No. In fact, I think the only island I've been to is Vancouver Island (I think that's what it's called). Not counting islands inland (salt or fresh water), nor stops to change planes on island nations. Yeah, one single island thirty years ago is the only island I've been on. ETA oh, whoops. I seem to remember Manhattan is an island...well, those don't count as real islands IMHO — I'll call those "inland" islands. Oh, and Alcatraz. That's a real island. My memory is not working yet good this morning.
TNP thinks, in North America, most people don't understand just how big the "great lakes" are, and is himself or herself sometimes surprised by some new facts learned about them.
Last edited by Jizzelbin; 06 Dec 2018 at 09:49 AM.
Definitely. All of the Great Lakes I've seen (and I've seen all but Huron and Superior, I think) are much bigger than you might think they are. You can't even see to the other side of Lake Pontchartrain, near New Orleans, and it's much smaller than any of the Great Lakes.
I've only sailed a few times, but did OK at it. My most memorable experience was sailing east, over the horizon, off the North Carolina coast once with my dad when I was a kid, and getting a bit worried that we'd end up in Portugal or something.
Yes, indeed. I am on a slow connection, but the first thirty seconds made me think the tune might have been "Five Long Years" (Eddie Floyd IIRC). I don't think that was Ike on piano, but I liked the subtle homage to Otis Spann's runs in the bass register of the piano. Reminded me of how Johnnie Johnson would have played it. Not going to look up the personnel, but that was a nice way to wake up. OK, I did look up the tune: "Cold Day in Hell." I don't recognize the name of the piano player, but he really is hitting that old Chicago style.
Good to hear a straight-ahead instrumental blues — good playing doesn't need the words IMHO to get across, even though I suspect the fellas in the band were just kind of having a bit of fun. It is still a bit disconcerting to hear the perfectly-tuned acoustic piano when the classic records always had a little something imperfect in the way the piano was tuned, but I can tell you it's a lot more fun to play on such an instrument even if it does sound a little clean. No, the piano player definitely put some grease in there, so no criticisms at all. In fact, if I were a bit younger and less convinced I was king shit, I'd try to copy some of those licks.
TNP has a favorite of the multiple blues players whose last name was (or is) "King."
Sure. I appreciated hearing what was a new (to me) track from the blues boy. Not at all a regret hearing some good playing and singing.
TNP thinks there are about two things every musician has to come to terms with at some point: the compositions and style of Monk, and getting down to NOLA style. As in those aren't optional. IMHO you can hear some of Louisiana in BB's playing, especially the laying back a bit on the beat.
Ha.. No. I don't want gifts, and I don't give them. Xmas should be celebrated, if at all, as a joyous exuberance, not any of this Santa Claus bullshit with the reindeers and crap. IF I had someone about whom I cared, I might have been preparing a gift, but probably only in the expectation of receiving the world's greatest beej because it was so awesome. I will be at mass, though, and look forward to being in a good disposition to receive the eucharist. None of my family will be there, but that doesn't diminish the community of the parish.
TNP is somewhat consoled by the sorry state of the U.S. union that the E.U. is pretty much equally fucked. Or, to abstract in a juvenile way, the neighbors are doing it too, so it's not so bad as to waste time navel-gazing.
Yeah, I'd eat that In fact, not too dissimilar from my meal after breaking a 48-hour fast yesterday: some burritos topped with cheese and slices of hard salami.
TNP thinks the "vaping"/e-cig people probably get more shit because of the appearance of impropriety (gasp! "smoking" in public!) than any real concern. Think of the children!
False. I found a Juul e-cigarette in the drying machine at my neighborhood and was tempted to buy a cheap charger for it and a few cartridges, but it does have a lot of complications about which I'm uninterested — I suppose it's like a hobby for some people. But I've used the Nicorette inhaler in the past, as well as the gums.
I don't think it's childish, but it does seem to suggest people wanting to be "special" rather than just smoking a pipe/cigar, which I consider a bit childish, although not dumb.
TNP will name other common activities he or she considers "dumb."
Well, it's just my opinion, but: line-dancing, macrame, curling and collecting bottle caps, off the top of my head. But if you love to do any of those things, or love someone who does, bless you!
