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Blog Themes Again

March 22, 2015 by rurugby Leave a Comment

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When I was blogging every day I had themes to build around so I am doing that again and writing quite a few posts in the future.

Sunday will be Spirit of Sunday like it was before.

Monday will be Music Monday, could be a song I write could be talking about music, it could be an appreciation or so many other things. Music makes the heart sing.

Tuesday is still Port Veritas poetry Tuesday. Although I plan to highlight more poets I like and why I like them preparing for my launch of the Poetry Conversation Podcast and website coming soon.

Wednesday is Wildcard Wednesday where anything goes

Thursday is Thoughtful Thursday which could mean many things. But a deeper piece of some kind.

Friday will still be Friday Reads when I talk about not just the books I am reading but other things as well. Recently that has been more pieces online. I think I will repost much of what I say on Facebook walls here as well if I think I would like to have it be more than effemeral which is what most of social media is.

Saturday will once again be the Saturday Night Review but will include more mini reviews such as the Aldi French Bread pizza that I had this afternoon, skip it and stick with the Stouffers. #skip

Or I saw Pinky and the Brain Season 1: Episodes 3 and 4 on Amazon Prime today. I forgot how brilliant the show is. It’s a complete masterpiece and to me it’s obvious which one is a genius and who is insane. ****

I look forward to blogging more again.

edmund

Here is what I posted to Facebook. I plan to archive much more of my social media posts now. There is some great stuff there.

I have decided to do weekly blog themes again and blog much, much more.
They are Spirit of Sunday about spirit in it’s many realsm
Music Monday that is about musical journeys and will include song lyrics, mainly parody songs
Port Veritas Poetry Tuesday which will talk more about poets I like and poems I like and include some poems too. I feel like I am more concentrated on music then poetry right now but their are so many great poems that deserve more eyes.\
Wildcard Wednesday which could be about anything
Thoughtful Thursday which I want to be a longer, deeper piece
Friday Reads about what I am reading which will include more internet links since I am reading more in bits and pieces right now.
And the Saturday Night Review which will include mini-reviews and some longer ones.
I want the blog to be able to archive what I do on Social Media. Facebook and Twitter aren’t designed to store information well. WordPress is.

Blessed be and believe that your words matter.

Filed Under: Blog Themes, books, Edmund Charles Davis-Quinn, Friday Reads, FridayReads, Music Monday, poetry, Port Veritas Poetry Tuesday, spirit, Spirit of Sunday, Spirit of Sunday, The Ecq Review, The Poetry Conversation, The Saturday Night Review, Thoughtful Thursday, Weekly Blog Themes, Wildcard Wednesday Tagged With: Music Monday

Citizenfour ***1/2

February 27, 2015 by rurugby Leave a Comment

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The Patriot Act was without one of the most unpatriotic and unconstitutional laws in American history. The Bill of Rights, especially the the First and Fourth Amendments do not allow the insane and worldwide surveillance society we have that looks at 1,200,000 people at any time. That’s staggering. “Citzenfour” is an incredibly important and brave documentary, by the patriot who believes in the Constitution, liberty and privacy Edward Snowden. He’s just a soft spoken tech geek that thought things went too far and he had to expose some of it. The sad thing is all of the surveillance society keeps getting bigger and costs billions. At this point the American government is the biggest terrorist state in the world. Monitoring communications around the world with only a puppet court looking on, a Congress who is afraid to act, and an incredibly disappointing President on National security issues, Barack Obama. Mr. Obama promised that he would bring accountability to the security state. It hasn’t happened, it’s only getting bigger. And we have an insanely large military with bases around the world.

We need sanity. Instead of trying to be the only superpower and the “world’s policeman,” lets help those who have had life struggles get back on their feet.

It’s a must see documentary if you care about democracy, freedom, investigative journalism and liberty.

*** 1/2

I feel like I have a lot more to say about this topic, and I think I will be adding to this post.

