Archive for the ‘Lists’Category

It’s My Party, and I’ll List if I Want To

janebirkin1

Jane Birkin in all her bohemian glory

Note: I wrote half of this yesterday and the other half this morning after waking from a Bordelaise and butter coma. My actual birthday was the 9th, but posting today gave me the chance to include a couple things I wouldn’t have otherwise.

Today is my birthday, giving me permission to be unabashedly indulgent for one day, and one day only. Truth be told, I prefer that these 24-hours pass with little fanfare, which is why I’ve planned a quiet dinner with a few close girlfriends tonight.

Since I have a free pass to be self-serving, though, I’ll use it to share a few of my favorite things in—you guessed it—list form. There’s no binding thread among what follows, save for the fact that I’m really loving, wanting, listening, thinking about, and/or admiring them.

savagedetectives

1. The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño

I recently read a description of this novel, about a crew of “visceral realist” poets on a madcap quest for an elusive literary heroine, that pegged it as Y tu mamá también meets Gabriel García Márquez. That’s somewhat accurate and perhaps complimentary, but also reductive. Unwieldy as its character threads may be, Bolaño’s writing is controlled and lyrically singular. The last time I felt this way about an author was when I picked up Murakami’s The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, which I now consider sacrosanct text. Only 200 pages in, and I can’t wait for the next 400.

thexx

2. The xx, “Intro”

The xx was on many a critic’s Top [insert number] list of 2009’s Most Notable Releases. I wasn’t convinced the first time I listened to the album, but I’ve since come to like the group’s self-titled debut and love “Intro,” its succinct opening track. It’s become one of those songs I stop midway, then jump back to the beginning because I don’t want it to end. Hypnotic and moody, just like I like ‘em.

rickowensjacket

Photo credit: LuisaViaRoma

3. Rick Owens Padded Leather Jacket

If I could make sweet, sweet love to an item of clothing, this would be it. After trying it on earlier this winter, I can attest to the fact that it fits perfectly and feels like a sumptuous second skin. Now, who has an extra $1,500 they can spare (and that’s on sale)?

futureclassicscoll

Photo credit: Future Classics

4. Future Classics

When I first saw this draped dress in person, I believe my first words were, “this shit is ridiculous.” And it is—ridiculously beautiful, coupling femininity with layered and intricate figure-conscious cuts. I appreciate designer Julie Wilkins’ nod to vintage clothing and the deconstructive edge of each piece, especially. And who needs jeggings when you have sexy, buttoned, stirrup-like leggings like those above?

janebirkin2

5. Style a la Jane Birkin

When I get dressed, I’m usually channeling Jane Birkin to some degree, or doggedly attempting to. While I may not be able to pull off the signature bangs, the high-waist jeans, square mini-dresses, and slouchy boyish/feminine look I can do. Pout not included.

meandgarance

Garance, left, and me, right, trying to tame my Canon Rebel XT (ignore the disgusting stained mirror)

6. Garance Doré

Photographer, illustrator, partner of Scott Schuman (a.k.a., The Sartorialist), and the French woman I secretly wish I was. She’s a woman of impeccable style, with an effervescence that comes across in photos and her playful musings about fashion. Devoid of pretense, Doré’s blog offers a refreshing and simultaneously erudite take on what’s happening on and off the runway.

chloetom

Photo credit: Neiman Marcus

7. Chloé Eau de Parfum and Tom Ford Champaca Absolute

My grandmother on my mother’s side was a rigid disciplinarian who sold fish on the streets of Manila to provide for her family—far from being a fashion or beauty maven in the traditional sense. I only know her through stories my mother has told me, one of the more memorable anecdotes being that she was never without designer perfume. How the woman, who was partial to Nina Ricci and Chanel No. 5, managed to get her hands on high-end fragrances in the face of dire financial straits is equally confusing and impressive.

She passed her love of perfume down to my mom, who in turn cultivated the same appreciation in me. Growing up, I remember my mother smelling of Yves Saint Laurent’s Opium, Coco Chanel, and Jaipur, and my own taste tends toward forward florals and spicy aromas. At the moment, Chloé is getting the most play in my scent wardrobe (because I do indeed have a wardrobe, including Jo Malone’s Nectarine Blossom and Honey for bedtime), but Tom Ford’s Champaca Absolute is at the top of my wish list. Did I mention it’s my birthday today?

leiferali

Photo credit: Neil Leifer

8. The Annenberg Space for Photography

Located on the same hallowed grounds as the CAA fortress building in Century City, the Annenberg Space for Photography is one of my favorite places to spend an afternoon in Los Angeles. I typically like to come here alone (more meditative), and I’ve seen every exhibit since it first opened last year. My favorite of the three rotating collections was themed around L.A. photographers/photojournalism, the work of Julius Shulman and Carolyn Cole being standouts for me. Best of all, visiting Annenberg is free; you’ll only have to pay a meager $1 parking fee post-validation. I visited the space today to see the Ioose/Leifer exhibit and left with a newfound appreciation for sports photography.

larkcaramelcake

Mmm. Caramel icing.

