The Fredösphere

See the Music Page for
more information about
my choral compositions.

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Wagner Was Making It Up, You Know

I don't like to link to Tor.com twice in a row, but sometimes the mission of this blog compels me: Dexter Palmer puts a sci-fi spin on a Blu-Ray recording of the La Fura Dels Baus staging of Wagner's Ring. He claims that kids raised on Star Wars and Harry Potter will eat it up, so long as they are kept in the dark about this being, you know, an
S P O I L E R   A L E R T
opera, and I'd like to believe him and give the experiment a try. . .but he don't know my kids.

Palmer also gives a nod to: Anna Russell's mangling of the plot (which I've never bothered to listen to); the graphic novel treatment of the Ring by Dark Horse Comics; and the introduction written and recorded by Deryck Cooke, which is—let's be perfectly frank—an absolutely essential starting point for anyone who aspires to understand the Ring on a musical level.

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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Til SF Voices Wake Us And We Drown

More on my favorite mashup, vocal-heavy soundtracks of science-fictional stuff:

Via A Cappella News we read of Gaggle, a not-your-mother's-female-chorus from England with a sound described as "sci-fi riot." Fusty reputations, begone. You can here their heavily post-processed sound at their MySpace place but bewarned, perfect intonation is not a priority.

Via SF Signal comes this animation accompanied by the Schubert Ave Maria (of all things) depicting the rings of Earth—or what the rings of Earth would look like if Earth had rings, like Saturn's. Dang, rings would be cool. We gotta get us some of them rings!



Okay, this last one has no vocal music, but it's futuristic, it's (even better) retro futuristic, and terribly arty: it's the art of Retropolis: The Future That Never Was! Do visit the posters page. Heck, do visit this future! Let's please go there, and never come back.

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Wednesday, January 06, 2010

SFF Audiophiles

Audio omnivores Jesse and Scott of the SFF Audio Podcast (SFF means Science Fiction and Fantasy) have very kindly and enthusiastically mentioned my science fiction jazz chamber opera They're Made Out of Meat (on sale at Amazon et al.) during their December 21 podcast. Thanks, guys. You da mensch.

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Thursday, November 05, 2009

Gray Is the New Evil

Oooh, boy, it is such a relief to enter the post-Obamamania era and live in a time of sane expectations. That's not the only reason to watch V, the new SF series on ABC TV, but for some of us, it will be enough.

Not that the show indulges in fanaticism of the opposite kind. It's current event scorecard shows equal digs at both Bushism and Obamamania. What makes this show special is its unambiguous digs at topics previously held sacrosanct by Hollywood. Namely, the Visitors (that's "V" for short; the suave aliens who hide their lizard hides underneath beautiful human skin and who lust after our resource-rich planet) seduce us earthlings with promises of universal health care.

It's a shocking moment when you hear those words, universal health care. It's also a failure of taste—I would prefer a more creative, less partisan examination of the totalitarian temptation—but, wow. I didn't think they had it in them. It's actually okay now for a big-four network TV script to prick the Obama balloon. What a relief. What timing.

Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play? Is V worth watching?

I would say it is, although the pilot's story line was terribly rushed. Why did they want to propel us past the opening moments of First Contact (so rich in drama) and move us to conventional TV crime/spy drama plotting? This seems such a 80s way to approach a TV series. Modern audiences (many of whom will watch at their own pace via DVR or DVD) can tolerate long plot arcs that span many episodes. Some of us actually do more than tolerate long plot arcs; we prefer them.

V's plot pacing bodes ill for the series, and its status as a remake left little room for surprises for me or anyone who has paid even a little attention to the history of the SF genre. Nevertheless, the performances are uniformly strong and the lizards look great in their satiny gray power suits. In particular, I liked the icy calm and unapproachable perfection of Morena Baccarin, who is very convincing as the perfect alien headmistress. (That wasn't true in Serenity where she was supposed to be the most attractive woman in the room but was outshown by the Ivory girl appeal of Jewel Staite and the exotic spookiness of Summer Glau.) After recently watching, and being turned off by, Mad Men, I find V's lack of edgy cynicism as a relief. I'll be watch more V and I urge you to do likewise.

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Friday, September 18, 2009

The Wrath of Khan: The Opera

Diva Diane, my sci-fi singing buddy, found this gem: Le Wrath di Khan:



It's a claymation production from Adult Swim, but believe it or not, the music is compelling and the singing is shockingly excellent, with a bit of choral writing that, to my intense embarrassment, makes the hairs on my arms stand up. "Khan! Khan! Khan!"

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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

First Professional Sale!

Because it came out when I was on vacation, I missed a chance to brag about my first published story, a bit of micro-mini fiction on a Twitter magazine called Thaumatrope. Sadly, my first professional sale indulges in vulgar humor, but one must take what one can get.

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Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Rejection

Today I address you, gentle reader, in my role as an aspiring but, for now, frustrated science fiction writer.  First, I direct you to this wonderful bit from Nielsen Hayden, a slush pile reader.  You'd think such an avenging angel would derive sufficient spiteful satisfaction from writing all those rejection letters, but no:  upon discovering a website exists for disgruntled and rejected authors, the angel turns demonic:
What I find weirdest about their take on rejection is that it's all completely personal. I don't just mean the rejection itself, which they're bound to take personally, being writers and all. They take things personally which have nothing whatsoever to do with them [. . .]
and then he tears the authors to shreds.  For example, to the person who was insulted because the rejection came typed on a half-sheet of paper:
Right. I can just see the staff at Prominent Science Fiction Magazine doing the slush, with all their different-size rejection notes stacked up in a little row in front of them. If your story really sucks, you get a rejection note that's mimeographed on a sheet of paper the size of a large postage stamp. If you've got strong writing but defective storytelling skills, you get a half sheet. Acceptances come on foolscap. And so on.
Great stuff.  Read and savor the whole thing.  Thanks to the ever-fascinating John C. Wright for the link.  John has his own list of authorial boo-boos, and his commenters (why can't I seem to attract dozens of clever, literate commenters?  No offense, Steve) riff at length on his "empirical storm troopers."  Not to be missed.

By the way, since I know you're dying to ask me, I have sufficient experience as a writer to have attained Nielson Hayden's level 9 (Nobody but the author is ever going to care about this dull, flaccid, underperforming book) which is something I'm pretty proud of.  Sadly, the final level (Buy the book) is level 14.  Five more to go, which doesn't sound like a lot until you realize each level is 20 times harder to attain than its predecessor.

Other fun links:  a 13-year-old boy tries out a music-playing gadget called a Walkman and finds it inadequate.  Don finds an animation to accompany the Hoedown from Rodeo.  And finally, Jalopnik has fun with a rendering of a gorgeous but hopeless Bugatti concept car:
[. . .] French industrial designer Bruno Delussu's rendering of a modern Bugatti Type 57 is so far removed from reality that the mind is free to conceive of anything. Say, a France removed by tractor beams from the way of an imminent Nazi invasion. Then allowed to grow in isolation for decades, acquiring high technology on the border of magic, to come up with this thing. A modern take on the Bugatti Type 57 Atlantic, powered probably by ion cannons instead of the original's clockwork straight-eight.
Not to mention that this princess has a chassis clearance so minimal, she would crash if she hit a rock the size of a pea.


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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Exercise in Futurity

I found out about Futurity, a musical by The Lisps, via a review at tor.com.  (Tor.com is a corporate sibling, but not exactly the online presence for, Tor Books, the SF publisher.)  The Lisps are some kind of indy rock group and Futurity is an SF musical about an aspiring SF writer whose day job is fighting for the Union side in the American Civil War.  Yes, your guess that the steampunk aesthetic is strong in this one would be resoundingly correct, and you can bet your bottom difference engine that Ada Lovelace, the world's first computer programmer, is a major character.

The show has a limited run so I won't have the problem of being even tempted to beg the wifeösphere and offspringöspheres to see a showing when we do Manhattan next month.  But you natives still have time to catch it this Friday or Sunday.

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Wells, Clarke, Lewis, Myers, Wright

A while back I mentioned SF author John C. Wright, an atheist-turned-Christian.  John has a story in the current issue of Fantasy & Science Fiction Magazine, a copy of which is sitting on my shelf, waiting to be read.

