Sunday, April 30, 2023

Shmulik Budagov

About five months ago, I wrote about the guitar shop run by Shmulik Budagov. Today I had to return to that area but purposely went later so that I could check out the shop. Indeed, the shop was open and Mr Budagov was there. He kindly signed the sleeve of my cd copy of 'Sheshet', telling me that it's been issued on vinyl. I told him that I bought my vinyl copy at the end of 1979! Budagov is third from the left; I doubt that I would recognise him from that picture, but then 46 years have passed. He no longer has the beard. 

He also told me that he has got 'a band' together that are going to start playing concerts, where their repertoire will be "all the old material"! I told him that I'll keep an eye out.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
57930/04/2013Automating Outlook - adding/updating a contactProgramming, Delphi, Office automation
94830/04/2016Writing lyrics (2)Song writing
102530/04/2017April 1977Israel, Personal, Food science
112830/04/2018The AmericansTV series
149630/04/2022Covid and teethHealth, Covid-19

Saturday, April 29, 2023

The seer (new song)

Way back at the end of August, I started work on a new song, whose arrangement was finished by mid-September. As usual, I had no ideas for words; this might be because of the difficult-to-sing tune that was fine to play on an instrument but made writing words hard.

Yesterday afternoon, I was thinking about Yehonatan Geffen, and how his words formed the backdrop to my adult life. Better contenders for this accolade are Peter Hammill, Richard Thompson and Randy Newman. I imagine that those born a few years before me would consider Dylan to be the soundtrack to their lives, but I can't imagine who someone born three to four (or more) years after me would choose. I resolved that this would be the idea behind the lyrics for this song.

My first task this morning was creating a simpler tune for the song: this was very easy, although in the course of singing the song, I changed part of it again. Once I had the rhythm for the tune, I was able to write the words. I don't think that they are very good, so I'm not going to quote them here (although my appreciation will probably grow in the future). In the end, the hidden inspiration is Peter Hammill; as it happens, "in the end" is one of his song titles. I had intended to throw in a few hints to songs of his; the only ones that made it are pilgrims and angels (from 'Man-Erg'). The final line at one stage was something like 'lemmings falling over the cliff edge', that would reference another song (the eponymous "Lemmings"), but this line became replaced as it didn't connect to the previous line. 

Listening (once again) to the recordings of the 'First Generation' (i.e. from "The least we can do" to "Pawn Hears"), I remember how important Peter (or more accurately, his words and music) was/were to my life at the time. He seemed like some latter day prophet, although he wasn't prophesising anything in particular (except for disaster, "Eyewitness").

Musically, the only interesting thing about the song is the bridge: this has the same chord sequence repeated three times, where the first two times are sung and the third time has a guitar solo. That in itself is unusual, but what makes it more so is a little serendipity: the first time round has the first two lines sung in half time, whereas the second time round has the complete four lines of lyrics for this section. The bridge also starts with a suspended chord, the likes of which I don't use enough.

Recording the vocal was straight-forward, probably because of the simple tune. Mixing again took some time; I was using a previously saved template that in retrospect has a noise gate not defined well. I think that I am going to save the mix template from this song as the new default template.

What lies ahead? No musical ideas at the moment. The problem is always the second chord: to a certain extent, this will set the tone of the song. Whilst walking the dog, I had the idea of I bIII vi bVII, which would be D F Gm C in the key of D. Sandy Denny has a song ('It suits me well') that starts off D F C Dm, which is similar but not the same. Time will tell.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
47629/04/2012Two filmsFilms, Meg Ryan, Steig Larsson
70329/04/2014Yo'av Tibon, RIPPersonal, Obituary, Kibbutz
112729/04/2018DBA updateDBA
131329/04/2020Stormbringer!Nick Drake, 1970, Joe Boyd, John and Beverley Martin
138929/04/2021DBA: Methodology chapterDBA

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Erythritol - further remarks

Following are several items that I left out of my first blog on the topic: firstly, this sugar alcohol occurs naturally - albeit in very low concentrations - in fruit, so it is not an artificial product. That said, erythritol is produced commercially by engineered yeast fermentation of glucose. As erythritol is metabolised neither by humans nor by gut flora, it is of course good news for diabetics. Quoting one of those National Library of Medicine articles, Evidence shows erythritol has potential as a beneficial replacement for sugar in healthy and diabetic subjects as it exerts no effects on glucose or insulin and induces gut hormone secretions that modulate satiety to promote weight loss. That final statement modulate satiety to promote weight loss is very interesting to me.

