Jez Stevens

French Canadian Bean Soup and other stories…

trader’s banking confession was no prank…

As Michael Moore pointed out to those occupying Liberty Plaza near Wall Street, in America it’s just 400 people who own as much as most of the rest of us put together. And when the rest of us decide we really want to change the rules of the game, and take back this country for all the people, those 400 won’t be able to do anything about it.

via Sorry, but this trader’s banking confession was no prank | The Yes Men | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk.

Beautiful…

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Association of Wikipedians Who Dislike Making Broad Judgments About the Worthiness of a General Category of Article, and Who Are in Favor of the Deletion of Some Particularly Bad Articles, but That Doesnt Mean They Are Deletionists

ELAINE DUIGENAN PHOTOGRAPHY: Portfolios

ELAINE DUIGENAN PHOTOGRAPHY: Portfolios.

Rupert Sheldrake on The Evolution of Telepathy – Metadata

Video & Audio: Rupert Sheldrake on The Evolution of Telepathy – Metadata.

“Jeffty is five, he’s always five.”

Top 40 best freemovies…

The list of links can be found here and you might be surprised at the quality of the films which are now copyright free…

Top 50 Dystopian Movies of All Time

Top 50 Dystopian Movies of All Time.

Fair of Milan, 1955 / Aqua-Velvet

Fair of Milan, 1955 / Aqua-Velvet.

9th and 13th…

Picture of book jacket
9th and 13th
Jonathan Coe
ISBN: 0141022752

I live on the corner of 9th and 13th, and I promise you, it’s not a good place to be. It’s not a place where you’d want to linger. It’s the sort of place you pass through; the sort you move on from. Or at least, that’s what it is for most people. For everybody but me.

I can’t believe I’ve been living here for more than eighteen months now. I can’t believe that every morning, for the last eighteen months, I’ve been woken up by the rolling of shutters at the Perky Pig Diner and BBQ just across from my apartment. Shortly after that happens, the noises will start downstairs: furniture being shifted, trucks driving in and out right underneath my bedroom, the throb of their revving engines so insistent that even when I try to block it out by putting on my headphones and turning the keyboard’s volume up to Max, even then I can still feel it through my feet. I live above the business premises of the Watson Storage and Removal Company: which makes sense, in a way, because like I said, this is a transient place, a place for people on the move, a place for people who are getting ready to pack up and leave.

9th and 13th. Do you know what that sounds like? You can find out for yourself, if there’s a piano anywhere nearby. Start with … start with a C, if you like. Way down on the keyboard, two octaves below middle C. Hold it down with your little finger, and now stretch your fingers, really stretch them, more than an octave, until your thumb is on a D. Now play the two notes, and listen to the interval. You’ve got your 9th. It’s slightly rootless, already: those two bass notes that don’t quite agree with one another. There’s an audible sense of indecision. And now, with the thumb of your right hand, you play a B flat. This adds a kind of bluesy overtone, turns the ambiguous statement of those two notes into a question. It seems to ask: where are we heading? To which the next note – another D – adds nothing except emphasis. Now the question seems even more urgent, but when the F is introduced, it changes everything. All of a sudden the chord feels hopeful, aspiring. There’s the hint of an upward movement, the sense that we might be about to arrive somewhere. And then, finally, we add the A, so that we have our 13th interval at last: and listen to how plangent it makes it sound, how wistful. This chord is aching to resolve, to settle on something: C major would be the most obvious place to go next, but it could be A minor, or F major seven, or … well, anything. It’s so open. As open as a chord can get. Brimming with potential.

9th and 13th. The sound of possibility.

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