Blog Posts in "music"

Virtuoso

Graham Binns posted a photo:

Virtuoso

Three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 140

UDS Intrepid, Day 2

Howard Chu plays for the assembled UDSers.

An Audience of One

Graham Binns posted a photo:

An Audience of One

Three-hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day seven

This is my first attempt at doing something Rebekka Gudleifsdottir-esque (yes, I know, terrible English, sue me).

It was bloody hard to do, let me tell you. For one thing, even moving from one position to the other meant that the lighting conditions behind me changed. In such a small room, with only one reliable light source this was, perhaps, a bad idea. It tested my gimp-fu anyway.

I shot it in colour and desaturated it since it made the matching of edges and colours easier. Final wash of colour applied in Picasa whilst I was playing about.

(And I've just noticed the rather odd bulge in the standing-me's right buttock. It's my wallet, not a gimping error (though I should have removed it). Ah, well.)

Time in a bucket

Posted at 23:41:18 on Wed, November 28th 2007 by graham
in: bass music photography thoughts

I shouldn't be writing a blog post, I should be doing something far more productive, like, to pick an example of something I need to do before I go to bed, the washing up.

Trouble is that - washing up aside - I'm far too tired to actually be willing to do anything other than write this post. Not that writing blog posts to you, dear reader, requires no effort, not at all, but since this is mostly coming out of my head via my fingers and then into your brain via your eyes (now there's a creepy mental image for you) it's far more relaxing than, you know, real work. (I apologise now to those friends of mine whose jobs involve blogging. You do do real work. No, really.)

So the purpose of this post then? Well, it's not, as you might expect, to explain the contents of my previous post (sorry); that post is being worked on but has turned out to be rather lengthy, so I'm going to actually finish it before I post it.

No, I'm writing here because I'm in a quandary of a which-thing-that-I-want-should-I-get variety.

Now, here's the thing. I'm not made of money, but I have been saving up for a while so that at Christmas, as well as buying things for everyone else in my life, I can buy something for myself; an end of year treat, a well-done-you're-still-alive present, if you will. And when it comes down to it I realise that I've got two choices:

  1. A new bass. I've been playing bass for quite a while now, since I was fifteen or thereabouts, and a a recent experience whilst I was in the States of playing in a band of like-minded musicians reawakened my thirst to play. I've always played anyway, on most days, as a way to relax, but now it's more urgent, more primal - and more fun when it sounds right. But alas the bass that has served me well enough for the last eleven years isn't quite what I need any more, so I'm thinking about getting a replacement, or at least a companion for it.
  2. A new lens for my camera. Specifically, this lens. I hate using a flash with my camera, and although I admit that some of the results of doing so now that I've got a half-decent flash gun and learned to use bounce flash properly are pretty good I still prefer, where possible, to use a good, fast lens in low light. Unfortunately, my fastest lens at the moment is a 50mm / F1.8 Nikon, which is manual focus only on my camera for reasons we won't go into here. Manually focussing in low light is hard work and, though autofocusses aren't always better at it it would at least give me some assistance. Also, it's an excellent lens for portrait shots, particularly if you're a fan, as I am, as shallow depths-of-field.

So which do I choose? The lens is pretty much a fixed price unless I get one cheap in a sale somewhere, whereas the price for the bass is likely to vary depending on manufacturer, model and dealer. Whilst I was in Plymouth I played a lovely Ibanez four-string with a gorgeous, almost brassy, sound to it, so I might well look as an Ibanez if I can find one round here. What I'd really like is a Fender Jazz, but I don't have that kind of money.

But of course, it's not a need thing really, it's a want thing. And when it comes down to it I want the bass more than I want the lens. I can manage with what I've got for now, and I can always save up for the lens later. But music is one of the only things in the world that speaks directly to the soul, and your author's flinty little heart is crying out for a worthy tool with which to get into the groove.

G'night folks. 

London town

Posted at 23:31:54 on Thu, July 19th 2007 by graham
in: london moleskines music

Tonight, I have seen a Brazillian couple playing guitar and drum outside the South Bank Centre, watched jugglers and living statues on Queen's Walk, and rounded the evening off with twenty minutes of pure musical bliss listening to a three-piece reggae band under Charing Cross Bridge.

What a great town this is.

(I very nearly bought a Moleskine London city notebook in a bookshop on the South Bank but £12.50 seemed more than a little steep and besides, I came armed with a Moleskine - two, in fact; I really, really don't need another. Honest.)

When bassists ruled the world

Posted at 17:03:26 on Mon, July 09th 2007 by graham
in: bass links live earth music spinal tap video

Spinal Tap played "Big Bottom" at the Wembley Live Earth gig, with a herd of bassists.

Youtube video (via BoingBoing)

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About

Graham Binns is a writer, photographer, musician and software developer from Lancaster, England, with far too much hair, a penchant for odd t-shirts and a magnificent hat. He has been making things up for as long as he can remember and has been making code work for long enough to make a living from it.

He has written one novel, which is in the process of composting, and is working remembering how to write before embarking on a second. In the meantime, he photographs things, since it's easier not to have to make the world up in his head all of the time.

From the gallery

Rosie Alan Pope and his portable Daviey Hollow and of no use Slightly Camp Jesus Ubuntu AllStars - Jaunty Jackalope Edition