Friday, July 30, 2010

Vinyl: Canterbury Tales

Artist: Caravan
Owned on digital media: No
Want to replace: Yes

As a general rule I don't like (a) live albums and (b) compilations of "best of" tracks (especially when I already own all those tracks on their original albums). In the era of MP3, playlists have pretty much eaten "best of" albums' breakfast, so this is very much an album of its time and you may think with all of that said, it stands almost no chance of a place on the want list.

And yet... and yet... I can feel my inner completist bleating about how good it is, and demanding that I head over to Wikipedia and make absolutely sure there's *nothing* on here that I don't already have/wouldn't already have if the want list were all fulfilled. We'll see.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Construction Complete

Compare this photo with the one taken four days ago. The phrase that springs to my mind is "new rooms for old" but then I always was a sucker for The Arabian Nights as a child.

The chimney breast looks the dog's bollocks with its new length of skirting perfectly fitted and a rather high-quality plaster vent in place of the crappy repro fireplace. The wall to the left of that is one that was plastered yesterday. Drying nicely. In fact as I type the ceiling is almost dry already, so  my allowance of seven days for drying before I can start wielding the roller is looking generous. I will wait the full week though. Experience tells me that plaster which LOOKS dry can still be sweating a bit, and the first coat of paint either won't go on properly, or it will blister when it dries as the last vestiges of moisture struggle to get out through the paint, which can lead to all sorts of problems with the second coat.

The drying time won't be wasted though. We'll be sanding woodwork and doing other prep this weekend. Oh joy.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

A drop in the ocean

The 'drop' in question being, as you might have guessed, our bedroom ceiling, which I guess makes the 'ocean' the vast sea of home improvements that stretches before us with no land in sight!

After the initial horrendous mess on Day 1, when our builders sealed themselves into the room, and then sealed themselves into those suits that forensic pathologists wear on the telly, with heavy duty breathing masks and elastic around the extremities and proceeded to make scary rumbling noises for four hours, fetching an estimated ton of sooty insulation, slate, brick, wood and other assorted bits of detritus down from the ceiling void, along with the lath-and-plaster ceiling itself of course, came Day 2. The reconstruction phase. Tying the somewhat flimsy original ceiling joists to the much more substantial flooring joists of the loft room floor, installing a steel beam to replace the original wooden beam across the bay window and screwing this to the wall plate and finally, once a stable, level surface was established, boarding it all out with plasterboard.

Here's how it was left at the end of yesterday. Today will see the final "construction" jobs - like attaching angle iron to corners, etc - completed, ceiling plastered and maybe some of the walls too. Good thing is, most of the really bad mess is done. I'm already looking forward to the weekend, when I'll be able to get going with my bit!

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Book Review: Timolean Vieta Come Home

The book club choice for July, and I think it received most votes on account of being the smallest of the three selections on offer, and also having relatively large print. Everyone knew that, even if it was crap, it would be a short and easy read.

I nearly didn't get past page seven. The sentence "His then boyfriend, a middle-aged Austrian music publisher whose name had slipped from memory but whose big, grey moustache and fierce, hooded eyes lingered on, had just announced that he was going to sleep in the spare room that night, and that Cockcroft could suck his own stupid penis for a change." brought me to an abrupt stop, wondering whether I really wanted to read any more like that (assuming there would be some more). But I was reminded of the reaction of another book club member from years back - she hasn't been to the meetings for about three years - to a line in a book I had recommended. May's The Many-Coloured Land. One of the minor characters says something about "having to get himself some gash" on his return from a long space mission, a sentence which had had a similar effect on her, back then, as Dan Rhodes' line had just had on me. I resolved to plod on.