Thanks to John's blog, I now know of the scholarly work of Doris T. Myers, whose book promotes the importance of C. S. Lewis as a contributor to the science fiction genre.  A small sampling of my SF friends tells me CSL is not regarded as among the stratosphere in SF, although his fantasy work (anybody heard of Narnia?) is almost Tolkienesque in its fan loyalty.

Myers disagrees, and puts Lewis at the center of a dialog among H. G. Wells and Arthur C. Clarke.  Lewis also gets credit for speaking from within the academy in favor of showing respect to the genre:
C.S. Lewis himself was a champion of the idea that science fiction should be taken seriously: C.S. Lewis regarded it as regrettable that a book of ideas like Arthur C. Clarke's CHILDHOOD'S END would be dismissed as juvenilia while modernistic books be feted. In a letter, Lewis says:
It is a strange comment on our age that such a book lies hid in a hideous paper-backed edition, wholly unnoticed by the cognoscenti, while any 'realistic' drivel about some neurotic in a London flat--something that needs no real invention at all, something that any educated man could write if he chose, may get seriously reviewed and mentioned in serious books - as if it really mattered. I wonder how long this tyranny will last? Twenty years ago I felt no doubt that I should live to see it all break up and great literature return: but here I am, losing teeth and hair, and still no break in the clouds. ~C.S. Lewis, Collected Letters of C.S. Lewis: Volume III, Letter to Joy Gresham, Dec 22, 1953
Of course, the admiration of the author of the Ransom Trilogy for the author of CHILDHOOD'S END will come as no surprise to those who recognize where these books stand in the Great Dialog of the Pen. Arthur C. Clarke's novel was an answer and a rebuttal to OUT FROM THE SILENT PLANET and to THAT HIDEOUS STRENGTH in the same way that C. S. Lewis' novel was a rebuttal and an answer to FIRST MEN IN THE MOON by H.G. Wells.
Read the whole thing, then read the follow-up post.  Then spend some time browsing Wright's other posts.  This is a man with lots of interesting things to say.

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

The Man, the President, and the Singing Japanese Robot Chick

At the official blog of the Tor publishing house, John Ottinger III notes a Parisian statue that honors the man who could walk through walls.

The most ridiculous political video ever?  A candidate, at least, but let's at least give Nixon credit for pulling off a nice one-liner about Truman, that other piano-playing president.



Too bad Nixon didn't enter that piece in a competition; with his political clout, he could have won!  Meanwhile, Don has heard the future, and it sounds like a nasal Japanese pop diva.

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Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Lawsuit on the Edge of Forever

Harlan Ellison is an incredibly entertaining writer, and no topic puts him in such fine form as that of his aclaimed Star Trek screenplay, The City on the Edge of Forever.  No, I don't mean he was in fine form when he wrote the screenplay; I consider it a mixed bag of inspired character development and embarrassing cliché.  No, what really brings out Ellison's genius is writing about the writing of, and the subsequent decades-long argument with Gene Roddenberry over, The City on the Edge of Forever.

My friend Jeremy, alert as always, reports to me today that the case is seeing—oh, how shall we put it?—fresh developments.  You'll laugh, you'll cry.

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Friday, March 27, 2009

The Onion Strikes Again

Annette of Germany writes in to let us know the Garrison Keillor sketch I quoted in my previous post can be read or listened to here.  Thanks, Annette.  In unrelated developments, Prague's Franz Kafka Airport is rated dead last in customer satisfaction and two talking rabbits debate the fantasy / sci-fi divide and TypeNow has movie-themed fonts.

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Watchmen Reax

Rejoice, Eveölators!  Her Tushness hath spoken on the Watchmen question.  Many links, and a fair amount of negative analysis, can be found, but she (like me) felt an initial, visceral joy in the movie that she refuses to repudiate.  Upon mature reflection, I agree with her complaint about the use of Mozart's Requiem and the Helicopter Ride of the Valkeries, and I would add the one-millionth appropriation of Phillip Glass to the list—so I guess the movie disappoints in my area of specialty.  (That would be high-brow music, in case you couldn't tell).  And, yes, the love scene was regrettable to say the least.

In a sort-of-related developement, I really enjoyed this 9-minute, 150-Euro movie my friend Jeremy told me about:



Here's the official website.  (But how do I enter the site???  Apparently, you have to dig for the treasure.)  Jeremy tells me the rumors of viral marketing have been denied, and with that, I have officially entered spreading-rumors-about-rumors territory.

Finally, moving from science fiction to science maybe-fact, we learn that cold fusion is back, baby!

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Friday, March 13, 2009

Reverence

The Grand Rapids Symphony and Chorus will perform Adams' On the Transmigration of Souls and also music from Wagner's Ring this weekend.  This is an impressive program I wish I could hear.

City Journal wanders into a strange (for it, not for me) neighborhood:  religion in science fiction.  Author Benjamin A. Plotinsky sees the genre shifting away from its more political focus during the years of the Heinlein hegemony.  Hat tip goes to He With Whom I Butt Heads, Gabriel McKee of SF Gospel, who says the article is a bit sloppy (and he has a point).  Meanwhile, McKee also dismisses Watchmen in three short sentences although the movie inspired in me much the same reverent (no joke) feelings that the book did and that completely swamped all my (legitimate) artistic, political and philosophical complaints.  I guess we'll have to settle for snippy snarking until the appeals process culminates with a ruling handed down from the magisterial Eve Tushnet.

Speaking of magisterial, Positive Liberty (how did I find you, PL?  I'm sorry to say I've forgotten) found Allan Bloom in two forms:  on video re Socrates and audio re Nietzsche.

My newest friend is Gareth Stack, a mercurial and intellectually peripatetic Irish being who sometimes adopts the nom de blogge "Professor Byron Frump" who nevertheless dares to call himself "confounded" by my "astrolabe of wingnuttery."  So, Prof. Frump, what do you make of today's goulash of themes and links?

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Saturday, February 28, 2009

The Third Man

I wanted an excuse to link to the blog The Claw of the Conciliator since I'm working my way through Gene Wolfe's impressive, dazzling, and yet sometimes exasperating Book of the New Sun, the second volume of which I am currently reading, and which is called (amazing coincidence!) The Claw of the Concilator.

So, here comes a post about the curious "Third Man" experience sometimes reported by persons in extreme situations.  T. S. Eliot gets a mention.  I would add that Kim Stanley Robinson discusses the experience at length in his Mars trilogy.

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Friday, January 23, 2009

Dr. Manhattan

From the Watchmen viral website The New Frntiersman comes this archival footage of a color presentation of the NBS Network Nightly News:



What's up with those Canadian accents, eh?

Watchmen.  Oooh, I am so ready to see this movie.

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Monday, January 12, 2009

Hitler's Funniest Novel

Over Christmas break, during a long drive from Ann Arbor, Michigan, to our vacation condo in Sarasota, Florida, there happened one of those coincidences that make life interesting and blogging easy. We were sitting in a positively charming little Scottish restaurant eating MacBreakfast when I leaned over to the Wifeösphere and asked, "did you notice the man who took our order was wearing a Hitler mustache?"

She had not noticed, although in her defense I'll mention the man was African-American; not only the low color contrast of black on brown, but the sheer culture shock of a Black Hitler made the mustache difficult to notice. Nevertheless, incidents like this one, or the Adolf Hitler birthday cake that was in the news at Christmas time, serve as a reminder of the enduring toxicity of all things Hitlerian. Hitler owns the franchise on Evil. He rules it. The attraction-slash-repugnance that surrounds Nazism, thanks in large part to the arrogance of the movement as well as its style sense (wouldn't communists be regarded with more dread if only they wore black leather decorated with skulls?) guarantees they will continue to be the first-call bogymen for novels, TV and films for the foreseeable future.

Have you ever seen a Hitler mustache in the wild? Of course not. Have you ever wondered why they never call them Charlie Chaplin mustaches? Of course not.

Nazis calibrated ever detail of their movement to maximize both evil and the appearance of evil, so some people have reacted by trying to quarantine Hitler, defining him as a kind of unique, unrepeatable monster who cannot and must not be understood. If a movie or book examines him too closely, critics worry that Hitler may be "humanized."

Norman Spinrad is not worried. In order to write The Iron Dream in 1972, he had to get inside Hitler's head in a way few would attempt and fewer could pull off. The Iron Dream is nothing less than a novel from an alternative universe plus an "Afterword to the Second Edition by a fictional critic. In that alternate universe, a young, passionate veteran of WWI immigrates from Germany to New York City, becomes a science fiction illustrator and fanzine editor, then writes a Hugo-award-winning novel. That novel--which makes up the bulk of Norman Spinrad's book--is called Lord of the Swastika. It's author is . . . you guessed it.

