Saturday, April 19, 2008

SNOW! Bright and white, but it's a touch too warm for it to stick through tomorrow.

Sitemeter Sez: Winston Salem, North Carolina; Toronto, Ontario; Albuquerque, New Mexico and Louth, Ireland (Love To Ya' Eavan!)

ROCK against Reaganomics at: Theater X-Net




Starring: Ida Rubinstein Belle Epoch Russian/Parisian beauty.
Ida's Places in Paris -- from my first jet-lagged day by the Seine.
Read more about Ida in Sisters of Salome by Toni Bentley




Visit: Michael's Montana Web Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
NEW --Launching NOW! Outre Space Cinema -- Featuring: 1930's Rocketry, Spitfires of the Spaceways and Cellulose to Celluloid, Flash Gordon in the Saturday Matinees and Sunday Comics -- UPDATED!





Many thanks to Jim Keefe (Visit his Website) -- the LAST Flash Gordon illustrator of the 20th Century, and Flash's first illustrator of the 21st, for his recommendations -- HERE!

Charity Alert: Check into Terra Sigilata blog -- donate $$$ to cancer patients just by clicking onto the site. Keep that Resolution to click on The Hunger Site every day.

In The Community: The Hockaday Museum of Art features abstractionist George Gogas, our annual Children's Show, and local High School Art Show. I'm glad there wasn't much snow to shovel off this morning.
The Music of Carmen is the theme of one more Honors Symposium session tomorrow -- it's a ticketed event with the Glacier Symphony & Chorale.
Check out Fall for Glacier -- a fundraiser for several programs that make Glacier National Park even better!

Media Watch: The Metropolitan Opera was doing a Phillip Glass piece from 1979. There's as much to SEE as there is to HEAR, but I've always enjoyed Glass' music anyway.
I saw Shekhar Kapur's second Elizabeth movie with Cate Blanchett on video. It wasn't as bad as I feared, but I wouldn't call it a good movie either. Clive Owen was OK as Raleigh, and Geoffrey Rush was excellent as Lizzie's loyally psychopathic Komissar, but no amount of quality acting could have saved that sorry-assed script.
Sir Walter Raleigh is an interesting historical figure. It's JUST possible that he was Elizabeth I's lover, but he led his own rambunctious life with and without her favor. The movie packs too many events into the time before 1588, including some that didn't happen until later. I'm afraid that Raleigh's closeness to Good Queen Bess created many enemies for him, and they pounced after her death. Despite all of his other crimes, I doubt very much that he conspired against King James, but the fact that an aquaintance did was enough to send him back to the Tower of London for a decade or so. His brutal pirate attacks in America after his release convinced James' government to send him to the headman's block.
The movie mentions pirate Sir Francis Drake and Admiral Lord Howard once. Pirate John Hawkins and explorer Martin Frobisher are not mentioned at all. Whatever part Raleigh played in the desperate fight against Phillip II's Invincible Armada, it was not central to the campaign, despite the movie.
The defeat of the Armada was an object lesson in persistance -- the English and Dutch were outmanned and outgunned, but they prevented the Spanish invaders from achieving most of their goals just by fighting back. The all-important rendevous with the Duke of Parma never happened, and Drake's earlier raid on Cadiz meant there were fewer warships sailing against them too. The fireships scattered frightened Spanish captains, and when the weather turned bad, the fleet couldn't hold together as the English kept attacking. More than a third of the ships were eventually lost, and less than half of them returned to Spain.
The filmmakers blew their opportunity to make a cinematic drama of the Armada's fate, even though they tried to make hay out of Elizabeth's REAL speech at Tilbury:
I am come amongst you as you see at this time, not for my recreation and disport, but being resolved, in the midst and heat of battle, to live or die amongst you all - to lay down for my God, and for my kingdoms, and for my people, my honour and my blood even in the dust. I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of a king - and of a king of England too, and think foul scorn that Parma or Spain, or any prince of Europe, should dare to invade the borders of my realm; to which, rather than any dishonour should grow by me, I myself will take up arms ...
She wasn't exactly in harm's way at the time, but if Spain's luck had changed, they would have sailed right up the Thames Estuary, where she spoke those words.
I think this gang stuck with costumes and romance because they were easier to plot ala' Harlequin Books. The Godfather-like intrigue and violence came back from the previous movie because they'd gotten away with it before.
Not that the Elizabethan Age wasn't cruel or violent, it was! Mary, Queen of Scots, was as arrogant and double-dealing as the movie said, and the Armada was sent partly as retaliation for her execution. Phillip II might have been a heartless ideologue, but he wasn't an idiot, and his family's empire endured for over two more centuries, to the great misfortune of most of it's subjects.
After seeing Helen Mirrin's miniseries about Bessie, I'm pretty sure Kapur is hustling the money for a third movie as I write this -- the rise and fall of Royal Cousin Essex, for sure, with maybe Bill Shakespeare and Burbage's theaters around London Bridge thrown in for good measure, perhaps. I hope I'm wrong.
In the meantime, Cate Blanchett still deserves Academy Awards for all her good acting!


