December, 2009

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Blue Moon

Friday, December 25th, 2009

“When you have two full moons in the same month, well, the second one is called the Blue Moon.”

I believe we’re due for a Blue Moon on December 31 – just New Year’s Eve for most.

In both anticipation and response, I painted this.  A big ol’ blue moon watching over a dark sky.  You ought to be able to click on it to see it in better resolution, though the dark colors may not show up particularly well.  Once again, I should probably invest in a photography class.  Or, yes, a painting class – har, har.

Just a note, this is Birmingham Verse’s one-hundredth post and I’ve got to say I’m proud of myself for all my best attempts to survive and thrive in 2009.  Merry Christmas, all.

Come Back

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

In putting together my version of Joni Mitchell’s River for an earlier post, I also took some time to record a quick copy of Pearl Jam’s Come Back, which is a truly beautiful song that I can almost never listen to without playing it several times in a row.  I learned it a few weeks ago.

Come Back – Pearl Jam – J Records

I can’t imagine that Eddie Vedder would let anyone sue me over posting this.

End of the Year Cleaning

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Just cleaning out some of my older bookmarks.  Too useful to junk completely, but maybe not useful enough to keep contributing to the clutter.  It might be a good idea to post some of them here because the blog makes for a good archive.  And maybe some of you would find some of this stuff useful or entertaining.  The trend here is towards creativity and the arts, although not entirely so.  These are listed roughly in some order:

  • (link) 3-minute TED talk of Richard St. John’s 8 secrets of success.
  • (link) Pcmag.com’s best 100 websites of 2009.
  • (link) Wonderful short video: The Eight Irresistable Principles of Fun.
  • (link) The math-art Whitney Music Boxes, plus other links (try me)
  • (link) A repository of art available for $20.
  • (link) The 1000 Awesome Things blog.  I get the daily emails.
  • (link) Daily collection of free recommendations of must-see gems.
  • (link) Rolling Stone’s list of greatest albums(, songs, & guitarists).
  • (link) Greg Rutter’s List of 99 Things You Should Have Already Seen.
  • (link) The Zoomquilt II collaborative art project.
  • (link) Gregory Colbert’s Ashes and Snow – art with animals.
  • (link) Sarina Brewer’s Custom Creature Studio (warning: dark)
  • (link) Matt Glass Photography.
  • (link) A partial history of color in art by the Museum of Modern Art.
  • (link) Moshcam.  Recorded concerts available online.
  • (link) Travel like a human – rent rooms from real people worldwide.
  • (link) World of Inspiration: inspirational quotes
  • (link) Color scheme designer application.
  • (link) Yanko Design – dedicated to modern international design.
  • (link) Stories from everyday people from NPR’s Tony Kahn.
  • (link) Garfield Minus Garfield.
  • (link) A planetarium in your web browser.
  • (link) Chart of “books that make you dumb”.
  • (link) The baby name wizard – tracking names through time.
  • (link) A full advertising database online.
  • (link) Scott Wade’s Dirty Car Art.
  • (link) What to get her for Christmas?  Maybe The Thing in a Jar?
  • (link) Fun, simple interactive art.  More here and here.
  • (link) An unusual multimedia brainstorming tool by Getty Images.
  • (link) Artist David Shrigley.
  • (link) Simple little piece of interactive art.
  • (link) The Muppet Wiki.
  • (link) Ultra-condensed classic books.
  • (link) Explanations of physics concepts using flash animation.
  • (link) What’s special about this number?  (Is this math art?)
  • (link) Article featuring socially-conscious pixellated artworks.
  • (link) A web-book to substitute for an art history textbook.
  • (link) Keith Tyson is a British artist.  His web design is notably good.
  • (link) Birmingham artist Paul Cordes Wilm.
  • (link) Entertainment Weekly’s best 100 books from 1983-2008.
  • (link) The annotated Watchmen.
  • (link) Possibly unclassifiable piece of moving art.

River

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Because it’s really the only Christmas-esque song I know how to play, I offer it to any readers as a Merry Christmas.  Click on the link for my .mp3 version of the song.

River – Joni Mitchell – Reprise Records

As always, please don’t sue me big, mean record companies.  Especially not around the holidays.

Birmingham Ballet: Nutcracker Performance

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Anything worthwhile takes a mess of effort.

Even writing these simple pieces usually takes me a few hours.  Yeah, some of it might be spent staring into space, arranging a playlist, or petting the dog, but it’s all just a way of making time for language blocks and potential ideas to fall, Tetris-like, into something more coherent.

When I paint, though I’ve been known to finish something in under an hour, it mostly takes at least a full workday.  And often some chunk of a week.  I’ve gotten pretty darned skilled at the quiet contemplation of a canvas.

It’s been close to a year since I’ve written any music, but that process is no less intense.  An idea has to come from somewhere.  Whether you labor at it diligently or chase after it with a butterfly net, it almost always takes time.  Getting a guitar part right.  Writing the (bleeping) words, too, takes forever and I might as well be distilling my own blood.  Not to mention getting my voice recorded in some way that won’t sound like dog-strangling.

I digress.  More on point, I quote directly from the Nutcracker program: “Birmingham Ballet’s annual presentation of The Nutcracker is a large community effort.”  That may be an understatement.  The program is three pages of small type with a long list of names like Absher, Addie, Allowyn, Baylor, Brianna, Caleigh, Elle, Ellie, Emma, Grace, Hannah, Hope, Linnea, Kendall, Riley, and Romberg.  On Dasher and Dancer, On Prancer and Vixen….

And each of those little names – and all that aggregate time spent with all those baby name books – has at least one adult who is responsible for all the jetting back and forth to ballet practice.  One adult who might be forced to say (at least once in a while), “Yes, you still have to go.”  One adult who had to use heretofore unknown skills to alter or fix a costume entirely too close to curtain at the first performance.  One adult with an almost superhuman love for that little dancer.

And who designed the programs?  Printed them?  Put together the website?  Herded five-year-olds at practice?  Buckled Jack Frost into his flight apparatus?  Swept the snow?  Made the props?  Set up the lighting?  Tracked the music?  Ran the ticket booth?  Ushered patrons to their seats?  A “large community effort” for sure.

But nothing substantial seemed to go wrong at the Saturday evening performance, in spite of the obvious possibilities.  (I can imagine a set of people who could enjoy dance like rednecks do NASCAR – mainly for the crashes.)  Instead, I throughly enjoyed the pretty sets, its sense of humor, Drosselmeyer’s magic, Harlequin and Pierot, the bouncy bows and dresses at the Christmas party, the world’s cutest mice, success in snow-land after multiple practices, the wonder of the snow itself, individual Sugar Plum Fairy and Spanish and Arabian and Dew Drop Fairy performances, and the fun of hearing the parents around me in the audience murmuring and bubbling about their children at all the right times.

I’m not sure I’d ache to see the Nutcracker every single Christmas, but fifteen years (or more) was too long.  It’s a mess of effort that’s worth getting involved in.  I can only hope that I might entertain a few people even half as well.  But without all the effort, an artist would have no chance.

Once more, thanks to Cindy Free for giving me a chance to get all dressed up and a someplace nice to go.  A link to my earlier piece on the Birmingham Ballet’s rehearsal can be found here.