Tea reviews

Jul. 6th, 2009 02:14 pm
bunrab: (teacup2)
Check out my latest reviews at the Tea Review Blog:
Formosa Fanciest from Narien Teas - http://www.teareviewblog.com/?p=4561
Green Apple Organic Green Tea from Liber-TEAS - http://www.teareviewblog.com/?p=4474
Devonshire Earl Grey from Upton Tea - http://www.teareviewblog.com/?p=4441

Have some photos of Friday's parade:



bunrab: (alien reading)
Let's see. First, Gaslight Grimoire, an anthology of Sherlock Holmes fantasy stories (sort of) - which I've done an Amazon review of, but it's not posted yet; I'll provide a link as soon as that's posted.

Speaking of which, could some of you go read my reviews for The Magicians and Mrs. Quent and Grease Monkey and Life Sucks, click on the little Yes buttons for my reviews, and maybe even add comments to the reviews? Thanks!!

Speaking of graphic novels, which the last two mentioned above are, I continue my efforts to decide whether graphic novels count as real books for grown-ups, not just comic books with too much self-esteem. One of the funniest is Rex Libris: I, Librarian by James Turner, which is an intergalactic space opera featuring a librarian who will go to any lengths to recover an overdue book. First published as 32-page comic books, this book is a collection of 5 of those, which comprise a complete story arc. Great dialogue, good characters, fun light-science-fictiony plot. Don't miss out on meeting Rex's boss, Thoth! (Especially funny to me since I have recently been to see a bunch of Egyptian mummies at a museum.)

The source of the amigurumi lemur is a book called Tiny Yarn Animals by Tamie Snow. Of no interest to anyone who doesn't crochet, but if you do crochet, you gotta try a couple of these critters! The lemur is the cutest, of course, but the beaver is also tooo cute, and if you're a fan of Kitsune in Japanese stories, then you'd like the little red fox.

OK. Off to band rehearsal in Essex. Tomorrow: saxophone lesson. Note to self: must buy more La Voz reeds; Bill's here in Catonsville doesn't carry La Voz bari reeds, despite that it's a large store; the much smaller L&L in Gaithersburg has a much better selection of reeds, as well as a fantastic repair department. So tomorrow is Gaithersburg on the way to Montgomery Village rehearsal!
bunrab: (Default)
Yesterday was my saxophone lesson. I came home with a different soprano sax than I had left with. Pictures soon. The upgrade did not cost much, and it's a MUCH better horn - not any shinier, but ergonomically much easier to play. The longer I take lessons, the more I learn about what works and what doesn't on an instrument with that many little moving pieces, that I had never thought about before.

I'm sure I had already mentioned my new bari sax mouthpiece, the Jody Jazz 6; I wound up getting almost the same model for the soprano sax, the 6* (pronounced six-star) [http://www.jodyjazz.com/hr.soprano.html]. I also got a new used mouthpiece for the tenor a couple weeks ago, a German make called Strathon, with a built-in reed holder, obviating the need for a ligature, AND a built in sliding baffle which can change the chamber shape, and thereby change the sound from fairly mellow (though still jazzier than my C-Star mouthpiece) to quite edgy. I could never have afforded one new, but used was do-able. It is the Adjustotone model. (Strathmann's web site has only minimal info about them, and no pictures; they seem to now be far more into making their alto flutes than their sax and clarinet mouthpieces - but here's a link, such as it is: http://www.strathmann-musicinstruments.de/gbpatente_u_lizenz.htm)

Today, we retrieved the fake tree and the pertinent ornaments from the storage unit; we'll get it up over the weekend and I'll take photos then. If it snows tomorrow, S will NOT be doing TubaChristmas outdoors at the harbor, so we'll get it up then, otherwise, it'll be Sunday.

