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[personal profile] vivdunstan
Finished watching this, having watched spread out and slowly.

Just beautiful, a gem of a series, that has so much of the feel of Mackenzie Crook's Detectorists, but tells an original story, with brand new characters, with warmth, style and pathos.

The character interactions were magical throughout.

So much of the best bits of the series were the small details, so very carefully observed, acted and directed.

And every character was rounded and sympathetic to an extent. That's top writing.

I especially enjoyed some of the moments in the DIY store.

But the best part was the relationship between Michael and Kacey.

For goodness sake BBC, renew it for a second series! Though I am rather wondering how well that would work. I'll certainly watch.

If you're in the UK and can watch this on iPlayer, I thoroughly recommend doing so.

If you're in another country, I hope it is broadcast where you are and you get a chance to see it!

It really is very special.

Explaining Shape Note Music

Mar. 18th, 2026 07:40 pm
buttonsbeadslace: A white lace doily on blue background (Default)
[personal profile] buttonsbeadslace
A translation/expansion of what I wrote for my open-topic presentation for my Spanish class.
Basically what is shape note music?
- A genre of folk music from the United States.
- Not very widely-known even in the US.
- Grew out of Protestant Christian music with influence from other genres of folk music.
- Began in the 1700s, but unlike some music and other traditions from that era, it is not a re-creation from historical evidence but instead a "living" tradition- people have been singing and writing shape note music from the 18th century to the present day.

How is it different from other types of folk music?
- Sung by groups of singers with no instrumental accompaniment.
- Tends to make all voice parts equally complex, rather than viewing them as melody + backup singers (not all the time, but like, moreso than some genres of music.)
- Emphasis on written music (although there are still some unwritten rules, and some ways people apply their own interpretations to the songs.)
- A social activity, not a religious service and not a performance- the expectation is that if you go to a shape note event, you're there to sing, not to listen.

Why is it like that?
- It started with a movement to improve music in churches, which meant teaching churchgoers to sing and to read music.
- Consider the context: Before radio and recorded music, the only way to learn a new song was to hear it in person, or to read it in a book. The United States in the mid-1700s was not particularly well-endowed with infrastructure or education systems, and many people lived in relatively isolated rural areas, so both seeing musicians in person and finding a music teacher could be difficult.
- The solution that arose to meet this need: Travelling singing teachers.
- Their sales pitch: Take a short class with this New Improved Method that makes learning to read music easy! Then buy our book Music For Dummies* and continue practicing on your own. In fact, our system is so easy that if you can't get to a class, you can teach yourself just from the book! Buy Yours Today!
- What was this wonderful innovation? Pairing a simple solfege system with standard music notation by using differently shaped note "heads" to represent each solfege syllable. Thus, shape notes.
- There were other similar systems, but this is the one that attained the most popularity.
- These temporary singing schools mainly taught religious music, that people might use in church services in the future, but they were social events organized by professional teachers or groups of singers. The form of the events stayed the same, even as more people learned the music and they stopped serving the same educational function.

(To be continued with: what is shape note singing like today?)
_
*Actual title: The Easy Instructor. Actual quote: "an improved Plan, wherein the Naming and Timing of the notes are familiarized to the weakest Capacity."
spiralsheep: Sheep wearing an eyepatch (Default)
[personal profile] spiralsheep
Film the collective most wanted to see together but missed was Queer as Punk, 2025, which I mention because some of you might also be interested in a queer Malaysian punk movie.

Film: All That's Left of You, 2025, is an unexpectedly gentle and also thoughtful film about a Palestinian man and his family, told episodically from 1948 to 2022. I usually resent any film over the 2hr mark but this deserved and filled the 2hrs 25mins it took to tell these stories. The cinematography is decidedly beautiful, with Palestinian lives and homes being lit in warm colours. I hadn't read any spoilers so I'd no idea where these stories were heading beyond forwards in time from the Nakba through the First Intifada, and I was surprised by the later themes which I thought were extremely well handled despite their difficulties. An aspect of the film-making that drew my attention very early on were casting decisions for the two occasions during which we see close-ups of members of the Israeli military being abusive, when the actors chosen looked as much like the Palestinian lead as possible, so the first could have been his brother and the second a close cousin (a more diverse population was shown but the casting in these two incidents was clearly intentional).
Conclusion: I recommend watching All That's Left of You if you enjoy heartfelt family-themed films (also rated 12A - about PG-13 - despite the surrounding violence [/ reminder that European film ratings tend to be higher for violence (and lower for sex) than US ratings ]). 5/5