A question: why is it that bacteria haven't incorporated a mutation that allows them to metabolise erythritol? I am always reading about how versatile bacteria are and how they mutate, adapting themselves to new environments. So why don't they have this mutation? And if nothing can metabolise erythritol, what happens to the erythritol that we excrete?

I have found an Israeli supplier that is cheaper than iHerb: 1 kg costs only 54 NIS, whereas I bought 454 g (1 pound) for 37 NIS. That said, I wonder whether this supplier will deliver a 1kg bag. [I ordered 3 kg with home delivery - there are also erythritol tablets at 52 NIS/800g instead of powder.]

A scientific paper on the action of xylitol and erythritol on oral Streptococci shows that these sugar alcohols not only inhibit bacterial growth but also have some positive effect on the biofilm matrix (aka dental plaque).

Here is a general article on the pros and cons of erythritol. I don't like how the article discusses the problems with large doses of sugar alcohols - that they are generally metabolised by gut flora leading to gas and bloating - without mentioning until much later on that this is not the case with erythritol. As I wrote earlier, gut flora too do not metabolise erythritol.

Where's the downside? Apparentlyerythritol, in both in vitro and in vivo assays, enhances platelet aggregation. This means that the risk of stroke and cardiac events by blocking blood vessels is increased. I take aspirin daily: this reduces the ability of blood to clot. So what happens with the concomittant usage of erythritol and aspirin? I've only read the abstract of that paper, so I don't know what were the levels of erythritol in the blood of the people being tested.

Looking through the Molecule of the Month website, I found a reference to erythritol, right at the very end.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
3425/04/2006Creaking bones and aching muscles (Slouching towards Jerusalem, part 2)Israel, Bar mitzva, Jerusalem
16825/04/2009Positive changesERP, Psychology
47325/04/2012Debt of HonourMBA, Tom Clancy, Negotiation
57825/04/2013New TV seriesTV series
131125/04/2020VideoPadHome movies, Covid-19
138825/04/2021Has the culprit been found (hypertension)?Health, Blood pressure

Monday, April 24, 2023

Yehonatan Geffen - the aftermath

I have to admit that I was surprised by the amount of coverage in the current events news programmes on television about YG; we were treated to some of his songs, a short film of some people performing a song for a Memorial Day ceremony (in which YG looked skeletal - I doubt that I would have recognised him) and interviews with musicians who had worked with him over his long career. The most surprising event was live coverage of his funeral - generally not something awarded to poets or songwriters. One of the mourners who spoke was Yair Lapid, current leader of the opposition and short serving prime minister.

Of course, all of this was on Channel 12, that is well-known to right wingers as a hot bed of left wing anarchists. I wondered how 'the other side' would relate to his death; although I didn't see it, the Minister for Culture was ridiculed because he couldn't name any songs that YG wrote.

But the more expected reaction was that of extreme right wing Member of Knesset (and lawyer of 22 years, as we are frequently reminded) Tali Gottlieb, who said that "YG did not represent the state of Israel. He represented loose women*, alcholism and drugs" (in a radio interview). Prime Minister Netanyahu, who did not eulogise him, said "One who used to write terrible newspaper columns about the right wing and religious people". Well, what did one expect?

* I'm fairly sure that this was a misprint in the quote. The actual word used means 'break-ins' (as in criminal access to people's homes), but a simple error could cause this. Excuse the Hebrew...
היה כתוב "פריצות" ולא "פרוצות" כפי שאני מניח שנאמר

Whilst looking for a disc on my shelves, I found a 3-cd set entitle "The best of Yehonatan Geffen": two cds of songs and one of skits from his various satirical shows.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
7124/04/2007Speying the dogDog
94624/04/2016New mobile computerComputer
112524/04/2018New mp3 playermp3

Sunday, April 23, 2023

Erythritol - the story begins

For about a month, I've been buying lemon-line flavoured water from the kibbutz shop; what is special about this water is that it claims to have 0 calories per 100 ml, as opposed to the previous flavoured water that I used to purchase, with 15 calories/100 ml. Eventually I got around to checking what the ingredients of the 'new' flavoured water are and how it can have 0 calories/100 ml. After all, my bachelor's degree is in Food Science and my dissertation was on analytic methods for calculating the amount of xylitol in foods; xylitol is a 'sugar alcohol', sweet but not a sugar like glucose. 45 years ago, xylitol was a new and exciting sugar replacement.

