28 April 2022

I don't want to know what they're saying about me

Thursday music corner: Ezra Furman is a 35-year-old Chicago-born singer-songwriter who has been releasing music since 2007, originally under the imprimatur of Ezra Furman and the Harpoons, and since 2012 in a solo capacity. Furman often appears on the BBC 6Music digital radio station as a host and DJ, filling in for evening DJ Marc Riley. As of 2021 Furman was also studying in Massachusetts to become a rabbi.

Trans Mantra features on the soundtrack to series 3 of the Gillian Anderson-starring British TV series Sex Education, and is one of the many Furman tracks that feature on the series' critically-acclaimed soundtracks

24 April 2022

Louise Henderson

Paris-born Dame Louise Henderson DBE (1902-94) was a distinguished New Zealand artist, and the only child of Daniel Sauze, secretary to famed French sculptor Auguste Rodin. She married New Zealander Hubert Henderson in 1923 and emigrated to New Zealand in 1925, earning a diploma from the Canterbury School of Art in 1931. After living in Wellington and then Auckland, Henderson was able to spend a year back in Paris in 1952 to work on her painting, and was welcomed back to New Zealand with an exhibition of her cubist works at the Auckland Art Gallery. With growing fame and recognition in the New Zealand art world, she continued working until near the end of her life. She is buried in Wellington's Karori Cemetery in the plot where her husband was buried upon his death in 1963.

Detail from Dame Louise Henderson's grave, Karori Cemetery

Henderson's grave
 
Louise Henderson, 'Arthur's Pass', c.1940



Louise Henderson, 'Wellington', c.1947

23 April 2022

Liaising with the Jugoslav partisans

Guy was never admitted to these conferences which were held in Serbo-Croat without an interpreter. Nor was he informed of the negotiations with Bari. De Souza had all signals brought to him in cipher. The later hours of his mornings in bed were spent reading them and himself enciphering the answers. To Guy were relegated the domestic duties of preparing for the coming visit. As de Souza had predicted he found the partisans unusually amenable. They revealed secret stores of loot taken from the houses of the fugitive bourgeoisie, furniture of monstrous modern German design but solid construction. Sturdy girls bore the loads. The rooms of the farmhouse were transformed in a way which brought deep depression to Guy but exultation to the widows who polished and dusted with the zeal of sacristans. The former Minister of the Interior had been made master of the revels. He proposed a Vin d'Honneur and concert.

'He want to know,' explained Bakic, 'English American anti-fascist songs. He want words and music so the girls can learn them'.

'I don't know any,' said Guy. 

'He want to know what songs you teach your soldiers?'

'We don't teach them any. Sometimes they sing about drink, "Roll out the barrel" and "Show me the way to go home"' 

'He says not those songs. We are having such songs also under the fascists. All stopped now. He says Commissar orders American songs to honour American general'.

'American songs are all about love.' 

'He says love is not anti-fascist.'

- Evelyn Waugh, Unconditional Surrender, London, 1961, p.268-9.

21 April 2022

And while we spoke of many things, fools and kings

Thursday music corner: Nathaniel Adams Coles, famously known as Nat 'King' Cole (1919-65), was a silky-voiced jazz and pop singer, pianist and actor with dozens of albums and single releases over his career. Hit singles he released include Straighten Up and Fly Right, Frosty the Snowman, Unforgettable (twice, solo in 1951 and posthumously with his daughter Natalie Cole in 1991) and this song, Nature Boy.

Recorded in 1947 and released in March 1948, Nature Boy was written by Eden Ahbez (1908-85), who later became a influential figure in the West Coast hippie movement. A devotee of alternative lifestyles, at the time Cole's version of Nature Boy topped the US Billboard charts Ahbez was reputedly living underneath the Los Angeles Hollywood sign on Mt Lee. 

Cole's version of Nature Boy was number one in America for eight weeks, his second pop chart-topper after 1946's (I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons. The song was also covered by Frank Sinatra and Sarah Vaughan.

