"Where else would you go when you have an ax to grind?"

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

My favorite record

Enough good things cannot be said about Austin, Texas' legendary Asylum Street Spankers. Buy their records, videos, download all their stuff off itunes and watch these concert and interview clips taped last fall for a Kansas television program called Turnpike

flipping the bird
Just in case the world didn't realize what dubya was saying when he appointed John "The United Nations does not exist" Bolton as ambassador to the UN, the commander-in-chimp has now held up his owther middle finger and nominated Paul Wolfowitz to head the World Bank

testing testing 1..2...3....is this thing on?

Nice to see one finally admit it

"That’s me, a marine, a murderer of civilians" This interview with U.S. Marine Jimmy Massey by Patrizio Lombroso of Il Manifesto appeared the day before Giuliana Sgrena was released and shot. It’s an interview not calculated to win love and friendship in official Washington circles.‘

“I’ve seen the horror that we were causing every day in Iraq. I have been part of it. We are all just murderers.“We kill innocent Iraqi civilians all the time. That’s the way it is. I believe they need to withdraw all foreign military troops in Iraq right away. And I say this about other soldiers: to avoid punishment or reprisals by the military, they don’t want to talk and admit that killing terrorists is not our mission. It’s to kill innocent civilians.”

useful information
Or at least something to read while waiting for the vodka in your freezer to get cold can be found at the home bartenders best friend Droogle and all manner of splendid reading for boozehounds everywhere can be found at Modern Drunkard magazine, where they put the "fun" in "functional alcoholic"

Oh, that Ann
Ann Coulter L'il Junior Miss Conservative Club - PATRIOTIC POSTERS - WHITEHOUSE.ORG

Monday, March 14, 2005

Alexander's next target for conquest: your coffee table
Kevin Wood / Daily Yomiuri Staff Writer
Alexander the Conqueror
By Laura Foreman
Da Capo, 211 pp, 35 dollars
As Hippocrates, a near contemporary of the subject of Laura Foreman's new book, famously wrote: "Life is short, art is long, the crisis fleeting, experience perilous, decision difficult."
This wisdom is reflected both in the life of King Alexander III of Macedon and in Foreman's biography Alexander the Conqueror.

Alexander's life was certainly short. He died just weeks shy of his 33rd birthday, but his legacy had a long-lasting effect on the world.

Ascending to the throne of Macedon in northern Greece at 20 after his father was assassinated, Alexander conquered an empire that stretched from Greece to modern-day Pakistan and Afghanistan and included Egypt, Libya, the Middle East and Persia. He conquered what to him would have been most of the known world in just 12 years. His adventures were unquestionably perilous, and he was badly wounded half a dozen times before his mysterious death, possibly at the hands of a poisoner.

Decisions were rarely difficult for the man who cut the legendary Gordian Knot with a single sword-stroke and went on to fulfill the prophecy that the man who contrived to undo it would become lord of all Asia. He proved himself a master tactician in battle time and again, defeating his enemies with a combination of surprising maneuvers, cunning deception and audacious feats of engineering. Alexander had little capacity for self-doubt and the charisma of a natural leader of men.

But journalist and pop historian Foreman also shows us a man who was obsessed with outdoing his famous father, who presided over numerous massacres and the bloody sacking of cities, and who murdered one of his best friends in a drunken brawl.

Like life, the text of Foreman's book is short, with large type and wide margins. She has proved that art is long by balancing the brevity of her concise but elegant text with a wealth of lavish illustrations: Not a single page goes by without a color photograph of a statue or other artifact depicting Alexander. His lasting legacy of inspiration is reflected in the wide range of color reproductions of paintings from across Europe and Asia. Numerous photographs of battlefields and ruined palaces also serve to bulk up this elegant volume.

This is not a scholarly work, but more of a popular history--classics for the coffee table. Foreman's descriptions of events and critical analysis is fleeting. She often relegates important issues--such as the fate of the citizens of Thebes, one of Alexander earliest and bloodiest conquests, and Alexander's possible role in his father's death--to one- or two-page inserts that interrupt the main text, making it an attractive book to browse through, but a difficult one to sit and read at length.

