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Song of the day: “Nothing to Prove” by The Who

This track appeared on music blog Said the Gramophone’s “Best of 2019” list, and I agree. Originally recorded by the band back in 1966, their then-manager and producer Kit Lambert rejected it at the time. Pete Townshend said that it may have had to do with the fact that back in ’66, well before a lot of their hits, they still had lots to prove:

“I have a feeling Kit may have felt the song sounded as though it was sung by an older and more self-satisfied man than I was in real life. That would have applied to Roger too, I suppose. Now it works. Back then, perhaps it didn’t.”

They took the original vocal tracks and replaced the instrument tracks with a 1960s soundtrack arrangement to, in Townshend’s own words, “make the song more interesting, but also to place it firmly in an Austin Powers fantasy.”

(This is odd praise, considering that ten years ago, he said that the Austin Powers character trivialized the London scene of the 1960s.)

That being said, the track is wonderfully shagedelic, and will be on high rotation on my sound system.

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Sign of the day, Canadian late-stage capitalism edition

If you’re passing through Tim Horton’s on one of these days, give them a tip.

In case you’re not familiar with the Tim Hortons chain, here’s a little context:

Thanks to Inhumans of Late Capitalism for the find!

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In the end, I went with an Instant Pot

Tap the tweet to see the original.

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Signs of the day

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From the camera roll: Morning view from our front lawn, December 16, 2019

Tap the photo to see it at full size.

It was a lovely 20°C (68° F) this morning in our neck of the woods, and the view was rather pretty.

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Same meme, new cat

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What have you bashi-bazouks done now?

Some context, for those of you who didn’t grow up reading Tintin: “Bashi-bazouk” was an insult that Captain Haddock often used…

The term bashi-bazouk is from Ottoman Turkish, and is generally used to mean “damaged head”. It’s a reference to the bashi-bazouks, who were irregulars in the Ottoman army, and who had a reputation for being out of control and robbing civilians.

Recommended reading

Thanks to Nic Pouliot for the find!