Saturday, 10 July 2010
Frankfurt
So this is my first stop. The plane flight was typically long any uncomfortable. I got a frisk search done on me in Sydney. I guesss that's what you get for wearing baggy cargo pants. I got into Frankfurt at 6am and of course couldn't check into my hotel that early so I spent several hours walking around the city without a map. I managed to find my way back to where I started. It took a while to get train from the airport because you could only get a ticket from a machine and there was no English instructions. All the machines were being poked by non German speakers trying to work out what to do. I kept pushing things that weren't actually buttons and eventually a German man pushed the buttons for me. Not a very tourist friendly place. There is no English anywhere. Makes life fun though.
I couldn't find any coffee because at 8 in the morning no one is out. The place got going by about lunchtime and the coffee shops opened up. But what about morning coffee? There are pretzel shops everywhere like the Chinese cake shops in Chinatown. And heaps of kebab joints. Today I got on a bus that loops the city and you can get on and off as much as you like all day. Lunch was frankfurts, sauerkraut and beer.
I couldn't find any coffee because at 8 in the morning no one is out. The place got going by about lunchtime and the coffee shops opened up. But what about morning coffee? There are pretzel shops everywhere like the Chinese cake shops in Chinatown. And heaps of kebab joints. Today I got on a bus that loops the city and you can get on and off as much as you like all day. Lunch was frankfurts, sauerkraut and beer.
Sunday, 4 July 2010
blogging from email
I'm going to blog a bit from hotmail while I'm on holidays. Sorry about the advertising and rubbish messages at the bottom. Can't be helped - it's hotmail.
Australia's #1 job site If It Exists, You'll Find it on SEEK
Australia's #1 job site If It Exists, You'll Find it on SEEK
Leave
I'm on long non-service leave at the moment. That's what you give yourself when you've spent most of your working career freelancing so have never accumulated long service leave. So after 15 years of working I'm finally having a big break.
I'm taking a combination of annual leave and leave without pay to have nearly 3 months off. Yay.
Here in Australia we get long service leave after 10 years. I've only been a permanent employee in my job for 6 years, so another 4 to go. I couldn't wait that long. Some European countries get it after 7 years. That would be nice.
Anyway, I've been bumming around at home, recovering from working really hard, catching up with friends, and getting ready to go overseas. This is a kind of big thing for me to do because last time I went overseas five years ago, I got really sick and ended up with chronic fatigue. I've never mentioned this before because I wanted this blog to be about the joys of life, not about the despairs of life. But there you have it. I've had a really rotten five years with bad health and other things going wrong, so it's just really nice that my health has improved enough that I feel up to trying travelling again and actually having a go at living life again after being shut up indoors for most of my life for 5 years, and going to work and not doing much else.
I'm confident I will stay healthy this time as I have my plethora of things I take which I'm pretty sure are doing me good. I'm hoping to blog regularly while I'm away. Hmm, we'll see how that goes, knowing my record at being a regular blogger...
I'm taking a combination of annual leave and leave without pay to have nearly 3 months off. Yay.
Here in Australia we get long service leave after 10 years. I've only been a permanent employee in my job for 6 years, so another 4 to go. I couldn't wait that long. Some European countries get it after 7 years. That would be nice.
Anyway, I've been bumming around at home, recovering from working really hard, catching up with friends, and getting ready to go overseas. This is a kind of big thing for me to do because last time I went overseas five years ago, I got really sick and ended up with chronic fatigue. I've never mentioned this before because I wanted this blog to be about the joys of life, not about the despairs of life. But there you have it. I've had a really rotten five years with bad health and other things going wrong, so it's just really nice that my health has improved enough that I feel up to trying travelling again and actually having a go at living life again after being shut up indoors for most of my life for 5 years, and going to work and not doing much else.
I'm confident I will stay healthy this time as I have my plethora of things I take which I'm pretty sure are doing me good. I'm hoping to blog regularly while I'm away. Hmm, we'll see how that goes, knowing my record at being a regular blogger...
Paintings
Here's another belated post - Back in April I went for a day trip to Canberra with fray and nag (not their real names) to see the masterpieces from Paris exhibition. It was a collection of post impressionist works from the Musee D'orsay.
It was pretty special to be able to see this collection as it never usually leaves Paris, but it came to Canberra, and I saw it.
The artists included Van Gogh, Gaugin, Cezanne, Degas, Monet and Serusier. I was interested to go and see them, but I was not expecting to be as blown away as It was great to see these famous paintings, many of which you would recognise from pictures in books etc. This was because seeing the paintings in real life is so much better than seeing a photograph in a book. The colours are so much more alive and you really get so much more of a sense of depth and illusion of light with the real thing. I had so much more of an appreciation of the talent and genius involved in these paintings after seeing them for real which I didn't have before.
