The Washington State Democratic Caucus was on Fire!

I showed up to find record crowds. Last year there were only a third of the people compared to this year. That doesn’t include the people who gave up after a half hour of waiting in line after the caucus was to open. There weren’t enough chairs and there were not enough volunteers to handle the crowds. As I finished the paperwork and moved to where my caucus was supposed to be, there was no one there. After about twenty minutes people started showing up. I recognized the first trio who showed up as they were the neighbors with the cool dog Max. 17 people eventually showed up, five of which I recognized.

During the preliminary speeches I noticed this fellow recording the speeches. So after the event I asked him if he was going to post this to YouTube. He said he would as soon as he got home and told me what keywords we was going to use so that it would be easy for me to find the video. Here it is from a fellow who goes by RedBeardMathPirate.

The video demonstrates the average Joe and Josie participating. I was happy to meet new neighbors and be a part of the process. I did note that I was the only person who attended the last election caucuses. I also wondered about a caucus that could not be attended by anyone who worked on Saturday. There’s go to be a better way. Don’t forget to take a look at the other video that RedBeard posted which was taken at the Obama event Friday morning that filled the Sonic’s stadium.

Posted in Politics | 8 Comments

Benoît Sauvé does Blue Train a la Coltrane with a Recorder

Where to start. I’m simply flabbergasted; how does he do it. Here’s a transcription of John Coltrane’s chorus "Blue Train". It is transcribed and played by Benoît Sauvé with the Recorder (Flûte à bec/Flauta Doce/Blockflöte). If Benoît can do this on a recorder, imagine how easy it is for him on tenor sax.

I’ll never look at a recorder the same again.  ;o)

Posted in Jazz | 7 Comments

Men at Work

From my good friend Elaine, "These men are installing and setting solid steel pillars in concrete to stop vehicles from parking on the pavement outside a sports bar in downtown Norman, OK. They are cleaning up at the end of the day. Scroll down to under picture."

MenAtWork

"How long do you think it will be before they realize where their vehicle is parked?"

I’m currently listening to Coltrane and Mile’s ‘Straight, No Chaser’.

Posted in Humor | 8 Comments

Sharing Photos Made Easy

I’ve been meaning to start moving my best photos to the Internet so they are available as I travel to visit friends and family. Don’t get me wrong, I already have thousands online, but I want to figure out how to do one site for thousands of pictures. Part of my research took me to this very reasonable video by the http://www.commoncraft.com people.

Okay family and friends, you have no excuses not to move into the brave new world of online photo sharing.

Cheers and happy picture taking. :o)

Posted in Computers and Internet | 8 Comments

Strange Maps: America the Mall

I so luv this site called Strange Maps. A number of blogs that I read have been pointing to it so I added it to my RSS. So the map this week is this one:

america-the-mall

This cartoon, ‘America the Mall’, was sent in by Josh Bloom, who scanned it from the Boston Globe, in which it appeared in August of 2000 – still very much the heyday of the shopping mall.

And then there is this marvelous piece of American lore: "One unconfirmed piece of shopping mall trivia holds that the US has more malls than high schools. While these must include many tiny malls, there are also more than 1,100 ‘regional shopping malls‘, targeting potential customers as far away as 25 miles and often extending to a million square feet.

Can you tell what is important to Joe or Josie Average American out there? Oh-oh, I’m gonna hear from my daughter Josie now.  ;o)

Posted in Everyday Science | 7 Comments

Can you name this instrument?

Musikinstrumente

Posted in Music | 13 Comments

Microsoft Conference Call

Microsoft has a love affair with the corporate conference call. Part of that ubiquitous event involves listening to the hold music while we wait for the call to start. Here’s what can and does happen on occasion behind the closed doors.

