Life is in flux BIG TIME these days. I want to keep in touch with all of my peeps. The Internet is this beautiful thing. I can move to a brand new city and still stay in easy, near-daily contact with the people I love. When I feel connected to the people in my life that matter, I am unstoppable!
There is a show airing on PBS on Wednesday that looks fascinating. The host is Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. He’s done genealogical research on famous African-American personalities and is presenting that information directly to them. You watch them learn about their own ancestry. I just set my TiVo to catch it:
African American Lives 2 – hosted by Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
As you know, I’m not very political, but I have to admit that the promise of a new administration has gotten me more engaged than usual. Here’s a Super Tuesday song from The Mountain Goats.
In discussing music with many friends over many years, I’ve learned that the way I listen is a bit different than the way many other people listen. I’m a music first person. If the melody, rhythm, tone, instrumentation, and harmonies don’t interest me, I’m unlikely to listen long enough to even hear the lyrics at all. If those qualities are highly engaging, then it may takes a hundred listens before I move on to the words.
When at a gig or otherwise listening to a song for the very first time, I am often amazed that someone might ask me the question, “What do you think of these lyrics?” Lyrics? Already? Are you serious? I have to get to the point where I’m really into the song first – well before I have anything at all to say about the lyrics. What’s weird, though, is that I really prefer music that is vocal. I love the complexity and variations (flavors, if you will) the human voice offers. I love the sounds of words. I love pronunciation. I love the rhythm and cadence of rhyme. I love the choices people make about how they use their voice – whether those choices are deliberate or not. I hear personality in a voice. Right now I’m thinking of Chan Marshall of Cat Power, Ella Fitzgerald, Billy Bragg, Chris Cornell of Soundgarden and Audioslave, John Darnielle of The Mountain Goats… All voices used well but in extremely different ways.
And speaking of The Mountain Goats, their latest video is what had me thinking about this the most. Having only heard a pre-released song from the upcoming album a time or two, I saw the accompanying video. It forced me to experience the music much differently from the way I normally experience music. Words are the centerpiece of the video. Instead of words just being additions to the overall soundscape, I am forced to recognize the picture that is being described by them. I can’t even say if it’s a good or bad thing. It’s just as different as can be. Take a look:
I have learned the most delightful and helpful thing. I was tired of being sent invitations for apps I knew I’d never add, so I sent Facebook support a message about it.
Here’s what you do. Instead of just clicking Ignore, click over to the main page of the application to which you’ve been invited. It should be hyperlinked. Once you’re on the main page for the app, look over on the right side of the page. There’s a “Block This Application” link. Since learning this last week, my Facebook life has gotten much more manageable, much more peaceful.
So to review: Block the application AND click Ignore, and you will never get another invitation for that application ever again.