Tuesday, April 30, 2002

Tom Waits For No One



Does the deluge des disques never cease? Although his two ... yes, count 'em, two ...new albums aren't due for another week, you can hear full streaming audio of Tom Waits' Alice and Blood Money for a limited time on the Anti Records web site.

According to the official Tom Waits web site, Alice will be accessible beginning at 10am PST on April 30 to May 2, while Blood Money will be up at 10am PST from May 3-6. The albums will be available in Real Audio format in one continuous stream.

There are also a couple of mp3s you can download.

I'm listening to Alice as I type this, and it sounds like a real beaut (that's pronounced "byoot"). Mostly composed of classic late-night Waits-ian jazzy piano ballad-y stuff. Lovely. Some wonky elements here and there, and a little bit of hound dog Tom barking at the moon, but mostly the sound of his big ol' heart breaking in song. We're talking Johnsburg, Illinois territory here.

Oh lord, here's a song with a singing saw. Oh... that's so perfect... it's the closing song, called "Fawn".
Oh yes, this goes on the list.

... and I keep forgetting to pick up former Whiskeytowner Caitlan Carey's solo disc, which I took for a spin at an HMV listening post a while ago. My ears was sayin' "yes yes yes".

Sunday, April 28, 2002

Just filed my income tax, using the NETFILE method, which allows you to upload your return to a secure CCRA website. Very convenient. So, if all goes well, in a few weeks I should receive my whopping $2 refund! Boy oh boy, what a shopping spree that will be! Hope I don't blow it all in one place.

I guess it's better than last year, when I had to pay about $150.

"Ha ha Mr. Wilson..."
"This is rock 'n roll recorded poorly, played in a hurry with sweaty hands and unsure reason. How it sounds, what it says, who played what - is irrelevant. It feels right. This is my blood." - Grandpaboy

As if there was any doubt that Paul Westerberg has an instinctual understanding of the true essence of rock & roll.
So it appears I didn't explode last Tuesday. Which is good. The Elvis Costello CD is actually being released a week later here in Canada (comes out this Tuesday), so in fact there weren't as many sparks to ignite the music consumer powder keg that was me.

But I did pick up Wilco's "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot" and Paul Westerberg's "Stereo/Mono". I'm dying to write about YHF. My thoughts about it have been coalescing over the past week or so, mixed in with the experience of seeing the band perform an amazing show at Convocation Hall a week ago, but as yet I haven't found the time to sit down and give it the proper review it deserves, and today I must try to finish my taxes, so it'll have to wait for a few more days at least. But suffice to say that YHF is a brilliant album. Defintely Wilco's finest work, and probably the best album I've heard since... well, since "Summerteeth".

The Westerberg is quite wonderful as well. Especially the "Mono" disc, credited to Grandpaboy, an "alter-ego" band which supposedly includes Replacement's bassist Tommy Stinson. It's got that kind of Mats sound, loose and swaggering. I don't know what kind of guitar-amp combination Westerberg uses on this album, but man oh man, what a glorious sound! Drawing from the Keith Richards tone book, wonderfully warm, tube-y amounts of crunchy distortion. Great springtime rockin' songs. Makes me wish I had a car just so I could cruise with the windows open and the stereo blasting "Mono".

The "Stereo" disc is mostly Westerberg solo, although there are a few band songs with elec guitars and a rhythm section. And while it is steadily growing on me, it didn't grab me as viscerally as the "Mono" stuff. There are some great songs ñ "Let The bad Times Roll" ñ and the opening line of the first track, "Baby learns to crawl watching Daddy's skin...", well, how genius is that? Then there's the disturbing double entendre from Got You Down: "he knows you like the back of his hand". Wow.
(It's a good thing the Costello CD wasn't released last week. An onslaught of Westerberg-Costello-Tweedy wordplay would have surely caused me to combust. But what a way to go!)

