9/20/12

IRVING STONE Quotation

There are no faster or firmer friendships than those formed between people who love the same books.” Irving Stone (from Clarence Darrow for the Defense)


DOGS NEVER LIE ABOUT LOVE

DOGS NEVER LIE ABOUT LOVE as seen stitched on a pillow in the book "A Perfectly Kept House is the Sign of a Misspent Life" by Mary Randolph Carter.

9/17/12

OLD SCHOOL? GOODBYE YOUTUBE STATION?

Musing today.

I've been meaning to delete my personal YOUTUBE station for a while now. One of these days I'm gonna do it. I opened it with a not g-mail account. Now to get into it, I have to open a new g-mail account. How dare they block me from using my old acount just because it's their competitor Yahoo? Is there no GRANDFATHER CLAUSE?

So my station has been sort of, song by song, becoming defunct for a while now and I don't even want it to show on the net. It's been a while since I personally listened to it while I wrote, though it's a lot of songs that that came to mind while simply living life and a few discoveries. The station was mostly for my personal pleasure.

I guess I have to admit that my musical choices are generally OLD SCHOOL. I have a huge inventory of songs remembered. A lot of these songs are "oldies" that I probably first heard on "oldies" radio stations. I did a lot of listening to the radio and was very influenced by friends who actually had the money to buy albums and turned me on to their favorite music when I was in my youth.

I used to collect lyrics as poetry, as story, and that's how I got to be a pre-teen who knew that Jimmy Webb wrote a lot of songs I loved.

I took a song writing class once and was not a natural. Since I love music this was unhappy for me. The teacher had written songs for Elvis and Barry Manilow and well, I thought he was a bit pompous and under impressed with my efforts. Most of the guys in the class were taking it to get laid.

In fact, I have only bad memories of that class, the teacher, and the people in it. It was the first I had a headache that lasted.

I love a good beat, love to hear drummers, and I can appreciate a rhyme as well as a rhythm but the rap phenomena leaped over me the way a fire leaps over the freeway.

Sometimes CDs sound tinny to me. I miss the old stereo with all the knobs to adjust things, the warmth of the plastic, even if it was popping.

Worse, at some point in music history, when there were too many love songs, song writers were striving to write about anything but love, but the songs with heart and emotion, those are the survivors. Maybe that's why I reach back past rap, to the singer-songwriters like the Allman Brothers Band, Neil Young and Led Zeppelin, to Carole King, Carly Simon, Joni Mitchell, and Linda Ronstadt (to name a few).

A generation of Guitar Gods are moving into elderhood, and these people are all my elders, so I'm not of their generation really, but their music is mine.


9/13/12

JOHNNY RIVERS : POOR SIDE OF TOWN

One of my favorite songs since I was yet to be a teenager. First heard it on a scratched up 45rpm that was handed down. That record got played over and over again on a plastic kid record player - mono - the worn needle scratching deeper.

9/9/12

DOGS IN LITERATURE : WOLF IN THE EARTH CHILDREN'S SERIES : CLAN OF THE CAVE BEAR

I'm a fan of Jean M. Auel, the prolific author of the Earth's Children series that begins with the book Clan of the Cave Bear. The books follow the life of Ayla, who is separated from her parents and tribe as a child, is adopted by a Clan ( "the flat heads") that is not of her own people, and is eventually shunned by them for being so different.

Driven to survive on her own, she spends a winter surviving by holing up in a cave in a valley, only going out into the cold to hunt with a sling shot and surviving by foraging plants in summer weather. Eventually, she finds a wolf cub that is also alone to be a companion and through observation and training, turns him into a prehistoric pet wolf - dog who comes when she whistles, to the amazement of every person she encounters from then on. This then is Jean M. Auel's way of introducing the relationship that humans and dogs have had for thousands of years.

When all the breeding dogs into small and even incompetent animals began, who really knows? I once watched a video about what the world would be like if there were no humans. Dogs would quickly resume their traditional lives of hunting in packs, and most of the flat faced ones would be so bad at hunting that they probably wouldn't survive.

