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Archive for the ‘nerdysexycool’ Category

Daily Rotation(s): Toro y Moi

In Brooklyn Social Club, Daily Rotation, Muses and Music, nerdysexycool on March 11, 2010 at 5:17 am

Not quite done with the lo-fi Daily Rotations for today’s installment. It’s this here warm spell in NYC. It’s a love jones I won’t name yet.

It’s Toro y Moi.

Musician Chaz Bundick’s project, by way of South Carolina-

Toro y Moi’s chill wave grooves are all about atmosphere, good times, kickin’ it, Spring Awakening, and shedding layers for smoother skin.

He’ll grace the Brooklyn Bowl stage with New Zealand psychedelic indie rockers The Ruby Suns on March 26th, 2010. Tickets are $5! Pretty voices, cheap tickets.

The video for “Blessa”:

and the boys playing with rockets in the video for “Talamak”:

Brooklyn Freestyle Sessions @ Rose Live Music

In Brooklyn Social Club, FG/CLlinton Hill/Bed Stuy, Muses and Music, The Talented Mssrs. & Mlles. I Know, Williamsburg, nerdysexycool on March 3, 2010 at 6:53 pm

Mobius Collective, every Thursday at Rose Live Music in Williamsburg, BK

Mobius Collective celebrates their 3rd anniversary at Rose Live Music this Thursday.

Saxophonist/director Troy Simms, along with staple cipher Omar Little (trumpet), Borahm Lee (keys), and David Bailis (guitar), the Collective features guest DJ’s and musicians each session. Last week amidst the snow storm, the house was packed full of folks ready to go on a trip. Guest DJ–brilliant selector–Deejay Obah–filled in the blanks between sets, seamlessly taking us from a recording of Fela’s “Yellow Fever” into the band’s supersonic rendition of it. Keyboardist Borahm Lee brings it full force, slapping at his keyboard, mapping out intricate solos,  infusing the tune with an echo here, a reverb there–he’s a vision to witness in action. Jazz to warm you up in the beginning, dub to settle the whiskey in your bones (it’s cold outside, y’all), flowing into Afrobeat and Hiphop to get the people dancing.

There’s something to the venue too. The abuela wallpaper and jazz club stage has an old-timers vibe, a subtly complementary addition to the listening experience.

Mobius Collective, courtesy of the band's Myspace

Note about their name, “Mobius Collective,” it’s a reference to the Mobius Strip, a one-sided, single edged surface that has no beginning or end. This metaphor comes alive during their performance–the musicians contribute to the soundscape by carefully listening, evoking the continuity between them, between the genres they journey across in a few hours’ time.

Check it @ Rose Live Music, every Thursday!

What: 3rd Anniversary Party of Mobius Collective’s “Brooklyn Freestyle Sessions

Where: Rose Live Music, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on 345 Grand St. @ Marcy

When: 10 PM to 3AM

Dialog Box: Modality & Miles Davis

In Muses and Music, The Talented Mssrs. & Mlles. I Know, nerdysexycool on March 3, 2010 at 5:26 pm

The third track on Miles Davis’ 1959 Kind of Blue, called ”Blue in Green”:

You can see how thinking about music moves into mysticism–Kwami Coleman

This Sunday, I talked to my friend, musician & musicologist, Kwami Coleman, who resides in San Francisco, about modality in music.  I was listening to Miles Davis’  ”Blue in Green”, a highly textured musical composition, from his record Kind of Blue, which is very modal. Now, I’ve studied music, namely violin, but still have lots of questions regarding the theories.  At first, Kwami broke down the basics of my questions, but then it soon delved into the relationship between music & tonality & its (unknowable) effects on human psyche.

When we hear a piece of music, it elicits a response from us. Whether we listen to Miles Davis, to get into a heady, reflective, sober condition or the energetic, multilayered, orchestrated spontaneity of Fela Kuti—there is an emotional response drawn out of us. We attribute emotions—longing, misery, whimsy, joy—to the melodies we hear. We all know this.  And we know that the reason for this will never be fully understood, there’s value in understanding what certain tones provoke in the listener.

To read the Dialog Box interview, click the title of this post.

Read the rest of this entry »

Haiti, the earthquake, and my family, by Edwidge Danticat

In Feminista, Politickin', all that glitters, nerdysexycool on January 28, 2010 at 5:16 am

Beautiful words about her family, life and death, by writer Edwidge Danticat in the New Yorker.

via Haiti, the earthquake, and my family: newyorker.com.

RIP Howard Zinn

In all that glitters, nerdysexycool on January 28, 2010 at 4:52 am

The People’s Historian, activist, and teacher Howard Zinn died of a heart attack on Wednesday, January 27 in Santa Monica, CA. I chose this excerpt from the article “The Optimism of Uncertainty” (The Nation, September 2, 2004), which was adapted from The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen’s Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear.

