SOUNDTRACK: CHRIS FORSYTH & THE SOLAR MOTEL BAND-Dreaming in the Non-Dream (2017).

I was anticipating watching Forsyth at the end of last year but the show sold out on me. (Note: he is playing nearby this Friday).
I heard about him from a stellar Tiny Desk Concert and was totally psyched to hear this four-song full length album.
The disc opens with the 11 minute History & Science-Fiction that starts with a slow bass line and lots of percussion. After a short intro the guitar comes in with whammy bar’d chords. It resolves into a really catchy “chorus” and then a slow down that reminds me of a softer “Marquee Moon.” But instead of turning into a rocking solo section, it totally mellows out, with keyboards and cymbals and a pretty guitar melody. It slowly builds out of that by switching from organ to sax.
[READ: December 27, 2017] Obama: An Intimate Portrait
Sarah got me this book for Christmas and it is awesome. I wanted to spend 2018 looking forward, getting past the dumpster fire of 2017 and hoping we can move past what we are bogged down with. #ITMFA #RESIST
But this book was just an amazing look back and something that gives me hope that we can move forward past what we have now.
Pete Souza is a tremendous photographer and this collection offers amazing access to a President who was full of gravitas and thoughtfulness.
We were concerned that reading this would be too depressing given the State of our country and the Embarrassment in Chief. And in some ways it was depressing. But in many ways it was what it was intended to be: inspirational.
It’s hard to believe that before our Chief Idiot was bumbling his way through life and giving literally zero thought to anything except his own ego, we as a country had 8 years of a leader who, these pictures show, put serious thought and concern into (almost) everything he did. Obama was never quick to do anything–he was often mocked for his slow speech patterns–but this is a job where rushing to judgment never does anyone any good. And you can see the pressures of the world weighing on him.
But this book is not all about pressure. There are delightful moments of joy–with his daughters, with delightful citizens, with staff and of course with Michele. (more…)
