"Modern science is based on the Latin injunction ignoramus - 'we do not know'. It assumes that we don't know everything. Even more critically, it accepts that the things we think we know could be proven wrong as we gain more knowledge. No concept, idea or theory is sacred and beyond challenge". - Yuval Noah Harari. This blog is a documentation of my journey of enlightenment, knowledge, and the pursuit of physical and emotional well-being.
Friday, April 13, 2018
The History of Love - Nicole Strauss
I was blown away by this book!! It was slightly confusing and moved in many different ways, and the ending leaves a lot of room for interpretation, but I found my interpretation and meaning, and even found a little life lesson.
It's a beautifully written book, and thought-provoking, both in a self-reflecting way, and for the analysis of the story line.
Socrates in 90 Minutes - Paul Strathern
Prior to Socrates, much of the "sciences" were explained in terms of mythology and religion, whereas post Socrates thought was rooted in observation and rationalization. As soon as astronomic philosophy converted over to an observation based field, it became a science, and soon many studies were converted over to "sciences". But the semantics are not as important as the fact that conceptually, there was a revolution in the way that people thought - without dogma, and with rationality. In fact, the first university was founded by Socrates student, Plato.
I always loved the Socratic Paradox - "I know that I know nothing". It's the way I try to live my life, and the purpose for this blog. In this spirit, I have so much more to learn about Socrates and his teachings, so I give this book a 10/10 for reintroducing me to Socrates and for invigorating my desire to learn more.
Wednesday, April 11, 2018
Ikigai - Hector Garcia and Francesc Miralles
I can't remember how I happened upon this book. It may have been through the last book I read - Flow.
I had previously understood Ikigai to be the Japanese term for "purpose" in life, but in this book, the authors don't seem to differentiate Ikigai from things like eating well and exercising, and in fact give examples of both. Dan Buettner, in his Blue Zones books, makes Ikigai a separate concept, so I'm still not sure I understand the true meaning of the term.
Semantics aside, I think it's a great book for learning how to be happy and live a long time. It dovetails right in there with the other books I've read. What makes this book different from the others is that they provide examples of physical exercises or different kinds of food to eat.
Incorporated into my collection of books on how to optimize life, this is a great addition.
I had previously understood Ikigai to be the Japanese term for "purpose" in life, but in this book, the authors don't seem to differentiate Ikigai from things like eating well and exercising, and in fact give examples of both. Dan Buettner, in his Blue Zones books, makes Ikigai a separate concept, so I'm still not sure I understand the true meaning of the term.
Semantics aside, I think it's a great book for learning how to be happy and live a long time. It dovetails right in there with the other books I've read. What makes this book different from the others is that they provide examples of physical exercises or different kinds of food to eat.
Incorporated into my collection of books on how to optimize life, this is a great addition.
What I would listen to if I had 20 hours of car rides
I'll probably listen to all of these on my upcoming vacation since there will be lots of car rides.
- Reign In Blood - Slayer
- Demigod - Behemoth
- You Will Never Be One Of Us - Nails
- Blood Mantra - Decapitated
- Nightmare Logic - Power Trip
- The Impossibility of Reason - Chimaira
- Perserverence - Hatebreed
- Posthuman - Harms Way
- Tyranny of Will - Iron Reagan
- Beneath The Remains - Sepultura
- Vulgar Display of Power - Pantera
- Slaughter of the Soul - At The Gates
- Revolver - The Haunted
- Svart - Feared
- Beast - Despised Icon
- Born Hanged / Falsifier - Black Tongue
- Nightbringers - The Black Dahlia Murder
Friday, April 6, 2018
The history of death metal
I think it would be interesting to trace the history of death metal by listening to the important albums that shaped death metal through the 80s and early 90s. I plan to listen to the following albums from start to finish, chronologically to hear the evolution album by album. I've never heard some of these albums all the way through, so I think it would be fun.
So far I've
title | artist | year |
welcome to hell | venom | 1981 |
black metal | venom | 1982 |
show no mercy | slayer | 1983 |
morbid tales | celtic frost | 1984 |
to mega therion | celtic frost | 1985 |
hell awaits | slayer | 1985 |
endless pain | kreator | 1985 |
seven churches | possessed | 1985 |
reign in blood | slayer | 1986 |
scream bloody gore | death | 1987 |
leprosy | death | 1988 |
slowly we rot | obituary | 1989 |
severed survival | autopsy | 1989 |
altars of madness | morbid angel | 1989 |
deicide | deicide | 1990 |
left hand path | entombed | 1990 |
human | death | 1991 |
blessed are the sick | morbid angel | 1991 |
necrotism - descanting the insalubrious | carcass | 1991 |
effigy of the forgotten | suffocation | 1991 |
clandestine | entombed | 1991 |
butchered at birth | cannibal corpse | 1991 |
So far I've
Thursday, April 5, 2018
Flow - Mihaly Csikszentmihaly
This was a great book that talked about optimizing life through control of one's consciousness. Much of the book talked about examples, rather than "how-tos", but perhaps the intent was inspiration. In any case, this was a really great book that teaches how "autotelic personalities" reduce "psychic entropy" through "flow" - the ability to experience life with unimpeded joy and concentration.