9/6/12

DOGS IN LITERATURE : TAISHA ABELAR'S MANFRED

Speaking of Taisha Abelar's new book (see past posts) that still hasn't come out (I just checked a popular book selling site on the net) one of my favorite characters in her first and only published book is the "dog" Manfred.

Come on - we know he is a sorcerer trapped in a dog body! But how that happened?

In this book Taisha encounters Manfred in the mysterious house in Mexico where she is in a spiritual apprenticeship. Manfred likes to lay on her, taking as much of her energy as he can. Manfred is a sensitive beast, who overreacts when anyone says he looks like a toad. So of course the word must be spelled out around him. T O A D! He calms down when you say that someone else looks like a toad or that he does not look like a toad!

Carlos Castaneda said that Taisha wrote this book while in dreaming. I wonder if Taisha ever had a dog or dogs in real life. I wonder if Manfred will make a reappearance in the long awaited new book?

9/3/12

AMY MY DAUGHTER : MITCH WINEHOUSE : CHRISTINE TRZYNA BOOK REVIEW

AMY MY DAUGHTER
Mitch Winehouse C 2012 (Amy's father)
itbooks - an imprint of HarperCollins is the publisher

There are words Mitch Winehouse does not use about his daughter, the singer Amy Winehouse who died a couple years back at the age of 27.

Let me use some of them. Amy Winehouse was a mess - long before she was famous - and she was mentally ill - she cut herself. She was into this seriously mentally ill behavior before she became addicted to... of all substances, her man - husband and ex-husband - Blake.Amy, who's artistry I admire, is on the cover of the book in a photograph that reveals a huge tattoo going down her arm that reads "Daddy's Girl." Maybe that's why, though Mitch was married to Amy's mother, and then her stepmother, the involvement of these women in Amy's life is not part of the big story - his story of being the protective but anxious father of a superstar.
I did want to know how her upbringing effected what seems to be Amy's long standing lack of self-discipline, but as it reads Mitch in his capacity as father, and as a man somehow involved in her management of finances and career, was the one she kept making the promises to - to quit - and the one who was there for her, offering love and advice as best he could even when she couldn't or wouldn't.

To hear Mitch tell it, Amy was brought down by Blake and could have been saved by marrying and having children with her next serious boyfriend.

The ups and downs of her medical history and her on and off again attempts to beat drugs and then alcohol might be typical of any addict. What wasn't typical was Amy's talent. Mitch never says that talent was a burden to her, or that she kept medicating herself with these substances because being famous and keeping a career going like that are damn difficult.

Amy was in very poor health and she had pretty much done herself in with substances. I came to feel that bad boy Blake was another symptom.

Those of you who know me know that I think, have long thought, the whole Psychiatry/Psychology profession is way too powerful. I believe this self propagating profession is hand in hand with pharmaceutical companies and that it is now true that everyone is diagnosable and therefore medicateble. I'll never be a Scientologist but on this they have it right.

I couldn't help but wonder though if Amy Winehouse would still be with us here and now if, earlier in her life, someone had recognized her cutting of herself as serious mental illness. Would psychotropics have killed the creativity and spirit in her? Or would be the best substitute for all those street drugs, all that booze? Mitch doesn't say it. I do.

Towards the end, Mitch mentions that there's a possibility that he got spiritual signs that he thinks were about Amy - butterflies - and a bird and a butterfly flying together. He has used these symbols for AMY'S FOUNDATION, which will address the problems of addiction, ill health, and homelessness among youth.

9/1/12


8/25/12

IT MIGHT GET LOUD : THE EDGE : JIMMY PAGE : JACK WHITE : CHRISTINE TRZYNA FILM REVIEW

One of the reasons I blog is so that when someone puts my name into a search engine on the Internet (which people rarely do!) and the name Jimmy Page (or James Patrick Page), which they do a whole lot, my name and his name will be associated.





Joking... but I'm intrigued by Jimmy Page, not just as a legendary Led Zeppelin rock and roll guitarist, but as a person. I ACTUALLY BELIEVE HE MAY BE A REINCARNATION OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, or at least from the same soul group.



