Showing posts with label Dark Winds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dark Winds. Show all posts

Friday, 11 April 2025

2nd Recital

I had a 2nd opportunity to perform my latest recital pieces today.  Thank you to Randy, Kate, and Peter for coming by to hear what I've been up to since last July.  The chance to perform is always a welcome one, and twice in one week is even better.  When Paula and Jenn are back from their travels I will run through the pieces again.  All went pretty well, with occasional slips and lapses.  The first Bach piece went really well, and overall the Haydn was quite fresh and zippy.  The Chopin Prelude, on its own, is a powerful little piece.  The Gnossienne also went really well, as did the Debussy and Glass.  So not a lot to complain about, though I know it could have been even better.  Such is life, and such is live performance.  Here is the program:
 

Michael Ethier

Piano Recital April 2025


"Simple Ingredients"


2-part Invention #9 in f minor

3-part Invention #9 in f minor..........................................J S Bach


Sonata in C major (HOB. XVI/35; L.48)

Allegro con brio

Adagio

Finale: Allegro.........................................................F J Haydn



***********************************************



Prelude #20 in c minor.....................................................F Chopin

Third Gymnopedie

Third Gnossienne.............................................................E Satie


Prelude #6 Bk 1 (..Des pas sur la neige)........................C Debussy

Etude #20.........................................................................P Glass


Mysterious Barricades.....................................................F Couperin

 

The only piece here that I have ever performed before this month was the Couperin.  When I begin working on the new program, the first half will be all Couperin, and on the harpsichord.
 
Deb is still feeling poorly, and likely will be until the concluding half of her medical procedure is undertaken.  Next week the stent will be removed, and hopefully that will end months of pain and infections.  In the meantime, she just has to hang in there, and take a happy pill as needed.
 
As full moon approaches, we have a perfect night tonight, with clear, dry skies.  Useless, though, as far as observing with a telescope goes, thanks to the brightness of the moon.  It's been a bad year so far, with only two usable nights to date.  I have so much work I would love to accomplish before I'm too old to lift the telescope and set it up and take it down.
 
In movie news, there are two to report, as well as Season Two of Picard.  Try to imagine a scenario where Wesley Crusher, Q and the Borg come out looking okay.  All this and more, folks, believe it or not.  Crusher, Q, and the Borg provided some of the most tropy and unwanted moments in Next Generation, and the writers stretched themselves to the limit in Picard to make them come out looking pretty clean and decent.  Unfortunately, there was overuse in Season Two of Picard's childhood background, with his insane mother who ended up killing herself.  There are so many flashback scenes to his boyhood that they ended up dragging down the series.  We get to see Data's creator, and he is evil in Season Two.  I imagine he will return, but hopefully not.  One more season to go, though we will wait awhile before viewing it.  We are still also immersed in Dark Winds and Monsieur Spade.
 
L'Innocente is a costumer by Visconti from 1976.  The main reason to watch the film is to view the parade of women's dresses on display.  Most of the film's budget must have been spent on costumes.  Here is the blurb from MUBI:

In late-19th century Italy, Tullio, an insatiable aristocrat, grows bored with his wife Giuliana and neglects her for his more exciting mistress, the wealthy widow Countess Teresa Raffo. After learning that Giuliana is having an affair of her own, he becomes tormented and descends into madness. 

It's quite a long film, mostly watchable but not always.  High society shows itself, yet again, for what it really is; empty.  Tullio is a hideous character, another less than fine male role model to follow.  To make matters worse, Giannini wears one expression throughout the entire movie, his grim face.  The camera work is excellent, as are the sets, lighting, and mise-en-scene, also spot on.  Visconti is a master director, and all of his skills and artistry are on display in this extravagant film.  I won't say it's the most engaging film I've ever seen, but it's certainly one of the better looking films.  Recommended if you enjoy beautiful women in incredible clothing.
 
The film was showing on Mubi, but has now departed. 
 
The Love Witch, written, directed, and produced by Anna Biller, is a 2016 murder/horror film that tries to emulate films from the 1960s.  Drenched in rich colours, mostly reds, and filmed with humourous parodies of Hammer films and such, the movie is great fun to watch.  A beautiful female California witch uses magic potions and rituals to try to land a faithful and loving boyfriend/husband.  Her spells are successful, but she tends to overdo them, driving the male crazy after a time.  Once she realizes that he is not the guy for her after all, there is only one way to rid herself of them.  The film succeeds on many levels, and its 125 minutes running time passes quickly.  The visuals are stunning, and the lead actress is both beautiful and funny, even though she acts the sincere part, playing it pretty straight.  A must view for fans of early 60s colour horror films!  My only complaint is that she should have been a redhead.
 
Leaving Mubi in three days. 
 
Mapman Mike
 
 
 
 

Sunday, 26 June 2022

Catching Up

...we now return to our regular programming.

The first part of June, with one or two exceptions, was seasonal and even a bit on the cooler side.  But not the 2nd half.  We have already endured many days of temps that go far beyond "above average."  Not only that, but it has been very dry, and will continue so until at least Friday.  I cut the grass yesterday for the first time in two weeks, on the slight chance of predicted rain.  No rain, but the grass is cut.

Later today I am awaiting the passage of the CSL Laurentien, one of five ships I watch on a regular basis.  This will be her 7th upstream pass, heading for Thunder Bay from Quebec City.  Back and forth all summer.  Quite a workhorse.  Meanwhile, Federal Bering, which was in Windsor a few weeks ago (likely picking up salt), was then off to Scotland, and is now in Ostend.  The Federal Cedar, which spent the winter in and around South American and Mexico, is on its way to Montreal, and will hopefully take a swing up our way in the upper Great Lakes.