“Revolutionary change does not come as one cataclysmic moment (beware of such moments!) but as an endless succession of surprises, moving zigzag toward a more decent society. We don’t have to engage in grand, heroic actions to participate in the process of change. Small acts, when multiplied by millions of people, can transform the world. Even when we don’t “win,” there is fun and fulfillment in the fact that we have been involved, with other good people, in something worthwhile. We need hope.

An optimist isn’t necessarily a blithe, slightly sappy whistler in the dark of our time. To be hopeful in bad times is not just foolishly romantic. It is based on the fact that human history is a history not only of cruelty but also of compassion, sacrifice, courage, kindness. What we choose to emphasize in this complex history will determine our lives. If we see only the worst, it destroys our capacity to do something. If we remember those times and places–and there are so many–where people have behaved magnificently, this gives us the energy to act, and at least the possibility of sending this spinning top of a world in a different direction. And if we do act, in however small a way, we don’t have to wait for some grand utopian future. The future is an infinite succession of presents, and to live now as we think human beings should live, in defiance of all that is bad around us, is itself a marvelous victory.”

From Toni Morrison’s “The Site of Memory”

In Feminista, Politickin', all that glitters, nerdysexycool on January 18, 2010 at 9:11 pm

“You know, they straightened out the Mississippi River in places, to make room for houses and livable acreage. Occasionally the river floods these places. ‘Floods’ is the word they use, but in fact it is not flooding, it is remembering. Remembering where it used to be. All water has perfect memory and is forever trying to get back where it was. Writers are like that: remembering where we were, what valley we ran through, what the banks were like, the light that was there and the route back to our original place. It is emotional memory–where the nerves and the skin remember how it appeared. And a rush of imagination is our ‘flooding’…’

Beautifully spun words, by Ms. Toni Morrison. In honor of the struggle that’s going on in Haiti now. Remembering that we all connect to primordial memories of being uprooted, the landscape we breathe in & witness, the homes and ports in which we welcome strangers, and the eternal rebuilding.

Great Firewall of China

In Politickin', nerdysexycool on January 13, 2010 at 10:26 pm

Photo: a makeshift commemoration to Google, in front of its Beijing office. Don’t go Googz!

Claiming cyber attacks by the Chinese government, hacking into the accounts of Chinese human rights activists, Google declared they would stop cooperating with Chinese Internet censorship and abuse.

Miss Bruno New York’s ‘My So Called Scarf’

In Brooklyn Social Club, Feminista, The 'Ness, The Talented Mssrs. & Mlles. I Know, bright lines, nerdysexycool on January 12, 2010 at 8:24 am

January simply feels better when you’re tucked away under winter accessories. We’ve all broke down and bought a

Corner Store Lily

dinky pair of black $5 gloves off the street when it’s become unbearable, as well as those faux-ushankas and poly-blend scarves.

Be done wit’ all that!

Miss Bruno New York’s My So Called Scarf Collection offers mujeres y hombres warm and fabulous neck gear.

The Artivist Scarf, model, Popular Thug, aka Sugar Aphrodite

Madame et Monsieur Bruno

The Highlife

Grinning and Bearing It.

In Artz, Brooklyn Social Club, Williamsburg, nerdysexycool on January 9, 2010 at 11:16 pm
death bear!

Often, my Daily Candy mail makes me smile. Even if I can’t afford the countless clothing or travel and culinary destinations they tote on their website.

But this here, this is just pure furry genius. For all of you melancholics and pessimistic souls:

The Painkiller Below, Courtesy of

“Summoned via text message, Death Bear will visit your Brooklyn apartment to remove painful reminders of your past (direct him toward empty cigarette packs, pictures of the ex, dropped-crotch pants) and give you the chance to start fresh in 2010.

Aside from practicing the dark art of absorbing negative memories, the man inside the suit also leads Chinatown garbage taxidermy tours, offers free bouncy rides on subway platforms while wearing a fish costume, and has a candy crack delivery service on weekends ($1 per bag).

But the resolution service is free this Saturday and Sunday.

So grin and bear it.”

To make an appointment, text 347-742-2293. For more information, go to clubanimalsnyc.blogspot.com. To find out more about the man inside the bear, go to natehillisnuts.com.

Photo: Kevin Walsh

Also available are “Bunny Butterfly Kisses”–courtesy of “Blizzard” the honey inside the bunny (head).

