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Archives for September 2007

My Favorite Trio Tracks: #11 – World In My Hand (from Trio Season 3, #7)

September 10, 2007 by krisis

Today’s song is “World In My Hand,” originally recorded in January of 2003 for Trio Season 3, #7.

When I wrote it in 1998, “World In My Hand” was my first “hit,” in a manner of speaking.

At the time I had only been writing songs for a few months, and only playing for about a year, but when I wrote the lyrics out on the first page of my new poetry notebook I knew I had tapped into something both more personal and more universal than anything I had previously written.

As my songwriting has become more and more refined my older songs have a tendency to drop off of my setlists – especially songs I wrote before college. Yet, no matter how much my songs evolve, this one will always be a favorite.

Filed Under: songwriting, Trio Tracks

My Favorite Trio Tracks: #12 – Enjoy the Silence (from Trio Season 2, #7 – “Boston” [secret track])

September 9, 2007 by krisis

Just a brief write-up for tonight’s Trio favorite, as I’ve been awake just about twenty-four hours, which included a lot of Trio remastering, walking, playing guitar, and being a miserable Philadelphia sports fan.

Trio has featured it’s fair share of covers, but I don’t think I’ve ever played one with so little preparation as “Enjoy the Silence,” which appeared in the “Boston” secret track attached to Season 2, Trio #7.

All three songs in the trio were covers of songs I spent a lot of time listening to during my trip to see Tori in Boston a month before. This very well may have been meant to be a practice take right up until I made it through the song, whereas the following two – more-rehearsed – covers wound up being train wrecks. I take special delight in how well-formed and supported the vocals are for the time period.

Tune in tomorrow for another Trio highlight, squeezed into my day somewhere between work and a jam with a new drummer (!).

Filed Under: Trio Tracks

Drastic Fantastic

September 8, 2007 by krisis

Rob Sheffield’s review of KT Tunstall’s upcoming Drastic Fantastic is one of the best record reviews I’ve read in a magazine in a long time.

Not only does it tell a story totally separate from its review, but it gives you an exact sense of what you’ll be hearing on the album.

Sheffield released a memoir earlier this year, partially detailing his life with his late wife.

Filed Under: rollingstone

Pre-Autumnal Misery, or Histaminic Kryptonite

September 7, 2007 by krisis

As if trying to balance out some great karmic equation, for the duration of what has – despite containing my birthday – grown to be my favorite month of the year I am cursed with severe seasonal allergies that no medication can quite quiet.

How severe? It took not one, but two separate 24-hour prescription decongestants to open up my nasal passages for an 8-hour day of work, during which I was a dessicated zombie-husk of my normal chipper self.

I quickly discovered that if you’re a designer you do not want someone delirious and half-blind from dehydration to be your proofreader.


My allergies initially emerged one day when I was eleven. We were on a boat, near the banks of some brackish body of water in the Philadelphia area, and we passed by a bevy of reeds.

“Achoo. Ahhhh-choo. Atchu. Atshooooo.”

My convulsive sneezing was unstoppable, even after I had been brought below deck and told to breath through a damp washcloth. One of those river reeds was my histaminic kryptonite, and it had doomed me to a life full of seasonal suffering.


When I was in highschool my mother met another nurse who worked in an allergy clinic. Clearly, I was an early topic of conversation, and one night my mother arrived home to inform me that I could make hundreds of dollars if I participated in an allergy study. I would go off my normal medication for a few weeks, taking the study meds instead.

To a teenager it seemed like the easiest money possible; I begged her to sign me up.

It was then that the agony began. For a week before being screened for the study I had to forgo all allergy medications, prescription or otherwise, so that the study could get a baseline – to prove I was allergic enough to join.

I showed up at the end of the week, splotchy, stuffy, grumpy, and unable to complete a sentence without adding several sneezed punctuation marks.

I qualified with flying colors as a perfectly allergic specimen, and gladly received my study medication.

