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12/14/2008

Comments

Arundel

Hi. I forget where I first came across your blog, but I enjoy your posts and insights.
Thank you.

However, this strange thing of repeating the same picture fifteen times in a post is a damned eyesore, an affectation that beats the casual reader over the head with the same repeated image in such a distracting way it's impossible to concentrate on what you're saying.

Repeating the same photo over and over implies there's some importance to the image- believe me, once is enough. We're not stupid. Repeating it so pointlessly is irksome.

I hope you keep writing insightful things. But readers have to work to find them between the same goddamn picture, breaking up the text for no reason.

Best to you.

John Anthony

I assume one would prefer only one leaf on a tree, one kernel of corn on an ear, one fencepost clicking by as you ride alongside of it. After all, they're all the same after you've seen one.

Ricky

This was one of the performances I had tickets for--what a wonderful surprise! Her voice was lovely and powerful, and she acted the hell out of the role. I would have never known she had little sleep and zero rehearsal, though Peter Gelb did come out before the opera began and informed us that by the time she would be singing the Liebestod, it would be morning in Munich.

I really love the design and staging of this production (except for those tchotchkes in Act III; what were they thinking?!). The lighting design is the most effective and beautiful I've seen in an opera; the way the gold light pours out of the doors into the blue night at the top of Act II--unforgettable.

My favorite part of the opera was Brangane's "Einsam wachend in der Nacht." Michelle DeYoung's voice is perfectly suited for this section, and it just floated over the orchestra so beautifully, magically.

Five hours never seemed so short a time...

The Gay Recluse

Thanks for sharing, Ricky -- I also love Brangane's "Einsam..." so haunting and beautiful!

jdibknbmht

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Cissy

Is that true?
What a big wow! Herr Meier is a real heroine!
Methinks she is the greatest female Wagnerian now singing on stage.

The comments to this entry are closed.

Gods final
#gods

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A young boy wanders into the woods of Harlem and witnesses the abduction of his sister by a glowing creature. Forty years later, now working as a New York City homicide detective, Gus is assigned to a case in which he unexpectedly succumbs to a vision that Helen is still alive. To find her, he embarks on an uorthodox investigation that leads to an ancient civilization of gods and the people determined to bring them back.

In this colossal new novel from the author of The Metropolis Case, the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice collides with a new religion founded by three corporate office workers, creating something beautiful, illogical, and overwhelming. Part sex manifesto, part religious text, part Manhattan noir—with a dose of deadly serious, internet inspired satire—#gods is a sprawling inquest into the nature of faith and resistance in the modern world. With each turn of the page, #gods will leave you increasingly reborn.

Praise for #gods

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The Metropolis Case

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-- The New York Times

Music: Death Culture at Sea and Saturnine

Listen or download songs and records from my indie-rock past with Saturnine here and Death Culture at Sea here.

Music Video: Remembrance of Things Past

Watch the rock opera Remembrance of Things Past written and performed by Saturnine and Frances Gibson, starring Bennett Madison and Sheila McClear.

Video: The Chaos Detective

The Chaos Detective is a series about a man searching for 'identity' as he completes assignments from a mysterious organization. Watch the first episode (five parts) on YouTube.
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