Thursday, December 27, 2007

I Monogram I

I'm a big fan of a certain sort of interwoven monogram, what I assume to be a late-19th century graphic fashion that crops up these days (in my world) most often in the logos of Brazilian soccer teams. Here's the crest of Internacional (aka Sport Club Internacional), from the southern metropolis of Porto Alegre:



And here's the shield of Fluminense (Futebol Club?), from Rio de Janeiro:


... and of their Rio rivals Flamengo (Clube de Regatas—they began as a rowing club!):


... and of the Vitória Futebol Club (which started out as a cricket club, though the second C didn't make the current monogram):


The Brazilians aren't the only ones with cool monograms, of course. My favorite Aussie Rules team (picked largely on uniform design—how un-Aussie-Rules is that?!) is the Carlton Football Club, from Melbourne (as are most of the clubs in the AFL). The current one's lost the laurels (perhaps due to a pretty dismal performance in the last couple of seasons I was able to watch from the USA):


... and finally (most famously) here's the badge of European soccer giants Inter Milan (F.C. Internazionale Milano):


But the real reason for all this is a lead-up to the following, an artwork I scanned from a very odd design book, The Art of Looking Sideways, by the late British designer Alan Fletcher. It's a monogram of every letter, A-Z. Making it the mongram that contains all monograms, perhaps. Definitely amazing, full of the antler-esque, victorian madness that can only be called, as the 17th century Dutch did, "pronk".


Thursday, December 20, 2007

Mumbai Manga

First, a history-vocab lesson, from the great old Hobson-Jobson: A Glossary of Colloquial Anglo-Indian Words and Phrases:

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And now a present usage, a truncated story from the oft-cited Mumbai daily DNA:

This brings up a long-standing question for me: how do you represent a generic, anonymous criminal without reorting to sketchy cliches about what a "representative" criminal looks like? The ingenious DNA answer: just use an anime-character silhouette!


(I couldn't find the exact stance, but here's, perhaps, our dacoit's tourist girlfriend, as seen on the animenano podcast)

Monday, December 17, 2007

Speaking in Tongues

From today's Folha de S. Paolo, a photo from this weekend's World Club Championship match: English shirt on a Brazilian footballer playing in Japan for an Italian team against Argentinean opposition.


Today, Kaká was named World Footballer of the Year. His acceptance speech, also in English:

Tonight is really special for me. When I was young, I dreamed of playing for Sao Paulo and playing just one game for the national team. That was it, but the Bible says God gives us more than we ask for and that is what has happened in my life.
For some reason I get a lot more excited (or is it I cringe less?) about players' for-the-camera professions of faith when they aren't American. Also, oddly, when you're wearing the on your shirt you by definition carry it close to you whether you win or lose — which is a pretty strong (if invisible) answer to the protest that, hey, wait a minute, Jesus isn't just (or even firstly) for Winners.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Have Yourself a Wimbo Zuri Christmas

A Christmas Mix* from my private label**. Sample/download here (iTunes).

1. The Gloucester Wassail Song / Waverly Consort 4:13
2. I Saw Three Ships / Sufjan Stevens 2:34
3. Beautiful Star of Bethlehem / Ralph Stanley & the Clinch Mountain Boys 3:52
4. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen / Jimmy Smith 4:19
5. Navidad / Gipsy Kings 3:25
6. Come Ye / Nina Simone 3:39
7. O Little Town of Bethlehem / Sister Rosetta Tharpe 2:26
8. The First Noel / Cyrus Chestnut 3:28
9. Jingle Bells / Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 2:57
10. Lo! How a Rose E’er Blooming / Sufjan Stevens 3:22
11. Il Est Né Le Divin Enfant / Trapp Family 1:18
12. Hoy Es Dia de Placer / San Antonio Vocal Arts Ensemble 2:02
13. Noite Feliz / Palavra Cantada 2:23
14. Sleigh Ride / Ella Fitzgerald 2:58
15. Come On Christmas, Christmas Come On / Ringo Starr 3:35
16. Jesus Ahatonnia (The Huron Carol) / Bruce Cockburn 6:31
17. Riu, Riu, Chiu / Benjamin Bayl & Choir Of King's College, Cambridge 2:09
18. That Was the Worst Christmas Ever! / Sufjan Stevens 3:18
19. Go Tell It On the Mountain / Smokey Robinsoinson & The Miracles 3:46
20. Weinachten Im Moomintal / Dakota Oak 4:05
21. Children Go Where I Send Thee / Joan Osborne 4:23
* Two-thirds of the inspiration for this list comes from KCRW's wonderful annual three-hour Christmas/Gospel Music extravaganza, Morning Becomes Glorious, deliciously DJ'd by Andrea Leonard (I listen to the streaming archives year-round here: 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003). Actually, MBG's playlists only maybe 20 percent holiday music; the rest is just good, very wide-ranging Gospel tunes — in fact, the Christmas songs are generally not the ones I love the most.

Thus, it felt sort of silly to be compiling a Christmas mix, till I realized that, hey wait, I do really love plenty of Christmas music. Really it's just a certain sort of sentimental, shopping-mall-type song that I don't care for (ah, but even exceptions there — Bing Crosbey's expertly-crooned "Silver Bells" nearly made the list). But most of the above is very traditional/choral (I sang the Gloucestershire Wassail with my high school choir at dozens of Christmas gigs), very Gospel, much more the Christmas Story than Christmas stories.

Of course, it wouldn't be a Wimbo Zuri mix without songs in lots of languages, from lots of eras. I think I've come out pretty well on that account.

** What's Wimbo Zuri, you ask? Well, aside from simply the name of my mix-cd-producing fake record label, it's not-quite-correct Swahili for "good song". And just fun to say.