Reminder: [livejournal.com profile] richspk, [livejournal.com profile] guavmom, and [livejournal.com profile] n5red, I still need your snail addies.
bunrab: (soprano_sax)
Sunday the Montgomery Village Community Band played at Falcon's Landing, a large Air Force retirement community in Sterling, VA. It went well - Wednesday's dress rehearsal had been awful, but the concert went much, much better. There are still a couple percussion players who can't tell the difference between 6/8 and 2/4, but what can you do? The audience outnumbered the band, always a goal for community bands, and the facility also broadcast the concert over their CCTV to the people in the assisted living and nursing home areas who couldn't come to the community rooms. On the way home, we went looking for local food for a late lunch, and happened upon a newish Persian Restaurant there in Sterling, which turned out to be wonderful food and nice people - the place was empty except for us, so we chatted with the owners for a bit, stuff like that. (Rainy Sunday afternoon, and too new to have its name on the shopping center signboard out at the street, and 4:30 p.m. isn't a heavy traffic hour for restaurants anyway.)

Monday is Bel Air band rehearsal. The youngest of our tenor saxes wasn't at rehearsal - 2 of his best friends at VA Tech, one of them dead, the other one of the critically injured. So he had other stuff to think about besides rehearsal.

The 4 tenor saxes, it's odd how we pretty much span 4 generations - Bob's 80, a "Greatest Generation" type; I'm "Baby Boomer", Alicia's Gen X (mid-thirties), and John is 20. Besides the tenor, I am also using my bari in one piece, to cover a contra-alto clarinet part in a new piece, where the composer wrote in way more bass parts than most community bands can cover. No, the range on the bari isn't quite the same, but it sounds a lot more like a contra-alto than a tuba does, and besides, we need the tubas to cover the string bass and contra-bass clarinet parts as well as tuba, and there's only 3 of them. I like getting more practice at switching between instruments.

Sunday the 22nd, we leave for Austin. Monday evening we're having supper with band friends; Tuesday evening we'll probably stop by ASB rehearsal. Wednesday we're eating lunch with Steve's dad, and possibly a couple of his other relatives (there's not many left). Saturday evening is the Austin Symphonic Band's Silver Anniversary concert, followed by a big party, which we're going to - and then, way too soon on Sunday the 29th a.m., we climb back on a plane so we get back here by 1 p.m., which gives us time to nap and change clothes and be in Perry Hall before 7 p.m. to play a concert with the Baltimore Symphonic Band. (And looking only slightly more into the future, the following Sunday, May 6, is the Bel Air band's spring concert.)

Anyway, the reason I mention the details of when we're eating with whom is so that those of you I hope to visit with (Sam, Anita, Liz...), can be ready to tell me when would be a good time, working around what we're already doing, to stop by, say hi, possibly eat a meal or at least chat, when I call, probably this Thursday evening. We'll be staying with Jerry & Kathy, which is a fairly convenient in-town location (and thank you so much, guys, for the room - Steve's dad is having problems getting enough water for even one person out there in Oak Hill!)

Our sump pump worked fairly steadily today. It's stopped raining now. There are downed trees all over the place from the winds. All the traffic lights on Frederick Road (Catonsville's main street) were out of power, and a bunch of ones on roads parallel to it as well. Which didn't help the crowd around the post office. The wait today was only about half an hour; tomorrow will be MUCH worse. So I'm glad we got that done today. Last year, paying 2005 taxes, we didn't owe much to MD as partial-year residents, but for 2006, since we were residents all year, we owed state and city taxes, which of course aren't withheld from our Texas pensions. Oh well, we really can see that we get some services for our tax money here, so it's not like we shouldn't do our part.

I'm not going to bother watching CSI:Miami any more; it's become all Hummer and no cattle, if I may mix my metaphors.
bunrab: (saxophone)
I got to play my soprano sax at rehearsal last night, for one number, a march. Most of the pieces we're playing don't have soprano sax parts. It turns out to be easier to switch between bari and soprano in one rehearsal, than between bari and tenor, because they're far enough apart that there's no confusion or "almost" about the embouchure. That was fun!
bunrab: (music)
No, that's not a guinea pig, it's a soprano saxophone.
As in, I've just purchased a new used one. I seem to be becoming a saxophone collector. It won't help if I promise to use my saxophones only for good, because everyone knows saxophones are intrinsically evil, and the soprano sax is one of the evilest. I am looking forward to playing it.
pictures behind the cut )
Geeky details: It's an Antigua. I am far too lazy to look up the year based on the serial number. Included in the price was a Pro-Tec case, making it an even better bargain. I got a C-star mouthpiece to go with it; I tried a couple brands including a VanDoren, but you know, no matter what size sax I'm playing, I guess I like the C-star best. Geez, the price on mouthpieces has gone up.
This does destroy my discretionary budget for a couple months. So I won't be attempting to go to the Pittsburgh Knitting Festival in Feb., nor the RG in New Hampshire. We shall have to see what the budget looks like by April, at which point we also need to decide between (let alone do both) Penguicon and visiting Austin around [livejournal.com profile] squirrel_magnet's birthday and an Austin Symphonic Band event.

