Sunday, December 31, 2006
These things I believe
(I believe in sharp cheddar, strong coffee and rare beef)
I believe that deep, raucous laughter - the kind that makes you snort - is good for your health.
I believe that married people should still make out.
I believe that there's intelligent life on other planets, and that they're ignoring us
I believe in the healing powers of chocolate
I believe women with curves and a bit of a wiggle are sexy
I believe in taking naps on the couch with the television on
I believe that "The Exorcist" is still the scariest movie ever
I believe fiercely in the statement "No Gods, No Masters"
I believe ketchup is underrated
I believe that everyone should know how to do something with their hands, to create something.
I believe that the crux of America's problem of racism is between Af Ams and white folks.
I believe in slow food.
I believe that bacon is worth the price of eternal damnation (can't claim this witticism as my own - I saw it on a t-shirt).
I believe that white folks come in many colors - pink, purple and grey, to name a few
I believe that athletic competition is a good thing, but unfortunately, fans are too 'fanny' and professional athletes take themselves way too seriously.
I believe in eye contact and polite greetings; in holding doors open for people; in talking about the weather in elevators with strangers; in being nice - and that 'nice' does not equal 'phony.'
I believe that Americans are way too obsessed with the lives of famous people
I believe that the smartest people are the ones who are not afraid to ask questions when they don't know the answer.
I believe in Marshall Amplification
I believe in gravy
I believe that people who don't like cats are worthy of suspicion
I believe Kevin Garnett is the best basketball player in the NBA
I believe the best buzz involves a few drinks, a little weed and the company of someone who makes you laugh
I believe that conversation is a lost art
I believe that germs are everywhere - so just deal with it
I believe that Angus Young is god
I believe in Apple computers
I believe that you let other people make you mad
I believe that hetero men should not be afraid of their own nipples
I believe in non-fiction
I believe in the blues scale
I believe in foreplay
I believe that Public Enemy's "Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos" is the greatest rap song ever
I believe that reason and logic are underrated and get a bad rap
I believe in 'both/and'
I believe that real men cry -- (and not just when their team loses)
I believe that my parents love me with all their hearts
I believe in sharp cheddar, strong coffee and rare beef
I believe that man created god in his own image - that's why there are gods to match nearly every culture on the planet.
I believe humans are BOTH good and evil
I believe people should not be afraid to question their own deeply held beliefs -- and mine
Saturday, December 30, 2006
Predictions for 2007
(oh fer cyute)
I'm going to rub the crystal ball for a second and take a stab at some prognostications for the big 07:
First a few easy ones
-some celebrities are going to get married and then divorced after a few months (paris hilton, the world is looking at you...)
-a bunch of people are going to die in Iraq
-Minnesota sports teams will fall below their potential and disappoint their fans.
-i'm going to turn 40 freakin' years old
A few more daring predictions:
-Rosie O'Donnell will get a bad case of ass cancer
-SNL's Rob Schneider makes a bigtime comeback by breaking into serious film by playing a gay jewish holocaust survivor.
-President Bush will get caught kicking his dog Barney on the White House lawn and the video footage will break hit-records on YouTube
-Jesus returns to earth and bitch-slaps Pat Robertson shouting, "you're fired, bee-yotch!" Then goes back to heaven but first tells everyone to carry-on as if he'd never been here.
-the U.S. Surgeon General will release a statement finally verifying what everybody really suspected all along, "Everything causes cancer. So eat whatever you want."
-The vatican will reveal that the anti-christ is walking the earth, and yes it is Anderson Cooper.
-A new serial killer will begin stalking, killing and eating celebrities. Nicole Ritchie and Lindsay Lohan will not be afraid. Not enough meat there, you know.
Friday, December 29, 2006
right now...
CNN is reporting that Saddam Hussein has been executed.
Right now, I'm having a beer with my feet up on the couch. Here's to you, you sick, tyrant beyotch...
U.S. troops are on alert for an uptick in violence as news of the dictators death spreads.
What? Like there's going to be MORE violence?
How could there be more?
CNN also reports that there was dancing around his body after he was hanged. And that the execution was filmed, so there's going to be video.
