Friday, December 27, 2013

Daniel Snyder says Redskins will never change name

That's the title from USA Today, which is totally misleading! When I saw it, I found it odd 'coz never is pretty strong and he won't have a say when he doesn't own the team anymore (maybe he will sell it someday or die, who knows?) It turns out he said 'We will never change the name..." which makes more sense (Still, I think the name should be changed because of the racism concerns) Poor reporting by USA Today!

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Sports highlights: Dallas Cowboys

It's yet another up-and-down, drama-filled season that is almost over for my team. The loss to the Packers after leading by 23 at the half was extremely mindboggling. Oh well, fans should not have high hope on the current team anyway. Still, there is one feel-good story I could write about: former Cowboys QB (mostly backup) Jon Kitna may play the same role again this Sunday (The starter Tony Tomo was injured. They might start Kyle Orton and have Kitna backing them up) He planned to donate his salary from that game to school. I posted another story (forgot where, probably FB) about him contributing to the community after he's done with NFL. A real class act!

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

My "best of 2013"

Albums of the year:
- Yellowjackets: A Rise in the Road. I gotta admit I listened to them for the wrong reason: Jaco Pastorious' son Felix played bass on it. It's actually fusion jazz at its best.
- Death Angel: The Dream Calls for Blood. They just stick with the classic thrash sound like they did it 20+ years ago, exactly what I need!
- In 27 Pieces: The Hilary Hahn Encores. Violinist Hilary Hahn plays 27 new works she commissioned. Gotta support adventurous classical musicians.

Books of the year:
- Haruki Murakami: Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage. Compared to the epic 1Q84, this "long" novel doesn't seem like much (I finished reading in 3 nights) and it's much more "realistic" I guess it's easier to relate to the story.
- Geek to Guitar Hero: The hero here is Alex Skolnick, guitarist of Testament (metal) and Alex Skolnick Trio (jazz) He wrote this memoir by himself. Testament is one of my all-time favourite band. Alex Skolnick's unique style of guitar solo was one of the reasons I'm attracted to their music. I wanted to read about the beginnings of his band and his guitar study and the book certainly didn't disappoint. The book basically covered his childhood (not a very happy one because he didn't fit in with his family and school) to present, primarily focusing on his experiences from his first stint with Testament. I felt somewhat connected to his stories because he grew up in the SF bay area (Berkeley) He mentioned a lot of local places (e.g. Yoshi's!) and bands that I'm familiar with.

Concerts of the year:
- Black Sabbath: I have never been to a Black Sabbath concert until this year. The set list included every Black Sabbath classic I wanted to hear: War Pig, Iron Man, Paranoid, N.I.B.... etc. Plus a few songs from their latest album, 13 (their 13th studio album), which was a pleasant surprise, even though Ozzy's vocal was a bit shaky.
Still, I was so glad that I went. They are the one and only Black Sabbath.
- Chick Corea: He is certainly one of the biggest names in jazz today. He is the type of musicians that makes the others play better. One thing I really like is instead of drawing attentions to himself, the big star, he made the whole band shine, especially the up-and-coming guitarist Charles Altura, as well as the horn player Tim Garland.
- Solo Bass Night 5: as the name suggested, the concert was all about solo bass players. I was most impressed by Ariane Cap, who showcased her masterful two-hand tapping techniques. It got even more interesting when she was joined by her bandmate, bassoonist Paul Hanson (their group is named Oon!) This unusual pair of instruments complimented each other very well. I also enjoyed listening to 11-string master Jean Baudin. He created music with complex texture and layers using his bass, effects and loopers. I rarely buy any CD these days but I bought 2 of his.

Rides of the year:
- Mt. Tam: The ride started from Bolinas Rd, through the neighborhood via some local streets to Olema Rd and back onto Sir Francis Drake towards North. Then we turned right into Nicasio Valley/Reservoir. Quiet and open country road there. Nice! Next, we turned West to Point Reyes Station, then to Hwy 1. We saw the ocean again (~40 miles into this route) and it was time to turn left and ride up Bolinas-Fairfax rd (small entrance, easy to miss!) It's a long 4-mile climb 'til we reached Ridgecrest, i.e., the famous Seven Sisters. Each sister represents a rolling section of the road (more than 7 of them!) The last "sister" was a hard 3 mile stretch before reaching the East peak. The original map didn't have this section so our planned 64 mile ride became 70!
- Mt. Diablo and Morgan Territory: I always wanted to climb Mt Diablo since I've already done 2 out of the Big 3 Mt in the Bay Area (Mt Hamilton and Mt Tam) and I think it's the right time to go. I started at the Blackhawk Plaza Shopping Center and took Blackhawk Road, which passed a few gated communities (affluent neighborhood!) Then turned into Mt. Diablo Scenic Blvd at 3.5 mile mark. A cat 2 climb starting at the South Gate 'til the entrance kiosk, then a 6-mile cat 1 climb all the way to the top. I was not only a bit tired from climbing but more importantly very much bothered by the poor visibility due to dense fog and mist. The very last section before the Summit was steep. The dense fog and mist was still there, if not worse, when I needed to go back down (also needed to negotiate the turns on the slightly slippery road and avoid getting hit by cars going downhill, which I could only hope the drivers were skillful enough to handle) I couldn't feel safe until I got back to the junction, where I regained visibility finally (that 4.7 mile descent felt like eternity!) I rode thru Walnut Creek and Clayton and the next major milestone was Morgan Territory Rd (at the 38.5 mile mark) The first few miles of Morgan seemed too mild and that worried me coz' I knew it went up to 2000+ ft above sea level eventually so the later the climb start, the steeper it would be! Finally I started climbing at the 42 mile mark (where the road is buried deep in the woods and my friend warned me there's no phone reception) and the Summit (2087 ft) is at 48. Overall, Morgan wasn't that bad (I had similar if not worse experience with long climbs on the Sea Otter ride, Tunitas Creek and West Portal on the Peninsula.) It's just that I was tired from the prior climb and rides. This is a ride any rider would be proud of!
- Tennessee Valley: unlike the first 2, this is a mountain bike ride. And it's in the Marin, kinda close to the Mt. Tam area. Although I bought my mountain bike for over a year, I have never rode it with anyone else! I'm glad that I learned a few tricks from my co-workers who went with me. The SF scenery from the top of the mountain was awesome. 

Sporting events of the year:
- America's Cup: even though the races were not exactly at where I work, I could see things related to the event all the time. For example, one of the base is really close so I saw the boats being lifted to and from the water. And of course, banners are everywhere in SF. However, I got the best view on cable TV (installed right around the races started!) And this series were epic! Biggest comeback ever, period. This is the type of event you talk about for the rest of your life: how bad the Oracle/USA team was in the beginning and how the boat got faster and faster and things got turned around completely. And of course, how unlucky the Kiwis were: the races that favored them got cancelled because of weather (too windy or not windy enough and thus exceeded race time limit!)
- Grand Prix Macau: it's hard for a auto-racing fan grew up in HK not to get excited about the event. So glad that it's held while I visited HK this year so I could go, at least once in my lifetime! The road course featured lots of tight corners (it has actually been modified from the early days for improving safety) and drivers could actually pass (unlike the boring F1)
- Bruno Escalante vs Michael Ruiz Jr. It's the fight for the IBA junior bantamweight title at Redwood City. It's also the first time I saw boxing live in action. There were 7 fights in total with some knockouts. Some were really entertaining. And the judges seem to score the same way I did :)

Gadgets of the year:
-Nikon D3200: I always think it's cool to own a single-lens reflex camera. However, I was just not the type of guys who carry a camera around everywhere AND taking good pictures! So I am content with using the camera on the phone most of the time (at least since owning camera phones 10 years ago) I'm glad that I took the plunge and bought this camera (and the flash recommended by my friend) Even with auto-settings, the camera takes pretty good photo.
-Fender Special Edition Jaguar Thinline: This is one guitar with the look I like (the f-hole) and good playability: easy access to higher frets because of the body shape and easier stretches of fingers for complex chords because of the shorter scale length. Haven't bought something I like this much for a while!

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Jazz playlist

It seems like the only reason I still subscribed to magazines are for the new release reviews. Found a few really interesting ones that fill up my recent playlist:
David Weiss, Endangered Species: The Music of Wayne Shorter
I don't listen to a lot of large ensemble jazz. However, some groups do work better for me. Like Dave Holland's and this one with David Weiss. As the title said, it features work of great saxophonist Wayne Shorter. The reason it "works" for me is that I could still hear distinctive voices from each individual instead of getting blended altogether.

Jacam Manricks, Cloud Nine
The leader, saxophonist Jacam Manricks is an unfamiliar name to me. The reason I found this is that the aforementioned David Weiss was the guest trumpeter here. More importantly, Sam Yahel, a jazz organist I really enjoy listening to, played on it too. Manricks played a 4-minute long unaccompanied solo. That's really a challenge. The guitar playing of Adam Rogers was a pleasant surprise.

Adam Rogers, Apparitions
And the above led me to check out the guitarist's work as a leader. This one features Chris Potter on sax and Edward Simon on piano. Can't go wrong with that!

Amir ElSaffar, Alchemy
That's a well chosen title. The trumpeter was really good at fusing middle eastern music with jazz.

It has been a good month discovering "new" jazz for me, after a brief trip out of the country. Still have a few more to write about. Stay tuned!

Monday, December 16, 2013

Crowd goes wild

I watch quite a bit of Fox Sport 1 channel because of its auto racing, MMA and soccer programming. Once in a while I would also watch their talk shows, like Fox Sports Live and Crowd Goes Wild. I like Georgie Thompson on the latter because she looks and sounds sexy (that British accent!) Well, more reason to support the show: turns out two guest hosts are from my Alma Maters: Jason Gay, the Wall Street Journal writer, graduated from U of Wisconsin while Sanya Richards-Ross, former Olympian, went to U of Texas.

A side-note: On today's show, Sanya Richards-Ross commented on her personal experience with the recently stepped-down football coach Mack Brown: Brown would text her with encouragement when she was at track-and-field competition all over the country and the world. That's why people call him a class act!