The sweetener used in the flavoured water is erythritol, and like xylitol, it too is a sugar alcohol. Glucose has six carbon atoms in its structure and is thus a monosaccharide; xylitol has five and erythritol has only four. It is non-caloric as the body cannot metabolise erythritol; this in itself doesn't mean too much as often the gut flora can metabolise what we can't. If that happens, then one of the end products is gas. Interestingly, the gut flora also cannot metabolise erythritol, and so all that one ingests is excreted as is.

When I was a child, I was told not to eat sweets as they would cause holes in my teeth. Whilst this is accurate, it's not the scientific story. Bacteria in the mouth, primarily Streptococcus mutans, metabolise sugar that is left on the teeth and create lactic acid that is the factor that creates holes in the dental enamel. These bacteria also cannot metabolise erythritol.

From what I have learned so far, erythritol is the perfect sweetener (better also than any artificial sweetener), so of course I had to order some. I doubt that it is sold as is in Israel, so I had to order from IHerb. I wasn't really on the ball at first, so I only ordered the powder for use in tea. Later on, I looked for further products - toothpaste and chocolate - and ordered these. Today the powder arrived and I shall be examining its effect upon me.

The toothpaste will be interesting: anything that reduces dental plaque will be good, although I doubt that the small amount of toothpaste used each time will contribute much. I found an article in Hebrew about erythritol's dental applications that I printed for my oral hygienist.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
3323/04/2006First aidObituary, Hospital
35323/04/2011The UnthanksKing Crimson, The Unthanks
57723/04/2013Red RabbitTom Clancy
138723/04/2021How to deal with shoes that are a bit too large (and are ordered without trying them on)Shoes

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Songbird

Back at the beginning of November, I wrote about writing a new song - or at least, the music for a new song - but that as usual I had no words for it. A week or so later, I had an idea as I was riding my motorcycle to Bet Shemesh; the song would be called 'Songbird', and the lyrics would be something like 'If I were a songbird, I would sing for you all day'. Great start! I entered notes into my mobile phone so I wouldn't forget.

But once I sat down to write, the words simply would not come. I had to fight very hard in order to write a verse, a chorus and half of a second verse. The chorus doesn't really count, as it's basically the line 'I would sing so loud/proud' a few times. Then I was stuck.

During the week I spend my time working for other people. Most of the time I am doing what I like and enjoy, but not always; this week I spent several hours explaining to annoyed/exasperated people why I had changed something in Priority. The change would be for better but they were not convinced. In retrospect, I handled the change badly, which is rather ironic considering the topic of my doctoral research. Anyway, my point is that the only time that I can do things for myself is Friday afternoon and Saturday morning; sometimes the Friday is out, too.

So yesterday afternoon, I had a look at the meagre lyrics that I had written for 'Songbird' ... and wrote the remaining one and a half verses in about fifteen minutes! That's the way it goes. This morning I spent an hour or so recording the vocals (including overdubbed choruses) and maybe two hours mixing. This is a fairly simple song and definitely 'up'; maybe this is my new direction.

Now only one song whose music I worked on in September is awaiting words. 

Ironically, I started reading this morning (after a pointer from Peter Viney) the book "Daisy Jones and the Six", a gripping novel about the whirlwind rise of an iconic [fictional] 1970s rock group and their beautiful lead singer. I'm probably about half way through the book and am very envious of the writing relationship between Billy and the eponymous Daisy, how they come from different backgrounds but manage (after a poor start) to get the best out of each other (aka synergy).

I have to do it all on my own.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
12722/04/2008Holiday weekProgramming, Delphi, Cold feet
70222/04/2014More researchDBA
102422/04/2017Jerry Lee Lewis rides againGrandfather

Thursday, April 20, 2023

Again, vertigo

In the past few days, I've noticed that I've suffered from dizziness much more than normal. I should qualify that statement: normally I don't suffer from dizziness at all, but if I am sitting down and get up quickly, I feel a bit light-headed. This is normal! As I had a doctor's appointment yesterday for something else (an odd pain in my foot), I thought that I would mention the dizziness.