Nor does she make decisions or draw conclusions about her subject. Instead, she shows the reader a dual view of Alexander, listing his accomplishments, virtues and lasting influence, but never shying away from his occasional misjudgments, murderous excesses or hubris.

Alexander the Conqueror makes no clear judgment about whether the remarkable ancient Macedonian should be remembered as great or terrible: "Having accomplished so much and died so young, Alexander set a standard for achievement that endures to this day...His greatness, therefore, is beyond doubt. His goodness is another matter."

Copyright 2005 The Yomiuri Shimbun

Thursday, March 10, 2005

All hail ZOGG!
Resistance is futile

Depends on your definition of "hole"

Apparently the story we were told about Saddam Hussien being found in a so called spider hole underground were
fiction

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

Hungry?
I might dispute the "world's greatest" part but this looks like a preety damn good grilled cheese sandwich to me


Inukshuk at the Canadian Embassy in Tokyo Posted by Hello

Expo 2005 and why Canada is cool

I went to an event at the Canadian Embassy in Tokyo last night that illustrated for me once again one of the best things about Canada.

The themes of the World Expo being held in Aichi Prefecture, Japan this summer is "Nature's Wisdom." Canada was the first country to sign up to take part and our pavillion is built on the theme of the "Wisdom of Diversity" - you can read all about it here .

Visitors to the pavillion enter to a show simulation the northern lights, then enter the outer ring that tells the story of Canada's "geo-sphere" and "bio-sphere" -- in plain English, the geography and wildlife of the great white north from Baffin Island to Windsor, from Vancouver to St. John.

The inner ring, and this is where it gets good, is Canada's "ethno-sphere" which celebrates the diversity of cultures and ethnicities in Canada. In his speech last night, deputy head of mission at the embassy MacKenzie Clugston, who for the record spoke only in French and Japanese and had a Japanese interpreter give the English version (how cool is that?), pointed out that, according to the 2001 census


47% of Canadians are of an ethic background that is not British, French or First Nations and 85% think multiculturalism is a good thing.

That really struck me. Living in monocultural conformist Japan, where there is a lot of xenophobia even today about "foreign devils" and reading some of the crap from the cultural conservatives in North American about the evils of immigrants and nasty foreigners and illegal aliens ruining the good ole US of A, it was nice to see the Canadian government get it right and showcase the cultural, intellectual and even financial prosperity that comes from having a diversity of experiences, backgrounds and opinions represented in the population. Three cheers for the cultural mosiac!

"It's the tolerance, stupid!"

Oh, and despite having recently become a U.S. citizen, Alanis Morrisette will be coming to do a concert there. Click the link to write songs like her.

Saturday, March 05, 2005

The view from up North for our American Friends

Missile Counter-Attack
Former Canadian Foriegn Minister Lloyd Axworthy fires back at U.S. -- and Canadian -- critics of our BMD (I think that's "bullshit missile defense") decision in An Open Letter to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
Do you think he'd go back into federal politics?

Thursday, March 03, 2005

Please, make it stop. My God, think of the children
The gay conservative offspring it speaks of is Alan Keyes daughter. It is amazing this woman is still being paid to spout such hateful drivel.Ann Coulter: Calling the kettle gay

WTF? Wingnuttery in action
Diana West: Fear and loathing of the gonzo establishment
Who is Diana West and has she ever read any Thompson or even had a beer?

Kung fu fighting
you may enjoy this

Breakfast with the doctor, a good line and a good quote

“I like to eat breakfast alone, and almost never before noon; anybody with a terminally jangled lifestyle needs at least one psychic anchor every 24 hours, and mine is breakfast. In Hong Kong, Dallas or at home – and regardless of whether or not I have been to bed – breakfast is a personal ritual that can only be properly observed alone, and in a spirit of genuine excess. The food factor should always be massive; four Bloody Marys, two grapefruits, a pot of coffee, Rangoon crepes, a half-pound of either sausage, bacon or corned beef hash with diced chilies, a Spanish omelette or eggs Benedict, a quart of milk, a chopped lemon for random seasoning, and something like a slice of key lime pie, two margaritas and six lines of the best cocaine for dessert…. Right, and there should also be two or three newspapers, all mail and messages, a telephone, a notebook for planning the next 24 hours, and at least one source of good music…. All of which should be dealt with outside, in the warmth of a hot sun, and preferably stone naked.”
-Dr. Hunter S. Thompson: Jimmy Carter and the Great Leap of Faith -