Understanding Japan: A Cultural History - Mark J. Ravina
This is an excellent set of lectures about the history of Japan. Ravina goes through different topics, such as trade with Chinese and Koreans, theater, gardens, language, and ends with the events of 1989 that forever changed the course of Japan.
I didn't think I'd enjoy these lectures, as the last time I sat through lectures about history was in college, and I hated them then. I've gotten old. :)
I didn't think I'd enjoy these lectures, as the last time I sat through lectures about history was in college, and I hated them then. I've gotten old. :)
Monday, April 2, 2018
Ghosts of the Tsunami - Richard Lloyd Parry
In this book, Parry talks about the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, and the devastation that the tsunami caused. The primary focus is the death of students at Okawa Elementary, and the after effects.
It was very sad, but also illuminating of Japanese culture and to that end, it was very interesting. I felt that the brief sections on ghosts and possessions was almost gratuitous, and perhaps didn't need to be in the story. More interesting was the determination of the parents to find their children, and the government's unwillingness to take responsibility for the deaths, which were preventable and attributed to negligence on the part of the administration.
It was also interesting that the author worked in the election of Shinzo Abe as Prime Minister. It almost seemed unrelated to the aftereffects of the Tsunami, but perhaps represented a shift in the way the Japanese saw their government, much like what the U.S. is going through now.
I wasn't sure if I'd like is as much as I did, but it was a good book.
It was very sad, but also illuminating of Japanese culture and to that end, it was very interesting. I felt that the brief sections on ghosts and possessions was almost gratuitous, and perhaps didn't need to be in the story. More interesting was the determination of the parents to find their children, and the government's unwillingness to take responsibility for the deaths, which were preventable and attributed to negligence on the part of the administration.
It was also interesting that the author worked in the election of Shinzo Abe as Prime Minister. It almost seemed unrelated to the aftereffects of the Tsunami, but perhaps represented a shift in the way the Japanese saw their government, much like what the U.S. is going through now.
I wasn't sure if I'd like is as much as I did, but it was a good book.
Thursday, March 29, 2018
The best metal albums, by year
1986
Reign In Blood - Slayer
1989
Beneath The Remains - Sepultura
1990
Cowboys From Hell - Pantera
1991
Arise - Sepultura
1992
Vulgar Display of Power - Pantera
1993
Heartwork - Carcass
Hollowman - Entombed
1994
Far Beyond Driven - Pantera
1995
Slaughter of the Soul - At The Gates
1996
None So Vile - Cryptopsy
1999
Slipknot - Slipknot
2000
Wages of Sin - Arch Enemy
Killswitch Engage - Killswitch Engage
2001
Iowa - Slipknot
2002
In Their Darkened Shrines - Nile
2003
Anthems of Rebellion - Arch Enemy
The Impossibility of Reason - Chimaira
2004
Demigod - Behemoth
The Wretched Spawn - Cannibal Corpse
Epitaph - Necrophagist
2005
Doomsday Machine - Arch Enemy
I, Monarch - Hate Eternal
2006
The Stench of Redemption - Deicide
AssassiNation - Krisiun
2007
Icons of Evil - Vital Remains
Inflikted - Cavalera Conspiracy
The Apostasy - Behemoth
Xenosapien - Cephalic Carnage
The Atrocity Exhibition - Exhibit A - Exodus
2011
Carnival Is Forever - Decapitated
2012
To Hell With God - Deicide
2013
Bu-Tik - Chthonic
2014
Blood Mantra - Decapitated
The Tyranny of Will - Iron Reagan
2016
You Will Never Be One Of Us Nails
2017
Psychosis - Cavalera Conspiracy
Nightmare Logic - Power Trip
Anticult - Decapitated
2018
Posthuman - Harms Way
Reign In Blood - Slayer
1989
Beneath The Remains - Sepultura
1990
Cowboys From Hell - Pantera
1991
Arise - Sepultura
1992
Vulgar Display of Power - Pantera
1993
Heartwork - Carcass
Hollowman - Entombed
1994
Far Beyond Driven - Pantera
1995
Slaughter of the Soul - At The Gates
1996
None So Vile - Cryptopsy
1999
Slipknot - Slipknot
2000
Wages of Sin - Arch Enemy
Killswitch Engage - Killswitch Engage
2001
Iowa - Slipknot
2002
In Their Darkened Shrines - Nile
2003
Anthems of Rebellion - Arch Enemy
The Impossibility of Reason - Chimaira
2004
Demigod - Behemoth
The Wretched Spawn - Cannibal Corpse
Epitaph - Necrophagist
2005
Doomsday Machine - Arch Enemy
I, Monarch - Hate Eternal
2006
The Stench of Redemption - Deicide
AssassiNation - Krisiun
2007