A good example of this is Van Gogh's bedroom painting. The real one has such a better perspective of depth that just doesn't come across in a little photo.
I also really liked Albert Besnard's portrait of Madame Roger Jordain for the way the illusion was achieved in making the fabric of the dress look shimmery and three dimensional. Again not an effect you see in the photo, but if you stood back and looked at this painting from a distance the effect was really extraordinary.
See it by clicking here.
I think my favourite painting of the day was Beach at Heist by Georges Lemmen. Again, a little unimpressive in the photo, especially because the colours don't reproduce very well. But this is an example of pointillism, used by many artists painting with little dots and creating new colours by the combinations of dots rather than mixing the colours on a palette. It was fascinating looking form a distance to see the finished product and then looking really close to see how they had created the image with a series of different coloured dots working together.
Click here to see it.
Canberra is about 3 1/2 hours drive from Sydney, so we spent most of the day in the car and only about 2 hours in Canberra. It was good.
It was pretty special to be able to see this collection as it never usually leaves Paris, but it came to Canberra, and I saw it.
The artists included Van Gogh, Gaugin, Cezanne, Degas, Monet and Serusier. I was interested to go and see them, but I was not expecting to be as blown away as It was great to see these famous paintings, many of which you would recognise from pictures in books etc. This was because seeing the paintings in real life is so much better than seeing a photograph in a book. The colours are so much more alive and you really get so much more of a sense of depth and illusion of light with the real thing. I had so much more of an appreciation of the talent and genius involved in these paintings after seeing them for real which I didn't have before.
A good example of this is Van Gogh's bedroom painting. The real one has such a better perspective of depth that just doesn't come across in a little photo.
I also really liked Albert Besnard's portrait of Madame Roger Jordain for the way the illusion was achieved in making the fabric of the dress look shimmery and three dimensional. Again not an effect you see in the photo, but if you stood back and looked at this painting from a distance the effect was really extraordinary.
See it by clicking here.
I think my favourite painting of the day was Beach at Heist by Georges Lemmen. Again, a little unimpressive in the photo, especially because the colours don't reproduce very well. But this is an example of pointillism, used by many artists painting with little dots and creating new colours by the combinations of dots rather than mixing the colours on a palette. It was fascinating looking form a distance to see the finished product and then looking really close to see how they had created the image with a series of different coloured dots working together.
Click here to see it.
Canberra is about 3 1/2 hours drive from Sydney, so we spent most of the day in the car and only about 2 hours in Canberra. It was good.
Friday, 18 June 2010
Writer's Festival.
All right so I dropped of the earth for a while. Blame it on the writer's festival. I have resurfaced finally, even tho the festival finished about a month ago. It was big, a lot of work, but really awesome. We recorded 45 events, built a radio station on site, broadcast for 8 hours a day for 4 days in a row, lost a lot of sleep, but also had a lot of fun.
Our studio we built and me.
The view from the studio at the Writer's Fest. at Walsh Bay
Saturday, 1 May 2010
Collard
Last week for CFs birthday we went to the Vanguard and saw Collard Greens and Gravy, a blues trio who play heavy old timey, Mississipi style blues. The Vangueard is a great venue - small and plenty of vibe. we were upstairs where the air con was freezing. Here's a taste of the band.
Friday, 30 April 2010
Discovery Pics
One of my favourite jobs is to record Discovery at the City Recital Hall. Richard Gill conducts the Sydney Symphonia and discusses the music. We set up in a little studio overlooking the stage from the side. See some piccies.
Thursday, 29 April 2010
Writer's Fest
The planning for our presence at the sydney Writer's Festival is well underway. We will be recording about 65 events and going out live on digital radio for 8 hours per day. It's full on. I have to co-ordinate all of the recordings in about 10 different rooms. This involves making sure all the engineers have all the equipment they need, installing equipment into the rooms, looking after OH&S stuff, liasing with the venues and PA companies and Writer's festival people plus more...We are building a studio down at the venue to broadcast from. This is how it's going to work -
Wednesday, 28 April 2010
The Swell Season
Yeah I know this happened weeks ago, but I've got a bit of catching up to do on my life experiences. This blogging thing is after all so that I can remember what has happened in my life. So, easter monday at the Opera House from the very back row right in the middle I watched the Swell Season. I loved it. It was one of those concerts I wasn't sure how much I was going to like it, but I did. Ali has written things about the concert that I can't be bothered writing. In short, they sounded Irish, because most of them are, so the music has that Irish sound about it. The fiddler from the Frames did a fiddly solo which I loved. There was too much kick drum in the mix, probably because we were on the back wall. But you'd think the opera house would have perfect acoustics. Haha wink wink. NOT. UUUmm ... they write nice songs and play well. If you want a taste of who they are, watch the movie "Once". And the bit in the movie where they are in the recording studio take the cassette of their recording for a ride in the car to hear how it sounds in the car stereo - stuff like that really does happen. We used to go on many a car trip around the block to listen to the mix. And here's one you can watch on youtube, not the whole band, but still cool.