Only it wasn't really plodding. The book did indeed turn out to be a very easy, if somewhat unstimulating and unsatisfying, read. Its online reviews frequently make much of Rhodes' beautifully crafted prose. A shame, then, that someone with such talent for the written word should use them to say not very much of any interest. The book is a series of short stories masquerading as a novel, with the stories thinly connected by the meanderings of the eponymous dog, who has been kicked out on account of the antipathy of his owner Cockcroft's latest lover. Cockcroft himself, his life, loves past and present, and many failures - as a composer, friend, lover and even human being - feature large in those parts of the book not devoted to the many characters the dog meets on his travels, but as Rhodes gives us little or nothing to like about Cockcroft, his reminiscences and liaisons never get under the reader's skin. Since the dog himself is little more than a narrative device, he elicits no sympathy either, and the people he meets and whose stories we read about in the aforementioned lambent prose, are come and gone in an instant far too brief for empathy or identification.

So once again, a book club read has left me with a huge feeling of "so what?" It's true that it is far more enjoyable to read a well-written book than a poorly written one, but no matter how well written it is, if the subject matter is nothing more than a loose agglomeration of everyday people doing everyday things, what IS the point? I may as well have been watching Emmerdale.

Monday, July 26, 2010

First night camping

Well, I say camping. We're on the sofa bed in the study - "camped out" for the duration of the work that's going on in our bedroom. The ceiling is due to come down today, for reasons explained earlier.

Our new IKEA sofa bed "LYCKSELE" (??) proved remarkably comfortable. To say we've left a 6-foot bed and moved to what is effectively a "put-you-up" that's only fractionally wider than a traditional double (4 foot 6), the experience felt nowhere near as cramped as I was expecting. We both agreed that it will be fine for the expected five-week hiatus, and more than adequate as an occasional guest bed. The mattress is firm without being hard, there are no creaks or wobbles from the frame, so all in all the camping is going pretty well on the evidence of one night.

Even the eerie blue light from the PIR detector that clicks on whenever either of us moves has its uses. With dark-adapted eyesight, it illuminates the room very well for those essential nightly sojourns to the bathroom.

There is one blue light that I'll have to do something about though, and this will raise a hollow laugh in at least one young lady reader. That flashing blue light from my PC when it's in sleep mode will have to go. But that's OK. I found the BIOS setting for it this morning. I have the power to change the power down mode :o)

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Preparing to drop

Today we cleared out the last of the furniture from our room prior to the ceiling coming down tomorrow.

Bedside tables slid into place in the study alongside the chest of drawers, and our 6-foot sleigh bed followed them, disassembled into its constituent pieces which we distributed around the room where they will be most stable and least hindrance in the coming weeks. The mattress was the hardest to find space for. In the end we decided it would have to go on the last few square feet of visible carpet on Nikki's side of the study, meaning she won't be able to reach her curtains until we move back into the bedroom.

This left just enough room on my side to deploy the new sofa bed in preparation for our first night's "camping out" tonight.

The empty room echoes eerily, as empty rooms do. Although we weren't planning to do this room next, the unexpected chance say goodbye to the final example of the previous owners' décor - the once-ubiquitous rag-rolled flame colours - is definitely welcome, and the room will be much warmer once the fireplace is removed and bricked up. Those wanting to return houses like ours to their former Edwardian glory may hiss and make the sign of the cross at the thought of ripping out an original fireplace, but the fact is that this one is not original. It's not even a good reproduction.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Curreh!

Travelling to experience the delights of eastern cuisine is nothing new for us. When I first came to Manchester as a student we'd think nothing of piling six of us in a car and driving from Nottingham to Manchester for a curry, and then driving home again.

Last night, we made the pilgrimage in the reverse direction, the only concession to age being that we stayed over for the night rather than driving back in the same evening. These days, a whistle stop in Bridgford has the added bonus that we can, as I put it, "reset the visit flag" with mother without spending too much time trying to think of news to tell her that she'll forget again five minutes after we've related it, or insisting for the fifth time in half an hour that we don't want a coffee, thanks.