Think of the months Spinrad spent on this project! This Lord of the Swastika is 240 pages long. All that time, he immersed--wallowed--in the Hitler mindset! I can think of only one comparable effort: The Screwtape Letters, wherein author C. S. Lewis imaged how an experienced demon might mentor a rookie tempter through a series of advisory epistles. But Lewis' book is very short, and intentionally so, as he explained. "It almost smothered me before I was done. It would have smothered my readers if I had prolonged it."

How Spinrad maintained his oxygen supply while diving in the murk of Hitler's brain is anyone's guess. Lord of the Swastika is a relentless cycling of a short list of obsessions: hygiene, manly strength, tight black leather, mass spectacle, and above all, violence. It is porny to a degree that I fondly hope has never been surpassed anywhere. It describes a future Earth despoiled by nuclear fallout and overrun by degenerate mutants who are dirty, smelly, ugly, weak, and surrounded by squalor. The burden of the story lies in the need of the true humans to purify themselves by destroying the mutant infiltrators and the mind-controlling "Dominators" who lead them. This the humans accomplish only when a hero of unusually pure genetic stock rises to take control of the government and launch an unspeakably bloody war against the whole world.

The battle scenes are especially self-indulgent. Although the warfare is mechanized, the climaxes inevitably require hand-to-hand combat, where the hero, named Feric Jagger, smashes the brains of his enemies with a giant metal truncheon of magical power.

The afterword, written by the fictional critic "Homer Whipple" has stolen much of my fun by making the most obvious points. There we find a catalog of Hitler's obsessions, with violence and hygiene battling for preeminence. There's also the kooky emphasis on the design of flags, buildings, pageants and uniforms, always attributed to the hero, which makes sense when you remember the attention Hitler paid to details like the cut of military uniforms.

We are also told of Hitler's reputation as a Don Juan at science fiction conventions, and this fact is compared with the subtext of passages like this:
He chanced to look at Best; the young hero was married to the controls of the tank and to his machine gun. His face was set in a steel grimace of determination; in his blue eyes was a fierce and iron ecstasy. For an instant their eyes met and they were united in the comradely communion of battle, transfigured together in a red mist beyond time or fatigue. Through the metal of the tank, the common weapon which they shared, their souls seemed to touch and merge for an instant in the greater communion that was the racial will. All this took place in the blink of an eye; their beings were not for an instant distracted from the sacred task.
Yowie. There are Freudianisms as well: the outstretched-arm salute, a tall reviewing stand, and a rocket that ends the novel "on a pillar of fire to fecundate the stars." All this is described by "Whipple" who then writes:
What is open to dispute is whether or not Hitler was consciously aware of what he was doing.
Great stuff, but marred slightly by the reader's sure knowledge that such a negative essay would never be included along side the novel it criticizes.

Still, verisimilitude is mostly maintained. The essay's author is ignorant where he ought to be. He firmly believes a society based on the violent enforcement of racial purity is impossible. He is not even sure Hitler is an anti-Semite. He suspects it, but Hitler's anti-communism argues against it in light of the communists' recent murder of five million Jews.

Also unnoticed by our friend Mr. Whipple is the pun in the name of the hero, Feric Jaggar. The first name obviously refers to the Latin ferrum for "iron." But why Feric? The naïve translation would "ironic." It looks like author Spinrad is sharing a joke with us over the head of his alter-ego Whipple.

Whipple cannot know the effect of his last sentence, described by Theodore Sturgeon in the book's (real) introduction, as "the most eloquent and penetrating shout of indignation I have ever experienced":
No, although the spectre of world Communist domination may cause the simpleminded to wish for a leader modeled on the hero of Lord of the Swastika, in an absolute sense we are fortunate that a monster like Feric Jaggar will forever remain confined to the pages of science fantasy, the fever dream of a neurotic science-fiction writer named Adolf Hitler.
Whipple is also unaware of the weird parallels between events in the novel and events in our own (real--at least, let's hope we're real) time line. Feric Jaggar's rise to power and conquest of the evil empire of the east follows Hitler's. Jaggar's lieutenants can be identified; Himmler, Röhm, and the amusing-yet-sinister Goebbels have fictional representatives. That Hitler, who moves to NYC in 1919 in the alternative time line, could have anticipated these characters and their fates is impossibly prescient. Spinrad may have meant it as another sly joke, but it comes off as a bit lazy or self-indulgent.

The funniest page comes at the beginning, the one where "Other Science Fiction Novels by Adolf Hitler" are flogged. But the fact is, I chuckled on almost every page. That's why I'm surprised Theodore Sturgeon blasted a rival critic who wrote of The Iron Dream that it "ceased to be funny after the first twenty pages" with a one-word paragraph leaden with sarcasm:
Funny!
They're both wrong. I found it hilarious from beginning to end. I suppose that means I'm a bad person. But we knew that already.

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Friday, December 19, 2008

Warped Passages

Futurismic points us to the story of Lisa Randall, a theoretical physicist from Harvard who wrote a book called Warped Passages, a layman's guide to alternate universes.  So anyway, Spanish composer Hector Parra asked her to turn it into a libretto (with the help of artist Matthew Ritchie), and he turned that into an opera.  It will receive it's premiere at the Georges Pompidou Centre in Paris.

New operas so rarely have legs; this one seems unusually doomed.  Keep your fingers crossed, and maybe the public will take a shine to it.

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Tuesday, December 02, 2008

John Higbie's Magic Mentah

We got word from the Ann Arbor Boychoir that our son, Der Drübermensch, would be needed for a special recording session on a Sunday afternoon.  The choir had been hired by John Higbie, a veteran visual effects specialist from Hollywood.  John recently moved to Michigan and is wrapping up post-production of his first directorial effort, a science fiction movie called Magic Mentah (previously called Amsteroid).  He wanted the boys voices to add Ligetiesque spookiness to some of the space scenes.

Science fiction and choirs?  In my own backyard?  Of course I wanted to find out more.  I attended the recording session and met John, an incredibly sane, likeable person (i.e., not what you expect in a movie director).  John's movie has been in post for some time now and he hopes to release it in 2009.  He'll work the festivals and he expects the movie to be available on DVD.  (When that happens, I'll let you know.)

I asked him why he chose science fiction as a subject.  He told me his experience in visual effects can be best put to use in that genre.  Since the movie's plot involves dead Egyptian gods as well as spaceships, I suppose a more precise categorization would be science fantasy.

The still you see here shows an asteroid in the shape of a human figure; that's one of the gods.  To the right is a transparent green brain.  In the clip John showed me, the brain rotates and approaches the camera, until you are close enough to see a live actor inside.  John has done an excellent job marrying the CG and live-action coordinate systems here; the two are linked seamlessly.  Clearly, the guy is a pro.

The big green brain is accompanied by the boy's voices:



If you had heard the original, you'd be especially impressed by John's mixing and filtering of the sound tracks.

John will be in Ann Arbor this Thursday for some filming.  If all goes well, I'll be interviewing him for the Starship Sofa podcast.  I've already discussed Magic Mentah on an earlier episode (Round Table No. 6; scroll down).

I'm terribly excited to see this kind of production happen in Michigan.  Magic Mentah is just the latest example of movies with modest budgets having a fighting chance at commercial success.  It reminds me of Primer, another SF film made on a budget of a few thousand dollars.  (Although, Primer did not have any visual effects that I remember.)   Definitely see Primer if you don't mind extremely obscure SF-al concepts bandied about with minimal explanation.

I'll be reporting again on Magic Mentah.  Watch this space.

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Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Neal Stephenson's Movement Moment

Neal Stephenson's Anathem sits at the intersection of science fiction and choral music, so naturally I'm going to blog it repeatedly.  However, there's more going on with this book (I'm about 70% of the way through its 900 pages, btw) that needs to be talked about.

Good or bad, lovable or hateful, this book is very unusual.  (If it were just an ordinary novel, not SF, I'd have to call it extremely unusual.)  Anathem has the chance to become a movement book.  Like Stranger in a Strange Land and a very few other novels I could mention if I took a while to remember them, Anathem presents a way of life that is very seductive and somewhat achievable.  (Much more achievable than SIASL, where you need to learn how to communicate with the dead and manipulate matter with your thoughts if you really want to get with the program.)

