Saturday, July 31, 2021

APPLESEED



I'm halfway through Appleseed by Matt Bell and it is becomingly increasingly mythic and increasingly weird. And I'm savoring every moment in its pages.

My best guess is that the connection to its three story lines will eventually emerge. In the meantime, however, I find echoes and elements that remind me of other novels. Mind you, this book is definitely its own creature, but it may share some genetic material of some sort with the following works (all of which I highly recommend).

Vurt (1993) by Jeff Noon

Autobiography of Red (1998) by Anne Carson

Tongkat/Tonguecat (1999) by Peter Verhelst

Blueprints of the Afterlife (2012) by Ryan Boudinot

Borne (2017) by Jeff VanderMeer

Metamorphica (2018) by Zachary Mason

Circe (2018) by Madeline Miller

Skyward Inn (2021) by Aliya Whiteley

PLU MEADOWS



TWT, The Wife, and The Child played a couple of nine-hole rounds of disc golf today at PLU Meadows. I put my Innova Champion Valkyrie distance driver into my bag and it was fun to play it again. It is light and really gets some distance. When it hits the grass right it will "skip" for a few extra yards.

First round

Hole 1 / par 3 - 3
Hole 2 / par 3 - 4
Hole 3 / par 4 - 3
Hole 4 / par 3 - 4
Hole 5 / par 3 - 4
Hole 6 / par 4 - 4
Hole 7 / par 3 - 4
Hole 8 / par 4 - 3
Hole 9 / par 4 - 5
Front nine / par 31 - 34 (+3)

Second round

Hole 1 / par 3 - 4
Hole 2 / par 3 - 4
Hole 3 / par 4 - 4
Hole 4 / par 3 - 3
Hole 5 / par 3 - 3
Hole 6 / par 4 - 4
Hole 7 / par 3 - 4
Hole 8 / par 4 - 4
Hole 9 / par 4 - 4
Front nine / par 31 - 34 (+3)

Friday, July 30, 2021

Thursday, July 29, 2021

Tuesday, July 27, 2021

TACO STREET



Tacos? What tacos?

We read about the new Taco Street restaurant in the Point Ruston Public Market on the Dine Pierce County blog. (Thank you, Sue Kidd, for continuing to provide the best local food reviews!)

The Wife, The Child, and I each ordered one of the "Taco Street Plate Specials," which included four tacos of one style of meat, beans, and rice. We shared with one another, so that each of was able to try three different meat we selected—carne asada, barbacoa, and al pastor.

We took them to Dune Peninsula Park in Tacoma, found ourselves a picnic table, and had some of the best street tacos. The meats were moist and flavorful. Rice, beans, and four tacos was the perfect amount of meal without feeling like one had eaten too much.

We will definitely be returning the next time we have a hankering for street tacos, which is actually quite often!

Friday, July 23, 2021

ANCHOR STEAM



The Wife makes the best chicken piccata.

I always keep one Anchor Steam Ale in the fridge for chicken piccata night because it is the perfect beer to pair with the flavors of the capers and lemon.

Eating it outdoors on the patio was a bonus!


I'm loving the new look on the label and bottle cap. It's a simple and effective redesign.

Friday, July 16, 2021

KREAMSICLE IPA



Enjoying a Pelican Brewing Kreamsicle Orange Zest IPA with homemade chicken tacos for dinner. Biscuity malts, light citrus bitterness, and tangerine make this an understated and enjoyable brew!

Sunday, July 11, 2021

THEO



Our next door neighbors had a small fire in their house this morning. While they clean up damage from fire, smoke, and water, their dog Theo is hanging out with us. Banjo and Wrigley aren't quite certain what's going on, but are very intrigued by their friend and visitor.

Saturday, July 10, 2021

SWIM FREE 2021



"Swim Free (2019)," Montana BLACK spray paint on concrete panel, and "Swim Free (2021)," pole puppet made out of two plastic bowls, red duct tape, wire, cardboard, Montana BLACK spray paint, electrical tape, and aluminum extension pole.

My mother died on July 10, 2017.

Each 7/10 since 2017, I make art in the form of an octopus, to remember and honor her. 

A couple of days before she died, I painted a small red octopus on the Bremerton Art Walls (where the old Maple Leaf Tavern once stood). In 2018, I painted a larger octopus on the Bremerton Art Walls. In 2019, I painted another octopus on the Walls, but as a limited edition series of four, with the other three painted onto concrete panels, which are in the gardens or flower beds of family members. In 2020, partly due to COVID, the octopus "came off the wall" and became a small linoleum block print for family and friends.

