Paul Simon – Graceland

I went into this album knowing a single song from it (You can call me Al) which really is a catchy pop tune that you find yourself humming in quiet moments during the day after you’ve heard it. I did some research into what the album is about and saw that Paul Simon purposefully injected traditional African beats, instruments, and melodies into the music (Specifically an African accordion band)

Overall the music really has a mid-80’s vibe to it with lots of synthesizer tracks typical to the time period. This really works with Simon’s dense lyrical prose which is filled with allegories and references. I’ve always enjoyed Simon and Garfunkel and pop-folk is one of my favorite musical genres (to play as well as listen to) and he continues this folk mentality with songs that tell entire stories

What this album reminds me of: I didn’t really hear this album until this challenge – which is a shame because it falls into the wheelhouse of the kind of eclectic music I enjoy. When it came out I was 12 years old and wouldn’t have gotten the same experience from it that I have now with age and well, a life lived. Honestly, I would have bailed after a few songs because at that age I was REALLY into top-40 and Hip-Hop so folk music would have been a hard sell.

Rating: 3/5 – While I enjoyed the album for it’s lyrics and progressive melodies sometimes it can get repetitive and while I prefer lyrically dense songs some of the tracks were a bit repetitive – after a while the tracks started blending together. Some of the lyrics are too obtuse to really infer what he was trying to say. I don’t mind lyrical allegory but I don’t want to work too hard deciphering lyrics!

Pesto Pizza w/Mozzarella and Tomato Bruschetta

I was tinkering with ways to make a pesto pizza besides my usual fig jam pizza. Since the pesto was rich and salty I wanted something lighter to offset it. I ended up settling on tomato bruschetta topping. It was light, textured, but also was a flavor bomb that could hold its own against the pesto sauce. Overall it was amazing and flavorful My only change would be a sturdier crust – since the soft Neapolitan pizza crust I was using couldn’t really stand up to the weight of all the toppings like a NY crust would.

Brussel Sprout and Red Onion Pizza

I was wandering around the grocery store trying to decide what looked good for meals that week when I saw the fresh brussel sprouts basket and wondered how they would taste on a pizza. Some internet research paired brussel sprouts with red onions frequently so I decided to make the base of my pizzas a layer of marinated red onions slowly cooked down until they were super soft. Topped off with some dry mozzarella and brussel sprouts shaved super fine (so they cooked / charred consistently).

Red Bull vs. Inter Miami

The good: The Red Bull won in a decisive fashion with some stunning forward play and an aggressive attack.

The bad: It was pouring rain – I mean biblical rain that the wind blew in great sheets as I sat in what I thought was a great seat. Also, it was about 45 degrees and no matter how I tried either the cold, wind,  or rain was making me uncomfortable. Also, I didn’t own rubber boots (I certainly do now) and there was a shallow lake between the train station and the stadium so my feet were soggy and cold the whole time as well! Also Messi pulled out at the last minute with a sore hamstring so I didn’t get to see him play.

The Amazing: The play where Morgan sprinted to catch up to the ball before it went out of bounds, reestablished a dribble then scored. (4:47 in the video) – Also the Morgan hat trick!

The stadium: It’s my first time at the Harrison stadium (I’ve seen them play at Giants stadium a bunch of times) and I rather enjoyed it. It’s a nice size for a soccer stadium and designed with the fans in mind – every seat seemed close. There was an entire drum section that led the cheers and the crowd was really into it – even with the awful weather. The food options didn’t really stand out – they had some higher end options like BBQ and hot chicken but the lines were ridiculous so I opted for generic chicken tendies and a soda, which admittedly were pretty good.

I really enjoyed seeing them play and I’d definitely go back – and hope for a better weather outcome.

Modern Times – 1936

Silent Film – 1936
Charlie Chaplin

Another visit to Chaplin’s tramp character. This time he’s working in a factory where everything is regimented and watched over (very big brother like) by the boss via television screens. Chaplin’s character is starting to show stress from the repetitive nature of the work and then goes off the rails in a madcap dash around the factory -eventually getting stuck in the gears in a pretty famous scene

He’s committed to a hospital and when he gets out accidentally gets involved in an anti govt protest and ends up in jail. At some point in prison he ingests a bag of cocaine and goes full Tony Montana (only without the guns) and in his rush around the station he stops a breakout attempt without even realizing what he’s doing.  The cops are so thankful they give him a cushy cell with lots of amenities which the tramp seems to really enjoy. However – his time in prison is soon to be over and he unsuccessfully tries to convince the police that he belongs back in prison since he gets three meals a day and a comfortable place to sleep.

