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A math guy's random thoughts.
A math guy's random thoughts.
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February 28, 2025 at 8:59am
February 28, 2025 at 8:59am
#1084490
"Total Eclipse of the Heart" was the lead single by Bonnie Tyler from her 1983 album, Faster Than the Speed of Night . The song was written by Jim Steinman, who also produced the album--more on him in a bit. The single was Tyler's biggest career hit, toping the Billboard charts in the both US and the UK. In fact, it kept another Steinman-written song, Air Supply's "Out of Nothing at All," from reaching the top spot in the US.

The song is likely also Stenman's biggest and best-known hit, but he wrote many other awesome songs--arias, really--about obsessive love, including Meatloaf's "I'd Do Anything For Love (Except that)" and Air Supply's "Oot of Nothing At All," among others. When he wrote "Total Eclipse of the Heart," he'd also been working a score for a musical version of Nosferatu, and he originally intended it to be a vampire song. The song was subsenquently included in his musical, Dance of the Vampires, and he's said, "If anyone listens to the lyrics, they're really like vampire lines. It's all about the darkness, the power of darkness and love's place in the dark..."1

The theme for this paricular set of blogs is supposed to be about the songs that have inspired my fiction. That's true for this song, too, except I'm still *writing* the story in question, so I can't link to it. It will be final story, "Liam's Tale," in the collection
Image generated by Designer.Microsoft.Com of a VW bus on a beach
As always, if you want to read any of these tales, drop me a note and I'll send the passkey.

The tale from the source material--It's obvious what that is, right?--is short, more or less parodies the other tales, and gets cut off for being "boring." Using this song, along with "Out of Nothing At All," I've figured out more or less how to do that. But, it'll take a couple of more days for the germ of the idea to percolate into a real story. I'll probably come back here once I'm done so people can find it.

Anway, here's the awesome video that went with Steinman's masterwork.


Footnotes
1  Hernandez, Ernio (18 September 2002). "Rando, Steinman Talk About Dance of the Vampires at Press Preview, Sept. 18". Playbill.

February 28, 2025 at 8:59am
February 28, 2025 at 8:59am
#1084491
"Total Eclipse of the Heart" was the lead single by Bonnie Tyler from her 1983 album, Faster Than the Speed of Night . The song was written by Jim Steinman, who also produced the album--more on him in a bit. The single was Tyler's biggest career hit, toping the Billboard charts in the both US and the UK. In fact, it kept another Steinman-written song, Air Supply's "Out of Nothing at All," from reaching the top spot in the US.

The song is likely also Stenman's biggest and best-known hit, but he wrote many other awesome songs--arias, really--about obsessive love, including Meatloaf's "I'd Do Anything For Love (Except that)" and Air Supply's "Oot of Nothing At All," among others. When he wrote "Total Eclipse of the Heart," he'd also been working a score for a musical version of Nosferatu, and he originally intended it to be a vampire song. The song was subsenquently included in his musical, Dance of the Vampires, and he's said, "If anyone listens to the lyrics, they're really like vampire lines. It's all about the darkness, the power of darkness and love's place in the dark..."2

The theme for this paricular set of blogs is supposed to be about the songs that have inspired my fiction. That's true for this song, too, except I'm still *writing* the story in question, so I can't link to it. It will be final story, "Liam's Tale," in the collection
Image generated by Designer.Microsoft.Com of a VW bus on a beach
As always, if you want to read any of these tales, drop me a note and I'll send the passkey.

The tale from the source material--It's obvious what that is, right?--is short, more or less parodies the other tales, and gets cut off for being "boring." Using this song, along with "Out of Nothing At All," I've figured out more or less how to do that. But, it'll take a couple of more days for the germ of the idea to percolate into a real story. I'll probably come back here once I'm done so people can find it.

Anway, here's the awesome video that went with Steinman's masterwork.


Footnotes
2  Hernandez, Ernio (18 September 2002). "Rando, Steinman Talk About Dance of the Vampires at Press Preview, Sept. 18". Playbill.

