Thursday, July 21, 2011

We'll remember this when we are old and ancient, though the specifics might be vague...

I went to see the Decemberists today at the Botanical Garden. It was a great show. The opening act was a local band called Typhoon, and they were really good. Kind of like BSS, but with discernible lyrics. They had 13 people on stage, singing and playing horns and guitars and violins. I think the word is "soundscape." Then the Decemberists came on:

"This is Sam Adams, mayor of Portland, Oregon. This message is not prerecorded; I am speaking to you live. I am floating above you in a blue geodesic dome. Do not be alarmed."

The set list:
July, July
You Are My Sunshine (Seriously, Colin Meloy was called offstage here by one of the audio techs, and none of the other band members could come up with a joke to tell.)
Down by the Water
Calamity Song
Rise to Me
Shiny
*Pause here to borrow sun hats from various audience members.
The Rake's Song
We Both Go Down Together
Won't Want for Love
The Crane Wife (all three parts!)
All Arise!
Rox in the Box
("We're glad to be in Boise; you've all been so accommodating... that this next song is about imagined Latino gangland warfare in California.)
Oh, Valencia
This Is Why We Fight
The encore:
Raincoat Song
The Chimbley Sweep (Pause in the middle for Colin Meloy to trade places w/ the drummer, who proceeds to play a cowbell and then sing something you could probably call the Failed Cowbell Solo Blues.)
June Hymn

Sunday, June 19, 2011

An Evening With Cake

I went to see Cake on Friday night at the Idaho Botanical Garden, along with Katie and Jason Keffer. It was a really good show. John McCrea does most of the heavy lifting, but the rest of the band seems to have really improved since they started putting out albums in the mid-90s. The set list:

Sad Songs and Waltzes
Opera Singer
Frank Sinatra
Arco Arena
Wheels
Stick Shifts and Safety Belts
Sheep Go to Heaven
Comanche
Rock 'n Roll Lifestyle
Long Time
Mustache Man
Federal Funding
Sick of You
--Intermission
Love You Madly
Haze of Love
Guitar
Satan Is My Motor ("I know there are probably a lot of religious fundamentalists in the audience. But this is just a metaphor, so you can still go to heaven if you sing along. Probably.")
--Brief pause here to give away a willow tree- apparently they do this at all of their shows.
Jolene
Pentagram
Never There (The trumpet player has gotten so much better since this song first came out. He used to sound like the first or second chair in a fair-to-middling high school band.)
--Encore:
Short Skirt, Long Jacket
The Distance

Thursday, January 27, 2011

RSS Graffiti Test

test test test

I'm tired of Facebook

I heard way too many dramatic stories tonight about things that happened on Facebook. Between that and being creeped right the hell out by Catfish, I am starting to wonder if I really need to be putting myself online so that people can look at pictures of me in a Rocky Horror costume, or rag on me for posting too many stories from the New York Times. (Get it Matt, rag?)

England friends, Michigan friends, OK friends who are out of town: I want to stay in touch with you. But how about I give you an email address or phone number? I haven't made up my mind yet, but I'm thinking about deactivating the ol' FB account, and instead using this blog to post news articles and interesting musings.

What say you?

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Some thoughts about the WBC

The Westboro Baptist Church came to Norman today, and Katie and I went to hold a sign and see what would happen. I've always kind of suspected that these people don't really exist, and someone has been photoshopping their signs into other pictures as a weird, elaborate prank. The fact that they do is a serious body blow to my faith in humanity. Apparently the WBC also protested in front of the Big 12 Championship last night. I find it interesting that the a super-conservative religious organization goes out of its way to offend conservatives and religious people: Baptists, OU fans, the military...

Suppose for a minute that you've bought into the Bill Maher, anti-theist idea that religion is bad, since people use it to justify all kinds of madness all over the world. Further suppose that you really want to help your fellow man escape the captivity of faith, how would you do that? I submit that if you were dedicated enough, you might get together with a group of like-minded friends and troll the world. You'd be as offensive as possible to as many people as possible, although probably stop short of actually killing anyone (since it's hard to effect social change from jail), and you'd do it in the name of religion. Not "I hate fags" but "God hates fags." You might come up with one or two issues, and take a stance that is unpopular, or better yet completely untenable. Better still if you can find some verses from your holy book of choice that seem to support these positions. After that you'd just make a lot of noise and harass people, but especially religious people, since they are the ones you'd need to convert.

Basically, if you wanted to convince people that religion is a bad thing, you'd found the Westboro Baptist Church.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

This basically the deck that I took to Indy two weekends ago. I think it has a lot of potential, although my testing for that particular event was somewhere between insufficient an nonexistent. I won last week's FNM with it, and I am going to try again tonight.

4 crumbling necropolis
1 dragonskull summit
1 drowned catacombs
1 lavaclaw reaches
2 creeping tar pit
4 scalding tarn
3 swamp
4 mountain
3 island
4 halimar depths

4 spreading seas
4 treasure hunt

4 calcite snapper
4 sedraxis specter
4 blightning
2 chandra nalaar
2 cruel ultimatum

4 lightning bolt
2 terminate
2 earthquake

2 countersquall

SB:
1 earthquake
2 terminate
3 flashfreeze
4 goblin ruinblaster
2 countersquall
2 magma spray
1 chandra nalaar

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

More updates!

I have decided to start posting on here again, although probably not quite as frequently as before. This blog has been a good way to stay in touch and practice writing every now and then. However, life in Oklahoma is a bit less adventure-filled than life in England. Much more of my time is consumed by school, work, and my beautiful girlfriend, although I will still write about any interesting things I do in the meantime. Additionally, I plan to write about: books, software, Magic: the Gathering, the Prime Minister of Italy*, and why I hate Glenn Beck.



*Warning: If Silvio Berlusconi is not one of your top five favorite heads of state, you might not enjoy this blog. If you do not have a top five, you should work on that, starting here.