I knew that some people would receive placebos, but I assumed that – given my hyper-allergic state, I would clearly qualify to be the lab rat for the medication actually being studied.

Oh, but, through the cruel irony of pharmaceutical science and my mother’s error of omission, I hadn’t fully grasped the concept of a “double-blind study.”

I returned to the office several weeks later, splotchier, stuffier, and grumpier than I had been on my previous visit.

The nurse received me with a grin, which I returned with a doleful stare. She drew some blood, despite my convulsive sneezing, and then sat me down to survey me.

“I see here that in our last interview you said on a scale of 1 to 10 – 1 being worst and 10 being best – that your quality of life was a 3 when not taking your allergy medication. What would you say your quality of life is now, after several weeks taking our study drug?”

I glared back at her, probably sniffling.

“I’d say 2. Definitely a quality of 2.”

“Well that’s… unusual. For quality to go down. Why would you say that is?”

“Because I’m taking the placebo.”

She smiled bashfully. “Now, now, I can’t reveal what you were taking because I don’t know.”

She pronounced the last three words in an intensely cute, almost sing-songy way.

I willed myself to sneeze on her, but I chanced upon a rare sneezeless moment in my life. I settled for glaring at her in stoney silence.

“I’m going to go down a list of symptoms, and you tell me how bad they’ve been this past week – 1 being worst, and 5 being not bad at all.

“Ready? Sneezing.”

“One.”

“Congestion.”

“One.”

“Itchy eyes.”

“One.”

The survey continued, interminably, each successive question more and more antogonizing, and my answers steadily monosyllabic.”

“Okay, finally, I have an open-ended question for you. What’s an everyday activity you perform while on your normal allergy medication, and how has that activity been impacted by taking our study drug?”

“Crossing streets.”

“Hmm?”

“Crossing streets.”

“I, ahh… I see.”

We stared each other down for several long seconds.

“That’s an… an unusual activity to name. I was looking for something more like playing sports, or shopping.”

“Well,” I sniffed, “you see, I would have to cross a street to do either of those things. But I haven’t been able to cross streets unassisted for the duration of the study. Because, my average sneezing fit (currently averaging upwards of seven and half sneezes) lasts longer than the duration of a yellow light in Philadelphia, so unless I start crossing at the very beginning of a green I’ll wind up stuck in the middle of the street when the light turns red, sneezing and half-blind, until some inattentive motorist just mows me down And, don’t even get me started on South Philly stop signs.”

“I’ll just put down ‘going for walks.’ Would that be okay?”


If you’ll excuse me, I think that’s as much blog as I’m good for in my current state. I’m off to a land of cold compresses and 75mg of Benadryl washed down with some high-end vodka.

Filed Under: high school, stories

Acting Agents, Resizing Smart, Blue Collar to Middle Class, Indie Rock Stars, et al

September 6, 2007 by krisis

Speaking of which, here are the links I’ve accumulated since last week.

I’m a great fan of Television Without Pity, a snarky website that recaps all of the best (and worst) serialized television shows, so imagine my delight to find their new feature “Ask An Agent.” Sure, you’ve seen talent agents in movies and teevee shows, but are they as heartless (and charming) as Entourage’s Ari Gold? TWP correspondent Wing Chun examines every angle with Canadian super-agent Bryan Misener, including perspectives on the differences between Hollywood and Toronto.

In a random hunt for some sort of Madonna content (god only knows what) I came across a Drowned World Tour recap on Troubled Diva, which I have since taken a bit of a liking to.

If you are a communications or graphic design nerd of any size, Communication Nation’s post on smart image resizing is absolutely required viewing. That’s the sort of thing I’ve always imagined computers would be able to do. Amazing.

What If No One’s Watching puts words to a sensation I’ve experienced but never been able to articulate: transitioning from working class roots to middle class adulthood. Now, I don’t fall so squarely into “working class,” but I (and my family) have definitely shifted upwards into the “middle class” category in my lifetime.