In other news, squirrel_magnet picks up the new bike Thursday!! Pictures shall be forthcoming.

Incidentally, I shall be AFK Friday afternoon through Monday night, as I am going to NY to visit a friend and help her out with some stuff, and her computer is cranky, and I am traveling too light to carry a laptop with me.
bunrab: (music)
Saturday was the Navy Band Saxophone Symposium, down at George Mason U in Fairfax. (Well, it started Friday evening, but we had those symphony tickets. Incidentally, the Baltimore Sun's reviewer pretty much agreed straight down the line with my opinions on that concert.) So down we headed to Fairfax, halfway around the nest of evil that is the DC Beltway.

Community saxophone choir rehearsal: the usual bunch of high school kids who think they're hot sh!t, attacking all notes and blithely disregarding all accidentals. But some fun stuff to play, several arrangements by the guy who was conducting the session, Rob Holmes, who plays bari sax, amongst other things, in the Navy Commodores, the jazz band. Since the saxophone is the saxophone, the whole symposium is tilted more toward jazz than toward classical/concert band.

Vendors' room: not enough vendors. But I did grab a moment to speak to the guys from L&L about test-driving some soprano saxes on Wednesday afternoon. The Baltimore SB is doing de Meij's "Lord of the Rings" this spring, and the soprano sax solo is mine if I can do it.

Interservice Saxophone Ensemble: great group, great stuff. A bass sax player, who is also an arranger; they did one of his arrangments which was called "Nick at Night" and was a medley of every corny sixties cartoon and comedy show that's now in eternal syndication. Of course he wrote some great bass sax lines into it!

Whine: next recital we wanted to attend was the Marine Band Sax Quartet; two faults with that: (1) It was in another building, way uphill from the main building, and (2) they played Albright's "Fantasy Etudes." Is there some rule that says someone has to play the Fantasy Etudes every year? I didn't like that piece 10 years ago, I didn't like it last year, and I still don't like it. It consists mainly of "sound effects" rather than music, and just because something can be done on a saxophone doesn't mean it should be done. (Words to live by for many disciplines, including HTML.) Anyway, that said, they certainly did it very well.

The next thing we wanted to go to was cancelled, so it was over to the Thai restaurant across the street for a snack. We seem to wind up there every time we're in Fairfax.

The Community Sax Choir performed in the lobby before the big Commodores concert. It went OK, for something that had had 25 minutes prior rehearsal, had several people who weren't at rehearsal show up and sight read, and about half the people who had been at rehearsal didn't show up. We had fun, anyway, and the audience applauded.

The Commodores concert was fantastic. The guest soloist was Chris Potter, who has an awful lot of awfully good notes stuffed in that horn! He plays tenor sax. My favorite was his composition "Ruminations." He was dressed in "musician casual" which means "whatever you were hanging out in, with a sports coat thrown over it," in this case an untucked shirt, worn jeans, and scuffed boots. I suppose someone that good gets to wear whatever he wants. I really admired the way he could change the tone without changing mouthpieces or even reeds. Plus, did I mention, a whole lotta notes?

A good time was had by all, and we stopped at the Silver Diner for pot pie on the way home. Sunday, we go right back down there for an entirely separate Marine Band concert, and then we're stopping by my brother G's house which is not too far off our route home.

ETA pictures of the community saxophone choir )
bunrab: (bunearsword)
Band rehearsal last night! Scott talks between pieces - actually, Scott talks a lot between pieces - which gives me a chance to rest, but it's still a long rehearsal, and the tenor sax parts have LOTS of notes. And that band hall is crowded: between chairs and stands and people and instruments and instrument cases and percussion equipment and music-folder storage, it is, in fact, something of a hazard. The tubas and the bari sax can get to their seats with very little fuss, but everyone else has to climb over things and there are multiple levels to step up and down from... to get to my seat, I hold the sax over my head, shimmy across the trombone section, then step over my chair while stepping down a level, at which point I can slide into my chair.