Australian-born Cate Blanchett in an extensively-reworked image from a fashion modeling session. She's married with at least two children, and it's fun to acknowledge living actors with private lives that are private!

Friday, April 18, 2008

The weather pattern is still the same -- dry in the valley, snowy in the mountains. The local newspaper ran pictures of the Ospreys at Dry Bridge Slough.

Sitemeter Sez: Gav, near Barcelona, Spain (Magpie Music/Dance fans); Hyderabad, India; Loma Linda, California; (Coulda been Nigel Olsson or Davey Johnstone reading about themselves); Toronto, Ontario; Vienna, Austria; San Leandro, California and Stozo Da' Klown in Jamaica, New York.

ROCK against Reaganomics at: Theater X-Net




Starring: Ida Rubinstein Belle Epoch Russian/Parisian beauty.
Ida's Places in Paris -- from my first jet-lagged day by the Seine.
Read more about Ida in Sisters of Salome by Toni Bentley




Visit: Michael's Montana Web Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
NEW --Launching NOW! Outre Space Cinema -- Featuring: 1930's Rocketry, Spitfires of the Spaceways and Cellulose to Celluloid, Flash Gordon in the Saturday Matinees and Sunday Comics -- UPDATED!





Many thanks to Jim Keefe (Visit his Website) -- the LAST Flash Gordon illustrator of the 20th Century, and Flash's first illustrator of the 21st, for his recommendations -- HERE!

Charity Alert: Check into Terra Sigilata blog -- donate $$$ to cancer patients just by clicking onto the site. Keep that Resolution to click on The Hunger Site every day.

In The Community: The last Honors Symposium for this year was "Why Be Moral?" with Dr. Dane Scott from Missoula. Self-interest and "flourishing" as a person seem to be the keys to why being principled is a good choice, which is my observation too. Plato's character Glaucus, from the ani-democratic dialogue Republic, who was the model for Machievelli's Prince got his predictable licks in, though.
The Hockaday Museum of Art features abstractionist George Gogas, our annual Children's Show, and local High School Art Show.
Check out Fall for Glacier -- a fundraiser for several programs that make Glacier National Park even better!

Media Watch:

The great British 'Scream Queen' Hazel Court just passed away at the age of 82. Her long-awaited memoir will be published later this year, but she won't be able to autograph it. Curses, I should have sent her a fan letter when I first heard of her book.


(L to R) Prim Hazel Court faces off with leather-clad Helen Laffer in the magnificently wretched classic Devil Girl From Mars.
Hazel stands right where she belongs, next to fellow Britisher Boris (William Pratt) Karloff on the big Technicolor screen in The Raven.
(Click for a larger image.)


Here's a dandy Fan Site about this level-headed, talented, model and actress, plus a photo from his archives:


The public asks, and even demands, many actresses to show their bodies. It is much harder to convincingly display the emotions which comprise a character. Hazel Court was capable of all the requirements an actress faces, and did her work with grace and good humor -- or humour as she probably spelled it.


Last of all, the opening poetry recitation from The Raven by Richard Matheson and Roger Corman. The rest of the movie is a fairly good genre parody starring Boris Karloff, Peter Lorre, Vincent Price, Jack Nicholson, and the recently-departed Ms. Court:

Thursday, April 17, 2008

It isn't as cold as yesterday -- that damn wind isn't sucking the warmth out of everything today.