Check out his totally shredded guitar.
Check out his totally shredded guitar.
Wednesday, 24 March 2010
The adventures of Basil the basil - 6 months on.
Well here is Basil
Amazing isn't it?! Actually it's not Basil. It's another lot of basil I had to buy because Basil just wasn't coping with life.
This is Basil
Sad huh. Refuses to die, refuses to flourish.
Monday, 22 March 2010
redback
I found a large redback spider living in our outdoor furniture today. In ten years of living in Sydney this is the first redback I've seen here. Growing up in Brisbane we saw them all the time in our backyard and sometimes in the house. Once I pulled the mail out of our mailbox and there was the biggest one I had ever seen sitting there on the letters just near my fingers. I dropped the mail and ran. For you non-Australians, redback spiders are highly poisonous. Adults will generally survive a bite but it will make you pretty sick. Children can die from it.
Anyway you should be proud of me. I managed today to be brave enough to run and get the camera to take a picture of the spider before freaking out and killing it. However it did shake me up a little bit as later on when a cockroach ran over my foot I have to say I reacted quite unprofessionally.
Anyway you should be proud of me. I managed today to be brave enough to run and get the camera to take a picture of the spider before freaking out and killing it. However it did shake me up a little bit as later on when a cockroach ran over my foot I have to say I reacted quite unprofessionally.
Thursday, 18 March 2010
Wednesday, 17 March 2010
Mixing Al Green
Well this has to be one of the hardest mixes ever. With 40 channels of audio, and heaps of spill going everywhere, it's really hard to control the sounds. If I could leave all the vocals out it would sound really good. But the vocal mics all have heaps of drums spilling into them, meaning that you lose all the clarity in the drums. When you turn up the vocal channels the reverb on the vocal also adds to the drums reverb, plus the indirect sound of the drums in the vocal mics makes for mushy drums. So lots of compromising has to be done as far as reverb levels and drum levels go. Also we have to remember that vibe is good. Try to get across the feeling of being at a live concert without it sounding too crappy.
The other thing to deal with mixing a live concert as I've mentioned in other posts is to remove all the mud from the sound. With loud PA systems and foldback on stage you get a lot of general low to low mid frequency wash that just muddies up the sound. So this needs to be removed, sometimes at the expense of the induvidual sounds. But that's part of the trick of making things mix well together. Soloing a particular instrument and making it sound good on it's own usually does not mean it will sound good mixed in with all the other instruments. So you need to treat each element in the context of what everything else is doing. I've gone through and edited the tom tracks and the percussion tracks cutting out sections where nothing is going on on those channels to reduce unwanted noise.
The other thing throwing me into turmoil is learning to use the automation on the SSL. It's great having this so you can record all of your fader moves. In such a large band with so much going on it's good to be able to shift the focus and also help in reducing the mud and spill, and the automation is very handy for this. But when you don't know the automation system very well you get yoursef in all sorts of trouble with faders jumping all over the place. It's a good way to scare people into thinking there is a ghost in the room, but not a good way to get a mix done when time is so limited anyway. In the long run it saves time because you can keep going back finessing the mix, so it's worth the pain learning how to do it.
The other thing to deal with mixing a live concert as I've mentioned in other posts is to remove all the mud from the sound. With loud PA systems and foldback on stage you get a lot of general low to low mid frequency wash that just muddies up the sound. So this needs to be removed, sometimes at the expense of the induvidual sounds. But that's part of the trick of making things mix well together. Soloing a particular instrument and making it sound good on it's own usually does not mean it will sound good mixed in with all the other instruments. So you need to treat each element in the context of what everything else is doing. I've gone through and edited the tom tracks and the percussion tracks cutting out sections where nothing is going on on those channels to reduce unwanted noise.
The other thing throwing me into turmoil is learning to use the automation on the SSL. It's great having this so you can record all of your fader moves. In such a large band with so much going on it's good to be able to shift the focus and also help in reducing the mud and spill, and the automation is very handy for this. But when you don't know the automation system very well you get yoursef in all sorts of trouble with faders jumping all over the place. It's a good way to scare people into thinking there is a ghost in the room, but not a good way to get a mix done when time is so limited anyway. In the long run it saves time because you can keep going back finessing the mix, so it's worth the pain learning how to do it.