The restaurant of choice this time, at Ian's suggestion, was the Bombay Bridgford, just opposite the cricket ground. Traditional décor and seating, but those were the only aspects of this venue that could be considered run-of-the-mill. We enjoyed a much warmer than usual welcome from the smiling greeter, and the interesting and eclectic menu mixed some exciting specials among the more usual fare of kormas and jalfrezis. Having insisted before we set out that I wouldn't just go for the hottest thing on the menu, in the end I plumped for the chicken Jai Puri; the... er... hottest thing on the menu. So hot, in fact, that it came with a health warning.

"Have you had a Jai Puri here before?" asked the waitress.
"No," I smiled back, "but I have thirty years' experience eating very hot curries."

As it turned out, I needed every year of that experience to weather the waves of extreme chilli in this dish. Every mouthful tasted like boiling water on the tongue, among the more subtle flavours of coriander, cinnamon, vinegar, lemon and so on that make very hot curries such an irresistible choice for me. Absolutely delicious, and I made sure the owners knew how much I enjoyed their hospitality. Even the Peshwari nan was above average.

We don't eat out in Bridgford very often these days but it's a sure bet that we'll be returning to this place.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Windows 7

We've been running Windows 7 at home for some time, but yesterday I was scheduled to have it installed on my work's laptop as part of an internal pilot. There's been a few horror stories floating around from those who have already undergone the transition, so I wasn't expecting the upgrade to be glitch-free, and I wasn't disappointed. What should have taken a little over three hours turned into an overnight job as the rebuilt machine failed to get its encryption keys from the central server - the request stuck in a queue 11,000 items long with no way of reprioritising. Poor design, which has resulted in me having to go back in (thereby wasting an hour and a half from an already packed day) to collect it this morning.

I can only hope the works build is more stable than that on my home PC. Since upgrading I've been suffering regular blue screens (three or four a day sometimes, but usually at least two on the main occasions I wake it up from a sleep) in a video driver - atikmdag.sys. If you can be bothered, you can Google that for yourselves. I have. Pages and pages of forum entries bemoaning the problem, stretching back as far as Vista's first release in 2007, and still - three years later - no fix. It's a problem with a feature introduced with Vista known as TDR (Timeout Detection and Recovery) which was intended to allow the OS to recover from video card/driver timeouts without blue screening but which, when it fails, er... blue screens.

The failure has been attributed, at various times, to having two memory sticks instead of one (which can increase the risk of memory timeouts), Windows Aero features, hardware overheating (seems strange, because I always experience it either immediately after boot, or on wakeup, when the hardware is cold), hardware fault, or graphical driver errors. I've disabled Aero, but I still have two 1GB memory sticks and I may well have a transient video card fault, but I'd be willing to bet on the driver being the real problem. I had some similar issues on XP before upgrading the driver. Unfortunately I'm already on the latest W7 driver, so if that is the problem, at least for now, I'll have to put up with it. :(

At least W7 loads a heck of a lot faster than XP! (lol - but it's a humourless, hollow lol)

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Vinyl: Better By Far

Artist: Caravan
Owned on digital media: No
Want to replace: Yes

Another of those albums where the years have ticked by and left me with no recollection of (almost) any of it, with the possible exception of the title track. Amazon reviews (there are three) of the digital remaster vary from thinking this is an overlooked masterpiece to disbelief that the band could have so badly lost their way and released an entire album of duff tracks. 

While it definitely will never count as my favourite Caravan collection, now that I know it's available I can't do other than add it to the want list, even if it remains quite a way down.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Beeb under fire

The culture and media Secretary has recently announced a review of the BBC by the Audit Office, which potentially may result in a reduction of the licence fee. Cue the predictable whining about "Tory cuts" from socialists and luvvies both within and without the Beeb, and the raising of spectres of shredded drama budgets and how we need to "protect our beloved and sacred Beeb from the wicked Tory axe."

