Pop the trunk, slam the door, peel off
The rusted ghost sign on the side of the Knights of Malta Hall which we discovered last year to date from the days of the Sheraton Upholstering Company has been removed. It leaves the ghost of a ghost sign.

I really enjoy the wall of sound on Bachelor's "Stay in the Car." I had encountered Melina Duterte and Ellen Kempner through their respective solo projects, but they are just ferocious together. Be the ice cream left out in her sun, plug into the speaker and put on our favorite song, run the A/C and sing along. Should you need a queer anthem for those brain-melting moments across a crowded parking lot, I think you could do a lot worse.
Faye Schulman has died. The partisan with the camera, the partisan with the leopard coat and the rifle, an invaluable documentarian of Jewish resistance during World War II. I have seen her photographs for years. I didn't know until this article that her name in those years was Faigel Lazebnik. I didn't know, either, that like Henryk Ross, she left her photography with the war. "And among the few other belongings that Mrs. Schulman was able to bring from Europe was her Compur camera, the folding bellows model that she had used in August 1942. She treasured it, her daughter said, but she apparently never used it to take another photograph again." Her memory—her pictures—for a blessing.

I really enjoy the wall of sound on Bachelor's "Stay in the Car." I had encountered Melina Duterte and Ellen Kempner through their respective solo projects, but they are just ferocious together. Be the ice cream left out in her sun, plug into the speaker and put on our favorite song, run the A/C and sing along. Should you need a queer anthem for those brain-melting moments across a crowded parking lot, I think you could do a lot worse.
Faye Schulman has died. The partisan with the camera, the partisan with the leopard coat and the rifle, an invaluable documentarian of Jewish resistance during World War II. I have seen her photographs for years. I didn't know until this article that her name in those years was Faigel Lazebnik. I didn't know, either, that like Henryk Ross, she left her photography with the war. "And among the few other belongings that Mrs. Schulman was able to bring from Europe was her Compur camera, the folding bellows model that she had used in August 1942. She treasured it, her daughter said, but she apparently never used it to take another photograph again." Her memory—her pictures—for a blessing.
no subject
It does! It has the explosive dynamic shifts, too. (Which I know were pioneered by Mission of Burma, but remain most commonly identified with the Pixies and Nirvana, etc.) I've played it . . . a lot.
no subject
Me too, now.
Whenever I hear "dynamic shift" I think of "Fountains of Wayne Hotline". (Which is not as good as "Stay in the Car," but makes me laugh.)
no subject
"Two sixteen-bar verses, the first one broken down, followed by a radical dynamic shift—"
"Oh, that Gerald."
That's wonderful. Thank you so much.