Tag Archives: hoboken public library

Three of my favorite Bands to Hear Live (that Hoboken Library Card Holders can Listen to for Free on Freegal)

1 Jul

I love seeing live music, but life often gets in the way of going to as many shows as I would like.  But it only takes a few seconds to log on and download music from Freegal.  Freegal is a service available to Hoboken Public Library Resident Card Holders.  You can download up to three free songs per week.   The songs are permanently yours once you have downloaded them.   It is a great resource for finding songs from popular musicians such as Beyoncé and Adele, when there is a long waiting list for their CDs at the library.  I listen to a lot of Goth and Industrial music and some of it can be hard to find, but Freegal has a variety of artists available in even hard to find genres and international musicians.  So take a peek and download some music! https://hobokenlibrary.freegalmusic.com/users/sndlogin.

Cruxshadows

Cruxshadows

The Cruxshadows are a Goth band originally from Florida.  I have seen them numerous times live including at clubs in NY,  the Sci-Fi/Fantasy Convention DragonCon in Atlanta (which they perform at yearly), and even on the Gothic Cruise in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.  No matter what the venue they are at the Cruxshadows always put on amazing show.  Rogue, the lead singer, is energetic and will often wander through the audience.  At one performance, he hung off a balcony above the crowd.  He is also probably one of the nicest musicians you will ever meet and always makes time for his fans.  Their lyrics are thoughtful and often mix in mythological reference such as the Orpheus myth.  Their songs also have good beats for dancing and several of their singles have been number one on the Billboard U.S. Hot Dance Singles Sales Chart.   When I lived in Boston, Marilyn, My Bitterness was played constantly at ManRay, the local Cambridge Goth club.  Hoboken Public Library Card Holders can download it and other songs from their album Telemetry of a Fallen Angel (one of my favorites) on Freegal.

Rasputina

Rasputina
The Cello Rock Band Rasputina is my favorite live band.  Their lyrics are quirky and range from topics like the historic year without a winter, to mayflies, to ice hotels.  The habit of wearing Victorian Undergarments such as pantaloons and corsets onstage adds to their whimsy.  The main force behind Rasputina is cellist, Melora Creager, though I have also enjoyed solo cello performances by some of the musicians that have been part of the band through the year including Zoe Keating and Erica Mulkey (of Unwoman).  I have seen Rasputina over a half dozen times in a variety of venues, but my favorite shows will always be the ones at the sadly soon to be closed Maxwell’s here in Hoboken, where due to the short height of the stage and the necessarily seated position of musicians playing cellos the audience was always asked to sit on the floor, which gave the show an added surreal feel reminding me of elementary school assemblies in the gymnasium.  Since Creager lives in New York, the band plays frequently in this area.  But even if you don’t make it out to one of their shows, you can sample songs including my favorite, The New Zero, from three of Rasputina’s albums on Freegal including Thanks for the Ether, Transylvanian Regurgitations, and How We Quit the Forest.

VNV Nation

VNV Nation
VNV Nation is one of my husband’s favorite Industrial/EBM bands.  I saw them once opening up for Apoptygma Berzerk and then several years later headlining with And One opening for them.  The Irish/English Duo of Ronan Harris and Mark Jackson are now based in Germany, but they tour frequently so although they currently have no local dates scheduled, you may have the opportunity to see them in the future.  With meaningful lyrics, a great stage presence, and a sound that ranges from upbeat danceable tracks to ballads, they are definitely worth checking out.  Songs from Of Faith, Power And Glory (including my favorite song Tomorrow Never Comes) and Reformation 01 are available from Freegal.

– Aimee Harris, Reference Librarian

Number 42 for Kids

10 Apr

jackierobinson

This week, a new movie will hit the theaters highlighting the life and career of Jackie Robinson, number 42 on the Brooklyn Dodgers.  Robinson, the first African American to play major league baseball, played until 1957, but it is his very early years that are most noteworthy.  The story of Jackie Robinson is one of perseverance and bravery, but it is also the story of the men who enabled Robinson to become a pioneer in baseball.  Branch Rickey, the President of the Dodgers, could have picked the potentially more talented Josh Gibson or Satchell Paige to be the first Black player.  However, he counseled Robinson that he would need fortitude to ignore the taunts and abuse that he would undoubtedly receive from the stands.  Among Robinson’s supporters was Hank Greenberg, a Jewish player who understood the mistreatment Robinson would receive, and the Southern-born Pee Wee Reese, an unlikely booster, but a friend to Jackie for life.

There have been many children’s book written about Jackie Robinson and his career, but perhaps more importantly was the impact of the man on people that post-War America considered “outsiders.”  The following books are both biographical tributes to Number 42 and books that fictionalize how young people viewed this heroic man who earned his place in sports’ history by standing strong. To reserve a copy of any of these books, just click on the book title and you will be taken directly to the library’s catalog 🙂

In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson

In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson, by Bette Bao Lord is the story of a young Chinese girl who owes her Americanization both to baseball, her ability to play stickball (the street version of baseball, but you have to be from a particular kind of neighborhood to know the rules), and to her devotion to her hero, Jackie Robinson.

TestingTheIceCover

Testing the Ice, by Sharon Robinson and Kadir Nelson, is a personal story, told by Jackie Robinson’s daughter, about how her seemingly fearless father had one very real fear.  He was afraid of water, having never learned to spring.  On a winter’s day, he finally challenges his own apprehensions by walking to the center of a frozen pond illustrating for his daughter the courage that made the man.

DadJackieAndMe

Dad, Jackie and Me, by Myron Uhlberg and illustrated by Colin Bootman, shows how important Robinson’s success was to all outsiders.  In 1947, Uhlberg would go to Dodgers’ games with his hearing impaired father.  While his father did not understand the game, he clearly understood the hatred being aimed at Robinson when he went on the field.  It was Robinson who inspired Uhlberg’s father to learn about the national past time and also talks about little known “Dummy” Hoy, a hearing impaired player who played for fourteen years in the major leagues.

when-jackie-and-hank-met

When Jackie and Hank Met, by Cathy Goldberg Fishman with illustrations by Mark Elliot, is the fleshed out story of the brief collision on the field between Jewish player Hank Greenberg and Jackie Robinson, and how Greenberg’s encouraging words forged a lifelong friendship.

0316340944

Snow in August, by Pete Hamill, is one of my all-time favorite books.  It is for older readers and adults.  I would comfortable give it to a good reader of 12 years through adult.  It is a coming-of-age story in much the same way that A Tree Grows in Brooklyn is.  After World War II, Rabbi Hirsch, a concentration camp survivor, moves to Brooklyn and opens a small synagogue.  He turns to a young neighborhood boy, Michael Devlin, to do small chores for him that cannot be performed by a religious Jew on the Sabbath. As Michael and the Rabbi become friends, they bond over baseball and Jackie Robinson.  Both admire Robinson’s ability to stand up to bullies, much like the bullies who terrorize their Brooklyn neighborhood.  When the neighborhood toughs break into the synagogue looking for what they think is a treasure of Jewish gold, Michael digs into Jewish mythology and creates a golem, a giant creature charged with protecting Jews against anti-Semites. The post-war atmosphere and the need for a superhero to fight against discrimination plays in well to the story of Jackie Robinson, and will gently teach young readers how hatred festers when good men do nothing.  A truly memorable book.

With the baseball season now in full swing, these and other books about Robinson, the Negro Leagues, the All-American Girls Baseball League, among other heroes, will show young readers an entirely different side of a sport we consider uniquely American.

– Lois Rubin Gross, Senior Children’s Librarian