Music’s Place In My Soul

Listening to Rufus Du Sol, reminded how much I enjoy electronic music and one of my regrets: when I had the chance to study music formally, I opted not to. Insecurities spoke too loudly, drowning out passion. I loved studying music theory, exploring the way audio elevations interact with each other. Memories of improvisation workshops, and the compliments I received for my commitment to rhythm.

Now, though, my poetry echos my musical tastes. Symmetry, rich harmonies, layers, textures, all blending into something far greater than the sum of the parts.

The difference between music and poetry: in poetry words flow in single streams. Together, yet alone; they can’t interact. Several words flowing together at the same time create a pile of textual vomit. Music allows multiple people singing multiple lines simultaneously with their interaction making them greater. Much the way different colors blend into new colors, different feelings, telling a story with each dab.

I often play with the idea of restarting this path. Of exploring all that can be done with today’s computers, today’s sampling gear, today’s synthesizers. I could create words, sung, standing upon each other, blurring, blending into something greater, into something beyond whatever could be imagined. Words building upon words, interweaving with tones, textures and rhythms, pushing through feelings, ideas, the power of souls intermixing and exploding with something more powerful than any human element could be, do, express on it’s own.

With all this, when I was younger I listened to music deeply, richly. I listened to the chords, the words, exploring what the composer communicates with that interplay. Did the pleasant, kind words take on irony with the minor or diminished chord interwoven? Words stacked with changing chords, showing tension, motion, landing on a major chord, resolution, release.

Then there’s the blending of older music, ancient music, such as Enigma, taking ancient chant, interweaving new tones and auditory textures, creating something linking the ancient with the rising sun, with a newness of being, something that both exists from antiquity and yet is brand new.

Lesson: passions drive live, make it beautiful. Explore them fully, deeply, richly. Humanity needs no more bitter business people, soul’s stripped of joy. No, we need more passion, joy, aliveness.

Bring that into being, my friends.

Here is the song by Rufus Del Sol that got me going. Enjoy!

Classic XKCD

I’ve long been a fan of XKCD. There are a few strips that I find myself coming back to time and time again.

 

Found a Quote, Made a Graphic

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio from Pexels

I love this quote: “Don’t ask what the world needs, ask what makes you come alive. Because what the world needs most, is more people who come alive.” – Howard Thurman

So I went onto Pexels and found this photo by Andrea Piacquadio to whip up this graphic.

Life Update: February 26, 2020

Update in the life of Carl: this Friday will be my last day at my current job. Though tinged with sadness (great people to be missed, though a commute to Bellevue I rejoice in leaving behind), I move forward. After exploring some re-training options, I plan to study Web and Application Development at Edmond Community College. Though still ironing out details, this path excites me. With a gap in my time starting next week, I plan to spend time catching up as many people as I can. Friendship: life’s best present.

Ah, Them Sports Things

Seattle, like most major sports markets, has it’s share of maniacal fans. I, however, am not one. To be clear, I adore my city and root for the home team. But, well, my interest in the details of most sports is pretty limited. I tend to get bored and find myself exploring Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, or, if I’m really far gone, down various rabbit holes on YouTube.

I discovered this comic a few years ago, and regularly repost it on my socials to remind folks of my, well, apathetic ignorance of most things sports. My great appreciation to the good folks at VectorBelly for crafting this gem.

The Difference Between A Master And Beginner

[Image] Difference between a master and a beginner

As a martial artist and Star Wars fan, this speaks to me deeply. The reminder to keep trying, to keep getting up and trying again. Never give up on your goals.

A Note On Blog Posting

I follow a number of blogs, most of them sending me emails about new posts. Today I received around 15 messages from one as they posted post after post. So, I wanted to remind everyone about a great feature within both WordPress and Blogger (and I expect other blogging platforms as well): Scheduled Posts.

With a plethora of blog posts to load, instead of blasting them all out at the same time, balance them out over time. Besides the kindness to your readers’ inboxes, Google prefers that SEO-wise, as you end up with more continuous content and updates.

WordPress:

So, in WordPress’ block editor, before you post, head to the upper right-hand corner, click the gear, then “Post Settings”, then “Status”. Click on a date and time for your post to go.

Annotation 2020-02-16 093350

 

Blogger: 

The advice is pretty much exactly the same, if the visuals are different.

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So, there you go! Spread those posts out, get better SEO and avoid flooding inboxes. And keep on pursuing greatness!

Today’s Black History Month Meditation: Kwame Dawes 

This reminds of great advice given to me by myriad mentors: to become a better writer, read more, read deeply, delight in great writing. 

To learn more about Kwame Dawes, check out his bio on Poetry Foundation

A bit of martial arts wisdom this evening

Tidbits to remember during life’s trials. Focus on the end goal.