Wednesday, December 04, 2013

惡星情人

早幾日被問到那一本村上春樹作品我比較不欣賞,我直覺的答案是「國境之南、太陽之西」我也不知道原因;其實我根本完全忘了故事情節,唯有重讀一遍吧。我還以為這書是我在十年前左右讀的,原來是1993年出版,很可能我即買即讀,之後數年也可能重讀過一兩次,相信超過十年沒有碰過。很快就重讀完,也明白為何當時我不太欣賞:因為沒有村上招牌的超現實情節,當年我也沒有家室,很難想像主角的心境。

一如村上其他作品,本書和幾首曲子頗有關係,奇怪的是我一直對書名前半部的South of Border一曲興趣不大,又一直誤會書名後半部是耳熟能詳的East of the Sun, West of the Moon,最想聽的反而是Star crossed lover。在那個互聯網剛起步的年代,要找來聽實在不易。今天在Rhapsody及YouTube一口氣聽了六七個不同版本,結他版比鋼琴版少得多,不過也找到兩個:
有機會的話也想試彈一下,當然,這在廿年前是無法想像的。

Monday, December 02, 2013

機上娛樂

在沒有自選電影的年代,每次來回香港及美國,起碼看三四套新電影,現在反而看得更少,可能因為自選會看電視劇集、資訊節目及舊片。講講今個trip看的:

新電影是The Wolverine, 動作打鬥英雄片對我來說十分適合在極度沉悶等待到目的地的長途機上看,近年就看過Captain America及GI Joe。本片故事了無新意,離不開英雄被困解困成功救美打敗頭號壞人的情節,Wolverine很有型就是了。差點忘了我也看了The Great Gatsby,原著我是後知後覺地在去年才看,因為想擴闊我看的小說範疇,不再局限於中日文。電影在夏天旺季推出,反應似乎普普通通,所以我的期望不高,其實想找一套悶片催眠,結果只是錯過了幾段,倒看了大半套,和我看小說時所想像的境像相若吧。

電視劇集是Big Bang Theory,自從Friends完結之後,我很少追處境喜劇,不過間中會看看這套以冷門的大學科學家為主題但收視強勁的劇。其中一集講他們到中學勸女生加入科研行列;無獨有偶,最近有一則IT界新聞是關於各大公司獎勵學校辦寫程式課程,如多女生參與可獲額外獎金。

資訊節目有一集講韓國斧山旅遊,行程包括寺院食齋參拜穿佛珠修心,學做米酒及咖啡拉花,試穿韓服(包括龍袍),少看旅遊節目的我也很enjoy。另一集講位於玻利維亞,全世界最大的巨型鹽沼Salar de Uyuni, 無邊無際無窮無盡一片白,實在壯觀;當地居民用鹽建屋,掘鹽賣錢,鹽下更有鋰礦,未來會是一大財路。 最後看了三集Birth of Europe,這個地埋節目探究歐洲大陸如何造成。

舊片是以前看過多次,近年未有重温的李小龍作品唐山大兄。有趣的是原來該片配樂用上Time from Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon, 配樂人有點前衛。

Monday, November 25, 2013

Jazz fusion playlist: Dave Holland, Jeff Lorber

I enjoy bassist Dave Holland's performance a lot. I've been to concerts of his groups at Yoshi's a few times. I listened to his big band album even though I'm not a fan of this format at all, not to mention many albums in which he played as a side man. However, I was not familiar with the fusion side of his playing (which I should have 'coz Holland played with Miles Davis) until now: after listening to his 2013 release "Prism" (reviewed here), which features his long-time drummer Eric Harland (great to watch him play live), guitarist Kevin Eubank (even non-jazz fan would know him for his time at Jay Leno's 'Tonight show')

Regarding the term fusion, I first saw it being used in the 80s to describe music by the likes of John McLaughlin but also that of Kenny G and Spyro Gyra. The name "smooth jazz" took over in the 90's. However, the tide has turned: smooth jazz is going out of favor and musicians are distancing themselves from it. One evidence: Jeff Lorber started using the name of his old group, Jeff Lorber Fusion, since 2009. His group did play an important role in the history of smooth jazz: Kenny G got his start playing in this group (you could hear his playing on this album) Enough of the past. I highly recommend their new (2013) album, Hacienda. Smooth or not, this is great instrumental/improvisational music. And it featured two guests: guitarist Larry Koonse and violinist Jean-Luc Ponty. That's a lot of star power!

Thursday, November 21, 2013

東區我的故事

在香港生活差不多廿年,成長期活動範圍以油尖旺沙田為主,過對面海總是隆重其事,例如跟父母到中環購物到北角會友,偶爾也會到淺水灣石澳,總的來說是相當陌生,東區更是絕少踏足,今次我的「做個遊客」計劃選了小西灣。

從大埔中心坐74X到大老山隧道(入隧道前落車) 轉682,不到兩小時就到小西灣運動場外,事前讀過這個詳細介紹(網友寫得相當用心,super like!) 知道沿海旁走,有路上山可望大浪灣,風景優美。其實這次共走了三條路,第一條是在公園洗手間附近開始的龍躍徑,大部份雖稍斜但寬闊,行山客不少開著小音響邊聽邊走,有粵曲有英文金曲,很高興聽到有人播「萬水千山縱橫」,和我同是關正傑fans(我踩車上山多唱「天蠶變」) 半個小時後到達一個大涼亭,東張西望,找到第二條-有很多石級的砵甸乍山郊遊徑,走起來甚為吃力,十多分鐘後見到山頂觀景台指示牌,那是一個短短的detour, 觀景台可見整個九龍東部(包括鯉魚門),也有一個大涼亭,我醫肚醫得太遲,經已餓過飢,吃了預先買定六個麵包的兩個,再加一個powerbar,肚餓尤未止,已有打退堂鼓之意,休息廿分鐘離開觀景台,抉擇時候:向左走向右走?結果好勝之心得勝!其實最辛苦路段已過,向馬塘坳的路都是下山或平路,這段可見大浪灣,有一對港男港女情侶行孖必打情罵悄,令我頗為驚訝有不怕曬不怕辛苦的港女(路上見好幾個) 過了馬塘坳就見一大路,那是港島徑第八段,跟著大潭峽的指示牌(牌上有巴士標誌),走下一條樓梯就是石澳道,稍向右行至哥連臣道交界,就是往筲箕灣的9號的巴士站,我未見巴士先見紅色小巴,$7到筲箕灣。

本來打算即坐叮叮到銅鑼灣,但想起筲箕灣也是我極少到之地,於是改變主意隨便走走,見到譚公廟的牌,十分好奇,皆因我只知金庸小說〖天龍八部〗有個譚公,走到譚公廟,當然參拜一番,見有幾隻用來裝飾的木雕船及水上人家,估計是保佑他們的神祇。下一個吸引我的指示牌,是海防博物館,我記得星期三全港博物館免費,實在不容錯過,也是明智抉擇:在鯉魚門堡壘原址建成的博物館極具氣派,乘電梯一上就是八樓展覽廳,永久展出明朝以來香港海防(亦即是軍事) 歷史,倭寇為患的明朝,腐敗懦弱的晚清,抗日失敗的英治香港,其歷史在香港讀書的朋友想必略知一二。無獨有偶,展覽介紹了哥連臣這位有多地以其命名的早期英國軍士,原來就是最早勘察地型畫成香港地圖者;展覽又介紹了添馬艦地名的來歷。最後隨導賞團參觀魚雷發射站,為了此設備,又建有供應蒸氣機的水池,及煤炭用的鐵路、煙囪,如此大陣仗,卻從未建一功即已被拆。最後觀看的是火藥庫,日軍佔領後被改作處決囚犯的刑場!導賞員叮囑大家必需教育下一代不忘歷史,諷刺的是有訪客穿的是日本排球隊T恤(不是我), 用的是日本牌子相機(是我) 我的東區之旅就此結束。

後記:之後沒有坐叮叮,為的是把握時間逛銅鑼灣誠品,當真好心有好報:為姐姐找CD時竟然見到大量雨果唱片公司新舊出品,十分齊全,包括幾隻尋找多時的潮州弦絲樂及潮州客家箏樂。

Monday, November 18, 2013

2013培正同學日

今年是母校培正香港建校八十周年,同學日格外隆重,正日前一晚先和幾個舊同學在TST Fat Angelo's來個「小圈子」晚飯,當中有位已兩年沒見,可喜的是大家「無穿無爛」,縱有煩惱事,即管一起分享下。

當晚仍jetlag,同學日一早就起床,唯有看看電視消磨時間,亞視歲月流聲台當然是首選,看了第五十幾集的天蠶變,還有新角色加入,飾演的竟然是港姐張瑪莉,原來她當選後加盟過佳視及麗的,那是香港有三個免費電視台百花爭鳴而無一台獨大的年代。之後再轉睇J2,因為播的是我大學畢業後至愛的動畫:美少女戰士(Super S系列) 夠鐘向培正出發!

十一時多在窩打老道校門左近下車,已見校內好不熱鬧,原來是同學會新址開幕!一班同學會高層和校友老師在慶祝,見大家身上戴著新的八十周年紀念校呔或風褸,我趕快也去買一條。接著行上中學部,經過校友對教師的籃球比賽,戰況激烈。為找小食部,行了數段新的自然教育徑,找個同學仔問路,才知小食部已搬至新大樓中間,行當年往體育堂更衣室的通道可達,這時適逢同學仔帶領校友參觀新大樓及和舊時很不同的圖書館,我也加入行列,中學禮堂控制室看起來相當pro. 到了午飯時間,我光顧了小食部為曦社辦的$60自助餐,味道真不錯,又和幾位同樣由海外回來的同學高談闊論,更是高興。

飯後回去小學部,皆因老友女兒在培正小學就讀,有份演出;又遇到其他現為家長的舊同學。之後就是在中學禮堂舉行盛大的加冕儀式,非加冕班級也有份上台接受薪火相傳,小弟有幸代表禮社。第一個高潮是為畢業八十年的老校友鄺伯加冕,從小就見鄺伯代表同學會出席活動,聲若洪鐘多年不變,其實已是一百歲的老人家,他的一句:「行得、食得、瞓得」引來全場笑聲掌聲。然後七十周年至廿五周年(隔每個五年)各級社皆人強馬壯分別上台接受加冕,主角當然是銀禧的曦社。儀式後繼續在門外拍照,和一班當年相熟多年不見的電腦班師兄們吹水,吹到勝利道的茶餐廳打個底(因為晚宴尚有數小時才開席),然後浩浩蕩蕩往YWCA上接載我們的旅遊巴,前往大公宴會場九龍灣展貿中心,路線和以前體育課去游泳池(那時校園內並無)相似,勾起一眾乘客集體回憶。

九龍灣展貿中心乃係全港最大的晚宴場地之一,才能容納得了一百席的大公宴,我們禮社所訂的一圍正是#100!這一席有我們兩位校花,多年不見,美貌更勝當年。重遇的不只他們,還有兩位old family friends,認真意外驚喜。

大公宴表演節目包括時裝表演,方知香港十大名模之一陳祉妤(舊名陳沛嘉)也是同級禮社同學(來自澳門分校)。另一個精彩節目則是由銀樂隊新舊成員組成的jazz band表演多首名曲。

幾個有趣小插曲:和校花傾了幾句,原來當年大家談論背書,自負的我說了一句話,她如今仍記得,又再印證客戶服務的真理:一個正面形像不易建立,一件破壞形像的事情卻令人難忘!還有另一位舊同學,新來培正就被改花名,原來也是我做的好事呢:P

後記:用了current affairs的label,皆因香港建校八十周年晚宴有多位名人校友出席並見

Thursday, November 07, 2013

New thrash metal from old and new bands

Thrash metal continues to be one of my favorite sub-genre of metal. Many great thrash bands from the 80s are still going strong like Anthrax and Slayer (oh yeah, almost forgot Metallica played thrash metal too) or have come back from hiatus like Testament, who released 2 highly acclaimed albums since then. And I've just listened to 2 pretty good new albums: "The Dream Calls for Blood" by Death Angel and "VI" by Onslaught. Check out the linked reviews! In both cases, there isn't anything really ground breaking. They just stick with the classic sound, i.e, the sound we thrash metal fan enjoy! On the other hand, if you prefer a thrash metal band that's willing to experiment on a new album, I suggest you give Annihilator's "Feast" a listen. Their main man Jeff Water likes to throw the listeners some curve balls. And a vital music scene not only needs new albums from old bands but also new blood. Diamond Plate is one of the latter. They have just released a new one "Pulse." Glad to see the scene is alive and kicking!