For 2021, Ann the Octopus returned to the Bremerton Art Walls, as part of the second (of four) Bridging Bremerton walks, in the form of a pole puppet. I even had an opportunity to share briefly with those gathered about Ann and commemorating my mother Sandy's life and our connections to the Walls. It was a fun and fascinating walk, filled with Bremerton history as part of the walk, but also for myself and my wife, as we reminisced about our own personal and family histories of times, places, and events in Bremerton.

Wednesday, July 07, 2021

NEW LONG LEG



New Long Leg by Dry Cleaning.

It's post-punk art-rock. It's likely my album of the year for 2021. (The album to knock it off it's perch would have to be perfect.) This is an absolutely stunning piece of art. The whole really is greater than the sum of its parts, and that is saying something because each individual track shines so bright. 

SIDE A

Track 1 > "Scratchcard Lanyard"
Out of the gate, it's a post-punk kick to the head; a concert to which we are all invited. "It's a Tokyo bouncy ball, it's an Oslo bouncy ball, it's a Rio de Janeiro bouncy ball..." Get your lighter and/or cell phone flash light in the air. This track sets the tone and let's us know it's going to be a wild and welcome ride!

Track 2 > "Unsmart Lady"
A garbled noise intro leads into a more perfect marriage of lyrics/vocal delivery and instrumentation. Driving bass and drums meets jangly guitar and surreal spoken word.

Track 3 > "Strong Feelings"
Get the club dancing with this track! Keep the vibe going. Warm, welcoming instrumentation meets slightly obtuse lyrics, yet it all absolutely works. And every so often the main melody is punctuated by "nostalgic"/"lightly melancholy" guitar noodling. This is one of my favorite tracks on the album.

Track 4 > "Leafy"
A companion piece to "Strong Feelings?" Perhaps. Almost the same feeling as the prior track, except there is almost a weird Muzak-meets-Hippy energy about it.

Track 5 > "Her Hippo"
This track leans into the melancholy a bit more. Some shoe gazing is definitely going on here. And when I really pay attention there is some bending of the guitar strings going on (or whammy bar or pedal manipulation or all of the above), which is why I love this album. These little details pop up and ask to be noticed and then fade into the background once more.

The reason I purchased the album was because of these five tracks, as well as "Viking Hair" and "Magic of Meghan" from their first two EPs. I had heard these tracks as part of various live performances I found online—KEXP, BBC, and the like. Side A provided some familiarity and worked really well together, almost as though an EP in its own right.

So then it was onto Side B, having heard none of the tracks prior to buying the album.

SIDE B

Track 6 > "New Long Leg"
There's a "singing quality" to Florence's voice here that is definitely a bit distinct/different from the spoken word delivery songs of Side A. "Doo doo doo doo." And a brightness to the music. An almost "Asian leaning" at times in the structure of the song and the sound of the guitar.

Track 7 > "John Wick"
This reminds me a bit of early 1980s post-punk. Joy Division. (Or perhaps Portishead's version of Joy Division? Anyway, I like it a lot.) There is a beautiful section in the middle of the song where the drums and guitar drop out, leaving only a light bass line and vocals. Then it all builds again. I'm thinking this track must be dabbling in minor chords. (But what do I know?)

Track 8 > "More Big Birds"
Mellow, slow, almost plodding (but not quite). Another "Asian feeling" track. Florence's "near scatting" is very welcome. Beautiful.

Track 9 > "A. L. C."
This is a brooding "noir-ish" number. Almost on the verge of not fitting in with the rest of the album. Except that is exactly why it works! Plus it is the perfect lead-in for...

Track 10 > "Every Day Carry"
The slow-build jam. The stoned-out-of-your-mind space jam. The whirling dervish psychedelic jam. THEN everything shifts into catastrophic-disaster-of-the-spaceship alarm meets baby pterodactyl screams—all interpreted through whale song. THEN we are back in the build, not where we left off, but rather at the point where the "build" would have been if it had been going on behind the "alarm break" the whole time. And THEN it simply ends. Brilliant, brilliant track! My favorite of the album.

In the same way that Darkstar's Civic Jams haunted me in 2020 (and still does), Dry Cleaning's New Long Leg is doing the same for 2021. The two albums may be different musically, but they share a mood and lyrics that are best engaged as the fragments and snippets that one can decipher and/or comprehend. I appreciate the ability of both bands to navigate the chaos and turmoil of the current age, push back against it with some of their own quirky take on the same, transform it again, and yet ultimately leave enough that is familiar that we do find something recognizable and inviting—whether that would be on the dance floor (or in one's own bedroom) or next to the stage of the club (or in one's own living room).