Thursday, July 29, 2010

Coming Around Again
"Coming Around Again" is my favorite Carly Simon song, even if it does make marriage sound like the bleakest thing ever. The opening line: "Baby sneezes, Mommy pleases, Daddy breezes in" sets up the whole idea of how people in love can get into a rut so bad, nothing feels like feeling anymore and falling apart is preferable because "there's more room in a broken heart." And yet amidst the sadness, Simon insists so earnestly (and with such touching pain) that she does believe in love, with the rising back-up vocals to support her.

Not only are the lyrics themselves truly affecting...the way Simon sounds so real just makes it all the more heart-breaking. It's a far cry from the infamous "You're So Vain."
The Sellout
Macy Gray, whose gravelly voice and quirky charms have somehow always oddly calmed me, really delivers on her new album The Sellout. It's rare that I like every song on an album, especially in the digital age when you can be impatient and picky about wading through an entire CD. But tracks such as the highly danceable "Lately" and tough girl optimistic "Beauty in the World' have me listening over and over again. Not since she sang with Beck on her album The Trouble with Being Myself have I felt such a thrill at hearing new Macy Gray.

I close my eyes to "Lately" and not just the words, not just the music, but the whole spirit of it gets to me. It's about a woman who dumped her boyfriend because she was terribly insecure and now that she's got her act together  (she's popular and "been comin up like a palm tree") she wants him back. I love the way the chorus swirls round and round like great disco songs do and the male background's cynically chanting "uh huh" brings it all together.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Swash Fresh It Up - Clothing Odor Outer, At Large, 2.5-Ounce (2 pack bundle) [Amazon Frustration-Free Packaging]
I recently received a free sample of Tide's Swash Fresh it Up. The directions on the side of the bottle, "lay flat (the clothes, not you!)," cracked me up, but other than that nothing special came from the experience of using it.  The idea of "refreshing" last night's clothes just doesn't turn me on...

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Last Time I Saw You: A NovelLittle Miss Sunshine
In the movie Little Miss Sunshine Uncle Frank (played very well by Steve Carell) calls high school "your prime suffering years. You don't get better suffering than that." I'm not sure I'd go that far (my bet is with middle school if you want to kick the whole suffering thing up a notch.)

There were moments in high school I actually enjoyed...times with friends, certain parts of class (both humorous and academic) that made up for the more painful stuff (trig, geometry, algebra...the whole math thing).  We'll skip the unrequited crushes, the out-of-sync-with-the-rest-of-the-world cloud that often followed those of us who were mostly loners and that horrible melodramatic overload of hormones and mixed emotions.

I mention high school because of what I'm currently reading. Elizabeth Berg's newest book (aptly titled The Last Time I Saw You) captures some of what makes high school reunions both scary and utterly fascinating. I just started it, but hope to return soon with thoughts on it...

...A few hours later and I've had time to read more. I love this passage: By the time she was in high school, she spent all her money on record albums and on paperback books--she couldn't get enough of either. Why moon about not being invited to a party when you could listen to Bob Dylan? What date could compare with Nine Stories?  The major reason I usually end up liking a book is because there is a least one character so relatable to you it's almost eerie...(except, when I was in high school I didn't listen to Dylan.)
Vicks NyQuil Cold & Flu Relief LiquiCaps, 60-count BoxDie Hard 2 - Die Harder
So I've been battling a cold this past week and last night I think I might have taken just a little too much NyQuil (best thing ever for trying to sleep while sick!) 'cause I got to thinking how great Die Hard 2 is (it was my first time watching it so I'm not sure if it's the cold medicine or the movie)...Though I'm sure my liver won't thank me for all the OTC medicine I've been using lately, I love that numbing feeling that spreads through your limbs and mind once the NyQuil takes over...thankfully, though, I've never reached that point where I take NyQuil even when I don't have a cold...

some sorta scary NyQuil facts

that explains those feelings...

The "in between reality and sleep realm," whether induced from NyQuil or a sleep aid or that moment right before you fall asleep, has always been fuzzily pleasant for me....neither conscious or un...just "there." Sometimes, when little things are all you can really count on, that kind of buzz is just beautiful...