Tuesday, 16 March 2010
Apple
We had to clean out our pigeon holes at work for refurbishing of our lounge room. All that was left was my apple. A great opportunity for some artistic shots. But I wasn't as successful as I'd hoped. Most of the shots didn't turn out very well. This was the best I got. The dark background made it really hard to get a good setting for the lighting to look good.
Tuesday, 2 March 2010
Gonks
The world famous Gonks played a gig on the weekend for DBs niece's 21st. It was in the smallest venue ever. I had to leave all my extra basses at home. Here's what we played -
A Whiter Shade Of Pale
If You Leave Me Now
Make Me Smile (Come Up And See Me)
Better Be Home Soon
Besame Mucho
Light My Fire
634 5789
Stuck In The Middle With You
I Saw Her Standing There
Pretty Flamingo
Midnight Hour
Knock On Wood
Is She Really Going Out With Him
Moondance
After Midnight
Living For The City
Take Me To The River
Happy Birthday
Listen To The Music
Cajun Moon
Black Magic Woman
Cocaine
Eagle Rock
Ode To Billy Joe
I Got You (I Feel Good)
Johnny B. Goode
I Shot The Sheriff
Superstition
Sultans Of Swing
A Whiter Shade Of Pale
If You Leave Me Now
Make Me Smile (Come Up And See Me)
Better Be Home Soon
Besame Mucho
Light My Fire
634 5789
Stuck In The Middle With You
I Saw Her Standing There
Pretty Flamingo
Midnight Hour
Knock On Wood
Is She Really Going Out With Him
Moondance
After Midnight
Living For The City
Take Me To The River
Happy Birthday
Listen To The Music
Cajun Moon
Black Magic Woman
Cocaine
Eagle Rock
Ode To Billy Joe
I Got You (I Feel Good)
Johnny B. Goode
I Shot The Sheriff
Superstition
Sultans Of Swing
Thursday, 25 February 2010
Some Fremantle Piccies
Fremantle is the port at the mouth of the Swan River near Perth. It's been done up into a trendy place with cafes and shopping. Here are some of the old buildings.
Wednesday, 24 February 2010
Moonlighting
I have been spending the last 3 weeks at Classic FM, our classical music network. I'm filling in for someone away on holidays. I'm really enjoying the chance to work on some large classical recordings - something we don't get much of a chance to do at Radio National. I was trained in classical recording at uni, but I haven't had as much professional experience in that area as I have had in recording contemporary music and jazz. So I'm pulling out a lot of long lost information about classical recording techniques. And learning a lot. It's great.
Tuesday, 23 February 2010
Wind surfing in Perth
I'm sorry to all my fans - I went underground for a while. But as a special treat, I'm going to post photos of me trying wind surfing for the very first time in Perth on the Swan River. My cousin MH who is really experienced had access to a learner board and took me for my own special lesson. It was a lot of fun. The learner board made it a lot easier because it's big and floats easily, so I just had to balance on it. That wasn't so hard as I already had good balance from my childhood skateboarding. Now I wasn't really good or anythig, but I used to skate up and down our driveway as an 8 year old on my own green fibreglass skate board that I bought for $8 from K-Mart.
So once you are crouching on the board you have to pull the sail up and stand, which is quite difficult with wind blowing around. And then you sail. It was hard keeping control of the sail with the wind gusting and blowing it out of my hands, but I managed to have a good surf once I got the hang of it.
The good thing about the Swan River is it's very shallow for a long way out, so when you fall off it's pretty easy to get back on again. At one stage I got a bit carried away and ended up quite a long way out and fell off and to my shock my feet didn't touch the bottom!. And getting back on was impossible, so I had to swim the board closer to shore untill i could touch the bottom and scramble back on again.
The other thing you need to work out is how to go back the other way and and sail against the wind do you don't end up way down the other end of the river. I managed to even turn araound on the baord and sail back the other direction, right when MH wasn't watching. And then I wasn't able to do it again to prove I could do it.
I had to stop when the wind started to pick up too much and all the experienced surfers turned up. But I had a decent go. I ended up with very bruised shins from getting back on the board, plus a really big bruise from a fin scrape. Plus really sore arms from pulling the sail up.
So once you are crouching on the board you have to pull the sail up and stand, which is quite difficult with wind blowing around. And then you sail. It was hard keeping control of the sail with the wind gusting and blowing it out of my hands, but I managed to have a good surf once I got the hang of it.
The good thing about the Swan River is it's very shallow for a long way out, so when you fall off it's pretty easy to get back on again. At one stage I got a bit carried away and ended up quite a long way out and fell off and to my shock my feet didn't touch the bottom!. And getting back on was impossible, so I had to swim the board closer to shore untill i could touch the bottom and scramble back on again.
