Saturday, April 18, 2026

Saturday Sounds - Stan Rogers - Rebecca Cohn Halifax 1982 Concert

This week's musical treat features the great Canadian singer-songwriter, Stan Rogers, who tragically died in an Air Canada airplane fire in Cincinnati in 1983. The recording is of a famous concert at the Rebecca Cohn Auditorium in Halifax, NS in 1982 that was broadcast nationally on CBC radio. I remember listening to it when I was living in Alberta. 

I knew Stan from when I was living in Hamilton in the early 1970s and was lucky to see him perform many times as his career developed from performing in coffee houses to becoming a national folk music icon. Most of the concert was released after his death on the album, Home in Halifax though the version here has several songs not on the album. 

1:25 Witch of the Westmoreland
6:26 White Collar Holler
9:10-13:21 Field behind the Plow
16:41-19:45 Night Guard
22:59 - 25:40 The Idiot
26:24 - 32:00 Lies
32:52 - 36:19 Workin' Joe
39:25 - 42:47 The Giant
45:50 - 49:31 Dark Eyed Molly
49:43 - 55:10 Northwest Passage
57:25 - 1:02:04 The Last Watch
1:05:12 - 1:10:00 The Mary Ellen Carter
1:11:16 - 1:15:17 Barrett's Privateers
1:17:00 - 1:22:27 Sailor's Rest

If you don't know Stan's music, you're in for a treat. I particularly recommend "Lies", a song that still makes me weepy, and the anthemic "Northwest Passage". 


Friday, April 17, 2026

We're Toast 65

It's well past time for another one of these posts. 

This post is a collection of links that support my increasingly strong feeling that the human race (or at least our technological civilization) is doomed. 

a depiction of Planet Earth being toasted like a marshmelow over a campfire.
Our toasting Earth

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Featured Links - April 15, 2026

Things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.

Docks waiting for summer

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

2026 Locus Awards Top Ten Finalists

The top 10 finalists for the 2026 Locus Awards have been announced. The awards are voted on by subscribers to Locus Magazine and will be announced on May 30. 

These are the finalists for best science fiction novel.
  • The Folded Sky, Elizabeth Bear (Saga; Gollancz) 
  • Picks & Shovels, Cory Doctorow (Ad Astra; Tor) 
  • Notes from a Regicide, Isaac Fellman (Tor) 
  • When We Were Real, Daryl Gregory (Saga) 
  • All That We See or Seem, Ken Liu (Saga; Ad Astra) 
  • Where the Axe Is Buried, Ray Nayler (MCD; Weidenfel & Nicolson)
  • Slow Gods, Claire North (Orbit US; Orbit UK) 
  • Death of the Author, Nnedi Okorafor (Morrow; Gollancz) 
  • The Shattering Peace, John Scalzi (Tor; Tor UK) 
  • Shroud, Adrian Tchaikovsky (Tor UK; Orbit US) 
I've only read the Ray Nayler novel, though there are three or four on the list that I plan to read at some point.

You can read most of the short story and novelette finalists online with links provided in the article. 

Monday, April 13, 2026

2026 World Press Photo Contest Winners

The winners of the 2026 World Press Photo Contest have been announced. They present "outstanding work from photojournalists and documentary photographers worldwide, connecting global audiences to the most pressing stories of our time."

A pleading man stands in front of several burning high rise buildings in Hong Kong


I'll have to keep an eye out to see if they will be displayed in Toronto. I've seen a couple of the contest winners' exhibitions and it's definitely the best way to see them. 

Amateur Photographer has an article that displays some of the most striking photos in a larger format than the contest website. 





Sunday, April 12, 2026

Photo of the Week - April 12, 2026

This week's photo is of a wheelchair ramp on the Lake Ontario waterfront in Pickering. There is a raised walkway along the beach with ramps leading down to the sand and this ramp. 

Beachfront wheelchair ramp through the sand to the water
Beachfront wheelchair ramp


Saturday, April 11, 2026

Saturday Sounds - Bruce Hornsby - Indigo Park

I've been a fan of Bruce Hornsby since the late 1980s and have seen him perform a couple of times (once in 1992 with the Grateful Dead and in 1993  with his band). He's released consistently enjoyable music since then and his latest album, Indigo Park, is no exception. 

Relix published an in-depth profile of Hornsby and the album recently. 

As he is tracking the unexpected origins of “Indigo Park”—the title-track of the new, 10-song studio set he’s scheduled to release on April 3 via Zappo Productions/Thirty Tigers—Hornsby is sitting in a hotel room in Houston, before a solo set at The Heights Theater, and then he’s off to a college town about an hour away. The Virginia-based musician is quick to mention at the top of his Zoom interview that, despite over four decades on the road, he’s never played this particular venue before. And that desire to experience fresh musical situations has continued to guide the pianist through an unexpected latter-career renaissance that’s led to the release of four albums in five years—2019’s Absolute Zero, 2020’s Non-Secure Connection, 2022’s ’Flicted and 2024’s Deep Sea Vents—a prolific second act scoring films and his own version of a Never Ending Tour with his veteran band, the Noisemakers. In that time, he’s also naturally aged into a gracious elder stateman, collaborating with improv-forward favorites like Goose and Eggy on stage and working closely with a new generation of indie-rock icons in the studio.

There are two songs written with the Dead's late lyricist, Robert Hunter, and collaborations with several musicians, including Bonnie Raitt and the late Bob Weir. I've listened to the album a couple of times and like it a lot. If he was coming to Toronto on his current tour, I'd probably be going.