Category: music


a new place

July 15th, 2009 — 2:53pm

Thanks to J being a roving musician, I was able to join him and the band for a trip to Martha’s Vineyard this past weekend. I had never visited the Vineyard before and had a great introduction thanks to beautiful summer weather and a generous host (thanks Scott!). We caught the 2:30 ferry from Woods Hole on Friday afternoon and had time to relax and chat before heading into town for dinner and the band’s gig at Offshore Ale Co. Unfortunately, we had to catch the 7am ferry the next morning but we had another gorgeous ferry ride and hopes of returning (for one thing, J made good friends with Dylan, Scott’s giant Anatolian Shepherd dog!  See below…).

07.10 :: breakfast stopcrossing the Bourne Bridgeferry from Woods Holeseagulls keep upJ & Dylan, sharing a momenta perfect day on the VineyardBrian cozied up to the Baby Blue07.10 :: dinner timepeanut shellsripping it up07.10 :: a rare self portraitwhere we stayed

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Boston :: two trips

June 23rd, 2009 — 10:36am

No.1

walkin' in the city06.06 :: tent stage at Harpoon Summer Seriesa bit of green downtownwowbackstagetuningcheersoh yes

No.2
afternoon pausehotel view06.20 :: dinner & drinks06.20 :: Boston by boatBoston harbor

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studio time

June 12th, 2009 — 5:47pm

I have been able to spend more time in the studio the last couple weeks (thanks to my part-time status in the summer) and it’s been invigorating.  J wanted some postcard sized business cards printed so I got down to business.  I chose Kabel for the typeface primarily because I had it in a variety of sizes and light and bold.  And I had a linoleum carving of a chicken that I did a few years ago that seemed to work well for his business — The Chicken Barn Recording Studio.  The text was all printed in black and then I mixed a bright red with brown to get a brick red for the chicken.  on the mixing board in the studiobusiness postcards for Jink experimentsup-close

He also wants some similar cards for another business so I drove up to Rock, Paper, Scissors in Wiscasset this afternoon and as always found exactly what I wanted.  The shop owner had lots of chipboard kicking around so I got a nice big stack that we’ll cut up to use for the rustic looking cards.

I also revamped my inspiration board.  The contents had been up for far too long.  Here’s the update:
updated inspirationalways makes me smile

Hopefully I’ll have lots more to share in the coming days and weeks.
Have a great weekend!

Comment » | film & television, life, music, printing, word of the week

So much to say…

April 16th, 2009 — 2:27pm

Clearly I have not been a faithful blogger these last few weeks.  Once again, time has slipped away in the blink of an eye and I have not made the time to write in this space.  But here I am, trying to make up for lost time.
Let me begin by telling you that spring is really here, in all its glory.  To back up my words I offer Exhibit A (and if this isn’t proof, then I don’t know what is):
04.13 :: bursting!

Of course, most of you know this by now and have yearned for and embraced this seasonal change right along with me.  But I thought I would offer proof anyway.
In other exciting news, J has just joined Girls Guns & Glory and will be touring around the Northeast, Midwest and South in the coming months.  You can view the band’s schedule here to see if they’ll be playing in your area.  The band happened to have a show in Portland (Maine) at Empire last Friday so I was lucky enough to see him play with them already.

04.10 :: Girls Guns & Glory, Empire, Portland, Maine04.10 :: Shipyard04.10 :: Girls Guns & Glory at Empire

And in case you’re wondering, J is gesturing to the drummer with his pointer finger and not his middle finger in the photo above.  Pictured is Ward Hayden, lead singer and acoustic guitar, Colt Thompson, lead guitar, John Graham, drums, and Maine’s very own Justin Maxwell on upright and electric bass.  The guys sounded great and we had a blast ripping it up on the dance floor.  The band is headed to NYC tonight to play at the Rodeo Bar.
In other music news, J and I (along with his father and step-mother) went to see Greg Brown last week at the Stone Mountain Arts Center in Brownfield, Maine.  I bought tickets back in November for J’s birthday, and the original date back in February was cancelled due to a blizzard and rescheduled for April 9.  This worked out well, in part because it became a celebration of almost exactly two years together for us.  Our first real date was going to see Greg Brown at the Camden Opera House in April of 2007.  Both shows were great, and the Stone Mountain Arts Center is worth the trip and price.  I hope we’ll make it back again.
04.09 :: Stone Mountain Arts Center + 2 years together

I think I’ll sign off with a few photographs from Easter weekend.  J and I drove up to my parents for church and dinner, and as usual my mom prepared a dinner that was just as pleasing to the eye as it was to the belly.  I can take credit only for the maple-glazed parsnip dish (we had our first CSA pickup last weekend!).

