Monday, November 12, 2012

The far end of the line



I went to the end of the MTR line on Sunday to practise with my band in a rehearsal room housed, as is common here, in a large industrial tower block. Due to reading Burning Chrome at an impressionable age, I viewed what we found there as something Gibsonian, but our guitarist compared it to an episode from the Grand Theft Auto games -- travelling to a fairly bleak location, where behind the allotted door,  one or more larger than life people go about their business.

This place is owned by a family of Russians whose main business is running a recording studio and events company -- apparently the events business run by the daughter is the profitable part of the business, but she is kind enough to subsidise her parents and in particular her father's love of very loud music. There is an eight-person, marble-topped dining table in the corridor outside the studio. I'm not sure who it belongs to.

The studio rooms are a lot like the way I always imagined the back rooms at TV stations to be in the early 90s -  to get from one room to the next you have to squeeze past colossal amplifier stacks, electrical equipment, and all sorts of machines with lots of dials on them. The recording room houses banks of keyboards and a mixing desk with so many parallel tracks - each with its own array of switches, dials and indicators - that it's hard to imagine one person could operate it alone.

The father of the family is a long-haired man in his 50s, with an extensive musical history and the life stories to go with it. "For 15 years I play rock'n'roll, all across Soviet Union. No matter you are playing for 50,000 people, 200 people, always they give you the same ... thirteen rubles. Maybe eight dollars... Then Gorbachev makes Perestroika, opening up, and I say bye-bye, go to California."

Our guitarist texted me the next day. "This man is a legend and will be essential to our myth-making."

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

An ocean of violets in bloom



Despite the best efforts of bulk-buying scalpers and Ticketek Australia's unusually finicky postal address fields, yesterday I managed to successfully buy a ticket to see Prince in Melbourne on my birthday this year.

One ticket only, sadly, so I would have to go by myself, which is a little discouraging. Still... Prince!

The other issue is of course getting there without bankrupting myself, so I may end up just selling the ticket on.
But let's see how that goes. It would be a nice trip. I hear Melbourne's lovely.

In a fit of Prince-thusiasm, I created an account on prince.org, as I think the forums there might prove useful.
To do so, of course, I needed to choose a username, and I am quite pleased with mine. It has to be said, though, how does any online Prince-based community go for more than a year without the name "Curious Poses" already being taken?


Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Potrebbe essere stato un errore


It may have been a mistake to let slip that I can read Italian. Now I am getting all sorts of things sent to me from the Beijing office where [large Italian automotive company] have sent them emails and press release edits in Italian that no one can read.

On the other hand, this is the best workout of my Italian ability since I left primary school (where lessons were laid on courtesy of the Italian embassy, for reasons that I was never entirely clear on).

Monday, March 26, 2012

Minor pleasures department - item 3425


Biting open an all-in-one coffee sachet with your teeth, so that you feel a bit like a Napoleonic infantryman loading a musket while making your morning beverage.