Sunday, July 27, 2025

Comments

When I started this blog way back in 2005, I allowed comments to be displayed without my authorisation; after only a few blogs, I noticed that I was getting spammed so I stopped that. For a while, comments used to be sent to my email where I could choose to publish or delete them.

I haven't received such emails for a long time, so to be honest, I had completely forgotten about them. Maybe no one reads these blogs and so no one comments. Today I idly went to the web page that manages these blogs and clicked on the 'comments' link: to my surprise, I found about 50 comments waiting for my authorisation.

Some of them were clearly spam - the same topic appeared again and again, promoting some spy thriller - but most of them were interesting. So I deleted obvious spams and authorised the rest. Some of these reference blogs that I wrote over ten years ago whereas some reference more recent blogs.

From now on, I'll try to remember to check the comments waiting for authorisation at least once a week. And now I know that at least someone is reading.



This day in blog history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
18527/07/2009MBAMBA
38927/07/2011Masochistic programmingProgramming, Unicode
88127/07/2015Vinyl log 22 - 27 JulyVinyl log, Fairport Convention, Jackson Browne
105727/07/2017Sing StreetFilms, Swell Season
115727/07/2018Careless loveLiterature, DCI Banks, Police procedurals
124827/07/201910 years of post-graduate studyDBA
164727/07/2023Displaying blog content within my blog manager (2)Programming, Blog manager program

Saturday, July 26, 2025

Tu b'Av performance

The calendar shows that the very minor festival day of Tu B'Av will be in two weeks' time. This is the Israeli equivalent of Valentine's day; I don't know quite why it's in the middle (or towards the end) of summer, but the 'Tu' word means 14 - it will be in the middle of a lunar month and so there will be a full moon - very romantic.

The female singer in our musical group has long wanted us to play at this time, so as soon as we got our previous appearance1 out of our system, we started suggesting romantic songs to be played. There is, of course, a surfeit of such songs, but even so a few songs have been suggested that I've never heard of before. This performance (which will be brought forward from the Saturday night that is the Hebrew date to Thursday) - or rather the list of songs - is unusual for us, in several respects:
  • there are three or four songs in 3/4 time
  • there are a few 'acoustic' songs that might actually be played with one acoustic guitar
  • there are one or two songs during which I don't play
  • I get to sing lead vocal on one song

The 'not playing' bit is because at least one of the songs is very delicate and I feel that I don't have anything to add to it (and I don't want to make it sound worse). For another song, I feel a bit like George Harrison in a very cringe-inducing scene from the "Let It Be" film when he says to Paul McCartney something like "I'll play what you want me to play, and I won't play at all if you don't want me to".

Referencing the Beatles is obviously subconscious, for the song that I am going to sing is "I saw her standing there", the opening song of the first Beatles' album. We've rehearsed this a few times, but at our last rehearsal, whilst probably waiting for someone to get themselves together, I started playing it at a very slow place, turning the song into something else. We continued to play the entire song in this new arrangement, and at the end, I turned to the others and said "Well? Maybe we could play the song like that - it will certainly sound unusual". In the end we agreed that the first verse will be slow and the rest fast, although I have yet to decide whether to repeat the first verse at the fast tempo and simply to continue with the second verse.

I now have memorised almost all of the songs (or more accurately, the songs have wormed their way into my memory), but there's one where I am going to play with the music on a stand - this has an instrumental, or more correctly, vocalese break of something like 24 bars, and the chords for this create a continually rising spiral with several diminished chords. It's not something that is easily memorised, hence the sheet music. In fact, it took several weeks to figure out the complete and correct sequence: although I have the official sheet music for this song in a book published some 45 years ago, the chords there are in a different key and use different symbols for diminished and half-dimished chords. Not only that, I remember that I played it at a wedding about 40 years ago and then I transposed the chords to a yet another key that is not the same key in which we will be playing. So I had to figure it all out again, by comparing the various chord charts and what I heard.

I must admit that I am less enthusiastic about this set of songs that I was for our previous set. The performance will take place again at the kibbutz pub; my wife insists that I should be in the front row of musicians instead of lurking at the back. Obviously for 'my song', I'll be at the front but I don't know about the rest.

The octave pedal2 made its debut appearance. At first I was worried that it seemed to make a great deal of noise when I wasn't playing, but this wasn't noticeable during the two songs in which I used it. There is a third song that is in Cm that also requires the pedal; this is quite a delicate song and I am worried that there may be too much noise. We didn't play this song at our last rehearsal so I don't know what it will be like. At the worst, I can use a capo.

Internal links
[1] 1923
[2] 1967



This day in blog history:

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38826/07/2011Red CapTV series, Switzerland
124726/07/2019Smart watch? I call it 'stupid watch'Mobile phone
132826/07/2020Peter Green, RIPObituary, Fleetwood Mac