Filed Under: politics, The Saturday Night Review

Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Heart Club Band **** – The Beatles Track Review with YouTube links of covers

February 26, 2015 by rurugby Leave a Comment

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1. Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band — Good but not great song. *** It does have some good silliness. Lenny wants to help me with this (my cat). [The stars are what I would give on iTunes from 1-5]

Here is a more fun version and cover from Big Daddy, the German host introduction even makes it more surreal. It’s like a doo wop version. They covered the whole album and it’s pretty awesome and silly. This version. ***

2. With a Little Help From My Friends — A good song that was made great by Joe Cocker. This is definitely a song where the cover version could be considered the classic one. *** The Beatles version still is nice, but doesn’t compare to Joe Cocker’s version. Joe Cocker’s version is ****. Almost seems strange to hear this as a Beatles song now. The Beatles version seems way too calm now.

Lenny thinks this is a good time for a break to play with the kitty so here in the Joe Cocker version.

3. Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds — To me the first really classic song on this album. A song I just love. **** Although the William Shatner version is hilarious.

I just decided I need to have YouTube videos of covers for every song on this album. Shatner version *** but hilarious.

I found another amazing cover by the Flaming Lips, featuring Miley Cyrus and Moby. This is fabulous and even weirder than Shatner’s version. (Warning includes nudity). ****

4. Getting Better — A solid song, but just a pretty average Beatles song. ***

Oddly hard to find to a good cover for Getting Better. Listened to a few that were entirely different songs from Brooks and Dunn and Tesla. This one is good but not great by Kaiser Chiefs for a BBC 40th Anniversary Special. *** And I am starting to really hate eInsurance from all the Youtube ads, been way too many tonight.

5. Fixing a Hole — Nice song, not amazing but good. ***

The cover I found is by the Fray for the same 40th Anniversary special as the Getting Better cover. ***

Intermission: while waiting for an Oasis version of “Within You and Without You”, this awesome and silly song “Diamond Sword” Minecraft animation came as an advertisement. It’s pretty awesome. Decided to pass on the Oasis cover found the great Sonic Youth cover later.

6. She’s Leaving Home — Actually a very cool song, not one I know all that well. *** 1/2 (but going to round up to 4 on iTunes) I like the choral play on this song. The Beatles harmonies are very underrated.

Found a nice version by the Andy Timmons Band, I like the guitar work, has a bluesy feel. Seems to just be an instrumental, basically guitar centered. It does miss the wonderful harmonies of the original. ***

7. Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite — One of my favorite Beatles songs, I like the version on the Beatles Anthology even better. Gets trippier and richer in my opinion. ****

I thought there would a lot of good covers with this very fun song. I found one from AndyBoy63 on YouTube that is quite faithful.

8. Within You Without You – A nice with the sitar, but there are better Beatles songs like this. *** Honestly too long too.

Found a wicked awesome Sonic Youth cover that was released in 1988 on a multi-artist compilation album called ‘Sgt. Pepper Knew My Father’. I like the Sonic Youth cover quite a bit more. ****

9. When I’m Sixty-Four — More ironic when the Beatles are getting older. Of course sadly John Lennon didn’t get there, tragically being shot at 40. George Harrison died at 58. Paul McCartney is now 72. Ringo Starr is 74. It’s strange how aging changes perception. Many people today at 64 don’t feel that old, and will often live 20 more years. **** The song is good fun though. It of course makes fun of societal expectations. Does feel bittersweet now though.

This cover by Big Daddy is my favorite track on their album. It has a fun beat. **** Both versions are great, I think I have to go Beatles though.

10. Lovely Rita — Fun song. Feels like one the Beatles earlier, sillier songs. ***

Nice cover from the 40th Anniversary BBC Show from Travis. ***

11. Good Morning Good Morning — A good and pretty silly song. There are a lot of those on this record. ***

Fun, peppy cover from the Zutons.

12. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise) — Better than the original version, but still just okay. It is catchy and short. ***

I found this fun Cheap Trick cover, I guess they did a show in Vegas with Sgt. Pepper’s, time does weird things. ***

13. A Day in the Life — To me easily the best song on the album, I like the version on the Beatles Anthology even more. The Beatles Anthology Volume 2, Disc 2 is my favorite Beatles record which I know is an odd choice. I like having multiple versions of several of the songs. ****

The great Jeff Beck live, seems to just be guitar, but lovely. I would love to play guitar like this. It’s such an amazing instrument. He plays a lot with the whammy bar on his guitar too. I wonder if I should try one like that and if I would like it. ***

It’s a great record with some all time classic songs in “A Day in the Life”, “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds”, and “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite.” It’s a solid **** record I haven’t heard all the way through in a long time. And without a doubt incredibly influential.

The best cover of these by far is the Joe Cocker cover that took me down this rabbit hole. And then the insane and pretty awesome Flaming Lips/Miley Cyrus version (with a bit of Moby). And the Big Daddy cover of When I’m 64 is good fun. And Jeff Beck is an amazing guitarist.

This was a lot of fun and definitely a blogpost that took a while to write and have a lot of fun with.

Filed Under: music, The Saturday Night Review

Embracing the Geek: A Writers Journey Selected Poems 2010-2013. My first book.

April 10, 2013 by rurugby Leave a Comment

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My first book called “Embracing the Geek: A Writers Journey Selected Poems 2010-2013” is almost ready to be available in PDF tonight.

I need to type in one poem that is still in journal, and then do formatting with my wife tonight.

The goal of the book is in the wonderful quote by Kurt Vonnegut in my 2nd favorite book of his (to Slaughterhouse-Five) “A Man Without a Country”:

“If you want to really hurt you parents, and you don’t have the nerve to be gay, the least you can do is go into the arts. I’m not kidding. The arts are not a way to make a living. They are a very human way of making life more bearable. Practicing an art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow, for heaven’s sake. Sing in the shower. Dance to the radio. Tell stories. Write a poem to a friend, even a lousy poem. Do it as well as you possible can. You will get an enormous reward. You will have created something.”

So make something, anything. A pot at a pottery store, it may not be symettrical, it may crack, it may not hold water and need to be used for pens, but it will be your cup, that you made, with your hands. And it will be art.

Or like me and Lanna Lee you could blog every day. If you average 100 words a day it’s a novella, 250 words a day a full modern novel (365 pages). And the post can simply be “today f**king sucks. Ow!” That’s a blogpost you kept up your writing journey. And you will keep improving and if you use a blogging program like WordPress easily archive your work.

It’s also about gratitude to my writer’s journey. From 2nd to 4th grade I wanted to be a writer. I learned to create my work on a computer and let it flow. Then in 5th grade, I had a terrible, horrendous, not very good English teacher that thought me being on a computer was an abomination of his narrow worldview. These terrible teachers have tenure, and continue to infect students for decades. Meanwhile the amazing, creative teachers who inspire art, creativity and writing are on 1 year contracts and not hired on. There is both my amazing 4th grade Language Arts/English teacher and some of my friends I am thinking of here.

The book starts with the Vonnegut quote and then has a very long acknowledgment. If you are listed on it, congratulations! You have earned a free PDF copy of the book. I only have 100 copies of the book, signed and numbered so if you want one assigned (there are about 35/100 books unclaimed before even PDF release) please let me know on the blog, or my e-mail address edquinn at gmail dot com (to avoid spam), my Twitter feed at @rurugby or my Facebook at Edmund Charles Davis-Quinn.