I'd like to peer for a moment behind the curtain of party political bollocks and bring some calm rationality to the debate. Before we start I should nail my colours to the mast: I'm a firm fan of the BBC. I willingly pay my licence fee, and am happy that for the princely sum of 40p per day I get access to a load of quality, ad-free output, as well as a load of other crap I wouldn't watch, or listen to, in a million years. But hey, there are 26 million households also forking out their 40p a day and they're perfectly entitled to watch crap if they want to.

But that's not what this is about.
  1. Every publicly-funded organisation, government department, local authority, or whatever is coming under financial scrutiny right now. To suggest that the BBC, which is effectively (if indirectly) funded by public money, should be exempt from this scrutiny just because it's in the "arts and entertainment" sector, is patently ridiculous. We're paying for it, we should be assured that we're getting value for our money. We can debate how that value is perceived in the BBC's dramatic or entertainment output, and I don't for one second believe the government should (or even can) impose any controls over that, but on the business side Auntie should be as well run as possible, and should be able to prove it.
  2. Every large organisation embodies a proportion of waste. It's as inevitable as a thunderstorm in an English summer. Some are better than others but ALL will have some waste in them somewhere, and the longer the time that elapses between audits, the worse that waste will be. Whether it's more efficient procurement, industry standard benchmarking of costs and remuneration, better management structures, more effective administration and on, and on, every business can benefit from close scrutiny from time to time. The Beeb is no different in this respect, and a lot of the savings could, I predict, be made without impacting the core BBC business - radio and television output - at all. (Whether or not they WILL be implemented in this way depends on how much the implementers have a political axe to grind. I wouldn't, for instance, put it past some people to try to trash something like The Archers to give "the cuts" the maximum profile and impact among the listening public)
  3. While we're on the subject of "core BBC business" - what is it that we actually expect from the BBC? What is the BBC FOR? Because as time goes on, simple focus on that key question can be lost, and corporations of the size of the BBC can easily fall into a mindset of "here's how much money the licence fee generates, now how can we spend it?" Which will usually lead, over time, to growth in non-core sectors of the business, leeching money from the pot and generating apparently legitimate business cases for ever-increasing licence fees. It's good every so often to take a step back and examine what direction the Beeb is moving in: what business, what outputs, what is really important? What do we - the people who pay for it - want it to be for? 
  4. I hope the auditors will examine the thorny issue of "competitive salaries". No matter how much the corporation's leaders bleat about it, the BBC is not in competition with commercial media. They should exercise some discretion and play on the cachet of working for Britain's best-loved entertainment provider. The most high profile example of a hyperinflated salary deal was Jonathon Ross's £6million-a-year wedge, but he's gone now, so who's next in the firing line? Whoever it is, they don't need to be paid that much. Other recent examples of well-reported leavers - Brummie tosser Adrian Chiles and his vacuous sidekick Christine Bleakley - have been gone for a while. Do we miss them? No. Are their replacements paid as much as they were? No. Has that made a difference to the "quality" (*cough*) of The One Show? No. I rest my case. Anyone - and I use that word advisedly - anyone can present a TV programme. Assuming they can read. They are not "celebrities." They are not "stars." In a way, they're a bit like receptionists. They sit at the notional front desk of TV programmes and show people where to go. And we all know how well-valued receptionists are, don't we? TV presenters deserve similar wages. There, that's a few million lopped off the budget right there.
  5. Finally - because this is turning (has turned?) into a lengthy diatribe and you'll be wanting your lunch - on the subject of licence refunds. It's been said that if and when the audit finds significant savings, these will be given back to the licence payer as a refund. No, thanks. I think I'm on pretty safe ground when I suggest that the overwhelming majority of licence payers can do without the couple of quid a year they would probably get back. Keep it. Make some good programmes with it. Don't give it to Ross, or Norton, or Wogan, or Chiles or anyone like them. Don't set up a new department. Don't buy a new manager, director, or executive. Make more programmes. Make better programmes. That's all we want from the Beeb, really. Isn't it?

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Triple decker

A couple of years ago, I blogged about the night we woke up to find water dripping into our bedroom. Since then we've had the roof (and the gutters) replaced, and the downspout cleared of tile shreds, and there's been no repeat of the leak.

