I need to put together a Christmas mailing of some sort. Clock is ticking.
Monthly Archives: December 2015
Отцы и дети, or A Dad Named Sue
I had two dads and four grandfathers when I was growing up. Sometimes keeping everyone straight was an adventure. I share the same first name with my dad and his dad, which lead to sometimes-comical attempts by one family member to get the right one of us to respond. While I was never put out by this, it did impress on me the importance of names. When I was about twelve I chose a different nickname than the one my dad and his dad use, which caught on with some – but not all – of the family. I even have relatives who still call me a diminutive form of my nickname that I stopped using in elementary school. Now that I’m old enough, I find being called that name endearing.
For many years, I called both of the men who raised me “Dad.” When we finally became close in adulthood, my stepdad became “Pa.” That development came around the same time that I began mending my relationship with my dad (who, contrary to my WGOM shorthand, I never called “Pops”). I don’t think it’s a coincidence this distinction between them emerged during the time when I was establishing a healthy, adult relationship with each of my dads.
With four grandfathers the naming convention challenge multiplied. My grandfathers though remarriage were both “Grandpa” – one “Grandpa Lastinitial” and the other “Grandpa SurLastFamilyname.” My maternal grandfather was “Papa,” as his parents were still “Oma” and “Opa” to my generation of the family. My paternal grandfather, the only one of my grandfathers still living, is “Gramps.” (In fact, he’s the Gramps-iest Gramps to ever Gramps: a baseball-loving, Buick-driving, Cold War Navy vet who taught high school business & sold shoes. He likes burnt toast, black coffee, and Winstons. He doesn’t drink much anymore, but when I was a kid, he drank Schmidt. Before that, it was North Star.)
Mrs. Hayes & I are both third-generation Americans, our families heavily Americanized but still aware of our ethnic heritage. Papa’s third language was English, which he learned when he went to elementary school; he spoke German & Hungarian at home. My mom & her sisters get by in German to varying degrees. I speak just a little German, but understand a little bit more. To my dismay, we’ve lost the Hungarian. The other side of my family lost its Polish & German even quicker. Mrs. Hayes’ family has held on to their Greek heritage a bit better, mostly thanks to the ethnic dynamics of Orthodox Christianity. While nobody speaks much Greek in her immediate family, the culture’s customs are observed to varying degrees and greetings & blessings are still given in Greek.
Our child’s language acquisition is a priority for both of us. Mrs. Hayes & I both agree on what we would choose for a super power: the ability to speak other languages fluently. Our hope is to have her learn bits of a few languages: Greek and Russian (to communicate with my best friend’s family) for certain, and then whatever we can manage or build beyond that. I would love to send her to an immersion school if we have the opportunity, though that’s many years down the road.
But in the next two month I have a very personal decision to make. Who am I going to be to this little person? Figuring out my new name has consumed my thinking recently. What name do I choose? We agreed on a name for this child for nearly a decade ago. What I never considered is that I'd need to settle on a new name for myself, too.
Because I lost both my dads when they were fairly young, I don’t feel comfortable assuming either of their names in a couple months. At the same time, because we've functionality lost our mother tongues, I wonder if I have the right to claim a non-English name aligned with my child’s ethnic heritage. Do I become Apu, Vati, Tata, or Μπαμπάς? Do I choose Папа, given that’s drawn from the foreign language I speak best and hope to pass on? I honestly don’t know what’s right. But I know whatever I choose has to last two lifetimes.
How did you decide who you were going to be to your child(ren)? Has that name become as much a part of your identity as your given name?
If you speak (or wish you spoke) another language, how did you go about integrating that language into your child(ren)’s life?
Finally, this one goes out to my dads:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dmt7wo0Tnr8
1965 Rewind: Game Seventy-three
MINNESOTA 3, KANSAS CITY 2 IN KANSAS CITY (11 INNINGS)
Date: Saturday, July 3.
Batting stars: Don Mincher was 2-for-5 with two home runs, his fifth and sixth. Harmon Killebrew was 2-for-5 with two doubles. Sandy Valdespino was 1-for-5 with a walk, a stolen base (his sixth) and a run.