Here is the acknowledgment:

This limited edition chapbook is designed for all the people who have helped me in my writing and poetry journey. So if you have made this list of people who are awesome, you have earned a free chapbook. I would love to do trade for the poets in the room, and to pass the gratitude forward for those who are not. And maybe even inspire you to write.
I first want to dedicate this chapbook to the love of my life, the wonderful, fabulous and amazing Lanna Lee Maheux. She is my rock, my partner, and makes me life immensely richer. I love you.
Next I want to dedicate this book to the radically inclusive and safe space, Rhythmic Cypher. The 2nd poetry slam from the amazing small city of Portland, Maine. This was a dream and vision of my good friend Tina “T Love” Smith, and had a difficult birth in an imperfect space. Now that it has found its true home at the amazing Dobra Teahouse in Portland, Maine at 7pm on Sundays, it’s one of the best poetry slams in America. A place where genderqueers, gays, lesbians, freaks of all size, shapes and colors, and those afflicted with madness can feel safe. Where a 16 year old with panic disorder can read a beautiful and amazing poem about her condition and feel safe. Where Toben Tilgenman can make an amazing poem about what it means to be a man who was born in a woman’s body. Where music backs the poets, and the poets back each other. It is a spectacular success and I am so happy it is part of my community.
Next I want to thank New York Times bestselling author Colleen Hoover for first creating her wonderful young adult romance “Slammed” that used the power of the poetry slam to make the beautiful story of woman loses dad, woman loves boy across the street, boy across the street has no parents so transcendant, thank you. My friend Gennyfer Hanley sent me a link with the free eBook of slammed, and I loved it wrote a positive review on Amazon saying I was a slam poet and how much I love the book. She followed my blog at ed2dq.com and we became friends.
While Colleen was writing the follow-up to Slammed this time ahead in the story and from Wil (the boy’s perspective) called “Point of Retreat” she happened to see my blogpost/poem “Write Poorly” about simply writing and turning off the editor. She printed it off, put it up by her computer and looked at it whenever she felt discouraged or needed to remember to just write. I plan to make my second chapbook called “Write Poorly” with 500 copies. It is amazing to me that my little poem on my often not that read blogpost that often gets less than 10 pageviews a day inspired an author so much. So much that she put it in her book “Point of Retreat” that is a bestseller that has been read and loved by hundreds of thousands of people. Her 3rd book “Hopeless” is the number two eBook on Amazon so far in 2013, behind only behind Nicholas Sparks’ “Safe House”. Bemazing. That fact is surreal and amazing, that I may have more page reads in 2013 than the absolutely incredible and amazing Andrea Gibson who was the number one seller of the best slam poetry publishing house in America, Write Bloody Publications in 2012. Just ridiculous, if you haven’t read Andrea Gibson’s work yet and live in Portland, Maine go to Longfellow books and get a copy of her work, it’s outstanding.
Next I want to thank the Port Veritas writing, slam and poetry community for showing me love, giving me a place to read, and encouragement. Wil Gibson is a force of nature, and him saying “Write Poorly” is the best thing I ever read meant a lot. I have seen Port Veritas go from Acoustic Coffee, to the much beloved North Star Café, to Wil’s House, to the Mayo Street Arts Center, to Blue, to the wonderful restaurant Local Sprouts, and to it’s current location at Bull Feeney’s upstairs every Tuesday at 7:30pm.
I would be incomplete without talking about the amazing contributions of Tricia Hanley to Portland’s poetry scene and craft beer community. Her little bar, Mama’s Crowbar in Munjoy Hill, has some of the best craft beer you will ever drink in a wonderful small place. It would be my regular if I lived on the hill, but alas I live in Westbrook. They also host a reading hosted by Ryan McLellan that is unmiked, and at 9pm on Mondays. I do wish the reading is earlier so I can attend more. Unfortunately, I wake up at 4am most Mondays. It’s a great place to read.
Next I want to thank the heroes, friends, and compatriots of my journey towards embracing my inner geek. My recently departed father, Henry Edmunds Davis who passed away very recently on April 1, 2013 at 66 years old to brain cancer. You are one of the nicest men and fathers any son could wish for. I expected you to live so much longer, as did my wonderful mom Christine Davis. Their marriage is the great love I have seen through my life and it’s so sad it’s over after 42 years. Mom, I love you.
I also want to thank my wonderful and insanely intelligent sister, Melinda Davis Layten, who is ABD (all but dissertation) in computational biology and SUNY – Stony Brook. Dad’s illness I think took a lot out of my sister and brother-in-law Robert Layten, and I hope my dad’s journey away from pain, suffering and cancer allows her to become the brilliant scientist she is meant to be.
Next I want to thank the people who I have known the longest growing up in Montgomery Township, New Jersey north of Princeton. This chapbook may have the longest acknowledgements ever and I will just name some of my good friends that made feeling like an outcast in school easier: Greg Seidel, Bill Dyer, Conrad Saam, Anthony Schubert, Ben Dalbey, Eva Hanna, Kayt Sukel (who has an amazing book called “Dirty Minds” about the neuroscience of sex and love), Beth Cooper, Laura Hahn, Susan Flora …
Teachers including: Cheryl Watson, Jay Prag, Mr. Juliano, Mr. Harry Brobst, Ms. Williams and so many others.
And of course fellow poets including, who are mostly performance poets. I am about 20% a performance poet, and 80% a writer. Many of these excel at both and include: Heidi Therrien, Greg McKillop, Beau Williams, Jen Jacques, Toben, Emma Bovril, Paulie Lipman, Rachel McKibbens, Andrea Gibson, Billy Tuggle, Ryk McIntyre, Tony Brown, Melissa May, Sam Sax, Denise Jolly, Zanne Langlois, Robin Merrill and the fabulous Nancy Henry.
There are so many others I can mention but this is already an over 1,000 word acknowledgement to a chapbook. To all the friends I have made in the amazing city of Portland, Maine. Twitter has been an amazing way for this geek to meet people so I must thank Chyrstie Corns, and .. for creating them.
Also want to thank my Twitter heroes and friends like Alex Steed, Alexis Lyon, Keith Luke and so many others who make Portland a jewel of American cities.
I can’t name all the people who are part of my journey towards acceptance, but thank you all so much.

