Monday, 2 June 2014

And so it goes


I saw Alec yesterday. I’d decided to get out of the house because it was a lovely day and besides, there were things to find for customers. Hadn’t seen him for a while, not since I stopped wasting one Sunday a month selling tat to idiots. We had adjoining tables back then, and took turns to do the coffee run. Decaf Americano, Earl Grey with no milk.

He was standing outside when I got to the mart, puffing on his last cigarette before trading started. There was already a gaggle of people waiting outside, all of them recognisable from my trading days. Alec said hello as I walked up, asked how I was. Told him I was fine, returned the query, asked after his wife. Last time I’d spent the day at the next table to him, he’d got married just a month or so before.

He held up his left hand, waggled the fingers. No ring. Three years, it’d lasted. Amicable separation, no dispute over property; they just took what they’d brought in and called it quits. He’d moved out last week.

Sad to say, he looked good on it. Less haggard, pinker, healthier. I asked what had happened. He told me they'd just stopped getting on. He’s in his early forties, his ex-wife had been a few years less; they were both, he said, too set in their ways.

We both went in; he went to his tables, I bought a couple of books from him as he was the only one there who had anything like what I was looking for. I had a wander around the hall. Same people as three years ago, same things on display, but far fewer people there to buy them except for the too-recognisable gaggle who’d been outside.

I left, bought myself a coffee, sat in the sunshine in Bedford Square to drink it. Thought about them, all too set in their ways. 

Sunday, 1 June 2014

Lord Who Made Thee Mighty


Last Friday. I’d arranged to meet Fran – the woman previously known here as the Pocket Sex Goddess but who is far more than so stupid, insulting and reductionist a title – at the Royal Festival Hall for an evening of Elgar’s music performed by the Philharmonia Orchestra, a performance that included Elgar’s Cello Concerto. Fran, who plays the cello, loves the Concerto.  As now do I.

I’d never knowingly heard it before. It’s a beautiful piece of music, different from and outside of the Elgar I was aware of, the loud, Last Night of the Proms, flag-waving and anthem-chanting Elgar. It’s always a wonderful thing to discover something new, especially if that something changes an opinion you considered unshakable. It’s an even more wonderful thing when that change comes in the company of somebody with the knowledge to guide you into a new and better understanding.

As the orchestra performed, from the corner of my eye I could see her doing the things she sometimes does when she hears music. Moving her hands into position on an imaginary instrument, a thing I last saw her do to the bassline in The Breeders’ Cannonball, playing while we were in a diner one night. Holding her head slightly more erect while listening to Enigma Variation #9, her love of the music at conflict with the sadness it brings to her.

Before she arrived, and with a little time to kill, I walked over Waterloo Bridge. On a slightly overcast evening, just cold enough to justify a light overcoat, there are few better places to be. London evolves continually; the commuters crossing the Thames every day may not be so immediately struck by its changes, just as they may not notice a colleague’s slow-growing hair, but as an only occasional visitor I was fortunate enough to see how much my city alters in even a short time. New buildings, high and proud, rearing above what was such a lowbuilt place; thankfully kept away from the eyeline to St. Paul’s, showing the cathedral the respect it demands even as their modernity throws its ancient glory into greater relief.

And the river. Always, always the river. Grey, mildly choppy on this late Spring evening. Every moment a new construct, a new form carved by its ever-moving waters. Growing ever more brilliant, shining silver as she widens out past the City’s obelisks, the sky a dull grey-blue. Then, as I reached half-way across, the clouds parted for a moment and sunlight the colour of vellum notepaper streamed down onto the water, changing its colour from small change to bullion. For the first time in far too long, I felt something stronger than happiness.

I’ve been lucky enough to travel to many different places. Some of those places still have a hold on my heart. The blasted dark landscape of rural Poland, the explosion of life and colour of Barcelona; I’ll always love them. No matter where I go though, I come back here, to the river, and that sense of joy fills me, time and again. This is my home. This is my city.

Afterwards, we walked across together. The last piece of the evening’s music still echoing in my head: Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 in D: Land of Hope and Glory. This is my city. This is my home. This, I thought as I looked again at the water and felt again that sense of hopeless bliss, is my country. My country is not a land of fear, not a place where we search for people to blame. My country is one I love above all others but I do not, and never will, think of it as solely for those who fit a constrained set of Englishness. It’s a country of tolerance and welcome, of inclusivity, of compassion.

It worries me, in these darkening days, that there seem to be more people whose England rejects those values; people who would rather we closed our doors, turned down our lights and kept ourselves quietly, primly, to ourselves. Those people are misguided at best and dangerous at worst, and we of all people should learn the lesson of history. England today, London today, the same city that lifted my soul so swiftly and suddenly that evening, is reflected not in their isolationism, but in the joyful variety of the Southbank market, in the Spanish churros dipped in dark melted chocolate that Fran and I ate, in the seemingly endless selection of vodkas we drank in a tiny Polish bar late that night.