04.11 :: waking up on the weekendSearsmont04.12 :: Easter appetizertulips!maple glazed parsnips04.12 :: daffodil cake


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short trip to Beantown

February 11th, 2009 — 10:48am

city blur2.6 :: Mark Olsen & Gary Lourispost-concert drinks :: River Godsgildedgazing Cupid

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02.10.09 :: melancholy

February 10th, 2009 — 2:24pm

Word of the week: melancholy
1mel·an·choly
Pronunciation: \ˈme-lən-ˌkä-lē\
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural mel·an·chol·ies
Etymology: Middle English malencolie, from Anglo-French, from Late Latin melancholia, from Greek, from melan- + cholē bile
Date: 14th century
1 a: an abnormal state attributed to an excess of black bile and characterized by irascibility or depression b: black bile c: melancholia
2 a: depression of spirits : dejection b: a pensive mood

I daresay that sometimes in deep winter, melancholy can strike.  I have been rather melancholic as of late and am doing my best to embrace it.  I enjoy reading what Tom Hodgkinson says about melancholy in The Freedom Manifesto (go here for an earlier post on this book).  Chapter 17, “In praise of melancholy,” explains:

For guidance on the vexing issue of melancholy, depression, black bile, we must turn to the world expert, renowned scholarly reflector and gentle intellect Robert Burton who, in 1621, wrote that most cheerful and cheering of books, The Anatomy Of Melancholy.

That the book was a big hit should come as no surprise, because it came out during a miserable period in history. Merry England was dead or dying. Burton’s book, 78 pages of the most delightful misery, was published roughly halfway between the Henrician Reformation and the Industrial Revolution, those two major disasters for lovers of life and liberty. The old religious festivals had been banned by Cranmer. Merry-making on Sundays was attacked. The fun was being drained from national life. The book is also almost contemporary with Shakespeare’s study of isolation, Hamlet, and Marlowe’s study of ambition, Dr Faustus.

The meat of Burton’s book is thousands of quotations on the subject of melancholy from classical sources. This would suggest that the Ancient Romans and Greeks suffered from melancholy, too, which doesn’t surprise me, because the Romans, particularly, lived in a rapacious, warlike, exploitative oligarchy, much like Britain and the US today. It may also be true that, aside from external factors, melancholy is just a fact of life. There is no escape. Even the wise, lucky and prosperous, Burton says, suffer from melancholy: deal with it.

Among the causes of melancholy, Burton lists bad diet. Among his solutions is merriment: “In my judgment none so present, none so powerful, none so apposite as a cup of strong drink, mirth, music, and merry company.” He calls music “a roaring-meg against melancholy, to rear and revive the languishing soul”. This is the power of jazz, or rock’n'roll, or dance music.

Today, gone are good company, good cheer and good beer as cures. Melancholy has been professionalised, commodified, industrialised. It has been transformed into a “condition” with a costly chemical cure. These pills make the most gigantic profits for their dealers, the drugs giants. Depression is big business.

No one ever suggests, of course, that the fault for your depression may lie not with you but with the things that you are expected to do in our hyper-competitive, meritocratic, money-based, godless society. However, rather than change yourself, you could change your world. Quitting your job, refusing to vote, not taking pharmaceutical drugs: these are acts not of apathy but of a radical re-engagement with society and with your own self. Once you disengage from the structures that bind you, you find that you begin to recreate a life of self-reliance. And self-reliance, rather than the sticking-plaster method, will help you to come to terms with your melancholy, rather than trying to banish it with drugs.

I think that even simply renaming depression “melancholy” can do a lot to disarm it. Keats, in his Ode On Melancholy, advises not getting wasted (which he calls Lethe) and not taking anti-depressants (which he calls wolfsbane and nightshade). Instead, he suggests going for a walk and gazing at the flowers and recognising that melancholy is a sister to joy and must be embraced.

2.8 :: music in the studio

Amen.  Hmmm…bad diet?  And music as “a roaring-meg against melancholy, to rear and revive the languishing soul”?  Indeed.  This is precisely why J had me jam chords (albeit awkwardly) on his electric guitar on Sunday afternoon, and why he insisted I eat more often.  The winter blues may strike, but I am trying to take the energy and channel it productively — and I use productive loosely.  Creatively might be more appropriate.  Or get out of the house, go see some jazz and have a pint (and if you’re in the Portland, Maine area then consider dropping by One Longfellow Square tonight for some live jazz by The Chameleons).

SS Chameleons

Cheers!


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listening to…

February 3rd, 2009 — 12:04pm

Ready For The Flood, a new record from Mark Olson & Gary Louris.  This is the “first new release from the pair since Olson left the Jayhawks in 1995,” explains the New West Records website.  I heard one of the tunes from this on World Cafe a couple weeks ago, and then again on In Tune By Ten.  J surprised me with the album last weekend and we’ve given it a couple good listens and are really enjoying it.And there is icing on this album cake.  We are headed down to the Somerville Theatre on Friday night to see Olson and Louris in concert.  This should be a nice jaunt to kick-start the month of February.  And maybe we can find someplace cozy for a drink and some dessert after the show…and before our long-ish drive home.

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