Right now, I'm having a beer with my feet up on the couch. Here's to you, you sick, tyrant beyotch...
U.S. troops are on alert for an uptick in violence as news of the dictators death spreads.
What? Like there's going to be MORE violence?
How could there be more?
CNN also reports that there was dancing around his body after he was hanged. And that the execution was filmed, so there's going to be video.
Saturday, December 23, 2006
Good lordy...
(the painting is Annunciation by El Greco - 1570-1575)
This is an excerpt from an AP story which ran in the Strib today, (12/23/06)
"An overwhelming majority, almost regardless of backgrounds and religious convictions, think angels are real, according to an AP-AOL News poll exploring attitudes about Santa Claus, angels and more.
"Belief in angels, however people define them, is highest — almost universal — among white evangelical Christians, 97 percent of whom trust in their existence, the poll indicates. But even among people with no religious affiliation, well more than half said angels are for real."
There's a quote that I love about democracy that goes something like this: "Democracy is the belief that the majority is smarter than just one person."
I think it accurately sums up why the folks who don't believe in fairy tales, Santa, the virgin birth, heaven and hell, the great father in the sky -- and those who believe that religious beliefs shouldn't restrict personal liberties (like marrying the consenting adult that you love) -- constantly get shouted down in the public marketplace of ideas.
I think the quote also highlights how intractable the problem is. There's an overwhelming sense of entitlement on the part of the majority who believes in angels, demons, gods, etc. that feels like the government is supposed to uphold their religious sensibilities and validate them by making laws that uphold those beliefs.
I don't care what you call it...
...I still dig this time of year.
I think there's plenty of evidence to show that humans (at least those of us above the equator) have always celebrated at this period on the calendar. Why not have a big festival that features lights and food and gifts around the solstice, the shortest 'day' of the year? And for that matter, why not have another big shindig in the springtime that highlights the joys of rebirth? Like with bunnies, and eggs and Jesuses rising from the dead?
I guess it's just as easy to believe that a bunny can carry around a basket of eggs and hide them from children...
Anywho, bring it all on. I like a party. Why quibble over where it originated?
And I'll say Merry Christmas to you or anyone. I don't care. And you shouldn't either. Not a xtian? No big deal. You can say happy hanukah to me and I won't care. Hell, say Happy Solstice and I'll return your salutation.
This time of year means different things to different people. To some it means the birth of Jebus. To others it's the story behind the oil and the lamps and the lighting of the candles.
Oy vey.
And to people like me, the season is about shiny objects, little gifty gifts, family gatherings with a lot of food and drink, snow, listening to Ella Fitzgerald, Elvis, Nat King Cole and Brenda Lee sing Xmas standards, watching the Grinch; and to me, the ultimate Xmas music, Vince Guaraldi's score for the Peanut's xmas show.
Oh yeah, and it's also cool to get three days off of work.
Sweet...
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Lazy Sunday...
cold chillin' on the couch with my bitch Beans.
feet up in socks, sweatpants and a t-shirt
won't get up until halftime of the second football game
i'm a better napper than rapper
but this is church for me son
i worship the gods of chillin'
or lords of laziness - i won't get off the couch
until i'm done.
word.
Friday, December 15, 2006
another reason why i love the internet
kewl movie
Starship Troopers
I got home last Saturday night late and turned on the TV and lo and behold one of the kewlest movies ever was on.
Here's what I love about it. Special effects are great. Especially in the scene in the picture above. The movie is a bit cheesy. Especially at the beginning. I won't try to explain the movie to anyone who hasn't seen it. But briefly: All these great looking people start out as gung ho young recruits in the military as the Earth as it battles against, well huge, wickedscary bugs who live on the planet Klendethu, or something.
The bugs send a big meteor to hit the earth and destroys Buenos Aires.
Of course, the humans are whipped into a fervor and they boast that their going to squash all them bugs. When they arrive on the planet they realize that they underestimated the bugs and they get their asses kicked. Then the movie gets real dark from there.