Photobucket

The Thin White Sketchbook

In Artz, bright lines, nerdysexycool on December 22, 2009 at 2:11 am

I spoke too soon. I do love Kanye, but I love David Bowie more. Courtesy of comic artist, writer and critic Sean T. Collins’ project “The Thin White Sketchbook’, a collection of David Bowie sketches. Some old Bowie, some young, some black and white, others in color, all of them homages to the magic that’s Bowie.

Here’s TV On the Radio songster, visual artist, & animator Tunde Adebimpe’s rendition of Bowie:

Check out Sean’s blog: http://www.alltooflat.com/about/personal/sean/

You can check out more of the Bowie sketches @http://www.flickr.com/photos/9486145@N04/sets/72157602061430969/

Bowie in Bed…drawn by the married duo, Eleanor Davis and Drew Weing:

And finally, Old Bowie dreamin’ of Young Bowie, by Mark Kindt:

Johanna Heldebro @ 3rd Ward, 12/18

In Artz, Brooklyn Social Club, Williamsburg, nerdysexycool on December 18, 2009 at 4:38 am

Since we’re already on this Swedish tip…

Tomorrow’s the opening reception for Brooklyn artist Johanna Heldebro‘s “To Come Within Reach of You”

After  following him to Stockholm, Sweden, she presents images and video documenting her father’s daily life (who pulled a disappearing act a couple years before).

Dialog Box #2: Untitled by Carlos E. Fernández-Dieppa

In Dialog Box, The Talented Mssrs. & Mlles. I Know, all that glitters, bright lines, nerdysexycool on November 29, 2009 at 11:03 pm

Artist/Designer/Thinker/Bu, Carlos E. Fernández-Dieppa, photographed this last week.

There’s something sensual about this quartet of cords, no?

I love how the vivid image of one cord pops against its blurred counterparts–as if one could pluck it right out of the picture.

I noticed my eyes struggling to focus between different parts of the image. It seems to be a matter of binocular rivalry.

“When one image is presented to one eye and a very different image is presented to the other, instead of the two images being seen superimposed, one image is seen for a few moments, then the other, then the first, and so on, randomly for as long as one cares to look.”

me:   gimme a quotable quote, waxy moustaches

los.veni.vidi: This photograph illustrates a duality between clarity and abstraction. On the one hand, depth is inferred by the use of focus on the object in the foreground the silhouettes are blurred in the background. Conversely, one could interpret the image as multiple cords in front of a depthless plane.

los.veni.vidi: If you interpret the background as a depthless plane, while still illustrating depth through the use of focus, it differs in that you can speculate what you perceive as object and shadow.

(Some pretty deep thoughts after we’d hit up The Back Room –102 Norfolk @ Delancey– sippin’ on Jameson in teacups):

lustre du sein (titty chandelier):

(I happen to have some white spot on the corner of my mouth. Hm. Don’t have the Photoshop, so here you are, here I am, unadulterated.)

David Byrne & Brian Eno’s “Strange Overtones”

In Artz, Daily Rotation, bright lines, nerdysexycool on November 10, 2009 at 4:07 am

Check it–It’s not an official video–but I liked the heart monitor ala Bright Lines with this tune. “Strange Overtones” is on David Byrne and Brian Eno’s record Everything that Happens Will Happen Today.

While Brian Eno focused on instrumentals, David Byrne blessed the record with his sonorous magic–

Says Eno:

“Upon starting this project, we quickly realized we were making something like electronic gospel, music in which singing becomes the central event, but whose sonic landscapes are atypical of such vocal-centered tracks. This notion tapped into my long love affair with gospel music, which, curiously, was inadvertently initiated by David and the Talking Heads.’”

David Byrne

The beautiful & strange Mr. Byrne

 

 

Now, you can see the man’s genius if you read his journal, but I love this entry:

“Some years ago I visited Bell Labs and was shown the famous anechoic (perfect, sound absorbent) chamber. This was where John Cage claimed that he could hear both his heart pounding and the high-pitched whine of his nervous system. His insight was that true silence doesn’t exist — even if we can block out everything else, we can’t stop hearing ourselves.

Here is one such chamber:

 

10_24_09_e_anechoic

He’s even got an Alien Espresso Cup line with Illy.

Alien Tea Cups_David Byrne

Copper Highlights

In The 'Ness, Williamsburg, all that glitters, bright lines, nerdysexycool on October 22, 2009 at 8:00 am

Remember those  ”Can you find the…?” games in Highlights magazine? Those were sort of the only things that made flu shots & dentist shiz bearable when I was a kid.

Copper Mold

These molds range from fascinating to regular–when my friend The Chronolect questioned, “Who would want a mold of a rooster?”

Or a cat?

Playing on the words “rooster” & “cat” is pretty raunchayyyyy. Okay, I’m corny. We figured it was some irony on the part of the owners of this collection, in S. Williamsburg, or perhaps it’s our own diabolical minds in action.