Pitching stars: Jim Kaat pitched 4.2 innings, giving up two runs on five hits and two walks with two strikeouts. Al Worthington struck out two in 2.2 scoreless innings, giving up a hit and a walk. Bill Pleis pitched two perfect innings with one strikeout.
Opposition stars: Diego Segui struck out six in five innings, allowing two runs on four hits and three walks. Jim Landis was 2-for-5 with a double, scoring once and driving in one. John Wyatt struck out three in two perfect innings.
The game: Mincher homered in the fourth to put the Twins up 1-0, but Ed Charles had an RBI single in the bottom of the fourth to tie it. Tony Oliva singled in a run in the fifth, but again the Athletics got the run right back in the bottom of the fifth, this time on a Landis single. The Twins put the go-ahead run into scoring position in both the sixth and the ninth, but there was no more scoring until the eleventh, when Mincher led off the inning with his second home run. The Twins could have scored more, but left the bases loaded. In the bottom of the eleventh Ken Harrelson singled, was bunted to second, and took third on a ground out, but Dick Stigman came in to retire Dick Green on a fly out to end the game.
Of note: Zoilo Versalles was 0-for-6. Oliva was 1-for-5 with an RBI and a stolen base, his seventh. Jimmie Hall was 0-for-3.
Record: The win made the Twins 45-28 and moved them up into a tie for first place with Cleveland, who had lost 8-4 to Baltimore.
Notes: Sam Mele seemed to not know what he wanted to do with the lineup when Bob Allison did not start. He again batted Hall fourth but this time put Mincher fifth, with Killebrew dropping to the sixth spot. Hall's 0-for-3 dropped his average to .316 and he was pinch-hit for by Joe Nossek in the eighth. Kaat led the league in games started with 42 but seemed to get a lot of quick hooks. In this one, he was pulled with two on and two out in the fifth inning of a 2-2 game. He still pitched 264 innings, though, so it's probably a good thing he was pulled early a number of times.
Happy Birthday–December 17
Cy Falkenberg (1879)
Ray Jablonski (1926)
Cal Ripken (1935)
Jerry Adair (1936)
Leo Cardenas (1938)
Bob Ojeda (1957)
Marvell Wynne (1959)
Curtis Pride (1968)
Alex Cintron (1978)
Chase Utley (1978)
Cal Ripken was in the Orioles organization for many years, managing in the minors from 1961-1974, coaching in the majors from 1976-1986, and 1989-1992 and managing the big club from 1987-1988. He had a son who did okay in the majors, too.
Nadia Reid – “Holy Low”
Don't you hate it when you have a pretty good idea of what your top 10 will be for the year, and then you hear something really excellent close to the end of the year and it throws everything into chaos? Yeah, I thought so!
Anyway, I read about Nadia Reid's debut album Listen to Formation, Look for the Signs (a melancholy album about a break-up by a woman is pretty much my wheelhouse this year) and immediately queued it up on Spotify. And when I finished listening to the album, I started it over again. And then got home and listened to it a few more times. This is pretty much all I listened to while writing papers for school last week. Anyway, here's probably my favorite song from it, "Holy Low."
J said the album gave her feelings of nostalgia that she couldn't quite place, and I totally get that. Her voice evokes a lot of bands I listened to in my late teen years, but I can't quite put my finger on who. Not that it really matters, since I just listen to the album over and over and worry that recency bias will make it too high in my top 10 this year. I suppose that isn't the end of the world when an album is this good.
For whatever it's worth, I think this is my top 10 as constructed today. It'll probably change sometime before the end of the year, but it's something!
01. Chastity Belt - Time to Go Home
02. Colleen Green - I Want to Grow Up
03. Julien Baker - Sprained Ankle
04. Nadia Reid - Listen to Formation, Look for the Signs
05. Speedy Ortiz - Foil Deer
06. Wimps - Suitcase
07. Childbirth - Women's Rights
08. Future - DS2
09. The Intelligence - Vintage Future
10. Spelljammer - Ancient of Days
1965 Rewind: Game Seventy-two
MINNESOTA 3, KANSAS CITY 1 IN KANSAS CITY
Date: Friday, July 2.
