Thursday, July 31, 2008

basketball, et al

The Shank Family College Tour stopped in Springfield yesterday and, coincidentally, our hotel shared a parking lot with the Basketball Hall of Fame. Totally unexpected but definitely cool.





















The museum itself is a 3-story hemisphere (that resembles a basketball) with a 10-story spire.
















Here it is at night all lit up and taken from our hotel parking lot. We were that close.
















Inside it's the "Hall of Famers" on the top floor, games and informative videos on the middle level and a basketball court with all kinds of stuff (dunking contest, historical baskets, etc.) on the bottom. Here's the a few of the inductees.
















They had info and memorabilia about each of the inductees: Coach, Player, Official and Contributor.
















These are the three floors seen together.





















Papa Shank takes a shot. He is preternaturally better at 3-pointers than me.
















That's me versus Shaq's shoe size. Biggest in the NBA: size 23.











That's the original Chuck Taylor, everybody: namesake of my favorite shoe in the whole entire world (see previous picture). His name is a brand/style of shoe which has been on the court and on the foot since 1917!
















Our hotel was right next to a club that had live music every night and I was lucky enough to check out a group of awesome musicians on Wednesday. I had a long chat with their lead guitarist, Michael George, after they ended their set.









We talked poetry, art and great rock 'n roll. He played as a session musician in New York/Nashville and had some great experiences/stories to share. I'll never forget their rendition of Hendrix's Little Wing...the guitar gods smiled. He plays like conversation and this awful photograph only catches him in the midst of greatness. I worshipped at the altar of the Gods of Rock and I had the rare chance to talk with a priest.

Here's some more random photos from the trip.



















Monday, July 28, 2008

east coast

One of the nice things about having 3 months off every year is that, for the past 2 years, I've been able to accompany family members on college adventures on the different coasts of the United States. Last year I drove to Bellingham, Washington to pick up my little sister, Caitlin, from Western Washington University and, this year, I'm in the Boston area to help the other sister, Emma, look for colleges.

I was actually going to attend the Berklee College of Music at one point (i.e. I've been out here before) but one of the nice things about this place nowadays is that some good friends of mine from my days at Luther College have settled in the Boston area. We met up to have dinner and some great microbrews at the Publick House the other night. Beth Willer and Abby Frost!















They are unfailingly brilliant musicians and it was great to see them again. Abby and I actually designed and implemented our own choral/orchestral survey course while we were at Luther and learned a lot. Speaking of that class, one thing I didn't know was that Beth (who is a crazy-awesome singer/conductor/pianist/trumpet player) hates Mendelssohn's Elijah. Sacrilege!

Anyway, here are some random pictures I've taken over the last few days. The first one I took while haunting the music hall at Brandeis University. May I present Leonard Bernstein's childhood piano!















I have no idea how I blindly stumbled across this. Apparently (and unbeknownst to this huge Bernstein fan), he was on the faculty here in the 50s and, in his honor, they bought this thing. It's just sitting out in the common area of the building with an informational sign that ends with, "When you're as good as Lenny, maybe we'll let you play it too."











Saturday, July 26, 2008

summer singers

The Summer Singers gave a wonderful performance of Blue! 'Tis the Life of Heaven Thursday night. That piece is the second movement of Color Madrigals: Six Songs on Texts by John Keats and, since Vicki and her lovely singers premiered the third and fourth movements of that set last summer, it was like coming home.

In honor of Minnesota's 150th birthday, the concert featured music by composers from the state...many of whom were in attendance.















Here you've got Robert Berglund (who I met last time I worked with The Summer Singers), Matthew Culloton, Maestra Vicki Peters, Abbie Betinis, Michael Dennis Browne (some of his poetry was included), Jocelyn Hagen (who was the only other one courageous enough to go "toes out" with me) and this composer.

I love that picture because, last time there was a MN 150 concert, most of these people were there for a group picture as well. However, since it was in January, we were much pastier and way more layered in attire (and one of us was a little less pregnant as well). See for yourself.














(Just for good measure that's Michael Dennis Browne, Matt, Stephen Paulus, David Evan Thomas, Abbie, Craig Carnahan, Jocelyn, Tim Takach, me and Edie Hill.)

It was so nice to see everyone again. I was chatting with someone at the after party about how great it is to reconnect with an ensemble like that. Normally I write the piece, fly in for the premiere, nervously talk at the audience, make great friends and then abruptly drop off the face of the earth in terms of my dealings with the people I've met.

A genuine thanks goes out to the Summer Singers for having me back. I hope it's a yearly tradition!

