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thefrugalgamer

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Costumes [Oct. 25th, 2009|09:39 am]
Well, instead of going to OVFF, I stayed home. NEXT YEAR! (maybe) Anyway, I found out at the last minute that the San Francisco Opera was doing a costume sale, the first one they've done in 14 years. Now, I need stuff for Dickens, and besides, Costumes! I thought, hey, spend a couple of hours there, see the pretties, maybe buy a bowler hat or something. Well, I was totally unprepared for what they had, and they were totally unprepared for the response by the public.

I got there at about 10:30 for their 11:00 opening, and was about 3/4 of a mile away from the front doors in line. They opened on time, but it was 4:45 before I actually got into the warehouse, and was one of the very last people they let in. They turned away over 200 people, all of whom had waited in line not very much less time than I did. Good Lord! I'm surprised that there wasn't a riot.

Was it worth it? (Bearing in mind that this is San Francisco in October, so it was HOT!) (Out-of-towners: SF is cold in the summer, hot in the fall, and freezing in the winter -- go figure.) Yes, omigod, yes. The costumes were, literally, fantastic. Huge robes of nearly every possible color, hand painted Kimonos (from M. Butterfly) scores of quasi-military garb. Armor with attached codpieces. Sponge Bob. On the other hand, I was looking for something very particular: Victorian menswear. And I found: a pair of pants. This is more of a victory than you might imagine: I'm fat. But then, apparently its OK for opera guys to be fat. The pants fit. For $5.00. But also: An absolutely to-die-for black Victorian serving woman's dress that fits Andrea (my daughter), albeit a little snugly. Another Victorian dress that also fits her (with a little more room). Several shirts ($1.00 each!) A pair of authentic, that is to say, vintage, 1930's era military-style riding pants (jodhpurs) with lace-up lower legs (presumably for leggings or to fit in boots) that also fit her perfectly (although she complains that it makes her hips look huge). A huge white robe thingie that fits me well -- not sure what to do with it, really. Anyway, a lot of cool stuff.

The big disappointment: I got a pair of sailor's pants (double row of buttons holding up a front flap & lace-up back) that looked like they'd fit (no fitting rooms in the warehouse). Now, I'm not a small guy. I wear size 50 pants, but can squeeze into a size 48 if need be. These are apparently a size 46. Damn! Just big enough to tantalize. Oh, well, maybe I can find a seamstress to help and they can be used.

Anyway, Andrea made out like a bandit, and I am apparently now BESTDADEVER! I'm still recovering after spending from 10:30 am to 7:30 pm on my feet (the check-out line was two hours long!) So: if in the next 14 years, the SF Opera has a costume sale, the moral of the story is to go, but get there about 5:00 a.m., or be prepared to wait all day in line. But go.
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Brass Farthing [Oct. 21st, 2009|06:57 pm]
I just thought I'd let everyone know that I've recently joined a new singing group, Brass Farthing:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Brass-Farthing/51622383911

We'll be performing at Dickens Fair at Mad Sal's (the lower-class music hall stage).

http://www.dickensfair.com/

I'm really excited about this; its a bit of a stretch from my usual sea music, but the music hall stuff is really fun and not that far removed. Same era, anyway. (grin)
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El Cerrito Free Folk Festival [Oct. 9th, 2009|02:11 pm]
For anyone in the Bay Area with free time tomorrow, its the First Annual El Cerrito Free Folk Festival. This will be much like the SFFFF - many of the same people involved. I'll be there for the sea shanty and the Harmony workshops. Come and sing!

