Saturday, December 24, 2005

Shitty Car


Click on picture to see the carnage!

OK -- so this one needs a little bit of explanation. My brother is an animation major, and he was over at our parent's house with his electronic tablet. So I drew this silly little picture and animated the car crash.

Friday, December 23, 2005

Kono's Quote of the Day

"Have you considered a dessert tray?"

Thursday, December 22, 2005

I love this one

It would help if we had a photo.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Brian Willis shows up

Not to much to report on this -- Brian is a good friend from before highschool (I think 6th grade, which would make that about 15 years). He came into town and stayed with Liz and me for a few days before Christmas.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Beethoven's 9th Symphony Review

Wow!!! This guy does not deserve the link traffic, but I had to post this. It actually reminds me of an episode of The West Wing, where Josh insists on posting to an internet message board, and hilarity ensues. Read the dribble that the music critic has to offer, and then check out the comments. For those that aren't familiar, Martin Wright is the conductor of the Master Chorale, and Jahja Ling is the well respected conductor of the Symphony. Watch them duke it out with the other bloggers!!

Messiah

Hi everyone! This has been a heck of a season - I am finally getting to sit down and write a couple of blog entries. The Master Chorale had a full plate this holiday season, starting with Mahler's 2nd Symphony, a breif respite, and then powering through Beethoven's 9th Symphony and Handel's Messiah. They are all over now, and I am more thankful than ever to not be performing. I think that it will take me at least a few months to get all of my voice back after using it so much.

Performances were overall very good. Local press covered the Messiah, which we performed four days in a row - check out reviews here and here.

For Liz - you voiced your opinion of the "standing" at the Hallelujah Chorus..here is what the director had to say..

"One fan was King George II, who stood during the "Hallelujah" chorus. Legend has it that George stood because he thought he was hearing the voice of God. When the king stands, everybody does, and to this day, audiences stand to recapture that moment. But Wright explains that the king simply needed to stretch his legs. He shrugs off the myth that keeps audiences rising to their feet.

"At that point it's nice for the audience to stretch their legs," Wright says."

And to prove I was there...