14 April 2022

Dragonflies and daffodils

Thursday music corner: At her father's urging, and with the hope of revitalising her ailing pop career, in 1967 Nancy Sinatra (b. 1940) worked with writer-producer-arranger Lee Hazlewood (1929-2007). One of the stand-out results of that collaboration, and one of the strangest singles of the 1960s, was the lush, woozy dreamscape of Some Velvet Morning, with its mixed time-signatures (Lee sings faster than Nancy) and disorienting echoes of both the grand landscapes of spaghetti Western soundtracks and the bubblegum pop of Sonny & Cher. The song featured on both Nancy Sinatra's 1967 album Movin' with Nancy and the follow-up album, 1968's Nancy & Lee, the latter of which peaked at number 13 in the Billboard chart. There have been many cover versions, including Primal Scream's recording with Kate Moss in 2002. A 2013 film featuring Stanley Tucci shares the name but is unconnected. 

10 April 2022

New Zealand cricket's middling summer

It's been a middling, mixed-up New Zealand cricket summer, characterised by a return to relatively moderate form since injury and then the Indian Premier League robbed the national team of captain Kane Williamson and star batsman Devon Conway. It's also been an unusual season, if only because the three forms of the game were clearly delineated - there were 10 T20Is in the Gulf and India, followed by six tests - two in India and four in New Zealand - and wrapped up with that now obscure, little-known format, the one-day international - three home matches against the plucky associate nation of the Netherlands.

Performance-wise, New Zealand standards slipped over the summer. In the Gulf T20s New Zealand performed reasonably well, beating India, Scotland, Namibia, Afghanistan, and England, and only losing to Pakistan and Australia. Then on to India, where the home team thrashed New Zealand 3-0, with none of the matches close. The two tests in India that followed were a mixed bag, with one hard-fought draw in Kanpur and a drubbing by 372 runs in Wankhede.

The mixed form continued back at home for the four tests against Bangladesh and South Africa, two each. At Mt Maunganui Bangladesh enjoyed its first test victory over New Zealand, before the home side took revenge inside three days in the second and final test in Christchurch. Then against South Africa it was the reverse - New Zealand snaffled the first by an innings and was thumped in the second. Both 'series' only go to show that two-match test series are ridiculous contests; both Bangladesh and South Africa should've had a third test decider.

After a rained-off solo T20 against the Netherlands, an IPL-depleted New Zealand enjoyed three ODIs against the same team, which proved entertaining and at times more closely-fought than the home side might have expected.

T20 Internationals (won 5, lost 5)

In the T20s Martin Guptill and Daryl Mitchell excelled in the batting, scoring at a strike-rate of over 130. Trent Boult and Tim Southee performed admirably as the spearhead of the strike bowlers, while Ish Sodhi and Mitchell Santner supported with spin, with Sodhi proving rather more expensive. 

Start date

Format

Vs

Location

Result

26 Oct 21

T20

Pakistan

Sharjah

Lost 5 wickets

31 Oct 21

T20

India

Dubai

Won 8 wickets

3 Nov 21

T20

Scotland

Dubai

Won 16 runs

5 Nov 21

T20

Namibia

Sharjah

Won 52 runs

7 Nov 21

T20

Afghanistan

Abu Dhabi

Won 8 wickets

10 Nov 21

T20

England

Abu Dhabi

Won 5 wickets

14 Nov 21

T20

Australia

Dubai

Lost 8 wickets

17 Nov 21

T20

India

Jaipur

Lost 5 wickets

19 Nov 21

T20

India

Ranchi

Lost 7 wickets

21 Nov 21

T20

India

Kolkata

Lost 73 runs



T20 batting:
Martin Guptill 360 runs at s/r 136 incl three 50s (hs 93)
Daryl Mitchell 244 runs at s/r 133 incl one 50 (hs 72*)
Kane Williamson 216 runs at s/r 116 incl one 50 (hs 85)
Glenn Phillips 139 runs at s/r 114 (hs 39*)
Devon Conway 129 runs at s/r 108 (hs 46)

T20 bowling:
Trent Boult 16 wickets at econ 6.83 (best 17/3)
Tim Southee 12 wickets at econ 6.61 (best 16/3)
Ish Sodhi 10 wickets at econ 7.93 (best 17/2)
Mitchell Santner 6 wickets at econ 6.70 (best 27/3)
Adam Milne 4 wickets at econ 8.22 (best 17/1)

Test matches (won 2, lost 3, drew 1)

Devon Conway and Tom Latham racked up plenty of runs for the test side, but no other batsmen made a significant impact. The highlight was undoubtedly Latham's 252 in the second test against Bangladesh in Christchurch. In the bowling department all five front-line bowlers contributed admirably, with the luckless Ajaz Patel being the record-maker with his ten-for at Wankhede, only to be dropped on return to New Zealand thanks to the selectors' allergy to including spinners in the test squad at home.