February 27, 2025 at 8:53am
February 27, 2025 at 8:53am
#1084441
Without going into too much detail, this 1926 song by George and Ira Gershwin fit perfectly with the mood and thematic material of "Alby's TaleOpen in new Window..

The song itself was written for the musical Oh Kay!, which ran for 200 performance on Broadway and also had a successful run on the London stage. The original score called for an up-tempo beat, marked scherzando (playiful) on the sheet music. However, starting in the 30s, recordings appeared wth a slower, more balladic tempo, which has since become the standard. The song has been recorded by many artists, including such luminaries at Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Barbra Streisand, Ray Charles, Willie Nelson, SinΓ©ad O'Connor, Elton John, Nelson Riddle, and Linda Ronstadt. My personal favorite recording is by Michael Feinstein.



The story "Alby's TaleOpen in new Window..references the song playing in a piano bar, so the version that's appropriate for this particular blog is this interpretation for jazz piano.




February 26, 2025 at 9:22am
February 26, 2025 at 9:22am
#1084402
Originally, "Melancholy Baby" was a honky-tonk song. It was published in 1912, with music by Ernie Burnett and lyrics by George A. Norton. The first public performance of the song was at the Mozart Cafe in 1912 by William Frawley. Fans of the old TV sitcom I Love Lucy will remember Frawley for his role as the Ricardo's landlord, Fred Mertz. He actually reprised his performanc in a 1959 episode, "Lucy Goes to Sun Valley."

For me, the most memorable version is the one by Judy Garland, in A Star is Born. The song is completely recast from its honky-tonk origins to a melancholy dirge, and is one of Garland's most unforgettable performances.

The last half of "Alby's TaleOpen in new Window. is set in a piano bar. At current count, it's got seven different song references. The first half of the story happens in a crowded discotheque where the ABBA hit "Dancing Queen" sets the scene. I wanted a song to set a different, more introspective mood for the piano bar, so of course Garland's rendition of "Melancholy Baby" came to mind. But, it's a piano bar, so I wanted to find a version for piano, preferably a smooth jazz version.

This is what Alby hears as he enters the piano bar:



February 25, 2025 at 3:53pm
February 25, 2025 at 3:53pm
#1084371
I've spent most of yestreday and today writing a short story. Well, doing that and making bread and seafood ceviche. The story--still very much first-drafty--is {item:2335764

It's based on another well-known tale, from another era. I think I managed to include all of the essential plot elements from the source material. See if you can guess what it's based on. There are hints galore.

Anyway, a good part of this story takes place in a piano bar, so I've got a wealth of songs to fill out the month in just this one story. It's also a romance, and the song that motivated the romance element is this haunting performance by Marlene Dieitrich.



Dietrich first sang the song in the 1930 movie Der Blaue Engel, an erotic story of obsessive love. It was later translated into English and she sang it again for American audiences. It became her signature. The most sexually explicit verse in the original German lyrics never got translated into English--see this review  Open in new Window. in The Guardian if you're interested in the details.

February 24, 2025 at 8:30am
February 24, 2025 at 8:30am
#1084314
The Charile Daniels Band relesed "The Devil Went Down to Georgia" on their 1979 album Million Mile Reflections. Whle uncredited, , Vassar Clements originally wrote the basic melody an octave lower, in a tune called "Lonesome Fiddle Blues." Charlie Daniels moved it up an octave and added lyrics. Tthe lyrics, which are more of a recitative than sung, tell of a battle with the devil over the soul of a country fiddler. This is recognizably a varition on the classic deal with the devil  Open in new Window. trope. In particular, Daniels has cited the poem The Mountain Whip[orwhill  Open in new Window. by Stephen VIncent Benet as the inspiration for framing the trope as contest of violinists.

The lyrics and music also mention at least three old-time country songs.
*BulletG* Fire on the Mountain
*BulletG* The House of the Rising Sun
*BulletG* Granny Will Your Dog Bite
*BulletG* Ida Red

The last is referenced only by the lyric, "Chicken in the bread pan peckin' out dough."

The song rose to number three on the BIllboard Top 100 Chart, but the populatirty of "My Shirona" eventually stopped iis rise.