Unfortunately that's not the end of the story, as we learned recently when discussing other works with our builder. He pointed out something that must have crept up on us while we weren't looking. In that stealthy way things that you see every day have, of changing imperceptibly over time so that you believe they've always been like that.

Fact is, when wooden beams get wet they lose more than 50% of their strength. The beam in our bedroom, that holds up the bay window, is a wooden beam. Saturated by the leaking roof, it sagged under the weight of the ceiling (an original lath-and-plaster job), and then dried out in its bowed state. When examined closely from most angles, the ceiling can be seen to have adopted a dangerous curve vaguely reminiscent of the radio telescope dish at Jodrell Bank.

So the whole lot has to come down, the beam replaced (or at best braced and pinned) and a new ceiling put up. Being an old house, we know the ceiling void is full of sooty, filthy, pumped asbestos fibre insulation (because we experienced it on a small scale when the toilet wall came down), so when the ceiling is "dropped" (see how fluently I insert real construction terms into the story) the room has to be cleared. Totally. Including... the wardrobe.

This beast has never negotiated the bedroom door. Or the landing. It arrived in five (count 'em) boxes and was assembled in situ, so to move it out of situ will require some disassembly. And that, gentle reader, was this weekend's project.

In the end, and entirely predictably, the single wardrobe section proved not to be a problem. Much. Undoing the bolts that hold the two sides together did result in minor chewing of the veneered chipboard, but nothing that's visible in everyday use, so that's OK. With its pelmet removed the single side slid happily through the door, across the landing, through the study and now sits in its allotted slot beside the window.

The double side was not so easy. It proved literally a millimetre too wide to turn the corner into the study, but that was the millimetre that counted. We couldn't lift it over the skirting board either, as that meant it hit the top of the door. The only thing to do was commandeer some space in Nat's room for the duration. It makes an already small space even smaller, but it should only be for a week or so. Once the construction is complete the wardrobe can move back in and sit under a sheet while I decorate. Or we may decide not to bother until the carpet is down, to avoid too much toing and froing. So, a few weeks really then. Sorry Nat.

Our room doesn't half feel big without it though.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Wish in one hand...

I wrote recently about shit my Mum says, and I've just remembered something else she always used to trot out regularly when I was a kid. It was a memory of her grandma - whom she called Gram - and the old lady's reply whenever, as a girl, Mum would wish for something.

This homespun philosophy was passed on to me when I in my turn would make some wish, of the sort kids are wont to do. "I wish I had a bike," or "I wish I had someone to play with," etc. Round she would spin, eyes sparkling brightly at this new-found opportunity to pass on her worldly wisdom. "Wish in one hand," she would declaim, "and shit in the other, and see which hand gets full first."

And as I've remarked many times in the past, my mother's mind often works like some kind of fleshy programmed text which is incapable of independent thought. So this Epithet of Astonishing Profundity would inevitably be followed up with the observation: "that's what my Gram used to say, and she wasn't being rude."

Which, clearly, she was. She was revelling in the chance to be slightly naughty and use the word "shit" where in fact almost any other physical activity which could possibly have resulted in the filling of a hand would have served as an alternative. She could have said spit, for instance, although admittedly it would not have had the instant memorability of the mental image of someone actually shitting into their hand.

I did wonder occasionally what effect it would've had on my Mum if I'd taken her advice literally. If I'd walked up to her with my handful of shit stretched out in front of me and said something like "look Mum! This one got full first!" I mean, she would only have had herself to blame for putting such a mad thought into a kid's head.

Incidentally, the irony of referring to this stuff as "shit my Mum says" has just hit me since, occasionally, she did say "shit." Q.E.D.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The remastering starts

Having spent almost five times as long on the recording of our second album as we did on the first, and being much, much happier with the result, we decided it would be a good idea to go back and apply all the lessons we'd learned in the last five years to the older work and bring it up to the same standard. Remastering is, after all, a well-tried activity in "proper" music circles, and as that first album never enjoyed an official public release we figured we'd prefer to make it as good as it can be before letting it loose.

