Do you ever just sit down and think?..."I could just eat a tin of minced beef right now." No neither do I.
Polar Bear Diaries: Saw a bit of this on BBC2. After half an hour of watching the irritatingly grim host and his camera team moaning about how poorly the bears were doing and how hungry they must be I just thought..."go into the ship's freezer and throw them a few trout or mackerel or whatever you've got in there and walk away." It seems that nature's way and me just don't agree sometimes.
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Wednesday, January 09, 2013
Exasperated Blackberry
Going from an old phone to a new one is fairly traumatic. This time it's from a whatever it was dumb phone to a sparkly and not so smart Blackberry (this is for business not pleasure). I never have been an early adopter of new technology so I'm always catching up and even my slim guitar stunted fingers seem a might too big for the tiny qwerty keys and trackball touch thing that wobbles like jelly on top of smoothie in a glass of Activia. I will persevere however and climb that hill. So what have I learned recently?
The wonders of e-book via the 3D Kindle, all apps, magazines and finger flicking good stuff.
Wav files are miles better than Mp3s.
Microwaves can be made to defrost chickens.
2 in 1 Nescafe is very good for you early in the morning.
I can live, survive and thrive using a Macbook.
In-car temperature controls and trip computers are good things.
Chips in cats will allow cat flaps to operate (?).
Smart TVs are not so smart.
Rewiring a dimmer switch.
My Sky password.
The Blackberry trackball touch.
Smoothie and Activia can successfully live in a shared glass if correctly chilled.
You can buy whisky on-line from on-line retailers.
Cheesy beans are good.
A Porsche doesn't need high octane fuel.
That's about it - but I still feel just a little uneasy and out of step with things...I imagine that's how David Bowie must feel all of the time.
Tuesday, January 08, 2013
An error occurred
Entering a strange new world. |
David Bowie has finally made a new record and created quite a fuss on the Twittersphere. Fortunately it had all passed over like a fresh January storm before I got home, I will give it a listen in due course.
Monday, January 07, 2013
Driller's Procrastination (DP)
Thirty five year old Black and Decker, still works up to a point despite numerous mishaps and bodged repairs. |
Two holes and a pen mark. |
Possibly the finest collection of blunt drill bits and chuck keys North of the Pentlands and South of the Ochils. |
Sunday, January 06, 2013
Spirited away to Kelty
Unlikely doppelganger doorknob. |
Earlier in the day we began with the traditional hangover bustin' Cowboy/Cowgirl breakfast; eggs, chilli egg bread, olive egg bread, flat Fife sausage, bacon, beans and tomatoes - works a treat. I started eating it and I'd no hangover, fifteen minutes later I had a head like a Townhill (Lochside) brick that's been blasted in the oven since Tuesday. Marvellous stuff really.
Funniest thing I've seen on TV in ages: Cuckoo "Grandfather's Cat Episode", oh yeah!
Saturday, January 05, 2013
The low road
The sole of a boot found on top of a dry stone dyke. |
An abandoned water pump, buried in rubble, unused for years. |
Thursday, January 03, 2013
The loneliness of the long distance rubbish
So what about the applied mechanics of recycling, staying sane and staying greenish all year round? Half way out on the road to find a seasonally uncluttered drop off point I ask myself is it really good practice to take all your recycling material in the boot of your gas guzzling car to the recycling centre? By then you rinsed out the cans and bottles in the precious, maybe even hot soapy water. Folded flat the cardboard and taken all the windows out of envelopes and the cellophane from the ready meal boxes. Of course you've stored these items for a while somewhere within your valuable house space, tripped over them a few times and then finally stuffed them into the car in order to drop them into the appropriate bins at the recycling centre. That is assuming that the council have emptied the bins and that there's room in the bins. There is also a strong possibility that it's windy and pouring rain while you stuff the precious material into the deliberately too small container apertures. Trouble is, once you start you just can't stop.