 

 

Posted in Humor | 9 Comments

Two Bass Saxes – Performance by Uptown Lowdown Jazz Band

Paul Woltz, shown with the gold lacquer bass sax, was fixing my Buescher bass sax and told me of how the sax he is playing here was run
over by a car. He was so devistated that he couldn’t look at it for almost a year. It looks and sounds find now. :o)
 
Posted in Jazz | 3 Comments

For my blog posse: How to find Mr. Right

There are a number of friends out in the blogisphere who ‘might’ be looking for the proverbial Mr. Right. Life is such a dice roll, but with the hormone rush of youth in the past for many of these people, maybe a little science can help. This article caught my eye from Web MD.

white-knight

WebMD Commentary from "Psychology Today" Magazine

"Finding love is a little like finding the right pair of shoes. I don’t own stilettos only because I may break my neck, and I don’t bother with Doc Martens because I may break someone else’s neck. There are all kinds of shoes out there—the proper, the whimsical, and of course the loud. But for the longest time, I seemed to gravitate toward the wrong fit. To be honest, I don’t even know why some just rubbed me the wrong way. Indeed, it’s all a bit of a mystery.

I recently came across the book The Secret Psychology of How We Fall in Love. The title, though, was enough to give me indigestion. Still, I wanted to peruse it for the sake of curiosity. Author and psychiatrist Paul Dobransky, also known as Dr. Paul, separates people into four categories: Kings-Queens, Warriors, Magicians, and Lovers. I liked the sound of it—there’s a certain romantic ring here. But what’s the gist?

In effect: Seek your opposite."

Read more…

Of course there is no magic answer, I would be a fool to hope for that. And as most of you know, I was very lucky to find my soul mate in Suzy. But I offer this as just another viewpoint that might help those who are looking.

Posted in Too Spicy for some | 7 Comments

Gandalfe buys a Shakulute!

Yesterday after some research I purchased this recorder type mouthpiece for my Gemeinhardt flute. Here is the most stuff that I have seen about this instrument that is a bit a rarity:

The Shakulute! Bamboo Head Joint for Silver Concert Flute offered by Ancient Sounds Ethnic Instruments.

length

Amazing innovation by Monty H. Levenson of Tai Hei Shakuhachi.  Achieves many of the stunning tonal dynamics of a Shakuhachi and adds a new pallet of interesting tonal colors, for Standard Concert Silver Flutes.  Retains the flute fingerings you already know!   Plays in a vertical forward direction, easy on the back and neck.

Classic Japanese KINKO Style Mouthpiece, with Protective Rattan Bindings  Fits Both Std ‘C’- or ‘B’-Footed Flutes of Most Flute Brands.  It’s silver tenon is sized just under the size of most flute bodies (0.78” = 19.8 mm outer diameter) and thus it most typically only needs to be shimmed to block air leaks to mount.  Otherwise standard swedging methods can size the tenon for exact fit, whether the diameter needs expansion or reduction (see mounting description below), which is a standard service offered by many local band instrument repair shops.  The shakulute is then fined tuned by how much you slide in it’s tenon length.  

Hear Shakulute Excerpts as Played by Tanifuji Kozan from “Shakulute Live In Concert” CD * click links below

from “Pastoral”:  http://www.ancientsounds.org/ebaydocs/TanifujiPastoral.mp3

from “Wind Patterns on the Sand”:  http://www.ancientsounds.org/ebaydocs/TanifujiWindPatternsSand.mp3

from “The Bamboo and the Mulberry”:  http://www.ancientsounds.org/ebaydocs/TanifujiBambooMulberry.mp3

from “Taken with Dancing Snow”:  http://www.ancientsounds.org/ebaydocs/TanifujiDancingSnow.mp3

from “A Talk with a One-Legged Gateway”:  http://www.ancientsounds.org/ebaydocs/TanifujiTalkOneLeggedGateway.mp3

from “In the Space Between the Forest & the Lake”:  http://www.ancientsounds.org/ebaydocs/TanifujiSpaceBetweenForestLake.mp3

Finest grade shakuhachi bamboo (Golden Madaki) with beautiful classic natural color and finest recessed rattan bindings. The craftsmanship level is fantastic.  Monty Levenson is second to none in his level of attention to detail and design. Using Castbore Technology and Multiple Bindings at the Time of Production, Make it Possible to Produce a Very Stable Headjoint, with Little Chance of Cracking, and little likelihood of Falling Out of Service, if by Chance it Did!