It will take a lot of stars getting into alignment for any significant Anathem monastic communities to get organized.  I'm not saying I think it will happen; only that Anathem is that rare book where such a movement could be even possible.  Plus, it's not like SIASL made much of a mark on our culture, although it did at least introduce one word into common use (common among geeks, that is).  And that's nothing to sneeze at.

Stephenson's goal (if it was a conscious goal) to write a movement book will be helped along a bit because it was inspired by the work of an organization already in place:  the Long Now FoundationStephenson is on video reading from the book and answering questions at a Long Now event.  Cantors in funky robes are thrown in for fun.  The music they sing is inspired by mathematics.  Some of it doesn't really work for me on a musical level, frankly, but it's worth something as a curiosity and a kind of proof-of-concept.  Give them time.  I may even try my hand at it too.  After I finish the 3 or 4 other projects clogging my queue.

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Tuesday, November 04, 2008

And Pfft You Was Gone

My never-ending research on the topics of science fiction, choral music, and the effects of Hee Haw on modern font development led me to these gentle distractions from today's Big Event.  First, a one-man quartet synopsizes Star Wars:



Then, I give you a very nicely-prepared summary--and one more example of the kind of kooky obsessiveness that the internet enables--of font jokes from Mystery Science Theater 3000.  Does anyone do obscure reference humor more boldly than these guys?  Finally, here's the official Hee Haw site.  Man, that was a bad show.  Bad, bad, bad.

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Thursday, October 23, 2008

Mathymetry

The black swan strikes: out of the blue, everybody's talking math at me all of a sudden.

Barnes & Noble interviews Neal Stephenson at length, and the links that come with it are very good. Neal's new novel Anathem is all about an alien world where the cloistered monks devote themselves to science and math, not religion. Neal's friend (David Sutz of the Seattle-based ensembles Tudor Choir and Cappella Romana) created chant music inspired by pi, quadratic equations, you know--all the usual math-type stuff. I especially commend to your (freely-downloadable) listening pleasure the "Thousander Chant" with it's contrabass throat singing. Whoa.

Neal creates a special playlist for each novel he writes. I've tried a corresponding trick; I used photos of classical ruins to inspire the composition of some severe chant-like vocal music; the result was a little too ruinous, I'm afraid, and I've never tried that trick since. The intersection of choral music and SF: it's my blog's great theme, and Neal Stephenson is singing it.

Next, we find out about the musical importance of the number 5 as we wander down an Overgrown Path. We'll also meet Pythagoras and the Golden Mean while we do.

Oh, and that business about the swan? Daniel Wolf has the musical connection.

Finally, today a friend emailed me a Newsweek article about certain countries good at producing girls who are high achievers in math. The author concludes math ability is culturally determined, and in a beautiful expression of self-parody, says she's going to "scream" if she hears anyone talk about "hard-wired" brains ever again. I invite everyone to go to the very convenient website of International Mathematical Olympiad results and spend a few minutes with the data as I did. The obvious conclusion you will reach is that boys continue to dominate, and if girls are surging (even if only in select countries) then the effect is subtle. Maybe the metaphor we're looking for is "firmware."

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Algis Budrys

Technology Review has reprinted a sad little SF story by the late, great Algis Budrys called The Distant Sound of Engines.  Here's more about the author.

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Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Neal Stephenson

Neal Stephenson came last night to Nicola's Books in Ann Arbor to sign copies of his new novel Anathem.  He rocked, but I was especially interested in the crowd, which self-selectively skewed nerdy (of course) but also less unhip than you would expect.  All of the questions from the audience were coherent and succinct; a few of the more intense fans seemed to be bursting with the urge to make long, arcane speeches, but resisted admirably.  The signing line moved more than twice as fast as I estimated, and in general I found the crowd conforming to my personal preferences (for efficiency and public reticence) to a higher degree than any I can remember.  We Neal fans are ... special.

I'm kicking myself for being too reticent. One of the first questioners asked Neal a faith-n-reason question which was a somewhat more concise version of the question I wanted to ask.  The guy was wearing a tee-shirt with the slogan, "Opiates are the religion of the people."  Clearly, this is a kindred spirit, yet when I almost literally bumped into him in the store afterwards, I failed to start a conversation.  This lost opportunity drove me to self-loathing far more than my other loss of the evening, when I wasted all my one-on-one time with Neal explaining to him how to spell "Fredösphere" when he signed my copy of his book.

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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

The Fly Barks

It's opera and it's science fiction, so you'd think I would be compelled to comment, but I've been avoiding linking to news of The Fly since I figured out the show included nudity.  I'm not exactly one with a finger on the pulse of the opera world, but isn't new opera pulling a Britney/Janet/Jennifer and turning to skank to shore up the sagging popularity?  Anyway, now that we have a review, and it has turned snarky ("The Fly is a dog" is not what he said, but what he meant), I almost feel sorry for poor David Cronenberg et al.  Okay, I don't feel sorry at all.  And the review contains a bit of truly wonderful advice that could have helped more than one recent would-be opera composer:
"The Fly" isn't even an interesting failure. It's just amateurish. It isn't even good enough to be offensive. Shore, noted for composing music for such films as "Ed Wood," "The Lord of the Rings," and, yes, "The Fly," has no business writing an opera. But how could he know until he tried, you ask?

Well, he couldn't, but you don't try it out on an audience at the Chatelet in Paris, where it debuted in July, and then take it to Los Angeles Opera. You write a scene, get a graduate seminar class at some music school to give it a run-through, and then go back to the drawing board, humbled by what you've heard. Opera is hard. A man's got to know his limitations.
(When Matel comes out with its very first composer doll, and you pull the string, that's what you'll hear it say:  opera is hard.)

Well, my very first opera was a huge critical and popular success, in the sense that no critic panned it because there were none present, and the audience, which consisted of the good folk of Bronson, Michigan, pop. 3000, sitting in the gymnasium of the local jr. high school, seemed to like it well enough, or at least acted mightily impressed that a teenager could write 12 minutes of reasonably conherent music and still have enough friends to stage the thing.  But now that I think of it, my experience tends to confirm the wisdom of the above advice.

(I do like idea of the chorus singing the part of the computer, however.)

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Monday, September 08, 2008

Cell Mate

You might expect me to link to news of Ananthem, the new novel by SF author Neal Stephenson, because I'm a fan of SF and a huge fan of NS, and, yes:   perhaps I will get around to it eventually.   Today, instead, I'd like to link to an interview with NS about the book because of this comment:
I asked Stephenson whether he felt that cell phones in our own world might represent a wrong turn, technologically speaking. He said:

I couldn't live without mine. But the etiquette and the interface are lagging behind the technology. Introduction of new technology often leads to disruptions in manners that can take a generation or more to play out. We're in one of those awkward times now.
I now own a cell phone, but only because the Wifeösphere bought it for me.   However, it is almost never on, and frequently I forget to take it with me.   I resent the appalling manners of many cell phone users--exactly why does a cell phone justify you cutting me off in mid-sentence just because it happens to be ringing?--and, to reinforce the point NS is making elsewhere in the interview, constant conversation is a distraction from serious thinking. Gee, you'd almost think people were looking for a distraction.

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Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Drum Pundit

A new angle found by SciFi Scanner, and a perfect topic for the Fredösphere:  Ancient Christian Paintings Give Evidence of Space Alien Visitation.  It sounded kooky, but then I saw the painting first cited:  The Baptism of Christ by Aert de Gelder.  I'm not sure who, but somebody's phoning home in that painting.

Meanwhile...

My son is enjoying a Boychoir retreat this week, and I was privileged to observe a special educational demonstration given to the boys by John Churchville, a local expert in classical Indian drumming.  It's amazing what just one hour of explanation can do to greatly increase one's appreciation of an art form.  Hey, here's an idea:  we could introduce music education into the public schools and effect an explosion in classical music interest among the general population!

Anyway, John's demo was info-packed and conducted with grace, even when the boys in the front row fidgeted or experienced gastric indiscretions thanks to the meal of tacos and refried beans consumed just minutes before.  Oh, and then there was the "please back up; I can feel your breath on the back of my hands" moment.