"Jeff Gannon ... He is a White House correspondent who has been lobbing softball questions at the president and his press secretary, turns out he is actually a paid escort for wealthy homosexuals... He actually had two jobs - one obviously was sleazy and shameful and the other was a gay male prostitute... I think I know what Bush meant now when he said he has a mandate."
- Bill Maher

Q:"If you had been in President Clinton's place would you have resigned?"
A: "If I had been in the President's place I would not have gotten the chance to resign. I would have been lying in a pool of my own blood and listening to my wife ask, 'How do you reload this son of a bitch?'"
-Texas Congressman Dick Armey

"Kelly Joe Phelps could not get get any cooler without moving to Antarctica. "

In your ear
Kevin Wood / Daily Yomiuri Staff Writer


Jack Johnson
In Between Dreams
Universal, 2,548 yen
With his latest release, surfer-cum-filmmaker-cum-folk rocker Jack Johnson explores the joys of domesticity while broadening his musical palette.
In Between Dreams mixes rhythmic folky acoustic guitar-based songs with the occasional funky rocker like the scorching "Staple it Together" to offer up a relaxing, sunny package of tunes that linger in the listener's ear for days.
In Between Dreams showcases Johnson's gift for making the personal universal with playful love songs like the bouncy "Better Together" and "Banana Pancakes," a paean to waking up slow. His songwriting has always been strong, but the combination of strong hooks and laid-back grooves heard on this disc are proof he has hit his stride. His no-frills vocal style and chunky acoustic guitar provide a warm tone that runs throughout the whole album.
Johnson branches out musically here, using a wider variety of tempos than on previous CDs. His arrangements have become more subtle and complex, filling out the trio bare-bones sound with an accordion evoking French chanson on "Belle" and using piano for the first time on a few tracks. While his signature conversational folk-meets-rap cadences remain in place on songs such as "Better Together," Johnson belts out "Breakdown" and "Good People" like an old-time R&B singer and shows a hint of Nashville on the rootsy "Do You Remember."
In Between Dreams is a lazy, sun-drenched day at the beach.

Kelly Joe Phelps
Tap the Red Cane Whirlwind
Rykodisc, 2,414 yen
At the other end of the spectrum, the no-less brilliant Kelly Joe Phelps could not get get any cooler without moving to Antarctica.
Tap the Red Cane Whirlwind is a collection of solo live recordings from a series of California club dates last March that show a master slide guitarist, singer and songwriter at his peak.
Phelps' songs tend toward dark narratives about people on the margins of life, mining much the same vein as Tom Waits, but sounding nothing like him.
After starting his career as a jazz musician, Phelps rediscovered and reinvented for himself the blues. His lyrics are both evocative and mysterious, his singing understated yet powerful and his guitar work sparse and hypnotic. It's an intense package.
The songs on this disc are like a suibokuga ink painting in which the initial impression of spare simplicity gives way to endless subtle shadings that provide the work immense beauty and power. This album is not background music--it is lie-on-the-floor-with-the-lights-out music.
First-time listeners may find the opening 10-minute interpretation of Skip James' "Hard Time Killin' Floor Blues" a bit slow and meandering, but like good Scotch, Phelps is an acquired taste that packs a punch. A mailed fist in velvet glove clutching a rose. Spend a night home alone and listen to all the Phelps you can lay you hands on.

Citizen Cope
The Clarence Greenwood Recordings
BMG, 2,548 yen
Yet another highly original singer-songwriter, in this case with some serious studio production chops, Citizen Cope aka Clarence Greenwood's sophomore effort is an ambitious album that uses slow hip-hop beats to back a genre-blurring mix of blues, R&B, funk and pop. Citizen Cope delivers arty, poetic lyrics in a plaintive, rough-edged voice over broad-ranging arrangements that utilize stabbing horns, melodic piano and chunky guitar riffs.
The former Basehead hip-hop deejay sounds like a Bob Dylan or Bruce Springsteen born in 1977.
Copyright 2005 The Yomiuri Shimbun