Thursday, October 31, 2013

HBO Documentaries: YoungArts Masterclass, Sports

I wasn't in the mood for sitcom or drama last night and I realized Comcast's free HBO offer should be over soon so I purposefully looked for good shows on HBO and came across one with trumpeter Wynton Marsalis. At first I thought it might be just a cameo appearance but I couldn't be more wrong! The whole episode was about Wynton mentoring a group of young jazz musicians (some are only 18-19 yr old) as part of the YoungArts Masterclass Season 3.. Obviously all of them have the chops. The advices given by Wynton were way above technical level. He gave each of them one word. For example, the saxophonist needed relaxation because of his intensity. The bassist needed concentration to support everybody else. And the pianist needs to free his playing and takes some risks. It's kinda like watching American Idol (except all the comments was about musical art instead of manufactured crap) I can't believe a major network like HBO shows something this good (and niche)

The 2nd show I watched was Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel. Last time I watched gotta be long time ago (maybe in college when I had HBO) The hour long show talked about 4 stories in depth:
1) Concussions in NFL: NFL setup a fund of $765 Million to settle the lawsuit by former players. Man, it's a brutal sports. It's really sad to see the guys who played real hard are now having serious health issues like ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease)
2) Around-the-world sailing race: this is the ultimate tough-guy sport - Half of the participants couldn't finish the race! Basically the route takes ~3 months to complete. Each yacht is manned by just one sailor. He was all by himself for that 3 months battling dangerous water.
3) The Seattle Sounders-mania: Soccer (or football for the rest of the world) has never been that popular as a spectator sport in the States. I mean, lots of people played but not that many watched pro-teams play compared to baseball/football/basketball. Things have changed in the past few years though: per-game attendance of MLS (major league soccer) has passed NHL and NBA (which was actually "reasonable" because NHL and NBA teams play way more games per season) Still, it's hard to imagine one MLS team could have such loyal/crazy fanbase that rivals the top teams in Europe (think Liverpool, for example) That team is Seattle Sounders. The show kept comparing the sold-out crowd at the Sounders' game vs the many empty seats at the Mariners' game. Gotta give a lot of credits to the 2 owners of the Sounders. Both of them have a background in the Hollywood/show-biz and know how to generate buzz well.
4) The comeback of pitcher Steve Delabar: he was in minor league baseball for a while and his arm was injured really bad. Had a surgery but his baseball career was over. He worked as a substitute teacher at a school and also helped out their baseball team. He was introduced to a strength-training program. He wanted to try it out before the students did. And the program really worked for him. He was able to pitch well (velocity reached mid-90s) again and was noticed by some scouts. Next thing you know, he's back in pro-baseball, progressing thru the minor league and eventually made his major league debut! The next year he was traded to Toronto Blue Jays. Continued to play well as a closer and got chosen for the All-Star team. Couldn't his story be more Cinderella-like?


Thursday, October 24, 2013

IndyCar championship

As I predicted, Helio Castroneves was unable to overcome the point deficit during the last race of the season at Fontana and Scott Dixon won the championship for the 3rd time in his career. He definitely deserved it. It was a bit unfair that the league penalized him for that pit road incident earlier in the season anyway. And I was glad to see the "King of the road" Will Power had his second victory on an oval track! What an irony. If he did well in any of the final race of the season in the past few years, he would have won a championship or two.

Friday, October 18, 2013

下一代

The more things change, the more they stay the same. 在這個人人上網的年代,原來後生仔女依然喜歡聽收音機!女兒和姨甥女坐我車,要求轉台,一時101.3,一時97.3,好在這個爸爸不太老餅,除了爵士古典,這些台也在preset。其實很好奇她們在家何時聽收音機?還記得以前深夜或清晨都會聽收音機,中學年代開夜車收音機更是良朋,不過那時坐爸爸的車常常都要被迫聽新聞台,爸爸更加不會讓我寫一張清單然後幫我錄歌!

早幾天參觀女兒下年就讀的初中,原來有家政班(教煮食)、法文班、工業班(教木工);在香港受教育的我,當真大開眼界,這樣比起我小時候獨沽一味鋤書的模式確實優勝。

Monday, October 14, 2013

Sports highlights: Red River rivalry, upset Saturday, MLB, NASCAR at Charlotte

The past Saturday of College Football was all about upsets. The most important one to me was the big win by Texas over the heated rival Oklahoma. We haven't won for 3 years! And Wisconsin beat the then-ranked Northwestern later that day. I watched only the OT part of the Michigan-Penn State game. Every time I thought it would have been over after someone kicked a FG and switched channel, I found that it's still not over when I switched back! It's like no one could win the game! Not a fan of either team but I was happy to see the underdog (Penn State) won as well as the other upsets :Utah defeated Stanford (a new PAC-12 team > an "old" PAC-12 team) and Missouri beat Georgia (a former Big 12 team > a SEC team)

We were certainly following the MLB playoff on TV and radio even though no bay area team (no team I root for, in fact) is still in it after the A's went down. The low-scoring St. Louis vs LA game was a nail-bitter but I'm not counting the latter out yet. And Red Sox coming back from 5-0 deficit in ALCS game 2 was a dramatic one. I guess it's deja vu of 2004 (which means the White Sox will win the WS next year. Yay!)

The complete opposite of drama was F1 in Japan. Vettel and his invincible Red Bull machine was passed during the start (surprise!) but he still won on tire strategy. BORING! In comparison, the NASCAR race at Charlotte was much more exciting. I thought it would be a waste of my time to watch when Jimmie "Five Time" Johnson made steady progress and eventually overtaken team mate Kasey Kahne for the lead in the middle of the race. He and his car looked so good. Well, this was not F1 and he didn't do well on one of the re-start and slipped back. On the other hand, Matt Kenseth, JJ's main competitor in the championship chase, didn't do well in the beginning but slowly improved to finish 3rd, one place ahead of JJ and maintained his championship point lead. However, the story of the race gotta be 2012 champ Brad K finally winning his first race of the season, after he failed to get into the championship chase. What made it more amazing was that he recovered from a poor pit stop in which the jack was stuck to (and damaged) his car and he had to serve penalty! Please remind me why I still watch F1 (!? Maybe just because it's on TV)

And the great sports weekend was concluded on Sunday night with Da Boys winning over rival Redskins. Texas rulez.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Sports lowlights: Dallas Cowboys, Helio Castroneves

Hate to mention "lowlights" two weeks in a row but it was disappointing to see Da' boys lost by 3 late in the game. They showed signs of brilliance from time to time but just not have the consistency for the whole 60 minutes :( And I was rooting for Team Penske to win the IndyCar championship this year but Castroneves' car had issue on both races in Houston during the weekend and lost his big point lead in the standing. I'm afraid it's another 2nd place finish at the end of the season for a Team Penske driver. That's Will Power for the past few years. Ironically, Power won the 2nd race at Houston. The "King of the road" seem to get back on track after a disastrous season. So that belongs to the "highlight" department. Another one is Manchester United's victory with new kid Adnan Januzaj scoring 2 goals (he was the difference between a W and a L.) We also have a new star this side of the Atlantic: San Jose Sharks Tomas Hertl. I was happy watching him scoring 4 goals against the New York Rangers, even though I also like the latter team and hoping for a less lopsided game. It's awesome watching the opening games of the new NHL season on TV in HD! Anytime of the year in the world of sports some leagues start while others end. One just finished this weekend was Champion League Twenty 20 (Cricket) The semis and the final were all exciting. Lots of fire powers from the final 4! Mumbai Indians deserved to win it all. Last but not least, the late late game on Sunday night, Raiders vs Chargers, was an entertaining one. Glad to see Raiders winning another one. The Ws are hard to come by these days. Maybe Pryor could make it in NFL after all (not expecting MVP/Aaron Rodgers-type of numbers) 

Monday, September 30, 2013

Sports lowlights: NFL, EPL, MLB, NASCAR

Dallas Cowboys lost. Manchester United lost. Wisconsin Badgers lost. 5-time Cup champ and 7-time Dover winner Jimmie Johnson won at Dover again to move up to second in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship standings which might not have happened had Junior didn't miss the pit entrance and had to come back to pit and lost a whole lot of spots.

And I wrote about White Sox needed to win 3 out of 10 to avoid losing 100 games this season last time. Well, they won exactly that many games and ended the season 63-99. I guess it's a "highlight." SF Giants won quite a few games for the last week, including 2 against the Dodgers (winning the season series) and also the season finale in walk-off fashion. Plus they signed fan favourite/clubhouse leader OF Hunter Pence to a long-term deal. Let's hope he will continue to lead the team to success (instead of being another big contract failure that the Giants had in the past) Congrat to the Oakland A's for winning back to back AL West! I listened to the radio on the day they clinched (after Texas Rangers lost) and passed by the Coliseum right after they won that game! They are the hope of the Bay Area for the moment. Still, I don't have too high hope. The "Moneyball" team has made many trips to the postseason without winning it all. This could be yet another one of those years which they just miss THAT something to propel them over the hump.

Larry Ellison and his 2-time America's Cup winning Oracle Team USA had become instant-legend by coming back from an 8-1 deficit. Enuff said.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D

我很少看美國電視drama(一小時那種),對上一次已是四五年前的事,但今天因為偶像Cobie Smulders客串演出這套Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D而看了,其實這類改變Superhero漫畫的作品本已很吸引,果然沒有令我失望。相信該劇另一位靚女,擁有華人血統的Chloe Bennet(汪可盈)會令我繼續追下去。

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Sports highlights: MLB

With less than 2 weeks left in the season, many games have playoff implications: Indians, Rays, Rangers and even the Yankees are all fighting for the 2 AL wild cards. I'm afraid it's too late for the Yankees even though they are beating up the SF Giants. They lost way too many games in the past 2 weeks. The Indians playing the lowly Astros are certainly helping them but hurting the other wildcard hopefuls. Sometimes the analysts could be so right even before the season started. Some predicted the Astros would lose 100+ games. Then the Astros beat the Rangers on the opening day and I thought those people would be wrong. Not so! Speaking of the Rangers, their chances are not good. Looks like their series against the Royals would just be ruining each other. Another team in danger of losing 100 games is the White Sox. They had a brief winning streak last month so I stopped worrying but then they lost the magic completely. They got stuck with win#58 for a long time! Finally they got to win#60 but I'm not optimistic they could win 3 more before the season ends 'coz all of their opponents are fighting for postseason (except for 1 game vs the Blue Jays): the Tigers wanna get a higher seed for home-field. The Indians and even the Royals are wildcard hopefuls and cannot afford to drop even one game. Finally, we have the Reds vs the Pirates this weekend fighting for the wildcard and maybe NL Central. It's great to be a baseball fan now!

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Sports highlights: Jim Furyk's 59, Man U, La Vuelta, Beat LA, college football, Sprint Cup

I, as a sports junkie, am trying to enjoy as much sports on TV as I can on the week I "returned" to the world of cable TV. Here are some memorable moments:

Jim Furyk became the sixth men on PGA to shoot 59, which happened in the 2nd round of BMW Championship. This article says Furyk's 59 is among the best out of those six.

NBC bought the right to English Premier League and putting some of the games on NBC Sports Network (formerly Versus, formerly OLN) Comcast did the right thing and included this channel in the starter package. I'm usually the one who whine about not getting a certain channel but it's my buddy who subscribed to DISH not getting this channel! So, my first EPL game on big TV this season is Man U vs Crystal Palace. I missed the 1st 20 min and thought I might have missed some Man U goals already but I didn't, which was NOT good!. They only scored twice against a team that never stay for more than one season after promoted to the premier league. Still, I'm glad that both strikers RVP and Rooney scored, a PK and a free kick, respectively, which gotta boost their confidence.