John showed us a video of his teacher, pandit (i.e., pundit, sort of like the Indian equivalent of a Ph.D.) Swapan Chaudhuri.  I found the following video which seems to be the clearest picture of the master employing the one-handed roll characteristic of his region's style of drumming.  See it for the first time at about 1' 30"; in most videos the hand moves too fast to see that he's flapping the right hand in a left-to-right movement, using the thumb and forefinger as one "drumstick" and the other three fingers as the other. 



Am I the only person who sees a bit of Harlan Ellison in Chaudhuri's face and posture?

Boychoir conductor Tom Strode mentioned the influence of Indian Music upon Olivier Messiaen.  If only Messiaen had Youtube, think of how much more he could have achieved!  Although, in that case, we may have had the Messiaenification of the following--which is too disturbing to contemplate!



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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Panel of Experts

Look carefully at this post at John Scalzi's blog.  Look at the first photo.  In particular, look at the painting of the strawberry on the far wall in the picture.  Note the lower-left corner of that painting.  Notice the gray head that is almost, but not quite, obscuring that corner.

That head just happens to be the one attached to my body.  Yes, I was in attendance at the author event at the Ann Arbor District Library last Sunday.  John was joined by fellow Ohiöspheric SF authors Tobias Buckell and Paul Melko.

The one boooooing! moment occurred when a gentleman from the audience questioned the value of publishing on the internet, compared to the "relatively permanent" nature of print.  The panel responded with more grace and patience than I probably would have, but the content of their answers shot down his premise.  Scalzi noted that "the disappearance of the internet implies apocalypse."  And then he noted that apocalypse would be very bad.  For people, for books, for everyone.  Then he described the many people busy archiving the whole internet.  The Noösphere Is Eternal!  (My words, not his.  But you knew that.)

Yes, Toby and Paul are funny and smart, but John modestly fails to mention he outdid even those two in clever, cogent, articulate comments on the state of SF publishing today.  In sum, the event was marred only by its brevity.  John, if you read this:  I was the one in the question line who stuck out his tongue impatiently when you called a halt to the Q&A session.  I apologize for my bad manners.  Please come back to Ann Arbor anytime.

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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Dr. Horrible

A musical ... a sci-fi comedy musical ... released on the web?  I admit, I was grossly derelict in my blogging duties by not telling you to go watch Joss Whedon's Dr. Horrible's Singalong Blog while it was available for free download.  (The DVDs will be on sale soon, with--wait for it!--a sung commentary track.  Geniuses.)

Anyway, I just found out the good Doctor is available for one more day for free.  Today.  What are you waiting for?

Oh, yeah.  You're waiting for the link.

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Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Signs


Incontrovertible proof that aliens have visited the Fredölawn.

(Okay, seriously, what are those dark, perfectly round rings that show up in the grass every summer?)

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Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Outsider

Good news.  When I last linked to Outsider, a free webcomic by Jim Francis (a.k.a. Arioch), the series was stalled at page 50, with much more of the plot yet to be written and drawn.  Regular checking-in on my part over the intervening months led me to fear this project was permanently comatose.

Today I have discovered that, somewhere along the line, four more pages have been drawn.  The work resumes!  Sadly, one can read the new material in a matter of seconds, a pathetic amount of time compared to what was needed to create it...and yet, we have progress.

To recap the plot:  a human male finds himself rescued/captured by a star cruiser staffed by aliens who are 95% humanoid and 100% female.  Form-fitting uniforms!  Blue skin!  Pointy ears!  Pouty lips!  You get your guilty, and you get your pleasure, all in one convenient package.  Don't miss it.

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Friday, July 18, 2008

The Future Is Your Friend, Or At Least, Your Comrade

Previously at the Fredösphere we discussed the discrete charm of French science-fiction.  (La Flamme Cosmique!  Métal de Mort!)  While French is an inappropriate language for le futur, Russian seems perfect, especially when spoken in the impatient growl of a Soviet apologist.  Io9 raises the topic; Dark Roasted Blend remains my go-to guy for images (galleries are here, here and here).  It would seem that, in space, all the stars are red.

While researching this post, a few oddities turned up that I cannot turn down:
Turns out there's a literary award for Russian science fiction which, as far as I can tell, is referred to as "Literary Award 'Russian Science Fiction'" (how ... appropriate!) which is interesting only because the trophy they give the winners looks like Howard Roark built a skyscraper model out of chocolate and then left it sitting too close to the radiator.  (Speaking of ill-placed radiators....)

Here's an alt-history novel that until now has flown beneath my radar:  it posits a world where the United States turned communist in 1917, but Russia remained imperial.  It's called Back in the USSA.  Cute.

An expert in ancient engineering techniques reviews some books in his field.  Any fan of the Age of Empires RTS (real-time strategy) game will fall in love with the catapults.  It seems the Romans (and even the Greeks) had some serious firepower at their disposal, including even hand-held weapons that could kill at one hundred yards.

BLDGBLOG has a wonderful collection of fanciful ruins, all from the game Guild Wars.  Don't you just want to eat these up?  I'm tempted to find a city and blow it up, just for the chance to indulge in some spooky/artsy melancholy.  (Memo to the good folks at the Counter-Terrorism Unit:  Just!  Kidding!  Anyway, why would I need a blown-up city when I have one so conveniently located just 45 minutes east of here?)
UPDATE:  Links are fixed now.

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Friday, July 11, 2008

Lynx

Cobly Cosh thrills to the news that a near-complete print of Fritz Lang's Metropolis has be discovered in Argentina.

USB wine.  Le wow.  Also, we speakers of English may be losing control of the language--oh frak!  And those alien spacecraft just keep getting bigger and bigger.

Steve Hicken's fantasy life is pretty similar to mine, and I mean more than just the win-the-lottery part.  He's got the musicians, the new compositions, and even the bathtub filled with chocolate pudding.  At least, that's the way I remember it.

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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Brothers of the Sun Ra

Slate explores an underappreciated branch of African-American music:  the space alien mythos.  I was pleased that Sun Ra, the one practitioner I knew about, is prominent (but I suppose everyone knows about Sun Ra, Saturn's favorite son) and was previously treated by Slate to an exclusive profile back in 1997.  (Wow, did the internet even exist back then?)  Anyone who feels alienated may find solace in science fiction, which is why I was addicted to an embarrassing degree to the Roswell series on the WB network years ago.  Gosh, I blush at the memory.

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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

2001, the Musical

Many people have commented on Stanley Kubrick's brilliant choice of music for 2001:  A Space Odyssey.  By using classical standards, Kubrick maintained more personal control over his movie.  These pieces--Zarathustra, Lux Aeterna and the Strauss waltz and all the rest--were originally placeholders, music Kubrick inserted into early drafts of the film while he was waiting for the commissioned score by Alex North to be written.  (In a shameful episode, North did not find out his music was axed until he saw the film just before its release.  North's score was eventually released as an album.)

Here's a take on the film that's new to me:  2001 as a kind of visual music in three movements.  Experts discuss the film, its music, its musical nature, and what the heck the ending is supposed to mean, anyway.  (Short answer:  anything you like.)

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Friday, May 09, 2008

Friday is Toyday

I like DesignObserver, I really do, but sometimes they play to the stereotype.  Here they are, analyzing Spirograph:
The Spirograph demonstrates, if not promotes, the belief that design can be formulaic and that good design has something to do with simplicity and objectivity. However, qualitative aspects such as emotion, irrationality, and instinct are largely missing. The patterns themselves make no direct reference to a user’s nationality, ethnicity, social class, or gender. Choices are officially confined to color and template combinations.
...and inevitably, the Tet Offensive also gets a mention.  Only near the end does the essay get back on track.  I wonder what ominous visions of militarism one could see in Major Matt Mason (one of my favorite childhood toys) if one went looking?  I loved the space crawler, which one could mount atop the moon base and use as a crane (since it had a winch in its tail).  Don't make my mistake and confuse it with the crater crawler, another toy I owned but which is not of the MMMM (Major Matt Mason Mythos).  Don't forget, James Lileks has beautifully deconstructed the MMM Big Little Book.  Beat me to it--dang.

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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Space Opera, Furthermore

In an earlier post I commented with pleasant surprise on a Swedish composer's attempt to create an opera on a science fiction theme.  Commenters assured me this was hardly the first composer to attempt such a feat.  Daniel Wolf cited as ancient an example as Haydn, which impressed me to no end.  Those of you familiar with my Haydn animus won't be surprised my mental picture of Haydn as a space opera-tor is that of the salt vampire of Planet M-113.