The doctor asked me to sit on the examining bed; he took my head in his hands and said that he wanted me to quickly lower my head until it rested on the bed. I did so and suffered immediately from a severe attack of dizziness. "Aha", the doctor said (or would have, had he been British): this is a clear case of vertigo.

I told him about my previous encounter with vertigo and the tests that I underwent. He said that there was no need for the ENG test again; instead he would prescribe a medication (that apparently is not very effective), but that the best way of curing the vertigo was by performing the Epley manoeuver. He asked for my phone then searched for this term in YouTube, finding a couple of videos that explain what to do.

The home Epley maneuver is a type of exercise that helps to treat the symptoms of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV). You can do this exercise at home. BPPV is caused by a problem in your inner ear. Your semicircular canals are found inside your ear. They detect motion and send this information to your brain. The utricle is a nearby part of the ear. It contains calcium crystals (canaliths) that help it detect movement. Sometimes these crystals detach from the utricle and end up inside the semicircular canals. When these crystals move inside the canals, they may send incorrect signals to your brain about your position. This can make you feel like the world is spinning. This is called vertigo. Dr. John Epley designed a series of movements to dislodge the crystals from the semicircular canals. These movements bring the crystals back to the utricle, where they belong. This treats the symptoms of vertigo.
[whoever wrote this has apparently never heard of the semicolon; this is very simple English]

So yesterday evening I laid down on my bed, trying to approximate the position shown in the video. I was turned to the right, but had no vertigo when lying down. I then turned 90° to my left; this gave me intense vertigo, and shows that the 'active' ear is my left ear (rereading my blog from seven years ago, I see that there also I noted that the left ear was more sensitive than the right; I also hear better in the left ear). I waited until the dizziness went, then turned back to the original position; more dizziness. I waited again until this passed and then assumed the third position, lying on my stomach with my head turned. I don't recall now, but I think that this wasn't so bad as the two previous turns. After waiting a bit, I got up and carried on as usual, although I was feeling a bit nauseous and fragile - normal responses to the manoever. 

This morning I repeated the manouever but felt no dizziness as I turned: this is good! I did feel a bit unsettled afterwards, but this feeling went fairly quickly. Later on my wife went to the pharmacy and bought the prescribed betahistine; I took one immediately when she returned, and to be honest, it made me feel a bit unsettled again. I will repeat the manouever at least twice a day until all dizziness has ceased.

Obligatory Peter Hammill quote: Cathedrals spiral skywards, I think I'm getting vertigo ("German overalls").



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
3220/04/2006Printer ate my foursProgramming
47220/04/2012Levon Helm, RIPObituary, The Band, RIP
57420/04/2013Emerging from the morning mistDog
70020/04/2014700 blogsMeta-blogging
70120/04/2014Musical progressMIDI, Song writing
94520/04/2016Programmers at work (2)Kindle
138620/04/2021Yet another new song ("There she goes")Song writing, Home recording
149520/04/2022Still positiveHealth, Covid-19

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Yehonatan Geffen (1947-2023)

With a great deal of sadness, I have to report the death of Israeli author/poet/songwriter Yehonatan Geffen. I wrote extensively about my connection with him here. In fact, I don't think that I have paid much attention to him since.

He was a huge influence on me in my first years of living in Israel and he will be missed.

Here is an obituary in English.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
3119/04/2006Strumming the guitar - stage oneProgramming, MIDI
24619/04/2010Books and filmsFilms, Nick Hornby, Time traveler's wife, Hugh Grant
69919/04/2014Researching during the Passover holiday weekDBA, Psychology
94419/04/2016Programmers in MOBIProgramming, Computer, Kindle
102319/04/2017Donating blood (2)Health, Donating blood
112319/04/201870 years of independenceIsrael, Kibbutz

Saturday, April 15, 2023

Revisiting the Hebrew song "Birthday"

I wrote two and a half years ago about this song. I had occasion to listen to the recorded version a few months ago and did not like it at all: it seemed too fast and the arrangement was too 'busy'. I started work on a new arrangement that would be much slower, 80 bpm instead of 100 bpm. I'm not sure about the original key of this arrangement: the previous version started in B minor (mutating in the middle to A minor), whereas this new version seemed to start in C#m minor.