Wednesday, January 02, 2013
Almost normal progress
In other news we've gone straight in at the deep end and started watching the "Breaking Bad" box set. Already I can feel my life slipping away in a pleasant four-eyed trance. I may need more pie.
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Inflammatory and offensive...
...to some but that's just the way things are. Everybody takes offense a little too easily these days and it just may well be that your taste in music / films / food, your political beliefs, your religious and philosophical ponderings and your appetites for this, that and the other are, if placed under close scrutiny just a little bit dodgy. Just remember the tiny speck that you are and that there are at least a billion people in China who don't give a Tinker's Cuss about what you or I think. So let's all have a better perspective for 2013 (The Hebridean Year of the Unlucky Pig and the Inarticulate Blogger) and may God, Communism, Capitalism and the Great Bloated Pumpkin King bless you all.
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Psychedelic Pill
Yes I own a copy and to be honest I was
confused by it. That awkward first listening when you fear the worst
and revisit the sleeve notes for clues. No big grab effect, cosmic
hook or be-jewelled ear-worms. Something that's a one play album, no
depth or engagement possible and then filed back in oblivion as a
musical relic despite the pretty packaging. If I were truly heartless
then it'd be stuffed onto Ebay for £5 along with some stellar hope
for the best and a fond farewell in a second hand jiffy bag. None of
that came to be. I found something else that resides beyond any music
or sound scape, that's a properly valuable experience if you can ever
get yourself in there. So if all your life you've been looking for
some narrative soundtrack to tell your story then maybe this is it.
This Psychedelic Pill. This is what it all comes down to -
distillation and focus and a drug called music. The different,
slightly disappointing thing that marks you out as just another
confused passenger mishearing some instructions and reacting badly
at an inopportune moment. All quite normal really. So contrary to
what you thought it would been the listing allows for none of the
big hitting stuff, none of the classics, those pieces that you
thought would define your three score and however many, all set up
there in an ever changing imaginary list that's just too fluid to
settle into any kind of permanent structure. Then, quite by surprise
on the day you die it'll solidify like porridge and shrivel up into
the three chosen songs that they play on a bad sound system at your
funeral and all the while nobody is listening nor really caring what
any of it might mean. That's because your long gone now and it's
clearly too late. Anyway it's always about somebody more alive and
more articulate than I ever was and they're livin' on trying to
express a feeling for you, in a way that you never could. Then again
it is completely possible that I just made this up and let my
apparently arbitrary tastes fit the model so that you'd be more
confused and that you'd never really know quite what was on that list
o' mine. It's not that I tried to hide it or that I couldn't be
bothered. It's more to do with the fact that it just doesn't matter
now.
Friday, December 28, 2012
Ultimate sandwich
One more turkey sandwich. This month's
Heathen Winterfest has seen us dip into a rich vein of locally
sourced produce, bought in damp and rainy farm shop barns and
rickety butcher shops. No electronic tills, tags or reward points
were used in the making of these communal meals but some animals and
root vegetables were seriously damaged. They gave their lives for
curry and the twin births of those seasonal cultural icons Jesus and
Santa. It's as if we'd suddenly caught onto the old Fife Diet
experiment and for a brief moment tried to take the non-global
approach to life seriously. I suppose we run the risk of being
picketed by irate Tesco shareholders, Zombie economists or active
members of the Conservative Party. As if any of them gave an ounce of
seasonal stuffing about our paltry consumption levels, intolerance to
white sugar or the mud on our mock Wellingtons. So here we are,
burning dried logs, living the outlaw life on the fringes of society
and playing Scrabble, it's a kind of life I'd always dreamed off
experiencing. Ignoring TV schedules, high street sales and shopping,
reviews of whatever year it was and idiot news, listening to
Psychedelic Pill and chasing strange cats from their squatter beds
under Christmas trees, squishing through the chemical run off from
some vast fields, fixing doors and being hypnotised by touchy feely
colouring in schedules and warm alcohol. Time for another turkey
sandwich and getting into things without having to explain.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Non-white Christmas
So the Christmas panic is over and some lucky places on earth experienced peace and that kind of thing, I hope you had some also. Here we had the full on Christmas party jigsaw experience coupled with that awkward nostalgia felt for sweets and confectionary from the past. Tastes, strange brands and prices from that difficult decade that was the 70s. 1000 pieces, none of them easy.