Anyhoo, I'm pleased to add another work to this growing list:  Jacques Offenbach's adaptation of Jules Verne's Le Voyage dans la Lune.  Wikipedia has the details, including a wonderful photo showing costumes and a set from the original lush (but to the modern eye, goofy) production.  Kudos is due (hey!  I conjugates that verb real good!) to io9 for dredging up this information (especially considering that deep historical perspective is not what you expect from a Gawker-related site) in a terribly interesting roundup of info on Georges Méliès' groundbreaking 1902 SF film A Trip to the Moon, which itself was recycled in a trippy music video by The Smashing Pumpkins called Tonight, Tonight:



And I suppose I'll have to comment on The Man that Fell to Earth if I ever get up the courage to watch it.

Space.  And opera.  What else have I overlooked?

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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Space Vulture

I've been writing reviews of SF books for Starship Sofa.  My latest reviews cover The Jewels of Aptor, the first novel of Samuel R. Delaney (written when he was only 19), Neil Gaiman's instant-classic youth novel Coraline, and most recently, Space Vulture.  This last is an ambitious attempt to recreate the raw energy of the great pulpy space operas of 40-60 years ago, written by the creator of Roger Rabbit and his childhood friend, the archbishop of Newark, NJ.  Yes, we're talking about a confluence of very odd factoids.  If you want to find out if Space Vulture achieved it's authors' high ambitions, head on over to the Starship Sofa Reviews page.

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Friday, April 11, 2008

R & SF

Ambigrams.  Wow, and double-wow.  Plus, a bearded dragon named Fred.

Today's post is about religion in science fiction.  I wanted to write something that aspired to comprehensiveness, but that vain hope was quickly dashed.  These days there is so much fiction being written and commented on that fits that description.  Just finding all the blogs devoted to R & SF is too big a task.

Ted Chiang, author of the excellent (and award-nominated) The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate displays the stereotypical SF author's attitude:
All science fiction is fundamentally post-religious literature. For those whose minds are shaped by science and technology, the universe is fundamentally knowable. Faith dissolves, replaced by a sense of wonder at the complexity of creation.
Yet Chiang's alternate realities subvert that belief, out of a playful sense of adventure, if for no other reason:
In "Tower of Babylon," a group of miners climb until they reach the vault of heaven, hoping to find God on the other side of the carapace of granite that enfolds their world. "Hell is the Absence of God" tells the tale of one Neil Fisk, whose wife is killed in a visitation by the angel Nathanael to a downtown shopping district. In Neil's thoroughly contemporary world, God exists beyond a doubt. Angels behave like weather phenomena, the miracle of their appearances tracked, quantified, and reported on the nightly news.
Another point of view is represented by this expert who correlates belief in aliens with Jesus and going to the bathroom while employing logical rigor to a degree I don't recall ever encountering before.

Whole blogs devote themselves fully or mostly to religious SF.  Old Testament Space Opera is the first to come to mind.  An impressive list of websites and more impressive steampunky graphics are maintained at Christian Science Fiction & Fantasy Central.  I also found a list of recommended titles and a list of authors by religious affiliation.  (The latter really needs to do some wheat-chaff sorting; I suspect a lot of these guys are nominals, which is a far more important distinction than how they fall out in the dreaded Congregationalist-Methodist schism.  For example, calling that Olaf Stapledon a Quaker is ridiculous in light of the letter he wrote to his unborn great-grandson urging him to fall off the religion wagon without delay.)  Finally, the unfortunately-named topic of "Christian science fiction" has its own Wikipedia page, wherein this tragedy of the publishing business is documented:
Christian bookstores, like some of their secular counterparts are often unsure how to deal with such stories, and may shelve what few they carry under the rather generic and somewhat unhelpful label "futuristic literature".
Catholics are everywhere in SF and speculative fiction generally--call it the Chesterton Effect.  For example, Insidecatholic.com likes the hard-to-categorize Tim Powers, author of Declare.  This link recommends other authors, and makes this observation:
That's a curious thing when you think about it. Science fiction is a genre whose founding fathers and mothers tended very often (though not exclusively, of course) to be the sort of people who were hard-boiled atheists of the Arthur C. Clarke/Isaac Asimov mold -- people who spoke the word "Science" either with a sort of religious reverence or with the sort of stentorian triumphalism of a Thomas Dolby tune. Some of them, like H. G. Wells, managed to achieve both science worship and stentorian triumphalism in their work, writing books which were combinations of fun narrative and some of the preachiest, creakiest, antiquated prophecies in print.

Outgrowing God is indeed a favorite theme of science fiction and fantasy. Evolution/technology/aliens/time travelers from the future/computers/whatnot are always just about to prove that God does not exist, life after death is a fantasy, the soul is a function of matter, man is but a sophisticated meat machine, Jesus never existed, etc.

And yet the astonishing thing is that science fiction and fantasy are absolutely awash in theological speculation. Lots of it is pagan, in the Chestertonian sense. That is, it is an attempt to reach God through the imagination, hampered by the inability to conceive of something truly outside of the created world. The result is a sort of quasi-supernaturalism that acknowledges planes of existence beyond the human, but refuses to entertain the notion of angels and demons.
I'd like to give more attention to religious themes other than Christian ones in SF, but I lack the knowledge or the time.  Once again, Wikipedia is a (meager) starting point.  I tend to hear about mostly the scandalous examples, like the rise of the Jedi Knights in the UK, or (most deliciously) graven images of Kirk and Spock.

SF Signal's symposium on the question, "Is Science Fiction Antithetical to Religion?"  One participant was John C. Wright (see him at livejournal.com) whom I have blogged previously.  John is an interesting case; he's an adult convert from skepticism to Christianity who nevertheless is pessimistic about inserting religious characters into fiction.  Does the new retro-space opera Space Vulture prove him right, or wrong?  Mostly right, I'd say, but there is plenty of contrary evidence from writers with higher ambitions and, frankly, better skill.  Take C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy, for example.

Nevertheless, he's right to be skeptical.  Blending religion and SF does go wrong sometimes.  Oh yes, terribly, terribly wrong.

UPDATE:  Calvin College joins the party.

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

On the Sofa

This week at the Starship Sofa podcast you'll find me in my occasional role as celebrity co-host.  Tony Smith and I discuss the five British Science Fiction Association nominees for best short story.  In 40 minutes we discuss slasher novels written by Mormons, the advantages and disadvantages of fax machines for souls, and two-headed bug-eyed aliens, as well as the topic at hand.  You can download the audio file directly from the Starship Sofa homepage, or better yet you can subscribe via iTunes.

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Wikihistory by Desmond Warzel

Build time machine, travel back to 1936, assassinate Hitler:  what could be more simple?

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Thursday, February 21, 2008

Lunar Eclipse

Tuesday evening, I anxiously watched the weather, and rejoiced as the clouds thinned out.  I gazed at the moon through my binoculars, and noticed that the thin lacework of clouds, if anything, made the view more dramatic, with a layering that gave Moon a sense of context and proportion.  Around 9:30pm, I started to wonder what was going on.  By 10:00, a profound sense of betrayal settled in.  Somebody, somewhere, somehow, screwed up.

The next morning, I met the screwer-upper, and he was me.  I reread the email from my friend Doug, the amateur astronomer, and discovered the eclipse was on for Wednesday night.  (Rain or shine.)

Last night's weather was painfully clear and bright; perfect conditions.  I was struck by the sharpness of the Earth's shadow, and how its curved shape gave me the sense of the spatial relationships of two heavenly bodies too large for us normally to comprehend.  The only other time in my life I've had such a sense of vertigo while intuiting the roundness of our world was the time I viewed the tippy-tops of the skyscrappers of Chicago from a vantage point across Lake Michigan in New Buffalo, Michigan.  Each time I felt a momentary fear that, if I wasn't careful, I could fall right off this crazy spinning thing.

You know, don't you, that Moon's orbit is gradually increasing?
Drift away, but steal a backwards glance until the Sun grows cold.

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Thursday, February 07, 2008

Mostly Wright

My previous post on random album cover generators proved to be hugely successful, by my standards.  Do read the comments, which have links to other great examples of serendipitous album art.

I strongly recommend you read what Books Under the Bridge has to say about religion in science fiction.  It's a series of four blog posts, each with a long, stimulating comments section.  Read part one, part two, part three, and part four.