And I'm not the only one who loves this movie. Earlier this week, I was (long story short) sitting in a hallway at City Hall waiting for the council to finish up a meeting. Waiting with me are several news folks, including a cameraman from a local station who starts talking about Starship Troopers. He loved it for the same reasons I did.
small world huh?
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
...hard to carry on...
(grunting and gasping for breath)...feel like I'm walking through quicksand...(whew)195 lbs too much weight on my frame...too much damn food...not enough excercise...why does pork taste so freakin' good?
(guk-whoo!) ... don't even want to know what cholesterol number is...or blood pressure...
damn dreadlocks weighing me down...must cut hair...must drop 20 lbs...(wheezing)...while i'm at it...need to get rid of stuff i don't need...way too many t-shirts and coats...old sweaters from the 80s...
(skronk!) ...knees beginning to buckle under weight of holiday stuff...haven't bought any gifts...fear of disappointing loved ones pushing down on shoulders...
(argh-kak!)
...will try to muster energy to make to do list...but can't find pencil...@#$#!
(guk-whoo!) ... don't even want to know what cholesterol number is...or blood pressure...
damn dreadlocks weighing me down...must cut hair...must drop 20 lbs...(wheezing)...while i'm at it...need to get rid of stuff i don't need...way too many t-shirts and coats...old sweaters from the 80s...
(skronk!) ...knees beginning to buckle under weight of holiday stuff...haven't bought any gifts...fear of disappointing loved ones pushing down on shoulders...
(argh-kak!)
...will try to muster energy to make to do list...but can't find pencil...@#$#!
Friday, December 08, 2006
Some observations...
First, Beans is the cutest dog ever.
The women who work at that liquor store on Lake street near the Arbys always look bored and never look you in the eye.
The dudes who work at Hums smell like B.O.
There's nothing convenient about the S.A. on Lake street and Aldrich. Everytime I go in there to buy just one thing and there's someone in line in front of me buying a bunch of lottery tickets.
There's no need for live music in the lounge at 5. It's just too dang loud.
30 degrees actually feels warm.
Car repairs rarely cost under $100. And on the rare occasion that one does, celebrate it.
Saturday, December 02, 2006
My highlights and notable events of 2006:
(Dude, I got a Marshall stack this year! -- photo courtesy of Collin Lyle)
(In no particular chronological order or rank of importance)
Sold the house in North Minneapolis and moved to Lyn Lake area.
Thanks to the move, instead of more 911 calls about drug dealers and large groups of teenagers fighting in the street, this summer was full of bike rides, walking to nearby bars and restaurants. A nice change of pace.
Saw my folks
I flew out to Denver to see my folks and celebrate my mom's 63rd birthday with them. What else can I say? A guy always misses his mom. And it was great getting the chance to hang out with the old man, too.
Venus
Full Stack recorded our first full-length CD, 'Venus'. We spent a lot of long days in the studio. And it paid off. I know I'm biased but the disc sounds f-ing brilliant.
New Orleans vacation
Mecca and I spent five lovely days eating, drinking and taking in some great live music in the Big Easy. We also met some very proud people who wore their love of their great city on their sleeves. They were glad to see visitors and we were glad to be there.
Lowlights
Beans the wonder dog got diagnosed with diabetes and went blind this year. A definite low light. However, this amazing animal is such a trooper. She gets around just fine - of course she bumps into things from time to time -- and she does the things she likes to do, bark, eat, bark, sleep, bark, go for walks and bark some more.
Sunday, November 26, 2006
Un-glam rock
It's the morning after our big CD release party at Station 4. I have a hangover that is probably less from the whiskey and beers I consumed on stage, and more about all the head-banging I do while I play.
I got home last night around 2:30 a.m. with most of my gear in the back of the Focus. I'll take it back to the rehearsal space when I'm good and ready.
I ran into more technical difficulties last night at the show. I started hearing a loud buzzing sound coming from my rig and then for some reason my sound cut out during the next to last song.
eh - it could have been worse.
We started our set late so we cut a song out. I think we played well for the most part, although I couldn't help notice people start to trickle out of the bar during the set. Maybe we were just too loud - or maybe they didn't dig the music.
