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My voice, through the aether.
There's More Than One Way To Do It
1/27/06 22:50 - permalink - email - category: Knowledge

Tossing my musician's backpack into the seat before me, I slid into the taxi near First and Market. After giving the driver my destination, he immediately whipped a faster-than-light U-turn into oncoming traffic. The stunned drivers had no time to stop, slow down or even hit their horns before he had already merged right into their midst. I could tell from his expression, watching me in the rearview, he thought I would be scared by this.

I laughed, loudly, "Cabbies are my favorite drivers! You can drive, man! How long have you been a cabbie?"

Thus began one of the most hilarious journeys I've taken by taxi in San Francisco. I usually joke around with the drivers, ask them how business is, get any crazy stories they're willing to share. This trip, as we literally flew through traffic in various trajectories I didn't even know a cab was capable of following, the driver was a live one. By the end of the trip we were both laughing so hard our faces hurt.

Than's been driving a cab for five years, and says he manages to haul around over 500 people per day. At the speed he was driving, that number is probably underestimated. He's from Vietnam, in his fifties, and has a thriving side business importing a natural Asian substitute for Viagra and selling to other cabbies and riders. I didn't believe his age at first, not by a couple decades, until he showed me his California driver's license.

"You want to know how I stay so young?"

"What's your secret?" I asked.

"I have three wives, and working on number four."

"Three in a row, or three all at once?"

"All at once. One here, one in Oakland, one in Hayward and number four lives in San Jose."

Than splits his time between cities, and drives a cab in each of them on a rotating schedule. I thought of the 500 people per day he chauffeurs, and how so many of them, even here in the highly liberal Bay Area, assume he's just a guy like they are, living a life somewhat similar to their own, and is probably unremarkable or he would not be driving a cab.

"You have a busy schedule."

"Oh, they work out my schedule. Everybody knows about everybody. I learned a long time ago, tell a woman the truth, she'll love you no matter what. If you lie to her, better hide all the guns. A woman is just like you. You mafia, she's mafia. You like to dance, she likes to dance. You like to fuck, she likes to fuck. I just tell them what I like and it always turns out they like it, too!"

At breakneck speed, we pass by a couple women waiting at the crosswalk. Than points at the blur out the window and says, "You need more wives! I have the perfect plan. See, they need a husband." We pass a couple more. "Look... lonely, carrying groceries alone, probably watch television and cry all night. Even a couple hour husband would help."

"Maybe they like it without a man."

"Ok, some, yes, but most are crying. Here's my plan: Rent A Husband dot com. Different rates for different jobs, and if we like doing the jobs we charge less. This way, the Rent A Husbands can help lots of lonely women and the ones we fall in love with, we'll stop charging and just be their husbands!"

"That's a great idea! You're going to be very rich."

"So... you want a job?"


From The Air
1/22/06 22:40 - permalink - email - category: Knowledge

Cesare Marilungo has created a wonderful, 20 minute sandbox piece, Still Trying To Grasp The Zen Mind. It's generative music he brought to life through a custom PureData program. Listening, I began thinking about why I write music, what music is to me, and why I am drawn to specific musical terrains I most love to live inside.

I find music in the world around me, every moment of every day. It's in the spinning, dopplered shards of conversations I intersect with walking through a crowd of business people. I hear it in the metal-on-metal of subway couplings working through an almost-minor scale. It speaks to me in the chaotic rumblings and surges of the Bay beneath the ferry, in the clicks and hums of appliances chattering to each other over AC circuitry, in the screech of a barista's steam-wand, in the fractal patterns of rain against the drum membrane of a window, in the slow creaks of wood as the house settles, and settles again.

There are often moments where I'm reading, thinking, dreaming, and realize I'm caught up in a symphony. My foot is tapping, my thoughts flowing in a cadence or melody to fit within the larger environment. I will alter my gait unconsciously to fit the construction worker beat of heavy machinery, find myself typing in counterpoint to whatever I'm listening to, speak to someone with a song in my mind and on my tongue.

I am highly synaesthetic. For me music is a very visual and textural experience. I can see the sounds breathing in space between the speakers, between my ears. Drawing a picture, with scratch of arcing pencil and sliding skin on paper, has the same effect on me as composing. For me, all creative experience has music at its core.

The rhythm of life is all around us.

Because music is everywhere, and I walk within it and of it, and know this... I can easily be driven crazy by not playing my part. I must give it further voice, or lament a broken instrument. My apologies and thanks yet again to all those in my life who have been near me when, for reasons internal or external, I was unable to create for extended periods. You have witnessed me at my lowest.

John Lennon famously said, "Songwriting is about getting the demon out of me. It's like being possessed."

