Showing posts with label luck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luck. Show all posts

Friday, June 13, 2008

the evidence is strong

Mr. Spooky, looking for paths to cross.

Luck. It can pushed, pressed, and tried. It can be prayed for, hoped against, and trusted upon.

Ultimately, when we speak of luck, both good and ill, what we're really discussing is an after-the-fact assessment of the laws of probability. They can no more be negotiated with (through ritual, fetish, or prayer) than any other impartial force of nature...

...despite what the desperate throng of supplicants who've made the pilgrimage to Keno Mart's lottery kiosk would otherwise believe. Hope may spring eternal, but that's only because the soil of self-delusion is perpertually fertile.

Lene Lovich - Lucky Number (from Stateless, 1978) - An examination of love as a binary system.

(I briefly considered posting "13 Is My Lucky Number" by L.A. shock-punks The Child Molesters, but there are some things even I won't stoop to.)

Saturday, November 25, 2006

portents dark and shining

The stretch of time between Thanksgiving and the first week of December has traditionally been when Providence sees fit to make with the life-changing events. My mother’s death, my grandfather’s death, the worst break up I’ve gone through, my first date with the woman who would become my wife – that two week period is apparently my rollout date for heavy personal developments. Although the past few years have been blissfully uneventful, it’s hard to shake the feeling that something’s going to happen

Ribzy – Why Did It Happen? (from The Valley Within compilation, 1983) – It’s always nice to discover a piece of hardcore punk that tries to reach past the louder-faster-harder assembly line template.

The Undertones – It’s Going to Happen (from Positive Touch, 1981) – Northern Ireland’s The Undertones crafted some really fine punk pop material in the late 70’s and early 80’s. That said, I really don’t understand the extreme reverence and awe that music critics hold for the band.

Oingo Boingo – Nothing Bad Ever Happens (from Good for Your Soul, 1983) – This is from my wife’s collection. She likes this track for it’s eighties apocalypticism; I think it’s a bit hollow, the pop equivalent to vacuformed plastic.

Salvation Army – Happen Happened (from the Mind Gardens EP, 1981) – LA punk pop with leanings toward the Paisley Underground 60’s revival movement. It reminds me a bit of Hüsker Dü, circa Candy Apple Grey, but I can’t put my finger on why.