But I hear Westerberg on a few of the lesser "Stereo" songs mining very similar melodic territory as on his last album, "Suicane Gratifaction", a very good album in its own write. It's probably some of his finest solo work, but the repetitiveness I hear in some of his melodic instincts just irks me a bit. Plus, while I applaud the slapdash ethos of putting out these tracks ñ some of which are essentially demo recordings which end abruptly when the tape runs out ñ there are a few occasions where he could have simply faded the song out, and it would have been a less jarring experience for the listener. But maybe he wanted that effect. And maybe it is more interesting than a fade-out. Those minor gripes aside, "Stereo/Mono" is a fine release. Nice to see Westerberg back on track.

More later.

TRON COMES TO LIFE

Virtual theft causes real pain
On-line gamer calls cops after hacker steals character

I love the part where the victim borrows his brother's on-line character in order to chase down the guy who hijacked his identity. A character chase!

Does anyone know a good virtual gumshoe?

Monday, April 22, 2002

Hey look!

I've got stuff on my sidebar! Links to some of my stuff.

Kind of tentative for now. (Not to mention a little self-promotional!)
I'll add links to friends' blogs and web pages soon.

If you're reading the news on Tuesday, and there's a headline that goes something like 'MAN EXPLODES IN RECORD STORE"... uh, that'll be me.

There are so many CDs being released tomorrow that I want to get. It's going to be hard keeping my greedy little hands from grabbing more than two or three. Some of these titles I've been hotly anticipating for quite a while...

- Wilco's Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
- Jeff Tweedy's soundtrack for the flim Chelsea Walls
- Former Wilco multi-instrumentalist, Jay Bennett's solo project
- Paul Westerberg's double CD, Stereo and
Grandpaboy
- Elvis Costello's When I Was Cruel...

And I think there may be a couple more that I'm forgetting.

Too much of a good thing?
NEVER!

Sunday, April 21, 2002

BLACK AND WHITE AND GREY AND RED ALL OVER

Not that I'm a big fan of the Toronto Sun or anything, but I use their Canoe site to check up on news headlines and such. Today I found Michele Mandel's very moving elegy to the four Canadian soldiers whose caskets were flown home yesterday.

Yesterday, I ended my usual Saturday afternoon running around with my quasi-traditional stop at the Court Jester on the Danforth (their jerk chicken burger rocks), and I sat at my usual table which affords a view of the TV. I scooped up a copy of NOW to peruse while I sipped my Kilkenny and waited for my burger. The Maple Leafs' matinee playoff game had just ended, and the sound on the TV had been turned up so people could hear the game. They left the sound on, even after the bar stereo came back to life, and the CBC news came on with their lead story. People chatted noisily around me, paying no attention to the TV. I was immersed in an article about Wilco.

When I heard the bagpipes, I looked up to see the silver casket, draped in the red and white of our flag, being lifted off the plane by a huge fork lift. And then another. And another. And another. Each ferried into a waiting hearse by the white gloves and stoically solemn faces of military pall bearers.

This had happened earlier in the day, but it was the first time I'd seen this footage. Maybe the other people in the Jester had seen it already, because no one else appeared to be watching it. I found it jarring. Chilling. Watching the flag-draped caskets of Canadian soldiers killed overseas in the "war against terrorism". Killed while on a training exercise, when an American pilot apparently mistook their live rounds for enemy fire, and dropped a bomb on them. But no matter, friendly fire or enemy fire. Killed by war.

Hard to describe the feeling of ambivalence about this. My heart goes out to the families, loved ones, friends and comrades of those soldiers. As a Canadian, seeing those coffins, I feel wounded. While I don't always have a great deal of respect for the military as an institution, at the personal level, these were four people who served our country in war, and paid the price.