In the comments of part one, you'll see I grab an opportunity to flog one of my favorite religion-in-SF novels, The Mote In God's Eye, which is remarkable for the casual (and to me, believable) way religion is depicted:  always there, in the background, neither impotent nor menacing.  Also of note are the very long comments by SF author John Wright, a former atheist and current Christian (hmmm, what are the implications of that word "current"?  What will he logically turn into next--a Rosicrucian?  An anarcho-socialist post-Jesuit with a soft spot for vegetarian triumphalism?) who, oddly, is a skeptic on the question of including religion in any fiction at all, except in its extreme forms.  (Read his argument; it's more plausible than my summary makes it sound.  More plausible, and somewhat convincing, but not completely.)

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Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Launch Loop

Its construction costs are lower, its launch capacity is greater, its per-payload costs are lower, and its feasibility is greater (i.e., non-zero as of now) compared to a space elevator...so why have I never heard of a Launch Loop (or Lofstrom Loop) until today?  I guess I know now how I'll be spending my time this weekend:  I'll be building one of these things in my basement.

I will need to be careful:
A running loop would have a stupendous amount of energy. While the magnetic suspension system would be highly redundant, with failures of small sections having essentially no effect at all; if a major failure did occur the energy in the loop [...] would be approaching the same scale of energy release as a small nuclear bomb explosion (350 kilotons of TNT equivalent).

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Monday, January 14, 2008

That's Munich, Germany

So, it turns out my idea to write a science fiction story about the Three Wise Men is officially one of the Overused Science Fiction Clichés:
k. A major historical figure (Jesus, Einstein, Lincoln, Elvis) was really a space alien.
Meanwhile....

I was shocked, frankly, to read Jens Laurson's description at Ionarts of an audience's hostile reaction to music by MacMillan and Britten at a concert in Munich.  Let's be perfectly clear--we're not talking here about Munich, North Dakota:
Mad gallops toward the end of the third movement [of James MacMillan's Vigil] sent yet another wave of listeners out of the hall - and during the work's end over faint, silver touches you could hear those patrons just outside, discussing angrily what they had just been made to listen to.

It was a fine day for good new music and a courageous triumph for the Munich Philharmonic (which offered professional, if not great, playing). But it was also a monument to the lack of curiosity of much of its clientele. The Munich audience had proved by virtue of its absence that it will only pretend to be interested in modern music to a certain extent… and that programming a “modern, little known composer” like Britten (that’s sadly his status among many attendees) with a contemporary piece and some obscure renaissance prelude is far too much for them to respond to. As rich as the cultural environment is in Munich, and as much as it prides itself in its diversity, it cannot deny a certain provincial attitude that is often coupled with a plain ignorant and dismissive attitude of all (cultural) things Anglo-Saxon and, indeed, foreign. Give the subscription holders of the Munich Philharmonic their Strauss (either), Mozart, Brahms and they shall be happy. Give them Britten and they won't come - or come and leave mid-concert. A pity.
I'm always interested in these cases of overturned expectations regarding relative cultural sophistication.  I prefer the term "reverse provincialism" (alluded to in my previous post) in cases where a pseudo-sophisticate assumes the worst of supposed rubes, and only exposes his own ignorance in the process.  This is another, different, example of the same trend.  Frankly, I can't imagine such a thing happening in Ann Arbor or Detroit.  Britten?  Unknown???  And what about MacMillan--I thought he was Mr. Accessible Modernism.  I've heard of the locals here in S.E. Michigan walking out on an unusually screechy Kronos Quartet concert, but Britten and MacMillan?  Madness.

Oh, well, what does it matter?  We're all going to die.

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Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Swedish Outer-Space Bebop

Kyle Gann writes of Karl-Birger Blomdahl's science fiction opera Aniara, a surprisingly early (1959) attempt to merge these two disparate art sensibilities.  Blomdahl employs a wedge-shaped 12-tone row:
[T]ruth be told, there's something about science fiction, this "woo woo we're in outer space" feeling, that makes the discomforting 12-tone idiom ring more plausibly. In addition, the chromatic aura is cut by and blended with two other idioms. One is a kind of Swedish outer-space bebop that attends the "Yurg" cult around Daisi Doody - by which I mean that it doesn't sound like Blomdahl's trying to write bebop, only that he's created a hybrid music indebted to it. The other idiom is the electronic music used for various sequences, such as when the computer-like being Mima is transmitting images of the Earth destroying itself.
(Daisy Doody is a character in the opera, an entertainer aboard a ship adrift among the stars.)

There seems to be a trend:
In fact, one of the first things I did in Europe was to visit the American expatriate composer Wayne Siegel in Aarhus, Denmark, who teaches electronic music at the Royal Conservatory. (My profile of him just appeared in Chamber Music magazine.) And Siegel played for me excerpts of his own science fiction opera, Livstegn, or "Signs of Life" (1993-94), about a scientist plunged into a personal crisis by his unexpected discovery of intelligent life on one of Jupiter's moons.
Folks, we need to band together and smother these infants in their cradles.  We've got to shut down all news, all discussion; let the world forget these works were ever written.  Why?  Because I want to write my own space opera and I want to preserve the illusion that I got there first.  I also want to use the title Space Opera and pretend nobody else ever thought of it.

Indeed, I've been neglecting this blog lately as I give some attention to science fiction.  My latest project is a choral work which I've decided to combine with a science fiction story which will have the same title and theme.  I've progressed enough on the story that I'm sure at least it won't be a train wreck, so I'll start mentioning it now.  I'll still withhold the details (even from the Wifeösphere!) because I think it best to externalize my plans by implementing them, not talking about them.

I'm having fun with the gang over at Starship Sofa, an SF podcast.  Those craving to hear my voice should download this week's episode, wherein I play celebrity guest and explain why Flowers For Algernon left me wanting less.  (The novel is a favorite of host Tony C. Smith.)  I'm also an occasional contributor to the group blog there, and I've served a stint as a reader of stories for the podcast; I may continue if I decide I'm willing to put in the time required to prepare properly (which is a lot).

Finally, have a peek in here:  forget the giant face; scientists have found a secret doorway on Mars!

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Thursday, November 08, 2007

Exodus

When ... Worlds ... Collide!  It was a mashup of religion, choral music, and sci-fi (sort of) when William Shatner read from the book of Exodus accompanied by orchestra and a choir of 350 singers.  A live recording of the work, written by David Itkin and performed by the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra, is due for release any time now.  No word if outtakes from rehearsals will ever make it on to the internet; I'm hoping to hear a sound engineer say to Shatner, "can there be a little more excitement during the plague of locusts?"

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Starship Sofa

Starship Sofa is my favorite podcast.  Two blokes from northern England, Tony C. Smith and Ciaran O'Carrol, wing it on the subject of one sci-fi author each week.  Their unscripted approach (and these guys blaze new trails in unscripted--wow, are they unscripted) makes commercial radio, or the podcasts that emulate it, seem clotted and pompous by comparison.

Because I was an early, vocal fan, and for who-knows what other reasons, Tony and Ciaran have adopted me.  They read every email I send them on the podcast.  Although they haven't yet asked me to don a giant chicken suit (probably because this is an audio cast, not video) they do seem to view me as some kind of mascot.

It is the Starship Sofa (hereafter, SSS) podcast that is the outlet for my new venture in sci-fi authorship.  I have recorded myself reading my second story, Sofa God, and it will be included in a future SSS podcast.  I'm working on writing a bit of incidental music to accompany the reading.  This experience confirms what I found earlier:  writing music is laborious and frustrating; writing prose is easy.  Easy.

There's no point publishing Sofa God here on this website, since the story is merely one extended inside joke, written for fans of the SSS podcast.  My first story, however, is of general interest, and I'm trying to decide if I should publish it is sections, within blog posts, or perhaps record it with incidental music or even a mini-sound track, and post it here or distribute it as a free podcast.  In any even, I don't see that I have a chance selling it to any sci-fi magazine, because of its length and not-quite-sci-fi subject matter, but I'm not disappointed with it as a first attempt.  (This is the Emperor Augustus In The 21st Century story I mentioned before.)  It's titled In the Shape of a Man.  Anyone who wants to read and critique it can get it in a pdf file by emailing me.  (Lynn?  Are you interested?)

I'm working now on my first "real" story, the test of whether I'm wasting my time by writing sci-fi.  It's an alien abduction story involving a kid named Israel... well, never mind for now what his last name is.  It's controversial.  The wifeösphere has ordered me to change it.  Negotiations are at a delicate stage at the moment.  I'll get back to you.