25 Nov 21

Test

India

Kanpur

Draw

Southee 144/8, Latham 95 & 52, Young 89

3 Dec 21

Test

India

Wankhede

Lost 372 runs

Patel 225/14 incl 119/10, Mitchell 60

1 Jan 22

Test

Bangladesh

Mt Maunganui

Lost 8 wickets

Conway 122, Nicholls 75, Young 52 & 69

9 Jan 22

Test

Bangladesh

Christchurch

Won inns & 117 runs

Latham 252, Conway 109, Blundell 57*, Boult 43/5 (1st inns)

17 Feb 22

Test

S.Africa

Christchurch

Won inns & 276 runs

Henry 23/7 (1st inns) & 58*, Nicholls 105, Blundell 96, Southee 35/5 (2nd inns)

25 Feb 22

Test

S.Africa

Christchurch

Lost 198 runs

De Grandhomme 120*, Mitchell 60, Conway 92


Test batting:
Tom Latham 446 runs at 44.6 incl one century & two 50s (hs 252)
Devon Conway 388 runs at 64.7 incl two centuries & one 50 (hs 122)
Will Young 301 runs at 30.1 incl four 50s (hs 89)
Henry Nicholls 280 runs at 28.0 incl one century & one 50 (hs 105)
Tom Blundell 237 runs at 26.3 incl two 50s (hs 96)

Test bowling:
Tim Southee 24 wickets at 27.8 incl two 5/wkts (best 35/5)
Kyle Jamieson 20 wickets at 29.2 (best 82/4)
Ajaz Patel 17 wickets at 22.1 (best 119/10)
Neil Wagner 15 wickets at 27.9 (best 102/4)
Matt Henry 14 wickets at 16.1 incl one 5/wkts (best 23/7)

One-day internationals (won 3)

Marked by the final three innings for New Zealand by the stalwart Ross Taylor, the three late-season ODIs against the Dutch allowed Will Young to rack up two centuries and Tom Latham to knock a powerful 140 not out. With the next ODI World Cup only 18 months away, New Zealand will need to start scheduling one-day fare if the team is to put up any successful effort in India.

29 Mar 22

ODI

Netherlands

Mt Maunganui

Won 7 wickets

Tickner 50/4, Young 103*, Nicholls 57

2 Apr 22

ODI

Netherlands

Hamilton

Won 118 runs

Latham 140*

4 Apr 22

ODI

Netherlands

Hamilton

Won 115 runs

Young 120, Guptill 106, Henry 36/4



ODI batting:
Will Young 224 runs at 112.0 (s/r 97) incl two centuries (hs 120)
Tom Latham 171 runs at 171.0 (s/r 113) incl one century (hs 140*)
Martin Guptill 114 runs at 38.0 (s/r 81) incl one century (hs 106)

ODI bowling:
Kyle Jamieson 6 wickets at 18.3 (econ 4.85)
Michael Bracewell 5 wickets at 19.2 (econ 5.05)
Matt Henry 5 wickets at 13.4 (econ 4.32)
Blair Tickner 5 wickets at 17.6 (econ 5.86)

07 April 2022

Her prose is clean as sunlight

Thursday music corner: Formed in 2017, British garage rock band The Surfing Magazines have released two albums on the Moshi Moshi label - the first self-titled in 2017, and after a hiatus of several years, Badgers of Wymeswold in 2021. The band describe the single Ten Days of Shiver, somewhat mischievously, in this fashion: 'Here they channel 90s nostalgia into a Phillip K. Dick sci-fi murder mystery, involving darts, ghost pirates and Janis Joplin'.