Film: Colours of Time / La Venue de l'avenir, 2025, is a lightweight middle-of-the-road French film exploring recent history through the lens of one family, and was clearly sponsored by the Normandy tourist authority (and good for them!). The casting suited the plot as well as the characters, the lighting was good, and all the very mainstream music - from acoustic to electronic dance - was spot on. Cliches are racked up constantly, but each is well done and forgivable (except possibly Monmartre as a romantic pre-suburb village, which was wholly unnecessary nostalgia that didn't rly work as commentary on the present and was balanced by the equally saccharine Ooo They've Got Electricity scene). The Obligatory Pride in French Arts Culture is offset by making it mildly amusing. Beekeeping featured as the vaguest form of token environmentalism. There is the most improbably upbeat and escapist take on teaching as a career. Warning for the usual pervasive French misogyny, albeit dialled down as this is intended to be a sweet story. Nonetheless I noticed the Stressed Businesswoman Who Just Needs a "Date" trope, and although the Women's Magazine Culture is Lol Lowbrow trope was offset by humour, there was also Historical Women Were All Sex-Workers. Also warning for glamourised recreational drug-taking. The best laugh line was "I got hit on by Victor Hugo!" and I'm absolutely not going to spoil the context, although for balance there was also a dreadful pun about cat/chat room filters.
Themes: family, love, nostalgic history. 5/5

Film: The Blue Trail / O Último Azul, 2025, is a Brazilian film, that I saw with the original soundtrack and subtitles (there seems to be a terrible dubbed trailer about too?). In a near-future dystopia, 80 year old people are bussed away to a "colony" for old people so they don't impair the economic activity of younger people... according to pervasive government messaging. Unfortunately for the protagonist, Tereza, the age limit is lowered to 77 only a few weeks before her 77th birthday. She is mandatorily retired from her job at an alligator processing factory (warning for animal death and dismemberment) and sent home to her small shack to await the inevitable. However, Tereza has other ideas and decides to flee in pursuit of her desire to fly. Along the way she meets a drug-taking riverboat courier who shows her a wild snail that excretes blue "drool" which induces visions in humans when used as eyedrops. Various snitches try to turn her in to the authorities, and her dream of flying crashes. But Tereza meets another riverboat traveller, on the rainbow-coloured Caridad (Charity - aka loving kindness), who might have an alternative dream for our heroine. But what will the visionary wild snail reveal about this, and how much will Tereza's renewed life cost her and the animals she inevitably continues to exploit (more warnings for animal death)?
Themes: exploitation, of people and animals and the environment; but also love and redemption (which has its price, like all redemption). Possible lesbian and/or female friendship themes but these are choose your own adventure interpretations.
Conclusion: beautiful, disjointed, occasionally upsetting, and partially individually redemptive. 4/5
oursin: Photograph of small impressionistic metal figurine seated reading a book (Reader)
[personal profile] oursin

What I read

Finished Victoria's Secret - still slightly meh about it - could possibly have engaged a bit with a longer history of 'Monarch has favourite/s who are not Quite Our Sort', even if historically the gender issues in play here were different??? Also had a bit of feeling that QV was not entirely NOT treating John Brown in the light of A Very Large Faithful Dog devoted to her to which she was also devoted and which she insisted on imposing upon people who hated dogs.... Thought it was good on her awful childhood, though.

Clare Pollard, The Modern Fairies (2024) - telling stories about women telling stories, i.e. the precieuses at the time of Louis XIV, the stories they were telling and their stories and how those reflected one another.

Susan Ertz, Woman Alive (1935), my attention having been drawn towards it by a mention of its having been republished. I have a copy of the first edition, Ertz being one of the early C20th middlebrow women novelists in whom I have had an interest going back decades, but not sure whether I ever actually read this. It is sf Of The Period, in which someone is cast forward into The Future by sciento-psychic means, this is his account. And okay, is not (unlike a cluster from around the same time) about the dystopic crushing iron heel of fascistic misogyny, is about the dysoptic outcome of a war in which germ warfare has killed all the women. Except one who has survived courtesy of mad scientist neighbour's experimental process.

Points for her being a young women of education, character, and something of a backstory conveying a certain cynicism, but she still concedes to the agenda of marrying and going forth and having babbyz, though I think everyone is a bit optimistic that she will pop out multiple daughters and even so, we do not think this will Save Humanity. (Also, no-one seems to suggest she should have Plurality of Mates, surely that would be advisable?) But then it just stops with our narrator pinging back to his present day.

Most recent Literary Review

Muriel Spark, A Far Cry from Kensington (1988), which I really enjoyed and am now looking out for more of hers - think I have copies of some somewhere?

Robert Barnard, Death of a Literary Widow (1979)- everybody in it is a bit of a caricature, not just the American academic.

Emily Tesh, The Incandescent (2025), because I have been hearing well of it. Pretty good, but is it just having Read A Lot that made one character look like a honking parade of red flags?

On the go

I think I am actually giving up on I Am A Woman, I don't think Being A Sad Lesbian is enough to provide a rounded character? Maybe it gets better?