I'd like to thank everyone who stuck around to see us, in fact I can probably name each of them: Eric and Kim, Collin and Katie, Mecca, Jeff, Frank and Tim from ET, Liz and Kathy, and Leah. There are probably a few more that I didn't mention because I didn't meet them. but there you have it - about a dozen folks.
Did I mention we made $90?
I ain't complaining. There are so many people who would gladly change places with me -- frustrated guitar players and band-fans who just never took the time to learn how to play and organize a band. And some bands don't even get a chance to play gigs at all.
I'll end it there. I could go on, but I've got to try and nurse this hangover by watching the Vikings play some lackluster football against the Cardinals in about a half an hour.
Saturday, November 25, 2006
14 hours to show time...
Later on this evening the band will be on stage at Station 4 in downtown St. Paul officially launching our new CD Venus. If all goes according to plan, we'll play for 30 or 40 people, sell maybe 10 CDs and put on the best show we can. Then at the end of the night, I'll be buzzed, sweaty and exhausted and will have to load my gear back in the car and head home.
"riding down the highway/going to a show..."
These are lyrics that have been burned into my head ever since I was 12 and picked up a guitar for the first time.
"stopping on the byways/playing rock and roll..."
Yes, Bon, it is a long way to the top if you want to rock and roll. And i guess, like every kid who started trying to master "Smoke on the Water," "Stairway to Heaven" and "Eruption," on the gee-tar, I really wanted to be a rock star.
But not so much for the reasons that I think a lot of young folks today want to be stars. I cringe every time I watch "Cribs" and see these wealthy young punks flaunting a garage full of expensive cars that they don't really drive and show off professionally decorated rooms in their McMansions that they never spend time in.
I've always just wanted to be a really good guitar player and make a living at it.
And it also wouldn't be a bad thing to get a little famous along the way. But not stopping-me-in-a-public-bathroom-for-an-autograph-famous.
Who knows? Maybe someone with some real connections will hear Venus and fall in love with it and hook us up. And by hooked up I mean someone who can help finance a small tour, pay for another CD and get us in front of large groups of people.
My dad always told me, that if you do what you love, the money will follow.
OK $$$, I'm waiting....
Friday, November 24, 2006
Thankful for the day after Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving is one of my favorite holidays. I love the fact that its sole purpose is to give people the excuse to gather with friends and family and consume large amounts of food and drink. I also love that the emphasis is placed on slow food - meals that take several hours to prepare and often require the participation of guests.
But perhaps what I love most about Thanksgiving is the day after. I don't have to work. I have plenty of food leftover from last night (we had a brilliant shindig with a small group of good friends and family), and aside from a sinkful of dirty dishes, there's nothing that I absolutely have to do. Although I will have to go to liquor store - we had seven or eight full bottles of wine last night, along with an 18 pack of beer + some home brew brought by my buddy Eric -- this morning the death toll stands at seven or eight empty bottles of wine and an empty growler of home brew. There are maybe two cans of beer left in the fridge.
I plan on lounging, lounging, lounging and then I'll take a nap. There's plenty of "Austin Powers" movies on TBS and I'm a happy camper.
Monday, November 13, 2006
N.O. Day Five: Missing New Orleans already
(Mecca, looking forlorn on the steps of the St Charles Guesthouse while waiting for the airport shuttle)
It's really hard to enjoy yourself on the last day of travelling. Although I like being home, I often find myself pretty down when it's time to leave. We had several hours to hang out before we had to catch the shuttle to the airport and so we had one last trip to the Quarter for food. We stopped at Napoleon House for one last taste of the city. I had a bowl of seafood gumbo and Mecca had jambalaya. Both were spectacular, but not a cure for the last-day-in-New-Orleans-blues.
The whole time Mecca and I said very few words to each other. She may have just been tired of hanging around me for the last several days. But I suspect she was just feeling the same melancholy I was.
I will miss the food, the music, the nightlife and all that. But I really miss how each day and night offered opportunities for all new adventures.