Either way–copper = healing  or if you throw a penny in a flame =

Copper in Flame

When copper gets heated up, the flame turns turquoise green. Cool!

Copper electrons jump out of their normal orbitals, then drop back into their normal orbitals.

So, they emit light with frequencies in the blue and green range.

Not to get all 11th grade teacher on y’all, but here’s a cool periodic table that shows you the emission spectrum of all the elements. So, when their electrons do a lil’ two-step, the color that is emitted is indicated by this chart.

Inneresting fact: (this is Wikitalk here, but I was informed of this by The Chronolect): “Most molluscs and some arthropods such as the horseshoe crab use the copper-containing pigment hemocyanin rather than iron-containing hemoglobin for oxygen transport, so their blood is blue when oxygenated rather than red.”

Copper Pure

Copper Ring

Some say copper has healing properties–back in the days in India folks used it for boils and venereal disease; the Egyptians laced drinking water with it. My grandma uses it for arthritis and aches.

Malleability is fly…

Lord knows we learn this the hard way.

Copper Bangles

Giant Females Spinnin’ 3ft Webs

In Feminista, bright lines, nerdysexycool on October 21, 2009 at 6:53 pm

Forget mustache envy!

Nephila komaci as the largest web spinning spider known to science. Only the females of this groups of species are giants, with a leg span of up to 12cm (4.7in); the male spiders are tiny by comparison. Courtesy of BBC.

Nephila komaci as the largest web spinning spider known to science. Only the females of this groups of species are giants, with a leg span of up to 12cm (4.7in); the male spiders are tiny by comparison. Courtesy of BBC.

These spiders are found in Madagascar & Maputaland. While Nephila spiders have been widely studied by scientists, this particular species has just been discovered, supporting the widely accepted evolutionary theory that female gigantism occurs in order to produce larger number of offspring.

And, not bad work for the considerably smaller male:

Male on Top

Mustache on a Stick

In nerdysexycool on October 21, 2009 at 6:42 pm

After years of denying I liked mustaches–strange daddy issues, perhaps–I’ve come to appreciate the waxed & handlebar steez of the mustache, rocked by hipster boys II men around town…

For those of us who wanna break an awkward silence or get through an excruciatingly boring meeting (or hey, a date or intimate moment), Something’s hiding here on Etsy presents a mustache on a stick:

Mustache on a stick!

Ingredients: cast urethane mustache made from a carved poplar wood original

Plastic is fine. I guess the only issue is the $32 per ‘stache on stick.

Maybe I can use this jam to cover up my own mustaches when I can’t be bothered to get ‘em threaded off!

You may buy The Chronolect's 'stache...

You may buy The Chronolect's 'stache...

Moiré Patterns

In bright lines, nerdysexycool on October 20, 2009 at 7:11 pm

From Wikipedia:

In physics, a moiré pattern is an interference pattern created, for example, when two grids are overlaid at an angle, or when they have slightly different mesh sizes. Comes from the French word for a type of fabric–generally silk–that has a rippled appearance.

Par example:

Moire Check www.mathematik.com, to see Moiré in motion.

Or:

Moire 2

Computer-rendered 7-slit Optical Interference Pattern:

a7slitsbgr

Physics, kids!

A Novel Playlist

In Daily Rotation, all that glitters, fiction, nerdysexycool on October 13, 2009 at 3:25 am

I get in these phases when writing– I’ll listen to the same tune over and over and over–What I’m reading right now, Kazuo Ishiguro’s latest, a short story collection (after six novels, including A Pale View of the Hills, Remains of the Day, and Never Let Me Go), called Nocturnes: Five Stories of Music & Nightfall , is a bit like a musical composition in five movements.

After that run-on sentence…

Repetition is soothing. Once I’m finished reading, I’ll offer a few words on Ishiguro’s collection.

The following five tunes compose the nocturnal soundscape that’s inspiring my work at this moment.

#1: Q. Lazzarus’s “Goodbye Horses”
Featured in Silence of the Lambs back in the days. Remember when Buffalo Bill has his moment–tucking away his member, putting on his lipstick, groaning inhumanly?–

According to my Itunes, I’ve played the song 575 times. Sick.

#2 Juana Molina’s “Un Dia”
Something about this Argentine songstress inspires creativity…

#3 Telepopmusik “Just Breathe”
Reminiscent of my summer 2008 in the muffuckin’ French Riviera! First got hold of this tune from my buddy Frances Angevine.

#4 “Tezeta” aka Nostalgia by Mulatu Astatke Ethiopiques Vol. IV. Much of this volume is in Jim Jarmusch’s film Broken Flowers.

