Rhapsodies

A comic strip about life, love, accounting, progressive bookstores and the divine power of jazz!
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Happy St. Patrick’s Day

by wpmorse on March 17, 2015 at 10:22 am
Posted In: Test

It feels weird that considering approximately ten percent of my cast in Rhapsodies is Irish I’ve yet to do anything with St. Patrick’s day.

I’ve rarely gotten into St. Patrick’s day mostly since I have some not so fond memories of the wearing of green being mandatory at the elementary school I went too, seriously. But the big one is because it is also my sister’s birthday (Happy Birthday Jul!) so to me it’s always been more her day than mine.

 

All the stuff with the leprechauns are fun but I don’t see any reason to limit my interest in Celtic faerie lore to one day (though the fact there’s a lot of folklore texts on sale at all the bookstores I know this week certainly is a perk.)

As for the adult stuff I really don’t need a night dedicated to getting plastered, especially on a weeknight and I usually forget that this is the week that corned beef is on sale if I want to do that culinary tradition.

But anyway I hope everyone else enjoys it so raise a Guinness while singing Danny Boy and have a happy St. Patrick’s Day!

└ Tags: Birthday, Danny Boy, Muppets, St. Patrick's Day
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Tuesday Rhapsodies

by wpmorse on March 17, 2015 at 8:41 am
Posted In: Test

For this week’s Rhapsody we have Harriet Cohen and the London Symphony Orchestra perform Hubert Bath’s Cornish Rhapsody from the film Love Story.

└ Tags: Classical Music, Harriet Cohen, Hubert Bath, Music, Piano, Rhapsody
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Wednesday Double Feature

by wpmorse on March 11, 2015 at 8:34 am
Posted In: Test

My initial idea for a theme this week was something in the way of people trying to maintain the façade of an artificial reality. Unfortunately I’d seen most of the movies that could go with the movie that had inspired me to go in this direction, Goodbye Lenin!, so I was forced to muddle along and the connection between it and my second film choice ended up being a bit of a stretch.

215px-Good_Bye_LeninGoodbye Lenin! is a German Film about the end of East Germany and how, at least in one apartment complex, lasted just little longer.

We open hearing our protagonist, Alex Kerner, tell the story of how his mother Christiane, embraced communism after his father defected to the west and years later how she had a heart attack from the shock of seeing him in a pro democracy rally putting her in a coma for eight months. During that time the Berlin Wall falls letting all the joys and horrors of capitalism pour in.

When she finally wakes up, Alex is warned by the doctor that any shock could cause Christiane to have another heart attack. In order to prevent this Alex reverts the family apartment to the way it was a year ago and does everything he can to make it look as if East Germany is alive and well. This, however is easier said than done and as the movie continues the façade becomes increasingly difficult to maintain.

This is an interesting quiet film, and while the premise Is certainly comic it is played perfectly straight. The pacing seemed a bit off time most notably my favorite scene where Christiane finally walks out of the apartment and sees modern Berlin covered in loud colorful commercialism with a statue of Lenin flying by hanging from a helicopter. I would have imagined this to be the climax of the film in any other film but in this one the story went on for another 45 minutes.

220px-Human_nature_posterWhile, as I said my other film selection, Human Nature didn’t fit my original theme beyond on of the characters trying to hide her true nature to her lover, but it was still quite enjoyable amusing quirky piece of magical realism. It tells the story of a man raised by apes (actually his crazy father who thought he was an ape) and a woman who abandons civilization and the quirky behavioral scientist who brings them together.

This is a flawed but fun satire that has a lot to say with some good performances, (including an early cameo from Peter Dinklage) I found myself liking some of the background material the best, most notably a pair of white mice seen throughout the film who were a lab experiment to see if mice could be taught table market. Near the end of the film they are released into the wild. As the credits go up we see them trying to hitchhike.

 

└ Tags: Film, Review, Satire
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Tuesday Rhapsodies

by wpmorse on March 10, 2015 at 12:11 pm
Posted In: Test

This week’s Rhapsody is Ernest John Moeran’s Second Rhapsody in E Minor.

└ Tags: Classical Music, Ernest John Moeran, Rhapsody
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Friday Museum Sketches

by wpmorse on March 6, 2015 at 10:25 am
Posted In: Art

Lamenttion Lamentation2015-03-05-18.29
Well another free first Thursday at the Seattle Art Museum and another crack at Massimiliano Soldani Benzi‘s Lamentation of the Dead Christ. This time I tried going at it from the other side that I normally have.

Regrettably it’s about as much of a mess as usual. This really is a hard one to do standing up. Every time I looked at it it was at a slightly different angle! To add to my humiliation, included is the photo I took of the original angle I started with.

While I was drawing this I couldn’t quite get it out of my head why an angel would be crying in any of these paintings when they would know the score… Unless the need to know bureaucracy of Heaven is even more convoluted than the Bible suggests.

└ Tags: Italian Art, Massimiliano Soldani Benzi, sculpture, Sketches
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Tyson Speaks

by wpmorse on March 5, 2015 at 8:45 am
Posted In: Test

 

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Too true. As much as I enjoy the modern folklore that is UFOs to the point that I occasionally am willing to let myself get fooled. The whole “ancient astronauts” schtick is insulting to our species as a whole.

└ Tags: Ancient Astronauts, Neal deGrasse Tyson, UFOs
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