In my story, "The PackageOpen in new Window., the song is playing on the radio as the protagonist drives home, as a bit of foreshadowing for what's in the unexpected package she finds on her driveway. If you want to read the story, please drop me a note for the passkey.

February 23, 2025 at 12:27pm
February 23, 2025 at 12:27pm
#1084274
"Softly and Tenderly" was written by Will L. Thompson in 1880 as part of the American Restoration Movement. It is based on the Bible verse Mark 10:49. It is among the most used gospel songs, and has circulated far beyond its original evangelical origins.

Growing up, my rather stern Congregationalist church never used this hymn--at least to my memory. Not paricularly a propos of anything, the history of this particular congretation included having the father of Robert Milliken as it's pastor. MIlliken won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1923 for measuing the mass of the electron. His autobiography describes my home town in the 1880s as having more saloons than taverns on main street.

That tedious anecdote aside, here's another. My first enocunter with this song that I actually remember was while watch the film Junebug. That's the performance I've linked below. In this scene, Allesandro Nivola sings the song a cappella, along with two extras from the local congregaton where the scene was filmed. The reactions from the other characters while he's singing add amazing depth to the performance.

It was this scene and Nivola's performance that inspired the associated story. In this case, it's final chapter of "Dreamin' Life AwayOpen in new Window., "Chapter 11--Softly and TenderlyOpen in new Window.. Dante is back in the subway to hell 1950s Tulsa and he hears two street magicians, a pianist and a violinist, performing an instrumental version of the song. For completeness, I'm including a link to the song Dante hears, but it's not what motivated its inclusion in this chapter.

If you want to read this chapter or any of the chapters, please email for the passkey. Here's a complete list of eleven chatpers:
Max Griffin
Max Griffin πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ Author IconMail Icon
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Dreamin' Life Away Open in new Window. (18+)
Dante finds a subway to the past in his basement. A slipstream story.
#2314898 by Max Griffin πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ Author IconMail Icon

Genre: Slipstream, Supernatural, LGBTQ+
Teaser. Dante's boyfriend just dumped him. He's moved into a new place. Oh, and there's a locked door in his kitchen.


"Chapter 1. Sleep WalkOpen in new Window. 18+: Dante can't sleep
"Chapter 2. Take FiveOpen in new Window. 18+: The Subway
"Chapter 3. Over the RainbowOpen in new Window. 18+: At the downtown subway station
"Chapter 4--Danse MacabreOpen in new Window. 18+: At the Cool Cat Clothiers
"Chapter 5--EverydayOpen in new Window. 18+: Everyday life's headed this way, faster than a roller coaster.
"Chapter 6--Mad WorldOpen in new Window. 18+: Dante is back in his new digs
"Chapter 7--So What, GymnopΓ©diesOpen in new Window. 18+: Back in the subway station
"Chapter 8--You Belong To MeOpen in new Window. 18+: The Screen Test
"Chapter 9--Get Happy, In DreamsOpen in new Window. 18+: At the Club of Dreams
"Chapter 10--Rider on the StormOpen in new Window. GC: Back in Dante's bedroom
"Chapter 11--Softly and TenderlyOpen in new Window. 18+: Back on the subway
"Songs in "Dreamin Life Away"Open in new Window. E: Links to the songs referenced in the story




Here's Nivola singing in Junebug.The movie is definately worth watching.
February 22, 2025 at 5:20pm
February 22, 2025 at 5:20pm
#1084245
"Riders of the Storm" was the last song recorded by the Doors and the last song recorded by Jim Morrison before his death in 1971. It was inspired, in part, by the country classic "(Ghost) RIders in the Sky," but has an altogether different vibe. Appearing in 1971, it's roots in the psychedelic anthems of the sixties are obvious. It was also influential in later develops in rock music, including punk rock and heavy metal.