Another present surprise included by Comcast is Fox Sports 1 (formerly Speed) I did not get Speed with Comcast's basic package before we terminated the service last time. The Fox-owned Speed used to broadcast F1 (now on NBCSN), Supercross, NASCAR Truck series, etc and I seriously considered getting cable just for Speed but I eventually didn't because of the high cost. I was also surprised that Fox Soccer channel has been folded (now become FXX which is non-sports) So basically Fox "converted" a motorsports specific channel to a general sports channel (like ESPN and NBCSN) which shows its remaining motorsports, soccer programs plus some more after losing F1 and EPL rights. FS1 will be showing Champions League games starting this week!

La Vuelta a Espana (Tour of Spain) is one of the 3 grand tours (the biggest road bicycle races of the year. The other 2 is of course Tour De France and Giro d'Italia) Watching bike racing to me is kinda like watching NASCAR: a lot of times most of the action happened at the end of the race, for example, the peloton catching the breakaway, or the sprinters shoot it out at the finish line. Still, I would turn it on whenever I remember (these European races end around 9am!) This year's Vuelta doesn't have some of the biggest name: Chris Fromme, Alberto Contador, Andy Schleck. Cadel Evans but I was glad that I watched. Stage 20 was a brutal climb (I saw a few 24%) Giro's winner Vincenzo Nibali was 3 second behind American Chris Horner at the start of the stage. Both were in the 2nd group after the breakaway near the end of the race and during those steep climbs. The British sports channel commentators mentioned rains might help Nibali and they sounded like they want that to happen. I guess there's a subtle bias against the American! For a moment Nibali attacked and it seemed like Horner had a hard time keeping up. Well, it turned out Horner was saving some in his tank and only used it later to pass Nibali and extended his lead to seal his overall victory. Congrat to the 41 year old becoming the oldest grand tour champ.

The hated Dodgers has been unstoppable for the last few months. No one could deny it's a much better team than our Giants this year and a likely championship contender. The games between these 2 teams probably don't mean much to the big picture but true fans still care. It was a nail-biter on Friday and the Giants hanged on to win. On the other hand, the Saturday night game was a huge blow out by the Giants. Then another close win on Sunday. Sweet!

Watched the Wisconsin vs Arizona State game via Slingbox on the same night. What a mind-boggling finish! The Badgers should have won the game by kicking a field goal but the QB simply put the ball on the ground which didn't stop the clock and we ran out of time! Unbelievable. Not enjoying any college game this weekend :(

I've followed the career of NASCAR Nationwide series driver Justin Allgaier since his Penske years when his team was sponsored by Verizon. He lost that ride because NASCAR's bigger sponsor Sprint forced Verizon out. Now that he's on a smaller team, he still performed consistently as the best-of-the-rest after the top-tier drivers. It's hard to tell if his talent is good enough for the Sprint Cup, the top series in NASCAR but he never got a chance to race there until this week. One of the owners of his Nationwide team has bought a Sprint Cup team and his Nationwide sponsor agree to sponsor that car for a few races so Allgaier will make his Sprint Cup debut this week.

Of course this is just a tiny story among all things happened in NASCAR this week. Recall last week's race in which Ryan Newman was about to win the race but Clint Bowyer's car spun and brought out a caution. Eventually Newman didn't win and Truex beat out Newman on a tie-breaker for a spot in the 12-driver field of the chase for Sprint Cup championship. Bowyer was allegedly spun out intentionally to help out Truex. Both were penalized by NASCAR and Truex's spot in the chase was replaced by Newman, which I think was the right thing to do. However, the story didn't end there. It turned out Joey Logano's team was found colluded with David Gilliland's so that the latter let the former passed to gain a spot (and a point) which helped him beat out Jeff Gordon for the final spot in the chase. To compensate for this, NASCAR added a 13th spot to the chase to include Gordon. Again, I think that's the right thing to do. Ironically, Logano won the pole of this week's race, the first of the 10 races for the championship, which was delayed by rain in the Chicago area.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

電視精回歸

取消Comcast有線電視後過了大半年,其實也沒有太不慣;上上YoutTube已很多東西看,不過小朋友漸長大,再加上間中有的訪客同時想上網,家中所謂寬頻(DSL)就不勝負荷了。早一陣子AT&T寄過廣告宣傳我們屋苑已有新一代U-Verse服務,打去問才知目前速度仍和DSL一樣,而Comcast最新的優惠是TV+Internet兩年合約,兩年內由超筍價加到正價平均每月$70+雜費,覺得可以接受,於是重投Comcast。落搭後兩個工作天就收到Comcast的cable box,之前也買了cable modem,準備self-install,想來不會太難,又免卻等待technician上門。

結果花了三小時,登入Comcast activation網站四次,有兩次網頁無反應,另外兩次activation不果;打去Comcast activation專線四次,三次是automated response,成功activate cable modem及cable box,打第四次是因為優惠包括六個月HBO沒有兌現。當中也花了一點時間configure router,原來對上一次用有線寬頻已是十幾年前的事,那時Wifi尚未流行,modem直駁電腦;之後用router都是用PPPoE駁DSL modem,Google了一會才知router WAN setting只需定為DHCP,但router還是無法接入Comcast,想起十年前朋友吹水提過要clone MAC address,即router「假裝」自己是用來activate那部電腦,終於搞掂。

兩晚看了三小時電視(因為去了Uproar Festival),也看了不少精彩節目,包括:
America's Cup: 只看了美國隊開賽以來的唯一勝利的重播,除此之外整體上慘不忍睹。
Giants vs Rockies: 久違了的巨人隊比賽,皆因MLB.tv網上轉播不包括本地隊伍;雖然今年表現強差人意,但也要捧捧場。
Motorcross: 冠軍人馬已出爐,聽見這些熟悉的名字總有點親切感。

World Poker Tour: 看別人賭不是自己的錢,我一直都很有興趣。再加上節目安排了不少美女,包括主持。

Thursday, September 05, 2013

Queensryche vs Queensryche

Queensryche is certainly not a household name like Aerosmith. The band did have a big hit, "Silent Lucidity," in early 90s, which is actually not typical Queensryche, which started out as a progressive metal band. Prog bands were favorites of certain magazine writers those days and I was persuaded to listen to some, like Crimson Glory and Queensryche. I enjoyed Queensryche's "epic" concept album: Operation Mindcrime, a whole lot. Their techniques were superb, melodies were catchy and storyline was interesting. Fast forward 25 years to 2013, the band fired the lead vocalist Geoff Tate. At that time his wife was managing the band and his step-daughter was managing the fan club. It's not hard to imagine $$$ might have caused some problems. After the split, both parties claimed ownership of the band's name. Both of them released an album in 2013. And both of them are touring to promote the albums. Well, two bands with the same name certainly caused quite a bit of confusion. I received newsletters from concert promoters and have to read carefully to tell which one is performing when. I hope they could ultimately resolve the conflict peacefully. (I could live with two bands having the same name) This controversy was actually the reason I listened to both new albums! The verdict: Queensryche with Todd La Torre (the new singer) holds a slight edge over Queensryche with Geoff Tate. The new album of the former sounds just like a continuation of the ones from the earlier days. Even the vocal sounds very similar! The latter is not bad either. Just sounded a bit too mainstream.

Wednesday, September 04, 2013

Post #601

Last week I have published my 600th posts of this blog which was started in 2008/12/26! The average was about 120 per year. To be honest, there's a clear downward trend. It's unlikely to reach 120 for 2013 :( Maybe there are less notable events/interesting topics to write about on a daily basis. Another reason is that I got "distracted" by Facebook (what else!) where it's appropriate to post about marginally-notable events and semi-interesting topics! And I have also "diverted" some of my music-making and biking related writings to my other blogs. Finally, I gotta admit I wrote less about my views on politics and current affairs. You don't need Snowden to remind us that the Big Brother is watching as he always do. Still, my blog is a better place for such posts than FB (I guess it's less likely to offend my friends here) For example, some of my FB friends posted this one about the Japanese radiation-leaking danger zone (formerly known as a nuclear plant) causing health issues in North America now (e.g. California) I am very skeptical and seems like some people with first-hand knowledge feel the same as I do judging by the comment section.

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Pitchers that used false identity

The story of foreign pitchers using false identity to enter and play in U.S. caught my attention last year. Roberto Hernandez (the pitcher formerly known as Fausto Carmona) played 2 good seasons with the Cleveland Indians. His future was still uncertain when that article was written in April 2012 because he needed to reapply for visa to enter US and may face suspension by MLB. Found an interesting article dated last July about Indians players threw him a party with 3 birthday cakes when he came back to the States. He joined the Tampa Bay Rays and started quite a few games for the team in this 2013 season and even pitched a complete game last month but his record doesn't look good. We might not hear much about him.




Wednesday, August 28, 2013

尋寶

甚為喜歡亞視版的尋寶,那是一個介紹藝術收藏品的節目,我先看的是國內的版本,每一集都有幾位家庭觀眾帶自己的得意收藏品上來給電視台邀請的專家鑑定真偽及價值;亞視版並非國內版配上廣東話,而是邀請香港的專家(看過的都是在香港工作的內地人,我也視之為香港的專家)為香港的觀眾鑑定。

對於收藏藝術品,我是心有餘而財不足;不過尋寶經驗我也有不少,是來自買二手唱片及書籍。十多年前玩過一陣子黑膠,去過本地多間大大小小有名無名唱片店二手黑膠部搜羅心頭好,記得有一次去到SF Conservatory of Music在19th Avenue的舊址,當時正為搬遷大賣藏品!記得那次買了相當精彩的貝多芬Triple Concerto錄音。後來到自己搬遷,迫於無奈轉贈唱盤予友人,但保留了多數黑膠碟。匆匆十數年,終於重回多姿多彩的黑膠世界!裝好唱盤後,除了重温十多年前的藏品外,下一步當然是擴充!除了Berkeley Telegraph街,SF downtown幾間舊相識,最近又到過幾間二手書店入貨,頗有收穫!介紹下幾張「得意」「新貨」:

Al Di Meola: Scenario
此碟特別之處是有份參與的是一些Art rock界響噹噹的名字,例如Yes鼓手Bill Bruford(原來早於83年玩fusion,我要到九十年代末看他樂隊出show玩jazz才知他也擅長這一瓣),Genesis鼓手Phil Collins(差點忘記他玩Art rock打鼓的歲月,早幾天還在收音機聽他唱In Too Deep,原來早年他也曾為fusion樂隊Brand X打鼓。),King Crimson低音結他手Tony Levin。

Blues for tomorrow
這張碟名毫不起眼,但仔細看看陣容,認真不得了:Sonny Rollins,John Coltrane,Coleman Hawkins,Art Blakey是其中最響噹噹的名字,其餘的也是頂級高手。這是一張jazz blues專輯,收錄的是Riverside沒有在其他碟發表的錄音,可謂滄海遺珠。唱片封套的notes詳盡地介紹了blues在爵士樂的地位:雖然blues在爵士樂之前誕生,前者是後者吸收多種風格的其中一種,有人視後者為前者之進化;其實爵士樂演進數世代(Dixieland->Swing->Bop),12-bar blues依然是爵士樂其中一個常用的形式,只不過Bop大師如Charlie Parker等等把12-bar blues的progression多加變化,所以jazz blues聽起來一點不老土。主題曲Blues for Tomorrow的陣容對我來說相當特別,因為有Coltrane和Hawk兩個不同年代的Saxophone宗匠接連solo。此碟在1957年錄音,當時的Coltrane出道已超過12年,不過他是在這一年才推出首張由他領導樂團的同名唱片Coltrane,也是在這一年他過檔Bluenote推出其突破性作品Blue Train。