http://www.elcerritofolkfest.org/
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(no subject) [Mar. 30th, 2009|05:46 pm]
A lot of you know my son, Rob. He's recently been deployed to Iraq, where he does computer support for the Marines. He's said that he'd like a care package, but as for contents, he only says things like, "Oh, you know, munchies." Apparently the commissary there doesn't stock much more than the basics. So, oh LJ friends, what should I send him? I'd like to get him something that: a) he'll really like, and b) he's not expecting. How 'bout it?
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The Best Wurst [Mar. 27th, 2009|01:44 pm]
There is a lot of good food out there. I know this, and you know I know: you don't get a table muscle like mine by being shy with a fork. I love food of all kinds, from the commonplace to the exotic, I'll try just about anything once. (Dog soup? Good stuff; tastes like chicken. Highly spiced chicken.) Still, I find that the simplest foods often satisfy the best. I like French food, but no matter how rich the sauce or subtle the flavors, there's always something,  . . . unsatisfying about it. Chinese food is yummy and, when you get the yen for it, it hits the spot. And I LOVES me some good sushi. An English meat pie can be tasty.  BUT

There's nothing, and I mean NOTHING, like a good sausage. Some may differ (I'm looking at you, Brunnhilde), but, as Gandalf says, "Search your feelings, you know this to be true." Bratwurst, weisswurst, banger, Louisiana hot link, Andouille, even the humble frank, the wonderful gush of meaty juices when you bite into them sends me into rapture. Everett & Jones (Oakland soul food BBQ www.eandjbbq.com - and well worth the time to try if you're in town and not lucky enough to be a local) are justly famous for their wonderful sweet, hot sauce, but they also make their own links, and the links alone are to die for. Put the links and the sauce together, and you have the most perfect food imaginable. It is nothing less than meat candy.  There's only one meaty treat that can hold a candle to it: Dittmer's.

Dittmer's Gourmet Meats & Wurst Haus www.dittmers.com/ on San Antonio Road in Mt. View is a German deli that serves up sausage sandwiches  during lunch time. The other day, I was barreling down 101 at 11:45 a.m.  I hadn't eaten anything that day, and my stomach was letting me know unequivocally that it needed to be filled RIGHT NOW! Its been years since I've been to Dittmer's, so I wasn't thinking about them. I actually considered stopping at fast food somewhere. I used to work off San Antonio, and I knew that there was a KFC not far off the freeway, so I took the exit. Still, I missed the KFC, and before I knew it, I was on the overpass going over the Central Expressway. And there it was: meat Shangri La.

I had a Thuringer Bratwurst sandwich the likes of which brings angels to tears and causes the heavenly host themselves to drop their harps and grab their forks. Grilled brat (it was the special that day) with provolone cheese melted all over, topped with pepperoncini and German mustard. I ate out in the sunshine on their picnic tables and realized that life just doesn't get any better than that.  Oh, I suppose that I've had better days. I mean, those were pretty good days when my children were born, and when I got married, to name a couple. But for pure animal contentment and hedonistic enjoyment, what could be better than a grilled sausage sandwich in the warm sun?

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Roving Tars [Mar. 11th, 2009|02:29 am]
[music |"Maid in a Garret" by The Clancy Bros.]

Wow, an entry two days in a row. I may have to go to the doctor; I must be sick (well, sicker than usual, anyway).

Just got back from rehearsal, and things look like they're progressing. We've been invited to perform at the "Summer Sailstice" (or however you spell it) on Treasure Island and at the Pirate Fest in Vallejo (or wherever it happins this year).  Also, there's a new club opening up in a re-development area in Oakland (across from the main post office; visible from and accessible by BART at the Oakland West Station), and they want us to do a monthly gig. Add that to the summer monthly gig we do at the Berkeley Yacht Club, and it looks like we'll be performing a lot this coming season. I was enormously flattered at Consonace this weekend when Kristoph and Margaret told me that they thought we should be making actual money gigging around, and that they felt that there would be a market for the kind of trad stuff we do.  I'll admit that money would be nice, but we really do it because we love the music. (And I don't REALLY believe that there's much money to be made doing trad sea music -- but a pirate can dream, can't he?)
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Skepticism [Mar. 10th, 2009|05:39 pm]
Well, this makes it more than a year since I've posted anything on LJ.  I'm sure that's not a record, but seems worth a mention.  Anyway, I thought I'd share something I found.  Tim Minchin is a skeptic comic who sings most of his material.  That's certainly "found-filkish" is it not?  Anyway, here's a poem I thought aptly summarized much of my current feelings on things.  Hope you like it.  Full text below the cut


www.youtube.com/watch



"Storm"
Inner North London, top floor flat
All white walls, white carpet, white cat,
Rice Paper partitions
Modern art and ambition
The host's a physician,
Lovely bloke, has his own practice
His girlfriend's an actress
An old mate from home
And they're always great fun.
So to dinner we've come.