Sitemeter Sez: Castelldefels, near Barcelona, Spain; Zwijndrecht, Holland; Marietta, Georgia; New Orleans, Louisiana; Albuquerque, New Mexico and Topeka, Kansas.

ROCK against Reaganomics at: Theater X-Net




Starring: Ida Rubinstein Belle Epoch Russian/Parisian beauty.
Ida's Places in Paris -- from my first jet-lagged day by the Seine.
Read more about Ida in Sisters of Salome by Toni Bentley




Visit: Michael's Montana Web Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
NEW --Launching NOW! Outre Space Cinema -- Featuring: 1930's Rocketry, Spitfires of the Spaceways and Cellulose to Celluloid, Flash Gordon in the Saturday Matinees and Sunday Comics -- UPDATED!





Many thanks to Jim Keefe (Visit his Website) -- the LAST Flash Gordon illustrator of the 20th Century, and Flash's first illustrator of the 21st, for his recommendations -- HERE!

Charity Alert: Check into Terra Sigilata blog -- donate $$$ to cancer patients just by clicking onto the site. Keep that Resolution to click on The Hunger Site every day.

In The Community: Our college is celebrating Earth Day -- lots of activities around the noon hour. The last Honors Symposium for this year is TONIGHT -- "Why Be Moral?" with Dr. Dane Scott from Missoula.
The Hockaday Museum of Art features abstractionist George Gogas, our annual Children's Show, and local High School Art Show.
Check out Fall for Glacier -- a fundraiser for several programs that make Glacier National Park even better!

Media Watch: Ridiculous! -- That idiotic right-wing talking-point fest on ABC last night was NOT a debate.

Sublime -- I don't necessarily agree with everything I say.
The new electronic interdependence recreates the world in the image of a global village.
Marshall McLuhan, "Gutenberg Galaxy", 1962
There is absolutely no inevitability as long as there is a willingness to contemplate what is happening. The medium is the message. Marshall McLuhan, "Understanding Media", 1964

In The Mechanical Bride (my personal favorite -- see tribute below) McLuhan mused that attempts to analyze Mass Media's assault on us all might be the key to wresting away some of its power for our OWN benefit.


Speaking of Mechanical Brides:




Sing Along!
(Cadence and melody similar to Aerosmith's later Walk This Way)

Her neon mouth with the blinkers-off smile
It's nothing but electric sign
You could say she has an image of a sort
She's a part of a carnival time

Secretly seen, those chrome-covered clothes
You wear cause you have no other
But I suppose no one knows
You're my plastic fantastic lover

Her rattlin' cough never shuts off
Is nothin' but a used machine
Her aluminium finish, slightly diminished
Is the best I ever have seen

Cosmetic baby plugged into me
I'd never ever find another
But I realize no one's wise
To my plastic fantastic lover

The electrical dust is starting to rust
Her trapezoid thermometer taste
All the red tape is mechanical rape
Of the TV program waste

Data control and IBM
Science is mankind's brother
But all I see is drainin' me
On my plastic fantastic lover!

Marty Balin 1966-67


McLuhan might have made a vain promise, or set a difficult goal, because Corporate Media mutated into a whole other creature since our humorous savant passed away in 1980. The Right Wing ironically co-opted the Far Left's Post-Modernism and transformed what was once called Mass Media into a propaganda network on the level of Pravda(Truth), Izvestiya (News), and Goebbels' Third Reich.

The joke used to be that there was no Pravda in Izvestiya, or Izvestiya in Pravda and vice versa -- too bad it was wasn't really a joke.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

It got cold again as Monday rolled around. It's a taxing Tuesday too! Spring is still marching in, and the Ospreys are pulling fish out of the slough.

Sitemeter Sez: Hyderabad, India; Bedfordshire, UK; Toronto, Ontario; Chicago, Illinois; Columbus, Ohio; Carbondale, Illinois and Barcelona, Spain.

