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The Neil Young Immersion Experience

12/8/2013

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Today I finished a three-part "Neil Young Immersion Experience", flipping the last page of his autobiographical Waging Heavy Peace.

The first part of the NYIE was a multi-media four-Friday edutainment event hosted by music historian John Einerson in McNally Robinson Bookseller's Community Classroom.  It came complete with a "Harvest Moon" dinner accompanied by a local musician.  That was a year ago and led to NYIE parts 2 & 3 -- the concert and book.

Let me be clear - while I like Neil Young's music, I'm not any kind of groupie or fanboy.  The NYIE was just something different, interesting and connected for my wife and I to experience together.  While attending the class, we decided it would be fun to see Young live on his upcoming Winnipeg tour date.  After the class and concert, I guess Santa cataloged me as a NY guy and left the book in my stocking.

So what did I take from all this?  It can be summed up with a quote from page 484 of his book (yes, anything Young does is intense so of course the book is 500 pages).

"I've always been told that what I am doing is right.  Maybe it isn't.  Maybe just some of it is.  I need to dig deep and discover some things along the way.  How do I avoid being short with those I love and respect? How do I try to make people feel good about what they are doing for and with me?  How can I respect others' tastes while retaining my own?  This is the knowledge I'm searching for.  I can remember so many times in my life when I have hurt others and hurt myself.  I really need to find a way to change those patterns for good."

You see, what I admire most about Neil Young is his dogged determination. Right from his earliest years playing in Winnipeg, he had nothing but bloody-minded focus on his goals.  Here, he formed a band, practiced constantly, attended school rarely, performed everywhere, and cut a record.  In no time, finding the local scene confining, he split for Toronto. There he struggled but met strategic people, including Stephen Stills and soon followed their path to L.A.  From there, his rise was meteoric with Buffalo Springfield then Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.  In 1970 at age 25, he wrote Ohio which became an anthem of the anti-war movement and perhaps a generation.

Along the way, many were left behind including a Winnipeg bandmate whose mother forbade him to hit the road with the band.  Left behind like all of us who take the safe, predictable road every day long after we leave the nest.  Ironically, Young yearns to undo the damage from his early days; the damage most of us are too afraid to risk in the first place.

Fascinating.


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The Clock at the WAG

11/10/2013

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Last Friday, went with my wife and another couple to Christian Marclay`s The Clock, an unusual film playing at the Winnipeg Art Gallery.  Each minute of footage in its 24 hour length is a movie clip focused on some aspect of time -- an actor announcing the time, a glance at a watch, close up of Big Ben...  The film's time corresponds to real time, so you never need to glance at your own watch.  From the time you walk in to the time you leave, you are reminded each and every minute what time it is.  At one point, Tom Cruise even marks the passage from one minute to the next -- "it's 9:15..16", he announces.  And so it was.

As I watched, I found myself reeling with questions.  Is there really a movie time reference for every minute in a 24 hour day?  Yes, and often multiple.  Will I recognize many films and actors?  Yes and no.  There are flashes of films from every genre and period since the beginning of cinematic history -- and The Clock reminds you how vast that space is.  How can we have been sitting here for 10, 20, 30, 60, 90 minutes already?  Oddly, even with constant reminders, time seemed warped, accelerated.  Likely because the continual scene changes stretch you to keep up.  What film is this?  Where and when is it set?  Do I recognize any of the actors?  Is there a theme that connects this clip to its neighbors?

At the two hour mark, we began exchanging glances, asking each other with our eyes, "is it time to go?"  At 10pm a silent alarm squelched our romantic notions of marathon viewing and pulled us towards after-theatre eats and bedtime.

What was the point, you ask?  For me, it was suspending disbelief and allowing myself to experience The Clock as a time machine moving rapidly, anywhere in the world through both human time and cinematic time.
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A Concert to Wake the Dead

6/4/2013

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I went down to St. James Infirmary
To see my baby there,
She was lyin' on a long white table,
So sweet, so cool, so fair.

Went up to see the doctor,
"She's very low," he said;
Went back to see my baby
Good God! She's lying there dead.
Traditional.

For decades I've had issues with that song. Who would write something so depressing?  But of course it was the perfect opener for the Winnipeg Jazz Orchestra's May 16th concert at Bardal Funeral Centre in Winnipeg.  Actually, it was the liveliest rendition of Infirmary I've ever heard, setting the tone for a toe tapping evening of New Orleans jazz.  Guests were Ron Paley, Winnipeg's own big band leader (piano), Bjorn Thoroddsen (guitar), and Helen White (vocals).  It was a lively, glorious evening though I found myself especially appreciating Helen White's numbers. Closing my eyes, I felt like I could float on her silky voice back to a 1940s ballroom.

Following the concert, I noticed a couple of inscribed stones in the mortuary floor.  "Ask not for whom the bell tolls," said one.  "It tolls for thee," said the other.  It will soon enough, I thought, but not tonight.  Not on this glorious night.  Exiting to the parking lot, some men in black were leaning on a limo.  "Can we drive you across the street to the cemetery?"  I smiled recalling the ferryman on the river Styx.  Of course this ride was just to the overflow parking.