Julian & John (a.k.a Together, from the CD version
驟眼看碟名你可能以為是指Julian和John Lennon兩父子,其實是Julian Bream及John Williams兩位古典結他大師才對。繼Andres Segovia之後,這兩位算是最響噹噹的巨星。此碟是他們兩人首度合作的唱片,曲目包括Carulli及Albeniz的作品,彈開古典結他的朋友對他們肯定不會陌生,而兩支結他的編曲亦豐富且有新鮮感。

Mulgrew Miller: Work!
這是一張27年前推出的爵士鋼琴三重奏唱片,三位樂手都是出道不久,才是鋼琴手Mulgrew Miller第二張作品。低音提琴手Charnett Moffett和女鼓手Terri Lyne Carrington至今仍然活躍,今年分別推出新作;可惜Miller已於今年五月底去世。他和另一位今年去世的爵士鋼琴手Cedar Walton都是我早年在Yoshi's欣賞過的大師。他們都給我實而不華的感覺,這張唱片越聽越有味道。

Larry Coryell, John Scofield, Joe Beck: Tributaries
由三位爵士結他高手合作的作品,想必不會差。尤其是Coryell和Scofield都是十分多元化的樂手,第三位其實我看錯以為是Joe Pass,不過Joe Beck和我師父Jimmy Bruno合作的Polarity一碟我也是十分欣賞。言歸正傳,原來有樂評對此唱片評價普通,覺得只有結他友才會喜歡;可能這個說法也沒錯,我一定有點bias。總之這不是一張易找的作品,CD版也要從日本入口!我們有三個彈結他的band友,我常常希望有朝一日搞個爵士三重奏,這張唱片也是一個很好的參考。

Monday, August 19, 2013

Sports highlights: sportsmanship and victories

49er is on my top-hated team lists but gotta give their players some credits and respect when it's due: 49er played against Kansas City Chiefs last week in a pre-season game. Coincidentally, it's the first time they met after former 49er QB Alex Smith was traded to KC. 49er players (including Smith's replacement) took turn to wish Smith well. And they were not even on TV so I'm pretty sure that's genuine feeling, not what the word "sportsmanship" could describe.

From the team that I don't care to the ones I care: Giants, A's, White Sox, Yankees all won their weekend series (against the lowly Marlins, the competitive Indians, the still-not-rock-bottom Twins and the "mightly" Red Sox, respectively!) I couldn't remember when this happened last time this season! Oh well, true fans are supposed to stick with their teams during good times and bad times.

BTW, we drove by the Sonoma Raceway on Sunday, exactly 1 week before the Sonoma Grand Prix (Indycar race) The traffic was not great even on a day without big race. I went a few years ago and wish it's an oval track (wider tracks usually resulted in more passing opportunities. And you could see the whole track better) Oh well, not everyone lives near an Indycar and NASCAR race track though. I shouldn't complain too much about the traffic and the fact that it's a road course instead of an oval. 

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

NASCAR真人騷

我對真人騷相當抗拒,原因?太戲劇化!「真」的成份不高。不過最近卻看了一個,是汽車添加劑製造商Peak贊助Michael Waltrip車隊招一名新成員受訓。參加這個節目的車手經過多重考驗,當然少不了賽車,也有鬥快速避開障礙(例如賽事進行中遇到的壞車),鬥短時間進出維修站,還有非賽車:演出為Peak宣傳的廣告片,鬥演得好。睇開美國賽車的朋友都知Peak現任代言人是新聞多多的Danica Patrick, Danica有在節目出現指導參加者做廣告所需演技,她算駕輕就熟了。有人睇有車睇,這個節目總算冷場不多。我支持這個節目的另一個原因是Michael Waltrip車隊的車手: Michael Waltrip作為車手戰績不俗(兩次贏得Daytona 500大賽),車隊論budget算不上頂班,旗下卻猛將如雲:包括老而彌堅的Mark Martin,爭標前列分子Clint Bowyer等等。

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Progressive Insurance Radio Ad

I don't like watching their TV commercial. The actress is probably quite good at acting but she's NOT pretty and looks kinda annoying (even though I know she has many fans) Man, its radio ad is even worse! I hear them a lot on TuneIn radio. Apparently I'm not the only one who couldn't stand them. Check out these negative comments on the forum of another online radio site.

Monday, August 12, 2013

爵士高手雲集聖荷西

第一次去要收費的聖荷西爵士音樂節,十幾年前去還是免費,不過廿元入場費可看足全日,也是超值,希望大會給音樂人的報酬好一點。這位音樂人分享他在夏日音樂節的報酬及經驗,甚為有趣。

下午三點到達downtown,最近在附近學結他所以對泊車情況也略知一二,找到隔幾條街的免費車位再踩車過去慳了五元。具體地址也沒有事先看地圖,總之向人群及音樂的方向踩就不會錯,原來是用圍欄包著市中心廣場(即博物館及Fairmont酒店對出那個)圍欄以外也有表演場地,都不見收費站!似乎可付可不付,我也沒有多探究,總是先去圍欄入口買票吧。再看看節目表,原來Fairmont酒店內就有一場Touch of Brass Big Band,老實說甚少聽Big band,這個演出還有女歌手,唱得甚為動聽。

四點鐘到上演「重頭戲」的Main stage看Javon Jackson with Les McCann and Dr. Lonnie Smith. 後兩位是玩Soul jazz keyboard的元老級人馬,McCann除了彈琴還唱歌,唱的藍調很有味道。我雖然不喜聽vocal,接連兩場聽了一點還可接受。Dr. Lonnie Smith則是我一向十分推崇的organist,彈起來總是霸氣十足又游刃有餘。

五點鐘節目表列了在Fairmont演出的是Joe DeRose and Amici.單看名字,直覺上是一男一女前者彈後者唱的組合(例如Tuck and Patti),在官網仔細看看卻是另一回事:DeRose是一位出自Berklee的fusion jazz鼓手,Amici是指和他合作的樂手好友,其中包括我以前也聽過並甚為欣賞的結他手 Hristo Vitchev,當日他用Tele彈出的聲同fusion十分夾,solo非常精彩。6弦Bass手Dan Robbins的技術同樣令我歎為觀止。他們的原創作品各有特色,例如其中一首由DeRose介紹乃係源自一條在座友人提供的bass line/riff.



六點鐘重回Main stage是為了看著名Smooth jazz色士風手兼電台節目主持人Dave Koz and friends,是那幾個friend?後來才知,總知意外驚喜。雖然論深度Smooth jazz無法和"Real"(傳統/主流/現代) jazz相比,但我其實一直都不太抗拒,說到底當天如果沒有聽Kenny G今天的我會不會聽及玩jazz也是疑問。和Kenny G相比,Dave Koz給我的感覺更懂得製造商機;近年Smooth jazz大衰退,他就和其他幾位和他知名度不相上下的色士風手合作同台演出,搞得聲勢浩大頗有突圍而出之感。雖然這個說法有點不尊重女性音樂才華,但有點姿色的女色士風手一向受人注目,以前就有Candy Dulfer,今次的Mindi Abair亦肯定增强這個lineup吸引力不少。這次演出更是明刀明槍搞大眾化:玩的都是70/80年代的pop/R&B/soul/funk作品,包括翻玩Sly and the family stone, Earth, Wind and Fire, James Brown, Herb Alpert,台下觀眾明顯相當受落,很多聞歌起舞。(雖然主流爵士網評一如所料對此不以為然)
(Left to right: Gerald Albright, Dave Koz, Mindi Abair, Richard Elliot)
總括來說我很高興去了這次音樂節,短短四小時也十分滿意。

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Everybody wants to rule the world: Blues version

I've just learned about a few new releases from Concord/Telarc's newsletter. One of them is 7 Cities by the blues rock group Moreland & Arbuckle. This is the first time I heard of their music. The most special track to me is their cover version of "Everybody wants to rule the world," the huge hit of Tears for Fears.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

意外驚喜

由於放假加上聲樂節目關係,已有個多月未去過Noontimeconcerts,今天的節目終於輪到我喜歡的弦樂四重奏(曲目是Smetana, Borodin的作品)。出車後,發覺沒有帶單車鎖,唯有由聽音樂改為到唐人街買野食;一如所料,金門餅家又放假。再到園林點心,竟然見到牛脷酥!這是我在美國首次吃到。之後再遊一會單車河:望望Luna Rossa的大本營(來自意大利的LV Cup參賽隊伍),以及新起好的海傍小公園,倒也不俗。

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Vasona park一遊

在半島居住後,比以前少了去扒獨木舟,皆因最近我家的Shoreline park的湖實在太小,一下子就環湖一周,不夠過癮;再加上踩單車已花去很多時間。昨天踩了Montebello,今天正好轉轉活動,發掘一下扒艇的新地方。Google找到位於Los Gatos 的Vasona park,決定試試。

其實Vasona park是老地方,picnic試過,萬聖節之夜玩過,單車踩過,只是艇未扒過。我一直都認為那裡環境優美,但一如其他美好的事物,壞處就是多人爭;矽谷雖然處處都有適合遊玩的公園,已比其他地區優勝不少;始終也有一些像Vasona這樣較受歡迎。停車場收費六大元,如用來津貼一下保養的經費,也算合理,總不能因為該處居民有錢要他們全數負責吧。想慳這六元也很簡單,把車停在附近街上再踩單車過去即可。

租艇中心比告示的十一時還要早點點開檔,有點意外驚喜;在我之前已有幾家人租水上單車,該中心也有當今最熱門的Standup paddleboard 出租,他們有大約十多塊,開門不到一小時,已差不多全數租出!我租的是獨木舟,職員問我租一小時還是半小時,我推斷湖不會太大,果然,我租了一小時如果不hea夠環湖兩周,不過比Shoreline還是大一點點,不至於一眼睇晒!我想我會再回這裡玩水上活動,記得早一點去便可。

Saturday, July 27, 2013

正義有罪?

挺身而出指責執法不公重要,定係扮假道學人士重要?答案十分明顯。

有無學生純情到以為老師在私人時間都唔會講粗口?如果有,係時候醒醒。

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Force some rows to appear last in SQL

Everyone who writes SQL knows ORDER BY, which forces the result to be ordered by the values in the specified column. I had a scenario where I not only needed to ordered by the values in a column but also wanted a certain value to appear last. Naturally I go to Google first and as usual it found me what I needed from StackOverflow. See this post, which was about forcing rows to appear first. For my purpose I just needed to flip the 0 and 1 in the CASE-WHEN. BTW, if one still wants the results to be ordered by that column, simply add that column after the CASE-WHEN in ORDER BY.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

表裡不一

人地封面故事講一個外表呃晒人既疑犯,寓意睇野唔好睇外表咁無知;成班人就為左呢個封面鬧爆人,係咪對號入座呢?

Music app and channels

I have got a new Android device (more on that later.) This gave me a great opportunity to try out new music apps. The first one that I'd like to recommend is the TuneIn Radio App, which you have probably heard of, even before reading this, because of its advertisement. In fact, I went by their office location on U Ave in Palo Alto the other day! It's actually quite similar to XiiaLive, which I have been using to listen to ShoutCast stations (Shoutcast is a technology for serving audio streams and also a directory of internet radio) Like XiiaLive, it also has timer and alarm features, which I use quite often. It seems to offer different stations than ShoutCast though. From TuneIn Radio, I've found a few good channels:
1) Blue Rock from ROCKRADIO.com plays the likes of Buddy Guy, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Freddie King... etc. That's my favourite Blues sub-genre

2) Thrash Metal from ROCKRADIO.com plays my favourite Metal sub-genre. Death Angel, Testament, Slayer all played thrash. I've also heard Shadows Fall on it! And I "discovered" the German Thrash band Cripper featuring female vocalist Britta Görtz (another metal goddess after Angela Gossow)

3) Hair Bands from ROCKRADIO.com plays my guilty-pleasure Metal sub-genre. One of the first songs I heard was "Every Rose has its Thorn." Hard to not like it!

