This year's addition to my gallery of Halloween costumes: Stork with twins.
Note that this is 100% costume. The actual twins will arrive soon, when the actual stork brings them.
agile / banjo / software development / technology
This year's addition to my gallery of Halloween costumes: Stork with twins.
Note that this is 100% costume. The actual twins will arrive soon, when the actual stork brings them.
The other day I was watching Jesus Christ Superstar on Ovation TV and I actually paid attention to the annoying lower third ad:
So I fired up my little-used Twitter account and tweeted a few plots. A few days later Ovation announced the winners and, whodathunkit, I won first place!
First prize was a pair of tickets to a Broadway show in the winner's area. I picked Hair, which is coming to Chicago in March.
Here's my winning tweet. Click on it to see what Broadway show I summarized. Float over it for a hint.
I summarized a bunch of others, too, like:
I have to admit that this one was my favorite:
After posting this one...
...I felt that I was being too wordy. So I summarized the same show in four words...
...then another in three..
...until I finally found one I could summarize in two words.
IMO, the best posts from my distinquished competitors were...
...and...
It's just occurred to me that the Hohner S32 Melodica...
...could be modded to make a steampunk keytar.
I mean, it runs on a stream of air so all you'd need to do is to connect up the steam! And it's only $38.99 at Amazon.
Yes, I know that other people have created so-called steampunk keytars...
...but those are electric instruments wrapped up in gadgetry. I'm talking about making music from actual steam heat!
A check-in on the Banjo versus TV project — J.R.'s ongoing plan to spend more time on his banjo than on TV. This post covers 8/15/2010 through 8/21/2010. J.R. has fallen way behind in his banjo blogging but is in catch-up mode and is rapidly gaining on the present week.
(I'm going to do us all a favor and censor some of the nastier photos in this blog entry. Watch out for those external links, though. Yuck.)
My hideously deformed toenails will help me become a better banjo player.
Before I explain how this is good for my banjo playing, let's look at this timelapse of two months of growth of a human fingernail following an accident...
...and consider some educational bullet points about fingernails and toenails. (Thanks, Wikipedia!)
When I started treating them several weeks ago, the nails of both of my big toes had been infected with a fungus. (Onychomycosis, probably.)
To treat them I'm following the advice in the wikiHow article How to Cure Toenail Fungus With Vinegar. Basically, you soak your toenails in vinegar once or twice each day for 10-15 minutes per soak. In such an acidic environment the fungus is unable to infect the newly-grown cells. Eventually the old, infected cells will be pushed forward to be clipped away and the fungus will be gone, leaving behind only nice, beautiful toenails. As you know from the above bullet points, that process will take 12 to 18 months.
I've decided to make the best of an ugly situation and use this toenail thing to my advantage. I've placed in The Fortress of Banjotude (which I described in last week's entry, remember?) a 9in x 13in baking dish with cover...
...that's just big enough for me to put my feet into. I keep it stocked with enough vinegar to cover my toes.
Once or twice a day I set a 15-minute timer, soak my feet in the vinegar and (on the good days when I'm not sidetracked by other stuff) practice my banjo.
Voila! Treatment and practice!
It's been working nicely so far. The last several weeks of new nail (approximately an eight of an inch) are pink and lovely, a severe contrast to the nastiness of the old nail material.
My banjo's sounding better, too.
Also in the last week:
I was on a trip out of town (kind of in the middle of nowhere, really) when my banjo developed a problem. The hole for the fifth string tuner had apparently widened and the tuner kept slipping out.
Fortunately there was a pile of wood chips nearby...
...and I always carry a pocket knife...
...so I was able to create a tiny shim that wedged the tuner into place until I could get back to civilization and effect the proper repairs.
Cross-posted at J.R.'s Banjo Hangout blog
A check-in on the Banjo versus TV project — J.R.'s ongoing plan to spend more time on his banjo than on TV. This post covers 8/8/2010 through 8/14/2010. Hey, this catch-up mode is really working! There are now only six Catsup Bottles of Behindness!
I mentioned a couple of updates ago that I've finally put the time into setting up The Fortress of Banjotude – the banjo practice area that I first described when I was making banjoversary plans last year. You remember those plans, right?
No link for that last one because I never did get around to describing the plan.
But over the last few weeks I have finally gotten around to executing on that "terrific banjo practice area" plan and I think I've put together a top-notch practice area.
Here's what The Fortress of Banjotude has. And yes, I went cheap on almost all of these things. It also helped that I've spread these purchases out over more than a year.
The key ingredient is my newly-finished silent practice banjo. It's an Oscar Schmidt OB5 banjo that I've outfitted with Sam Farris' Silent Banjo System – a replacement mesh head that doesn't vibrate the air but that works fine with an electric pickup like the K&K Hot Spot.
Using this banjo I can slam on the strings as much as I like without worrying about the neighbors (or the redhead) being bothered by the noise.
"Then how can you hear yourself play?" I hear you ask, because I'm right there with you.
I can hear it because I connect the pickup from my silent banjo to the preamp on my Behringer Xenyx 502 mixer...
...which mixes everything together to feed either into my Audio Unlimited 900MHz Wireless Stereo Headphones...
...for quiet times or into my Logitech S220 2.1 Speaker System with Subwoofer...
...if I want to be loud.
"But why do you need a mixer if you've just got the one input from the banjo?" I hear you ask, because I'm still there.
That's because there are other cool things in The Fortress of Banjotude that make noise and which need to be mixed in to, er, the mix.
For instance, I picked up a used Radio Shack MD-1210 MIDI keyboard...
...which has the advantages of being cheap, having accelerated keys and hosting a library of 100 drum machine sounds. So instead of a boring tick-tock metronome I can practice to the rhythm of CLUB POP, BOSSA NOVA, TEX-MEX or whatever strikes my fancy.
I also mix in the audio output of a used IBM ThinkPad R40 laptop...
...on which I have installed:
I connect the laptop to the MIDI keyboard with a E-MU Xmidi 1x1 USB-MIDI interface.
...which lets me use my MIDI keyboard as both input and output for my music software.
Take all of that and toss in the variety of utilitarian items (chairs, music stand, tuner, etc) that I described when I first conceived of The Fortress of Banjotude and I've got a practice area that I really, really love.
Also in the last week:
I've been using all of that stuff described above to practice Theme Time, the song that my banjo instructor David recommended the other week. I've been following the practice-no-faster-than-you-can-play-it-without-mistakes philosophy. I started at 45 bpm and gradually increased the tempo to 60 bpm. It's going to be a while before I can play it at 160 bpm like Jimmy Martin.
Cross-posted at J.R.'s Banjo Hangout blog