Roald Dahl

roald_dahl.jpgRecently, the topic of ‘Roald Dahl‘ came up in conversation in my house, in reference to a children’s book of his titled ‘The Twits’, with which I am unfamiliar. And that surprised me, because I considered myself a fan who grew up loving Dahl’s books; James and the Giant Peach, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and the epic sequel Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator. And a particular favorite, Danny the Champion of the World (published in 1975 when I was 10, I still have the copy I received for Christmas that year).

My daughter Colleen, also a huge Dahl fan, ran up to her room and returned with an armful of his books that I have never read including George’s Marvelous Medicine, The BFG, The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me, Matilda, and The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar.

I tweeted my surprise, and started reading. In the Wikipedia article on Roald Dahl, I found my explanation as to how I had missed these books. Each of them had been published after 1980, by which point I was in high school and I had seemingly turned to more age appropriate reading. Just once since then had I read a Dahl book, this one written for adults, My Uncle Oswald, a bawdy tale that predicts Viagara and sperm banks. It was a fun read, but I didn’t explore his adult books any further.

Yesterday I finished the third of these new (to me) books on the bus home, The BFG (which is of course short for Big Friendly Giant). And then in my evening web surfing I stumbled onto a coincidence, September 13th (Dahl’s Birthday) is recognized as Roald Dahl Day in the U.K. and around the World. And a day’s not really enough, so Dahl’s own web site claims September as Roald Dahl Month!

I’m happy for the fortuitous timing of my rediscovery, and a new pile of books of his I get to explore more than 35 years after my original introduction and enjoyment of his writing. Happy Roald Dahl Month to all!

Update – With a week left to go in Roahl Dahl month, today’s Washington Post reviewed a new biography about him. It looks like a great read.

‘Storyteller,’ Donald Sturrock’s authorized biography of Roald Dahl
The Washington Posts, 9/23/10

Two Suggested Features for iTunes

itunes.jpgDear Apple,

Thank you for iTunes and iPods. For several years now they have brought music back into my daily life, while running, commuting, shopping, driving and at dinner with my family (not really on the last two). Thank you also for the ‘shuffle’ feature. It turns my iPod into my own personal juke box loaded only with my songs. It’s great to explore and re-discover my own music library through the random play of ‘shuffle’.

But I have two ideas to share with you, that I think would be very well received; rock blocks and linked songs.

Often, hearing a song by an artist makes you crave a little more of the same. Radio stations figured that gimmick out long ago. Why not have an iTunes shuffle setting to allow users to play their own shuffled ‘rock blocks‘? The iPod settings would allow the user to specify how many songs by an artist should be played in a block, 2… 3…4… and voila! The same benefits of shuffle, but with the bonus of blocks.

The second idea struck me while listening to music on my bus ride home. The song I was enjoying was ‘The Crooked Beat‘ from the Album Sandinista! by The Clash. It’s a mellow song about going out to listen to music, rhythmic and sleepy, with some nice horns and trippy echos. And in the last 15 seconds of this 5:29 song, the echos come back strong and a guy shouts out what’s always sounded to me like ‘birddog’, and the pickup in speed leads immediately to the fast opening of ‘Somebody Got Murdered‘, among my many favorites from this album. Only in shuffle mode, it didn’t. My iPod didn’t know any better and randomly pulled something totally wrong for the next song. I wanted to cry. Were I able to do so, I would adjust the settings for ‘The Crooked Beat’ using linked songs to ALWAYS have it be followed by ‘Somebody Got Murdered’. And that is but one of thousands of other songs I would similarly link.

But Chris, you ask… if you’re so eager to hear rock blocks and songs played in their album order, why don’t you just listen to whole albums as you grew up doing? Well, from time to time I still do. I suspect it’s a shrinking audience among iTunes users who think of an ‘album’ as a collection of songs intended to be listened to in sequence. Years ago CD players introduced shuffling and multi-disk options that began the birth of the personal jukebox, and the demise of straight through album listening. But with these features, iTunes could give listeners a nice middle ground between shuffle and album play. I know I’d like them.

Sincerely,

Chris