Morrison attended a 1963 lecture on Martin Heidegger at Florida State University, a lecture which exerted deep influence on his life and art. In partiular, the lyrics of "Riders on the Storm" relfect this influence.. In Heidegger's view, humans are "thrown" into the world, left to confront issues such as personhood, mortality, and the dilemma of being surrounded by other humans while ultimately being alone. The song's lyrics reflect Heidegger's beliefs about existence:
Riders on the storm...
into this world we are thrown,
Like a dog without a bone


In "Chapter 10--Rider on the StormOpen in new Window. of "Dreamin' Life AwayOpen in new Window., the protagonist Dante must finallly face the reality of his life. The storm that drums against the windows of his home echoes the consequences of the Faustean bargains he's made. The Doors song, starting with the sound of thunder and rainfall, followed by a keyboard riff leading to Morrison's haunting voice, is the perfect soundtrack for this chapter. Thiis is the penulitmate chapter of a novella that is, ultimately, about the questions Heidegger raised.





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February 21, 2025 at 8:55am
February 21, 2025 at 8:55am
#1084173
Soundtrack of Your Life Logo


Harold Arlen is perhaps best known for writing the score to MGM's 1939 release of "The Wizard of Oz." The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) ranked his "Over the Rainbow" number one on their Songs of the Century list. But Arlen was nominated eight times for the Academy award and was responsible for many familiar classics, including standards like "That Old Black Magic" and "Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive." He also wrote "Get Happy" in 1930. Judy Garland sang the song in 1952 in her last MGM musical, "A Star is Born." Her performance is linked below.

The exuberant music and lyrics have gospel roots, and exhort the listener to "get happy" and "get ready for the judgement day."

There are two songs referenced in "Chapter 9--Get Happy, In DreamsOpen in new Window. of "Dreamin' Life AwayOpen in new Window.. Yesterday's blog dealt with the Roy Orbison classic, "In Dreams," and explained its connection to the story. For "Get Happy," the connection is the line "get ready for the judgement day." In earlier chapters, the protagonist, Dante, has made a Fausitian bargain and has gotten his reward. But now it's time to pay the price. So, hearing the lyrics to "Get Happy" warns him to "get ready for the judgement day." The payoff comes when he hears "In Dreams," with a turning point that mirrors a scene in David Lynch's "Mullholland Drive."

The story has a surreal, slipstream mood, and I wanted the performance of the song to reflect that. So, instead of Judy's famililar performance, I chose the one Rufus Wainwright did in his Canrengie Hall concert. Wainwright's performance and staging copy the familiar MGM clip, right down to Wainwright dressing in drag, wearing black nylons, high heels, and a saucy little hat. Since Dante is celebrating his reward in the 1950s, I described Wainwright's performance but placed it in a 1950s gay club.

Here's Judy Garland in "A Star is Born"


And here's Rubus Wainwright, at Carnegie Hall


February 20, 2025 at 11:14am
February 20, 2025 at 11:14am
#1084134
Roy Orbison's "In Dreams" is an amazing, operattic rock ballad in seven movements. It tells the story of a lost love, now available only "in dreams." His 1964 release featured his phenomenal range, over two octaves and well beyond the reach of most popular singers. The song peaked at number 7 on the US charts. It regained popularity in 1986 when David Lynch featured the song in his provocative auteur film Blue Velvet.

I featured the song in "Chapter 9--Get Happy, In DreamsOpen in new Window. of "Dreamin' Life AwayOpen in new Window., where the protagonist hears it performed in a nightclub. I got the overall structure for this novella from Lynch's masterpiece, Mulholland Driive, although my story uses a linear timeline in contrast to Lynch. The pivotal scene in Lynch's movie--pivotal in the sense that it's where the timeline reverses--occurs in a night club where Rebecca de Oro sings another Orbison song, Crying, in Spanish. So, of course, my protagonist hears "In Dreams" in Spanish.

The lyrics of the song fit perfectly with the story's plot. The first chapter suggests that the protagonist murdered his lover, so the absent lover is surely available only in dreams. There are lots of hints, though, that something else may have be going on with the absent lover. I won't reveal the plot twist here.

Here's an amazing version of "In Dreams" in Spanish. Even if you don't understand Spanish, this beautiful language fits perfectly with Orbison's song and lyrics.


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