Sunday, February 21, 2010

Scanning the past


We picked up Pandigital photo scanner thingie this week, a neat little device not much bigger than two cell phones stacked, that scans photos and saves them direct to a memory card. No PC required, although it does come with a USB cable.
Results are pretty good so far. The scan process takes about 4 seconds per photo, and while at 300dpi the images are just okay, it's a decent way to quickly digitize mountains of 4"x6" pics. Alot easier than lining them up on a flatbed.

I already have saved a number of photos I had of Karin, around the condo and on our various outings, as well as a Mt Sherman climb we did in 1992 (?) and one Desolation trip, which I believe was 1997. Will probably throw one or two of these up on Facebook by the by.

Missing the days when the actually photo process date was printed on the backs of prints. Our documentation for all these pictures wasn't real good - relying on memory and bits and pieces in the photos themselves to date them.

It occurred to me, especially scanning the pics of Karin, I could not have managed to do this 5 years ago. No way.
Time blunts, does it not?

Monday, February 15, 2010

Near Floyd Experience


I'm not typically much for cover bands - standard issue critic snootiness, I guess - but I pitched BW on a whim to cover Wish We Were Floyd, a Denver-based Pink Floyd cover band, comprised largely of members of Savage Henry members and a few (quite a few, actually) friends.

I saw Dave Herrera's Westword review of their Cervantes show from last year, and since he's an actual music critic, I was curious as to whether or not their alleged marksmanlike precision was the real deal or simply the unexpected gush of another Floyd fan getting a decent dose.

The band is just fantastic, that is really what I think...(couldn't resist)...but actually, they were pretty good. Note for note precision? Eh...mostly, I suppose. Singer Damon Guerrasio seemed more comfortable with the Waters numbers (he admitted in our interview that Gilmour's voice is very tough to really nail), but the guitar work (Stuart Miller and Glenn Esparza) absolutely slayed the guitar parts. Most of Dark Side, predictably, but for my money the highlights of the evening were a thunderous, triumphant "Mother" and a bruising, melt-the-walls rendition of "Sheep".

And a special mention for Kate Shoup, designated "Screamin' Diva", who sent chills through the Fox audience with a brilliant, mostly-but-not-completely textbook read of the "Great Gig in the Sky". Shockingly effective and utterly gorgeous.

See 'em, Denver area folks. Great stuff...fun show...

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Happy Anniversary, Bear

Six years ago today, we were married at the top of Lift 2 at Loveland. Gorgeous day - blue sky, near perfect snow.

I have the picture, and the wedding Coors Light they gave us.

I'll always remember it, and I'll always love you. My Bear.

New music

Steve Roach has released a double live CD of a 2007 performance at Grace Cathedral, in SF. If I had half the mind, I'd try to get a review published somewhere.

Serrie's also got two new releases, both space-themed - not the simpy New Age stuff he occasionally drops into.

May be checking out two or three of these offerings.

Also heard a nice bit on Drone Zone today by an artist named Dan Pound, from a 2006 release called Trance Meditation. Very nice stuff.