Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Pet Shop Boys Electric


It was an amazing night at the Pet Shop Boys’ Electric concert in DC. This was my third time seeing them live. The duo is made up of two non-performers, so their basic premise for concerts is to stand there — one sings, the other plays keyboard — while exciting things happen around them.

The exciting things happening this time: dancers wearing horned minotaur heads, creative backdrop video, strobes blasting, fog machines, and tons of lasers.


During one song the Boys wore a bowler hat and a disco ball each covered with mirrors while spotlights beamed down on their heads and sent sparkles throughout the hall.

For Love, etc. the Boys got into upturned beds and performed with different bodies from the neck down projected onto the sheets. For Domino dancing the dancers were dressed head-to-toe in tinsel suits bouncing on pogo sticks as Neil got the crowd to sing along. Towards the end the dancers were on 4 legged stilts walking around.

The lasers were my favorite part, they made everything mesmerizing and exciting, you could watch them all night. I've never seen anything like it. Here's the setlist.


Here's a video of the closing number, Vocal from the Moscow set (they have fans and tour everywhere). Skip ahead 2/3 of the way into the video, it explains the epilepsy warning posters outside the concert hall!


The Pet Shop Boys are interesting blokes, and put a lot of thought and deliberation into what they do. So when a new record comes out it's a treat to find interviews where they talk about their work. Here's an electronic press kit video on the making of the new Electric album, insight into their work process, an interview of producer Stuart Price, along with footage from the tour.
[Not my photos above.]

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Banging and Lasers


Looking forward to "banging and lasers," the Pet Shop Boys' own description of their Electric tour. Thanks to Craigslist I'm going to see their concert in DC tonight!

Nobody knows who they are, but these guys are my favorite. Why?
  • They've been making records for almost 30 years straight. Not a reunion.
  • They've pioneered the sound and trends that a lot of artists have followed. For instance: remixes.
  • They use a lot of electronic sounds. I heart vocoder.
  • They use a lot of other sounds: orchestral, choral, guitars, horns, sound effects. There's a harpsichord on their latest pop single.
  • Their focus is on composition: they've scored a ballet, performed a silent movie soundtrack, written music for a solar eclipse. They nick chord changes from classical composers for their songs.
  • Super-interesting tunes. Songs are just as likely to be a Russian history lesson, or a story about dictators in hell, as about love.
  • Intelligent. In the lyrics of their latest album: bolshy, bourgeoisie, doss, oligarch, schadenfreude. It’s dictionary meets dancefloor.
  • Prolific. Lots of non-album b-sides. Two full albums out in the last 12 months. It's great for fans.
  • They're very British.
Looking forward to this special night. Is it 8:00 yet?

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Love Is the Answer


Washington DC is divided into four quadrants (NE, SE, SW, NW) with the Capitol at the center.

NW is where I spend most of my time, it's where work is. This time all the hotels near work were booked up, so I'm staying in DC NE.

There are a lot of cranes and new buildings going up near the NE DC hotel I'm at this week. But you don't have to travel far from the gentrification zone to find sketchy neighborhoods. Which I did last night as I walked around looking for dinner.

Let's just say I've never been in a Subway where the sandwich makers are behind inch-thick bulletproof glass.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Smooth As a Baby’s Bum


Usually portable roadside signs bring news of solemn inconvenience. This is the first I've ever seen with an exclamation point!

Saturday night I was so happy to see this sign on a main route we've been detouring for months. I went zipping through the new road, now with two fewer traffic lights, shouting to my kids, “I love my town!!!” How often do you compliment government like that? Exclamation marks all around!

I’m not a fan of roundabouts, but Glenville installed a small traffic circle to replace a traffic light at an intersection of two one-lane roads with no right on red, and it works beautifully. Then 500 yards west they widened a narrow one-way railroad underpass and removed its traffic light, and also widened a two-way railroad underpass that was too narrow. The previous three obstacles that slowed every church trip and snarled traffic at rush hour, are now smooth sailing.

My kids exploded into laughter when I complimented the new run as “smooth as a baby’s bum.” Rest assured, I corrected myself and told them we shouldn’t really drive over babies.

Sunday, September 08, 2013

Claire Turns 7


Claire turned 7 today!

This crazy kid woke me up at 5:30 this morning to ask if she could play with her presents. Thankfully, when I got up at 6:30, she had gone back to sleep.

I told Claire I would let her pick her own birthday present this year, and she wanted something called Beanie Boos. Trouble is, we couldn't find them anywhere. Finally at 9:00 last night, the fifth clerk we asked at Toys R Us knew just what they were, she had seen them at Cracker Barrel that morning at breakfast, and even had a photo on her phone. Claire confirmed the sighting and we sped off into the night.

What came of this crazy weekend dragging my kids through five stores —
  1. Get a real present instead of giving money (my backup plan). I persevered, now I'm Super Dad.
  2. My kids never ride in the car when it's completely night out. They thought it was freaky. I never thought about that before.
  3. When it's late, I'm much funnier. In one store we saw this electronic pig that walks and oinks and plays music, rightfully 80% off at $4. My kids laughed hysterically as we plotted who we could buy this for as a gag gift.

Thursday, September 05, 2013

McPherson


Statue of James Birdseye McPherson, a Union general killed in the Civil War Battle of Atlanta. This statue is in the middle of a grassy block across from my office building block in Washington, DC, called McPherson Square. The McPherson Square Metro (subway) stop under our building is also named in his honor.

Interesting fact: for a couple of years his portrait was on the back of the $2 bill.

Wednesday, September 04, 2013

Best Gig Ever

Happy 60th, Kurt Rakozy!

True story: Sunday Kurt asks if I’d come help with a blessing. I said sure. I mean, I’m over all the time having fun: “farm food” dinners, watching movies, stringing chicken wire in the garden, playing model trains, swimming laps at the high school every week.

As I thought about it I started feeling awkward, like, maybe they should ask their home teacher from church instead of me. It took a full 20 minutes before it hit — oh yeah, I am their home teacher. That’s the kind of gig I’ve got at the Rakozys.

Tuesday, September 03, 2013

Table Rock Lake


Sunset on the dock at my mom's lake house in Reeds Spring, Missouri.

Monday, September 02, 2013

On the Lighter Side


I favor shadows in my photography. I gravitate towards the solidity of the dark patches, with the purpose of leading people to brighter areas of interest. I'm a big fan of chiaroscuro.

So here's me trying something completely different. I clipped these lilacs from a beautiful bush on Route 50 this summer. Shhh, don't tell.

Sunday, September 01, 2013

Dyed Roots


An askew white balance setting accidentally produces the next Enya album cover.

Taken at an eroded bank of the Indian Kill, Glenville, New York.