4) Radio Web Guitar Warrior seems to be European and played quite a bit of Power Metal. Not really my cup of tea except it usually features good guitar solo!

5) CLASSIC METAL RADIO plays a lot of mainstream/pop metal. I heard Aerosmith's Angel on it. Love that ballad! Also heard "Don't Look Back" from the "new" Queensryche (the one without original singer Geoff Tate but the vocal still sounds like him)

6) Guitar Jazz from JAZZRADIO.com. Jazz guitarists gotta love it!

7) Sax4Love (Smooth Jazz.) Another guilty-pleasure sub-genre :P

8) Jazz Radio Network

BTW, TuneIn listed both JAZZRADIO.com and ROCKRADIO.com with a Palo Alto address! Maybe it's the epicenter of internet radio.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Italian CamJazz

I consider myself a jazz lover that listened to a great variety of jazz, including European jazz musicians who record for the ECM label, like the Polish trumpeter Tomasz Stanko, whom I saw live at a SFJAZZ concert with Charles Lloyd (each with their own group) Well, I just learned that I should pay attention to Italian musicians when it comes to European jazz. The Italian label CamJazz has released quite a few good gems. For example, I am listening to House of Card by Fulvio Sigurta, another trumpeter. Check out this review. I like the playing of the guitarist Federico Casagrande on this disc a lot.

Monday, July 15, 2013

Sports highlight: auto racing

Can't believe I missed Tim Lincecum's no-hitter for the Giants vs the Padres last Saturday. He might never be a dominating pitcher again but this is another highlight (after 2 World Series rings and Cy Young) on his already outstanding resume. With many other sports being in the offseason, the main thing for the Summer weekends to me was auto racing. First, I watched both NASCAR races, with the Sprint Cup one won by Brian Vickers, who had to endure a few unlucky events: his health issue (blood clot) forced him out of NASCAR for a while. Then the team he raced for, Red Bull, decided to withdraw from NASCAR. I understand it's a business decision, with Spring Cup television ratings no good in the 18-to-34 age group (as of 2011) Even though Red Bull's NASCAR team is far less successful than their Formula 1 team with multiple-time champion Sebastian Vettel, it seemed competitive enough and got good exposures alongside other energy drink brands like Monster (sponsoring Kyle Busch in Nationwide) and 5-Hour (sponsoring Clint Bowyer in Spring Cup) Oh well, I don't drink much Red Bull with or without their presence in NASCAR. Anyway, Vickers doing well and finally winning a race was a feel-good story for sure.

Another interesting story has to do with Danica Patrick, again. I wrote about her current boyfriend, Ricky Stenhouse Jr caused a big crash that collected Danica at Talledega 2 months ago and the story was not mentioned a lot in the media. Well, it's the other way around this race: Danica wrecked Stenhouse. And it caught a lot of attentions! Sexism? This time most reports mentioned the Talledega crash and I found out Danica was actually not happy with Stenhouse last time (Well, she tended to be angry with anyone involved after every crash from her IndyCar days) This time she apologized on TV and admitting her fault. Nice! BTW, the third car involved in the crash was #93 Travis Kvapil, who was so mad with Danica after the crash. Guess what team he was with? BK Racing, a team formed with some remaining personnel and equipments from the now-defunct Red Bull team!

There were also 2 IndyCar races, at Toronto. As I mentioned before, I have been rooting for Verizon/Penske driver Will Power for the past few years. He lost his road course qualification magic for the first race and didn't start from the pole. And once again, when his car finally got to the front and started looking promising to win the race, it faded and he finished outside the podium.

Wednesday, July 03, 2013

香港房屋政策

林本利是一位我覺得頗有見地的經濟學者,從這篇分析香港政府的房屋需求評估如何脫離現實的文章可見一班;原來他有一個blog貼了他在各大報章發表的文章。


Tuesday, July 02, 2013

The Galileo affair

This post has nothing to do with the heavily promoted TV series starring 福山雅治 in Hong Kong but the scientist instead. For some forgotten reasons I brought up Galileo vs the church during a family conversation even though I have pretty much lost my interest in science after college. It was my favorite subject when I was a kid. (I guess it's abandoned because chicks found artists more cool than scientists) I barely even read "soft-core" science these days but I gradually started doing that again because of the kids. First, it's a known fact that girls in the American education system tended to be uninterested or even discouraged in this area so I gotta do something to counter balance that. Second, I wanna find some heroes that my kids could look up to. Apparently they are not too interested in great composers even though they play. I guess scientists who made discovery and contributions to our world would be easier to understand and be admired. A recent article that is related to science (and also history) and I found interesting was from Quora: the Galileo Affair was voted as the top most misunderstood historical event. (Linking to Wikipedia because you have to become a member of the latter to read its article and I still couldn't figure out how to unsubscribe) Here's the gist: Galileo's contribution to heliocentricism (i.e., the Earth going around the Sun instead of the other way around) was exaggerated. His punishment by the church because of his advocacy of heliocentricism was also exaggerated (the punishment was house arrest for the last 9 years of his life but he was not tortured. And the church didn't exactly oppose heliocentricism but rather Galileo's presentation of it)

Tuesday, June 04, 2013

愛民族及民俗

今天六四,一早見到香港傳來的良心照片,心情多欣慰少沉重。無獨有偶,也過了愛國愛民的半天。話說每逢星期二三藩市唐人街旁的舊聖瑪利堂都有午間古典音樂會,今天的表演者是自小從台灣移民美國的鋼琴家Tien Hsieh。老實說,我對古典鋼琴獨奏熱愛程度只屬中等,但直覺告訴我這可能是一個不同凡響的音樂會,再加上曲目包括華格納及李斯特這兩位我欣賞的作曲家的作品。果然,很慶幸沒有錯過!第一首是李斯特改編華格納歌劇,也是無人不識的Bridal Chorus(即「成個老襯從此被困」,好在這幾天沒有這種感覺!)Hsieh的彈奏抑揚頓挫,老掉牙的旋律也感新鮮。最後一首唐璜幻想曲更是大顯功架之作:快及大聲得來粒粒音清清楚楚,當然贏得全場熱烈掌聲!作為中國人也沾了一點光,很久不太有這種感覺了。沒有浮誇,只靠實力,實屬可貴。接著順道循例到金門餅家看看,幾個月沒開門做生意,經已沒有期望,但見門外有一條短短的隊,實在喜出望外!金門也可以「只靠實力」來形容,做出好東西,自然得到中外人士欣賞。回到office,沖壼鐵觀音。飲啖茶,食個包;香港人的生活情趣實在可愛!

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Jazz playlist

I have been listening these few CDs:
- Todd Marcus: Inheriance
The current issue of JazzTime magazine has a special on bass clarinet: its history in jazz and its players, Todd Marcus being one of them. He led a group that included guests Don Bryon (another famous jazz clarinetist) and Warren Wolf on Inheriance. 

- Bob James and David Sanborn: Quartette Humaine
David Sanborn is probably more well-known for his "smooth jazz" efforts like his album "Close-Up" from 1988. Indeed, I picked it up because it's supposed to sound like Kenny G from around the same time. Of course, in the music circle, Sanborn is much higher regarded than Mr. G. In fact, Sanborn isn't a smooth jazzer. His more mainstream stuff sounded that way because of the R&B elements. He could play "real" jazz too. You could hear that from "Another Hand", the 1991 album he released after "Close-Up." It has my favorite version of Charlie Haden's composition, "First Song." Bob James was another musician(pianist) known for his smooth jazz work. He was an original member of the smooth jazz supergroup Fourplay. He collaborated with David Sanborn before and produced a smooth jazz classic, Double Vision, that included popular tunes like Maputo. Again, he played more than smooth jazz, as evident on this latest (2nd) collaboration with Sanborn, which is an acoustic tribute to Brubeck and Desmond. 

- Wayne Krantz: Two Drink Minimum
This was recommended by my teacher at Berklee for the interesting stuff he did with rhythms.

Last but not least, it's a sad sad day for jazz fans as pianist Mulgrew Miller passed away today because of a stroke. I still remember my first time visiting Yoshi's (in the old Oakland Claremont location) was to see him perform. The DJs at KCSM have been playing many of his works as a tribute. RIP.

Friday, May 24, 2013

ExtJS tips

My boss always joked about being impressed by my front-end skills listed on my resume (of course I was hired to do back-end work primarily) It seems that I'm considered to be more of a back-end guy throughout my IT career even though I have built UI for every job I had, including those used by engineers in manufacturing and IT, B2B buyers and sellers, etc. I have even built a tutorial/demo of using that B2B site in Flash! After a few years of hiatus from building UI, I'm finally back in the game, "fast-forwarding" from Weblogic/NetUI (yes, that's ancient technology I used last time) to ExtJS by Sencha. I visited them earlier this year. The offices and the atmosphere was so dot-com! The web UI created with ExtJS looks very slick with tons of eye-candies (which a lot of people like) You could build a good-looking basic web app with it quickly and easily. However, there are quite a few gotchas that have to do with its association model. Let's say you are a publisher who sells magazines to your subscribers. You have a one-to-many relationship between your customer and your magazines. So you created a class for the magazine model and another for the customer model. Then specify in the customer model a hasMany relationship with magazine. This is to be used with a REST-ful webservice for CRUD of customer (along with magazine relationships)

1)  You cannot create a separate store class in which you define a REST proxy with the URL of the aforementioned webservice. Instead, the proxy must be defined within the model class. Stores for customers and magazines are implicitly created. To load these stores, call Ext.ModelManager.getModel to obtain the model object and call load(<id>) on it.

2) Query of your customer REST-ful webservice could return magazines subscribed by the customer as a JSON array, named the same as the hasMany relationship. The implicitly created store for magazines associated with the customer will be populated properly. However, when you call customer.save(), the payload to the REST proxy's URL will not include the array of subscribed magazine. To make this happen, you have to override the default JSON writer of the proxy. See the second part of this post for a generic implementation that works for all associations. Alternatively, you could just implement a customer JSON writer that handles your customer/magazine relationship only, which is much simpler: basically you implement the getRecordData function. Add the fields of customer to the data object to be returned. Also loop through the associated magazine stores and add the fields to an array inside that data object.

