Friday 12 July 2019

"It's Easy To Be A Gentleman On A Full Stomach"

I've been on a bit of Giovanni Guareschi kick. 



I like his Don Camillo books. And I sure wish the BBC would release their early 80s TV adaptation - with the great Brian Blessed chewing the scenery as Communist mayor Peppone - on DVD. Maybe it's been lost forever?

Peter White's Blind Date With Don Camillo is a nice slice of radio and a good introduction to the man and his work.

On holiday I read his POW Secret Diary ("Diario Clandestino").
"Sitting on the edge of his upper-story bunk, with his head bumping against the ceiling, Arturo is playing his accordion. The bellows open like the pages of a book, and memories drop out of them like pressed flowers, suddenly made green by the music."
In the epilogue Guareschi returns to Germany 14 years later, son in tow, and ruminates on the ideal of a United Europe - resonant in these bonkers, backwards times. (#StopBrexit)

And now I am reading the gently wry "The House That Nino Built".



No one is going to mistake it for America Psycho* but, to paraphrase Barry Norman, I like it - so there.

I also liked:




And this was a 24 carat hoot:


I have been working on music for a couple of TV documentaries; a short film featuring Kate Dickie and Kevin Guthrie; and also a film about Van Gogh's time in London.

I updated my TV/film music showreel:



Teenage Fanclub play Glasgow, Edinburgh and The Belle & Sebastian Boaty Weekender soon. All dates here.

Just came across this - onstage with TFC in Oslo, I think.
Please, Father, that's all I can remember. And now I'll make a good act of contrition.

Tinkety Tonk.

*(I've never read American Psycho - and I have no plans to do so)

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