Spring. It has been a long time since I've had a northern spring. Spring in Texas is about 3 weeks long, consisting of bluebonnets everywhere, then some Indian Paint flowers, then segueing into evening primrose and assorted DYFs. The temperature fluctuates between 60 and 90, with intermittent drizzle. Spring up here is a much longer and bigger deal. There are cherry trees in bloom, and zillions of apple trees (some of them may be pear trees; I will admit that from a distance, I cannot tell the difference between one white-flowered fruit tree and another.) And forsythia everywhere. And now the dogwoods are starting up, a much deeper pink than the cherries. The apple/pear trees are everywhere, including highway shoulders and medians, corners of very urban blocks downtown, and front lawns from the city to the suburbs. But it's mostly the forsythia that says spring to me. When I was growing up on LI, the forsythia was EVERYWHERE in the spring. And if you break off a branch and stick it in the ground somewhere, chances are it will take root and then you'll have more forsythia!!

It doesn't look like we'll make it to Austin for S's birthday - the idea of air travel before I'm fully healed is way too scary. Carrying luggage, and bumping into things, and the diseases carried by the poorly-recycled air in the planes, and luggage falling out of the overhead bins when they're opened, plus carrying all the supplies with us - noooooo, I don't think so. So it will have to wait till fall, since I'm certainly not going back to Texas anytime between May and September! So maybe late October...

Today's random observation: Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young has the same number of syllables as Om mane padme hum and works just as well for regulating breathing for meditation or sleep.
bunrab: (music)
This morning I had my appointment over at Johns Hopkins with the electrophysiologist that my cardiologist referred me to, and the EP, Dr. Sinha, is quite confident that he can implant the third lead without having to do a thoracotomy, so we went ahead and scheduled the surgery for Thursday, March 2. Johns Hopkins Outpatient Clinic is a large facility, where one has to wait in line twice in the lobby alone, just to be allowed access to the elevators, in order to get to the floor for the department one is aiming toward, at which point one then stands in line for a sort of concierge for that floor, and she points one toward the correct department, where one finally gets in line to sign in for one's appointment. Then one is directed to one of several waiting rooms, each and every one of which has at least half a dozen people waiting, usually at least one more person than there are chairs in that waiting area. The good news from this waiting is that I finished the first of the wrist-warmers from striped sock yarn that I am making for [livejournal.com profile] fadethecat, and the second will go faster, now that I am no longer winging it but rather just following what I've already done in terms of what to cast on, how many rows of ribbing, where to place the thumb hole, etc.

Anyway, once I established that he didn't have to dumb down the language for me, Dr. Sinha and I got along well and rapidly went over all the options, complete with some quick sketches and requisite hand waving to indicate what would be done. It will be simple; although it could be outpatient surgery he usually keeps people over for one night to be on the safe side, and he foresees no problem in getting my insurance company to pay for that; despite my relatively good appearance, my EF alone is prima facie support for the necessity of this procedure. (Medicalese: the ICD/pacemaker is always a "device" and surgery is always a "procedure.") So you will have the gory details of that to look forward to in a month. Since it will be on a Thursday, I won't miss any rehearsals that week, and as long as I don't try to carry the saxophone from the car myself, should be able to pick them up again the following week. The next concert after that isn't till the 19th of March, on the tenor, the smaller/lighter of the two horns, so that should be do-able; the 25th is a concert where I'd be on the baritone sax. (He was perfectly willing to schedule the surgery for, like, next week, but I have a concert to play in on the 12th!! Not enough time to recover and pick up the larger saxophone!)

Meanwhile, I'm almost finished with a modified plaid crocheted afghan, and have started a quick Q-hook afghan in the car. In addition to that long list of people I already owe stuff to, there's the nephew who recently bought a house; I really should give him a housewarming present, so he'll probably get stuck with the apple green plaid, pictures of which will be forthcoming in the next day or two.

Profile

bunrab: (Default)
bunrab

January 2025

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930 31 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Mar. 31st, 2026 08:36 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios