New here, looking for my home on the fediverse. Interests include traditional musics from around the world, opera, Asian drama series and growing my own veg. Decades of life with chronic illness. Brain often malfunctions. Whatever words I've gotten out have likely been a struggle. Please be kind.
Moonlight Chicken, Thai BL
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It is so good. Gentle, warm, visually beautiful, so much heart, and very real.
(Link to the playlist is via a privacy-orientated alternative front end to YT. Or you can just search for it on YT if you prefer.)
Lisa Hannigan, I Don't Know (Ireland)
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just sharing 4:46 minutes of joy :)
Community Promo
I made a post to promote the Kdrama community in [email protected]. I'm giving up on figuring out the best way to link to it directly. It shouldn't be hard to find in that community. Let me know if you'd like anything edited in or out.
I put that it's a new Malaysian instance in the title too, as a way of putting that in front of more eyes too.
Any fans of Queen In-Hyun's Man here?
Kim Boong Do is a scholar who had supported the reinstatement of Queen In Hyun when Jang Hee Bin's schemes resulted in her being deposed and replaced...
I really liked this one. Time travel combining historical and modern. Probably should re-watch it before talking too much about it. (That's 95% glitchy aging brain and 97% an excuse to re-watch it :D )
What are your favourite instruments to listen to?
Not sure if there are many people looking in, but maybe we can get some conversation going....
I'm partial to kamancheh (Persian spiked fiddle), spiked and regular fiddles in general, nyckelharpa, and kudyapi (Philippine boat lute played with a hella groove). I'll add links to examples if anyone is interested.
Dreamers' Circus, Kitchen Stories
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"A little tune about all the good parties that, for some reason, always ends up in the kitchen." If you ever get a chance to hear these lads live, grab it. They're brilliant.
Besh o droM, Mahala
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Lush Balkan Brass, one of my favourite albums. The whole disc is well worth close and repeated listening.
BULLA TIMPÁNICA Pontecaldelas
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Another happy one to start the day. From Galicia this time. Alfonso Franco & Alfonso Merion on fiddles, Josiño Liz on bouzouki
I get stuck because of physical health reasons. My three things I try to kickstart it again are:
- dark mode on my tablet, can make a huge difference for me
- reading free page turner crap I get from the online ebook store (in dark mode of course)
- reading novels I already know the general plot of
The built in reader on my tablet keeps track of time read. It's set at five minutes, so I try to at least get to that target with the free page turner crap.
Reading fluff for five minutes is easier than taking on something substantial. And if it doesn't happen on that day, that's ok, I can always try again later.
This is what works for me. There will be something which works for you, so try and keep trying until you find it. If something doesn't work for you, that's ok. You'll find one that does.
(Have you tried short stories? Easier to complete than a novel.)
I haven't read Stephen King in probably two decades so this might no longer apply. Family members are BIG fans and I started every one I read expecting to love them. But it turned out how much I liked them was inversely related to the death count. The higher the percentage of characters who died, the less I cared. There's a novella where they're trying to get to Hartford CT (I think it was Hartford, anywhere somewhere around there which is the last place you'd think of as being salvation), I liked that one.
Yes, I realise I am not the norm in this but you did say everyone ;)
Some thoughts: I find it works better for me to only follow bookwyrm accounts with my bookwyrm. I don't check it every day so it's easy to come back to record finishing a book and find my feed swamped by even a single user's microblogging activity. Book-related posts are just slower and fewer (at least amongst the other bookwyrmers I follow).
I follow my bookwyrm with my mastodon account so I can boost some reviews to mutuals with a shared niche interest. That works well enough. Aside from them being busy and not seeing my posts <lolshrug>
If I wanted to repost something on Lemmy (anyone interested in the original novels behind great operas? no? no? you philistines ;D ), I'd probably copy/paste what I wrote and link to the bookwyrm. Any discussion could happen on the Lemmy thread. If I wanted to save that discussion, I could add the link to my comments on the book.
That's somewhat more cumbersome than your suggestion but not much. My thought is that I'd rather have the bulk of a robust discussion on my microblogging or threadiverse account than my bookwrym because of that overwhelming my bookwyrm feed aspect. This would be especially true if my bookwyrm got spammed by a robust discussion by someone I follow about a book I haven't read. Easy to not read that thread on Lemmy.
