Colin Barnett, recently reinstalled leader of the WA Liberal Party, says he believes that the WA electorate has stated that it wants the Liberal Party to the govern. This was said not long after current Premier, Allen Carpenter, had said that things were so close that the most likely outcome was a hung parliament. While the outcome lies in some combination of postal votes, preferences, and the whim of the National Party, it seems interesting to me that that it didn’t occur to Barnett that maybe what the electorate was saying was that it wasn’t all that fussed about either option. Certainly, that was my take.
The Liberal Party has, appparently, won the Western Australian State Election. I don’t know what I think. I guess Alan Carpenterfailed to impress.
I just watched a documentary about the making of Elton John’s Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. I remember sometime in the mid-70s, I would have been 11 or 12. My parent’s had gone out for the afternoon. I pulled out the stereo and dragged it into the middle of the lounge room, and dug out some LPs I wanted to listen to. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road was one. I remember the physicality of it. The stereo sitting, largeish and bulky on the carpeted floor. The LP sleeves scattered on the floor. The tone arm of the turntable moving across to place the stylus in the groove of the record. The label going slowly round at 33 1/3 revolutions per minute. Picking up the record and turning it over at the end of the each side. Those were the images of music of my day. You focussed on the music and you saw the machinery of its reproduction. That, and the sleeve art. It may be the innocence of being that age, or that you never focus on anything in quite the same way again, but I don’t think any images provided to accompany music ever added much to the experience. I loved LPs. I loved the sleeves and jackets. I loved turntables and the technology of it in a way that I have never loved the mechanics of the digital era, and I guess I’ll always remember that afternoon. Or the night we played the entire Beatles catalogue all the way through. Or hundreds of similar experiences.
I must be getting old. Nostalgia is claiming me.
On tie-ins
Discussion of media tie-ins continues all over the place. There’s a piece over at Jonathan McAlmont’s SF Diplomat, and he links to more. I don’t typically find that my worldview aligns with SF Diplomat all that much, but I was struck by one point: the underpinning to my own view of tie-ins is that I’m not the market for them. Without implying that there’s anything inferior or wrong about them (a view I find is usualy rather elitist and tiresome), I’m usually not interested. I want to read the next thing, something challenging and different. Tie-ins are inherently a continuation of the known. I don’t find that interesting.
Now, that view is a product of the reader that I happen to be. I’ve no criticism at all of the many people who find tie-ins enjoyable and worthwhile. I should add that very, very occasionally I find something interesting in the tie-in world. John M Ford wrote a very good Star Trek novel, Ed Bryant & Dan Simmons wrote a dynamite Batman novelette, Joe Lansdale’s Hellboy novellete is excellent, as is Howard Waldrop’s Wild Card’s story. It’s not an absolute. Tie-ins can be fine, but for the most part I’m focussed elsewhere.
Scatter…
Some scattered thoughts, notes, links etc from around the Interweb:
- Jetse De Vries has resigned from Interzone. I’ve been meeting Jetse at WorldCons for the past handful of years, and I think he’s been doing a terrific job as part of the IZ editorial crew. We just spoke in Denver so it wasn’t a complete shock, but I am disappointed. I wish both Jetse and the IZ gang the best, and can’t wait to see what they come up with separately in the coming years.
- Subterranean has a new story up by John Scalzi. I really liked this. I don’t know if it’s one of the year’s best, but it’s a lot of fun. BTW, what is it with superheroes? I have a superhero story in Eclipse Two, this is a superhero story, and I just saw two new anthos of superhero stories in Planet Books. Is it the Marvel movie goldrush biting at a broader cultural level, or something else?
- Eclipse Two just disappointingly lost a story, and I’m debating trying to find another.
Interruptions come. More….