The last line of the book is “Make art, it’s good for the soul.” And it is so true.

Thank you and with much love,
Edmund Charles Davis-Quinn

Blessed be.
Make art! Suck!

Filed Under: acceptance, acceptance, books, breathing, Edmund Charles Davis-Quinn, Embracing the Geek: A Writer's Journey, FridayReads, graphic novels, grieving, haiku, Kurt Vonnegut, library, meditations, minerva, My books, NaPoWrimo, page, poetry, Port Veritas Poetry Tuesday, reading, Short Stories, sickness, silly, slam, spirit, Spirit of Sunday, Spirit of Sunday, The Poetry Conversation, The Saturday Night Review, Thoughtful Thursday, Weekly Blog Themes, westbrook, Whispering Deer, woods

Skip, consider, go

February 2, 2013 by rurugby Leave a Comment

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I have more of these to add later.

Doing some mainly tweet reviews of restaurants, bars, etc.

May have seen a few uf you follow me at @rurugby, Foursquare or my Facebook (the even I admit pretentious Edmund Charles Davis-Quinn, my original Edmund Davis-Quinn got hacked.)

So here are some examples:

Saigon: Excellent service, excellent food.  Everyone I have taken here has loved it.  Go!

Schulte and Herr: The potato pancakes here were a revelation.  Excellent cucumber salad, soups, entrees and bread.  If you haven’t eaten here yet you need to.  Go!

Kamasouptra: Seriously great soup.  One of the few places I an happy to eat vegan.  Go.

Local Sprouts: Great use of local ingredients, nice atmosphere, good space for kids.  Good stuff. Go.

China Villa: Good takeout, yummy and craveable fried dumplings.  In a bad town for Chinese food the portions are huge and satisfying.  Definitely good not great though.  Consider

Catbird Creamery: Excellent ice cream, truffles, and coffee.  The ice cream sandwiches are the best I have ever had, simply ridiculous.  Really nice owners too. Give this hidden gem on Main Street across from Bank of America in Westbrook a try. Go.

Dancing Elephant: Excellent Indian food.  Highly recommend the garlic naan, the tandoori chicken and the masala tea.  Go.

I have more to add but will add more later.

Edmund

Filed Under: portland, The Ecq Review, The Saturday Night Review, westbrook

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