We are nowhere with repairs to our garage foundation.  We simply cannot find anyone interested to come and fix it.  We basically need a foundation mason, but apparently they are all busy.  Sigh.  We ourselves are assembling and putting up railings this week on the new staircase, however.  The main job is to drill 16 holes into the new cement.  We are purchasing a new drill for that job.  Pictures to follow.

In film news, we have watched three interesting documentaries lately, all of them excellent and very well presented.  We have had to subscribe to AMC+ for two months in order to watch a new series they are presenting (see below), but they also have several other good things to watch.  One of them is Jodorowsky's Dune, from 2013.  Featuring much of the concept art that was created, and nearly endless conversations with the man himself, this pre-Star Wars idea was simply way too ahead of its time.  There can be no doubt that it would have been a terrific and awe-inspiring picture had it been made.  In the end it needed 5 more million dollars, which were nowhere to be found.  Definitely a fascinating way to spend a few hours!

Now streaming on AMC+.

Another good doc showing on AMC is Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown.  Dating from 2008-09, this one is incredibly well researched, and features interviews with Guillermo Del Toro, Neil Gaiman, John Carpenter, Caitlan Kiernan, and others.  Lavishly illustrated with historical photos and art inspired by his works, this is a must-see film for fans of horror fiction.

Now streaming on AMC+. 

A few weeks ago we watched Margin, a simple film about a journey up the Amazon on a passenger ship, directed by Maya Da-Rin.  Criterion also has her film called Land, from 2009, about a city that shares a border with Peru, Colombia, and Brazil, far up the Amazon River.  She spends time in this far off city, getting in fairly deeply with some of its citizens, including some Indigenous people who have had to make major adjustments to their lives in order to survive. Well worth seeing, her work is a form of visual anthropology.

Showing until June 30th on Criterion.   

Some other films we have seen lately (Criterion) include One Day In The Rainy Season, an Indian film from 1971 directed by Mani Kaul.  Based on a play by Mohan Rakeesh, the plot concerns a young village woman who gives up her hold on her lover so he can go to court and become a famous writer.  The play has very few characters, and is entirely set within a small and very basic hut in a small village. The acting is carried out in unemotional speech, giving a timeless quality to the b & w proceedings, almost as if the words were spoken by dead people, rather than ones emotionally involved with the tale.  Unique and worthwhile.

Showing on Criterion until June 30th/22 
 
Fritz Lang's 1941 Man Hunt was next, starring Walter Pidgeon and George Sanders.  Pidgeon is a big game hunter who sets his rifle sights on Adolph Hitler.  Before he can pull the trigger he is caught and arrested.  Refusing to sign a confession to Nazi Sanders, he escapes back to England with the Germans in hot pursuit.  Though well acted and filmed tautly and expertly, the film left me a bit cold.  I think that the character of the hunter becoming the hunted could have been made a bit more realistic.  He seems to have virtually no skills whatsoever, so how he ever got close enough to Hitler in the first place remains a mystery.  The whole concept of the enemy in our midst, however, was very well done.
 
Showing on Criterion until June 30th. 
 
Lone Wolf and Cub: Baby Cart In the Land of Demons, and Black Belt Jones, from 1973 and 1974 respectively, make a good double feature of action packed mayhem.  While Lone Wolf slaughters the enemy with his trusty blade, Jones uses karate to demolish his enemies.  And they both dispose of a lot of enemies.  It's not the kind of movie pairing one might think of, but it works! Both are streaming on Criterion.

Streaming on Criterion. 
 
Streaming on Criterion until June 30th. 
 
In addition to films, we are currently involved in several series, including two sets of lecture courses on Wondrium.  We only have one left in the SF literature series, and still several more on the archeology of North America.  As one of those courses finish, we will begin a new one.
 
On Prime we are now well into the 2nd season of Undone, an animated fantasy series that is quite complex and easily one of the better fantasy screen adventures ever undertaken.  It is aimed at adults, and follows the adventures of a family of four as they unravel their past, present, and future selves.  Needless to say the plot is difficult to explain, but the acting, writing, and special effects are truly inspired.  Episodes are less than 30' each, but pack an awful lot into that time.  Highly recommended.  There are 8 episodes in each season.

Seasons 1 &2 are showing on Prime. 
 
The reason we subscribed to AMC+ was to watch their new series called Dark Winds. The first season has 6 one hour episodes.  It is so well done that a second season will be presented next year.  It features Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee, Navajo police officers from Tony Hillerman's acclaimed detective series, largely set in Northwest new Mexico and Northeast Arizona.  So far we have seen three episodes, and the fourth is set for tonight.  We both love the Hillerman books (17 or 18 of them before he died, with the series now taken over by daughter Anne, who was an executive producer for the TV series), and have seen two or three earlier films based on the books.  But this series has a budget, and the production values are near to perfect.  The casting seems enlightened, especially Leaphorn. We are devouring this series!  We got my dad interested in the books a long time ago, and he should be able to watch this series on his AMC regular channel.
 
Leaphorn and Chee take on the bad guys!  Great stuff! 
 
As a bonus, we also found an 8 part series on AMC called Name of the Rose.  It follows Ecco's book much more closely than the earlier film ever did, and once again the TV production values are superb and nearly overwhelming.  It may seem odd to find John Turturro playing the lead role of the detective monk, but so far (2 episodes in), he is unbelievably good.  I have never seen medieval atmosphere so authentically depicted on the screen.  We have certainly hit gold this month.  And waiting in the wings is a 2009 version of The Prisoner, a six episode series that might prove interesting.
 
A 2019 8 part series showing on AMC. 
 
I will return with more news in a day or two.  And it close to the time when I summarize my month's reading.  Please return soon.
 
Mapman Mike