3) Let's say you implement a drag-and-drop UI that allows user to drag magazines between the 'subscribed' and 'not subscribed' lists. Check out this example from Sencha. Each of such list is actually an ExtJS grid panel defined with its store. However, you want the 'subscribed' grid to use the implicitly created associated magazine store at run time. The name of the method to use is not that obvious. It is 'reconfigure.' I learned that from this post.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Implementing RESTful Webservice using Wicket

Wicket alone might not be the ideal framework (check out this project that extends Wicket for such purpose) but this could be done. Simply write a class that extends WebPage. Override the renderPage method and write to the response. Finally, mount that page in Application.init() to a URL for its client. Here is the syntax for specifying the id in the URL with mountPage. (For example, a typical RESTful query looks like this: http://youraddress/order/<order id> )
  mountPage("/order/${orderId}", Order.class);

More tips:
1) PUT and POST
One of the key features of REST is using the "verb" (i.e., the method of the servlet request) to determine which of the CRUD (create, read, update, destroy) action is to be performed. It took me a while to figure out how to extract this "method" value:
        HttpServletRequest servletReq = (HttpServletRequest) getRequest().getContainerRequest();
        String method = servletReq.getMethod();
        if ("GET".equals(method))
        {
            // logic to read the object
            ...
        }

2) the payload
To create or update an object via RESTful Webservice, the payload includes a serialized form of the object (e.g., in JSON format) Again, it took me a while to figure out how to extract the payload:
        HttpServletRequest servletReq = (HttpServletRequest) getRequest().getContainerRequest();
        BufferedReader br = servletReq.getReader();
        String payload = null;
        if ((payload = br.readLine()) != null)
        {
            // process payload
            ...
        }

3) HTTP Status code
The page should return a meaningful code to the user. I found this table quite useful. Set it in renderPage() like this:
    public final void renderPage()
    {
        WebResponse response = (WebResponse) getResponse();
        response.setStatus(200); // for OK
    }

4) Return a download file
This is not RESTful but I just want to mention it here. Sometimes you want to provide a URL that would serve the browser content not in a browser window but in a download file. HTTP actually supports this using the Content-Disposition value (set to 'attachment') in the header. Let's say my page/class that extends WebPage create a zip file to be downloaded by the browser. Implement renderPage() like this:
    public final void renderPage()
    {
        WebResponse response = (WebResponse) getResponse();
        response.setHeader("Content-Type", "application/zip");
        response.setAttachmentHeader(fileName);
    }
BTW, don't rely on overriding the getMarkupType() method to set Content-Type in the header. It doesn't work that way for some reason. Set it explicitly like the above.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

The Amazingly Flexible Jackson

Continuing my praises for Jackson, the JSON processor. I have a fairly unusual requirement for JSON generation: for a certain class of object in the hierarchy, the JSON representation needs to be all on one line. I have been using JsonGenerator instead of the ObjectMapper to generate my JSON and I knew injecting my own newlines could be done by simply JsonGenerator.writeRaw("\n") However, I rely on writeObject for that class of object, which is in an array, and writeObject is responsible for writing the commas before every elements after the 1st element in the array. So there are commas after the newlines but before the { of the object. I need to have these commas on their own line.

What I ended up doing is "hacking" the pretty printing support of Jackson. Jackson allows you to set a pretty printer to the JsonGenerator (or perform no pretty printing by setting it to null) Jackson also provided a full-blown pretty printer (the default) and a minimal one (that basically print as if no pretty printing and expect you to override some of its method to customize its behavior) I needed the JsonGenerator to add newlines surrounding the comma when writing array separators. However, this should only happen before the first { of the object, i.e., for the arrays nested within the object, it must not add newlines. Otherwise it violates the requirement of getting everything on one line! My subclass that inherits the minimal pretty printer has a boolean flag to control adding newlines so that it only adds the first time. Sounds tricky, right? Yes, it is.   

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Jackson and polymorphism

Believe it or not, I have been manually adding {[': ......etc to generate my JSON for a while, until I discovered the open-source library Jackson, which I should have been using all along. It is very easy to turn a Java POJO into JSON and vice versa (i.e., serialization and deserialization) Check out the simple examples provided by this fellow. The only hiccup I had was related to deserialization and polymorphism. Imagine you are Jackson and parsing a block of JSON. According to the class definition, that block belongs to an abstract class or interface. Which subclass would you choose to deserialize this? Obviously you need some hints. Jackson actually includes mechanism to handle this. It's easy if you have something like 'dog' and 'cat' extending 'animal' and there is a type variable in the classes that could be used to tell whether the object is a dog or a cat. (See example 4 from this post) However, I have 2 subclasses of an abstract class that could only be distinguished by the class variables (i.e., unique attributes.) Fortunately I've found a way to solve this (See example 6 from the same post as above) Basically I wrote a custom deserializer for my abstract class. This deserializer looks for the unique attribute and find the corresponding subclass for deserialization.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Running a daemon using Tomcat

From Wikipedia:
a daemon is a computer program that runs as a background process, rather than being under the direct control of an interactive user.
Anyone who know Java could write a standalone one easily. My main concern is ease of management and deployment. Since I am using Tomcat as app server already, I decided to find out how to have a daemon running inside and managed by Tomcat. It turns out to be a popular choice. I've found quite a few links (1, 2) about it. Basically the daemon class needs to implement ServletContextListener. Then mention the class in web.xml like this:
<listener>
    <listener-class>MyDaemonServletContextListener</listener-class>
</listener>

For deployment, I use the Maven tomcat plugin and simply specify the server URL in the pom.xml.

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Open another browser from a hyperlink using Javascript

This sounds like a trivial and common task but I just learned how to write that. First, include a function like this:


Then use it in the A HREF like this:
<a href="javascript:void(0)" onclick="javascript:openInNewTab('blog.00zine.com'); return false;">00zine</a>


BTW, I have also just learned the above way of publishing code on Blogger from this post, which is linked to the useful HTML encoder (turns your angle brackets to < and >)

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Phil Humber's perfect game from 2012

Just realized I drafted this post last year but have never finished it. I still remember when I found out his perfect game: on my drive back from Monterey after finishing the Sea Otter Gran Fondo ride. (None of our friends did it this year. Neither did I) This was THE topic of those sports talk radio shows (the host debated whether or when he would root for the opposing pitcher pitching a perfect game against his home team) Here is a link to the video. The White Sox ended up having a decent season under 1st year manager Robin Ventura (they had a strong 1st half but faded and passed by eventual AL champ Detroit Tigers) Another interesting comment about the game was the comparison to former White Sox pitcher Mark Buehrle's perfect game:
If Buehrle throws one, everybody can throw one — with respect to Buehrle. I say that about Buehrle because Buehrle is a contact pitcher. That’s what I think is one of the most amazing things I ever see – he has both, he has a no hitter and perfect game. That’s hard to come from Buehrle because Buehrle’s game is (pitching to) contact.
Fast forward one year though, Humber ended the 2012 season with a 5-5 record. The Sox put him on the waiver and he was claimed by the Houston Astros (which switched from NL Central to AL West!) He started the season in the Astros' rotation and lost all 7 games he started. Then he was moved to the bullpen, appeared as reliever twice and lost 1 more game (overall record: 0-8 record after less than 1.5 month into the season) Houston has designated him for assignment. It's sad sad sad to see him falling from glory so fast, just like a one-hit wonder in music. Still, he is in the record book for good for one game in which he did not give up any hit. (How ironic!) Not something a lot of great pitchers had achieved in their careers! I don't mind being a one-hit wonder. (I think I kinda qualified already with our band's song being kinda popular in the HK indie scene)

Monday, May 13, 2013

雨中的浪漫

出車最不喜下雨天,踏入2013年以來上班踩車卻竟然未試過要穿雨衣!今早駕車經南三藩市路段時,見小雨點落在擋風玻璃也不以為然,通常進入三藩市便會消失,今天卻是例外。從停車場踩到公司短短數分鐘,絲絲雨線反而加添了點點浪漫,想起你和這首歌:
...心只好 只好恨透絲絲雨線
微雨的天 總像是個謊言
靜靜地 垂淚 漸漸地 別去
忘掉當天不再追

垂著頭暗暗對我說清楚
曾說過愛我卻不可
像火的心窩心裡是痛楚
從未忘妳最愛聽那些歌
微雨裡暖透妳心窩
怎麼不是我

之前剛好見到阿Miu的母親節post,記得她喜歡哼落雨擔遮想起媽媽:)跟著想到雨夜的浪漫和Rainy Days and Monday都不應景(雖然是星期一但雨不夠大:P)想起有首雨中的浪漫但不記得誰唱,還是留待FB朋友解答吧。

Monday, May 06, 2013

Sports highlight: auto racing

I watched a bit cricket and rugby during the weekend but the main thing was auto racing. First, it was Aussie V8 Supercar, which I had never watched before. Marcos Ambrose raced there and won before he came to US to race NASCAR so I knew they've got pretty good drivers for sure. It was indeed competitive with cars nudging each other for position on a road course, just like the NASCAR road races. What I found most interesting though was the manufacturers and models raced in that series: there are Mercedes AMG as well as Nissan Altima. It seems to me it's a bad idea for the former because they are supposed to be much better than the other "lowly" brands/models (e.g. Ford and the aforementioned Nissan) but they did not actually finish higher in the races!
Back to the States, both NASCAR series were racing at Talladega, which I considered one of the tracks with most exciting races. To be honest, they are exciting for the "wrong" reason: the "big one", i.e., a big crash that almost always happened, once or more, especially near the end of the race. Both the Nationwide and Sprint Cup race ended with last lap passes (also multiple crashes though) The former was enough to make the races interesting. I was happy to see "underdog" drivers on lower-budget teams did well: Regan Smith won the Nationwide race while David Ragan did it at the Sprint Cup race (with his teammate finished 2nd)
More drama from Talladega: During her career Danica Patrick usually did better on longer tracks like Talladega but her day was ruined by none other than her current boyfriend, Ricky Stenhouse Jr, who is a talented driver but with few experience at the Sprint Cup level. He drove too aggressively and caused a big crash that collected Danica. I was surprised this story was not mentioned a lot in the media.
I was so glad I didn't miss the IndyCar race at Sao Paulo because it featured yet another exciting finish! I have been rooting for Verizon/Penske driver Will Power for the past few years. He was almost invincible at road races but seemed to have lost his magic this year. He didn't qualify well but was making his way through the field. Just when things started looking promising, his car was on fire and forced him out of the race. There were a ton of cautions but the last dozen laps were really close with 3 drivers fighting it out. Takuma Sato, the winner of the previous race, was leading but challenged by Joseph Newgarden and James Hinchcliffe. He was accused of violating IndyCar's rule by blocking both. It didn't matter much though 'coz he was eventually passed by Hinchcliffe. The young guns are doing well in this series (Will Power and former champ Dario Franchitti are 18th and 15th in the current standing, respectively) For a sports that couldn't gain enough fan support here due to lack of success of American drivers, it's moving in the right direction.

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

The 19 inning game and Loyalty

Can't believe I am writing two posts about baseball in a row, and about fans from two teams opposite to each other across the bay and with almost opposite behavior! I'm talking about the Giants and the A's. The latter played against the Anaheim Angels on Monday night. I was busy watching other stuff late at night and realized I didn't find out who won. It was midnight and I'm surprised the game was still going on, in extra inning. Another 1.5 hr passed by. I was almost done with the video I was watching and about to go to sleep. Checked the result again. OMG it was still tied! Finally the game ended ~1:45am. The A's have just played the longest game, a 6.5 hr one, in team history! I listened to the highlights while I was in bed. What a great game! The A's trailed the Angels 2-7 in middle of the 8th. I definitely won't blame the fans for leaving at that point. But they scored 4 in the bottom of the 8th and 1 more in the 9th (down to their last out. Cespedes hit a long single to the outfield for the RBI) to tie! Both team scored again in the 15th (again, the A's were down to the last out and tied) Brandon Moss hit a 2-run walk-off homer to win the game for the A's in the 19th inning. The sports talk radio show host talked about this game, of course, and he estimated around 1000 or less fans stayed till the end to support their team. Those fans were as loyal as you can get. (They and the Giants fan who left in the 7th inning around 3pm in the afternoon in a tied game were beyond comparable)

Monday, April 29, 2013

"Breaking up" with the SF Giants

This has nothing to do with their players and the recent slump, and of course not the management (which could do no wrong because they did a great job building a team that won 2 world series in 3 years) I just don't want to be associated with this fanbase and deal with the greedy bloodsucking businesses near the ball park (or I should say remotely close to) I have been driving to SF to work for years. My office building is ~1 mile from the ballpark and in the past the parking lots here do not charge extra on game day. I guess most people went to the games chose to park closer to the ball park. Well, things started to get crazy last season. The parking lots and garages near the ball park started to charge >$50 and it has a ripple effect: the not-so-close-by parking lots were jacking up the price to ~$30 as well, including the ones near work. Only 1 parking lot sticks with the regular $15 and of course that one got full quite fast (I arrived at 9:45 the other day and almost couldn't get in. They still need to reserve a few spaces for the monthly parker, which I am not)  And it's not just parking. The traffic near the park got busy at that time already but the game wasn't started until 12:30 (or later?) My co-worker who took CalTrain to the city told me the train was jam packed when he was getting to work! That's why I still glad that I drove instead. It would have been crowded on the train back home too. Some riders who left the games were drunk, high or loud (or all of the above) and I wanted to avoid them at all cost. Still, driving away from the city at 3pm could only help so much: the streets outside the ball park was already filled with people leaving the game, less than 3 hours after the game started, in the 7th inning with a 1-1 tie! No way I would call these people true supporters of the team. Why do they even bother to come to the game? Just stay home next time, OK? BTW, it was a really exciting game: the Giants fell behind soon but came back in the bottom of the 9th. Too bad they couldn't win in the end. More home fan support might have helped. Who knows? 

