SOUNDTRACK: SON LITTLE-“The River” (2014).
I don’t like the blues. I find it dull and repetitive. I also don’t really like singers who are described as “soulful.” And yet here is Son Little with a soulful blues stomper that I really like a lot. WXPN has been playing this song pretty often, and I like it more with each play.
It’s a fairly simple set up with handclapping and a two note guitar riff. Even Son Little’s voice doesn’t seem all that special at first. But there’s some way that all of the elements combine that makes it so much more than the sum of its parts.
And with each verse, more elements are added, a synth sound, some guitar lines, even some bass riffs, building the song’s intensity.
But it’s that chorus–so catchy and ominous at the same time with interesting harmonies that just sound like he is echoing himself. I really can’t get enough of it.
[READ: January 31, 2015] What if?
This book was just entirely too much fun. Well, actually I thought it would be a bit more fun, but Munroe is so scientific that at times (when he got really factually scientific) I just felt dumb. Which lessens the fun. In fact, the first couple of pieces are really heavily sciencey, unlike some of the later ones which are really funny.
But what am I talking about? This book is a collection of the “what if’ section of the website xkcd. There’s no real guidelines on the site for what kind of question you can ask, and many of them are quite strange (and often hilarious). They are hypothetical (what if?) questions and, depending on the arcane rules that Munroe follows he will answer them to the best of his scientific scrutiny. And he will take the questions very very seriously–no matter how stupid your question may seem, he will try to answer it scientifically. It’s fun!
But it’s also serious, and seriously scientific–Munroe is a former NASA roboticist.
So the first one “What would happen if the Earth and all terrestrial objects suddenly stopped spinning, but the atmosphere retained its velocity” almost seems to be put in the front to scare off those who might not want to be too scientific. And the second question comes more down to Earth (but also destroys the Earth): “What would happen if you tried to hit a baseball pitched at 90 percent the speed of light?” (more…)