New Orleans is still obviously on the mend. And so many of the residents we talked to thanked us for coming. How many times do you hear that when you travel? It almost brought tears to our eyes. The folks at the Guesthouse told us they are already getting close to all booked up for New Years Eve and Mardi Gras. So make your reservations now.
N.O. Day Four: Cold and Hot times
(picture of Bonerama)
Saturday brings a chill and neither of us are prepared for it. After experiencing 80 degree + weather on Friday, we awaken to temps in the mid 50s. The sky is gray and there's a wind that bitch slaps your exposed skin - as if to scold you for not bringing a sweater.
However, it's a perfect day to walk through the first cemetary built in New Orleans. As we huddle and shudder against the chill, the tour guide points some noteworthy tombs, the Clairbornes, Morials, etc. including the family tomb of Homer Plessy. We also were introduced to the tomb of voodoo priestess, Marie LeVeau, which was marked with dozens of Xs.
After the tour we escaped for a very tasty lunch - we split a muffeleta and order of jambalaya at Masperos.
The sandwich was spectacular.
That night we headed out to the Maple Leaf Bar - a legendary music venue - to see Bonerama. They tore down the place. With four and five trombones up front - one guy playing his 'bone through a wah-wah pedal -- keys, drums and guitar, they had such a big sound it threatened to loosen the joists in that old building.
They play originals and a couple of very well-arranged cover songs, like the Allman Bros, "Whipping Post," and Hendrix's "Crosstown Traffic." I heard that they will be a house band for the Comic Relief benefit for New Orleans, next saturday night 11/18 on HBO. check it out.
The band rocked until 2:30 or so and we wound up returning -- again -- to the guesthouse in the very wee hours of the morning.
Saturday, November 11, 2006
N.O. Day 3: Isn't that John Goodman?
(here's just one of the jaw-droppingly beautiful homes in the Garden District. It's not John Goodman's house, though).
Speaking from experience, let me tell you a walking tour is the best way to get to know a town. We've taken them in Berlin and London and they were excellent.
I'll be brief today because we're trying to take another one here that starts in about an hour and a half. We walked through the Garden DIstrict, just me and Mec and our guide, a man named Roberts. The man had so much info in his head about the homes, the foilage and the people who live in the homes -- we were both extremely impressed.
During the tour Roberts is telling us how Ann Rice has had such an impact on the area; how she's bought and sold several houses there and the fact that actor Nicolas Cage now owns one of her homes. He told us that on a past tour, no sooner did he point out this fact, than the famous actor himself walks out of the house. His tour-ees were very impressed.
So during our tour, we're standing in front of a gorgeous mansion that used to belong to Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails. Roberts is telling us that Reznor sold the house a little while ago and sold it to actor John Goodman. No sooner does he tell us this - guess who should walk out to the porch smoking a big old stogie?
Roberts has a gift y'all.
more later.
Friday, November 10, 2006
N.O. day 2: Mec falls for Bob the drooling cat
Day two in N.O. -- we strolled around French Quarter for the first time by light of day. And it is extremely gorgeous. The temperature was in the upper 70s to low 80s, without a cloud in sky - so the deep blue sky made for a wonderful backdrop. Crusty buildings adorned with wrought-iron gates, peeling paint and balconies often stuffed with large hanging plants - it was all what you'd expect to see in an old, old town.
Of all the attractions we experienced like Cafe Du Monde -- which was fabulous -- I can safely say the things we'll remember most are some of the city's colorful citizens. Like the big dude in Jackson Squaure, squatting on a bench belting out Foreigner songs, accompanied by the bands music blaring through a small boom box next to him. And he had a GREAT voice. Remember the Ripper Jones story? The kid who sang like Rob Halford from Judas Priest and then replaced him in the band? Well, if Lou Gramm ever wants to retire singing his old band's songs -- the big fat guy from Jackson Sq. could be the new 'Ripper.'
Bet.
OK, so more characters. We stopped by a little cookbook store called Kitchen Witch. The proprietor was a bubbly southern woman, with a store full of cookbooks, vinyl records and animals -- including Bob the drooling cat.