  • Gorgeous Highest Grade Golden Madaki Bamboo
  • Classic Kinko Style Utaguchi Mouthpiece
  • Blowing Edge with Gold Metal Border
  • Gorgeous Highest Grade Golden Madaki Bamboo
  • Precision Tapered Bore, Black Resin Filled
  • Finest Quality Inlayed Rattan Protective Bindings
  • Professional Sterling Silver Head Joint Tenon**
  • Signature Stamp:  Tai Hei (Monty Levenson’s Oriental Symbol Stamp Imprint for ‘Tai Hei’ Shakuhachi)

** All headjoints are fabricated with professional seamless tenons made of solid sterling silver (as opposed to brass, copper or plated material).  This material is easily serviceable by most local instrument shops that repair band instruments or mount custom headjoints.

Shakuhachi are said by many to be able to create all the sounds of nature, wind, storms, animals and more.  Their roots hail from Zen Master Buddhist Monks in Japan, who perfected them from ancient designs originating in mainland China, and the Middle East before that.  Playing a shakuhachi is considered a form of meditation … literally blowing Zen

A significant portion of the tonal dynamics and multiple octaves possible from a shakuhachi is generated by the nature of the artful, deceptively simple-looking blowing edge.  Combined with a silver flute fingering mechanism … a Shakulute’s expressive ability is essentially limitless

We find the is not a ‘compromise’ concept in any sense.  The full dynamics and volume possible from your flute are delivered!  In many ways, we find a shakulute even a stronger, more impressive dynamic playing headjoint, than the standard transverse head, which comes with your flute!  The design is fully fine tunable (by sliding the joint distance into your flute), it only needs to be shimmed to fit your flute.

Installation:

The shakulute is easily mounted to any standard-sized Boehm design concert flute body socket, either locally so you don’t have to send your flute out.  Or send the flute to Monty Levensen and pay return shipping and he will mount your shakulute headjoint, at no additional cost.  The mounting method is as for other headjoints.  The tenon is sized to be slightly smaller than most flute bodies.  The joint is then mounted either by just using tape as shim, the silver tenon can be exactly sized by slightly expanding it’s diameter in a standard instrument shop.  If the tenon is larger than your flute body, a standard swedge vise is used to slightly compress the tenon’s diameter.  If you change flutes later, the headjoint can be resized again in the future.  Thus, tenon resizing is possible because the high grade of silver tenon has appropriately mallable silver.

Audition:  Our 100% 14-Day purchase price refund guarantee, serves as an audition, giving time to adequately test the instrument in your hands.  Please do not purchase this unless you are serious about obtaining a fine shakuhachi headjoint.

Since they first were created … musical instruments have been under continual design and developed over the centuries.  Museums could be filled by those that worked for awhile, but just didn’t make it.

We believe the Shakulute is a winner.  It offers the shakuhachi player another basic tool for more easily playing certain scales in other forms of music, for instance in Jazz and modern music.  And it offers the dedicated silver concert flute player astounding new playing dynamics using fingerings they already know … in a relaxed projected forward facing playing style, easy on the back!

We have formed a collaboration with Monty Levenson, where we commission and have Shakulute head joints built, then feature those exact pictured head joints, for our valued Customers.  The exact head joint you see featured here is the one you get.

 Monty’s Description: “This headjoint for the silver flute is a completely new concept in woodwinds developed by Tai Hei Shakuhachi.  It replaces the side-blown headjoint of the western transverse flute with that of an end-blown shakuhachi headjoint to create an innovative new sound and style of music.  This hybrid instrument allows the player to employ blowing styles and techniques distinctive to the traditional Japanese shakuhachi while using fingerings common to the western classical Boehm flute.  The resulting sound is a unique blend of East and West that can be achieved on no other instrument.  It is perfect for the western flautist interested in producing music with a Japanese touch as well as the traditional shakuhachi player who wants to experiment with western scales and intonation.”

Posted in Music, Oddities | 4 Comments