Batting stars: Tony Oliva was 1-for-4 with a double, scoring once and driving in two. Earl Battey was 3-for-4 with a double. Harmon Killebrew was 2-for-4 with an RBI.
Pitching star: Mudcat Grant pitched a complete game, giving up one run on five hits and no walks with three strikeouts.
Opposition stars: Ken Harrelson was 2-for-4 with a double and an RBI. Wayne Causey was 2-for-4 with a run. Jesse Hickman retired all four batters he faced, striking out one.
The game: An error, a single, and a ground out put the Twins up 1-0 in the top of the first, but Harrelson singled in a run in the bottom of the first to tie it 1-1. There was no more scoring until the sixth, when Oliva delivered a two-out run-scoring double and Killebrew followed with an RBI single. The Athletics did not get a man into scoring position after the fourth.
Of note: Zoilo Versalles was 0-for-4 with a run. Joe Nossek was 1-for-5. Jimmie Hall was 1-for-4, dropping his average to .320.
Record: The Twins went to 44-28, second in the American League, a game behind Cleveland.
Notes: Battey made a strong return to the starting lineup after missing about ten days. Bob Allison returned to the lineup as well, going 1-for-4. With the additions, the Twins went back to their regular lineup, with Killebrew batting fourth, Allison fifth, and Hall sixth.
Happy Birthday–December 16
Sammy Strang (1876)
Tony Kaufmann (1900)
Neil Chrisley (1931)
Adolfo Phillips (1941)
Mike Flanagan (1951)
Rick Sofield (1956)
Tom Gorman (1957)
Billy Ripken (1964)
Jeff Granger (1971)
Charles Gipson (1972)
Matt Kinney (1976)
Neil Chrisley's given name is Barbra O’Neil Chrisley. I have no explanation for this name, but it seems reasonable to assume that he’s the only man to play major league baseball whose first name was Barbra.
Jeff Granger was drafted by Minnesota in the fourteenth round in 1990, but did not sign.
December 16, 2015: Triberious
Triberious is not a word, but all the same, it IS the CoC title and maybe I'll come up with a definition later.
Sufjan Stevens – Eugene
Carrie and Lowell is on many (if not most) Best Of lists this year (though no Grammy nods), and with amazingly good reason. This album is one of the most heartfelt, wonderful, awful records I've ever heard. More or less written about his childhood, the complicated relationship between him and his mother, and the time of her death (if you want more background, it's out there and easy to find, so I won't go too much further into the backstory).
I know there's been some pushback on the whiney singer/songwriter wailing over his acoustic recently, and this album could be construed as that, but I don't think it applies. In my mind, he wrote this album strictly for himself. He was kind enough to invite us in on what must have been a substantial and devastating cathartic journey. Littered throughout are so many baldly personal, terrible little slices of life. Take the first two verses this song alone:
Light struck from the lemon tree
What if I’d never seen hysterical light from Eugene?
Lemon yogurt, remember I pulled at your shirt
I dropped the ashtray on the floor
I just wanted to be near you
Emerald Park, wonders never cease
The man who taught me to swim, he couldn't quite say my first name
Like a Father he led
Community water on my head
And he called me “Subaru”
And now I want to be near you
It may not be my favorite of his (I mean, my god, Age of Adz), but it is definitely his finest work to this point. Sparse, sharply honed, and expertly crafted. A simply masterful album from one of my favorite craftsmen.
...oh, right, I should probably play the song now.
2015
Sorry, I wanted to find something professionally done from this album, however, strangely, none seem to exist.
Anyway, if this piques your interest, here's the album version of the first track, also awfully wonderful/depressing:
Jason Isbell – Something More Than Free
httpv://youtu.be/VvlTwSWyqUM
Here's the title track off of Something More Than Free, which has taken over Metamodern Sounds as the album I listen to probably too much, but I just can't help it. I'm still highly debating the concert in February. Bonus "Hudson Commodore" after the break. Continue reading Jason Isbell – Something More Than Free