Icons of Evil - Vital Remains
Inflikted - Cavalera Conspiracy
The Apostasy - Behemoth
Xenosapien - Cephalic Carnage
The Atrocity Exhibition - Exhibit A - Exodus
2011
Carnival Is Forever - Decapitated
2012
To Hell With God - Deicide
2013
Bu-Tik - Chthonic
2014
Blood Mantra - Decapitated
The Tyranny of Will - Iron Reagan
2016
You Will Never Be One Of Us Nails
2017
Psychosis - Cavalera Conspiracy
Nightmare Logic - Power Trip
Anticult - Decapitated
2018
Posthuman - Harms Way
Tuesday, March 20, 2018
Heidi Joubert
Maybe this isn't the best video of her, but Heidi Joubert just totally blows me away. She is an amazing hand percussionist and singer. So talented and charismatic. If and when I ever get a cajon, I plan to follow her instructional videos. She really inspires me!
Monday, March 19, 2018
My favorite things so far this year
It's only March, and there are so many things that I really enjoyed:
Why We Sleep book
Harms Way album
Black Panther movie
The Remains of the Day book
Paramore concert
Love Her Wild poetry book
James and the Giant Peach play
Why We Sleep book
Harms Way album
Black Panther movie
The Remains of the Day book
Paramore concert
Love Her Wild poetry book
James and the Giant Peach play
James and the Giant Peach
My son played the role of the Centipede in CTAA's production of James and the Giant Peach this weekend.
I am not a huge fan of musicals. I've seen maybe 3 professional musicals in my life - A Chorus Line on Broadway, The Lion King in Honolulu, and Big Fish in Chicago. Oh, and if you count it (I do), I saw Othello: The Remix at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater, so make that 4.
I've also seen too many local productions to count - mostly from my kids' performances in various studios.
It's not exaggerating to say that CTAA's production of James and the Giant Peach ranks up there with some of the professional productions.
First and foremost, the actors and actresses playing the parts were not only perfectly cast, but they were all very talented and entertaining. On the surface, the story was wacky and whimsical (a boy accidentally spills a magic potion on a peach tree, growing a peach and various insects huge), but the story was a vehicle for the characters to grow, learn to trust, and find in themselves a family.
The songs were wonderful and some were very touching. I saw the production twice. I wish I had seen it for all 4 showings - it was that good!!
I am not a huge fan of musicals. I've seen maybe 3 professional musicals in my life - A Chorus Line on Broadway, The Lion King in Honolulu, and Big Fish in Chicago. Oh, and if you count it (I do), I saw Othello: The Remix at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater, so make that 4.
I've also seen too many local productions to count - mostly from my kids' performances in various studios.
It's not exaggerating to say that CTAA's production of James and the Giant Peach ranks up there with some of the professional productions.
First and foremost, the actors and actresses playing the parts were not only perfectly cast, but they were all very talented and entertaining. On the surface, the story was wacky and whimsical (a boy accidentally spills a magic potion on a peach tree, growing a peach and various insects huge), but the story was a vehicle for the characters to grow, learn to trust, and find in themselves a family.
The songs were wonderful and some were very touching. I saw the production twice. I wish I had seen it for all 4 showings - it was that good!!
The Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby tops a lot of all-time best fiction lists, and since I've never read it, I felt it was time to read the classics.
Fitzgerald is a talented writer. I found the story to be mildly but not overly interesting. This is one of those books that has it's intrinsic value in style over the message or story. I didn't much develop an affinity for any of the characters, certainly not for the narrator Nick, nor did I see a lot of character development other than maybe Daisy.
It was okay. Not what I would put on a must-read fiction list, but maybe I just don't get it.
Fitzgerald is a talented writer. I found the story to be mildly but not overly interesting. This is one of those books that has it's intrinsic value in style over the message or story. I didn't much develop an affinity for any of the characters, certainly not for the narrator Nick, nor did I see a lot of character development other than maybe Daisy.
It was okay. Not what I would put on a must-read fiction list, but maybe I just don't get it.
