An Evening With Fred Hersch

Michelle and I went to the first concert of the Institute for Advanced Study 2005 season (from a past association, I have friends there who can get me tickets – thanks again if you’re reading this!). These are always excellent, and this one was no exception. Fred Hersch is a jazz pianist and composer, and, even not knowing much about jazz, it’s easy to see how he pours his personal style into the interpretations of the music of the other composers he plays. The evening consisted of a rotation between the music of Thelonious Monk, Cole Porter, and his own compositions, with a conversation with Jon Magnussen, the Composer-in-Residence at the Institute, part way through.

As a virtual newbie to jazz music, I found some of the peices more accessible than others, but came away from the evening with a better appreciation, and at least some notion of where to start to listen to develop that appreciation. Fred Hersch’s repertoire, by his own admission, consists of composers whose music seems to be acting as a framework that allows for improvisation in performance (up to 90% of what’s played!), and that, to me, is what makes listening to, and watching the performance, interesting. I’m also curious to see if that interest holds when I can’t watch the performance, ie listening to a CD. This could be the start of a whole new world of music listening, and possibilities, for me…

Serenity

OK, so I should have blogged this last Friday, when I saw the movie, along with half the other bloggers in the world. Oh, well. I’m blogging it now, and with good reason. First off, go see the movie, it’s amazing. I came out of there completely blown away, but a little ticked off at Joss, but gradually got to the point where I realized what he had done, and, if not exactly why he’d done it, at least a glimmer of an inkling.

Secondly, Slashdot just posted a pointer to a review by a favorite author of mine, Orson Scott Card, who pretty much nails it, and far better and more lucidly than I can (and he has a point about Seinfeld that I could never grasp before, but I always knew was there (or wasn’t), and why I never liked the show or found it funny most of the time), and it’s definitely worth a read, even if you have no idea what I’m talking about.

The link is here: Serenity – Uncle Orson Reviews Everything

Name Dropping

I’m currently attending a talk at work (Princeton Computer Science). The speaker is Andrew Tannenbaum, who wrote several of the text books I used in university, and those books (later editions, of course) are still used today. Oh, yeah, did I mention Brian Kernighan is stitting across the room?

Things like this happen quite a bit. I love this place.

That’s a Lot of Water!

Over the summer, our pool developed a tear in the liner (fortunately, above the waterline), and that meant it was time to replace it. Not a cheap endevour, but necessary, and besides, there was a hard-metal stain in the shallow end that we inherited when we bought the house that I won’t be sorry to see gone. Anyway, the company we hired to do the work set up the pump yesterday to pump all 19,000 gallons of water out into the sewer system, and now that the work’s done, we’re busy dumping another 19,000 gallons back into the pool. I wish there had been a better way…

Wake Up, People!

From CNET News.com: SanDisk stakes its future on TrustedFlash

This is really rich: the tag line states “SanDisk is planning to launch new mini storage card technology that it says will let people play or view secured content on multiple devices, including smart phones and portable digital players.”

Note the spin on the wording: the new technology “will let people”. Wow, that’s great! This will let me… What they really mean is “will take away your right to play the stuff you own on anything you want”. I’m not sure what I hate more: that companies are doing this (maybe they’re not being given a choice?), or that people are buying it (both with what’s left of their brains and their wallets).

I would like to think that a world full of stuff that tells you what you can and cannot do isn’t inevitable, and I’m happy to see stuff like Make: out there, but stuff like this is getting more and more common.