Since the audience of this blog is largely technical, I don't post much about other topics, but I feel it's time for a short summary about one of my "real life projects".
In the spring of 2009 I joined a progressive death metal band. I've been drumming since I was 17, but during the last 2 years I've been practising and rehearsing like never before.[1]
When you hear yourself on tape for the first time, it's a bit of disillusionment as you suddenly hear every imperfection, many of which you didn't realise you had (or didn't think were very noticeable).
So 2 years of practicing, rehearsing, test recordings, real recordings, mixing sessions (where you really grow a good ear towards imperfections) later we are now getting to the point where we can nail our stuff and are looking very forward to our first gig, which will be June 3rd in jh sjatoo in Kalken.
We've written about 7 songs, of which at this point we play 5. I wish we had proper recordings of all of them, but "Total Annihilation" captures several aspects of our style:
In early 2010 I treated myself (found a nice 2nd hand deal) to a new pdp birch kit with Zildjian Z custom cymbals (that was actually at the time I was in the interview process for a Palo-Alto position at Facebook so I might have needed to sell it again soon after, but that didn't happen).
Here are some pics:
1,
2,
3,
4.
More info about the band:
posted on Saturday, 14 May 2011 14:58 - link - tags: music, real life - path: / - 1 comments
I've always liked Amarok: it does everything I always wanted, and more. It looks perfect in every way ...
But .. it uses the QT library, and although there are tricks to make QT applications more fit in with your gtk desktop/theme it will never fit in perfectly, not only graphically but also because you still need to load the qt libraries when you want to listen to some music and it is built to interact with the KDE desktop environment.
So, I've been looking for an alternative, a GTK application strong enough to actually be able to replace Amarok, the king of all software music players.
::Read more
posted on Sunday, 08 Jul 2007 12:50 - link - tags: foss, linux, music - path: / - 11 comments
Weird as it might sound, I've never bothered to listen to Muse songs.. until now. Some people have recommended the band to me so I really had to stop ignoring this band someday. And wow.. what have I been missing al that time :/
Songs like Butterflies and Hurricanes and Citizen Erased are among the most beautiful songs I've ever heard now.
posted on Sunday, 09 Nov 2008 10:33 - link - tags: music - path: / - 2 comments
I've been meaning to write about a lot of stuff in separate posts, but they kept getting delayed, so I'll just briefly share everything in one post.
I've been in Berlin for the first Velocity conference in the EU, which was quite good. The best part was probably the "Velocity Birds of feather" (whatever that means) unconference the day before at betahaus, which was great for meeting some folks such as the soundcloud.com guys (which BTW, is the site we host our music on), although lots more interesting folks attended the conference itself (and it was packed).
Berlin itself was nice too. Lots of history (Berlin wall, world war(s)), lots of impressive architecture (old and new), very cheap (albeit mediocre in quality) food, lots of Italian food, a bit cold though.
I'm still recovering from the awesome time I just had in NYC. I've been way more busy over there than I anticipated. I should have stayed 2 or 3 weeks instead of 1 :). I've met various locals (one of whom who'd love to become a city guide as 2nd job because she just loves showing people around, so that just turned out great!). I didn't go for the typical touristy things (I skipped things like the WTC memorial, empire state building, statue of liberty, to the extent you can skip them, as they are very visible from pretty much all over the place).
Instead, I wanted to get a feel of the real city and the people inhabiting it. I've seen parts of Queens, central and North-West Brooklyn, lots of areas (but not enough) in Manhattan and even Staten Island, been to a rock concert, comedy, improv and cabaret shows, the movies, more bars than I can count and mostly ate out with company (just as real new yorkers do, of course, though for breakfast that feels a bit weird). I even went shopping (not mall-shopping, but groceries in the supermarket, the Williamsburg Foodtown - that's what it's called - clerk advised me to enjoy every last second in the US, phrased in a way as if any other place in the world sucks in comparison, which is ridiculous, but turns out I followed his advice anyway) because I stayed at an apartment in Williamsburg, I also had 2 roommates, with whom I ironically couldn't spend as much time as I wanted to as I was so busy meeting up with all those other people, I also visited the Etsy and Vimeo offices (both are awesome) and met up with Dave Reisner (who is one of our latest Arch Linux devs, and who lives in NJ, but don't tell anyone) and who forgot to show me around in the Google office ;-) And I realize some of the past sentences are a bit long and busy but that's one of the things I learned at New York I guess. For one week, I almost lived like a real New Yorker, and it was interesting (but exhausting).
Enough about the trips. Back to daily life. I moved to the city of Ghent. Riding by bike to work every day along the scenic Coupure is fun.
I am quite proud to say nearly all of my stuff in this apartment is second hand and I've been lucky to receive some free stuff as well (thanks Bram!). Not (only) because I'm cheap money conscious but I like to give things a second life instead of buying something new, lowering the impact on the environment. Even if it doesn't look too well, as long as it's functional. And this is exactly one of those values I mentioned above which is often not understood in our Western society but I was pleased to find out this philosophy is the standard in large parts of Thai culture.
We've done 3 gigs (which had great reception, luckily) and we've got planned a few already for 2012, one of which will be at the From Rock Till Core festival in Merelbeke.
We also did a semi-professional photo-shoot, and I made a website (you can tell I'm not a designer).
posted on Sunday, 08 Jan 2012 18:10 - link - tags: music, real life, travel - path: / - 2 comments