Monday, December 24, 2012
Room full of mirrors
Ah, Christmas Eve. Too busy this weekend to be busy with anything other than all those details and bits of things and pieces that add up to Christmas - but right now I quite fancy something from the Chinese takeaway. That's just how I get sometimes, anyway Merry Christmas to you when it comes.
Friday, December 21, 2012
Went out
...came back. This fine fellow was siting on the windowsill in the spare room. Confident, nonchalant, looking me up and down, that sort of thing. The other cats seemed strangely indifferent to the new guy, well that's their problem. We tried out-staring each other but I blinked so I promptly chased him out of the house with a hair dryer.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Might just do this...
...tomorrow, all we need is for the numbers and omens to add up. 2hrs 4 mins, 48 frames per second, 21st of December (longest night, shortest day and the possible end of the world), Black Friday, busiest day of the year for traffic, good choice of ice creams, floods, fire and pestilence and all that final wrapping and vegetable shopping not quite nearly done. Drone, drone, drone.
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Edinburgh stuff
I was indeed in Scotland's capital city today but sadly failed to spot any of the elusive new trams they have there. On the Ten o'clock BBC news I did hear that one was seen carrying out speed trials in preparation for that far away day in 2014 when they run for real on metal rails from here to the far away middle of the town, oh yes! Apparently the mighty machine reached speeds of up to forty miles per hour with no red flagman in attendance. It is said that some local simple minded women who saw the machine speeding along fainted as if overcome by the vapours, cows couldn't give milk and hens stopped laying goose eggs. Angry farmers who watched it pass by shook their fists in the air and cursed God that such a thing should ever have come to cross their now barren and scorched fields. Christmas Cabbages and Brussels Sprouts were seen to shrivel and die and a donkey in Ratho suffered a massive heart attack at the Premier Inn. Meanwhile in nearby Gogar lightening struck the RBS HQ food court and the quiche dispensing machine jammed shut trapping some small children on a day out from Bathgate. In Sitehill all road traffic stopped thanks to the trams reputed sonic boom effect, it's believed that the windows in Arnold Clarke's were badly shaken as was the Hungry Drunk Burger van and a number of it's clientele. These trams have a lot to answer for but then again that's progress for you.
Monday, December 17, 2012
Out Now!
In the heat of the non-existent battle
and as ever conscious of our ability and appetite for serial time
wasting we've taken yet another small step towards the deep end of
musical obscurity. This celebration of all things mundane, mediocre
and slightly delusional takes the form of a CD entitled:
which has currently been deposited in the eclectic musical data vaults of Bandcamp (it may well find it's way to other repositories in due course, that depends). From this mysterious location it can be listen to and downloaded apparently, if you're inclined towards that sort of thing. As it is the season to be more jolly than pragmatic we may also distribute a few copies to friends who are either hard of hearing or in need of a mid-winter jolt of some sort. At 10 Mid-Equator minutes the CD is fabulously short, almost sweet as a Malteser you might say and it plays quite well on all forms of modern sound reproduction equipment. Of course it's always wise to check with your local dealer or a trusted adult who understands the operation of such complex things. Anyway we think it's rather good, as for that red and itchy rash and the aroma of stale nutmeg, well the less said about those things the better.
which has currently been deposited in the eclectic musical data vaults of Bandcamp (it may well find it's way to other repositories in due course, that depends). From this mysterious location it can be listen to and downloaded apparently, if you're inclined towards that sort of thing. As it is the season to be more jolly than pragmatic we may also distribute a few copies to friends who are either hard of hearing or in need of a mid-winter jolt of some sort. At 10 Mid-Equator minutes the CD is fabulously short, almost sweet as a Malteser you might say and it plays quite well on all forms of modern sound reproduction equipment. Of course it's always wise to check with your local dealer or a trusted adult who understands the operation of such complex things. Anyway we think it's rather good, as for that red and itchy rash and the aroma of stale nutmeg, well the less said about those things the better.