The 5th guest is an unknown,
The hosts have just thrown
Us together for a favour
because this girl's just arrived from Australia
And has moved to North London
And she's the sister of someone
Or has some connection.
As we make introductions
I'm struck by her beauty
She's irrefutably fair
With dark eyes and dark hair
But as she sits
I admit I'm a little bit wary
because I notice the tip of the wing of a fairy
Tattooed on that popular area
Just above the derrière
And when she says "I'm Sagittarien"
I confess a pigeonhole starts to form
And is immediately filled with pigeon
When she says her name is Storm.
Chatter is initially bright and light hearted
But it's not long before Storm gets started:
"You can't know anything,
Knowledge is merely opinion"
She opines, over her Cabernet Sauvignon
Vis a vis
Some unhippily
Empirical comment by me
"Not a good start" I think
We're only on pre-dinner drinks
And across the room, my wife
Widens her eyes
Silently begs me, Be Nice
A matrimonial warning
Not worth ignoring
So I resist the urge to ask Storm
Whether knowledge is so loose-weave
Of a morning
When deciding whether to leave
Her apartment by the front door
Or a window on the second floor.
The food is delicious and Storm,
Whilst avoiding all meat
Happily sits and eats
While the good doctor, slightly pissedly
Holds court on some anachronistic aspect of medical history
When Storm suddenly she insists
"But the human body is a mystery!
Science just falls in a hole
When it tries to explain the the nature of the soul."
My hostess throws me a glance
She, like my wife, knows there's a chance
That I'll be off on one of my rants
But my lips are sealed.
I just want to enjoy my meal
And although Storm is starting to get my goat
I have no intention of rocking the boat,
Although it's becoming a bit of a wrestle
Because - like her meteorological namesake -
Storm has no such concerns for our vessel:
"Pharmaceutical companies are the enemy
They promote drug dependency
At the cost of the natural remedies
That are all our bodies need
They are immoral and driven by greed.
Why take drugs
When herbs can solve it?
Why use chemicals
When homeopathic solvents
Can resolve it?
It's time we all return-to-live
With natural medical alternatives."
And try as hard as I like,
A small crack appears
In my diplomacy-dike.
"By definition", I begin
"Alternative Medicine", I continue
"Has either not been proved to work,
Or been proved not to work.
You know what they call "alternative medicine"
That's been proved to work?
Medicine."
"So you don't believe
In ANY Natural remedies?"
"On the contrary actually:
Before we came to tea,
I took a natural remedy
Derived from the bark of a willow tree
A painkiller that's virtually side-effect free
It's got a weird name,
Darling, what was it again?
Masprin?
Basprin?
Asprin!
Which I paid about a buck for
Down at my local drugstore.
The debate briefly abates
As our hosts collects plates
but as they return with desserts
Storm pertly asserts,
"Shakespeare said it first:
There are more things in heaven and earth
Than exist in your philosophy...
Science is just how we're trained to look at reality,
It can't explain love or spirituality.
How does science explain psychics?
Auras; the afterlife; the power of prayer?"
I'm becoming aware
That I'm staring,
I'm like a rabbit suddenly trapped
In the blinding headlights of vacuous crap.
Maybe it's the Hamlet she just misquothed
Or the eighth glass of wine I just quaffed
But my diplomacy dike groans
And the arsehole held back by its stones
Can be held back no more:
"Look , Storm, I don't mean to bore you
But there's no such thing as an aura!
Reading Auras is like reading minds
Or star-signs or tea-leaves or meridian lines
These people aren't plying a skill,
They are either lying or mentally ill.
Same goes for those who claim to hear God's demands
And Spiritual healers who think they have magic hands.