Tuesday, March 13, 2018
Jim Adkins
I find that there are guitarists that, instead of being shredders, just write really cool riffs and cool parts. Jim Adkins, the guitarist and singer of Jimmy Eat World, is one of those guys. He writes great songs, and his parts fit in so well and are more than just strummy stuff. Chase This Light is one of my favorite albums of all time, start to finish.
Monday, March 12, 2018
Death Note
I finished the 12-book series. It was good and I can see why it was so popular in Japan, even though there was a story arc that seemed to dead end with no reason or explanation. It was a little confusing in the last 4 books, possibly due to my inattention to certain details. Overall it was a worth reading, though I don't know if I am a convert to manga just yet.
Love Her Wild - Atticus
Love Her Wild is a collection of poems, separated into three distinct sections - Love, Her and Wild. I really enjoy his poetry. I will seek out more by this talented poet.
Nocturnes - Kazuo Ishiguro
Having read and really enjoyed "Remains of the Day", I wanted to explore Ishiguro's other works. Unfortunately, "Nocturnes" fell a little flat to me. The book was a collection of five relatively short stories, but they didn't invoke reflection from me, even though the stories were close to my heart.
Despite the lack of resonance, I still think that Ishiguro is a great writer and story teller, and clearly well versed in his technical understanding of music, as well as knowledge of popular music.
Despite the lack of resonance, I still think that Ishiguro is a great writer and story teller, and clearly well versed in his technical understanding of music, as well as knowledge of popular music.
Monday, March 5, 2018
Today's guilty pleasure
I used to love this album. Then I couldn't stand it. I'm on and off with Gary Cherone's voice, but I've always loved Nuno Bettencourt's playing. I guess being that Nuno is a huge Beatles and Queen fan, it would make sense for him to have Cherone singing.
Cherone's singing is cheesy to me. He retains all of the campiness of a larger-than-life singer, with none of the coolness. I cringe when I watch him perform.
But I don't listen to Extreme for the lead vocals. They have great songs, the guitar playing is jaw-dropping, and the harmony vocals are sweet. Nuno is one of my favorite guitar players that was active in the late 80s/early 90s.... and I feel he passed the mantle to Dimebag for badass EVH influenced guitar playing.
I go back and visit this album from time to time, but it's sometimes hard to listen to. I had to wash my ears out with death metal. :)
Cherone's singing is cheesy to me. He retains all of the campiness of a larger-than-life singer, with none of the coolness. I cringe when I watch him perform.
But I don't listen to Extreme for the lead vocals. They have great songs, the guitar playing is jaw-dropping, and the harmony vocals are sweet. Nuno is one of my favorite guitar players that was active in the late 80s/early 90s.... and I feel he passed the mantle to Dimebag for badass EVH influenced guitar playing.
I go back and visit this album from time to time, but it's sometimes hard to listen to. I had to wash my ears out with death metal. :)
James and the Giant Peach - Roald Dahl
My son will be performing as the Centipede in a production of James and the Giant Peach in a few weeks, so I wanted to read the book.
Roald Dahl also wrote "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory", which was my favorite book as a kid. James and the Giant Peach was equally strange, with interesting but odd characters. Dahl is a great and imaginative writer, and I enjoyed this book!
Roald Dahl also wrote "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory", which was my favorite book as a kid. James and the Giant Peach was equally strange, with interesting but odd characters. Dahl is a great and imaginative writer, and I enjoyed this book!
The Remains of the Day - Kazuo Ishiguro
I heard from a friend that Ishiguro won the Nobel prize for literature, and won the Man Booker Prize for The Remains of the Day. My unfamiliarity with Ishiguro made me wonder how a Japanese man could write about an English butler in a compelling and award winning way. But my mistake was in assuming that he is Japanese. Rather, moving to England as a 5-year old, his nationality was British while his ethnicity was Japanese (lesson - don't assume one's nationality by his/her name).
The subject matter of this book was interesting, but there weren't any grand or dramatic occurrences. I think the mark of a memorable book is how the main character is multi-dimensional and develops throughout the book, and the main character in this book, Mr. Stevens, hits that mark, as he contemplates his life in service as a butler to Lord Darlington and later to Mr. Farraday in Darlington Hall. The story is based in his present time spent on an expedition to see Ms. Kenton, a former maid in Darlington Hall, though much of the book is a recollection of his previous years working with Ms. Kenton.
It's a beautifully written book. Though I don't read a lot of fiction, I felt that this was the best fiction I've read since 1984, and I totally understand why it won awards and was made into a movie.