Track 1 – Sea Cloud: Electric Guitar
x 2, synth, drum loop and sea sounds.
Track 2 – Ibiza Zen Garden: Electric
guitar x 2, bass, Dr Rhythm drums, Ali vocal sample and tiny bell.
Track 3 – Pimp my Dolphin: Synth x 2,
drone and bubble samples.
Track 4 – Deep Blue Compression:
Electric Guitar x 2, Bass, drum loop, Ali vocal x 2.
Track 5 – Barcelona Taxi: Dr Rhythm
drums, Electric slide guitar, bass, applied echo.
Track 6 - Sea Cloud (Reprise): Electric
Guitar x 2, synth, drum loop and sea sounds. Remixed.
Friday, December 14, 2012
Stuffing the Christmas Volvo
There's no doubt that stuffing a Christmas tree into a Volvo seems like the most natural thing in the world. I imagine that in the far away land known as Sweden it is some kind of national winter sport, along with it's own world records, specialists, woollie jumpers, thrash metal, icy beer and pigs heads on spikes.Today I had a go, it was the usual seasonal pantomime, the cold's now departed and we're left with damp and dispiriting gales. You choose your 8 foot tree from a windswept B&Q bin, priced at £27.99 or thereabouts, you lug it to the robot till and in the space of 30 seconds it's jumped up in price to £47.99. You think "fuck it I need this tree" and blame your lack of glasses and curse rampant hedge fund managers and George Osborne. You certainly don't dare query the bar code and by this time you're covered in damp pine needles and have grown strangely attached to your dead wooden companion. Then the ritual of Volvo stuffing begins, the key components being: a) don't damage the precious tree, b) don't get any wetter than you are already and c) don't cover the car in pine needles (it's not a good look) and d) don't drop the tree into a puddle or under another car's wheels. In Sweden they do this in mere seconds. Here, the old Viking genes have worn off a bit and it can take a while and items a - d may well befall the intrepid tree buyer. Any way we're home safe now and the tree is outside in the rain. I know that seems kind of cruel but at some point it will enter the house and be tarted up like Lady Gaga for it's short lived festive fortnight. It's nearly Christmas, phew. Thanks to Wagonized for the Volvo drawing, I take no credit.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Deep cold
It's that deep and stiff December cold, everything is dark and frozen. The ending of the world on the 21st now seems remotely possible in these conditions, the planet could just slow down and stop in a minus Centigrade mist of frozen air, a silent puff and we all just stand stiff, stuck in our tracks. The running down timing of the year, beating it's own internal clock around and slugging with the sun for the rights to the longest night and shortest day, all taking a perverse pleasure in a deep cold that touches the raw bone's root. There is of course no escape, it's heads down, hands tight in pockets, make a grimace and clutch on to some hot beverage, turn the car heating up, choke on the exhaust, lean on a warm radiator, pull up the duvet. Then there's the internal glow of a golden and supernatural heater that blurs the edges, tapers away the sharp point of a frozen sting and calms your world down to that of the slowly tilting motion of the earth. Those few precious degrees that feed the seasons and take all the blame for climate and quirks. That'll be the alcohol, whisky or some such, a winter antidote. Just don't tell the Scottish Government.
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Goggle box
Just got around to watching this on the goggle box via the good offices of the British Broadcasting Corporation and Sky's jagged little yellow button. Big lines of Orange amps, some serial guitar face gurning and liberties taken with the tunes but it's all ancient history now. Good enough to do the ironing to, that's the acid test.
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