By the way,
Why is it OK
For people to pretend they can talk to the dead?
Is it not totally fucked in the head
Lying to some crying woman whose child has died
And telling her you're in touch with the other side?
That's just fundamentally sick
Do we need to clarify that there's no such thing as a psychic?
What, are we fucking 2?
Do we actually think that Horton Heard a Who?
Do we still think that Santa brings us gifts?
That Michael Jackson hasn't had facelifts?
Are we still so stunned by circus tricks
That we think that the dead would
Wanna talk to pricks
Like John Edwards?
Storm to her credit despite my derision
Keeps firing off clichés with startling precision
Like a sniper using bollocks for ammunition
"You're so sure of your position
But you're just closed-minded
I think you'll find
Your faith in Science and Tests
Is just as blind
As the faith of any fundamentalist"
"Hm that's a good point, let me think for a bit
Oh wait, my mistake, it's absolute bullshit.
Science adjusts it's beliefs based on what's observed
Faith is the denial of observation so that Belief can be preserved.
If you show me
That, say, homeopathy works,
Then I will change my mind
I'll spin on a fucking dime
I'll be embarrassed as hell,
But I will run through the streets yelling
It's a miracle! Take physics and bin it!
Water has memory!
And while it's memory of a long lost drop of onion juice is Infinite
It somehow forgets all the poo it's had in it!
You show me that it works and how it works
And when I've recovered from the shock
I will take a compass and carve Fancy That on the side of my cock."
Everyones just staring at me now,
But I'm pretty pissed and I've dug this far down,
So I figure, in for penny, in for a pound:
"Life is full of mysteries, yeah
But there are answers out there
And they won't be found
By people sitting around
Looking serious
And saying isn't life mysterious?
Let's sit here and hope
Let's call up the fucking Pope
Let's go watch Oprah
Interview Deepak Chopra
If you're going to watch tele, you should watch Scooby Doo.
That show was so cool
because every time there's a church with a ghoul
Or a ghost in a school
They looked beneath the mask and what was inside?
The fucking janitor or the dude who runs the waterslide.
Throughout history
Every mystery
EVER solved has turned out to be
Not Magic.
Does the idea that there might be truth
Frighten you?
Does the idea that one afternoon
On Wiki-fucking-pedia might enlighten you
Frighten you?
Does the notion that there may not be a supernatural
So blow your hippy noodle
That you would rather just stand in the fog
Of your inability to Google?
Isn't this enough?
Just this world?
Just this beautiful, complex
Wonderfully unfathomable world?
How does it so fail to hold our attention
That we have to diminish it with the invention
Of cheap, man-made Myths and Monsters?
If you're so into Shakespeare
Lend me your ear:
"To gild refined gold, to paint the lily,
To throw perfume on the violet... is just fucking silly"
Or something like that.
Or what about Satchmo?!
I see trees of Green,
Red roses too,
And fine, if you wish to
Glorify Krishna and Vishnu
In a post-colonial, condescending
Bottled-up and labeled kind of way
That's ok.
But here's what gives me a hard-on:
I am a tiny, insignificant, ignorant lump of carbon.
I have one life, and it is short
And unimportant...
But thanks to recent scientific advances
I get to live twice as long as my great great great great uncles and auntses.
Twice as long to live this life of mine
Twice as long to love this wife of mine
Twice as many years of friends and wine
Of sharing curries and getting shitty
With good-looking hippies
With fairies on their spines
And butterflies on their titties.
And if perchance I have offended
Think but this and all is mended:
We'd as well be 10 minutes back in time,
For all the chance you'll change your mind.


