As seen from Federal Hill Park
Paste has a great interview with the Thermals, whose new album, Now We Can See, came out a couple weeks ago. I’d been meaning to write about it for a bit, mostly just to say how great it is. It not as immediately mind-blowing as The Blood, the Body, the Machine was, but I think it’s thematically/lyrically more interesting, being a death album rather than a religion/politics album. I’ve been listening to it pretty much every morning at the gym, and then again at some point during the day. So yeah, it’s good. The Thermals really have gotten to a point with me where I doubt they’ll ever disappoint.
The only thing I’ve been listening to more than Now We Can See is the Thermals’ cover of “The Ballad of Big Nothing”, an Elliott Smith cover from an ES-covers comp called To Elliott, From Portland. It’s on my Amazon Wishlist, which is now prominently displayed in my sidebar. I downloaded it from iTunes, though I realized today it was available for free on about a billion mp3 blogs. Oh well, I guess thats as good a song as any to make my.. um, sixth iTunes download. My seventh download* was also a Thermals song (yeah, I’ve been on a Thermals tear ever since their record came out)- another cover, this time Built to Spill’s “Big Dipper.” Also awesome, but I doubt you could make that song sound bad without the help of at least two members of Throttyl.
I first heard the Elliott Smith song via Pandora, which I’ve recently installed on my Blackberry, which I’ve recently decided was an awesome move. I spent all Saturday night listening to a George Jones station on Pandora that was fantastic for about 8 straight hours. Then my battery died.
Thermals are playing at the Bottom Lounge in a couple weeks- be there or be square.
I’m trying to get back in the habit.
Last week I read Adam’s Tongue, by Derek Bickerton. It’d been awhile since I read a language-related book, but Bickerton wrote a guest-post on Language Log that seemed interesting so I thought I’d check it out. (FTR, I don’t recommend doing a google image search for “Adam’s Tongue.” I should have figured that out before I tried it.)
Adam’s Tongue is Bickerton’s theory on how language developed- kind of a big question. Bickerton sets out a handful of factors that he believes must be considered to develop a theory on how language developed, analyzes them to see if they hold water, and then uses them as a guide for fleshing out what happened. These factors include utility (it must have actually been beneficial), uniqueness (specific to humans, since we’re the only ones who can talk), ecology (in accord with where we lived at the time, ie language couldn’t have developed from a need to avoid polar bears), credibility (people had to believe what you were saying), and selfishness (it must benefit both the speaker and the listener to have language). He spend a lot of time moving from each of these elements as the image of early language comes into focus. It was almost suspenseful, like reading a mystery novel. Details keep coming up, one by one, until you’ve solved the puzzle along with the author. So I liked it. I also liked that he makes some real claims- he doesn’t just set up the guidelines and cop out with “But who knows what happened because it was a long time ago.” I don’t want to ruin the ending, but it involves throwing rocks at lions and hacking up dead elephants. Pretty cool stuff.
The subtitle: “How Humans Made Language, How Language Made Humans” is an excellent subtitle, as Bickerton’s theory involves something niche construction theory, which essentially says that evolution/natural selection and the environment set up a positive feedback loop. This idea is crucial for taking language from “dead elephant that way” to “omg theres tots a d.e. outside. ttyl!” The book was great at pulling from all sorts of sources across many fields, though I prefer footnotes on every page, I think that probably turns off a lot of people. The end of the book was kinda funny, as, sort of out of nowhere, Bickerton dismally suggests humans are becoming more and more antlike and that its only a matter of time before we replicate their one queen/thousands of foot soldiers model. One can only hope.
So it’s a beautiful day today- sunny, cloudless, relatively warm. I’m working with Grant today, but he only needs my help taking stuff up and down the stairs. All our stuff is already up here on the roofdeck he’s power washing, so I’m just enjoying the day, the view, and the Reader crossword until it’s time for us to pack. Heck of a way to spend the first nice day we’ve seen in awhile.