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The tempest may howl and the loud thunder roar
And gathering storms may arise
But calm is my feeling, at rest is my soul
The tears are all wiped from my eyes



 


Monday, December 25, 2006

R.I.P., Godfather ...10:13 am

James Brown dies, aged 73.

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Pass me not ...9:47 am

To my knowledge, Dylan has never performed any Christmas songs like Away in a Manger, or even Marshmallow World. But by being oblique, it’s not impossible to read a little Christmas theme into this one: a nice version of Pass Me Not O Gentle Savior from Bismarck, North Dakota on March 29th, 2000. Christians would believe that this holiday commemorates an occasion on which our Savior most assuredly did not pass us by. (That’s “Saviour” for those using the Queen’s English.)

The lyric was written by Fanny Crosby in 1868 — the tune by William H. Doane.

And a little Christmas morning scripture from the good King James, and Isaiah, Chapter 52:

How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion, Thy God reigneth!

Thy watchmen shall lift up the voice; with the voice together shall they sing: for they shall see eye to eye, when the LORD shall bring again Zion.

Break forth into joy, sing together, ye waste places of Jerusalem: for the LORD hath comforted his people, he hath redeemed Jerusalem.

The LORD hath made bare his holy arm in the eyes of all the nations; and all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of our God.

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Sunday, December 24, 2006

CHRISTMAS ...6:08 pm

Theme Time Radio Hour with your host Bob Dylan

So, a new holiday classic is born. (… continue reading …)

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Friday, December 22, 2006

Merry Christmas from President Mahmood Ahmadinejad — to everyone! ...8:03 pm

First al-Zawahiri’s warm words to the Democrats, and now this! My heart is full to bursting.

Mahmood’s greeting is at his official site here.

Extract:

Merry Christmas to everyone! 2006/12/21

In the Name of Almighty God, the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate

My sincere congratulations to everyone for the Glorious and Auspicious Birthday of Divine Prophet - confirmed and authenticated by Gabriel, the angel of Divine revelation - the Obedient of Almighty God,
Jesus Christ, the Messiah (peace be upon Him)

He was a messenger of peace, devotion and love based upon monotheism and justice. He was raised in His Mother’s hand - Virgin Mary (peace be upon her) - that Almighty God stood her as impeccable and exalted her above the women of the world. The Mother and the Son that in the Divine Sight are reputable and prestigious. And they are positioned by God - The All Wise - at a sublime level.

Gives new meaning to the term “backhanded compliment,” huh?

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Merry Christmas from al-Zawahiri to the Democratic party ...6:42 pm

From ABC’s “The Blotter”:

Al Qaeda has sent a message to leaders of the Democratic party that credit for the defeat of congressional Republicans belongs to the terrorists.

In a portion of the tape from al Qaeda No. 2 man, Ayman al Zawahri, made available only today, Zawahri says he has two messages for American Democrats.

“The first is that you aren’t the ones who won the midterm elections, nor are the Republicans the ones who lost. Rather, the Mujahideen — the Muslim Ummah’s vanguard in Afghanistan and Iraq — are the ones who won, and the American forces and their Crusader allies are the ones who lost,” Zawahri said, according to a full transcript obtained by ABC News.

“And if you don’t refrain from the foolish American policy of backing Israel, occupying the lands of Islam and stealing the treasures of the Muslims, then await the same fate,” he said.

Ho, ho, ho!

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Thursday, December 21, 2006

Down with blogs ...11:34 pm

Read “The Blog Mob”, by Joseph Rago, at OpinionJournal.com, published yesterday.

Then read “Blogs Make Me Puke,” by, er, Joseph Rago, published today by Iowahawk.

It just doesn’t get any better than this.

(What exactly “it” is, is another question.)

Addendum: This sentence alone earns Iowahawk a pedestal in some kind of hall-of-fame:

Every conceivable — and inconceivable — belief is on the scene, but the collective prose, by and large, is homogeneous: A tone of careless informality prevails; a cacaphonous miasma of perfunctory langorous bellicosity; posts oscillate between the uselessly brief and the uselessly logorrheic; cascading, tremulous arpeggios of useless prosaicity; complexity and complication are eschewed; directivity and candor and perspicacity belied; the humor is cringe-making, with irony present only in its conspicuous absence, which, when one thinks about it, is in itself ironic, creating an infinite, unintended laff-riot loop of ironic non-irony; arguments are totally solipsistic; their obviously drunk and/or crack-addled writers traffic only in pronouncement, and are loathe to employ professional-grade opinion tools like Roget’s Thesaurus, or the dramatic sentence-ending ellipsis . . .

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Progress ...10:48 pm

Speaking of people “getting it” (previously mentioned the Stephen Webb book), thanks to the reader who sent in this link to an article about Bob Dylan which appears in a Salvation Army magazine from Australia (that’s right). While I wouldn’t endorse everything in the piece, the main points are insightful and on-the-money. It begins with a quote from one of Bob’s “gospel” interviews.