I tried recording the vocals to this in a few barren sessions without getting very far. The major problem is that the tessitura is very large, from the absolute bottom of my vocal range until the absolute top. Whilst I can normally reach the high notes (although without much power), the low notes are very much hit and miss. I even tried adapting my current arrangement such that I could place the original vocal on top, which is when I discovered that I had removed breathing noise from the original vocal in such a way to cause 'pumping'. This didn't sound very good and as I couldn't achieve reasonable sounding tone settings, I abandoned this idea too.

Considering the song one night in bed, I hit upon a rather radical solution: record the lower parts of the vocal in D minor, then record the high parts in A minor. By means of vocal tuning software, I could lower the first part and raise the second part, having the finished song in C minor. So today I set out to accomplish just that. It turns out that almost all of the song was sung in the first part, with only a few lines sung in the second part. After several takes and a great deal of technical manipulation, I had a completed version.

Listening to it with fresh ears, it seems obvious to me that certain lines were recorded at a separate time (the high lines); this is primarily because there is less of a pause between the end of a line sung by vocal #1 and the beginning of the line sung by vocal #2. Tonally there is also a difference, but this can be explained away by the different vocal register.  Also, there were a few lines towards the end of the first verse with which I had trouble, so I sang these again at the end (in C minor): it seems that my vocal technique had changed over the hours working on the song, as this part sounds like the pasted high part.

Cheating, but the end product is what counts, and quite probably no one else but me will know how I managed to record this song. A clear conclusion, though, is to try and find songs with a smaller range; this was an undocumented conclusion to my previous song, 'Wonderful days', from two weeks ago.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
46915/04/2012[no title]MBA
102215/04/2017Return to KaizenDBA, Kaizen
121015/04/2019CommunicationsMobile phone
130915/04/2020Italian holiday filmHoliday, Home movies, Covid-19

Thursday, April 13, 2023

Rain, rain, rain

I mentioned a few days ago, almost in passing, that the temperature on Sunday was at least 35°C. Since then, the rain hardly seems to have stopped. On Monday evening, there was a little rain, but on Tuesday, 11 mm fell. Yesterday 36 mm fell, almost continuously, making it very difficult to find time to take the dog for a walk. Rain fell at 5:30 am this morning, but stopped shortly afterwards, thus allowing me to walk the dog. Since then, it's been bucketing down, sometimes with thunderclaps. [46.9 mm]

Three young people were killed a few days ago when crossing what would normally have been a dry stream in the Negev; instead they were swept away by the strong flow and their bodies were found a few kilometres away.

My son and his wife drove to Eilat yesterday afternoon; the road was blocked by the police at some stage because of the weather, but later on they were allowed to continue their journey and arrived safely in the evening. They say that it's a sunny day where they are. Meanwhile snow is falling in the north of Israel.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
34913/04/2011Advanced SQL for me - NULLIFProgramming, SQL
69613/04/2014Fifteen minute mealsCooking
82713/04/2015Vinyl log 3 - 13 AprilDCI Banks, Richard Thompson, Vinyl log
102113/04/2017April thesis updateDBA

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

More bells and whistles for the 'Blog' program

In the course of retrieving the tag frequency counts for the 1600 blogs, I had some more ideas for improving the 'blog' program. The first (that I am not going to show here) appears in the 'choose entries' form: one now has the option of choosing tags either alphabetically or by frequency (this of course means that every now and then I have to recalculate the frequencies). I don't know whether this idea is going to be a keeper, but it definitely helped, at least for cataloguing this blog entry, as 'programming' and 'delphi' are in the top five tags.

The other idea took me by surprise. In the 'show entries' form that is fed by the above 'choose entries' form, I had previously added a popup menu with a few options and short cuts. Today I added another option; as one has to rely on one's memory in order to know which short cut does what, I thought that I would add the options to the screen's status bar.

Then I had a delicious thought: would it be possible to click on a pane in order to execute the appropriate command? I've never done this before so I did some Stack Overflow research and found this question. There are a couple of solutions given; I used the first method that uses the OnMouseDown event of the status bar. As this solution simply displays the pane number, I had to exend it in order to have the click execute something. At first I listed the various options in a case statement, but I wasn't very happy with this. Then it occurred to me that the panel index is the same as the popup menu index, so I could use this and save a case statement that was getting a bit awkward because the event handler had to exit if an option were chosen. My contribution below is the tmenuitem (popupmenu1.Items[i]).Click line. Maybe I can use this idea in the 'manager' program.

