Rhapsodies

A comic strip about life, love, accounting, progressive bookstores and the divine power of jazz!
  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
    • First Two Years
    • Year Three
    • Year Four
    • Year Five
    • Year Six
    • Year Seven
    • Year Eight
  • Cast
  • Wiki
  • Other Rhapsodies
  • Store
    • Books
  • Subscribe

Posts

Tuesday Rhapsodies

by wpmorse on July 15, 2014 at 8:52 am
Posted In: Test

Today’s Rhapsody is the Rumba Rhapsody by Noro Morales. I’m pretty sure it started out as a variation of Liszt’s second Hungarian Rhapsody, but it’s a fun little piece so I won’t hold it against it.

└ Tags: Franz Liszt, Music, Noro Morales, Rhapsody, Rumba
Comments Off on Tuesday Rhapsodies

Wednesday Double Feature

by wpmorse on July 9, 2014 at 9:09 am
Posted In: Test

220px-PoorWhiteTrashWell for this week I was pointed towards a film, the friend who recommended it to me described as “ a caper for idiots. This is a very good description of Poor White Trash. The film features the kind of trash that trash calls trash (as shown in the first five minutes) and gets crazier from there. Pretty much the plot involves people getting into trouble from their own impulsiveness and stupidity than spending the rest of the film trying to get out of these predicaments. At the same time they seem to have no ability to stay out of trouble while solving the first problem and the plot snowballs from there into a story of betrayal, seduction and incompetence.

The_Italian_Job_rereleaseFor my second selection I decided to find another humorous caper film and I sort of found one, though I’m not sure if the creators meant it on purpose. I’d first heard about the Italian Job when I’d read a review panning the remake. Based on that review while I have no intent of watching newer version the original is a whole lot of fun. It opens with death and littering (cars getting smashed in the Italian alps appears to be a bit of a theme throughout the film) and then continues as a fun rollercoaster ride throughout. Micheal Caine plays career criminal Charlie Croker fresh out of prison who’s inherited the plan to steal 4 million in gold bullion in Italy. To do this he needs the support of crimelord Mr. Bridger (Noël Coward) currently imprisoned but runs the jail as his personal fief as well as a hand picked crew of “experts” Should go just fine as long as the Mafia doesn’t kill them first.

All in all, The Italian Job was a whole lot of fun with one of the best car chases on film. As I said, if I had any problem with it was I never sure whether I should be taking this seriously or not. The competence of the crew seemed to go back and fourth as the plot demanded and the demands didn’t seem particularly consistent. However once the heist began I was having too much fun to complain.

 

└ Tags: Capers, Micheal Caine, Movies, Review
Comments Off on Wednesday Double Feature

Tuesday Rhapsodies

by wpmorse on July 8, 2014 at 8:21 am
Posted In: Test

Today’s Rhapsody is Jonathan Wilson’s Natural Rhapsody

Enjoy

└ Tags: Jonathan Wilson, Music, Rhapsody, Rock & Roll
Comments Off on Tuesday Rhapsodies

Miles Ahead

by wpmorse on July 7, 2014 at 5:52 pm
Posted In: Test

Speaking as a lover of Miles’ work this is a project that needs as much love as possible.

└ Tags: Don Cheadle, Fundraiser, Miles Davis
Comments Off on Miles Ahead

Independence Day

by wpmorse on July 5, 2014 at 10:31 am
Posted In: Test

For whatever reason be it being obsessed with the need for ritual or being part of the community it just doesn’t feel right to treat national holidays like just another work day. (Trust me, when you’re self employed working out of a home office this is a really easy thing to do.)

This is very easy thing to do on the Fourth of July. Unless you’re invited to a picnic or if there’s a parade it’s pretty much just waiting for the fireworks. Sure there are parties but they tend to be overcrowded madhouses that while are fun for the people watching can be a bit overwhelming after say a half hour. So in the past I’ve treated it like a work day leaving the house at sunset so I could be there just in time for the fireworks. (Or leave a bit earlier and go to my favorite brewpub and have a few pints while waiting)

Raven welcomes new citizens.

Raven welcomes new citizens.

This year I decided to do something different and went to watch the Naturalization ceremony. It’s one of those things thats always on the front page of every blog and newspaper on July 5th partially as a photo op for VIPs and part of reporting on the enduring traditions that make this country great. It’s also one of those things you always feel a little guilty about forgetting.

So I figured if, as I’ve often argued, the true American religion is America, than citizenship is our baptism, and going to watch was a good way to prove to myself I was  taking my faith seriously.