As both platforms develop, it might be possible to create a good interface between them. I don't know enough to evaluate that. Just some thoughts from my experience using both mastodon and bookwyrm with each other.
Is there a tendency to regard books which make us feel bad as "better" than ones which don't?
I'm dragging myself through an "award-winning" "best-selling" "recommended" book I got from the library and wishing I hadn't. (Yes I know those phrases mean little and I can stop, though I'm nearing the end after hoping it would stop being so hopeless. Yes I can be naively optimistic ;) .) The characters and story are all stereotypes and clichés. It's not realistic or slice of life. The Korean drama I'm watching is top rated on MyDramaList and is well done but it also tells a sad story every episode. I'm halfway through and I don't think it's that much better than some lower rated ones with more moments of happiness. Anyway, this has me thinking about whether there's a general trend to regard books - stories of any kind really, including real life ones - as "better" if they upset us.
What's a tune that always brings a smile?
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Was able to hear these lads live many years back, when they did a small warm-up tour with a very informal "figuring this out" kind of vibe. It was brilliant and so much fun.
The Nightride Set from Kan: Aidan O'Rourke, Brian Finnegan, Ian Stephenson and Jim Goodwin (go baldies ;)
Pencil Full of Lead (folk version), Cameron Douglas and friends
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Can be played in a standard pub session setting on typical session instruments, just bring a kazoo. Check. Slice of life, common folk details in the lyrics. Check. Music derives from someone's tradition. Check. Imma calling Paolo Nutini's joyous Pencil Full of Lead as modern trad/folk, even in his original bluesy/jazzy instrumentation, and no one's going to convince me otherwise ;P
Happy to use this to kick off a discussion on what constitutes trad and folk but I'm not changing my mind regarding this gem :D :D :D
Any Asian drama fans here? Any communities?
New to this and definitely addicted :) Going to treat myself to a subscription or two to help fill the dark hours next winter but for now mostly Chinese dramas as there are so many free to view. Just finished Queen In Hyun’s Man (Korean) and really loved it. Goal is to get at least one from every country on the MyDramaList website.
After years of watching tight, compact UK and European series which tell their stories in a handful of episodes, I’m enjoying how much more time Asian dramas give to detail and emotion. Plus it’s a whole new set of conventions and cliches I haven’t gotten tired of :)
Would love to find more fans.
#CDrama #KDrama #JDrama #ThaiDrama #AsianDrama
Session A9
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Fit like fae the NE of Scotland
Cracking set from one of my very favourite bands, Session A9. https://piped.adminforge.de/watch?v=lHACsg91aWc
(Fit like is a local greeting, which means What like?/How's it going. Fae is from. NE dialect uses f's for some w's.)
Individual short stories can be added as if they were books but that does skew the books read tally, so I use my work around to get the mention in there.
Absolutely no way. I want as many firewalls as possible between me and the crap they pull so I'll move instances if any I'm on federate with a Meta platform.
Hello. I've been chronically ill for decades, with many symptoms going back to my earliest childhood memories. Dx are fibromyalgia, ME/CFS and FND (functional neurological disorder, which basically means something happens in the brain and then something weird happens in the body, and they're related, we don't know why and aren't much fussed to find out). I also had unDxed endometriosis, possibly for 20 years, as well. Because GPs have been so unhelpful, I've had to teach myself a lot. Nutritional approaches have helped me the most.
Bookmarked the page, thanks for sharing it
Started The Watchmaker's Daughter by Dianne Haley, about a young Swiss woman in the Resistance during WWII. She lives near the border with France and helps someone who's rescuing Jewish children and passes messages. Probably not the right time for a subject with that much weight for me though, plus my fiction brain is distracted by a 40 episode Chinese historical drama.
So glad I mentioned it then :) I couldn't leave Madame Butterfly (the short story) off my list there.
Just followed you with mine. Bookwyrm suits my needs at the moment, which are primarily as an adjunct to my aging memory. My main reading interest at the moment is the novels and short stories which inspired well known operas (many thanks to Project Gutenberg). Knowing the plot ahead of time is a useful accommodation for said dodgy memory. :)
One limit at Bookwyrm which I do find frustrating is that we can't make a post which isn't linked to a book. So for short stories and other things I follow my fedi account on another platform, write the post there and then boost it to get it into my Bookwyrm feed so I at least have a record of it.