In my world, I am both possessed and possessor, vessel for the idea and demon knowledge delivered from the air. I am embedded within and definer of without. I breathe in and the kick drops. I breathe out and the snare explodes.

Music is the system, working together, all parts in concert, all instruments playing the part only they may play. The orchestra is our world.

For me, everything is a song, and I am drawn to that which resonates. I love that which is playing in my own key. I join in the groove of the rhythm which moves me.

I write music because music is what I am.


Focus
1/15/06 23:19 - permalink - email - category: Knowledge

Since the first of January, even through my New Year's struggle with biological invaders, I've been focused on making 02006 The Year Dreams Walk.

Tonight, driving to the South Bay, I was taken by a curious feeling. It was a wonderful evening: riding along, looking out the windows, talking. A normal night spent pursuing the normal course of things.

I thought about the song I'm currently working on.

Instantly, without warning, it was as if I woke from deep sleep after a span of ages. I felt the past rush forward and the future collapse into this hot moment of now, of pinpoint action and immediate self, of all possibility and potential as a singular roaring fire within.

I remembered.

I remembered this state as if it had never been lost. Remembered it as not forgotten, but simply set aside, looked away from briefly as I wandered into faerie time and Van Winkled my way to this spatio-temporal locus.

It's walking across a stage just before the curtain rises.

It's the heartbeat between placing my hands on an instrument and the sounding of a first note.

It's my falling fingertips beginning a rough draft.

It's Zeno's magical gap between pencil and paper as a drawing commences.

It's honest awareness of my ability to deal lightning with both hands.

It's the knowledge I always have been and always will be.

It's the timeless immortality of youth, but only because youth have not yet lost sight of themselves.

I learned tonight it continues to exist in all of us, so long as we truly live.

I learned tonight 02006 will be a year I truly live.


Thankful Green Tea
11/29/05 22:38 - permalink - email - category: Knowledge

Thanksgiving night, driving home after seeing the excellent Johnny Cash bio "Walk The Line," my body turned on me. I'd been a bit dizzy after the movie, but chalked it up to jumping from my seat too swiftly.

The dizziness increased, turning to tunnel vision.

My lungs seemed to lose their ability to take in air and my heart began pounding hard enough to bruise the inside of my ribcage.

Ania quickly pulled the car to curb and I jumped from the seat to get flat on the wet sidewalk. It was so cold my skin was steaming, and all I could see was a small fuzzy circle of the dark sky and Ania's worried face as she dialed 911 and held my hand.

It wasn't the oft-described "elephant standing on your chest," but it felt so much as if my heart was going to explode I was certain it was a heart-attack.

Am I dying?

Is this really all the life I get?

An ambulance ride, many hours in a strangely quiet Sutter-Solano emergency room with ECGs, staggered blood tests, chest x-rays... and the verdict was I'll live. No damaging cardiac event took place, no heart attack, no sign of anything out of the ordinary.

Diagnosis: benign heart palpitations, confirmed by my regular physician today.

Culprit: excessive caffeine intake.

If that was benign, I certainly never want to experience malignant.

My one vice is green tea. No smoking, no drinking, no drugging, no meat-eating... hell, not even coffee. I quit that over a year ago.

Just green tea.

I have now learned the hard way all chemical dependencies will get you.

Now I am truly without vice.


Goban
6/14/05 07:52 - permalink - email - category: Knowledge
Goban about to whomp me.

At lunch recently Jake challenged me to a game of Go. My Go fu is very rusty, and he cast a 20th level spell of whoop-ass on me.

Next time, I will be prepared.

Sen:te's Goban is an implementation of Gnu Go for OSX. This program may not be the better of those ageless spirits playing on park benches in China Town, but will help me train to meet them. Free, smooth and groovy features in abundance:

  • Board sizes between 7 and 19 moku
  • A handicap can be set, to the standard +9 stones for rank beginner
  • Moves can be timed or free
  • Stones can be labeled in their sequence of play, to see where you went wrong
  • The software will attempt to score the game for you
  • Play the AI, a Rendezvous opponent, or through a server
  • Custom stone images possible

If you're not familiar with Go, it can be daunting. Over 4000 years old, a good overview is helpful, but it's a difficult game to summarize. My own mind fell back on patterns developed through years of chess, to my frustration and downfall. Those strategies are applicable, but only if transformed into a quest for territory, colonization, growth. Destruction and dominance as the battles of Queens, Bishops and Horsemen teach is not what Go is about.

Go will teach you about strategy as life, process, evolution. You will understand the strength of water and the weakness of stone. Just a few games and I've already remembered approaches to living I embedded below consciousness many years ago.

Jake put it best: "Playing Go makes you smarter."


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