On an odd note.... this audiobook was read by Simon Prebble, who also read the audiobook for 1984 that I listened to last year. These two happen to be my two favorite fiction books. But since 1984 had a huge impact on me, I associate Prebble's voice with Winston from 1984, a tortured soul. To heard "Winston's" voice narrating Mr. Stevens was initially unnerving, but I got used to it.
The subject matter of this book was interesting, but there weren't any grand or dramatic occurrences. I think the mark of a memorable book is how the main character is multi-dimensional and develops throughout the book, and the main character in this book, Mr. Stevens, hits that mark, as he contemplates his life in service as a butler to Lord Darlington and later to Mr. Farraday in Darlington Hall. The story is based in his present time spent on an expedition to see Ms. Kenton, a former maid in Darlington Hall, though much of the book is a recollection of his previous years working with Ms. Kenton.
It's a beautifully written book. Though I don't read a lot of fiction, I felt that this was the best fiction I've read since 1984, and I totally understand why it won awards and was made into a movie.
On an odd note.... this audiobook was read by Simon Prebble, who also read the audiobook for 1984 that I listened to last year. These two happen to be my two favorite fiction books. But since 1984 had a huge impact on me, I associate Prebble's voice with Winston from 1984, a tortured soul. To heard "Winston's" voice narrating Mr. Stevens was initially unnerving, but I got used to it.
Thursday, March 1, 2018
Another Paramore post
I was caught off guard.
I listen to metal, almost exclusively these days. Prior to this album, I was listening to a steady rotation of Harm's Way, Nails, Power Trip, Iron Reagan, etc.
The only time I listen to anything else is when my daughter plays stuff in the car. I know she likes Paramore, so I took her to the concert (see previous post).
In preparation for the show, I put a playlist together, and just totally got into this band. Their songs are amazing, and the guitar playing is inventive and unusual, but always appropriate for the song.
After Laughter is a great album. Like their most recent stuff, the songs are bass driven in a Motown kind of way. I'm sure this had something to do with producer Justin Meldal-Johnsen, who is an experienced bass player who has played with Beck and Nine Inch Nails.
I think after listening to so much heavy stuff, it's refreshing for me to listen to stuff that has guitar playing that's subtly awesome. Paramore has that in spades.
Oh, and Hayley Williams is a pretty good singer too. :)
Monday, February 26, 2018
Paramore
Hayley Williams is an amazing singer and frontwoman. This was the last stop on their tour but her voice was none worse for the wear. She belted out every song like it was their first tour.
Taylor York is a great guitarist and a fantastic showman. It was so entertaining to watch him. I also love his guitar playing - very inventive in the context of pop songs. The guitar tones sounded very midrangy as we were listening to them sound checking, but in the mix, they sat perfectly.
Zac Farro was a super solid drummer and through the band's recordings, I've found him to be very inventive. The drum sound at the venue was great, though overall the sound was kind of mediocre. He also stepped out to sing a song by his band Halfnoise.
In preparation for the concert, I had listened to their entire setlist and loved the material. I also read about the band's history, and about how Williams wanted this to be a band effort rather than a solo project, despite her being personally signed to a record label. Listening to the songs and the efforts by the musicians, I can understand why. They are all very inventive musicians, and I like how the later material is very bass driven. In fact, it's not a surprise that songs like "Ain't It Fun", with the really cool bass line, were produced by Justin Meldel Johnson, a bass player himself.
I might be late to the game, but I'm now a big Paramore fan.
Friday, February 23, 2018
Fury - Ektomorf
I've heard some Ektomorf in the past and really like them. The lead singer and guitarist is not shy to show his Max Cavalera influence, both visually (camo ESP guitars) and musically.
Being a huge Max fan, I appreciate this. I've only gotten three tracks into this album so far, but I really like it. Hopefully it will rise to the level that the new Harms Way has and be one of my favorite albums of 2018!
Thursday, February 22, 2018
Promise Me, Dad - Joe Biden
A memoir of part of this time in office, "Promise Me, Dad" is a poignant and enlightening story revolving around the decline and loss of his son Beau to brain cancer. I learned about Biden's involvement with foreign policy, specifically the Sunni, Shiites and Kurds in Iraq, the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, and the foreign aid given to the Northern Triangle (Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador). I learned about the experimental cancer treatments given to Beau, and about Beau's legacy as Attorney General of Delaware.
Maybe most importantly, I learned about the compassion and dedication of not just Biden, but his entire family, and also of Barack Obama as he helped Joe deal with the grief of losing his son.
Through his Vice Presidency, I didn't know a lot about what Biden had done, but this book shed some light on that. He also talks about his decision not to run for President, but in hindsight, for the good of the country, I wish he had.