ROCK against Reaganomics at: Theater X-Net




Starring: Ida Rubinstein Belle Epoch Russian/Parisian beauty.
Ida's Places in Paris -- from my first jet-lagged day by the Seine.
Read more about Ida in Sisters of Salome by Toni Bentley




Visit: Michael's Montana Web Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
NEW --Launching NOW! Outre Space Cinema -- Featuring: 1930's Rocketry, Spitfires of the Spaceways and Cellulose to Celluloid, Flash Gordon in the Saturday Matinees and Sunday Comics -- UPDATED!





Many thanks to Jim Keefe (Visit his Website) -- the LAST Flash Gordon illustrator of the 20th Century, and Flash's first illustrator of the 21st, for his recommendations -- HERE!

Charity Alert: Keep that Resolution to click on The Hunger Site every day. Also check into Terra Sigilata blog -- donate $$$ to cancer patients just by clicking onto the site.

In The Community: The Honors Symposium at FVCC this week is "Why Be Moral?" Dr. Dane Scott will hopefully treat it at a real, rather than a hypothetical, question.
The Hockaday Museum of Art features abstractionist George Gogas, our annual Children's Show, and local High School Art Show. The Student Art show for FVCC is going up on the walls now, but I don't have anything to do with that one.
Check out Fall for Glacier -- a fundraiser for several programs that make Glacier National Park even better!

Media Watch: Trash A Go Go -- Botox Queen Donna DeDead had a tough routine and should be the next to go. Judging was harsh. Miraculous Marlee Matlin deserved a higher score, but her partner should pay attention to where she does well, and where she gets into trouble. (Clue -- keep a hold on her and maintain visual contact.) Derek's two recent hospital stays seemed to make a difference in his partner's performance. (She's new to this stuff!) Edyta and the Big Guy were better than the judges let on, so were Tracy Turnblatt and Tony. Kristi Yamaguchi still has the inside track, although Mario and Karina were right on her heels. Cheryl Burke and her Big Hunk need a breakthrough soon -- I like him, but he's not improving as fast as the other actors in this round.

UPDATE -- Botox Queen was voted off Dancing with the Stars. (Good food and exercise are kinder to one's looks than quack doctors and needles.) Ex-champ Cheryl Burke and Christiane were in the bottom two -- everybody's gotta dance up their potential from now on, if they're going to last long enough to catch Kristi. Derek's pretty partner should smile more -- she just looks better that way, and she's very trainable. I liked the Latin band, plus seeing Kym and Anna dance in the Pro Ensemble. Mr. Blunt didn't sing badly at all, but the guest-dancers were better. The Kids were alright again. If Tracy Turnblatt makes it to the finals, I wonder if John Travolta will show up to Disco-dance as her mother?


Ridiculous
-- Prime Time TV ran a commercial for women's underpants which were supposedly "wedgie proof." It was funny in a vulgar, humiliating way, but was such a parody of the whole money-grubbing culture of advertising. The hypocrisy of holier-than-thou ABC/Disney is very plain to see.
If you don't believe that something this stupid exists, watch this digitized video example.

Sublime --


Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire in Swing Time (1936)

Monday, April 14, 2008

Spring is showing its colors at last! Red Tailed Hawks and Osprey are hunting over the streams and stubbly fields all over Northwestern Montana.

Sitemeter Sez: Milan, Italy; Olympia, Washington; Somewhere, Japan; Jamaica, New York; Suwon, Korea; Lindon, Utah; Lowell, Indiana; London, England; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Louth, Ireland (Hey Hey Eavan!); Frederick, Maryland; Columbus, Ohio and NYC, New York.

ROCK against Reaganomics at: Theater X-Net




Starring: Ida Rubinstein Belle Epoch Russian/Parisian beauty.
Ida's Places in Paris -- from my first jet-lagged day by the Seine.
Read more about Ida in Sisters of Salome by Toni Bentley




Visit: Michael's Montana Web Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
NEW --Launching NOW! Outre Space Cinema -- Featuring: 1930's Rocketry, Spitfires of the Spaceways and Cellulose to Celluloid, Flash Gordon in the Saturday Matinees and Sunday Comics -- UPDATED!





Many thanks to Jim Keefe (Visit his Website) -- the LAST Flash Gordon illustrator of the 20th Century, and Flash's first illustrator of the 21st, for his recommendations -- HERE!