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Friday, August 03, 2007

Of Prison Guards and Apes Speaking French

I spent yesterday in the company of Lutheran choral directors, yet survived.  Brian Altevogt hosted a Sacred Choral Symposium at Concordia University here in Ann Arbor.  These events are enjoyable, not the least because of the vespers service we sang together at the end of the day, in the lush sonic environment of the Chapel of the Holy Trinity.  A choir of choral directors is the best kind of choir; I suppose you could say a choir director is the ideal chorister in the way a prison guard is the ideal death row inmate, although if you said it you would be insane.

As a bonus, I present the strange world of vintage pulp science fiction novels ... in French.  Here's a page devoted to author Vargo Statten, who has books translated into many languages, and was "notorious" for cranking out streams of action-packed, but otherwise brainless, prose. There's something endearing about novels with titles like La Flamme Cosmique and La Bombe 'G' and Le Martien Vengeur (and I dig the vivid artwork too).  As in the case of French jazz, one feels the urge to speak patronizingly of French science fiction.  Heck, they deserve pity points just for giving the world Planet of the Apes.

(You can read up on John Russell Fearn, who wrote under pseudonyms like Vargo Statten, Volstead Gridban, and even Vector Magroon, here.)

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Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Forbin, Pushkin

Don't miss Trailers From Hell, a link I got from 2Blowhards. It's old trailers from films good and so-bad-their-good. It's got the trailer for Colossus: The Forbin Project, a sci-fi movie I'm fond of because I stumbled across it by accident on TV one Sunday afternoon. I found the evil computer to be hilarious; my experience as a programmer told me no giant hardware/software development project done with minimal testing will ever, ever result in a system that has more capability than the designer intended. No, not more, and almost certainly much less. I'm more forgiving now of these sci-fi classics, being more aware of how bad the truly bad stuff is, so I'd like to see the movie again.

In other artsy-geeksy news, Alex Ross links to nerdcore artist Bad Spellah and his take on that classic of speculative fiction, Wagner's Ring.

I met yesterday with choral conductor Brian Altevogt of Concordia University here in Ann Arbor. He gave me a fresh round of suggestions for improving my latest opus, The Prophet, a setting of a poem by Pushkin (translated with verve and élan by Babette Deutsch). Brian's ideas were all good as usual, and it's a privilege to work with an interpreter so deeply engaged in the creative process from beginning to end. It's also nice to hear my music played with feeling, something I don't get from my midi keyboard. Thanks to Brian's play-throughs, I come away from these meetings with increased optimism. Brian's latest plan is to perform The Prophet with his choir on November 4, at the Chapel of the Holy Trinity on Concordia's campus. Mark your calendars.

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

The First Robotic Cow Tongue On Earth

It's art!  Do yourself a favor and do not watch the video of the robotic cow tongue.  Really.  Don't watch it.

We got the music angle, the sci-fi angle, and the local angle covered, right here:  Tom Smith is an Ann Arbor "filk" singer who performs at sci-fi conventions.  SciFi.com reviews his comic opera, The Last Hero On Earth.  It is, apparently, funny.  Smith has another project in the works:  Lovecraft:  The Musical Comedy.  Hoo-boy.

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Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Comics

It's a graphic novel about a space-dude held hostage on an alien ship.  The all-blue, all-female crew have big hair, foxy ears, and unusual mating habits.  Am I tempted to link to it?  Maaaaaybe.  The (very) bad news:  author Arioch (aka Jim Francis) has been writing/drawing/computer-graphing the book since 2001, and chapter one is still incomplete.  Target date of completion is as futuristic as the storyline.

When I was a kid, we had comics with Aquaman and Wonder Woman.  Today's kids have superheroes like Nikola Tesla and Guglielmo Marconi.  Postpone the apocalypse!

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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Fair Use

Fair's fair.  (Be sure to follow this link; it's brilliant.)

In other news, his name is Wen Suchen, he travels the world in a flying ship of his own design, he is invulnerable to the most advanced weapons of the day, and he nurses a serious attitude of misanthropic independence.  No, there are no moody pipe organ recitals, but otherwise, it's Captain Nemo Does China, it's an alternative history of Chinese Science Fiction, and yes, he had me going there for a few minutes.  China's answer to Burroughs, Lovecraft, and many others also get reviewed.  Nice spoof, Jess.  (Hat tip Gravity Lens.)

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Friday, May 18, 2007

Ideas

Story tellers search continually for fresh ideas for their stories.  Always looking for some new deposit to mine.  The creators of Bobobo-bo Bo-bobo found some gold, and started digging:
In the year "3001.5," the world is controlled by the "Chrome Dome Empire" under Csar Baldy Bald the 4th, who has launched the EMBB Edict: Everybody Must Be Bald. To that end, he's sent out his Hair Hunters, soldiers who reduce the populace to skinheads, regardless of gender or age. But when a young pink-haired girl named Beauty is threatened by the Hair Hunters, a tall, improbably muscled man with a humongous blond afro appears and rescues her.

Using his nose hair as a weapon. And harnessing his martial art "Snot For-You."
Another well-worn tool for breaking writer's block is the random word generator.  Here's a passage from Peter and the Wolf given the Crazy Lib treatment:
Early one fortnight, Lawrence opened the gate and went out to the big orange valley. On a branch of a big popsicle sat an unconventional cat, Lawrence's mother. "All is short, all is short!", chirped the cat roughly. Yes, all is short. Just then a squirrel came conceding round. She was glad Lawrence hadn't groped the turkey baster and decided to take a nice swim in the deep skerry in the valley.
Story tellers would do well to heed the submission guidelines for Escape Pod, a podcast of new sci-fi and fantasy stories:
EP is a genre ‘zine. We’re looking for science fiction and fantasy. Please don’t send us anything that doesn’t fit those descriptions. And by the way, we mean SF/F on a level that matters to the plot. Your story about a little boy receiving a balloon before his heart transplant may be touching literature, but it probably isn’t something we’re interested in, even if you edit it so that the balloon’s an alien and the heart came from Satan.
Reminds me of my idea for the theoretical ultimate in soft sci-fi:  if one of Jane Austen's novels contained a space alien as a minor character.

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Thursday, May 10, 2007

Let's Put On a Show

Very cool:  Terry Teachout is writing an opera.  (Aren't we all.)

I'm glad to say I've adopted Google Notebook as a tool for organizing projects, which mainly means a place to store bookmarks to poetry I'd like to set, snippets of lines I've written myself, and titles of works I'll probably never get around to writing (but who knows?).  I've needed a project organizer for a while, and especially lately, as I've become more serious (more is a relative term here, people) about writing science fiction.  Fans of this plot, rejoice:  I'm writing it.  I even have a audience of non-zero size already in place, ready to read it.  Teaser:  imagine Augustus Caesar sitting in Albert Einstein's lap.  (This Albert Einstein.)

Beyond that, I harbor special ambition to combine my two main interests into one project.  No, I don't mean anti-popes and synaesthesia, I mean composing and sci-fi.  I don't mind sharing with you my working title -- Space Opera -- since it has almost certainly been used already.  [Accessing ... accessing ... --yep!  Darn.]  I've got some plot ideas that I think are a teeny bit original, so I'll keep quiet about them.  Sadly, considering how long it will take me to write this thing, it's only chance of attracting interest will be as a piece of retro-futurism.

On a related note, yes Don, you're right:  this is the greatest shampoo commercial ever.

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Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Sad Day

Another collaborative filtering site, RatingZone, bites the dust.  Weep and wail -- although I must admit I disliked its results, which were too recent-blockbuster-centric for my taste.  Probably it never attracted enough users to unskew its database.  Still, a sad day.

Which sadness is only compounded greatly by James Lileks exasperating news.  Yes, we now learn his reassignment is in the context of a major layoff.  But still.

I other news, I found Michael Kaulkin's shameful confession exhilarating.  I, too, have found myself in rehearsal confronting a flow-interrupting question which I could not answer because I just didn't care about the music to that level of detail.  Kaulkin puts it nicely:
I’m R&D and the orchestra is Sales. Are they adequately selling the piece to the audience? That’s what really matters.
Finally, a teaser:  it looks like I may leave all you loser musicians without a backward glance and take up a new, much more lucrative, career.  As a sci-fi author.  Details to come.

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