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Back from Conflikt [Jan. 29th, 2008|06:25 am]
[Current Location |In Bed]
[mood | tired]

Well, here I am in the early AM, just back from Conflikt and trying to stay awake long enough to take the kids to school before I crash for the day. Kathy, Isel (sp?) and I drove up through some nasty weather, but got there fine and managed to get some sleep before the first day's activities. The drive back was delayed by snow, but after we got going, there was no problem.  I'm not going to do a blow-by-blow, but in general, the con was great. The Seattle filk community is, it seems to me, much more excited and active than the Bay Area and LA, at least they were this weekend. (Maybe we're all just old and tired?)

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A Gig! [Sep. 13th, 2006|04:53 am]
[Current Location |Still taping]
[music |Cynthia McQuillin Singer in the Shadows]

BTW, for anyone interested: The Roving Tars, the sea music group I sing with, has a gig on Friday night at McGrath's Irish Pub on Alameda (1539 Lincoln Ave). 8:00 to 10:00, no cover charge. This will probably be substantially the same as our Baycon concert, so if you didn't like that, you may not want to come. (grin)
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I Can't Deal [Sep. 12th, 2006|07:12 pm]
[Current Location |stewing]
[mood | curmudgeonly]

I like a nice conspiracy theory as much as the next guy, but I've really had it up to here with the tinfoil hat wearing nutjobs. I guess its just 9/11 bringing them out of the woodwork, but I seem to be running into these guys all over the net in the past couple of days. Come on, folks; you really believe that the Shrub administration is actually capable of organizing a conspiracy the likes of which it would take to plan, execute and keep quiet a conspiracy the size of which it would take to blow up the WTC? These are the same guys incapable of running political damage control on the Valarie Plame fiasco (which, it now appears, was started by a political opponent of the administration, and in which no laws were broken). I know that this thought is not original with me, but wouldn't these covert masterminds have been better employed by smuggling in and setting up some WMDs in Iraq to justify that boondoggle?

This is besides the main thing that gets in my craw about the whole conspiracy theory thing: the crushing disregard and disrespect for the lives cut tragically short by the attacks. Harrumph.

Sorry for the untoward serious nature of this post; I've just been fed up. Thanks for letting me blow off some steam.

PS: here's a link: http://www.skeptic.com/eskeptic/index.html

Currently, that's an evaluation of the "9/11 Truth" movement, although IMNSHO, those folks care more about self-aggrandizement and sensationalism than truth. The article will change next week.
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Pegasus Awards [Sep. 9th, 2006|03:29 am]
[Tags|, ]
[Current Location |In bed with a computer on my chest.]
[mood |decisive]
[music |Slightly OVFF Track]

Well, I decided that if I'm serious about being in the filk community, I should vote on the Pegasus Awards, even if the likelihood of me actually going to OVFF is slim to none. Also, unlike past years, I've actually heard nearly all of the nominees preform their respective works. So, here's my thoughts (and votes), in case anyone cares what I think.

Read more )
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(no subject) [Aug. 29th, 2006|10:40 am]
[Current Location |Home again, home again, jiggity-jig]
[mood | tired]

Back from Worldcon; what a great time. Kathy, Andrea and I shared a motel room a couple of blocks from the convention center to save on costs, and it worked reasonably well. Except: those Google Maps overhead views aren't updated that well, and everything looks a lot closer to each other from the air than from the mare's shank level. The arrangement was, but to Kathy's mobility issues, that I'd drive her and Andrea over to the con w/our gear, and then park the car back at the motel, and hoof it back to the con. This worked well for a while, but I got awfully tired of trudging through LA heat on not-enough sleep. On top of that, one of the short-cuts I'd been planning on taking was blocked off by construction. Oh, well, builds character, I guess.

Filking was great, and it was fun to finally be able to put a face to the voices of people that I had never met before, including, but not limited to (sorry, legalese is my native tongue): Bill Roper, TJ Burnside-Clapp, Roberta Rogrow, Blind Lemon Chiffon & others. I was in poor voice and worse guitar (I've really got to start practicing more regularly), but managed to have fun anyway. More after the link.

