MY LISTENING YEAR, 2009
10 good albums I listened to this year:
At the moment, my favorite band. Saw these guys twice this year — once at Antone’s, once at The Mohawk. |
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2. bill callahan – sometimes i wish we were an eagle My favorite songwriter — at this point, he seems incapable of making a bad record. |
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3. the monks – black monk time A record from 1966 at #3? Yep. |
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4. the beatles – stereo box set Speaking of records from the 60s… The Beatles’ intentions be damned, skip the mono versions, and go for the stereo. They sound amazing. |
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I first heard McCombs’ “That’s That” on a White Denim radio show. I went out and bought all his records. This album is probably the best entry point to his stuff. |
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6. dirty projectors – bitte orca I blasted Rise Above during my bus rides last year, while I was making the book, and although that record is still my personal favorite, this one might be even better. |
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7. animal collective – merriweather post pavilion Yeah, this is as good as everyone says it is. |
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8. atlas sound – logos / megamixes / 7 inches Do yourself a favor: go subscribe to Bradford Cox‘s blog. Not only does he give us Deerhunter and Atlas Sound records, he’s constantly posting these amazing megamixes and free 7 inch singles. If only every musician was so generous. |
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9. phoenix – wolfgang amadeus phoenix Phoenix! What a cool pop band. Watch them tear up Letterman and try not to be impressed. This album isn’t perfect, but it’s great. |
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Her Austin City Limits taping was the best live show I saw this year. Amazing. |
10 songs I couldn’t stop playing
Take a listen on my Blip.FM playlist.
- “when I grow up” – fever ray
- “stillness is the move” – solange’s cover
- “1901” – phoenix
- “how to be invisible” – kate bush
- “river of dirt” – marissa nadler
- “leave me be” – the zombies
- “money” – barrett strong
- “fool for you” – the impressions
- “come to life” – arthur russell
- “beach on the moon” – kurt vile
* * *
My favorite sources for new tunes: Gorilla Vs. Bear, Pitchfork’s Best New Music list, or Twitter (mainly @woxy, @papertrail, & @fluxistrad).
* * *
Favorite live shows:
- St. Vincent @ Austin City Limits
- Gary Claxton @ Gruene Hall, Gruene, TX
- White Denim @ Antone’s, Austin, TX
- The Reivers @ Carousel Lounge, Austin, TX
- Andrew Bird – Austin City Limits
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For more reading, see my live music sketches from this year and all my posts about music.
MATHEMATICAL
MY READING YEAR, 2009
Ten good books I read this year:
Memories, Dreams, and Reflections
by Carl Jung
The best thing I read all year. Jung started his autobiography when he was 81, and worked on it right up until his death. See my map of the book.
Ed Emberley’s Drawing Book: Make A World
by Ed Emberley
I discovered this book last year, but returned to it over and over this year, recommending it often to folks as a beginner’s drawing book.
Asterios Polyp
by David Mazzuchelli
A graphic novel that’s as good as everybody says it is.
Map of My Heart
by John Porcellino
Porcellino is one of my favorite cartoonists, ever. This collection is even better than King-Cat Classix.
Lunch Poems
by Frank O’Hara
Jen Bekman got me into O’Hara. This collection, written while O’Hara was on his lunch break, includes the great “Ave Maria” and “Poem (Lana Turner has collapsed!)”
Await Your Reply
by Dan Chaon
This is the only novel I read this year. A terrific read.
Stitches
by David Small
The drawing in here is really top-notch: Small enjoys teaching anatomy, and it shows.
Every artist’s memoir has one underlying plot: *how I became an artist*. That plot can allow for infinite variations. My favorite page from the book.
Trickster Makes This World
by Louis Hyde
Hyde’s The Gift is one of my favorite books. This book isn’t as good, and took me a few months to finish, but it was worth the read.
Seven Days In The Art World
by Sarah Thornton
My wife got me this after reading one of Thornton’s articles. After reading it, I understood the art world better, and wanted less to do with it than before.
Ignore Everybody
by Hugh Macleod
Hugh’s said the book is “advice I wish I had when I was in my early 20s.” The book sprung from his piece “How To Be Creative,” which was a big deal to me when I found it a year or so ago, specifically for his “Sex and Cash Theory.” Helped me feel better about keeping my day job.
What was the best book you read this year?
VISUAL THINKING FOR WRITERS: NOTES AND SLIDES
In November I taught my second online course for Vizthink, “Visual Thinking for Writers.”
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It was a catalogue of techniques I’ve discovered over the past couple of years that have helped me with my own writing.
I thought up the course after thinking a lot about the tools writers use, and how young writers are often scoffed at in Q&A sessions when they ask things like “Do you write by hand or on a computer?”
In my experience, it’s not a silly question at all: tools -> process -> writing.
The way you work is important.
My main idea was that the best thing you can do for your writing is step away from the computer, spend $10 in the school supply aisle of your local grocery store, and start making writing with your hands. (See this Wall Street Journal article that asked novelists how they write — well over half of them start with handwritten notes, index cards, etc.) If I was going to teach the workshop in the flesh, I would simply organize it by pens, index cards, post-it notes, scissors, tape, etc.
Here’s a reading list of blog posts I used as inspiration:
- Lay It All Out Where You Can Look At It
- Get Yourself A Calendar
- Mind Maps: Pictures and Words In Space
- Comics Without Pictures
- Writing The Fibonacci Sonnet
- Tools
- How-To Books
- Graph a Story with Mr. Vonnegut
- Maps of Fictional Worlds
- Writing on the Walls
I’ve posted some of my slides below.
UPDATE: Here’s some really nice praise from one of the webinar participants:
Austin Kleon’s webinar was engaging, energetic, and expert. My colleague and I went into the webinar thinking we were getting a $60 presentation. What we got was a learning experience that was intelligent, interesting, fresh, funny — yet grounded in solid research about the ways people think about and respond to their worlds. And it’s *immediately applicable* to both our professional and personal lives! If this is what VizThinkU provides, we’ll be back — a lot.– Denise Dilworth, Content Strategist
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