‘Jesus tapped me on the shoulder and said, “Bob, why are you resisting me?”. I said, “I´m not resisting you!”. He said, “You gonna follow me?”. I said, “I´ve never thought about that before!”. He said, “When you´re not following me, you´re resisting me.”
Black hat, black suit and a rabbi´s fervour. Scarecrow´s musicianship, madman´s voice and an angel´s lyrics.

The crooked smile and a defiant gleam in those bleary eyes. Bob Dylan may be 65 but he´s back at the top of his songwriting game—and the charts.

While The Rolling Stones might still be churning out love songs for teens, Dylan has urged people to grow up and accept responsibility for the planet and their own lives.

In a Grammy Awards acceptance speech a decade or so back Bob declared ‘it´s possible to become so defiled in this world that your own mother and father will abandon you´.

But, he reassured billions, ‘if this happens, God will always believe in your own ability to mend your ways´.

The idea of a God who believes in humanity´s capacity; who believes we´re worth saving, is due to both Dylan´s exploration of the faith of his fathers and his own faith pilgrimage.

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America alone? ...10:32 pm

It’s a common theme of Clive’s — that too many American conservatives are writing Europe off in a foolishly simplistic (and counter-productive) way. He attacks the subject at his guest-blogger post with The Daily Dish, with some well-chosen quotes and this summation:

None of this is to say the dangers are imaginary. History hasn’t ended. But some of the Cassandras have a habit of sounding as crudely deterministic as any old school Marxist.

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COUNTDOWN ...9:17 pm

Theme Time Radio Hour

This episode of “Theme Time Radio Hour” was a big joke. (… continue reading …)

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Wednesday, December 20, 2006

The first one now ...9:12 pm

So, Dylan’s Modern Times was both the Billboard and the Rolling Stone critics’ choice as best album of 2006. I know that Dylan has been quite gracious about certain awards in the last several years — in particular his Golden Globe and Oscar for Things Have Changed — but I tend to think his reaction to these particular accolades would be a little more ho-hum. After all, if you believe it when the critics place you at number one, it means you have to take it at least somewhat seriously when they basically ignore you, as was true for quite a few years of Bob’s career (years when some of us were still listening).

Just by the way, a writer named Steve Guttenberg in a publication called Stereophile has a brief meditation on Dylan’s remarks earlier this year about what’s lacking in the sound of modern recordings, and casts a critical ear on the sound of Modern Times itself in that context. I am not the sufficient audiophile to be able to express what my ears tell me, but I think there’s something to be said for his criticism. As hard as Dylan was no doubt trying to make a natural-sounding record, I think that the technology defeated him to some extent. Which is far from a dismissal of the record — it’s just a regret that the quality of the sound couldn’t match the quality of the songs and the performances.

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Dish ...7:10 pm

That erudite mid-Atlantic blogger, Clive Davis, is “guest-blogging” at Andrew Sullivan’s usual abode, Time’s Daily Dish — until the end of the month.

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National security: Clinton style ...5:52 pm

The Inspector General of the National Archives today revealed some further details of Samuel “Sandy” Berger’s 2003 malfeasance, with regard to classified documents relevant to the lead-up to the 9/11 attacks. Berger, as all would recall, was President Bill Clinton’s National Security Advisor.

The report said that when Berger was reviewing the classified documents in the Archives building a few blocks from the Capitol, employees saw him bending down and fiddling with something white, which could have been paper, around his ankle.

However, Archives employees did not feel at the time there was enough information to confront someone of Berger’s stature, the report said.

Brachfeld reported that on one visit, Berger took a break to go outside without an escort.

“In total, during this visit, he removed four documents … .

“Mr. Berger said he placed the documents under a trailer in an accessible construction area outside Archives 1 (the main Archives building).”

Berger acknowledged that he later retrieved the documents from the construction area and returned with them to his office.

Berger, with the authorization of former President Clinton, was reviewing National Security Council documents on Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida, Sudan, and related presidential correspondence.

Berger, under the terms of the plea deal he agreed to, will regain the ability to be given access to classified material on April 1st of 2008. That is, in plenty of time to be assigned a top position in any potential administration of President Hillary Clinton, or any other Democrat. Who’s the April Fool in this scenario? The current cover of Time magazine might be enlightening.