The other thing you need to work out is how to go back the other way and and sail against the wind do you don't end up way down the other end of the river. I managed to even turn araound on the baord and sail back the other direction, right when MH wasn't watching. And then I wasn't able to do it again to prove I could do it.
I had to stop when the wind started to pick up too much and all the experienced surfers turned up. But I had a decent go. I ended up with very bruised shins from getting back on the board, plus a really big bruise from a fin scrape. Plus really sore arms from pulling the sail up.
The damage
Thursday, 28 January 2010
Perth
I'm in Perth at the moment for KFs wedding. There is a 3 hour time difference between Perth and Sydney. It took me 2 days to recover from the travelling and jet lag. The flight took 5 hours. What a crazy long time to travel within the same country.
I'm feeling more normal now, on my 3rd day here.
The nice thing is being able to see some relatives while here. I'm staying at my aunt and uncle's place. Although sadly I haven't seen my aunt yet as she is in hospital with a bad back. But I have seen 3 of my 4 cousins so far which is great.
Last night was the hen's dinner. I didn't eat any hens. But I ate chilli mussels. Lots of them. 39 in all! I had to count them because the pile was so huge.
And last night I saw the sun set over the water which is a novelty for those of us from the eastern states.
I'm feeling more normal now, on my 3rd day here.
The nice thing is being able to see some relatives while here. I'm staying at my aunt and uncle's place. Although sadly I haven't seen my aunt yet as she is in hospital with a bad back. But I have seen 3 of my 4 cousins so far which is great.
Last night was the hen's dinner. I didn't eat any hens. But I ate chilli mussels. Lots of them. 39 in all! I had to count them because the pile was so huge.
And last night I saw the sun set over the water which is a novelty for those of us from the eastern states.
Saturday, 23 January 2010
Recording Al Green
The Sydney Festival is on at the moment. I recorded Al Green at the state theatre in Sydney. That was a pretty exciting gig to do.
We set up in the dressing room under the stage and were able to drop the cables through a hole in the floor. We used the Sadie LRX. It was a pretty big lineup - 40 channels in all. Drums, bass, guitar, 2 keyboard players, trumpet, trombone, saxaphone, 4 backing singers.
AL GREEN INPUT LIST
1 KICK BETA 52 GATE 1
2 SNARE TOP BETA 57 COMP 1
3 SNARE BOT SM 57 GATE 2
4 HAT SM 81
5 RACK 1 BETA 98 GATE 3
6 RACK 2 BETA 98 GATE 4
7 FLR 1 BETA 98 GATE 5
8 FLR 2 BETA 98 GATE 6
9 OH SR SM 81
10 OH SL SM 81
11 CONGA 1 BETA 98 SUB GROUP 1&2 COMP 3-4
12 CONGA 2 BETA 98
13 BONGOS BETA 98
14 TIMBALES SM 57
15 CHIMES SM 81
16 TOYS SM 81 SUB GROUP !&2 COMP 3-4
17 BASS ACTIVE DI COMP 2
18 GTR SENN 609
19 GTR SENN 609
20 LESLIE L 57
21 LESLIE R 57
22 LESLIE LOW 421
23 PNO L AKG 414 OR DI
24 PNO R AKG 414 OR DI
25 MOTIF 8 ES L DI
26 MOTIF 8 ES R DI
27 TRITON L DI
28 TRITON R DI
29 MOTIF 8 L DI
30 MOTIF 8 R DI
31 RHOADES DI
32 VOCODER 58
33 SAX 421 COMP 5
34 TRUMPET 421 COMP 6
35 TROMBONE RE 20 COMP 7
36 COOP KSM 9 COMP 8
37 DEBRA KSM 9 COMP 9
38 RUBY KSM 9 COMP 10
39 AL GREEN WIRELESS KSM 9 COMP 11
40 AL GREEN SPARE WIRELESS KSM 9 COMP 12
We set up in the dressing room under the stage and were able to drop the cables through a hole in the floor. We used the Sadie LRX. It was a pretty big lineup - 40 channels in all. Drums, bass, guitar, 2 keyboard players, trumpet, trombone, saxaphone, 4 backing singers.
Here's some pics of the sound check.
I went for the 2 performances which was lucky because the first night he was in a bit of a bad mood. But night 2 was great. I was able to go and watch bits of the show from side stage. And on the second night, because I already had the levels set from the first night I was able to nick out the front for a bit to watch the show. The only problems i had was a badly distorted vocoder on the first night because I didn't get a level check of it, but Al hated it so much he banned it from the show. Then on the second night I had a bit of a scare when the show started and it appeared like we didn't have Al's mic coming through. When I investigated I found out that his radio mic had had it's output level switched lower and no one had told me so the level coming into my recorder was way too low.
Here's the channel list with mic choice and inserts.