It was also a story of hope - hope that you can be okay, after a loss. This was an important message to me.
This was a great book.
Maybe most importantly, I learned about the compassion and dedication of not just Biden, but his entire family, and also of Barack Obama as he helped Joe deal with the grief of losing his son.
Through his Vice Presidency, I didn't know a lot about what Biden had done, but this book shed some light on that. He also talks about his decision not to run for President, but in hindsight, for the good of the country, I wish he had.
It was also a story of hope - hope that you can be okay, after a loss. This was an important message to me.
This was a great book.
Tuesday, February 20, 2018
Boss HM-2
The Boss HM-2 is a distortion pedal that was made in Japan between 1983-1988. Production was moved to Taiwan between 1989-1991, after which it was discontinued.
It has recently attained cult status because of it's use on seminal metal recordings in the 90s, particularly Entombed and At The Gates. It's seem a recent resurgence due to bands like Nails and Harm's Way.
Liking bands from both of these eras, I bought one recently. It is a great sounding pedal, in it's crappy way, if you know what I mean. It's not meant to emulate fat refined Marshall tone. It's meant to be brash and obnoxious. I love this pedal!
Simon Prebble
Upon listening to the first hour of the audiobook "Remains of the Day", by Kazuo Ishiguro, the reader sounded strangely familiar. It occurred to me that the narrator of the butler in "Remains" reminded me of Winston from the audiobook version of "1984", and I discovered that Simon Prebble narrated both of these books.
I never thought about how much I associate certain voices with certain stories, so much so that Prebble's voice seems like Winston's actual voice to me. That makes it slightly challenging to listen to "Remains of the Day", except that the storyline seems completely different from 1984.
Still, it's weird, because 1984 is one of my favorite books, and Prebble's voiceover is a big part of that. He is a very good reader though!
I never thought about how much I associate certain voices with certain stories, so much so that Prebble's voice seems like Winston's actual voice to me. That makes it slightly challenging to listen to "Remains of the Day", except that the storyline seems completely different from 1984.
Still, it's weird, because 1984 is one of my favorite books, and Prebble's voiceover is a big part of that. He is a very good reader though!
Black Panther
We saw "Black Panther" this weekend. It was a really good movie! First and foremost, it was an exciting, epic movie in the modern Disney style, replete with Star Wars styled dogfight scenes, excellent sword play, and one-on-one fighting.
On another level, it was a socially aware movie that suggested that the solution to race related problems is not the arming of oppressed people - rather, it suggested positive dialog and sharing. Maybe a little idealistic, but I thought it was an interesting suggestion.
It lacked some of the wacky humor of recent Marvel movies, but I like the contrasts of each recent Marvel Studios movie.
On another level, it was a socially aware movie that suggested that the solution to race related problems is not the arming of oppressed people - rather, it suggested positive dialog and sharing. Maybe a little idealistic, but I thought it was an interesting suggestion.
It lacked some of the wacky humor of recent Marvel movies, but I like the contrasts of each recent Marvel Studios movie.
It Was Me All Along - Andie Mitchell
In "It Was Me All Along", Andie Mitchell talks about her eating disorders, and her life experiences that contributed to them. It's a story of transformation, filled with a lot of stories that I think are relate able to anyone who has had any kind of troubled relationship with food. There was a lot that of female specific issues but overall, I think this is a non-gender specific book.
I like this passage, towards the end:
"In grieving the end of our relationship, I'd gained 15 pounds. And slowly, as I felt the balance restored, I accepted them as part of me. Maybe I'd lose them, maybe I wouldn't. Either way, I had to be kind to myself. What I discovered in that year, and perhaps in all of my life, was that I am always growing, always learning. And whenever I think I've figured it all out, I've really only just begun."
I really enjoyed this - maybe one of the better books I've read so far this year.
I like this passage, towards the end:
"In grieving the end of our relationship, I'd gained 15 pounds. And slowly, as I felt the balance restored, I accepted them as part of me. Maybe I'd lose them, maybe I wouldn't. Either way, I had to be kind to myself. What I discovered in that year, and perhaps in all of my life, was that I am always growing, always learning. And whenever I think I've figured it all out, I've really only just begun."
I really enjoyed this - maybe one of the better books I've read so far this year.
Friday, February 16, 2018
Dave Lombardo, again
"I don't like guys like that either. I walk into a room and people don't know who I am and then I see their attitudes, and when they find out who I am they drop their guard. 'Oh, Dave, how are you?' but before that, they had all this ego. It's like, I don't deal with people like that. My dad always said 'Never think you're better than anyone else' you know, and I've held that throughout my life. I'm first a human being like everybody else. I just have a different job. And just because I have this job it doesn't put me in a power to treat people different or to use people. I don't like people like that so I refuse to be one of them."
