Archive for June, 2009

He’s bigger than the both of us…

Interview with one of my best buddies……

Chad Taylor is a New Zealand born novelist whose most recent novel, The Church of John Coltrane, was published in France in January — in French. Taylor currently lives and work in London, where he is working on the final edit of his seventh novel. Prima Storia volunteer Jane Robertson recently caught up with Taylor in a café on Brick Lane, in London’s East End, for a candid chat about genrelessness, rootlessness and open endings.

[From A Conversation with Chad Taylor ~ Prima Storia]

See, I know famous people…..Chad’s new novel is out in France now

Wooooowww……I knew it….


Another Porky Prime Cut……

It’s the passion you find on blogs like this which define exactly why, despite the cries of doom, music and the industry that creates it, will, once the smoke clears, be absolutely fine.

I understand this:

George D. Henderson’s voice is infuriatingly frail. And at 17 songs, 62 minutes, some quality control was needed.

[From porky prime cuts]

Doesn’t that apply to most albums? Hence the rise of the digital track download…

Footpaths in Bali, in fact, in Indonesia, are rarely what we would call footpaths elsewhere.

Indeed I’m always bemused by the way mega malls that sit adjacent to each other in Jakarta, filled as they are with countless (real) Gucci, Prada, Boss and all the rest, seem unwilling, or are not obliged to put walkways between them. I guess that’s the difference between retail in Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia and retail in Indonesia…there they all feed off each other to create thriving shopping precincts, here they are trying hard to work against each other. Nuts really.

But back to Bali. where the tourists swarm and I guess a hefty percentage end up with an injury of some sort as a souvenir of the shocking state of the island’s footpaths.

I blogged a while back (and I can’t find it, mostly because I’m too lazy)..ohh, I’ve given myself a cloud now, so I’ll try again..nope still can’t find it and realised that all my old images seem to have disappeared into some sort of blogger purgatory after my move from Windows Livewriter to Ecto….what to do? Nothing I guess…

So I start again…I blogged a while back about this beauty near our office:Footpath in Kuta

Kuta Footpath 2

which takes a blind footpath over a drop of perhaps 8 metres into what can best be described as a public sewer.

Now, to complement that, we’ve got a new precipice for the unwary.

The brand new footpath in the sadly increasingly grotty and unwelcoming Jalan Laksmana (also know as Eat Street because of the number of upper to middle range eateries) is an engineering shocker, with weird angles, gaping gaps between the masonry, an uneven surface which one assumes was put in place without any attempt to flatten the underlying earth, and the common wisdom in the area is that somebody pocketed most of the budget for the project thus the disaster that we now have.

But that’s neither here nor there because there are, mostly, no gaps to walk because it’s blocked by belligerent taxis, and the motorbikes of the workers in the area. Thus forcing the pedestrians back onto the street to avoid the other taxis that maraud along there hunting for young Japanese couples they can take 20km out of their way back to their hotel.

In one of the brief bits you can navigate on foot you find, bang smack in the middle, this:

footpath on Jalan laksmana

which of course takes the unwary pedestrian back into a sewer…I see a pattern emerging, and not just the bumps on the sight impaired friendly (or not so friendly) bumpy bits.

But relief is at hand..in Jakarta, the omnipowerful legislature have, last week, passed a sweeping new traffic law..so pedestrian friendly it now requires the disabled to wear a prominent badge, thus allowing them to be identified as less than normal and instructing drivers to let them cross. They won’t of course.

I wonder what colour triangle best suits?

This is actually pretty big news in the digital retail world as it marks the arrival of the first major on what is arguably the best digital music retailer. And it’s hard to scream piracy when you simply can’t buy the stuff outside places like the very user unfriendly iTunes, or the slightly friendlier but just as hard to search AmazonMP3.

eMusic may be the best site on the Internet for buying indie music, but those looking for major label tracks have always been disappointed by the selection. Today, though, eMusic took a major competitive step forward by licensing Sony’s entire back catalog—that’s everything, including the big names like Springsteen and Dylan, so long as it’s more than two years old.

[From Springsteen, Dylan come to eMusic as labels open up - Ars Technica]

It’s certainly more important than this incredible flow of unsupported drivel out of the UK. 4,000 jobs? Really? And you know this how?

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