sexta-feira, 23 de abril de 2021

Weakened by the weekend

In this week's newsletter: taking breaks, paper dictionaries, Debussy, and more...

View this email in your browser
A newsletter from the desk of Austin Kleon
collage of a person in a library playing cards and eating and reading and talking on the phone

Hey y'all,

Here are 10 things I thought were worth sharing this week:

  1. After finishing Abraham Joshua Heschel's The Sabbath in one afternoon, I wrote about how staying away from social media has me no longer weakened by the weekend.
     
  2. Paper dictionaries are magic.
     
  3. I'm on a big Debussy kick at the piano, so I've been reading Stephen Walsh's Debussy: A Painter in Sound and bits and pieces of Alex Ross's The Rest is Noise, Roger Shattuck's The Banquet Years, and Jan Swafford's Language of the Spirit. (The latter is a fine introduction to classical music and inspired me a few years ago to draw this timeline of composers in my diary). Maybe my favorite thing about Debussy I've read so far is pianist Stephen Hough's essay, which was expanded in his book, Rough Ideas. (And now I have to finally play Untitled Goose Game, which uses the Préludes as a soundtrack.)
     
  4. Music writer Ted Gioia has started a newsletter. Gioia is a rich source of inspiration (see my blog posts "Your input depends on your input" and "Ideas spread like the plague") and his first missive is about whether pandemics are followed by eras of festivities and cultural broadening.
     
  5. A long, excellent blog post by historian Ada Palmer about how the Renaissance, while golden in retrospect, was actually a pretty terrible era to live in.
     
  6. Comics fans: I drew and took notes on a discussion between three legendary cartoonists: Jaime Hernandez, Gilbert Hernandez, and Adrian Tomine.
     
  7. Ear candy: A YouTube playlist of live ambient performances.
     
  8. Movies: Midnight Run is a fun buddy comedy with De Niro in his prime and a terrific performance by Charles Grodin. Captain Blood is a 1935 swashbuckler with Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland, directed by Michael Curtiz, who shot some good shadows. (Both streaming on HBO Max.)
     
  9. I usually share obituaries in this spot, but this week I wanted to express my gratitude to the universe that two of my favorite curious elders are still kicking and celebrated birthdays this week: Iggy Pop turned 74 and John Waters turned 75.
     
  10. You could do worse than adopting composer Lou Harrison's motto: "Cherish, Conserve, Consider, Create."
Thanks for reading. This newsletter is free, but not cheap. To show your support, you can forward it to someone who'd like it, read my books, shop for some of my favorite gear (I get a cut), buy a t-shirt, or hire me to speak.

If you're seeing this newsletter for the first time, you can read previous issues and subscribe here.

xoxo,

Austin
Austin Kleon

Austin Kleon is the author of Steal Like An Artist and other books.

Subscribe to this newsletter

 
Twitter
Website
Instagram
Copyright © 2021 Austin Kleon, All rights reserved.

My mailing address is:

Austin Kleon
1101 W 34th St
Box #102
Austin, TX 78705

Please read this before sending me snail mail!

You're getting this email because you signed up for it at austinkleon.com.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

Amazon Affiliate links offset the cost of sending these missives.
Support your local bookstore if you have one.
 

Nenhum comentário:

Postar um comentário