Charity Alert: Keep that Resolution to click on The Hunger Site every day. Also check into Terra Sigilata blog -- donate $$$ to cancer patients just by clicking onto the site.

In The Community: The Honors Symposium at FVCC went long last week, but Lowell Jaeger delivered an interactive class rather than a sit-down lecture.
The Hockaday Museum of Art had our Childrens Show and High School Art Show ready for the opening reception last Thursday night before I ran off to the Symposium.
Check out Fall for Glacier -- a fundraiser for several programs that make Glacier National Park even better!

Media Watch: Politics is dominating TV news, but not the issues -- trivial rubbish has crowded out substance to an irritating degree.
I found Ginger Rogers' Roxie Hart from 1942 -- based on the the source material for Bob Fosse's Chicago. Adolphe Menjous' fast-rapping finale should have been the model for Richard Gere's version of sleazy Billy Flynn's triumph, but it wasn't. Director Rob Marshall's choice of a tap dance RUINED the movie for me, no matter what it's provenance might have been. Perfectly competent actor Gere has NO ability in that regard. I understand that George Hamilton is doing Flynn's role onstage in New York. Hammy is an OK comic actor, but inept dancing isn't really funny.

In Concert: The Elton John Band in Missoula, Montana Friday, April 11, 2008. I was there, with my wife and 8000 others. THIS show was audibly and visually more spread out than the show last Fall -- the sound mixer was sometimes very busy with sonic effects on the vocals and grand piano. The separation between instruments was clearer, and more dynamic. The musicians also jammed brilliantly during some numbers -- especially Madman Across The Water. They re-arranged a few songs, and skillfully re-created other classic tunes from their vast repertory. There were also a couple of mistakes here and there, which I didn't mind -- they proved you were at a live concert! I enjoyed their syncopated version of I Guess That's Why They Call It The Blues. The melody and vocal were untouched, but both of the drummers and the second keyboardist were joyfully messing about with the background rhythms. During the wonderfully simple Bennie & The Jets I looked through my binoculars at drummer Nigel Olsson while he was joking with the percussionist as the latter struck the song's characteristic hard-slapping beat. Olsson played a more intricate arrangement on his own kit. I particularly enjoyed a couple of additions to this year's setlist -- Pete Townshend's Pinball Wizard from Ken Russell's Tommy movie, and the pensive All The Young Girls Love Alice, featuring Davey Johnstone's beautifully-distorted and LOUD electric guitar.
This band represents one of the last existing examples of British Rock groups from their Golden Age (1963-1974). The Rolling Stones come to mind as a continuing ensemble, but there are few other bands who have stayed together over such a long period of time, or have generated the amount of quality material that Bernie Taupin, Reggie Dwight, and other collaborators have written. The Moody Blues may have led the way in this kind of Symphonic Rock, but they lost a lot of original members. I guess guitar-heavy Led Zeppelin and Cream deserve honorable mentions if and when they settle their differences for occasional shows, but their surviving members have their own careers. Blooze-Rockers John Mayall, Savoy Brown, and Alvin (Ten Years After) Lee do well-reviewed tours. Jeff Beck is absolutely superb, but he's not a group, and transcends the Rock genre. In a similar category, Paul McCartney deliberately gave up his leadership over 30 years ago, although he is still capable of good performances. Van Morrison can deliver a whole evening of original material, with an awesome band led by Georgie Fame. The mid-70's version of Fleetwood Mac is still active, but they are only partly British, and only in origin, as is soloist-by-choice Rod Stewart. Hmmm -- as a matter of fact, except for Elton John, his own bandmates are either Americans, or US residents.

Digital reinterpretation of a Flickr photo from Atlanta in 2007


Two of my favorite musicians happen to be Nigel Olsson (L) and Davey Johnstone (R) who have been with Elton John for over 35 years. Olsson is a fine singer as well as possessing a warm, relaxed, and symphonic style of drumming. Concert Master Johnstone's guitar parts are tasteful, and well-integrated into the keyboard-oriented sound of his band. The music these men play year in and year out is Rock & Roll at it's very best.