1 KICK BETA 52 GATE 1
2 SNARE TOP BETA 57 COMP 1
3 SNARE BOT SM 57 GATE 2
4 HAT SM 81
5 RACK 1 BETA 98 GATE 3
6 RACK 2 BETA 98 GATE 4
7 FLR 1 BETA 98 GATE 5
8 FLR 2 BETA 98 GATE 6
9 OH SR SM 81
10 OH SL SM 81
11 CONGA 1 BETA 98 SUB GROUP 1&2 COMP 3-4
12 CONGA 2 BETA 98
13 BONGOS BETA 98
14 TIMBALES SM 57
15 CHIMES SM 81
16 TOYS SM 81 SUB GROUP !&2 COMP 3-4
17 BASS ACTIVE DI COMP 2
18 GTR SENN 609
19 GTR SENN 609
20 LESLIE L 57
21 LESLIE R 57
22 LESLIE LOW 421
23 PNO L AKG 414 OR DI
24 PNO R AKG 414 OR DI
25 MOTIF 8 ES L DI
26 MOTIF 8 ES R DI
27 TRITON L DI
28 TRITON R DI
29 MOTIF 8 L DI
30 MOTIF 8 R DI
31 RHOADES DI
32 VOCODER 58
33 SAX 421 COMP 5
34 TRUMPET 421 COMP 6
35 TROMBONE RE 20 COMP 7
36 COOP KSM 9 COMP 8
37 DEBRA KSM 9 COMP 9
38 RUBY KSM 9 COMP 10
39 AL GREEN WIRELESS KSM 9 COMP 11
40 AL GREEN SPARE WIRELESS KSM 9 COMP 12
Thursday, 21 January 2010
holiday snaps
I've been holidaying and then got back to work for some busy times and was not thinking about blogging at all. Here are some piccies I took on my holiday over Christmas up at the Gold Coast.
Mt Warning
At the beach
Friday, 18 December 2009
Christmas Recipe Meme
I don't even know what a meme is. But I've been tagged for one. By Ally. By golly I hope I spelt that right.
I have to do this -
1. Link to the person who ‘tagged’ you.
2. Post the rules on your blog.
3. Post your favourite Christmas recipe – something traditionally festive or something that has become a tradition in your house.
4. Tag four people at the end of your post.
5. Let each person know they have been tagged by commenting on their blog.
6. Let the tagger know the entry is posted on your blog.
7. Post your own Christmas recipe within a week of being tagged to keep this on the move.
Well, the thing is, we don't cook in our household at Christmas. We eat seafood. You buy it, as close to the day as possible, if not on the day, pack it on ice with collanders underneath so the water drips out and the seafood doesn't go soggy. Then you arrange it on a platter. Then you eat it.
The tricky thing is cutting up the crabs. You have to get all the guts and gills out. Luckily they have their own builtin can opener thing. The flap undernneath - pull it up and then pull the top shell off. Then cut the body down the middle and then run it under a tap to wash away the gills and yukky stuff.
Ok here's the recipe bit -
Cocktail Sauce to dip the prawns and crab in.
Some mayonnaise
Some tomato sauce
Some worcestershire sauce
Some lemon juice
Some pepper.
Mix it all up.
Sorry, no quantities, but you use mostly mayonnaise and add bits of the other things till it tastes good.
Now the tricky bit is finding 4 people to tag who haven't already been tagged. Ummm Soph, Alison, Bonnie, and Nix.
I have to do this -
1. Link to the person who ‘tagged’ you.
2. Post the rules on your blog.
3. Post your favourite Christmas recipe – something traditionally festive or something that has become a tradition in your house.
4. Tag four people at the end of your post.
5. Let each person know they have been tagged by commenting on their blog.
6. Let the tagger know the entry is posted on your blog.
7. Post your own Christmas recipe within a week of being tagged to keep this on the move.
Well, the thing is, we don't cook in our household at Christmas. We eat seafood. You buy it, as close to the day as possible, if not on the day, pack it on ice with collanders underneath so the water drips out and the seafood doesn't go soggy. Then you arrange it on a platter. Then you eat it.
The tricky thing is cutting up the crabs. You have to get all the guts and gills out. Luckily they have their own builtin can opener thing. The flap undernneath - pull it up and then pull the top shell off. Then cut the body down the middle and then run it under a tap to wash away the gills and yukky stuff.
Ok here's the recipe bit -
Cocktail Sauce to dip the prawns and crab in.
Some mayonnaise
Some tomato sauce
Some worcestershire sauce
Some lemon juice
Some pepper.
Mix it all up.
Sorry, no quantities, but you use mostly mayonnaise and add bits of the other things till it tastes good.