9. Lark Cake Shop, Silverlake

As this is being written post-birthday celebration, I can include Lark on my list. My friend Frances, having heard me endlessly prattle on about wanting to sample the Caramel Cake from this adorable bake shop in Silverlake, surprised me by bringing it to dinner at Café Stella. It was as fantastic and moist as I imagined it, the sprinkle of Kosher salt in between layers of white cake and caramel icing subtly balancing out its sweetness.

louvrelists

Photo credit: The Louvre

10. Lists

My obsessive-compulsive love of organization was recently reinforced by a segment that aired on NPR. Famed Parisian museum the Louvre has unveiled an exhibit about “The Infinity of Lists,” curated in part by Italian writer Umberto Eco. Eco believes lists, even those as mundane as the phone book, can be “poetic” provided the correct intent is present. And that’s where this particular list ends.

Lisztomania, Part Deux

There Will Be Lists

There Will Be Lists

Lists! God, yes, I love them again. See what happens when you get a girl started? Oh, it’s all fun and games until I name The Pineapple Express one of the Best of the Decade. (I will not, though I loved it and am sure a cogent argument could be made in its favor.) Someone recently asked me, for pure shits and giggles, to fire off a list of the Top 25 Films of the last ten years. I could only come up with 20, and at least three of those I felt ambivalent about.

Also to be considered is the perilous line between “Best” and “Favorite.” Just because I adore a movie and can sit through multiple viewings—ahem, The Devil Wears Prada—does that make it worthy of a top spot? In this case, I will say “no,” because I’m judging films like a Michelin rater does a plate at Jean Georges. Well, okay, maybe I’m not that calculated about things, but I am naming movies I consider punch-you-in-the-stomach good—the ones I can’t shake for their beauty, charm, and/or overall execution.

To make things easier on myself, I’ve narrowed that original list of 20 down to 15. This is the nice thing about such a self-imposed assignment: I’m not beholden to anyone else’s standards, and can choose to include or exclude any information I please. Hell, this could be a list of three and it would be perfectly acceptable, albeit not that interesting. I would highly recommend any and all of these for rental. Once again, in no particular order, but this time sans explanations:

Top 15 Films of the Decade

1. Amores Perros
2. There Will Be Blood
3. Capturing the Friedmans
4. Talk to Her
5. Punch-Drunk Love
6. Before Sunset
7. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
8. Dogville
9. Dancer in the Dark
10. Lake of Fire
11. All About My Mother
12. The Royal Tenenbaums
13. City of God
14. Amélie
15. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

Paris is for (erstwhile) lovers.

Paris is for (erstwhile) lovers.


08

12 2009

Lisztomania

A memorable concert moment among headstones

A memorable concert moment among headstones

Now is a time for reflection, for looking back over the past year—oh, God, the past ten years—as the first decade of this millennium comes to a close.

It is a time for list-making.

I love lists. I hate lists. Making succinct, inevitably inadequate run-downs of my favorite something-or-others—films, designers, albums, ice cream flavors—is alternately fun and maddening. As soon as I think I’ve locked one down, I’m plagued with the guilt of having left off a borderline contender, or left wondering if I’ll look back on my Top [insert number here] with embarrassment or regret some time down the road. I now have mixed feelings about the Top 10 films I submitted to the San Francisco Bay Guardian for publication last year, for instance.

Yet like a smitten kitten I keep going back, because I love reviewing what’s been released, moments that have stuck with me, and searching the recesses of my culture snob soul to cobble together something that vaguely reflects my taste. So I suppose I’ll keep at it, though why anyone should care about what little ol’ me on my little ol’ blog has to say is not something I will dwell upon.

I may release these in a piecemeal fashion, or perhaps this is the only post I’ll dedicate to bulletpoint-ing…stuff. In any case, here is the first (last?) installment in Heidi’s End-of-Year reflections, in no particular order.

Top Five Live Shows of 2009

1. M83 with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, March 7
Highlights: The Phil’s rendition of Arvo Pärt’s “Fratres,” a soaring, orchestra and choir-backed take on “Lower Your Eyelids to Die With the Sun.”

2. Thom Yorke Secret Show at The Echoplex, October 2
Highlights: Crazy-ass, funk-a-licious “Harrowdown Hill” and “Paperbag Writer,” a song I never, ever thought I’d hear live—with Thom’s shirt unbuttoned the whole time, no less.

3. Bon Iver Sunrise Show at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, September 27
Highlights: Waking to a Buddhist blessing ceremony, the pure romance of “Flume,” a sing-a-long to “The Wolves (Act I and II)” followed by Justin Vernon’s cryptic farewell to the audience.

4. MSTRKRFT at Coachella, April 18
Highlights: As usual, the transition from Ugod’s “Ugodzilla” to “Easy Love,” which never ceases to inspire embarrassing, beat-bumping gyrations in me. That, along with John Legend’s surprise appearance for a finale of “Green Light”/”Heartbreaker” (whatever half-lip synching he was doing notwithstanding).
Lowlights: My friend almost passing out in the Sahara tent pre-show and getting drenched in the sweat of shirtless 21-year-old frat boys, but that goes with the territory.

5. Junior Boys at the El Rey, October 14
Highlights: “Parallel Lines,” the ever-so-sexy (and even moreso live) “Count Souvenirs”
Lowlights: A few technical problems and opener CircleSquare. Oh my suck.

Also, I need to stop using song titles as post titles so frequently.

*Edit: Sasha Frere-Jones is much better at this than I am.

06

12 2009