Friday, June 29, 2007

What is wrong with Danny Boyd?

Danny Boyd is a smart guy. He's also a nice guy. Sit and talk with him. Hell, he's great company and a funny conversationalist.

But, I can't connect this rational, funny, artistic, thoughtful guy with his new hobby-goal-death wish: BULL RIDING.

Why doth the Professor want to ride the bull? Me not know.
But I aims to find out.
By the by, the score, according to DFZ, is BULLS 5, Prof 0.
Sheeee-ikes!

Per favore, nessun fotografie!


Sì, sono famoso per i miei film. Per favore, non prenda le immagini del mio cane.

Ero giusto verso l'esterno camminare il mio cane. Ci avete visto il blocco?
Per favore, nessun fotografie!

Thursday, June 28, 2007

rain finally

we have been doubting
if the drought
would ever out
and rain would reign



I wish i had had the camera as i passed thru downtown. A cloud lingered over Capitol Street like War of the Worlds. It was eerie.

Coming over the bridge, two bolts of lightening shot down to touch either side of a mountain. The two legs of the sky god. I immediately thought of the Ray Bradbury story, The Long Rain.



The rain did not run out
the drought
but every drop was drunk
by the thirsty earth

Sunday, June 24, 2007

The Dynamic Duo: Back in the Shadows Again

The summer lethargy had set in fully.

Weeks without practice shamefully had passed. A few feeble attempts at practice and even the task of changing strings was delayed until it could not be delayed further. Equipment was in disrepair. The beloved amp, an old solid-state bass Polytone, is having age issues. Most likely the transistors are going. All this didn't matter because the gig, a wedding, was on the books. The gig is set and it's no one's fault but your own if ye ain't ready. Besides, poor musicians don't cancel weddings because overall they are good paying gigs; probably the best.
Fingers need slow resuscitation, especially the ones of the left handed variety. It is a fool who doesn't follow this rule, as the discomfort of trying to warm them up too fast is long lasting and painful.
Time is a bastard and is not your friend. Underneath the watch, note the notes of the more complicated Ave Maria-ditched because there was no time, nor fingers, to work it up properly. Weddings are not concerts, but they do carry their own brand of pressure.
Small comforts of the necessities: the nail file, (Classical style players have to maintain nails and they must be shaped. Yes, it sounds gay and looks it, but that's the demands of the style. How I envy guitarists who do not have to endure this hassle.) the finishing paper (the gray thing under the file) and the Sabine tuner(a good unit but a little precious at times).
Sometimes, when it is quiet and I get to practice, I feel so content and grounded that gigs are just an intrusion into this private and happy world. Alas, no reverie lasts forever and so it is time to open the outer hatch and interface with the real world. So be it! Time to entertain the wealthy!
But the gig is not bad, so put on your monkey suit! Get thee to the country club, guitar boy. Dance! Dance! Dance!
Even if my bank account weren't laughable, I would not join this swanky Lawn O' the Green country club. First, they wouldn't let me in. Second, since I am more likely to become a serial killer than play golf, it would be foolish just to join to attend functions or swim in the pool. Understand this:
we are not part of this world. We are paid for our service. The lines are distinct. The Dynamic Duo only visits these sacred playgrounds of Charleston's "important" people. We are only interlopers, the hired help, the folks who merely see the the glittery side of the social life of the lawyer-doctor-executive-corporate-old/new money. We see them dressed to the nines (especially the women-the true outward expressions of social status)wandering about with placid expressions, chatting, hugging and drinking all manner of expensive wines and liquors. They are among their own. And while the snob vibe was quite low on this gig, the lines are never invisible to me. I just ignore them and do my job. (But I know my place.)

I want to state this emphatically: no Bridezilla here. These people were wonderful. Easy to work with and no hassle.
The wedding, as you can see, was outdoors. We were safely sheltered under the porch. (We have played gigs under a sun so sweltering, that my strings felt like rubber bands and the sweat was rolling into my eyes. I go into a fog/dream state in such heat. All music is merely functional and barely so. All the guests, of course, were under shelter or inside with air conditioning, but musicians, since we fail to qualify as "people," we had to continue to melt under the solar flare. We nearly froze to death at another gig under the same circumstances.) History almost repeated itself. We were scheduled to play 20 minutes of pre-wedding for guests, but all the guests were inside, near the bar, staying cool.
The super (a great guy and a pro) soundman told us that our sound was being pumped into that area. We didn't know and had been talking freely beforehand, not realizing that all of our conversation were now public service announcements.

"Then I hope they weren't listening to us."
"No. I have the sound down until you play."
What if we had been discussing something very private!? Holy wireless mic, Bat Man!
Our set was short and soon the guests were told to move outside as the ceremony was about to begin. Despite all the thorough equipment checks, something always goes wrong with electronics and so the soundman must run to fix it. The wireless mic for the minister went dead. If you know anything about shorts in wires, you'll know that you often have to twist them in odd ways to get to work. This evidently was the case because the soundman had to stand behind the minister for most of the service. He stood there for so long that the minister forgot he was there!