Sunday, July 18, 2010




"Pumped Up Kicks" by Foster the People is one of the catchiest songs I've heard in a while. I must have hit repeat at least four times while driving around today (it's a great car song!) and now I'm dying to dance around in my living room to it, but it's almost one in the morning and I don't want to disturb the neighbors.

The words don't really matter, though I can imagine it has some kind of theme. It's the beats (oh God, the beats!) and the haunting, fading vocals (wish I knew the technical term for it) and the whistling (that makes the huge 2007 hit "Young Folks" by Peter Bjorn and John sound just a little too quaint). And no matter how often you play it, it always sounds so fresh and invigorating.

Incredible stuff and you can hear it here....wish I knew more about the band. I first read about them on NME magazine's website but as far as I can tell there's not much talk of them here in the U.S.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Bad Romance
"You gotta be kidding" read of the day (via Mother Jones magazine)...an anonymous blogger calling himself the Vigilant Citizen believes Lady Gaga videos are part of an elaborate plot (involving the CIA, Freemasons and possibly the occult) to brainwash the public...into doing what the article didn't say, but now those outfits in "Bad Romance" make a little more sense to me!:)

My favorite line from the article : "A superstar clotheshorse who is unwittingly the tool of an evil yet very silly conspiracy...wait, isn't that the plot of 'Zoolander' ?" MJ gives the theory 5 out of 5 on their "kookiness" meter!

Ah, Conspiracy Theorists...people with WAY too much time on their hands!!As someone somewhere has probably said before about mindless, but catchy, beat-driven music: just enjoy the music and dance!:)

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Monster Hunter International
Grabbed this up at Borders Express last night...pure guilty pleasure...can't put it down...Amazon is loaded with positive reviews, including this terrific one:

142 of 144 people found the following review helpful:


5.0 out of 5 stars MHI, February 2, 2008

By Kevin J. Coolidge - See all my reviews

(REAL NAME)



This review is from: Monster Hunter International (Paperback)

Monster Hunter International



It's your average, everyday Wednesday evening; I had just stopped by to pick up the latest issue of the Wellsboro Gazette. Suddenly, I found myself able to fulfill the American dream. No, not the one with the nude roller derby girls, the other "American" dream. I got to run over my boss. Understand, I felt obligated to burn hot rubber across his hairy back. No, I didn't wake up that morning and plan on killing my boss with my Subaru. It's really much more complicated than that. I would never have considered doing something that sounded so crazy. Heck, I work in a bookstore. My idea of danger is getting a paper cut. I didn't want to save the world. I didn't want to have to replace my headlight. I didn't want my insurance rates to skyrocket. I didn't want to know my boss was a werewolf...



It turns out that monsters are real, and that's why I found myself devouring Monster Hunter International by Larry Correia. Creatures from myth, legend, and B-movies are out there. Lurking in the shadows, seeking our destruction, or just plain hungry. Monster Hunter International is the number one agency for eradication of evil.



Our story starts with one Owen Zastava Pitt. He's your average, everyday working stiff. He just wants to work hard, get himself a wife and 2.5 kids, and settle in the suburbs, but when his boss literally tries to bite his head off, Owen is thrust into a world that he never knew existed - a world where monsters are exist, and there is good money to be made killing them. Welcome to Monster Hunter International.



MHI,a remarkable group of misfits that has banded together. They do more than dare to raise a candle to the darkness. They pack napalm-fed flamethrowers and lots of firepower. There's specialized body armor, big guns with unusual ammunition, and bloodsucking fiends. You'll also find some likable, well-developed heroes that bleed, and a full-speed action yarn that's funny as Hades.



I picked up this first novel because it sounded like a fun, fast read, and it is. Larry is a certified weapon instructor and it shows in his writing. He knows guns and weapons and he likes to blow things up, and have a lot of fun doing it. He also loves B movies, and has a twisted sense of humor, and it all makes for a highly entertaining read. It's not perfect. There are some rough spots, and at 452 pages, it's a little longer than is needed. The action slows down after a great intro that grabs your attention, but quickly jumps back to the fight. If you like SF, military fiction, or horror, you'll find yourself staying up late at night to finish, and anticipating the next novel. You aren't going to find MHI on the New York Times bestseller list, or Oprah any time soon, but maybe she should lock and load and lighten up...