procedure TShowEntries.sbMouseDown(Sender: TObject; Button: TMouseButton; Shift: TShiftState; X, Y: Integer); begin tcomponent (sender).tag:= x; end; procedure TShowEntries.sbClick(Sender: TObject); var accwidth, i: integer; begin accwidth:= 0; for i:= 0 to sb.panels.count - 1 do begin accwidth:= accwidth + sb.panels[i].width; if sb.Tag < accwidth then begin tmenuitem (popupmenu1.Items[i]).Click; break end end; end;


This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
82612/04/2015How not to display data in graphsStatistics
112112/04/2018Apology to Israel RailwaysTrains

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Half truths and outright lies

Last night, we had the dubious pleasure of watching on television a press briefing by Israel's prime minister, ostensibly about the security situation. When he started with a tirade against the previous government for making an agreement with Lebanon and/or Hizballa about the disputed gas fields off the coast, I knew that there was no point in continuing to listen to his combination of half-truths, outright lies and the incapability of recognising that maybe he has made mistakes.

At the end, there was a question and answer session; I would have liked to ask the following questions 

  • For how long are you going to blame the previous government (that existed for barely a year) for all of Israel's problems? When are you going to take responsibility yourself?
  • Endlessly you repeat that you and your supporters were given a clear mandate by the electorate ... for reforming (or ruining) the legal system. Do you remember that your election message was about fixing the cost of living? And that the legal system was not mentioned? When are you going to do something about the cost of living?
  • Again, you claim that the number of terrorist attacks doubled under the previous government. Please explain how it has doubled and trebled since your government was sworn in.
  • As you say, you were given a clear mandate. How do you explain the fact that your ratings in opinion polls is very bad? How have you managed to do so badly in such a short time?

I bare my buttocks to you.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
2811/04/2006Sitting shiv'aTV series, Obituary, William and Mary
24211/04/2010Driving lessonsFilms, Diane Keaton
24311/04/2010Surprised and pleasedOrganisation behaviour, MBA
57111/04/2013Speeding up ExcelProgramming, Office automation
94211/04/2016Farewell to Sorrento (2016/6)Holiday, Sorrento, Italy
94311/04/2016Coda: Rome airport (2016/7)Mobile phone, Holiday
112011/04/2018Troubles with trainsTrains
149211/04/2022Our son got married!Personal

Monday, April 10, 2023

1600 blogs

Before I get started on the 'hit parade', I want to note that yesterday was a sharav, with temperatures reaching at least 35°C. Today has cooled by about 10°C; about an hour ago we had a thunderstorm and a little rain - the sort of rain that gets one wet but doesn't do much for the vegetation. I wonder what tomorrow's weather will be like.


1600 blogs. Here are the most popular tags, along with their position in the previous 100 blogs.

Position Tag Count Previous All time position
1 Israel 12 - 13
2 DBA 11 12 2
3 Personal 11 2 4
4 Programming 11 4 1
5 Bari 9 - -
6 Holiday 9 - 3
7 Italy 9 - 9
8 Meta-blogging 7 - 36
9 Non-fiction books 7 (18) 49
10 Cooking 6 7 7
11 Weather 6 22 31
12 Obituary 5 17 10
13 Headphones 3 - 78
14 Health 3 1 5
15 Kate Bush 3 - 102
16 Kibbutz 3 - 19
17 Sleep 3 - 93
18 Song writing 3 3 16

Well, it's pretty clear that the 11 months and 100 blogs since 8 May 2022 are completely different from the 100 blogs previous to this period. Health has almost dropped off the charts - I've been healthy even since my blood pressure has been balanced, save for a minor incidence of gout that has not returned. 

No more Covid-19 means holidays! Italy! Bari

Unfortunately, the political situation of the past few months in Israel has forced me to write 12 blogs on the topic.

In these past 11 months I've done a great deal of work on my doctorate, performing all the research and writing it up. 

Non-fiction books is a new category, although I've back tagged previous entries; there were 3 entries between 1401 and 1500 that would have put this tag in 18th place.

Only personal and programming have held their position; these are activities that always take place.

There's barely been any blogs about song writing; this is a topic that has almost dropped off the radar. Since May last year, I've completed only one song.