I arrived right on time for when my information said I should have, though actually the 11:00 time was for the festivities themselves, the actual ceremony was at 12:15. The festivities consisted of a band performing patriotic marches. A lot of Sousa and several others (I found myself feeling just a little guilty immediately thinking of “How I saved Roosevelt” from Stephen Sondheim’s Assassins when they performed Sousa’s Washington Post March instead of… Sousa’s Washington Post March.)  The people watching was interesting and a very nice crowd was there and I got given a flag by a veteran who was passing them out.

The ceremony finally arrived with just about everyone there, the Mayor, congressman, governor, both senators and several consulates. There were 429 new citizens from over 70 different countries. The Mayor had them stand up as countries were mentioned. The largest number were from india with the People’s Republic of China coming in a close second. I was very interested when the Judge had them give their oath. It seemed very dated almost archaic. (to spell it out I’m pretty sure there aren’t any principalities in the world left to renounce.) But at the same time it fascinated me that how high a standard of responsibilities it placed on the people making it and wondering how comfortable all of us people nor here would be taking the same oath. The ceremony ended with a Native American performance and I left soon after.

On my way home I checked out one of the celebration by the Center for Wooden Boats It was a little bit of everything Music, boatbuilding, National Guard PR and overpriced food. (It was almost  a shame I’d already eaten. The footlong barbecued sausages looked tempting.) Afterwards I got home for a few hours of downtime. My main reason was to stow my bike. From my past experiences the crowd are too thick to ride though until you get past the University District and now that I live in the U-District I felt it was better to walk.

For all a child's bouncing needs.

For all a child’s bouncing needs.

I headed out the door again sixish. When I arrived the crowd was beginning to pick up. I walked around to people watch and listen to the music, in this case a surfer band. After a while I decided I wanted my traditional pint. I had been planning to try a new brewpub I had passed numerous times on my way to Fremont but it was too crowded and for whatever reason they weren’t serving full pints only those small plastic party cups. As I continued on my way to Fremont hoping to find the right place In most of the places I went to they were either serving the party cups or the bar was full (unless I’m with someone I prefer to drink at the bar it’s how I rationalize I’m not drinking alone.) I finally decided to try Hale’s which was a little far but probably worth it. When I finally got there they were closed. At that point I was annoyed and probably too picky to drink.

I arrived back at Gasworks with about a half hour to spare. I spent the time waiting in line at the Port-a-johns. Finally it was time. This year’s display was as good as always and a good chunk of the music was actually patriotic, (I especially liked the funk version of Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Was Made For You and Me”) It still annoys me that they don’t play a lot of the “traditional” music. Perhaps that’s me nitpicking and obviously unfair of me to think even for a second that music isn’t patriotic if it doesn’t have brass.

It was exactly as crowded as I feared getting home probably even worse since I was walking I didm’t have access to the slightly less crowded cyclists’ exit and was sucked into the bottleneck of the regular exit which was a crowd of human traffic I hadn’t witnessed since I was in Venice during Carnival. I certainly slept well last night.

All in all a wonderful day with my only concern being that since this is the first year I’ve had an I-phone I was a bit worried that recording the display distracted from actually watching it. But I got some great footage.

└ Tags: Fourth of July, Life, Seattle
Comments Off on Independence Day

Happy Independance Day

by wpmorse on July 4, 2014 at 7:01 am
Posted In: Test

Hope everyone has a fun and safe Fourth of July! I’ll report mine later. Anyway here’s some music to start things off. For whatever reason Aaron Copland is the first person I think of when I think “American Composer” and for me Fanfare for the Common Man is the best thing to start a firework display with.

Enjoy

└ Tags: Aaron Copland, American Music, Fourth of July, Music
Comments Off on Happy Independance Day
  • Page 161 of 262
  • « First
  • «
  • 159
  • 160
  • 161
  • 162
  • 163
  • »
  • Last »
Become a Patron! The Webcomic List

Links To Other Webcomics

The Comic Critic

Dresden Codak

Girls With Slingshots

Kinda, Groovy

Gunnerkrigg Court

Heavenly Nostrels

Love And Capes

Multiplex

PVP Online

Precocious

Questionable Content

Scandanavia and the World

Schlock Mercenary

Selkie

Sidekick Quests

Skin Horse

Something Positive

Strong Female Protagonist

Yellow Peril

©2004-2026 Rhapsodies | Powered by WordPress with ComicPress | Subscribe: RSS | Back to Top ↑

Loading Comments...

You must be logged in to post a comment.