Kevin Coolidge columnist Wellsboro Gazette
 
for more go here

Friday, July 9, 2010

Pontypool
A lot of people refer to "Pontypool" as a zombie movie, but there's more to it than numbed out cannibals and lots of blood. This 2008 flick, to me at least, is very underrated and its "less is more" vibe makes the off-screen implications far more scary than any obvious gore fest that goes on in most horror. (Of course the cover doesn't help make my case, does it?:)  )

Its take on what makes the 'zombies' go viral is one of the most interesting I've seen and might possibly change the way you think about the English language and language in general...

more soon...

Thursday, July 8, 2010

cool site of the day:)

You might want to check out shoes...it's an interesting site!:)
Electric Blue / Over My Head 45 rpmShattered Dreams (2008 Digital Remaster)

Yesterday I was shopping at Whole Foods when the song "Electric Blue" came on over their loud speaker. It had been ages ago (maybe since it first was released?) that I'd last heard it and suddenly (against my will) I flashed to late 1987.

It's weird how certain songs and smells can send your mind reeling back to the past...as though both are some metaphysical form of time travel...not a metaphor for it...but actual time travel.

"Electric Blue" was a one-hit-wonder type deal by the group Icehouse and (to me, at least) sounded a lot like another late 80s hit called "Shattered Dreams" by Johnny Hates Jazz (also a group that never had another big hit again.) Both songs have this harmless enough sound, but somehow have the power to make me want to look for the nearest exit...the memories associated with them are sometimes too much.

Of course, I've found that "overexposure" to 'bad memory songs' can work wonders. I used to feel the same way about "Hungry Like the Wolf" by Duran Duran...but one day I sat down and played that song over and over until it lost its power and now whenever the song takes me by surprise I'm just fine:)
Hiding Out
When I was going through my old cassettes the other day I found the soundtrack to the 1987 film "Hiding Out." I'd forgotten how wonderful it is, how much it used to mean to me and popped it immediately into my boom box (that I set up a few months ago after getting tired of nothing but constant streams and downloads of digital music.)

...in the 80s I really only loved two songs on it. "Real Life" by Black Britain and Boy George's opening track "Live My Life." But now I hear the cohesiveness of all the songs in relation to the angst and frustrations of teenage life and the film in general... (see here for full track listing)

Friday, July 2, 2010

Night Work
Scissor Sisters' new album is their most "out there" album yet! It's amazing and they wear their Bee Gees/Queen/Elton John influences like a second skin. Some of the songs may be more fit for gay night clubs than mainstream audiences, but for anyone who loves their disco mercilessly beat-driven and all sweat-inducing...well...wow!!

Night Work certainly lacks subtley with its phallic imagery (just give "Harder You Get" a listen) but it also knows its way very well around the dancefloor. Forget the lascivious invitations for casual gettogethers and promises of safe sex (on songs such as "Whole New Way") and enjoy the show!:) Your cardiac work-out and dance-happy feet will thank you!

My favorite bonus?...on "Any Which Way" Kylie Minogue shows up in the chorus! Other highlights? On "Fire with Fire" (soundling eerily like the band Styx) the mood is light and hopeful and on title track "Night Work" the mood is actually a bit Loverboy's "Working for The Weekend"...both in content and spirit...the Scissor Sisters have definitely got their retro on throughout the entire album and that's a very good thing for anyone looking for a bit of  70s and early 80s nostalgia!:)
Wicker Park
The soundtrack to "Wicker Park" is one of my favorite albums and it's one of those rare instances (for me, at least) where I love every single song! Whether it's the melancholic and dreamy "Maybe Tomorrow" by the Stereophonics or Danny Loher's version of  "The Scientist" (so much more heartbreaking than Coldplay's) the sound is phenomenal...and like so many of my favorite soundtracks far better than the movie it goes with...