Mandel's thoughts on seeing those coffins echo my own. This is something we're more likely to see happening to Americans. Coming home from Viet Nam, the Iranian desert, Beruit, Panama, Iraq... And I feel a resentment. Angry that we get entangled with the grey morality of American foreign policy. And yet, despite the always-shady nature of superpower geo-political agendas, there's also something so black-and-white about this campaign, coming as a response to thousands of people, of many nationalities, killed in the attack on New York City (to say that still sounds like something out of a Marvel comic book—"New York City is under attack! Where's Superman?"). We may squabble with our neighbour from time to time, and we may get pissed off when they play their culture too loud, but when their house is attacked, we help them out, as good neighbours should. Canadians are good neighbours.

Still, it's hard to accept, having to see those caskets.

Flashback to a night a few weeks ago, when my friend Katherine was stopped on Borden street by a young Francophone soldier in a cab. He was lost. Apparently from Quebec, he had been ordered to report to the Canadian Forces Base at Borden, Ontario, an hour or more outside of Toronto. He had been told to get off the train at Union Station and take a cab to Borden. Not knowing much English, he had the misfortune of getting a cab driver whose English wasn't much better, and whose French was non-existent. And so they ended up on quaint, tree-lined Borden street, looking for a huge military installation. (Aside from the language divide, it's also quite possible that neither of them was terribly bright.) Katherine was eventually able to figure out where he was trying to go, and they hopped back in the cab—the lost, young soldier and the obliging taxi driver—and sped off into the night.

He was just a young guy—early twenties perhaps, a bit slacker-ish in apperance, kerchief tied around his head. He wouldn't have looked out of place at a Dead concert. At the time I imagined that maybe he was a sniper. A new recruit, a crack shot whose skills had been noted by his commanding officer, and who was being called up specially, to be sent over to Afghanistan.

Now I think: it could have been him. It could have been him in one of those shiny metal caskets. We sent him off in a red and black Beck's taxi, only to see him return in a red-and-white draped metal box.

Back at the Jester, the barmaid stands at the gateway to the bar, awash in the steady din of jovial barroom conversations, aims the remote at the TV. And the bagpipes fall silent, the funeral dirge is history, the solemnity swept away with the push of a button, the changing of the channel, replaced by an advertisement for the newest Ford.

And here, I can only paraphrase Wilco's Jeff Tweedy:

I would like to salute
The ashes of Canadian flags
And all the fallen leaves
Filling up shopping bags

Friday, April 19, 2002

I almost fell off my chair laughing when I read this little bit of fashion advice on Canoe. It seems denim is in this summer ñ for us guys too!
This passage really cracks me up:

Don't worry boys, you wont be left in the closet as denim is also high up on your fashion
charts. Whether it's dried, blasted, worn or personalized, denim can be easily combined
with a logoed sweatshirt or a graphic design sweater for a powerful statement of
individuality. Old-fashioned floral prints can also be paired with oily petrol cast denim to
give our man boldness and independence. This summer, freedom and being yourself is
ruling the trends
of the season at French Connection.


!!!

Nice to see that independent thought is IN this season.

Yes, repeat after me: We are all individuals! We are all individuals! ...

Thursday, April 18, 2002

Here's the link to my piece on the Paul McCartney media conference, on the Chart magazine web site.

Paul McCartney Goes Through Beatlemania, Again

I decided to take a more informal, first person approach, rather than a 'news-y' style. Not only is that more consistent with the style of Chart's web site, it's also reflective of the mood of the event, where the roomful of journalists didn't try very hard to hide their fandom. Could have been our last chance to experience a former Beatle on tour.

Let me know what you think.
(click on my name below to send an email)

Monday, April 15, 2002

Okay, here's how the Paul McCartney press conference went.

It started an hour-and-a-half late. He was still doing sound check or something. It was in the Raptor's practice gym in the Air Canada Centre. They used about half the room, and had it divided with a curtain. I snagged a spot in the front row, next to Anne-Marie Green, one of the City-TV on-air hotties. Just my dumb luck, I guess. :-)

After a while, his press agent, Geoff Baker, came on to apologize for the delay and he ate up some time by fielding questions. One reporter, I assume trying to be cheeky, asked "can we get comps?". And Baker says, in his smooth Brit accent, "what, you mean you don't have passes for the show?" And it turns out there were about 15-20 of us who didn't have passes, so Baker says "we'll fix that." So I got to see the show from the press gondola. Way up above the nose-bleeds, but at least I got to see it. More on that later.