#5 Animal Collective, “My Girls” in Merriweather Post Pavillion. Saw these guys at Prospect Park this past August, sublimely shiffaced. Inspired line: ‘I just want 4 walls and adobe slats for my girls.”

Nonsense 10 Year Anniversary Party @ 3rd Ward

In Artz, Brooklyn Social Club, nerdysexycool on October 12, 2009 at 5:50 am

Stayed out ’til 5 AM las’ night y’all.

The Nonsense NYC Party at the 3rd Ward’s Morgan Ave. studio/warehouse = wonderfully orchestrated mayhem.

I arrived around 9 PM–early enough for the performance installation portion of the evening. After missing the Morgan Ave. B60 bus stop and walking 15 minutes in heels in a deserted wasteland that is East Williamsburg,  I met up with my girl Marissa GV & her Bed-Stuy crew (plus a lil’ DC ‘n Paris flava). Everyone was given two tickets to attend performances that were taking place on each floor. The venue is enormous. Downstairs: a gallery showcasing Nonsense artists’ visions of a bright and weird future for art in the next ten years. (The soda machine’s last button actually dispenses $1 PBRs, but didn’t seem to accept our quarters or billz). Ushers were wearing gorgeous feathered chapeaux and black plastic spectacles. Didn’t much like being ushered around from performance to performance, so we didn’t bother to see more than a couple of the following:

We started the night with these furry fools: (They’re slowly uploading the night’s photos on their website, I’ll find ours soon.

Oooh! I just did.

Nandini Nessa and Jeff = Donnie Darko meets Bugz Bunny?

Nandini Nessa and Jeff = Donnie Darko meets Bugz Bunny?

All I can say about the performances: I’m sure many of them were very good.  But I got stuck in the spoken word room with some herb talking about being stuck in a bathroom in a cop–

Honestly I kept looking across the way at a long dining table set up. FOOD! I was starving.  GRUB did a SEVEN-COURSE MEAL IN SEVEN MINUTES INSTALLATION (some of the courses were photos of food, but the wraps looked tasty) These are the folks that put together the community dinner on the first and third Sunday of every month at RUBULAD (in Bed-Stuy, 338 Flushing Ave, ‘tween Classon and Taafe Pl.)

GRUB'S 7 COURSES in 7 MINUTES

GRUB'S 7 COURSES in 7 MINUTES

Tried to finagle a seat, but a gorgeous girl in a feathered cadet and sequined dress said, “DO YOU HAVE A TICKET THAT SAYS HUNGRY FOR MORE?” I answered no. She told me to get off her seat. I did so, before a full fledged femme brawl broke out. Hee hee.

WROUGHT IRON FIRE ESCAPE = SCARY AS SHIT IN HIGH HEELS. I walked on tip toes between floors all night.

Our crew starting a soul train style dance off in a Arab-music themed DJ room with a skate ramp style wall. After running up and down a few times–we dizzily grooved upward to the dance floor. @ 1 AM, when the dance party started outside and upstairs, NONSENSE NYC EDITOR JEFF STARK said, “Enjoy the 45 minute video about this party.” Before we could boo –salsa dancers from Piel Canela Dance Company in Chelsea busted out with some serious salsa. That would be enough for me to boo, since I’m no salsa queen, but soon the night grooved into very very good funk, hip hop, house & electro. I love DJ DIRTY FINGER:

DJ DIRTY FINGER

DJ DIRTY FINGER

Check it: DJ DIRTY FINGER\’s \”The DIRTY FINGER ANTHEM”

and the RAYA BRASS BAND. Love those Balkan brass jams.

Noel, Piña, Jeff, Morgan, cool kids at Nonsense NYC

Noel, Piña, Jeff, Morgan, cool kids at Nonsense NYC

Making the :-/ face after some spoken wordherbness

Making the :-/ face after some spoken wordherbness

Carrot 'n Cooch, crime-fighting duo?

Carrot 'n Cooch, crime-fighting duo?

Thaaaaaaaaaaat’s all folks!

Barack Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize

In Politickin', nerdysexycool on October 9, 2009 at 8:37 pm

Barack Obama Wins Nobel Prize! The World Loves You!

And I love you.

But….what about Afghanistan, Iraq, Guantanamo, Iran, Healthcare, College Loans, Recession…like my sistah said, “Even Jimmy Carter had to wait like 30 years!”  That’s true, Jimmy Carter didn’t even win for his Camp David Accords back in 1978, when he got Egpytian president Anwar el Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to sign a peace treaty. He didn’t get it ’til 2002.

