Showing posts with label video games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video games. Show all posts

August 1, 2008

String trio

This is a string trio I wrote in about 3 hours a few days ago. The title of it is 'Snap' - an homage to a particular video game....Fab knows. I hope you enjoy the talent of the 1-mm high musicians who live in my computer!

November 10, 2007

What a concept!

That is my English teacher, Gary's favourite phrase.

The concept in question, in this case, is free time! It's a long weekend and my homework is all done. I have now plenty of time to practice the saxophone and re-work my guitar piece. I have also learned, just today, how to assemble a walking bassline - the most useful thing I've learned in months.

I have also retrieved my N64 from the Cosmic Cop, who has been borrowing it for about two years. I can't wait to play Kirby!

Fab and I played our first ever gig last night at Zach's thirteenth birthday party! Utilizing electric guitar, with all my usual effects, and a keyboard-via-PA, we rocked the joint with 'Equinox' and 'Little Sunflower.' Because of the PA, I had my amp much louder than usual, and this caused even more feedback than I employ on even my noisiest days. During one of my clean moments, I quoted The Smiths' "Still Ill," which I've been waiting to do in public for the last week.
Though I didn't notice it until someone pointed it out to me, I had my back turned to the fairly sizable audience the entire time we played.
In any case, it was fun, we got plenty of positive feedback (from people, as opposed to amplifiers), and it sort of functioned as a trial run for the coffee house. We also made some sweet cash!

I borrowed John Coltrane's final official album, Interstellar Space from Neill the other day, and have been listening to it madly. I'm always on about 'Calming Mr. Coltrane,' but I had never heard this, his most calming album of all. When I say 'calming,' by the bye, I mean it the same way I say 'hard-partying.' I put it on and did science homework!! After smashing my way (calmly) through this album a couple of times (once on public transit
[1]), I decided to get around to listening to all the free jazz-type stuff Neill burned for me a few months back; Eric Dolphy, The Albert Ayler trio and The David Murray trio. I was already familiar with Dolphy -- he's one of my favourite musicians -- but I hadn't yet experienced 'Out There,' which I listened to the other day. It's now one of my favourite albums. My track of preference is 'Serene,' but all of them are good. Turning now to Albert Ayler, I remember Neill advising me, "The first time you hear it, you might just think, 'the guy can't play,' but just try and give him a chance." I listened to Spiritual Unity all the way through today, and it really is unlike anything else I've heard, in a good way. He certainly can play, but his stylings would definitely turn many people off. I still haven't listened to all of David Murray's Live '93 Octfunk, but I've liked all that I've heard. One of the bass solos knocked my damn toupee right off!!

I've also been obsessed with George and Ira Gershwin's "Summertime" of late. I always thought the Zombies' version was amazing -- and it is -- but it's clown music compared to Happy Apple Green's version. (I don't remember where I got this strange disfigurement of Al Green's name, but I've been using it since I was a tiny child, and I'm not stopping now.) Bird's version is also mind-bending. He incorporates a huge volume of turns, and his vibrato is frikkin astounding.

1: Other great 'transit' music, I've found, would include anything by T
. Rex, and Youth Group's Skeleton Jar. Your thoughts on transit music?

August 23, 2007

If you boil it right down, I only do about four or five different things every week.

On sunday the twelfth, I was the only one attending jazz. After the second set, Jason advised me, "Get The Jazz Theory Book by Mark Levine, and you won't have to go to university for jazz education." Stella financed this, and it's one dense book. It has revealed that the melodic minor scale isn't completely pointless, and that I should be practicing roughly a hundred and sixty-eight scales a day. I also now know that a fine way of notating E7#9sus would simply be Esus#9. I'm slowly learning.

I recently read 1984, which should be read aloud when there's a lull at a party, and am now reading The Crystal World by J.G. Ballard. I attempted to read The Atrocity Exhibition about a year and a half ago, and was lucky to make it over halfway through. I was thinking of taking another stab at it, but O'brien told me, 'Read some of his older stuff first.'

Now, onto the most important of topics. I've begun playing plenty of Pokemon Red again. I was searching high and low for my old strategy guide, when it occurred to me that I may have sold it to Cosima along with my cards and blue version some years ago. I headed over there and asked her. "Nope." Then Nils said, "But you lent it to her, didn't you?" Why he would remember that is beyond me. Cosima went into her room and fetched it within ten seconds. I've since been obsessively making lists of pokemon I don't have, lists of pokemon that I need Cosima to trade to me, etc. I beat Erika last night.

A list of everything I do everyday that I carry with me.

April 30, 2007

These characters are not allowed: !

Well, I've tons to write about today.

First of all, Marg had her baby on the 24th at around 1:30 am, as I understand. Her name is Elliot. They're at home now, but I haven't seen them.

Now onto a totally different topic. I found out how to catch Mew in red & blue versions. If that sentence meant anything to you, read on.
On wikipedia, I happened to stumble across a page devoted to glitches in pokemon games. It talked all about the one I remember exploiting, the Missingno. glitch, and several others. But the one that made me really wake up was The Mew Glitch. When I was a kid, there was this big tale that one could catch a Mew by not getting on the boat, blah blah blah, and I tried it, and it didn't work. But anyway, there was a link to a video of someone doing it on the wikipedia page. And I'm planning on doing it. Catching the Mew. Yeah!

At my last lesson, Colin told me to learn Parker's solo from Now's The Time. I've learned some of it, maybe about a sixth of it. There's this mad part (circled below) that's way too fast, and he goes all over the fuckin place, but I'm slowly getting better at it. As you can see, there are madder parts forthcoming.

Yesterday was sunday, so of course, I went to the End cafe to see the live jazz ensemble with Fab, Sarah and Luan. There was a canucks game on, and dozens of screens all over the cafe, so the music was postponed until the end of the game. Fab was saying, "I'm used to hockey preempting shows I want to watch, but I never thought it would preempt live jazz". I was saying, "If it goes into overtime, I'm killing someone". Thankfully, the Caknuckleheads lost, and the band started. It was the same trio as last week, and I can even remember all their names now. It was Joel Kerr on bass, Jason Walters on tenor sax, and Steve Kaposy on drums. After about 3 tunes, the trumpeter showed up. His name was Chad, but they didn't tell us his last name. Their first set was quite enjoyable, then they took a short break. We were directly in front of the stage and also the only table tipping them, and this made Mr. Walters suspicious. He came up and asked, "So do you guys play?". We said yes, and he asked if we knew any tunes. I said I've only been playing a few months. He told us when we learn some tunes, we should play with them some time. I find this bodes well! Their second set was pretty damn amazing. Jason thanked us for coming.