And so the gig turned out to be easy and so the Happy Gigsters are already paid and happy that all went well. Time to go home, return to the lethargic rhythm of the summer months and wait for the next gig.

Friday, June 22, 2007

To Define Sexy

from the film Venus:
Maurice: For most men, a woman's body is the most beautiful thing they will ever see.
An actual convo:
"That's sexy."
"What?"
"That's sexy."
"You call a computer sexy?"
"Yeah."
"Dude, there's something wrong with you."

As if the Eclectic Wife is telling me anything new. I think we need to redefine what sexy means. Sexy means more than a quality which makes you want to do the horizontal mambo. What passes for sexy (think Britney) in the media has become a model of raunchiness.

  • iPods are sexy. Anything that can store a million songs and movies is sexy. Besides, the design is so sleek, it's like the closest I'm ever going to get to, say, the sleekness of a foreign car. Or an Italian girl for that matter.
  • Guitars are sexy. Paul Richards is selling his guitar. Pictures of it are basically so attractive that anyone with an artistic eye can see that it's sexy.
  • Apple computers. We have a Dell and although it's really working well, it has no personality. It lacks grace.

  • Sushi. As I sink into old fartdom, I realize how I used to gobble my food like a starving dog; hardly pausing to taste it. Now, I pause to relish every bite. Sushi is sexy.

  • Rosemarie Dewitt. Come on, who am I trying to kid?? You can keep your trashy 'slebs. I'm waiting on her callback.

Monday, June 18, 2007

At the Eclectic household, we rent about anything. Sifting through the racks is a bit of a gamble, so we usually ask for the advice of the young folks who work at the local Blockbuster. Some Baby Boomers would cringe at this idea, being know-it-all-ers, but I like to find out what the staff likes. Rarely are we steered wrong in that regard.

When I want to rent something a little off kilter, the film becomes "mine" in the sense that if it's bad, I must take the blame for choosing it. I am drawn to the offbeat, the foreign and the weird without apology.

Venus is something that no less than two employees recommended and I was delighted with this film. It is not a cliche of the older man as saintly mentor to the young and attractive girl. Disney would have made that. This film steers in another direction.
O'Toole is simply a delight: funny, perverted, razor sharp wit and steals every scene he's in.
This is not for the kids and some adults may wince at some of the more, shall we say, vulgar elements of the story. The relationship between O'Toole (Maurice) and Leslie Philips (Ian) is tender and touching-a real statement on friendship and aging. At one point, Maurice is helping Ian up, but warns:
Maurice: No, you can't cling to me like this, Ian, we'll both go down.
Ian: Put me on my feet then, you silly old fool!
Maurice: You're on your feet.
Ian: Oh. Yeah. Well. Thank you.
Maurice: Not at all. [They begin dancing]
O'Toole's relationship with the niece who is sent to help Ian is altogether a different story. Though she is a foul-mouthed "provincial" brat, he becomes fascinated with her. Well...he wants her.
But the film is far more than a story of a dirty old man, it speaks volumes about many subjects. Just watch it.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

silly quiz, part 2


Mingle2 - Free Online Dating

images of summer

one of these days I'm going to get a fancy Nikon and capture what I really see. Don't think this one is very good, but you can see what I was going for.

The Tulip tree is coming back full force. It's just amazing to look back at those April shots where the limbs were so bare.


A knot in the ramp.

The trees in the back are not so glorious, but sometimes you just have to look up.

There is an old, ugly fence out back, but the shadows were interesting.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Rumors of the Truth



As far as the Mad King, there are STILL those who defend by denial this unsaintly man's actions citing his "retirement" for health reasons. I hate to sound bitter (I must be), but seriously, just because he's a pastor of the church, do you have to totally discount reality? Aren't the facts immutable? This is not about forgiveness or turning the other cheek, this is about facing what the man did and dealing with it from there. The man was hiding money-two accounts rumoring to total $80,000.

  • Remember, I was fired shortly after telling someone that I had received a paycheck with an out of town check. Coincidence? Methinks not.
  • My take: he was slowly taking money from different sources of the church and secretly transferring them to these two accounts.
  • He would then acrue as much as he could, slowly building the sum until retirement. Then, once he was clear, he could draw on those accounts.
  • When he finally had to confess to the accounts, he said he was "hiding the money from the school" in order to help the church. The school was being funded elsewhere and was separate from the church. He made those decisions. So, that reason doesn't hold water.

There are good priests and bad ones. We got a really awful one. Its all over, said and done, as he left even earlier than the two week announced "retirement." He didn't even have the honor to stay through the second weekend.

Recently, a choir member invited me back to help with the singing on Saturdays. No, thanks. Innocence lost, trust broken and very few supported me in my dismissal. Things are spoiled for me there. I can't go back. Sorry.

Whatever happens to the bumbling King, I don't wish him well.

But I do wish him on his way.

St. Jude in a Pyrex

I can not say why I have affection for these stupid pictures shot for the sole purpose of learning how to use the Super Macro setting. They make me smile.
Funny thing, this perception thing. Some angles he looks saintly and some he looks quite cross with the photographer.








King of the Castle