I had taken my trusty little Sony tape recorder with me, and at the media check-in beforehand, I asked the EMI Canada rep who was running the thing (Anastasia) if it was okay to put it up on the table while Paul spoke. She said 'no'.

Damn, guess I'll have to take better notes. My note-taking sucks. But while we were waiting (and waiting and waiting) I saw someone else put their tape recorder up there, so I said 'what the hell' and put mine up there too. Nobody said anything about it.

So, eventually, in comes Paul McCartney. He looked great. Very fit and youthful, with a bit more jowl-droop these days, but he is 60 after all. And if that's 60, then bring on 60. It only lasted for about 15-20 minutes, but I got the last question in!

I asked him this: "The best rock concerts are about an emotional connection between the artist and the audience. Since the last time you toured, you've experienced some very personal losses in your life. So far on this tour, are you finding that there is a greater emotional connection with the audience?"

Or something close to that... as i tried to be as coherent as I could. I think I was able to ask it without sounding like an idiot.

And he gave a pretty long answer too, saying he was indeed finding that that was the case, and that he's finding it's a good way do deal with the sadness he's experienced and for everybody's sadnessñafter Sept. 11ñand that it's a kind of group therapy for everyone, and it's good to share that through the music, etc. I haven't listened to the tape yet, but that was essentially the gist of it. I noticed that quite a few of the other stories, in the Toronto Sun, etc, are using that as their focus. Heh.

This one guy from CTV brought a 60s vintage board game ñ "The Beatles Flip-Your-Wig" board game ñ from the hey-day of Beatlemania merchandising, and asked Paul to sign it, and he said he would after. So when it was over, that guy stepped up with his game, and then everybody else swarmed up to get stuff signed. So much for the cool and detached Toronto entertainment media.

Now I've never asked any celebrity for an autograph while on the job ñ it seems unprofessional to me ñ but I just happened to have brought the booklet from my White Album CD. So I joined the fray, and put it on the table, but Paul seemed not to want to sign it. He said something like 'give me something else', but I'm not sure if that was directed at me, or if he was just saying to everyone in general, 'okay I'll sign one more thing', or something like that. So he signed a lot of tour programs (which we had been given), he was very generous, but he didn't sign my CD booklet, and he started leaving, but he only got a few feet toward the door before he was waylaid by another group holding out programs. So I went back to my seat and grabbed my program and tried to get that signed, but he signed his last one before he got to me, and then he was gone. So that was too bad, but I have lots to take away from the moment as it is. For one thing, I have a tape with my voice and Paul McCartney's voice on it! How cool is that?

But it was pretty surreal. My mind is still absorbing it. I asked Paul McCartney a question and he answered it, looking at me, perhaps 12 feet away, and there I am nodding affirmatively at things he's saying, etc. In one sense, the most normal thing in the world ñ to ask someone a question and have them answer it, verbal interaction ñ but in another sense, one of the most surreal moments of my life, because it's Paul McCartney! All those songs that shaped my life. The Beatles were such heroes for me ever since I was 14 or 15 (still are, for that matter!), and I never dreamed I would ever meet one of them.

Man, I love my job.

Saturday, April 13, 2002

VeggieTales - Heroes of the Bible

Well, if this won't make kids eat their vegetables, I don't know what will.

Friday, April 12, 2002

File under "Wooooooo!"

Got a call from Aaron, the Managing Editor at Chart magazine, asking me if I'd be interested in covering Paul McCartney's press conference tomorrow afternoon at the Air Canada Centre.

Um, yeah okay, sure.

Holy Freakin' Fab Four!!!! I'll get to be in the presence of a Beatle! In the same room! Maybe only a few feet away, if I get a good spot!! And hopefully get to ask him a question! Holy shit!!