Read more )
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I Love the 80's [Aug. 19th, 2006|09:53 pm]
[Current Location |Back in the Tub]
[music |Hair Bands! Woo!]

Well, I just spent WAY too much time reading a FARK thread that contained links to YouTube copies of videos from the 80's. Or, as we used to say, "When MTV actually played music." They say that, as a general rule, people continue to listen to the music that was popular when they were dating (not true in my case; I'm now almost exclusively folk and filk), but I have to say that it was very fun to watch all those old videos. The hair! The makeup! And that's just the guys! Annabella Lwin! Ummm. (Redrob, I'm going to the special hell, too.)

Anyway, if you want an earworm, here's Dog Police; a horrible song, but one that I can't help but to have go through my head anytime I see a BART Police car. ("BART Police! Where are you comming from?")

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0359hSerDeE
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Post-Bash Ennui [Aug. 15th, 2006|12:32 am]
[Current Location |On the cusp.]
[mood | exhausted]
[music |Celto-Rock]

So Kathy & Dean's Summer Bash was this last weekend, and it was great. Aside from the Hollands' kid having to go to the ER for a possible appendepectomy (false alarm, everything appears to be fine), I think that everyone had a good time. Filking was fairly non-existant except for Sunday night, when Steve Savitsky, I and a couple of others tried to get something going. We had a few good songs, but it didn't last nearly long enough for my tastes. Of course, I was left wanting more, so I guess that's OK. I finally got to sing "The Complete Ring of the Nieblelung (Abridged)," and got a pretty good reception. I think its too long, though; I may have to work on trimming it for future filksings.

Jack was there, which was great. I haven't seen him in a long time, and we played a fun game of Settlers with Shannon, Brittany and Michelle from Salt Lake. I also met Dominic, an old friend of Kathy and Dean's, who was a very fun guy. Sunday night, several of us stayed up until about 4:30 or 5:00 a.m. talking, trading songs, watching Coupling, and generally wishing that things could go on for another couple of days. I speak for myself, of course. I imagine that Kathy and Dean are pretty happy to get their house back.

One thing that is worrying, though, is that the 'tweens' were drinking fairly heavily, and Rob got himself plastered. He's of age now, so there's not much I can do about that, but I'm pretty disappointed in him. Jake was also sneaking drinks; how much he actually drank varies depending on who you talk to; his friend Oz apparently got himself pretty drunk. Hopefully, this will be a one-time occurrance; if not, I don't think I'll be able to bring the kids to the Bash, and that would be too bad. They really enjoy it there.

Right now, I'm back at my long-term project of getting my cassettes and LPs into mp3 format. I've got Four Shilling Short's NOW on the tape deck being converted into e-form. This is the "extended" version of the band, with Christoph, Margaret, Heather and several others along with Aog & Christy(?). As JohnO once said, there's really only one Celtic band in the Bay Area, and they just have different mixes of the same people. Anyway, this tape has one of my very favorite songs on it: "You're Not Irish." Its the only version I have in any form, so it'll be nice to be able to have it on my iPod.

Well, enough verbosity. I'll post this and see if I can figure out how to "friend" people.

'ta.
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Very First Entry [Aug. 9th, 2006|05:56 pm]
[Current Location |In the tub.]
[music |Filk]

OK, I've been avoiding this for a long time, now, but I figure that I ought to at least have a page. No promises on regular updates, or even whether or not this will ever get updated at all. I guess that I've always wondered whether or not I have anything useful to say. Or rather, whether or not anyone would ever be interested in what I have to say. However, for better or worse, here I am, tentatively putting my toe in the blog water. Who knows, perhaps in a few hundred years, someone, mining for fuel, will unearth these posts and marvel at primitive e-man, preserved perfectly in the e-peat. Or am I being too obscure?

Also, why is the "mood" menu so limited? I'd intended to put "ambivalent" as my current mood, but no such selection. Ah, well.
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