The Gandhi of Rock

December 5, 2015 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | Modern Music |

(Pete in Toronto, 1974 - photo by Jean-Luc Ourlin)

Peter Gabriel (b. 13 February 1950) Gabes grew up in public.  Precocious and vulnerable, his relatively privileged upbringing (he schooled at Charterhouse) inured him from fear of failure. This gave him, for a time, freedom to make Genesis a really innovative group, who came up with several interesting albums before they morphed into a somewhat blander supergroup. He left Genesis just as it began to take-off, with a gnostic note to the world that said “I had a dream, eye’s dream. Then I had another dream with body and soul of a rock star. When it didn’t feel good I packed it in…” And…

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General Relativity

December 4, 2015 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | HISTORY, LIFE |

In 1915, Einstein published his General Theory of Relativity.  I have no idea what it means.  Something to do with nothing being straight, the universe being finite, and rather than having a fence, it closes on itself. So space and time are relative and can only be measured by magic rulers and Dali clocks.  The universe has no universals.  But at least the General Theory didn’t lead to a bomb – merely the event horizon. I don’t know what I’m talking about.  My random words don’t satisfy the theory of descriptions (linguistics’ homage to relativity).  Einstein knew what he was talking…

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Kenji

December 3, 2015 | Posted by Lesley Jakobsen | FOOD, Restaurants, THUMBNAIL REVIEWS |

When we  of TVC arrived at an almost full  Kenji at 8 pm on a Saturday night without a reservation, we were found a table with smiles and alacrity.  The space is a rather uninspiring box on Hutt Street but the décor (modern, clean lines, olive green and black, traditional Japanese ornaments) is pleasing, although L did have a view of the toilet door. L’s entrée size sashimi of 10 pieces was generous and succulent.  P’s lamb chops were a surprising inclusion on a Japanese menu but then, the menu at Kenji is surprising and innovative.   P’s chops were also succulent (although overcooked for medium rare)….

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Go See the ASO in 2016!

December 2, 2015 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | Classical Music, Ulalume, WAGNER |

Photo of ASO from "The Australian"

Great season ahead for ASO, in its 80th year, with newbie Nicholas Carter.  He’s a Wagner fan (yay!) and opens the season (13/2/16) with Die Walküre, Act I.  Dare we dream to ramp-up Adelaide again as a second Bayreuth?  It’s a natural fit – small, picturesque, bankrupt as the Master, and full of chancers!  But beautiful. Like the canon on offer this season – Wagner, Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, Brahms, Dvorák, Handel, Berlioz, Strauss, Ravel, Prokofiev, Smetana, Elgar, Mahler, Debussy, Sibelius, Delius, Shostakovich, Stravinsky,  Yes…The Varnished Culture has ranked them, not chronologically, but on merit. But see and hear what you can…

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Books of Their Year

December 1, 2015 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | WRITING & LITERATURE |

'Can you believe ______ liked this...?' (by Berthe Morisot)

We have already confessed our love for the ABC Book Show. As for the Show’s Big Five Books of 2015, as voted by the ABC audience, we have one response, and one response only: For the record, the titles were: 1. The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins 2. A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara 3. A God in Ruins by Kate Atkinson 4. The Natural Way of Things by Charlotte Wood 5. Flesh Wounds by Richard Glover

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