Wow!!

Hopefully I can think of a question that's not too stupid.

"Uh, so, d'you r'member, like, when you did that song 'Piggies'...?"

Paul: "Well, that was George's song, but yeah..."

"D'oh, *slapping forehead*... I'm so stoopid... *slap, slap*..."

This is soooo exciting!! I've interviewed quite a few rock stars, and I'm usually very calm and matter-of-fact about it ñ I mean, they're just people, after all ñ but this is a frickin' Beatle! And I've been a huge Beatles fan ever since I was about 14 or 15. They shaped my life in a very real way. The way I think about art, creativity, musicianship, the impulse for innovation...

This will be a truly Fab moment.

Stay tuned.





From the same people at Extrabad, who brought you LegoDeath (see below), you'll also find a bunch of other twisted animated shorts (and let's face it, nothing's worse than twisted shorts).

We Are Robots is particularly funny, especially Sad Robot and Robokopf, the tortured robot artist.

Thursday, April 11, 2002

LegoDeath Museum Of Horrors.

Y'know, there are those who would see this and wonder what kind of sick mind would create such a thing. Further proof that we're going to Hell in a handbasket, they'd say. But when I see this, I feel my faith in humanity is restored.

Or, put another way...

Some see LegoDeath and ask 'why?'
I see LegoDeath and say 'WOO!'

Wednesday, April 10, 2002

This is interesting. Just make sure your sound is on, and you're not eating or drinking when you view this.

Monday, April 08, 2002

Sunday, April 07, 2002

Honouring Past Loves and Last Waltzes.

There was a piece in the New York Times on the upcoming re-release of the The Last Waltz (which I alluded to in an earlier post).

Ah, The Band. I love The Band.

Some things end too soon. But some things just seem to run their course, and no amount of tears or regrets will bring them back. Their time had come. They ran out of road. Still, there always comes a time to look back and honour what was beautiful and valuable. So I'm really lookng forward (heh) to the re-issued boxed set of The Last Waltz. The Scorsese film of the band's swansong concert is making the rounds of select theatres, and it's also being released as a DVD, and the soundtrack as an expanded and remastered boxed set.

Looking back, I realize how this album was a pivitol piece of my musical development. I bought this album ñ a triple-record set on vinyl ñ in the early 80s. It was in the Fall and I was starting my first year of university at UNB, living in a boarding house in Marysville, across the St. John River from Fredericton. My landlord, Elmer Mac-something, was a pasty middle-aged Episcopalian bible-thumper who inherited the old house from his mother, and he kept the parlour ñ not a living room, a parlour ñ pretty much the way she had left it. Doilies and bell jar clocks and such. He had a compulsive behavioural thing where he would have to wash his hands after handling money, including the rent cheque. He gave me the creeps. I was glad to get out of there once a room became available at a university dorm in November.

But while I was there, when I left for school in the morning, the quickest route on foot was to cross a railroad bridge. No walkway. I had to stride along on the railroad ties, looking down at the river flowing far below my feet. When a train had the audacity to insist on sharing the bridge with me, I had to actually climb down over the side of the bridge and wait on one of the huge concrete supports until the train passed. The whole structure would shake. Fun.

When I got home in the evening, I would sit in my tiny room with the yellowing wallpaper and listen to the Last Waltz. Seemed like kind of an appropriate way to listen to the music of The Band and their other fellow travelers like Neil Young, Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, etc. This is the music I was listening to when the music world outside my thin wooden walls was becoming all glossy and, and... 80s-y and... well, to me anyway, empty. This music was rich. This music had heritage. This music had relatives. This music had old pictures in old picture frames in its parlour. But it wasn't dead, like Elmer's parlour. It was alive and vibrant, like a tree with roots.

Some of the performances on this album are just so definitive. This version of
"It Makes No Difference", in particular, has always stood out for me. It's just so perfect, musically and emotionally.