The transition has never been a threat or a disheartenment to me, but sometimes in my newfound yuppy life I am caught off guard when I realize that hardly anyone I know or work with has, say, been on food stamps before. At least Lindsay and I can reminisce about standing in line for government issued cheese.

Did you know that theversion of “Labor Day” in other countries such as Germany correlates not to their own nationalist labor movement, but to that of the United States? I sure didn’t, but Theatrical Milestones offers an explanation. Also, foodie blog Ethicurean draws a dotted line between unions and America’s agriculture.

Oh, and a link from Epi: Organic To Be.

Okay, I can admit I am not an automaton, and some things make me laugh. Such as this narrative eBay description linked by Writing Aspirations. The seller (a blogger) took an unusual approach to describing her product that, in this case, garnered something like a 3000% markup over what she originally paid.

Sometimes a link gets so memetacular that you can witness it sloughing through your RSS feed, as an illustrated coffee guide has been recently. Usually I ignore these sorts of things, but I cannot tell you how often I’ve explained the contents of this chart to family members and co-workers since my barrista days came to a close. I’m going to post it in my freaking cube for reference.

Longtime read Coolfer informs me that uber-producer Rick Rubin is now the co-head of Columbia records (via a great NYT article). And, yes, the idea of this one heavily bearded wise man saving the entirety of the music industry is a little hyperbolic, but clearly he comes down on the side of artist development, if only based on how many bands he’s produced where they’ve wound up sounding more like themselves than ever before.

And, while we’re on the topic of music, I must reiterate my addiction to my two recent mp3blog finds The Yellow Stereo and Philly-based Some Velvet Blog. Why? Because they like indie music, but they still have good taste – a trait critically missing from those who wet themselves over every yowling tuneless indie band that galumphs down the pitchfork pike.

Georgie-James is one of the rare bands that shares genre-space with our Arcati Crisis duo. Listen to “Cake Parade,” which is especially Gina-ish. I hope we get that catchy when we fill out to band size. The Magic Numbers seem to be in that category as well, except Gina can sing circles around their chick(s).

Säkert is cool, and all the more catchy for not being in English. I’m also inexplicably into “Summer In the City” by The Boys And Girls Club. Amos The Transparent seems to have some merit, but is not making my needle quiver, so to speak.

Closing out the music topic, Scott Andrew. He was half of the fabulous Pet Rock Stars, who wrote and recorded two songs from across the country during Blogathon 2003. In the intervening years he’s become the rocker/blogger than I’ve always aspired to be, seamlessly integrating his music into his page while keeping it a blog.

Scott has a new record coming out, the progress of which you can follow back to the cover shoot, or even the decision about whether it was going to be an album or not.

I would support Scott in concept, except for he’s an amazing singer and songwriter, so I can support him in reality instead. I’m looking forward to catching up to him a bit this year.

(Also, note to self: you have three days left to sponsor the new Mieka Pauley disc, which is going to be excellent. Check out her mindbendingly awesome “All The Same Mistakes” on Myspace.)

Finally, some quick hit links.

Ffffound is, in the words of Fresh Arrival: del.icio.us for cool photos you find online. Handy when you’re looking for a post topic in a pinch.

From the increasingly beloved MLarson: Indexed Blog, which is easier to see than to explain. Monome, an intriguing Philly-based design interface that frankly makes no sense to me but is still quite fascinating (note to self: maybe interview them?). You don’t need a plan, you need skills and a problem. A sentence truer than you think.

From the lengthily adored Make You Go Hmm: G.ho.st is a virtual desktop, useful if you work across several different computers each day. Aerogel is the lowest density product currently known to man, which I only halfway understand (decent explanation here) and will have Gina elaborately describe to me over the weekend. PriceProtectr tracks the things you’ve bought in case the price drops soon enough for you to get a rebate. Did you know that Amazon will refund the difference in price within 30-days of purchase? I bet you didn’t.

Fin: Heather Champ with my photo of the week.

Filed Under: identity, linkylove, teevee, weblinks Tagged With: Madonna

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