Pre-emptive? Is the committee in Oslo on some “maybe this will give you the confidence you need to succeed?” Perhaps. I think that maybe Obama–in all of his oratorical and ideological glory–represents the debonair diplomacy, fueled by a social consciousness + keen intelligence that folks admire. We can’t argue that. We can argue that he needs to toughen up against the baseless and truly base Republican slander, whether it was the Van Jones debacle or spooking average Americans on big government or how he really is Muslim, or now with winning the prize. Even if this has given them another bullet to try to bring him down, he’s got to heed his own words.

It”s a call to action. And he really should listen to himself on that tip. Time to act, Obamz. Time to really consider if we need to boost the troop count in Afghanistan or bring our girls ‘n boys home. We’re players in a  tricky, violent war-contending with rigged elections, Taliban terror, brutality against women, denying girl-children education–amidst a rugged terrain with underground caves and channels the Russians failed to conquer. Will we conquer it? I don’t think so. Afghanistan’s many layers–physically and psychically and culturally speaking– we cannot penetrate.  What I worry about are the women & girls, trying to live peaceably, trying to educate themselves and simply be free.

Note: Thanks to these wars, PTSD and Traumatic Brain injury are commonplace among veterans. And Domestic Violence among them is on the rise.

(An aside–it amazes me how I claim “we”–as an American? As a world citizen? As a lackluster Muslim? Rather than go back and change “we” to “The U.S.” I’ll keep it as a necessary moment of reflection.)

Nobel Peace Prize winner Barack Obama’s reaction “humble” and “surprised” are perfect words to play. Props to the Prez & his wordnerd team.

The World Loves Our President!

The World Loves Our President!

Julie Mehretu: Artist talks on PBS’ Art:21, premiers 10/28/09 10 PM

In Artz, all that glitters, nerdysexycool on October 9, 2009 at 8:35 am

I love this phrase: “The reason you read the mark is because you also feel the mark.”

CHECK OUT A PREVIEW:  ”Julie Mehretu: Artist talks on PBS’ A…“, posted with vodpod
Empirical Construction, Istanbul
Empirical Construction, Istanbul
Excerpt (Supremacist Evasion) 2003, inak and acrylic on canvas
Stadia II,ink and acrylic on canvas (2004)

Stadia II,ink and acrylic on canvas (2004)

Daily Rotation: Funny Girl, by James Mason

In Daily Rotation, The Talented Mssrs. & Mlles. I Know, all that glitters, nerdysexycool on October 9, 2009 at 7:58 am

Sent to me by the dear, clear-eyed Kwami Coleman, PhD candidate in Musicology at Stanford. Click on his name to read his article on remixes of Messiaen, French composer, organist, and ornithologist! Birds and music?  Dude incorporated BIRDSONG transcriptions in most of his compositions! But this here song, brings a lot of cheer, on some soul groove type shiz:

Nandz & Kwamz

Nandz & Kwamz

Herta Müller, Nobel Laureate, 10/8/2009

In fiction, nerdysexycool on October 8, 2009 at 10:56 pm

Not to sound, well ignorant. But you can read many wonderful things about The Land of Green Plums & Atemschaukel (Everything I Possess I Carry With Me) and her journey to the prize. Me, I’ll just compliment Ms. Müller’s navy blue blazer and cat’s-eye specs perched on her head.

Herta Muller, Nobel Laureate

Let Me Down Easy–Anna Deavere Smith’s New Play at the Second Stage Theater NYC

In Artz, Theater, nerdysexycool on October 8, 2009 at 7:13 pm

Anna Deveare Smith

Woman of 1,000 Faces Considers the Body

By CHARLES ISHERWOOD

Even if you have already had your fill of heated debate about the crisis in American health care — informed, opinionated or just plain batty — do not go in fear of “Let Me Down Easy,” the new solo show from Anna Deavere Smith, which opened Wednesday night at the Second Stage Theater. The buzz words that have been filling the airwaves like swarms of gnats (“public option,” “death panels”) make no appearances in this engrossing collection of testimonials about life, death and the care of the ailing body.

True, Ms. Smith has collected some input on the state of the current system. She includes contributions from a rodeo bull rider with a cynical view of doctors and a medical school dean who argues that prime consideration must be given to end-of-life care. (Yep, it’s that freighted grandma issue.) But just as often she seeks answers to more open-ended questions about the power of the human body, its susceptibility to disease, and the divide between spirit and flesh that poses mysteries no one can really elucidate.

Unlike Ms. Smith’s acclaimed previous works, about the riots in Crown Heights, Brooklyn (“Fires in the Mirror”) and the racial unrest in Los Angeles after the Rodney Kingverdict (“Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992”), her new show is not tightly focused on a historical event.

Actually it is not particularly focused at all, though it is continually engaging. Instead of devising an organized primer on issues pertaining to health care in America, Ms. Smith has created a loosely framed but vivid compendium of life experienced at its extremes, drawn about equally from the suffering and the ministering sides of the story.