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Guitarama - A magical evening with Winnipeg's finest guitarists

5/12/2013

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What a way to spend Saturday night -- at Winnipeg's Park Theatre in the front row experiencing Guitarama, a celebration of the city's best guitar playing with Greg Lowe, Tim Butler, Larry Roy, and Ariel Posen.  The evening was led by Bjorn Thoroddesen, an Icelandic guitar virtuoso.  Joked Tim Butler, it took a guy from Iceland to organize a bunch of Winnipeg guitarists!  The songs ranged Beatles covers to the musician's own compositions with predominantly Jazz stylings, though on a few numbers, the artists demonstrated their great versatility by rocking (or bluesing) out.

As I sat back with my wife and friends watching and listening to absolute masters at work, it was hard to imagine a more enjoyable concert experience -- intimate setting with a few hundred people, $12 ticket stub in my pocket, and did I mention we got front row no problem despite rush seating?

In case you missed it, you can catch these musicians at the Jazz Winnipeg Festival in June (
http://jazzwinnipeg.com/concert-season/nu-sounds-series/guitarama/).
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Hello Chess World!

11/25/2012

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PictureLet's Go by april-mo on Flickr
Late at night for the last several months I've been playing chess against my tablet.  I find it relaxing having a puzzle bearing no relation to work or daily life.  At first, the computer wailed on me, then gradually, my skills grew and the tables turned.  But my satisfaction was short-lived.  Had I really grown or had I just learned to repeatedly exploit the weaknesses of a single partner with a VERY consistent style of play?

Suddenly, an onscreen invitation to play online chess beckoned strongly.  I clicked and was transported to 
www.chess.com where I immediately signed up.  As I looked around, I was taken aback by what I had been missing -- six million members, ten thousand currently online, two thousand games in progress, and many grandmasters in our midst.

Intrigued, I signed up for a game.  Speed of play was the main option.  I could choose no time limit, 30 minutes, 10 minutes, or 3 minutes.  Three minutes a move sounded reasonable so that's what I went with.  I was paired instantly with another player and we commenced battle.  It wasn't until the clock ran down on me that I realized my mistake.  The time limit was 3 minutes a game, not 3 minutes a move!  So that was my first loss.  What a hick I was.  I tried again on a 10 minute clock but was still caught short of time.  That was loss number 2.

The third game I was wiser and chose 30 minutes.  This time I had a better grasp of the environment and was more mindful of the ticking clock.  I gained a small material advantage over my opponent then exchanged pieces until he had insufficient material to mate but I could still queen a pawn -- my first win.

When I was done playing, I observed a few games, then continued to explore the Chess.com website.  In addition to single games, tournaments, and lessons, Chess.com has member profiles, player stats, chat, and friending capability.  Kind of like a Facebook for chess nerds.

How remarkable, how wonderful, how truly awesome!  When I was young, the only options for chess enthusiasts were to play with family, friends, or join a local chess club.  The same options as in ancient times.  Now you can get a game anytime with an opponent from anywhere on the planet.  The Internet truly is shrinking the globe and I will most certainly become a regular visitor to this shrunken, digitized chess world.

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Space Alien Heart

1/15/2011

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The doctor said my blood pressure is too high and put me on a beta blocker drug called metoprolol.  It does its job -- this morning my blood pressure was 114/74 and heart rate 54 bpm.  Baboom.........Baboom.........Baboom.  Never been this low even as a teenager.  Comforting to know my BP isn't out of control and damaging my vessels.  Though I feel like a different species.  Anyone know about Klingon heart rates and BP?

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First noble truth

7/22/2010

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"Ring the bells that still can ring,
forget your perfect offering,
there is a crack, a crack in everything,
that's how the light gets in."
Leonard Cohen

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgYlqKxV54Q&feature=related
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Synergy, baby!

7/21/2010

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Here's what's good and guilt-free on a hot summer day.  Get a fat-free fudgesicle.  Those are no good by themselves, but wait.  Now pour yourself a tall glass of diet cola.  Those are no good either but here it comes.....

Swirl the fudgesicle in the cola and take a lick, swirl and lick, swirl and lick.  When the fudgesicle is gone, drink the cola.  Terrible apart, almost decadent together, yes?  That's synergy, baby!

No calories, so heck, have another one if you want.
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The folk festival circuit

7/21/2010

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You know, I could tour around all summer to folk festivals.  Sigh....

http://folkfestivalscanada.com
http://www.musicfestivaljunkies.com/2010-music-festival-guide

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Speaking of John Prine

7/19/2010

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Speaking of John Prine, he once said in an interview that he started writing the goofy songs to give his audiences comic relief from his sad, serious songs.  Here's a line from a particularly heartbreaking one called Sam Stone about a drug-addicted Vietnam veteran with no future, no hope, and a suffering family pulled into his despair.

"There's a hole in Daddy's arm where all the money goes,
Jesus Christ died for nothing I suppose."
John Prine
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    Author:
    Jeff Franz-Lien

    Though my career history is technical, I  harbor several repressed inner spirits including poet, inventor, engineer, teacher, and entrepreneur, not to mention my Marco Polo wanderlust and keen interest in everything.  This blog is about  acknowledging the power of those inner spirits and feeding them enough so they won't drive me crazy.

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