I wouldn't dare make a guess what the next 100 blogs are going to be about.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
2710/04/2006What's been happeningHealth, MIDI
24110/04/2010Speaking the statementsProgramming, Delphi, Resource files
56910/04/2013Pictures from a balcony (6)Personal, Dog
57010/04/2013A new CPAP machineCPAP, Apnea, Gadgets
69410/04/2014CalibreKindle
69510/04/2014A picture is worth a thousand wordsPersonal
82510/04/2015Sandy Denny: songwriting and productionSandy Denny
130810/04/2020I like the sound of falling rainSong writing
149110/04/2022The view from our rear balconyPersonal

Sunday, April 09, 2023

Problems with headphones

Five years ago, I wrote For walking around the kibbutz, I have a pair of headphones with a built in player; these are good, the player continues from the last song played which normally is good, but problematic if the 'song' is a complete album. The headphones themselves aren't as good as the Sony ones, which is not surprising; these barely cover the ears and don't fold, so I don't take them on the train.

Something happened to the phones a few weeks ago: the right hand speaker became detached from the arm; I'm not sure exactly how this happened. I tried repairing the damage with a splint and adhesive tape but this was clearly an interim solution. I quickly ordered a new pair of headphones with an internal mp3 player from Ebay.

These arrived about two weeks ago; whilst they look very good, the problems started as soon as I finished charging the player. After extracting the sd card from the old headphones and making some additions (and deletions) to the songs stored within, I inserted it into the new headphones - this was very easy to do. Then I turned the headphones on: the output was in mono but not even centred. I switched the headphones around - no difference. So it was time to write to the person from whom I had purchased them.

I tried a few experiments, like connecting the headphones via a cable to my external mp3 player; no change. The vendor suggested using the headphones with bluetooth, so I copied a few songs to my phone (including "Yours is no disgrace" by Yes, featuring various stereo effects), turned on the bluetooth and listened. Whilst the sound was very clear, Steve Howe's guitar did not alternately sound from left and right phones. The vendor wanted a video (!) of the phones, although for what purpose I cannot fathom (unless he sells many products), as the problem is with the sound.

A few days ago I decided to cut my losses and ordered another set of headphones, at only half the price. Maybe these will work properly.

In the mean time ... I was about to take the dog for a walk about an hour ago when the right hand speaker became detached from the arm! I'm going to try glueing the speaker as the damage seems easier to repair than with the prior set of heaphones. But even so, these headphones are destined for the rubbish bin.

For my walks, I will now use the external mp3 player connected to my very expensive
noise cancelling headphones, although I won't turn this function on.


This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
34809/04/2011dbPrologProgramming, Delphi, SQL, Firebird, Prolog
56709/04/2013Passover hall picturesJewish holidays, Mobile phone
56809/04/2013Mobile phone problem solvedMobile phone
69309/04/2014Switching mentorsDBA
82409/04/2015Trevor Lucas triviaSandy Denny, Fotheringay
94109/04/2016A few quiet places in Sorrento (2016/5)Holiday, Sorrento, Italy
120909/04/2019Shadrach in the furnaceKindle, Robert Silverberg, 1978
130709/04/2020Pesach in the shade of CoronaJewish holidays, Israel, Covid-19

Thursday, April 06, 2023

Recording 'Wonderful days'

Two months ago, I wrote about starting a new song. I worked diligently on this during spare time and eventually completed an arrangement. The third version of this finished with a section that is based on the Andalusian cadence; this suggested itself to me after the Phrygian portions of the song (especially during the 'middle eight' - actually eight bars of instrumental and eight bars of singing). But I used a twist on the casdence as I will explain below. 

Earlier in the year I had been sequencing the Van der Graaf Generator song "My room (waiting for wonderland)" and although this does not feature the Andalusian cadence in full, it's very similar. What also is interesting about this song is that the verse features an odd rhythm that I wrote about two years ago: one bar of 4/4, one of 2/4, then two bars of 4/4. As it happens, David Bennett uploaded a video a few days ago about songs that are in 14/4 time; although I consider this to be a somewhat artificial time signature, it does describes the rhythm in 'My room', and thus the rhythm in the coda of my new song. I mapped the Andalusian cadence onto this rhythmic structure, with the second chord having only two beats. Maybe the non-musical amongst you won't notice this. What follows below is more for my benefit that for anything else.

