Monday, January 05, 2009


River Bottoms - St. Charles County

There are broad vistas right up close to cities on rivers - people won't build there, it can flood, we know it well in this confluence of the Mississippi, the Missouri, and the Illinois.
So we have this, 20 minutes from downtown.
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Saturday, January 03, 2009

Monday, December 08, 2008



I cannot believe I haven't done this before.

Photos, that is.

This is Calhoun County, Illinois. A genuinely amazing place, reachable mostly by ferry. With flat riverlands, and hills like a Midwest version of the Cotswalds, orchards, high hedgerows, views of the Mississippi and the Illinois.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Big Boys

I am still trying to puzzle out what happened with this Great Credit Meltdown of 2008, and have a long way to go. As this point I'm skeptical. There is a problem for me in that smaller, well-run banks here in the Midwest would be surviving without all the government intervention, and smaller, well-run companies seem to be doing OK - reducing headcount, yes, but meeting payroll with those who are left.

And we are going to provide over $100 billion to keep AIG intact.

What gives? I think there are just too many big institutions that are creditors of AIG, and they just don't want to lose big money. There was a commentator on the tube today saying that if AIG liquidated, it'd be a fire sale. Buyers would get AIG assets for 20 cents on the dollar.

A. So what?
B. 20 cents on what dollar? A dollar based on 2007 valuations?

I hate it when left-wing slogans turn out to be right. But man, as of today, it really looks to me like we are nationalizing losses. And the really big boys - AIG's creditors - can't face a true, market-clearing, bottom-finding liquidation.

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Thursday, November 06, 2008

Whew.

At last, it's over, and back to things that matter. Like listening to music, and playing it.

I'm listening to Chet Baker, even though I guess he's regarded as a lightweight and I found about him through a Starbuck's ad. Or maybe it was Volkwagen. Who cares - this ocean of media can toss off flotsam and if I pick some up and make it into, say, a coffee table - great.

I'm playing what I've always called blues runs. There may be a hipper term. They are the flourishes that blues pianists use to (a) show off and (b) fill in between melody lines, whether a singer's or player's. Makes them sound shallow, but they're not. They're cool.

This would be the perfect place to paste an example, but I don't want to slow down, and this is all for me anyway. (Good God, I hope I know what I'm referring to.) The vaguely interesting aspect of the project is how to get comfortable with these babies outside the key of C. I've been using C runs for years, even in tunes in G, but that's about it. Time to go to another level (to use an expression that is awfully current but nonetheless fits) and hence work on this standard run - trying to make it second nature in C, D, E, G, and A. I love F, but it and B don't work, they'd require completely different fingering.

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Thursday, October 30, 2008

Money Voting

It's odd that there seems to be so much emphasis on the voting process and so little on campaign finance in America. They are both integral parts of how we elect people.

For me it is the slam-dunk factor in the upcoming election. I would have voted for John McCain in any event, for many reasons discussed below, but what puts it way over the top is how Barack Obama has trashed the campaign finance reform movement, by breaking a well-documented pledge to use public financing and, as a consenquence, by outspending McCain by, what, 200 percent?

How sad, and how short-sighted. The right wing in this country never liked campaign finance reform much anyway. After Senator Obama's sucker punch they never will. And do the Democrats think they can beat the Republicans on fundraising? This one time. Next time, and the time after that, and the time after that, campaigns will be all about money and not much else.

You do not see much about this in the media. Could it be because most of those dollars go to media buys? D'ya think?

Friday, October 24, 2008

Written Early Enough to Look Ridiculous Later

The next paragraphs are taken from an email to a couple of great old friends. I post them knowing full well that this kind of topical stuff usually looks ridiculous in hindsight. But that's one of the reasons for the post - indeed, for the whole project - maybe it can help with the twin problems of humility and short-sightedness.

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I am going to vote for John McCain enthusiastically. Mrs. Palin knows who she is and has a firm grasp of fundamental values - reminding me, at this point in the candidacy, of Harry Truman when he ran with FDR in 1944. For them to win at this point, however, would take a miracle.

The miracles have been running in the opposite direction, especially the fact that this final liquidation stage of the 90-year Kondratieff wave is breaking between nomination and election. No Republican could survive that, absent a miracle.

Obama has done one thing - run a brilliant, ruthless campaign. Look at the choices he has made with impunity - breaking his pledge on public financing, going 180 degrees on gun ownership, refusing to reveal any records of his history while at Occidental, Columbia, and very little about Harvard, among many examples. I can predict with some confidence that the information he has concealed would have made a difference in the election.

I am reminded of the revelations that Kennedy had Addison's disease, or that Sorenson and others wrote Profiles in Courage, for which Kennedy received a Pulitzer prize. I am still very curious about the connection between William Ayers and Dreams From My Father.

Running and winning a brilliant, ruthless campaign for President ain't chopped liver. I don't think it outweighs McCain's achievements and record, but oddly I am left where I began. I am going to vote for JMcC, and hope he wins, but I am not terrified of the probability that Obama will win. Pretty much for the reason that the pendulum always swings, and usually in proportion to the previous swing.

The only thing that worries me, a little, is the idea that we are in Russia and about to elect Kerensky - that we are about to get into a period of extreme instability and that Obama will not be able to stand up to truly radical voices that will emerge. I would much rather we had John McCain at that point. But I think it's a long shot.

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