My London is Elgar; unchanging, traditional. My London is the Thames; ceaselessly protean, always new. Both aspects always beautiful.

Plaese, don’t let it become anything else.

Tuesday, 29 April 2014

LOVELY THINGS: 2


How many times in my life have I heard Wichita Linesman? How many times have I sang along with it when it came on the radio, or when that old clip of Glen Campbell was shown on the television?

Why is it, then, that it was only today, as it was played on 6Music, that I understood what the song is about? Until now, it was a strange thing, half-diary, half-love song.

Today, it’s become the most eloquent, poetic expression of love; about how this man, this ordinary man with his mind on the quotidian demands of his job, a job that can be described in seven ordinary words -

I am a linesman for the county


- suddenly, helplessly, thinks of the woman he loves and describes in equally simple words how much he loves her -

And I need you more than want you, and I want you for all time


- then turns back to his job, back to the things he has to do in the coming days. Until she comes back into his mind, bringing with her that haunting phrase again.

That’s what happens. You get on with your day, and when you least expect it you find somebody there with you. Sometimes they’re someone you want, sometimes they’re someone you miss, sometimes they’re someone who’s gone.

Don’t ask me how before now I’d seen it as nothing other than a collection of rhyming words set to a memorable tune, nor how today’s hearing took on such a different meaning. All I know is this:

It was always a good song. Now it’s a perfect song.


S-DCBRs For This Week...

...Well, it seems that the two days off over Easter that caused last week's comics delivery to be delayed enough to derail reviewing just wasn't enough for the distributors, so they've delayed this week's shipment by a day as well.

Same thing next week because of the May Day Bank Holiday.

By the time I'm in the same place as the comics are, sleep will have been had and the books will be a couple of weeks old.

Back to the usual edge-of-sanity ranting soon.

But really. Really. Another delay? For no good reason?

Lazy sods.

Tuesday, 22 April 2014

A Small Thing, But Mine Own

Possibly the most trivial thing ever, but something that struck me the other night.

Here's a panel from X-Men 13 (or X-Women, or XX-Men if you want to play 'I Know Chromosomes')


Notice anything about it? How about this one:


Still not got it? This one's the giveaway:


Look at the lettering; in particular, look at the letter 'I'. Look specifically at the letter 'I' in the words 'I' and 'IT'S' or 'SIM'.  Do you see it now? What the letterer has done is to differentiate between 'I' used as a pronoun and 'I' as part of a larger wordform by using bilateral serifs in the former. It's very clever,  almost subliminal, guiding the reader towards a closer identification with the character who's speaking and also reinforcing the character by strengthening his or her self-image. In this comic, this is the work of "VC's Joe Caramagna" who I presume is Joe Caramagna working as part of the VC studio.

This bilateral serif / sans serif is also used by other VC staff: here's a panel from All-New Doop 1, lettered by "VC's Clayton Cowles":


The problem is, though, that once you've noticed this, you can't help but to also notice things like this:


See how jarring that serif is on the 'I' in 'IT', especially as there are only three examples of the letter in what is a pretty verbose panel? And again:



This one's even more of a jolt given the frequency of the letter; it subtracts something from the assonance of the dialogue. 

Yes, this is an astonishingly trivial thing to notice in a comic-book. It may be Marvel house style, it may be used only by the VC letterers. I guarantee, however, you'll be looking for the same thing in the next comic you read.


Thursday, 10 April 2014

SDCBRs!

Lots going on here at Tottenhamista Towers, so just a few quick observations. More later...


KINGS WATCH 5

Hot pulpy goodness! Dragons getting buggered (not literally)! Heroes making noble sacrifices! That's what you want from a comicbook, at least that's what I want from a comicbook, and that's what you're getting from this baby, baby.


However, given my position as North London's leading pilkunnussija*, I must question the on-off nature of the possessive apostrophe within these pages:
ON!
OFF!




And how about buying The Phantom a Philishave?

Ghosts who walk should always be clean-shaven.
It's only right.


Also: The Phantom's headquarters is in some place called Bangallah. I'd watch out for those fatwas, fellas.

Otherwise: lots of fun, and it leads straight into a Flash Gordon title by the same writer. But not by the same artist. Which is wrong.







*Finnish for 'pedant'. Literal translation: 'comma fucker'.

Monday, 7 April 2014

HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Of course things aren't looking any better. Sales plummeting, line-wide dullness, underwhelming reader reaction...






(Though I do love me some Giffen)