Maybe it sometimes feels cathartic to hear someone else singing your sorrows, but this song just taps into the sadness of lost love so deeply, it just tears me apart whenever I listen to it. Tears are mandatory. Spill 'em if ya got 'em. Rick Danko sings this song with such a sense of heartbreak that even though Robbie Robertson wrote it, Danko's singing is almost grounds enough for a co-writing credit. And then there's the harmonies on the chorus: Levon Helm supplying the first level (the tonic? the 3rd?) and Richard Manuel floating in on top, reaching for heaven. Robbie Robertson's guitar playing is so passionate and on-the-money, and Garth Hudson's tenor sax solo is a beautiful study of economy and feeling. Just perfect.

Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful music. Sad and strong and sexy. Every stream of American music ñ country, blues, gospel, rock 'n' roll, ragtime, folk, even a little jazz ñ coming together, distilled, of course, by a band that was four-fifths Canadian.

Anyway...
if you can't access the article, here's an excerpt:

The Band Is Gone, the Waltz Plays On

By ANTHONY DeCURTIS

When the Band first sauntered onto the music scene in 1968, the group's impact could not have been more profound. Playing haunting songs that explored age-old themes of guilt and redemption, of individual will and the responsibilities of community, the Band drew on the deepest currents of blues, R & B, country, gospel and the essential force of rock 'n' roll pioneers like Little Richard, Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley.

"Music From Big Pink," the Band's still-gripping debut album, helped end a baroque period of psychedelic excess. Eric Clapton was just one of many musicians on whom the Band's influence was decisive. Mr. Clapton was a member of Cream when "Music From Big Pink" came out, and the ego-free ensemble eloquence of the Band's music made him feel ashamed of his own group's grandiosity. He remembered hearing the album and thinking, "This is what I want to play."

Now, at what seems to be the end of a similar period of extravagance in pop music, the Band's honest, unadorned music is back. With a bit of fuzzy math, the 25th anniversary of "The Last Waltz," the original Band's final performance in an all-star concert in 1976, is being celebrated with a fanfare that rivals both the lavishness of the original event and the hoopla surrounding the release two years later of the acclaimed movie and soundtrack album that documented it....

The Scorsese film is regarded as one of the greatest music documentaries. "Scorsese has caught the exciting spirit of the concert in a brilliant rhapsody of images," the Newsweek critic Jack Kroll wrote in 1978....

Whatever its flaws, "The Last Waltz" returns at a moment in which it can be received far more generously than it was in the mid-70's.... And at a time when audiences both young and old are discovering music with a connection to something more meaningful than a record company's bottom line, as shown in the success of the soundtrack album "O Brother, Where Art Thou," the artists in "The Last Waltz" represent a rare integrity....

So now we have the revival of a farewell. In many ways, this ostentatious anniversary celebration contradicts the powerful point the Band made in 1968. Rather than the lengthy jams, rococo arrangements and trippy lyrics that were so prevalent at the time, songs by the Band like "The Weight" and "Chest Fever" were at once carefully structured and rhythmically loose, plain-spoken and receptive to endless interpretation. Other than Mr. Helm, who is from Arkansas, all the members of the Band were Canadian. But the group's morally ambiguous songs harked back to the oldest traditions in American music ó to medicine shows and spirituals, to murder ballads and eccentric folk character portraits....

It remains to be seen what those "younger generations" will make of "The Last Waltz." At one point in the film, Mr. Scorsese asks Mr. Robertson whether the concert represents "the celebration of a beginning or an end." Mr. Robertson replies, "The beginning of the beginning of the end of the beginning." That may have just been rock star insouciance, a flip way of saying, Who knows? to a question he may have considered corny. But as audiences today continue to consider the significance of "The Last Waltz," it may be as true an answer as he could have given, for reasons he probably could not have imagined at the time.
-----

"It¥s the last waltz
The last waltz with you
But that don¥t mean
The dance is over..."