The woman says Bob reminds her of a toothless, homeless guy that roams the quarter. And that's probably the best way to describe this cat. He's got one tooth that juts from his lower jaw, out of his mouth. At times his tongue hangs out and a constant, thin line of drool drips down his little chin.
Black with a little white spot on his chest, Bob also has no tail -- a manx -- thus the name Bob.
more later...
Thursday, November 09, 2006
New Orleans day one: Uncle Lionel makes a cameo
We got into New Orleans with out much trouble at all -- the airlines didn't lose our luggage and didn't have problem getting to the hotel. The St. Charles Guesthouse is absolutely charming. And by charming I mean it's falling apart.
After a nap and some freshening up, we hit the French Quarter for some eats, drinks and sounds. Mission accomplished. My wife the food writer and cook has us on a schedule of places to go, so I just eat where she tells me to. I can do that. I dined on crawfish etouffe, gumbo and crawfish cakes.
Drinks are portable, which makes drinking very convenient.
We saw some great little jazz and blues combos. I can't remember the names of the bands or the clubs they played in, but they were all freakin' brilliant. My favorite was a little band at the Spotted Cat (remembered that one). They were a group of young white hipsters playing gypsy jazz a la Django Reinhardt.
But perhaps the highlight of the evening was Uncle Lionel. He showed up to sing a tune with a little blues band down the street from the Cat. Uncle L looked he was in his 80s at least and dressed like a pimp on his way to church. It looked like he was less interested in singing than he was flirting with the ladies.
I want to be like Uncle L. if I make it to 80 something...
Monday, November 06, 2006
mon. 11.6. I shouldn't have weighed myself...
Here's what you don't want to see two days before you go on an eating tour of New Orleans:
195
Yeek -- that's the most I've ever weighed in my life. My doctor says I should be at 175-177 lbs. Now I know why my lower back starts to ache after standing for more than 10 minutes...
How's a guy supposed to gorge himself on sea critters and sausage for four days w/o thinking about that?
dude...
195
Yeek -- that's the most I've ever weighed in my life. My doctor says I should be at 175-177 lbs. Now I know why my lower back starts to ache after standing for more than 10 minutes...
How's a guy supposed to gorge himself on sea critters and sausage for four days w/o thinking about that?
dude...
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Full Stack at the Rock 11-01-06
Here's a pic from the show. Billy's the one with the bald head and tats.
The band played it's first gig since finishing the new disc, Venus. More details on the band's webpage.
www.fullstackrock.com
Here's a pic from the show. I'm actually just testing the link between the blog and my Flickr acct. It sounds like a cool idea, but we'll see. If you click on the photo you'll go directly to my Flickr page - which has a few more band pics - including some shots from our CD release party. More on that later.
The show went well, overall. I didn't do so hot. I was having technical difficulties which distracted me the whole night. Billy was just getting over an ear or sinus infection and nearly fell out on stage.
"it's a long way to the top, if you want to Rock and Roll..."
I didn't stay for the headliner that night, Stephen Pearcy, former lead singer of Ratt. I was pretty much wiped out, and it doesn't help that you have to load your own gear and unload it once you get home.
I can't wait to get some roadies up in this mother@!#$...
The band played it's first gig since finishing the new disc, Venus. More details on the band's webpage.
www.fullstackrock.com
Here's a pic from the show. I'm actually just testing the link between the blog and my Flickr acct. It sounds like a cool idea, but we'll see. If you click on the photo you'll go directly to my Flickr page - which has a few more band pics - including some shots from our CD release party. More on that later.
The show went well, overall. I didn't do so hot. I was having technical difficulties which distracted me the whole night. Billy was just getting over an ear or sinus infection and nearly fell out on stage.
"it's a long way to the top, if you want to Rock and Roll..."
I didn't stay for the headliner that night, Stephen Pearcy, former lead singer of Ratt. I was pretty much wiped out, and it doesn't help that you have to load your own gear and unload it once you get home.
I can't wait to get some roadies up in this mother@!#$...
countdown to New Orleans
Just looked at the weather forecast and it looks like weather will be sunny with temps in the 70s and 80s in The Big Easy.
more later...
more later...
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