All posts by tc

A timeless classic

If you like you can play the above video and listen while reading the blog post. Note though some links below go to other YouTube music vids, so you might want to listen to them one at a time. Or just read. Whatever.

Heading home via Leicester Square tube station the other day, on the concourse at the bottom of the escalators a busker was laying down some cool jazz licks on a keyboard. The synthesized beat was fast but otherwise nothing special, straight four-four, disco-ish. As I descended he was soloing over a nondescript chord change, or it might have been only one chord. His soloing was fluid and imaginative, but – as, it must be said, with many jazz tunes during the improvisatory section – it wasn’t clear what the piece actually was at this point. Not that it mattered – it needn’t have been anything in particular. I wasn’t even wondering what the tune was, just following the solo as I headed round the corner towards the platform for Euston. And right then, he stopped soloing and returned to the theme. I didn’t quite catch it at first, but it was tip-of-my-tongue familiar; a standard, but was it Moanin’? Blue Train? So What?

No. It was… Take Five. I’ve heard it all now, I thought.

Take Five is a Paul Desmond/Dave Brubeck classic that was, I believe, written especially for an album of tunes in unusual time signatures. For the uninitiated, four-four or 4/4 or “common time” is, as its name suggests, the beat behind 95% of modern musical compositions from a heavy rock number to a nondescript pop song; probably only 3/4 (waltz time) comes close in terms of popularity. Take Five though was written in 5/4, or five beats to the bar rather than four. You don’t even really need to know this – it’s such a great piece of music that it simply sounds funky, not weird.

What sounds weird is if you try and chop out that extra beat and squeeze the melody into a normal 4/4 signature. I wish I’d had a tape-recorder on me at the time, as it’s hard to explain exactly what it sounded like, but the whole effect was a bit like the most recent version of the (appropriately enough, as we’re talking time) Doctor Who theme tune or something, with some glossing-over of that extraneous fifth beat to make it work. I still can’t decide whether the busker was a genius or an idiot, but I sure wish he hadn’t stopped soloing…

If you’re still not clear what I’m on about, or do but can’t imagine what Take Five sounds like with a beat-o-dectomy, musical comedian Bill Bailey does a useful (and very funny) demonstration of different time signatures in this clip from an old episode of Room 101. Enjoy.

Leonard Cohen on Mount Baldy


This is a classic 1996 documentary of The Lenmeister in his LA Zen retreat. This video is the first of six showing the whole film – the other instalments should all come up in the related videos bar when watched on YouTube, otherwise they are all embedded in this post about the documentary on the ace Cohen site 1heckofaguy.com.

This post came to my attention incidentally via Marie Mazur, who has recently joined Facebook and regularly posts updates there from her longstanding and excellent Len site Speaking Cohen , and can also now be followed on Twitter.

Spreading the word of Russell Hoban again on 4th February

Yellow paper in the Paris metro
Yellow paper in the Paris metro

The Slickman A4 Quotation Event, or SA4QE, is taking place again in a few weeks, in which fans of the novelist Russell Hoban celebrate his birthday on 4th February by leaving their favourite quotes from his work in public places.SA4QE has been going since 2002 and in that time hundreds of quotes have been left in big cities and small towns alike across 14 countries. Some 350 of these quotes are recorded on the SA4QE website, where they can be browsed by book title, contributor, year, location and media.

Russell Hoban was born in Pennsylvania in 1925 and has lived in London since 1969. His 85th year will see the publication by “Harry Potter publisher” Bloomsbury of his new novel Angelica Lost and Found, and he has also recently submitted a new young-adult novel called Soonchild which is due out from Walker Books in 2011.

Chances are you will have come across one of Hoban’s books somewhere on your travels, whether it be the 1980 dystopian classic Riddley Walker – with which Cormac McCarthy’s recent bestseller The Road is often compared – or the Frances the Badger books which you might have read to your child, or had read to you. In between, Hoban has written scores of books for adults and children alike, and they’re all eminently quotable.

Here’s a list of things you can do to celebrate Russell Hoban’s birthday this coming 4th February:

* Write your quote on a sheet of yellow paper and leave it in a place of your choice – cafe table, bookshop, park bench, telephone booth, train station, you name it!

* Submit your quote to the SA4QE website and it’ll be added there by the webmaster with a page all your own.

* Take a photo of your quote in situ and upload it to Flickr with the tag sa4qe and it’ll appear automatically in the slideshow.

* Tweet your quote using the hashtag #sa4qe – this will make your tweet appear automatically in the sidebar of this website. If 140 characters isn’t enough space for your quote, try www.twitlonger.com which allows you to write as much as you like and auto-tweets a truncated version. (You can also follow SA4QE on Twitter – everything posted to the site on 4th February will be tweeted as it happens.)

* Post your quote on your own website or blog – if you include the keywords sa4qe and/or Russell Hoban it too will automatically appear in the blog feed in the sidebar.

* Use your quote as your Facebook status update for the day. (There are also Russell Hoban and SA4QE groups you can join on Facebook.)

* Use your quote as your email signature for the day, or otherwise drop quotes into emails, text messages and online chats.

* Film yourself reading your quote and upload it to YouTube with the tags Russell Hoban and/or sa4qe and it will appear in the sidebar.

These are just some of the ways you can take part, but the sky’s the limit, the world’s your oyster and Bob’s your uncle. If you have any further suggestions, or are planning any activity in particular, please share it on the comment form at http://sa4qe.blogspot.com/2010/01/sa4qe-2010-spreading-word-of-russell.html

Happy 4qating!

Questions? Answers.

Posted via email from Thoughtcat’s Posterous

Oops! Guardian and Daily Mail go for identical headline on EU presidency

Is this a first?? The Grauniad and the Daily Fail appear to be saying the exact same thing on the news of the appointments of Herman Van Rompuy and Cathy "Baroness" Ashton to the roles of EU President and Foreign Minister respectively. Reading the stories in detail however, the Mail shows itself to be just a tad more annoyed about it than the Guardian. (Unfortunately this blog post did require that I buy a copy of the Daily Mail, but I promise not to make a habit of it…)

Posted via email from Thoughtcat’s Posterous