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Kimberly Boyce



Last Updated: 11/22/2009

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Status: Single
City: Toronto
State: Ontario
Country: CA
Signup Date: 9/26/2006

Blog Archive
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Saturday, February 16, 2008 
I'd forgotten about Dan Hicks.  Lately I've been listening to his post 2000 cd, with guest appearances from Rickie Lee Jones, Tom Waits, Elvis Costello.  More fun music in the sort of jazz swing/country/blues style.  Featuring great violin and guitar solos.  Great musicians.  Fun, funny lyrics, like "Doin' It"  about a lady's man or "Hell, I'd Go" about taking a trip on a flying saucer.  I like "Driftin" with Rickie Lee, her casual, drifting in and out vocal accompaniment, and it's subject of just letting your thoughts drift.  
Saturday, February 16, 2008 

Category: Music
Lately my daughter bought a cd by Mika.  It is such a fun cd..feel good and over the top.  Mika lets himself go....his vocals climb far beyond where you'd expect them to stop, yet it feels right. Echoes of Queen and Freddy Mercury.  It's basically happy pop, with some ballads and other moods thrown in.... great driving music.  
Saturday, February 16, 2008 

Category: Art and Photography
February 15, 2008 - At Christmas my friend gave me Another Country by Mary Pipher.  Her main thesis in the book is that there needs to be more intergenerational connection, so that we can understand and reap the gifts that our elderly have to give us.  It's full of anecdotes and interviews with various elderly people.  I liked the tone of the book....sort of Bill Moyersish....serious, reverential almost, allusive, with references and quotes from writers from different disciplines...poems, etc.  Mary Pipher is a psychologist and has done her research, but the book is written in a style that is very readable, conversational and not academic.  It is a good book to read if your parents are getting older, whether your relationship with them was good or not.
Friday, October 19, 2007 

Category: Art and Photography
lucky. by anne sebold. she also wrote the lovely bones. lucky is an interesting memoir detailing her rape while at university, and the turmoil that followed. we see the emotional problems which she didn't really understand or confront until 10 or 15 years later. the impact on her family. the way it affected her relationships with men and women. the people who supported her. the unpleasantness of the "fame" on campus. the violence of the rape is captured in detail as are her feelings as she's experiencing it. the questionable or not ways she dealt with the situation. the trial. all of this is explored alongside her developing sense of herself as a writer...university courses, and activities afterward. she studied with some great writers, including tobias wolff, and in many ways this book is written in the style of this mentor, as she exposes herself and her memories in such raw detail.
Monday, September 03, 2007 

Category: Art and Photography
well, i'm including books under the art category.  i just finished "a round-heeled woman" by jane juska.  at a certain point, i became interested in books that talk about aging and loneliness and keeping on keeping on....i went through a major anita brookner phase.  her books were quiet, meditative, often sad in their triumph, all of that.  this book deals with similar topics, but the author (it is biographical) is an energetic 70 year old with a lot of joie de vivre.  she placed an ad in the new york times book review saying she'd like to have a lot of sex with a man she liked before she turned 67 (she was 66 at the time).  she mentioned the writer trollope as a possible conversation piece in her ad.  what followed were several mostly new york encounters with men who responded to her ad and interested her.  i liked her wisdom, her fearlessness when addressing often ignored topics, her insight, her emotion, her tough skin, her thin skin, her resilience, her chapters on teaching, her ability to capture conversation and seduction on paper, the whole adventure....i like that she set out on this journey, and followed it so enthusiastically.  her love affair with new york, with learning and with words are as much a part of this book as the encounters with the men who answer her ad.  
Monday, September 03, 2007 

Category: Music
so, i thought i'd try this out, jotting down who i'm currently listening to once in awhile.  this weekend it has been karen ann....i have to say when i first heard this cd, i didn't think it was that great...a little too slow, plodding, for my liking.  but then i had a long road trip, and decided to listen to the whole thing, and became very impressed.  there is a lot of interesting instrumentation on this cd, and the band works hard, and playfully, at creating spaces for karen's songs.  it is an original sound, but at the same time, reminiscent of old european style music....maybe edith piaff, jaques brels, etc, french music of the 20's?...for some reason it makes me think of that. lots of tinkling ivory, lovely little single line melodies on the piano, heavenly choir sounds, is that a musical saw?  i can see her throwing a feather boa over her shoulder on some tracks. as for karen's songs, the melodies are lovely, as is the singing. words that stand out...."you and i we're no different than the rest of the world - the morning wind"....OR  "send me ashore, it's a cold blooded war i can't win i give in i give in....you and i we both run with an unloaded gun....you can't change the world, no you can't change the world, it's been done by someone, long ago."  many more where that came from.  people who come to mind as i listen to her are leonard cohen, lhasa, jane siberry, natalie merchant.