I love this statement and identify with it. I've never felt that my job as an engineer puts me above the secretaries, or the janitor, or anyone else. And I've never felt in any of my bands that my ability as a guitar player or leader of a group makes anyone else's opinions or preferences diminish.
For Lombardo to have this kind of humility, gives me something to aspire to. He's one of my favorite drummers, but he's definitely a very cool human being too.
I think it's so cool that he has a shirt designed specifically for him, and I bought one of his limited edition shirts! I want to support him in any way I can.
Thursday, February 15, 2018
A beautiful bento box
I went looking for a bento box this past weekend, but couldn't find anything that I thought was really nice and had a lot of utility. Everything at the store was plastic, and seemed to be sized for children.
Fast forward to Tuesday, and I found a beautiful okurimono (gift) left on my desk by a friend who visited Japan last year.
This bento box is perfect - two separate compartments for rice on the bottom and okazu on the top. A beautiful gift from a good friend.
Fast forward to Tuesday, and I found a beautiful okurimono (gift) left on my desk by a friend who visited Japan last year.
This bento box is perfect - two separate compartments for rice on the bottom and okazu on the top. A beautiful gift from a good friend.
Friday, February 9, 2018
Modern Pain
While searching for Self Deconstruction albums, I found this album with the same name by a band called Modern Pain. It's freaking awesome!
Japanese grindcore
I am blown away by Japanese all-girl grindcore! There are two bands that are so good.
Flagitious Idiosyncrasy in the Dilapidation - what a strange name! But they are just shredding.
Self Deconstruction is also amazing.
They don't have releases on Apple, so I'll have to find their music elsewhere. From their videos though, they are crazy good! Much better than, ahem, Babymetal.
Flagitious Idiosyncrasy in the Dilapidation - what a strange name! But they are just shredding.
Self Deconstruction is also amazing.
They don't have releases on Apple, so I'll have to find their music elsewhere. From their videos though, they are crazy good! Much better than, ahem, Babymetal.
Thursday, February 8, 2018
Death Note
I have never read a Manga comic in my life, and know very little about what Manga even is. My first ever Manga book is Death Note. It's pretty interesting and fun and easy to read.
Death Note is about a kid named Light who discovers a book left in the human realm by Ryuk, who is a Shinigami (God of Death). The book has the power to kill people, if you write their name in it and visualize the person. Light uses the book to start murdering criminals, and becomes hunted by a mysterious crime fighter.
The only thing that's kind of funny is that the e-book flips right to left, the panels on each page read right to left, the word bubbles read right to left.... but the text in the word bubbles read left to right!
Death Note is about a kid named Light who discovers a book left in the human realm by Ryuk, who is a Shinigami (God of Death). The book has the power to kill people, if you write their name in it and visualize the person. Light uses the book to start murdering criminals, and becomes hunted by a mysterious crime fighter.
The only thing that's kind of funny is that the e-book flips right to left, the panels on each page read right to left, the word bubbles read right to left.... but the text in the word bubbles read left to right!
Monday, February 5, 2018
Music list 2018
Albums I'm looking forward to:
"Old" stuff to check out:
Xibalba
Pig Destroyer
New releases to check out:
Thunderbolt - Saxon (classic metal)
Rocknroll Machine - Turbonegro (punk rock and roll)
Down Below - Tribulation (Gothic black metal)
Catharsis - Machine Head (Slipknot)
Order of Torment - Genocide Pact (vintage death metal)
Into Beyond - LIVLOS (thrashy death)
The Awakening - Wrath Sins (sorta Mastodon-ish/nu-metalish)
Puncuring the Grotesque - Autopsy (old school death metal)
We Exist Even Dead - Eventide (djent)
Fury - Ektomorf (3/16)
Beasts of Burgundy - Squirrel Nut Zippers (3/23)
Rotation - Marc Rizzo (3/30)
To Drink From The Night Itself - At The Gates (5/18)
- Eyes Set To Kill - Eyes Set To Kill (2/16)
- Posthuman - Harms Way (2/9)
- Firepower - Judas Priest (3/9)
"Old" stuff to check out:
Xibalba
Pig Destroyer
New releases to check out:
Thunderbolt - Saxon (classic metal)
Rocknroll Machine - Turbonegro (punk rock and roll)
Down Below - Tribulation (Gothic black metal)
Catharsis - Machine Head (Slipknot)
Order of Torment - Genocide Pact (vintage death metal)
Into Beyond - LIVLOS (thrashy death)
The Awakening - Wrath Sins (sorta Mastodon-ish/nu-metalish)
Puncuring the Grotesque - Autopsy (old school death metal)
We Exist Even Dead - Eventide (djent)
Fury - Ektomorf (3/16)
Beasts of Burgundy - Squirrel Nut Zippers (3/23)
Rotation - Marc Rizzo (3/30)
To Drink From The Night Itself - At The Gates (5/18)
Sting-Ray Afternoons - Steve Rushin
Steve Rushin is just about the exact same age as me, and I think this book appeals to readers in close proximity to our age. Growing up in the 70s, there are lots of things that only people that grew up in our era will understand and identify with.