Friday, April 05, 2002

Thursday, April 04, 2002

Yahoo up your wazoo.

If you have an account with Yahoo groups, you may want to check this out. It seems they've changed everyone's marketing preferences in your account settings so they can send you spam. I went in and switched all mine back from 'Yes' to 'No'.

Here's the message a friend sent to me (thanks Marty).

> Just in case any of you, like me, had not yet received a notice from
> Yahoo, you might want to know that Yahoo "updated" their privacy
> policy. What this means to you is that the marketing preferences
> you indicated have been reset by Yahoo to make it okay for them to
> send you spam.
>
> If you'd like to "fix" that, go up to the Yahoogroups website and
>log in. Click on Account Info (it's at the upper right of the
>screen). You'll need to put your password in again, and then click
>on "Edit Marketing Preferences." Change all the options to No, and
>don't forget the two towards the bottom of the page about phone and
>snail mail spam. Click the button to save it. When you are returned
>to the previous page, also click the Finished button at the top or
>bottom of the page.
>
> You must do this for every account/profile you have. (Not for every
> group membership).

Bastards!

Wednesday, April 03, 2002

Okay, that does it. Someday, I will work for Rhino Records.

"KAZOOS TO NUGGETS"
"Every few months at Rhino, new employees congregate for a special element of Rhino's orientation program: From Kazoos to Nuggets - A Rhino Musical History Orientation. It is a crash course on all the music and mayhem of Rhino -- from the trunk of Richard and Harold's cars, to the store, to the first EP Some Kazoos by the Temple City Kazoo Orchestra to the triumphant Nuggets box and beyond. Each new-hire is ceremoniously dubbed a "Rhino," bathed in product, and treated to stories of deals, office changes, and musical fanaticism taken to the extreme by Senior VP of A&R Gary Stewart."

A company among whose chief offerings at the moment include Elvis Costello reissues and the Last Waltz boxed set.

A company that celebrates the Kazoo and "Fish Heads"!

And their head office is in L.A.

I will be theirs. Oh yes, I will be theirs.

Tuesday, April 02, 2002

More gems from the newswire.


http://www.canoe.ca/Canoe/canoechealth.html

Tuesday, Apr. 02, 2002
TORONTO (CP) -- It seems Hollywood isn't wrong when it portrays stoners as, well, dumb.
Heavy marijuana use does seem to drive down the IQ, by an average of four points, researchers from Carleton University report in Tuesday's issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal. The good news? The decline appears to right itself if the dope smoker butts out.

"A negative effect was not observed among subjects who had previously been heavy users but were no longer using the substance," the researchers wrote. "We conclude that marijuana does not have a long-term negative impact on global intelligence."

The issue of whether marijuana use has an impact on IQ is a contentious one. "It's been very controversial," said lead author Peter Fried of Carleton's psychology department.
----

Okay, the study's lead author is named... Fried?
Bwaaaaaaahhhhh!

I had to check the date twice to make sure it didn't say April 1.

Fried! Bwaaaaaahhhhhh!

Third day into it, and my blog has suddenly become Weekend Update!

Goodnight and have a pleasant tomorrow.
Bought a new thesaurus today.

It's really... good.

And speaking of resurrection... file this one under (Not So) "Po Lazarus"

From Billboard:
Not only did the "O Brother Where Art Thou?" soundtrack lead many to rediscover American roots music, it led to the rediscovery of James Carter, the Mississippi State Penitentiary inmate whose rendition of "Po Lazarus" ñ which folklorist Alan Lomax taped while Carter chopped wood on a prison work gang in 1959 ñ is the album's first cut. Now 76 and living in Chicago, Carter was found last month after an intensive archive search and was presented with a platinum album ñ and a $20,000 royalty check. But since the song is in the public domain, he'll also receive additional songwriting royalties. Soundtrack producer T-Bone Burnett told the New York Times that Carter ñ who didn't know about the film or the album ñ now stands to earn "well into the six-figure range".