The AnkiDroid Collection (Part 26) – Luck, Envy & Dialectics

Ankidroid additions related to Science, History and Philosophy. More information about Anki can be found in this article.

Luck

In a recent interview Douglas Murray told the above quote by the former American Baseball player Branch Rickey. He used the quote in response to the Victimisation mentality which often lays the blame of one’s misfortune or good fortune down to ‘luck‘. For example, Australia, is commonly known as, ‘The Lucky Country’ because it has comparatively little crime and a high standard of living. But how much is that down to luck as compared to being a residue of design?

Envy

Irish writer Oscar Wilde once told a fictional tale about how the devil was crossing the Libyan desert. He came upon a spot where a small number of demons were tormenting a holy hermit. The sainted man easily shook off their evil suggestions. The devil watched as his lieutenants failed to sway the hermit, then he stepped forward to give them a lesson.

What you do is too crude,” he said. “Permit me for one moment.”

He then whispered to the holy man, “Your brother has just been made Bishop of Alexandria.” Suddenly, a look of malignant envy clouded the once-serene face of the hermit. Then the devil turned to the imps and said, “That is the sort of thing which I should recommend.”

Dialectics

I wrote a review of the above movie Half Nelson recently where I discussed Gosling as a middle-school history teacher using a form of ‘dialectics’ in concept and dialogue in implementation. I have heard the term Dialectics used a lot more in recent presentations by James Lindsay about Critical Methods and Radical Thinking. So, what is Dialectics?

It is the art of investigating or discussing the truth of options or the inquiry into metaphysical contradictions and their solutions. It is the modus operando of Leftism for the past 200 years since Hegel and later Marx. It is a Socrates technique of exposing false beliefs and eliciting truth – Arguments that juxtapose or contain contradictory ideas. In summary, it’s discussing the ‘thesis’ (meta-narrative) then exposing the ‘antithesis’ (postmodernism) and resolving it through ‘synthesis’.

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Posted in politics, Reading, Reflections

I’m Your Teenage Prayer (1967) – Bob Dylan

We are having a Tuesday Basement Tapes festival with this and I’m Not There being released here because they follow in alphabetical order in the Music Library Project. What a marvellous coincidence!
I’m Your Teenage Prayer is a band and singer at their most rudimentary and injecting their jocular selves in singing a song and playing music. It’s another one from Dylan’s previously unreleased Basement Tapes material released on Volume 11 of his Bootleg Series. I like hearing it because it makes me laugh and their process of goofing around with the music and their voices is insightful.

They seem to just be experimenting at whim and it’s a great example of how far a band must go to achieve a great song. Obviously, they never thought this song was in ‘the works‘. You could imagine playing in bands where you played around like this, just because you could, and it was fun. 

Untold Dylan wrote (reference below): “If you have never played in a band that is not specifically rehearsing for a live performance, but instead is just kicking ideas around and having fun, you won’t know what it is like, and may well find it hard to understand why the guys spent so many hours larking about with silly songs like “I’m your teenage prayer”.

Take a look at me baby
(Just take a look at me baby)
I am your teenage prayer
(Yes I’m your teenage prayer)
Take a look at me baby
(Just take a look over here at me baby)
I am your teenage prayer

Take a look and when it’s cloudy all the time
All you gotta do is say you’re mine
I come runnin’ anywhere
Take a look at me baby
(Just take a look at me baby)
I’m your teenage prayer

I presumed Dylan was covering an already established song. But he wrote this! I assume it was a parody of sorts from the time. Following more with Untold Dylan – ‘There is nothing here but the guys passing the time of day, but it’s good that they captured what they did and how they did it.  Like having a chance to watch a great actor in early rehearsals, this is a most valuable artefact’.

References:
1. “I’m your teenage prayer”. What are Bob Dylan and the guys playing at? – Untold Dylan

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I’m Not There (1967) – Bob Dylan

I’m Not There is another previously unreleased gem from the 1967 The Basement Tapes sessions recorded by Bob Dylan and the Band in the basement of the Big Pink in Woodstock. The song was part of the bootleg copies that circulated amongst Dylan fans for a number of years and when The Basement Tapes were released officially in 1975, the song, among others were not included.
It wasn’t released officially until it featured as the title track in Todd Haynes 2007 unconventional biographical film of Bob Dylan – I’m Not There. This song has grown on me over the years and seems to uncover more mystique upon each new listen.