The first third of its 95-minute running time is largely taken up with attitudes toward the human body, and particularly the dedication of athletes who push against its limits. As always in her shows, Ms. Smith draws her texts verbatim from interviews she conducted herself, including pauses, repetitions, digressions and the occasional interruption for a cup of coffee or a ringing phone — details that add to the verisimilitude of the testimony.

The seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong speaks of his fight against cancer and how his natural competitiveness primed him for the battle: “The motivation is failure, ’cause failure’s death.” Then he turned around and used this souped-up ambition to return to cycling with more spirit than before: “Not that I thought I was gonna die if I lost the tour. But I certainly, I didn’t, I just didn’t want to face this, this, this demon called failure.”

The bull rider, Brent Williams, describes in gory detail the various predations he has subjected his body to, and how the doctors stitched him back up. He had his nose straightened after a fall without anesthetic so he could ride again that night. The heavyweight champion Michael Bentt recalls his brutal last bout, which put him in a coma for four days.

As the sports columnist Sally Jenkins notes, we prize athletes for their prowess and as symbols of the human ability to transcend life’s natural limits. The downside to this celebration of the superhuman is a denigration of the merely human.

In a rambling but funny monologue, the writer and activist Eve Ensler deplores the cultural pressure on women to simulate agelessness. “I think in this culture people don’t really die,” she cracks. “We’re all immortal here. We are all forever young here.”

As you may have gathered, Ms. Smith’s pool of participants is a little celebrity-centric. But as the show moves into more specific considerations of the state of health care, and later into meditations on death and disease, the balance tips in favor of nonboldfaced names.

Unnecessarily, we hear a breezy Lauren Hutton talking about how the Revlon chief Charles Revson opened doors to the best doctors in the city for her. More potently moving are the recollections of a physician working at a public hospital in New Orleans during the horrific aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Her sorrowing description of the government’s failure to evacuate the suffering poor offers stark proof of the economic disparities endemic to the current system. Another funny-sad example of inequity comes courtesy of a patient at Yale-New Haven Hospital whose charts disappear — like so many others, a resident shruggingly notes — until it is discovered that she is the chairwoman of the medical school.

Under the direction of Leonard Foglia, Ms. Smith moves briskly among these personalities on a handsome circular set ringed by large mirrors, designed by Riccardo Hernandez. Ann Hould-Ward conceived the simple costumes that Ms. Smith employs to signal her transformations.

For the most part these are unnecessary. Ms. Smith is not the kind of performer who wholly disappears into the people she is portraying; she is too forceful a presence for that. Instead she channels their voices through her own, using the specifics of speech patterns more than any fancy vocal gymnastics to let us hear each as an individual.

The final segment of the show, concentrating on the struggle against fatal illnesses and the reality of death, is naturally the darkest and the most affecting. An expert in palliative care speaks of how we cope with dying much as we have faced life’s lesser calamities. “If we were angry, we’ll probably be angry,” he notes. “If we denied the whole thing, we probably will deny the whole thing.”

Proving the point, the former Texas governor Ann Richards remains a blunt-spoken optimist even as cancer comes to call. Also fighting cancer, the film critic Joel Siegel retains his humor and his stubborn nonbelief in a sympathetically intervening God. “I do not believe in a God who would in any way interact between me and my disease,” he says. “I’m very Jewish.” (Both Ms. Richards and Mr. Siegel eventually lost their battles.)

Intentionally or not, “Let Me Down Easy” seems to have several endings. Mr. Siegel could have sent us out on a mordantly funny note. The minister at the Memorial Church ofHarvard, offering his views on the importance of accepting the fact of death (“Cherish the moment”), also seems a natural climax. His monologue is followed by a still more moving one from the director of an orphanage in South Africa, recalling the words she used to comfort an adolescent girl dying of AIDS.

And yet this heartbreaker is not the last word either. It almost seems Ms. Smith does not want to stop for death — like Emily Dickinson, and for that matter the rest of us.

LET ME DOWN EASY

A solo show conceived, written and performed by Anna Deavere Smith; directed by Leonard Foglia; sets by Riccardo Hernandez; costumes by Ann Hould-Ward; lighting by Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer; sound by Ryan Rumery; dialect coach, Amy Stoller; movement coach, Elizabeth Roxas-Dobrish; projection design by Zak Borovay; associate artistic director, Christopher Burney. Presented by the Second Stage Theater, Carole Rothman, artistic director. At the Second Stage Theater, 307 West 43rd Street, Clinton; (212) 246-4422. Through Nov. 8. Running time: 1 hour 35 minutes.