Now the tricky bit is finding 4 people to tag who haven't already been tagged. Ummm Soph, Alison, Bonnie, and Nix.
Thursday, 17 December 2009
Gonks at the Chrissy Party
The world famous gonks performed again last week at our work Christmas party. It was a hoot. Who are the Gonks you ask? If you haven't caught up with the phenomenon,the Gonks are the band I play in. We started up in 2005 after a discussion one lunchtime between me, DB and JD in January that year. We thought it would be a good idea to put a band together out of the pool of sound engineers and play at the next Christmas Party. So we did. The Gonks were formed and this was our 5th Christmas together. No one has told us they are sick of us yet so we keep playing. And we had a bunch of guest artists join us (other staff members of RN). I'm the bass player. And there were no cools shots of the band taken this year for me to show you. They were either all out of focus or the lights were in the way. So instead enjoy the photo of me and LM acting up for the camera.
Set lists were -
Overkill (Lazlo Baine)
Is She Really Going Out With Him (Joe Jackson)
Copperhead Road (Steve Earle)
Money (Beatles)
Total Control (Motels)
Ode To Billy Joe (Billy Jo Spears)
Delta Dawn (Helen Reddy)
Crazy Little Thing Called Love (Queen)
The Times They Are A Changin’
Dancing In The Street
Come Up & and See Me (Steve Harley and Cockeney Rebel)
Man, I Feel Like A Woman (Shania Twain)
The Ballroom Blitz (The Sweet)
Besame Mucho (Luis Miguel Armando Manzanero)
Moondance (Van Morrison)
I Got You (James Brown)
Living For The City (Stevie Wonder)
Take Me To The River (Talking heads)
Stray Cat Blues (Rolling Stones)
Boys In Town (Divynils)
Don’t Stop (Fleetwood Mac)
634 5789
Black Magic Woman
Play That Funky Music
Knock On Wood
Pretty Flamingo (Manfredd Mann)
Better Be Home Soon (Crowded House)
Addicted To Love (Robert Palmer)
La Bamba
Set lists were -
Overkill (Lazlo Baine)
Is She Really Going Out With Him (Joe Jackson)
Copperhead Road (Steve Earle)
Money (Beatles)
Total Control (Motels)
Ode To Billy Joe (Billy Jo Spears)
Delta Dawn (Helen Reddy)
Crazy Little Thing Called Love (Queen)
The Times They Are A Changin’
Dancing In The Street
Come Up & and See Me (Steve Harley and Cockeney Rebel)
Man, I Feel Like A Woman (Shania Twain)
The Ballroom Blitz (The Sweet)
Besame Mucho (Luis Miguel Armando Manzanero)
Moondance (Van Morrison)
I Got You (James Brown)
Living For The City (Stevie Wonder)
Take Me To The River (Talking heads)
Stray Cat Blues (Rolling Stones)
Boys In Town (Divynils)
Don’t Stop (Fleetwood Mac)
634 5789
Black Magic Woman
Play That Funky Music
Knock On Wood
Pretty Flamingo (Manfredd Mann)
Better Be Home Soon (Crowded House)
Addicted To Love (Robert Palmer)
La Bamba
Thursday, 10 December 2009
Where the Wild Things Are
I saw it. Yes I did. I was reluctant, but my friend was keen. I really liked it. She didn't.
It was total childhood fantasy. There were big furry creatures and problems were solved by wrecking things, throwing each other around and jumping on each other without anyone getting hurt. It was fun. The last half hour or so did get serious when furry creatures did start to get hurt and they got serious about the issues and how people should be treated.
The experience was even more enjoyable for me because the theatre was filled with young children and throughout the whole film you could hear little voices asking "why did the monster...?" and "what's he doing...?" and why this and why that. I kept laughing because of the kids. And then in the film the main boy character and the big furry thing howled at each other, so after that kids in the theatre were howling. Very funny.
It was total childhood fantasy. There were big furry creatures and problems were solved by wrecking things, throwing each other around and jumping on each other without anyone getting hurt. It was fun. The last half hour or so did get serious when furry creatures did start to get hurt and they got serious about the issues and how people should be treated.
The experience was even more enjoyable for me because the theatre was filled with young children and throughout the whole film you could hear little voices asking "why did the monster...?" and "what's he doing...?" and why this and why that. I kept laughing because of the kids. And then in the film the main boy character and the big furry thing howled at each other, so after that kids in the theatre were howling. Very funny.