Nibbling at various things. Realise that it is 2 weeks to next Pilgrimage discussion and I do not want to read Honeycomb too far in advance.

Up next

No idea.

wychwood: man reading a book and about to walk off a cliff (gen - the student)
[personal profile] wychwood
I was fascinated to read Jo Walton's post on How to read sixteen books at once at all times, because I have recently - and somewhat inadvertently - set up something similar for myself.

In mid-February I got fed up of all the half-read things in my ebook reader, so I went through and tagged a bunch of them - things I wanted to read, things I meant to get around to, etc - in a special collection, and then said "OK now you can only read things from this collection". I started out with 25 books, but added a few more either because a) they were new Dick Francis books that I wanted to read (2 books), or b) they were for a book group meeting that I had suddenly realised was approaching (2 books). Since then I have read only one ebook not in that collection (another book group! but a chapter-by-chapter one, so I don't want to read the whole thing yet), one paper book (oh look for a different book group), and a few chapters of other paper books, and the collection is down to 12.

It's actually been tremendously productive as an approach rambling about my reading habits )

In conclusion, it's been great for my reading but terrible for my booklog, which is sadly behind even though I've been working on it reasonably regularly.

Another personal record

Mar. 18th, 2026 08:02 am
mildred_of_midgard: Johanna Mason head shot (Johanna)
[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
My technique of "distance push, let legs recover, longer distance push next time" is working! I did 8.2 miles this morning in just under 82 minutes. My last run was 6.5 miles on Saturday. Sunday I was too sore, Monday I was too sore, yesterday I had a database migration that started at 5:40 am, so I couldn't get in my morning run (or even my morning shower).

I'm hoping my legs recover by Friday and I can push for 10 miles, but we'll see. If not, gunning for Saturday.

Since this approach is working, I think I'm going to keep it up for as long as it keeps paying off, then I'll think about mixing it up with some gym cardio activity.

Oh, fitness/muscle/injury notes:

* Left hamstring continues to behave igneously. I think sleeping with the leg straight *helps*, but isn't a cure.
* Left knee (which has partially relapsed) was stiff in places, but mostly fine (it's usually later in the day that it acts up), same deal with the right knee (which is probably paying the price of being neglected in favor of the injured knee).
* Left glutes tight, probably from trying to keep the left knee and hamstring pointed strictly forward.
* Right quads tight, I'm pretty sure, but I have a good stretch for that that I just need to make myself do before my next run.

Left knee: I had stopped sleeping with it unbent, thinking it was healed and I could return to my normal lifestyle, but alas. I've been getting occasional spasms and occasional sliding and popping. I'm now back to a strict regimen, and hopefully it goes back to fully asymptomatic again. But at least it's letting me walk and run.
[syndicated profile] dinosaur_comics_feed
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March 18th, 2026next

March 18th, 2026: Like few but not zero other people, I learned the word "coquettishly" from the disturbing early CGI - I wanna say "dog"? - the CBC had run ads during the credits of shows in the 90s, the late and lamented "Coquette".

– Ryan

65

Mar. 18th, 2026 09:01 am
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


I lead an active life so I am sure I have the physique of a 64 year and 11 month-old.

The Proposal by Myung-Hoon Bae

Mar. 18th, 2026 08:51 am
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Nobody is sure who the enemy is, where they come from, or what their goals are. Still, they are the enemy and it’s up to the United Earth Surface and the Allied Orbital Forces Command to show the enemy what’s what.

The Proposal by Myung-Hoon Bae
oceangrey: The cover for the album "Public Works and Utilities" by Warrington-Runcorn New Town Development Plan. (planning)
[personal profile] oceangrey posting in [site community profile] dw_community_promo
[community profile] warrington_runcorn_ntdp is a new fan-run community focused on the music of electronic project Warrington-Runcorn New Town Development Plan.

Anyone is free to join, even those who have never listened before! Although if that is you, I'd recommend checking out the project's Soundcloud, Bandcamp, and Youtube to get acquainted :D

Discussion on the community will include, but is not limited to, avourite songs/albums/album artwork, physical media, how you discovered the music, recommendations for similar music, etc.

The current rules are pretty standard: no harassment/discrimination against any other Dreamwidth users; no NSFW/explicit content unless it's directly connected to the community's theme; and please keep any posts/comments on topic as much as possible. Anything else can be decided on in the future.

I ([personal profile] oceangrey) am the current only moderator/admin, but if anyone else wants a similar role just message me or comment on the community's pinned post!

Meta’s AI Glasses and Privacy

Mar. 18th, 2026 11:07 am
[syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed

Posted by Bruce Schneier

Surprising no one, Meta’s new AI glasses are a privacy disaster.

I’m not sure what can be done here. This is a technology that will exist, whether we like it or not.

Meanwhile, there is a new Android app that detects when there are smart glasses nearby.

January 2026

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