Nerdysexycool: Miu Miu Spring 2010

In Artz, The 'Ness, nerdysexycool on October 8, 2009 at 6:51 pm

Miu Miu Spring 2010, by Miuccia Prada

Divine–silks, button ups, breasts aplenty, 70′s inspired sparrow ‘n dog prints–Miu Miu hits nerdysexycool on its head. I mean, how to make something pretty but also thoughtful, whimsical, intellectual even. There’s been a lot on my mind regarding the waning sexual potency attributed to women as they get older (perhaps my entry into 27 compels these thoughts) and looking the part of a writer vs. a un-serious 20-something. Flaunting it seems unbecoming. So I wonder: How to make something sexy and refined? Nerdy and suggestive?  Don’t get me wrong–I’m a sucker for girlishness, beautiful things, and adornments in general.  Miu Miu Spring 2010 collection defines a look that’s intriguing, bold, and hints at a newfound sexuality.

For the Love of Curry Leaves

In Foodstuffs, nerdysexycool on October 7, 2009 at 10:40 pm

Naw, not that yellow stinky stuff!

Article by Tejal Rao, food writer and editor in The Atlantic. Plus, a fabulous recipe for cool, cucumber raita!

rao_august10_curryplant_post.jpg

PHOTO BY TEJAL RAO

To try cucumber raita, click here for the recipe.

The curry tree’s shiny leaves have a savory, toasted eucalyptus perfume. They’ve got nothing to do with pre-mixed curry powder, that useless neon stuff at the supermarket (though the Indian name for the plant, kadipatta, pronounced curry-pratta, explains the English name, and our association).

Cooks who use curry leaves say things like, “They’re key to authentic Indian food.” And it’s true that even the simplest dishes are often flavored with a few leaves, dropped into hot oil. But I got on just fine without curry leaves for the last few years, making my mother and grandmother’s recipes and leaving them out.

When my parents moved to Thailand last year, my mother left me her plant. In the past, she’s left it with friends and carefully smuggled a cutting to replant at our new home. When we moved to France, a branch wrapped in moist paper towels sat up in the front seat, sharing my mother’s seat belt, and her view of the white cliffs of Dover.

I imagined this tree was related to the one my great-great-grandmother carried on the steamship that brought her to East Africa, and related to the trees my family carried to Europe, when they were exiled from Uganda in the 1970s.

But not this time. Presumably, she could easily get her hands on curry leaves in Bangkok, and those plants would be tastier from all the sunshine. Curry trees are native to South Asia, and, as Indians immigrated, they carried them along, replanting them in foreign gardens and window boxes.

I imagined this tree was related to the one my great-great-grandmother carried on the steamship that brought her to East Africa, and related to the trees my family carried to Europe, when they were exiled from Uganda in the 1970s. I started frying the leaves when I was supposed to, and sometimes when I wasn’t.

But within a couple of months of being under my care, the tree looked sad. The stems felt like they’d been deep-fried. The leaves fell off. Was it the change in weather? An Indian cook assured me that the curry tree grows quite happily on windowsills all over Rochester, New York, even in the winter.

“The curry tree is near impossible to kill,” said another site. I read, with envy, about a couple in Maine whose trees had doubled in less than six months. “We have so many curry leaves, we simply don’t know what to do,” they complained. Show offs, I thought.

Meanwhile, my tree’s main trunks, a few inches high and thick as twigs, were completely bare. A couple of new shoots sprung up, but they looked alarmingly delicate and sort of yellowish.

I consulted a forum where curry tree owners discussed problems like aphids–destructive little buggers–seasonal shedding, leaves turning black, and killer molds. Here, one man shared the story of receiving a plant as a gift and killing it accidentally. “Please tell me, what did I do wrong?” he asked.

I asked my mother the same question. She examined the plant in the Skype video feed. “Oh sometimes the kadipatta just gets like that. I mix some full fat yogurt with a little water and pour it all over the soil. Perks right up!”

“What if it’s too late?” I asked.

“It’s never too late for yogurt!” She assured me.

Indian grocery stores sell curry leaves on the stem, in the freezer section. But it’s in the spirit of the traveling plant to grow your own and share a branch, to play a part in distributing its quiet, culinary magic. And should the yogurt fail, I’ll be in the market for a new cutting myself.

Recipe: Cucumber Raita

The Book of Optics

In nerdysexycool on October 4, 2009 at 8:13 am
Diagram from Kitâb al-manâzir (Book of Optics) by Ibn al-Haitham (Alhazen, c.965–1038), showing a chiasm—'the joining nerve'

Diagram from Kitâb al-manâzir (Book of Optics) by Ibn al-Haitham (Alhazen, c.965–1038), showing a chiasm—'the joining nerve'