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Free Your Mind!

"Free Your Mind" is the title of a series of lectures about improvisation presented by the Institute for Diversity in the Arts and The Department of Theater and Performance Studies at Stanford University. It includes a wide variety of topics such as food, comedy, dance, visual art and of course music(jazz) which I'm most interested in. The lectures are actually open to public (also streaming online) and I attended the one with jazz pianist Vijay Iyer as the guest.

Dr. Iyer has a very interesting background. Check out this well-written article on him. His parents were immigrated from India. He double-majored in Math and Physics at Yale and then got accepted to the PhD program at UC Berkeley. He also started learning violin at 3. So, that sounds like your typical Asian American kid, right? Wrong! He studied violin 'til he entered college, when he realized he did not have enough time for the highly demanding classical violin training. (The amount of time high-level violinists put into practicing was incredible!) After he came to Berkeley, he got involved in the big musician community in the Bay Area but playing jazz piano (which he taught himself mostly) instead. At the same time, his research focus had also switched from physic to music and technology and eventually earned a PhD in such an interdisciplinary program.

Enough about his background, there were quite a few things they pointed out during the lecture: they talked about improvising during a performance as taking risk, which makes a lot of sense. As a performer, you could always "play it safe" but then if you played something different (e.g. musical or comedy ideas) that worked for the audiences, it would be even more rewarding. Of course it might not work so that's the element of risk.

They also talked about improvisation occurs more often then we think. In fact people improvise all the time during daily routine instead of planning/thinking ahead. Again, it makes sense. Just that most people won't think of that.

They pointed out music is highly related to motions of human. Musical beats mimic human movement (our pulses, our walking paces) In face, the same area in our brain is activated when we hear music or when we move. Finally, they mentioned empathy when hearing music, i.e., the player and listeners would fire similar nerves in the brain. When it comes to our brain and music, there are still a whole lot of unknowns (see the books "This is Your Brain on Music" and "Guitar Zero")

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Spring Break 2013

Seems like writing about Spring Break has become my annual tradition (see 11, 12) even though I'm not a college kid anymore (And Berklee has no break between Winter and Spring!) I took only 2 days off work but did a lot during the weekends and weeknights.

It began with my sister's visit 3 weeks ago. I took her to the newly opened SFJAZZ center for a concert by the SFJAZZ Collective, the "house" band of the 20+ year and running festival. It was the first time I've been there too even though I've been curious (or I should say skeptical) about the concept of a building dedicated to jazz (well, I'm not the only one. Even a SFJAZZ collective member said he thought it could not have happened) I should have been to one of legendary jazz bassist Dave Holland's concert earlier in the year but I missed it. Anyway, the theme of the concert was playing music inspired by pianist Chick Corea and rearrangement of his works. Chick Corea was a name I learned when I was a kid listening to HK's Jazz Radio Programme (yes, such thing existed back then. The DJ was all excited when Miles Davis and Pat Metheny visited HK. RTHK3 still has a jazz programme these days) To be honest, for some unknown reason, I am not familiar with Chick Corea's work at all even after all these years listening to jazz. Almost each member of SFJAZZ collective (there were 8 of them, which made them somewhere between a small combo and bigband, an interesting lineup to me) contributed a piece (new composition or arrangement) that night. The Chick Corea piece I like the most that night was "Crystal Silence", a ballad. It has been a refreshing musical experience for my sister, an aspiring pianist herself. In fact, she was so inspired that she went to Hiromi trio's concert after she went back (Hiromi played at SFJAZZ before flying there! What a coincidence :) She's definitely one of the most exciting young talent (and pianist) today.)

Also worthy to mention was the dinner before the concert: we had it at "Off the Grid," a food truck event at Fort Mason. We had pork puns from Koja (a truck that fused Korean and Japanese food) and The Chairman (I wrote about this truck before) And a Kalifornia Kölsch (beer) Pretty good food and even better atmosphere!

Another fun thing we did was hitting all these different coffee shops in the Peninsula 'coz my sis was also an aspiring coffee connoisseur. Check out her journal of her coffee experience during this visit!

Then we did something really healthy: playing badminton together. We haven't done it for maybe 30 years! Still remember the wooden rackets we used in those days.

Almost every time she visited, we would go to wineries. No exception this time and we picked a great day (Monday) to go to Napa. First we stopped in downtown for a lunch at Morimoto. She saw the restaurant and took a picture of it last time so it's a natural choice this time around. The famous bone marrow justified its fame. The other dishes we got were good too, including a wagyu beef wrap. The wrapper was edible rice paper which made it even more interesting. Another place we missed last time was Bouchon Bakery 'coz the line was so long but it's surprisingly short on a Monday. So we all got macarons (actually I shared an eclair too) which are very reasonably priced because of their huge sizes. Enough about eateries, the wineries we visited included Chandon (a pretty surrounding), Opus One (classy looking. Can't believe my sis hasn't been there before), Groth (interesting architecture - Mission style), Paraduxx (we did a tasting here and was very impressed by the high quality), and last but not least, Alpha Omega (our good friend is a member and made an appointment for outdoor tasting for us there. Awesome wine and view!) We were back to the City after a relatively smooth drive. Still, we barely made it to the happy hour at Hog Island at the Ferry Building (yes, long line there. Lots of people went after work I suppose) We had a few dozen of oysters, their unique clam chowder soup that was served with real clams still in the shells, and of course good beer (Racer 5 IPA)

On the last day of her trip, we're back to SF again. No luck with the Golden Gate Bakery of egg tart fame which has been in a loooong vacation. The main thing I wanna took her to was the noon time concerts that occurs every Tuesday at the cozy Old St. Mary's Cathedral. Coincidentally, a warhorse of the violin repertoire, Beethoven's Kreutzer Sonata, was performed that day. It was a superb performance.

Then we headed to the shopping area and visited her type of store: the trendy UNIQLO clothing store, and my type of stores: the artsy Lomography store and the smelly Rasputin music store. The other Lomography store I've been to before was the one in the MuseumsQuartier in Vienna and fittingly the Lomography movement was started there (the society that promotes event for the community is headquartered in Vienna and the camera distributor/trademark owner is also in Austria) So, what is Lomography all about? Basically it's a community of photographers that advocate creative and experimental film photography. To me, the most important and interesting aspect is spontaneity and de-emphasizing traditional techniques. A few of my friends have done a lot of that on FB, not with film though. I definitely enjoy looking at the photo displayed in the stores. In fact, I read a travel guide to HK using Lomographic photo and the photo fitted very nicely in the book. Well, as far as actually doing it, it's not really for a lazy guy like me as the films needed to be developed. I didn't actually shoot much pic before the digital era. I did spend some money at Rasputin, $6 on vinyl including Crystal Silence by Chick Corea/Gary Burton (inspired by the SFJAZZ performance obviously) and a Bach album by renowned classical guitarist Christopher Parkening.

The fun was not over (though a bit less :( ) after my sis left town. I had a weekend all to myself. First stop on that Friday was Nickie sports bar on Haight street. The Giants game (a really close win) was just over when I arrived and people were all in celebration mode. All TV was still showing the same Giants channel and no one bothered to switch to other games (I expect facility to show multiple games from multiple sports to be qualified as a sports bar) I did got my request fulfilled: the A's game. (I know nobody cares about the A's in the city) I never like parking in SF but that area is especially bad. The street parking is only for 2 hour. I have no choice but to leave early, way before I needed to but I did squeeze in a few min to drop by Metro Caffe for its cheesesteak sandwich that got a pretty good rave on Yelp as dinner.

The main event of that night was Pharoah Sanders Quartet playing at Yoshi's SF. I have seen his group performed Yoshi's Oakland many years before and enjoyed his music a lot. Even though he was often promoted as a collaborator of Coltrane and you could easily hear Coltrane's influence (well, everybody was influenced by Coltrane!), nowadays Sanders play fairly accessible yet refreshing sounding jazz. The amount of energy from this senior musician was unbelievable.

Saturday was reserved for an all-day bike ride (well, not quite, only on the saddle for 6+ hours) at Mt. Diablo (from Danville to the summit, and down north to Walnut Creek, through Clayton and Morgan Territory and loop back to Danville) 65 miles in total. It's kinda scary (steep downhill and the no man's land) but I'm also proud of riding it all by myself!

It was admission-free day at the Asian Art Museum the next day. Of course I won't miss it! The line was much longer than expected though: it was 3 block long when I arrived 20 minutes after the museum was opened. The museum was heavily promoting the Qin terracotta warrior exhibition which was NOT free but fortunately I wasn't too interested (In fact, I found it amusing that stores sell real-life size statue for garden decoration. Don't people know they were for accompanying the dead?) There were plenty to keep me busy anyway, including the South Asian part (mainly Buddhism and Hinduism from India, which I never had time to explore much of them) I always get something different from the art after reading more Buddhism and religion-related literature. As usual, I spent some time on Chinese painting. This time I paid more attention to the works from the Lingnan school (some Lingnan masters lived in HK after the war) And there was another exhibit dedicated to Chinese painters near our time. Those were artists/teachers immigrated to the States in the last century. They have not only used Western technique but also Western subjects (like the family of then US president)

I wish I had more time to spend at the museum but there was an interesting concert from the San Francisco Symphony's Chamber Series, which featured musicians from the orchestra and a program of unfamiliar works from familiar composers (Bruch, Amy Beach and Hindemith) As a violist myself, I especially enjoyed the appearance of the usually under-represented/appreciated instrument. In fact, Hindemith himself was a violist and he wrote the Octet featuring 2 violists in which he intended to play and showed off a little bit. The yet more unusual moment happened during the Bruch's trio pieces: the clarinetist couldn't flip his sheet music to the right page and the trio had to stop and started over. I was really puzzled and thanks to this review by San Francisco Classical Voice, I found out the confusion was likely caused by not all 8 pieces written by Bruch was performed. Nevertheless, it was a very enjoyable performance.

Finally, the "break" was over after attending jazz pianist Vijay Iyer's talk at Stanford, which I'll write in a separate post. (Yes, this has been a loooong post, which explained why my blog was not updated for over a week!)