Dogwood Tales
Monday, June 08, 2026
Greetings from L.A. by Tim Buckley
The album opens with a cheery number about sleeping with a black woman and hiding from a jealous husband, and moves on to songs about asking someone to get on top, creaking bed springs and there are no prizes for guessing what ‘talking in tongues’ is referring to. There is no love or romance here, just drunken screwing around with the morals of an alley cat.
Musically, it’s pretty much by the numbers sleazy blues sung in a throaty croak which reminded me of Jim Morrison’s voice on LA Woman - another ‘romantic’ who was on a similar downward spiral. No coincidence that they both died without ever seeing their 30th birthdays.
Sunday, June 07, 2026
Poltergeist
Although this film was directed by Tobe Hooper (of Texas Chainsaw Massacre fame) it very much has Stephen Spielberg's distinctive fingerprints on it. He wrote the story, co-wrote the screenplay and produced it, and it follows similar beats to his other films of this era of focussing on a typical suburban American family with 2.4 kids and a dog, facing an otherworldly threat. In case though, rather than aliens (friendly or not), the menace is coming from inside the house with (not really a spoiler if you've seen the title of the film and the poster) poltergeists coming out of the TV.
It really doesn't take long for the film to get going and amp up the peril with a mix of animated and practical special effects that mostly hold up. It's billed as a horror movie, but it doesn't really rely on jump scares but rather more leaning into the action and humour of the situation (scary clown dolls notwithstanding). I think I first watched this on a VHS from the video rental shop, so seeing it again on a bigger and sharper screen shows some of the cracks but it's still mostly enjoyable.
Saturday, June 06, 2026
Friday, June 05, 2026
Trout Mask Replica by Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band
Continued listening is worth it though, although it doesn’t get any easier. This is actually meticulous free jazz where the apparent randomness will sometimes resolve into a tight focus before splintering off again. The lyrics are similarly thought through as a piece of performance art that would obviously go on to inspire people like Tom Waits and David Lynch.
Moonlight-on-Vermont-tastic!