No I don’t belong to her
I don’t belong to anybody
She’s my prize-forsaken angel
But she don’t hear me cry


She’s a lone-hearted mystic
And she dain’t carry on
When I’m there she’s alright
But when she’s not when I’m gone

As aforementioned I’m Not There is part of a huge outpouring of songs from Dylan in the first half of 1967, which were by and large recorded with the Band. These songs are an extraordinary mixture of pieces and shows Dylan at his creative best, not just for each individual song, but for the incredible variation in all the songs. How Dylan almost threw I’m Not There away is staggering. Here is a song he just tried out once and moved away from. “Improvising on the spot” is the phrase Heylin provides for this masterpiece from Bob Dylan – a song that apparently Dylan could never understand why others loved so much.

It is clear this is a song Dylan wanted to try out for the Band and it takes time for them to get into the song and got to grips with what is going on. Because of the source material and that Dylan has never been captured playing the song in concert, the lyrics are something of a mystery.
Regarding the song’s meaning Untold Dylan gives the following description:
‘…in essence it seems to be the reflection of a man who was not always there when needed by the woman who has the toughest of experiences and who really needs his support.   He recriminates with himself for his failure but doesn’t ask for forgiveness.  He just blames himself and tells it how it was.’

References:
1. I’m not there: one of the two great forgotten masterpieces from Dylan in the 1960s – Untold Dylan

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3/10 – 9/10/22 – Magnus Carlsen, Kundalini Yoga & Hard Right

news on the march

Welcome to Monday’s News on the March – The week that was in my digital world.

Magnus Carlsen – Greatest Chess Player of All Time – Lex Fridman Podcast 315
Video interview at Lex Fridman

Current World Champion Magnus Carlsen told the world he will not compete at the World Championships unless there are substantial rule changes. This interview was fascinating from start to finish. In the beginning Carlsen explained that despite being a Real Madrid football supporter his favourite player of all-time is Lionel Messi. His logic, humility and impartiality during this whole interview were something to behold. I had to chuckle because I had never heard replicated my exact thoughts about Messi even including Higuain fluffing his chance at the World Cup. Now if I could only play chess half as good as him.

Edited: Since this interview was broadcasted, things have gone haywire in the chess world with Carlsen pulling out of a recent tournament due to suspecting an opponent (Hans Niemann) of cheating.

Magnus Carlsen is the highest-rated chess player in history and widely considered to be the greatest chess player of all time‘. (View video interview here)

The Secrets to Kundalini Yoga – Jordan Peterson
Video podcast interview excerpt at PowerfulJRE

I was fascinated to learn in this video that Jordan Petrson has practiced Kundalini Yoga for about the same time period as I and here he communicates its benefits to his life with similar introspection as I did in articles.

Great discussion from Joe Rogan & Jordan Peterson on yoga, the TRUTH of Kundalini yoga and much more.’ (Watch video podcast excerpt here)

Will the Hard Right Sweep Europe – Ralph Schoellhammer
Video interview at UnHerd

The rise of the Christian, ultra-conservative candidate Giorgia Meloni in Italy marks a strange split in European politics. Post-Brexit Britain is now in the minority of countries that have not seen a recent Rightward populist uprising. UnHerd’s Freddie Sayers sat down with Ralph Schoellhammer, Assistant Professor of Economics at Webster University, Vienna. (Video presentation here)

news on the march the end
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Posted in Health, News, politics, Sport and Adventure

I’m Goin’ Down (1984) – Bruce Springsteen

I’m Goin’ Down is my personal studio – favourite from Springsteen’s legendary Born in the USA record. The title track is my favourite listen and vision outright from the live-video recordings, but today’s song really does it for me. It might be one of the least popular from the record, but I love hearing it when it comes on. Despite the repetitive nature of the chorus, I have never grown tired of it because it always gets my blood pumping. It was one of the first songs from Bruce I enjoyed listening to in my youth and represented some kind of ‘unheralded freedom‘.

We sit in the car outside your house, you’re quiet
I can feel the heat coming around
I go to put my arm around you
And you give me a look like I’m way out of bounds
Well, you let out one of your bored sighs
Well, lately when I look into your eyes


I’m goin’ down, down, down, down

It was the sixth released song from the record and reached No. 9 in the United States. Springsteen had changing ideas about which songs to include on the album, but eventually decided to include I’m Goin’ Down in place of Pink Cadillac.

This energetic song about a relationship’s deterioration has been more favourably received in recent times with some listing it in his ten best songs. Springsteen hasn’t performed it often since the Born in the USA tour. The band originally recorded I’m Goin’ Down as a break from the Nebraska sessions but was temporarily shelved. Interestingly Springsteen had considered using solo tracks (like on Nebraska) for Born in the USA but was convinced to release band tracks.  In concert, Springsteen has described I’m Goin’ Down in jest as “one of my more insightful songs about men and women“.