However, familiarity and nostalgia can only go so far. Steve Rushin's biography is relatively uninteresting, so no matter how much times he references the theme from Good Times, or Farah Fawcett posters, I was pretty bored and just felt like getting this book over with.
However, familiarity and nostalgia can only go so far. Steve Rushin's biography is relatively uninteresting, so no matter how much times he references the theme from Good Times, or Farah Fawcett posters, I was pretty bored and just felt like getting this book over with.
Hardcore and thrash
There are a lot of relatively newer bands out that I really like. Maybe because they capture the essence of stuff that I've been into for awhile - stuff like Arise-era Sepultura, Pennywise, and Nails.
Terror put out a really great EP called "The Walls Will Fall" in 2017. It's thrashy and hardcore and reminds me a bit of Hatebreed.
Harm's Way has a new album coming out called Posthuman, that sounds like Max Cavalera meets Nails.
Incendiary sounds like Zak DeLaRocha singing over hardcore. Their "Thousand Mile Stare" is awesome!
And I've been raving about Power Trip's 2017 album "Nightmare Logic". It's one of my favorite albums of the 2010s.
Terror put out a really great EP called "The Walls Will Fall" in 2017. It's thrashy and hardcore and reminds me a bit of Hatebreed.
Harm's Way has a new album coming out called Posthuman, that sounds like Max Cavalera meets Nails.
Incendiary sounds like Zak DeLaRocha singing over hardcore. Their "Thousand Mile Stare" is awesome!
And I've been raving about Power Trip's 2017 album "Nightmare Logic". It's one of my favorite albums of the 2010s.
Friday, February 2, 2018
The Death of Expertise - Tom Nichols
This title of this book is, as the author initially states, pretentious and self important. But it makes a lot of sense to me. The basic concept of the book is that Americans are arrogantly proud of their ignorance. Nichols says that we have gone from an intelligent society, to an ignorant society, to a arrogantly incorrect society. I believe this book was heavily influenced by the 2016 U.S. Presidential elections.
I haven't done any fact checking (ha - the moral of this book), but if he says that people don't regard expert advise because of the college system and the media, it makes some sense to me.
I see ignorance proliferate even in my workplace, with people that have college and advanced degrees. It's disheartening to know that even intelligent informed opinions elude some of the most educated people.
I think what Nichols fails to examine is the lack of emotional or interpersonal or intrapersonal intelligence, as described by Daniel Goleman or Howard Gardner. I believe that this is a factor that makes certain people arrogantly incorrect.
Regardless, I think this is a good book that attempts to explain why American society is uninformed and doesn't care, and a wake-up call to Americans to think more critically. Unfortunately, I'm sure most of the readers of the book are the choir being preached to.
I haven't done any fact checking (ha - the moral of this book), but if he says that people don't regard expert advise because of the college system and the media, it makes some sense to me.
I see ignorance proliferate even in my workplace, with people that have college and advanced degrees. It's disheartening to know that even intelligent informed opinions elude some of the most educated people.
I think what Nichols fails to examine is the lack of emotional or interpersonal or intrapersonal intelligence, as described by Daniel Goleman or Howard Gardner. I believe that this is a factor that makes certain people arrogantly incorrect.
Regardless, I think this is a good book that attempts to explain why American society is uninformed and doesn't care, and a wake-up call to Americans to think more critically. Unfortunately, I'm sure most of the readers of the book are the choir being preached to.
Thursday, February 1, 2018
God Is Not Great - Christopher Hitchens
I could not get through the first half hour of this audiobook.
The content is fine, and I've read a couple of pro-atheism books (Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins).
The problem is the author is the reader of the audiobook. His volume fluctuations are so severe that I have to turn it up super loud to understand his soft passages, which make his loud proclamations jarring.
I have this on paperback, so I'll read that instead.
The content is fine, and I've read a couple of pro-atheism books (Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins).
The problem is the author is the reader of the audiobook. His volume fluctuations are so severe that I have to turn it up super loud to understand his soft passages, which make his loud proclamations jarring.
I have this on paperback, so I'll read that instead.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)