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No time to Waits ...9:51 am

Starting to get out from being under the weather — thanks to all and sundry for the emails regarding the Tom Waits Road to Peace controversy (previous posts here and here). I don’t want to beat the subject to death, but here’s a bit of an interview from Britain’s Observer magazine where Waits addresses the subject, in a manner of speaking:

And one song stands out. Called ‘Road to Peace’, it concerns the Middle East conflict. It’s not the kind of song he usually sings, though his last album also contained an anti-war song called ‘The Day after Tomorrow’. This one is angrier. ‘I was pissed off,’ he sighs, rubbing his eyes. ‘Started with a line I read in the paper one day: “He studied so hard it was as if he had a future.” It was about this kid who got blown up in a suicide bomb on a bus in Israel. They say God doesn’t give you anything he knows you can’t handle. Well, I don’t know if I believe that.’

He’ll probably get his ass kicked, I say, for the line ‘… why are we arming the Israeli Army with guns and tanks and bullets?’ He nods. ‘Maybe. Maybe. But, we are. That’s just a fact.

I guess any time anyone from outside a situation voices an opinion, it’s going to be, “Who the f**k are you?” Don’t matter what side you’re on. But this song ain’t about taking sides, it’s an indictment of both sides. I tried to be as equitable as possible.’

The places and the incidents referred to in the song are all real, and the names of the people, too. He’s well aware, he says, of the risk of making a song carry that kind of weight. ‘I don’t really know what a song like that can achieve, but I was compelled to write it. I don’t know if any genuine meaningful change could ever result from a song. It’s kind of like throwing peanuts at a gorilla.’

The above doesn’t exactly support the notion that Waits has any clarity regarding the subject he’s writing about. He refers to “this kid who got blown up in a suicide bomb on a bus in Israel.” As his own song makes perfectly clear, the kid “who got blown up” was doing the blowing up. He was not a bystander: he was the suicide bomber.

He says it’s “just a fact” that the U.S. sells arms to Israel, as if the factualness of it is the issue. The issue is that his song is implicitly trying to make the case that we shouldn’t sell arms to Israel. I don’t imagine he’d be capable of explaining how a bloodbath many times worse could be avoided in a Middle East where Israel was perceived by its enemies as weak and vulnerable, due to an arms embargo. His song isn’t about dealing with reality; it’s about wallowing in tragic scenes of violence and reaching for platitudinous and irresponsible “solutions.”

He says “I tried to be as equitable as possible,” as if the proper point-of-view regarding any conflict is always that of being “equitable,” instead of making any judgments as to who is worthy of support and why. Nazis? Britain? It’s a pity America wasn’t more equitable in its approach to World War II.

Anyway, enough of my throwing darts at Waits. I received an interesting email from Zdenek in the Czech Republic. Some of his insights:

Firstly, as it sounds so disparately cheap an agit prop, it does neither belong on this, nor any other Waits-idiom album thematically and, even if he means it as a (sick) joke or provocation, it still is chutzpah. You know, I´ve been listening to Waits since 1976. I´ve published a lot of words about him and even had a two-volume songbook released with all of his lyrics translated into Czech language (try to imagine that…) up to the Bone Machine album (1992). You wouldn‘t believe how difficult it sometimes was to get his final approval (through his impressarios/lawyers in Germany and California) with the final Czech version of almost every line he had ever written in terms of its comprehensive semantic exactness and compliance with the original English meaning of the artist´s imagination and his poetic license. Having thus been able to analyze his songwriter´s thinking in detail, I noted that, from a certain moment in the 1980s, Kathleen Brennan´s influence on him, as far as the tone and the vocabulary of his writing as well as the unexpected themes he suddenly started to deal with in his songs are concerned, began to prevail over his original artist-as-voyeur concept. I don´t mean to say that she was sort of “civilizing” him or something, but definitely, he´s begun to be different, less of his own‘s. Therefore, I am inclined to believe that, rather than having some lapse of mind or, any Mel Gibson´s moment, as you put it, I think that he was just “artistically” ill-advised to include the above line. Perhaps, as a mere marketing gimmick. After all, he´s of some age, he doesn´t sell millions copies of his albums, has always cared for money (I mean his imitators-related lawsuits) and, also notable is his rather funny affiliation with the Anti-Records label which, in fact is viewed as a punkish one here in Europe, with all of the attributes that it takes. To mind also comes an unfortunate today‘s tendency of certain, often on-the-edge American artists, to naively take it on the U.S. Administration …

So, that’s an interesting and different angle from someone who has considered Waits’ lyrical styles in far greater depth than I have.

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“Dylan Redeemed” ...9:25 am

There’s an interesting sounding new book out from Professor Stephen Webb of Wabash College, called “Dylan Redeemed.” Interview with him here. Nice to see people catching on!

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Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Secretive White House ...10:21 am

The AP story on Laura Bush’s skin cancer removal (which occurred in November but was just revealed) ends with this paragraph:

Monday’s revelation was the second case this year of a belated White House announcement. In February, the White House waited almost a day before disclosing that Vice President Dick Cheney had shot a fellow hunter during a quail-hunting trip.

What next? We are truly in the dark as to what this rogue administration is up to.

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