True: I think drinking wine out of boxes and "looking at" pornography count as hobbies. Then again as our friend Norman Bates remarked, "A hobby is supposed to pass the time, not fill it."
TNP can't wait until the "holidays" (say, from now through New Year's) is to have been over.
Yes. My dream "gig" is to go do some IT technical stuff in Antarctica — FWICT, it's pretty chill down there. Sort of like working in a warehouse, except the women have no choice but to abide by one's crude flirtations, provided those advances are reasonable and reasonably subtle.
TNP thinks "don't frighten the women" is a pretty good motto to live by.
Sure. I think I've gone as low as maybe 80,000 people (Missoula, MT was about that IIRC), and when growing up, it wasn't really a city, but whatever it was, it was way below that. For above 100K, I guess exactly four cities lived in for at least a year. Current town well above that, but IMHO it's more of a cow town than a city, but that's the facts.
Of course. Some of them I was even pretty good at, namely because I was too young to know better.
TNP doesn't mind the idea of doing piece-work (picking fruit, doing little contract work, or being self-employed in general), and in fact prefers it to drawing a salary.
TNP thinks that learning and playing (not note-for-note, but the general idea) Bill Evans'
might make it possible to placate the family on Christmas Eve.
I guess as much as the next person. A Vince Guaraldi fan, I suppose, and I saw a professional stage performance of something about the Peanuts gang that was pretty good. Sure, that giant pumpkin thing and the kicking of the football and stuff — it's pretty good cultural stuff.
TNP thinks the real issue with most "anti-sport(s)" people is that some people are having the hard time to ignore a lot of the media and general talk.
I guess as much as the next person. A Vince Guaraldi fan, I suppose, and I saw a professional stage performance of something about the Peanuts gang that was pretty good. Sure, that giant pumpkin thing and the kicking of the football and stuff — it's pretty good cultural stuff.
TNP thinks the real issue with most "anti-sport(s)" people is that some people are having the hard time to ignore a lot of the media and general talk.
That's a big part of it, yes, but I think a good chunk of it is also people who didn't like sports as kids/were nerds/were bullied by athletes in school.
TNP has no interest in serving as White House Chief of Staff, at least not now.
No, negative. While I've known quite a few people with close ties to Baltimore, I've never even been there, nor have any real desire to visit as a tourist.
TNP is absolutely shocked that cave-dwelling, mouth-breathing, knuckle-draggers still haven't been shamed into repentant silence about the idiotic opinion that "Baby, It's Cold Outside" is anything but a fun tune with absolutely zero "problematic" content.
Last edited by Jizzelbin; 16 Dec 2018 at 07:26 PM.
Reason: on [url=https://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/showpost.php?p=21381322&postcount=57]4-chan[/url]-type boards
No, although I don't personally think it's a "rapey" song, given when it was written and depending on how it's performed (the singers' tone of voice and ad libbing can make a big difference), I can understand how some people may hear it that way now.
I don't particularly mind cigars, and have smoked a few myself over the years, but as a baby-congratulations gift it always struck me as a little odd, so yeah.
No, never even heard of him. I do respect real DJs who use the turntable as a legitimate musical instrument, but I just never ran across his name.
TNP, in a similar vein, enjoys various works produced by "sound poets" (it's a large umbrella, ranging from early Dadaist/high-modernist experimenters like Kurt Schwitters, Raoul Hausmann, to Bernhard Heidsieck, to the Canadian group The Four Horsemen, probably whose most prominent member is the poet Steve Maccaffrey, out of Toronto, I believe, and the "young" lion Christian Bök, also out of Toronto, I believe, but a friend of the famous Buffalo Poetics grad program).
Last edited by Jizzelbin; 19 Dec 2018 at 05:06 AM.
Not yesterday. Today, I might pick up my usual lunch special "kung pao chicken, steam rice" — for some reason it's one of the few foods I eat that doesn't cause me bad gastric after-effects. That is, among frozen or "quick-serve/snack-meal" food I get at the grocery store.
TNP finds himself or herself eating a smaller range of foods than when he or she were younger.