One released he struggles to find a job – eventually finding work using a letter of recommendation from the police captain at a shipyard where he’s given a simple job of hammering some piles in – however he didn’t understand the instructions (in true tramp style) and ends up launching a ship that… wasn’t quite ready to be launched. Dejected from his inability to find work he’s walking down the street when he sees a young girl stealing bread and when the cops ask him what happened he said he stole the bread trying to get back to his cushy prison cell.  Witnesses tell the police that he didn’t really do it and he’s freed back onto the streets.

Really determined to go back to jail – he goes to a restaurant and eats a ton of food and then doesn’t pay – tracking down a cop to come arrest him for it.  He’s locked up in a paddy wagon – and lo and behold, the girl from earlier is in the wagon with him! He tries his charm on her and she seems to vibe with him.. When suddenly the paddy wagon crashes and they escape in the chaos.

He tries to go straight for the girl and takes a job as a night watchman at a department store  – he has a great time roller skating around and sharing what the store has to offer with her but then three goons break in and try to rob the place – the tramp realizes they’re fellow factory workers who are just hungry and desperate. He decides not to call the police and falls asleep in a very unfortunate location where he is discovered the next day and promptly fired.

The girl gets a job dancing in a nightclub and convinces the owner that the Tramp is a singer and waiter but he’s terrible at the waiting part and his last chance is the singing performance. He’s really nervous but the girl helps him write the words on his cuffs so he won’t forget them – but he loses the cuffs during the dancing part! What’s he to do? That’s right.. He channels his inner Eminem and goes full five mile on them: Chaplin Modern Times ‘non-sense song’

Things are seeming up for these two lovebirds, but then the police track the girl down from her previous escape and her and the Tramp are forced to flee once again.  The stop at the site of the road and the girl desparis at they have nothing left but the tramp reassures her and they set off down the road into whatever awaits them.

4/5 – Great move and one of Chaplin’s finest performances

I think this is the first time you hear Chaplin’s voice in one of this films and he uses it to sing a nonsense song that somehow conveys an idea without using an actual language (he made it all up). The slapstick comedy was tight and funny and the camera work and direction was engaging.  Some of the ‘special effects’ were really well done practical effects that he sold with his conviction and body control.  Reading into it somewhat it was a commentary on industrialization and the political climate of the time and has eerie echoes into the current day with AI threatening to displace a lot of people’s jobs. It was one of the last silent films of the era and Chaplin’s last performance as the tramp and I’m glad he got to set off into whatever future awaited him with someone by his side.

Pizza al Diavolo

Standard NY style dough with a san marzano tomato sauce base, some parmesan and slices of hot cappicola. The only thing I’d change is having the butcher slice the salami very very thin – the slices I got were pretty thick and ended up a bit chewy, throwing off the whole textural experience. The heat from the salami wasn’t too hot, so I threw on lots of fresh red pepper flakes which did the trick!

The Ramones – Ramones

Old School Punk! Classic album from 1976 filled with angry punk songs (Bonus, they were from my hometown of Queens NY!) 

Just an album full of angry punk rock – simple chords, screaming lyrics, and a standard drumbeat but each song slaps – the most iconic probably is the Blitzkrieg bop just a fun bouncy song that really encapsulates what the album is about.  Each song is under 3 minutes and while there’s only 14 song on the album they go by pretty quick. 

Some songs don’t age well (beat the brat, about well.. Beating kids who are bad is one example) but the songs all have distinct melodies that elevate the punk genre and like most good Punk they don’t take themselves too seriously with songs like ‘Now I want to sniff some glue’

Then there’s the mosh pit classic ‘lets dance’ – blast this in a punk club and watch everyone just go a bit crazy. The few times I dared the most pit (decked out in my black NIN shirt and bolstered with a few drinks) it was exhilarating even if I woke up with various bruises the next morning.

What this song reminds me of: Listening to punk rock with my cyber/chat friends who really introduced me to the genre.  Before I met up with them, I was mostly hip hop, metal, and pop.. But they introduced me to Punk, Industrial and Grunge and changed my musical tastes forever.

4/5 – Just a great album to crank when you’ve had a bad day at work and want to vent the anger by scream singing in the car on the way home!

Outkast – Aquemini

I was only familiar with OutKast from their super popular songs (shake it like a polaroid piiiiiicture) so I was pretty unaware of this albums existence.  Filled with 16 lyrically dense songs this was an album I had to listen to a few times to really get a bead on what it was all about.

It harkens back to the origins of hip-hop  – where they rap about societal issues to bring awareness to the situations they came from. (in this case, Atlanta).  Each song is packed with bars the beats are all different and drive the songs appropriately and the guest rappers all bring some fire to the tracks.

What this album reminds me of: Old school Hip-Hop – listening to K-Tel records with my brother on my plastic record player in my room in the house in Jackson – an adolescent kid who loved hip-hop surrounded by people who really didn’t ‘get’ it. 

3/5 – There’s a few tracks that drag down the album (and the fact there’s 16 songs really dilutes the overall product). Still a solid album and I’m glad I got to experience it.