Oh...and they did give me some fine Irish whiskey this time around (see previous entry). What could be better!

Friday, July 25, 2008

tom petty and the heartbreakers

I went to a Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers concert at the Target Center last Wednesday which was totally awesome. My dad is a huge TP fan and we were able to get 6 tickets and take almost the entire family for some good bonding at the altar of the gods of rock.

This was about 20 minutes before they turned down the lights and the opening act, Steve Winwood, took the stage. He's an English guitarist who had a few hits in the 80s (remember Higher Love or Back in the High Life Again) and, for the most part, he and his band were great to listen to while the arena filled with people.
















They played this great blues tune near the end of their set where he went for a few bars of a solo, stepped back and then turned up. Once my ears starting hurting and the paint was peeling off the walls I knew I was at a real rock concert. Unfortunately, it was so good he never should have followed it up with 2 or 3 more songs. They completely deflated your sense of awesomeness.

Then the big dogs rolled out and turned the on-stage light show on. I had never realized it before this concert of mostly hits but I know a lot of Tom Petty songs and I don't even own any of his albums (this will change). And the even cooler thing is that a lot of people know a lot of his songs. Last Dance With Mary Jane was probably my unqualified favorite. Remember the creepy video, anybody?
















I was having a really, really good time until I realized (during Free Fallin') that I was standing with about 19,000 fellow music fans and they were all singing. Way cool...definitely inspiring...and the concert just got better from that point.

The Star Tribune wrote a good review for this event (read it here) and my favorite line is near the end when the reviewer states:
"Even though Petty was playing mostly familiar mid-tempo radio hits, the music had more immediacy, oomph and impact live."
Nail on the head, sir. I hope this isn't my last TP show.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

my new favorite picture of all time

Click on this to see it a little bigger. Oh my god this is funny!

Sunday, July 20, 2008

hamluke

I went to a production of Hamluke at the Lowry Lab Theater last week that was absolutely hilarious. It's a cross between Hamlet and Star Wars and it was so funny I almost wet my pants. No lie.

Before the show we knocked off another of Minnesota Monthly's best burgers in the state: the Lion's Tap in Eden Prairie. I went with the double cheeseburger and a side of delicious cholesterol. They really know how to make a thin burger at the Lion's Tap. Soooo good...
















Drinks at Pazzaluna before the show. This is one of my favorite pictures that I've ever taken. The light makes the glass pop perfectly and the focus on the bubbles is just right.
















Here's the sandwich board for the show out front. I really can't say enough about how fun and creative this thing was.





















As the title suggests, they combined characters from the 2 sagas.

-The king was Darthius (he was also the puppeteer for the cross between Yoda and Polonius: Polyodius).

-A puppet of Jar-Jar Binks was the gravedigger who unearthed not the skull of poor Yorrick but a storm trooper helmet that, in a really subtle nod to the original SW movie, Hamluke then addressed as TK421.

-Princess Leia and Ophelia became Opheleia. She doubled as Queen Gertrude/Amidala...Cinnabon hairstyle and all.

-The Players became Jawas played by 3 little kids.

-My personal favorite: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were Lando Calrissian and his bald, half-robot henchman.

The actors also stayed as close to the inflection of the characters in Star Wars as possible (the "I am your father" scene was frickin' hilarious). One of the funnier aspects were the lightsaber battles where the actors had to make their own sounds. If you live in the Cities and are a fan of Star Wars and Hamlet then you have to go and see this before it closes. It's the funniest Star Wars spoof I've seen since Chad Vader: Day Shift Manager.

Friday, July 18, 2008

last day of vacation

Dubuque, Iowa is on the way home from Decorah and, since my brother and his family live there, I stopped through for a couple days and did the uncle thing as well as I could...I'm not so great with the babies. Luckily, Gracie is pretty easy to get along with....
















...and Mya doesn't really protest too much yet (especially since my camera has a flashing red light on it).
















I blogged about Minnesota Monthly's list of the best burgers in the state a few weeks ago and it turns out that I've been driving by one of them every time I head to Rochester or points south. So, in one last act of I'm-on-vacation-and-I'll-eat-whatever-I-want, I stopped at the House of Coates (it's in Coates, MN) for supper. The waitress suggested the Swanee Burger and she seemed to know what she was talking about. It's got onions fried to perfection and bleu cheese dressing that you can't see. I was trying to finish reading Ned Rorem's second volume of diaries but this thing was not a one-handed affair. I think I got some burger grease on one of the pages (sorry, Ned!).