Are we having fun yet?



So what's good about this DVD, is that, though you get to hear these three musicians jam a bit, and give each other instructions, this is not a concert film. I don't think they do a single song all the way through. What's good is that it's a bit like biography, with snippets of their memories of how they go their career going, and how that went, so I got to learn more about Jimmy Page than I did, and was surprised that he did start out in bands as a kid.



The marketing on the back of the package calls this an "unparalleled music summit." That's right.



C Christine Trzyna All Rights Reserved including Internet Rights and International Rights

8/24/12

I HAVE DONE LOUSY AT KEEPING MY NEW YEARS RESOLUTION

to say yes instead of yea... yea .... yea.

8/18/12

ENEMIES, A LOVE STORY : CHRISTINE TRZYNA FILM REVIEW

Can't say this summer is LAZY because it feels STRESSFUL, but I find myself watching more old films than I have in years, and not reading as much, in the evenings. Is that bad?

Isaac Bashivis Singer's ENEMIES, A LOVE STORY is one of my favorite books.




It's also a book I've gifted to one particular person in my life years ago who seemed to be in a dilemma a bit like the character Herman Broder, who has three women, "wives," in his life. This is the story of a Holocaust survivor who comes to New York and there lives with the Polish gentile woman who saved his life and who wants to get married and have his baby, has a mistress who is probably best suited to him who is married who has a phantom pregnancy, and the wife he was married to in Europe, who has been presumed dead, along with their two children, but makes it to New York.



So this film, which stars Angelica Huston (the wife presumed dead), Ron Silver (Herman), Lena Olin (the mistress who is married), and Margaret Sophie Stein (the Polish gentile) stays true to the book. I thought the acting was excellent (which means I forgot who the actor's were and believed their characters), and film and acting did add a dimension not in the book.



It's a Paul Mazursky film.



Go get it!



C Christine Trzyna All Rights Reserved including Internet Rights and International Rights

8/16/12

NEW BOOKS BY and ABOUT MUSICAL ARTISTS: ELTON JOHN'S and MITCH WINEHOUSE - AMY'S DAD HIT THE KEYS : COMPUTER KEYS THAT IS

Elton John wrote LOVE IS THE CURE - On Loss and the End of AIDS, and Amy Winehouse's dad. Mitch Winehouse, wrote AMY, MY DAUGHTER. I have both in hand, and am hoping to read them soon. Both fall into one of my favorite genre, pop music.
Now where is that wine and cheese?

8/3/12

UNTHINKABLE : MAN OPENS BOOKSTORE : DAVID SUISSA of THE JEWISH JOURNAL on TONY JACOBS NEW BOOKSTORE!

Just a few years ago, unconscious people were suggesting that I use my degree in Literature and Creative Writing to work at a book store and I actually thought that was highly inappropriate use of a very expensive and yet unpaid for college degree. I wanted to keep loving books too and admit that I was wary that the average bookstore clerk did not love books, like many city employees who work at libraries but do not love books or even read many of them. Would books be equal to say, cabbages, to my co-workers? There were two independent book stores that I wanted to work for, one Duttons on Laurel Canyon, and the other The Bodhi Tree in West Hollywood. Independents.

Those were the days... Every bookstore I could have applied to work at has gone belly up like cockroaches sprayed with cockroachacide. At best they go online where you can order what you heard about somewhere else.

So yes, it is remarkable that someone is opening the store of his dreams despite the independents and many of the big stores deader than dead. (If it will make any of you feel any better, I bought a used book today called "Gallop!" by Rufus Butler Seder, a Scanimation Picture Book, at one of those hole in the wall, where-is-the-little-man-behind-the-cashregister?-stores.)

The article I'm linking to is about Tony Jacobs who just opened SIDESHOW RARE AND REMARKABLE BOOKS, on Idaho Avenue near Sawtelle. The book started with years of personal collecting of books, pulp fiction! It's written by David Suissa who is President of the Jewish Journal.

click on the title!

8/1/12