The music was written on 4 February but the words arrived only three weeks later. I decided that I have written enough sad songs and that it is time for something more uplifting, hence the title 'Wonderful days'. This phrase appears right at the end of the song; indeed, until that moment, I was wondering what the song would be called. I spent most of Saturday 11 March trying to record vocals to the song and not really succeeding. It doesn't help that the tune is awkward - the first line starts on a C#, the second line starts on D and the third line on D# - and that there are many words to each line. The lyricist in me is annoyed with the musician in me who insists on writing such complicated vocal lines.

That initial 'recording session', whilst not being successful, did at least clarify a few things. The song was originally written in the key of A but even then I knew that this was far too high for my vocal range. For several weeeks, the song was lowered to E, making its highest note C, an octave above middle C, and its lowest note Ab, four semitones below middle C (this is not a recognised male vocal range; it's somewhere between a high tenor and an alto). The recordings showed that I could reach the high note but not the low note, so I had to transpose the song up to the key of F# - a key with six sharps, should I have written the sheet music out (I could also call this Gb, in which case there would be six flats in the key signature). As the second chord in the tune is now F# augumented, the first note on this chord should be called C double sharp (i.e. C# augumented) - but this doesn't really make any difference to me or to the MIDI sequencer. 

Once I could sing the song, I found that I also had great difficulty in producing a good vocal track; the tone of my voice seemed to change from line to line. I couldn't find good settings for reverb and eq, and also couldn't decide whether to have the vocals in mono or in fake double tracking. I decided to leave recording the vocals for later, although as the middle section was good (including the highest note that is now D, an octave and two semitones above middle C), I kept this short passage. I'm fairly sure that I reached that D without any mechanical help.

In the mean time, I discovered that Audacity, the 'free and open-source digital audio editor and recording application software', has the ability to make a continuous change to the tempo and/or pitch of a selection within a music file (this is confusingly called a 'sliding stretch'), so I used this to slow down the ending of the coda. Now that I know how to do this, I may use it to speed up parts of songs without affecting the pitch; Reason (or, at least the old version that I have) does not allow changes in tempo whatsoever.

It is now the first day of the Passover holiday; I had promised myself that I would work on this song during the holiday. So this morning I set up the microphone, briefly warmed up my voice - then sang the entire song with the same quiet tone throughout! One take. Processing the vocal track was also straight-forward, as was the mixing (this was partially due to my previous work). So after two hours of problem free work, I completed this song.

Now all I have to do is write words for the two songs that I had completed prior to this one but are still lacking words. Only then will I be able to record them. I also have a few covers of songs that I want to record (or rerecord) vocals for, so maybe I'll work on these for the time being.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
12506/04/2008The night of the long knivesRedundancies, Downsizing
16506/04/2009Dave Stewart/Barbara Gaskin - Green and BlueRichard Thompson, Peter Hammill, Randy Newman, Jackson Browne, Canterbury sound
34706/04/2011Green MBAMBA
56506/04/2013Back to bloggingDBA, Jewish holidays, Cooking, Mobile phone
120806/04/2019Maybe I'm doing it wrongmulti-track
130506/04/2020Days of Corona (3)Personal, Psychology, John Le Carre, Covid-19

Wednesday, April 05, 2023

Passover night, 2023

After a gap of several years, Anat and I returned to performing 'our' song at the beginning of the Passover ceremony. The entire evening was very enjoyable and allowed one to forget the past few years. 

As expected, there were more than a few references to the current internal situation in Israel; whilst the text of the ceremony is fixed (in the booklet that contains the text, but one could produce a new booklet), the 'blessings' that accompany the traditional four cups of wine are written anew each year. Naturally the topic of being slaves in Egypt and suffering under the Pharoah has several parallels to today's situation, although we feel that it's the story in reverse: after having been free men, we are now entering a period of 'slavery', or at least, having our freedoms curtailed.

I could choose from two pictures to display here: the other picture doesn't cut me off on the left, but I can see that we are getting ready: I am fixing the capo on the guitar and Anat is looking off to the side and not to the microphone. So I feel that the above picture is better.



This day in history:

Blog #Date TitleTags
24005/04/2010HolidayCooking
34605/04/2011Firebird fixed!Computer, Firebird
69205/04/2014PneumoniaHealth, Nick Drake
82105/04/2015Vinyl log 1 - 5 AprilVinyl log
93705/04/2016Sorrento shopping (2016/2)Holiday, Sorrento, Italy
111805/04/2018The sense of an ending (2)Films, Literature
120705/04/2019Excellent music blogBeatles, Song writing