The video I have presented below is translated in Spanish with some special concert moments of Bruce and the E Street Band over the years.

References:
1. I’m Goin’ Down – Wikipedia

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I’m Alive (2002) – Celine Dion

This is the second song to feature here from Celine Dion’s 2002 album A New Day Has Come. In my previous article of the title track I wrote how I was so blown away by her performances in the Divas Las Vegas Show and the I’m Alive version presented at the end of this post is the second I heard which made quite the impression. Lamentably a video version doesn’t exist of this stand-out performance, but the audio below should do the trick. I’m Alive is an uplifting midtempo song, where Celine declares she is fulfilled as a mother, and “in love.” It became a worldwide hit, reaching the top ten in many countries.

When you call on me
When I hear you breathe
I get wings to fly
I feel that I’m alive

When you look at me
I can touch the sky
I know that I’m alive
Ooh, I learn

When you bless the day
I just drift away
All my worries die
I’m glad that I’m alive

While working on the album, Celine commented;

I couldn’t wait to go back into the recording studio. And, I loved the songs that people wrote for me on this album. Those songs became even closer to me because, the fact that I took two years off, they wrote songs for me that were even closer to my emotions…. It was a fun adventure, no pressure, relaxed, smooth, powerful but controlled. I really had a wonderful time.’

I’m Alive was written by Kristian Lundin and Andreas Carlsson who had worked with Celine before writing her 1999 hit That’s the Way It Is. I mentioned in my previous article that my friend who saw just about every major artist coming through Melbourne saying that the voice of Celine Dion live was the most magnificent to experience live because of her powerful and technically skilled vocals.

Wikipedia: Born into a large family from Charlemagne, Quebec, she emerged as a teen star in her home country with a series of French-language albums during the 1980s. She first gained international recognition by winning both the 1982 Yamaha World Popular Song Festival and the 1988 Eurovision Song Contest, where she represented Switzerland. After learning to speak English, she signed on to Epic Records in the United States. In 1990, Dion released her debut English-language album, Unison, establishing herself as a viable pop artist in North America and other English-speaking areas of the world.

References:
1. Celine Dion – Wikipedia
2. I’m Alive (Celine Dion song)

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I’m A Dreamer (1977) – Sandy Denny

I came across I’m a Dreamer very recently most likely from one of your blogs. I don’t believe I am familiar with any of her other music. It was sad researching this song since Sandy died at 31 years of age due to due to injuries and health issues related to alcohol abuse. Alexandra Elene MacLean Denny (1947 – 1978) was an English singer who was lead singer of the British folk rock band Fairport Convention (formed by Richard Thompson who has featured here). Today’s song comes from her fourth and final solo album – Rendezvous (1977). The album is felt to contain some of her finest compositions including I’m a Dreamer.

But I’m a dreamer and you know
I’m a schemer with an eye for a show
It’s my imagination when I get low
And the truth is I don’t think I’ll ever go

When the music’s playing, that’s when it changes
And no longer do we seem like total strangers
It’s all those words which always get in the way
Of what you want to say

When I heard this song, I wouldn’t have guessed Sandy was an English singer. It sounds ala the Canadian singer Anne Murray who was making inroads about the same time I’m a Dreamer was released and was a favourite of my Mami. This record by Sandy – Rendezvous received criticism for its over production and I thought the latter parts of I’m a Dreamer didn’t really gel with how the song unfolds. But it’s still a keeper.
Sandy studied classical piano in her youth and after leaving school trained to be a nurse. She became involved with a folk club on campus and the rest as they say is history…

References:
1. Sandy Denny – Wikipedia
2. Rendezvous – Wikipedia

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I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better (1965) – The Byrds

I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better is one of the most buoyant sounding songs about a break-up I have heard. It was released in 1965 as a B side to All I Really Want to Do (Bob Dylan). The Byrds were going to town on Dylan’s songwriting, achieving unprecedented success with their version of Mr. Tambourine Man which I enjoy listening to especially Roger McGuinn’s version at Bob Dylan’s 30th Anniversary concert. I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better charted (even though a B Side) and was included on their debut album Mr. Tambourine Man. It has been covered by a host of artists and is considered one of their best songs by fans.