Wednesday, 9 December 2009
Musicals I have seen live (professional productions)
Phantom of the Opera (twice)
Les Miserables (twice)
Cats
The Secret Garden
Crazy For You
Pirates of Penzance
Singin in the Rain
The Lion King
The Boy From Oz
Billy Elliot
My Fair Lady
Wicked
Les Miserables (twice)
Cats
The Secret Garden
Crazy For You
Pirates of Penzance
Singin in the Rain
The Lion King
The Boy From Oz
Billy Elliot
My Fair Lady
Wicked
Thursday, 3 December 2009
Wicked
I saw Wicked the musical last night. I liked it. I like seeing musicals. Wicked is the story of the wicked witch from the Wizard of Oz, but it takes place before the story of the Wiazard of Oz.
It was at the Capitol Theatre in Sydney. This is a beautiful old theatre. It lookes like a castle inside and you look around in awe at the ornate decorations. If you want to book tickets there - the dress circle upstairs is pretty good because it's pretty steep seating so if you are short you won't have your view blocked. But don't get a box like we did. Sounded good until we couldn't see half the show because of obstructions.
I liked - the storyline, amazing costumes, interesting characters, set, sound, good production.
What it lacked - amazing memorable choruses and dance routines.
It was a good show, but would have been better if it had some great music to remember it by. And please don't cast famous people as a drawcard if they really aren't the most talented people available. Like the Idol reject Rob Mills, who had one of the lead roles. He can sing in tune and his acting was ok. But he wasn't fantastic, and he can't dance. I bet there are unknown musical theatre performers out there who could have done a much better job.
Tuesday, 1 December 2009
Mixing Garage Hymnal
Last week I had a very short amount of time to mix the Garage Hymnal sessions for the broadcast on ABC. Yes I was recording them for work purposes, not just for fun. They'll be broadcast on our religious music program this Friday night at 2105. Radio people always talk in 24hr time. We are clever in that way. Click here to find your fequency to listen to them.
Anyway, because we are churning out so much stuff all the time we don't spend heaps of time doing stuff. If I was mixing this session for an album release or something, I would have spent up to a day per song for mixing. Not because I'm slow, it just takes that long to get all the details right. But for this radio broadcast, I spent a day and a half on 7 songs. Then I spent a couple of hours mastering it. So it's a little rough, but it's meant to sound live anyway, otherwise you might as well just stick on the album. I'm pretty happy with how it turned out considering the time limitations. I would like to go back in sometime and do a bit of polishing, just for my own satisfaction.
So, some tricks in the mix. Don't tell the drummer, but I replaced the kick drum with a sample, thanks to the Drumagog plugin. It's really good because it replaces things sentitively and takes into account changes in dynamics, so it's not all the same level hits. It follows how the player played it.
Reverbs I used were the M6000 - 4 different engines going at once, plus the Lexicon 224. It is a bit of a luxury having so much expensive reverb to choose from.
The SSL automation is really nice and easy to use. And because the desk is fully digital I can go abck and recall all my mixes and tweak them anytime. The only problem is finding studio availability.
I had a bit of trouble getting the bottom end right becasue this was the first time I've mixed on the new speakers we have in the studio. they are Dynaudio Acoustics Airs. These are really nice speakers, but I just wasn't used to them so the bass is a bit out of whack. I really want to go back and fix that especially.
Here's some more photos from the session on the GH facebook page - http://www.facebook.com/pages/Garage-Hymnal/9949777114?ref=mf#/album.php?aid=133102&id=9949777114
Anyway, because we are churning out so much stuff all the time we don't spend heaps of time doing stuff. If I was mixing this session for an album release or something, I would have spent up to a day per song for mixing. Not because I'm slow, it just takes that long to get all the details right. But for this radio broadcast, I spent a day and a half on 7 songs. Then I spent a couple of hours mastering it. So it's a little rough, but it's meant to sound live anyway, otherwise you might as well just stick on the album. I'm pretty happy with how it turned out considering the time limitations. I would like to go back in sometime and do a bit of polishing, just for my own satisfaction.
So, some tricks in the mix. Don't tell the drummer, but I replaced the kick drum with a sample, thanks to the Drumagog plugin. It's really good because it replaces things sentitively and takes into account changes in dynamics, so it's not all the same level hits. It follows how the player played it.
Reverbs I used were the M6000 - 4 different engines going at once, plus the Lexicon 224. It is a bit of a luxury having so much expensive reverb to choose from.
The SSL automation is really nice and easy to use. And because the desk is fully digital I can go abck and recall all my mixes and tweak them anytime. The only problem is finding studio availability.
I had a bit of trouble getting the bottom end right becasue this was the first time I've mixed on the new speakers we have in the studio. they are Dynaudio Acoustics Airs. These are really nice speakers, but I just wasn't used to them so the bass is a bit out of whack. I really want to go back and fix that especially.
Here's some more photos from the session on the GH facebook page - http://www.facebook.com/pages/Garage-Hymnal/9949777114?ref=mf#/album.php?aid=133102&id=9949777114
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