The reasons why, oh, I can’t say
I have to let you go, babe, and right away
After what you did, I can’t stay on


And I’ll probably feel a whole lot better
When you’re gone

The song was written by band member Gene Clark, who also sings the lead vocal. How Clark ended up writing the song is quite whimsical..He remarked: “There was a girlfriend I had known at the time…and everything was changing so fast..and I knew we were becoming popular. This girl was a funny girl … and she started bothering me a lot. And I just wrote the song, ‘I’m gonna feel a whole lot better when you’re gone,’ and that’s all it was, but I wrote the whole song within a few minutes.” There you go, and that’s a hit.

I just have to say here, I love the sound of Roger McGuinn’s jangling 12-string Rickenbacker guitar. I remember watching him talk about it in an interview decades ago and I could understand why he was so obsessed by its sound. On the Tambourine Man recordings, it sounds especially impressive. Rolling Stone magazine ranked I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better at number 234 on their list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

References:
1. I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better – Wikipedia

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I’ll Be Your Man (2010) – James Blunt

The Brit Awards 2010

I always enjoyed James catchy tunes and the opening jingly acoustic arrangement here. I’ll Be Your Man was released as the fourth single from his third studio album, Some Kind of Trouble. This is the fourth song presented here from James Blunt. I’ll also be blunt and admit this isn’t a great song. It’s as though James is getting in touch with his inner teen idol, but I did enjoy listening to it when it came out.

So many voices
Too many noises
Invisible lies keeping us apart
So many choices, but they’re all disappointment
And they only steal me away from you
Climb into our own private bubble
Let’s get into all kinds of trouble

The music video below released featured footage of Blunt’s Some Kind of Trouble tour. In an interview Blunt said of the album: “After the last tour, I tried writing at the piano, but I found I was repeating myself, writing sad songs about poor old me...My new songs are more optimistic. In another interview he said: What I really like about it is its energy and optimism – it’s completely positive. The critics weren’t so much – the album receiving an aggregate score of 45/100 from Metacritic. One critic described the album as a Shallow, soulless and strangely cynical, Some Kind of Trouble is a thoroughly depressing listen. Ouch.

So, on that note, I’ll leave you with this thoroughly depressing track…’I’m Your Man‘.

References:
1. I’ll Be Your Man – Wikipedia
2. Some Kind of Trouble – Wikipedia

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I’ll Be Gone (1987) – Tom Waits

I’ll be Gone was released on Franks Wild Years – the tenth studio album by Tom Waits. It was written by Waits and collaborators (mainly his wife, Kathleen Brennan) for a play of the same name. The shared title of the album and the play is an iteration of “Frank’s Wild Years“, a song from Waits’ 1983 album Swordfishtrombones. The play had its world premiere at the Briar St. Theatre in Chicago, Illinois, on June 22, 1986, performed by the Steppenwolf Theatre Company.

Tonight I’ll shave the mountain
I’ll cut the hearts from pharaohs
I pull the road off of the rise
Tear the memories from my eyes
In the morning I’ll be gone

I drink a thousand shipwrecks
Tonight I steal your paychecks
I paint the sheets across my bed
The birds will all fly from my head
And in the morning I’ll be gone

I’ll Be Gone on the surface (and pertaining to the play it was written) is about a man called ‘Frank’ contemplating suicide and / or eventually acting it out. He paints a depressing fantasy and eventually (in his dreams) takes on Vegas and Broadway. When I read the lyrics and heard the song before knowing the context and background of the album, I gathered it was principally about ‘deprivation‘, whether it be from individuals (losing their senses, themselves and lost ones), Governments or Corporations. Such is with great poetry many different interpretations can be construed.

This song came out well before the World Economic Forum initiative (in response to the COVID crises) – The Great Reset, and I’ll Be Gone was interpreted as exemplary dreamlike imagery with great accordion, trombone, xylophone and guitar accompaniment. I get that and agree…But I elucidated in our current epoch this song as not just imaginary, but a reflection of what is actually happening now regarding the Multinational power-hungry elite juxtaposed with the heavy burden on the suppressed individual obsessing to have that same power but falling into the abyss. To illustrate this, I want to highlight this comment from You Tube:

In order to stay part of the control group (vaccines)… I was bullied out of my job, my 20 year marriage broke down, I no longer have contact with my family and I lost 99% of my friends. But my gut instinct was so strong I had to listen to it. I still have my 2 adult children (in their 20’s) in my life and one friend. Interesting how these times have changed a whole lifetime of trust and belief.

References:
1. Franks Wild Years – Wikipedia
2. I’ll Be Gone – Song Meanings

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