Suburban Nostalgia contained 10 tracks written by Beresford & Wallace, but we also each did a cover of a Genesis track. Retaining these covers would lead to all sorts of copyright complications and royalty payments (which we avoided first time round by not selling any of the small number of physical CDs we created for family and friends), so the remastered album will only contain our original work.

I've already redone the artwork in preparation for the new release and tonight we got together at Annie's place to start re-recording tracks, beginning with one of the ones I'd always been least pleased with. Old Love was written with a key transition in the middle which really stretched my range. Half of the song was either too high or too low, depending where I started, and the result that made the final cut of the first album sounded painfully thin and reedy in places. Happily, with new vocal warm-up techniques and some minor transpositions, the new recording is much stronger and includes some nice harmonies too - something Annie is becoming famous for. I have to admit I totally hate recording the harmonies. Although my musical memory has improved over the months, it still takes me several... takes... to "get" what she's trying to achieve. There's no denying it makes the final sound much richer, so it's something I have to put up with, but I don't have to like it!

Anyway, one down and nine to go before Suburban Nostalgia is re-released - this time for digital download.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

I Write Like...

Apparently...


I write like
Dan Brown
I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

but there again, earlier in the same novel,


I write like
William Shakespeare
I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

and later in that same chapter,


I write like
Stephen King
I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

So all in all I reckon either (a) I'm unwittingly suffering from multiple personality disorder, (b) I haven't quite settled into "my voice" yet, or (c) I Write Like is just another one of those crappy Facebook apps that doesn't know wtf it's talking about.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

The Graduand

I always remember it being "The Graduate" but I guess that means someone who has already graduated. What I learned today, and the first time I'd ever heard the term, is that someone in the act of going through the process of graduation is a graduand.

And how do I know this?

Because I attended Nat's graduation ceremony this morning.

I always hesitate to say that any one particular event or occasion has made me proud of either or both of my daughters, because the simple fact is that never a day goes by without me thinking how proud I am of them. I used to get really pissed off when someone would say to my mother "oooh he's a credit to you, Kath." I remember thinking "hang on, this is me. I've done this, not her." So I'm not going to fall into the trap of taking any credit for the wonderful people they've turned into. They're a credit to themselves, which is way, way more important than being a credit to me. In everything they do, write, or say. In every joke they crack, every kind word or deed, every mistake corrected or lesson learned, they fill their old Dad with wonder and pride and joy.

So, before this turns into a total gushfest of fatherly sentiment (too late! LOL) I'll bring it back to today, which if you like was a crystallisation of all of that, and more. The ceremony was relatively short, which was a blessing. A little of the Vice Chancellor and his soporific tones goes a long way, and on top of that I had... er... company. It was... not exactly comfortable, but, well, let's just say it could have been worse. Before we knew it the first of the 204 graduands was mounting the stage to collect their faux certificate (yes folks, that's a fake scroll they collect - it has to look good for the cameras) and I knew Nat would be concentrating on one thing - getting up and down those stairs without having a pratfall in full view of the assembled throng and those darned cameras.

I soon worked out that the ceremony was proceeding in alphabetical order of degree which meant we'd have the longest possible wait for the Zoology grads, but they zipped through the other 180-odd in record time and pretty soon I was on my feet trying to get a decent shot of The Handshake. I'd been practising with burst mode on my camera expecting that to give me four or five decent shots of the crucial moment. Big mistake. Rather than the one decent shot I would have been guaranteed had I stuck with the tried and trusted method, I ended up with four blurry snapshots on which Nat is barely recognisable. I redeemed myself (somewhat) later by capturing on video the replay of the "graduation DVD" footage that was being repeated on a loop in the other building.

And then suddenly... it was all over. Mother jumped a cab back to the train station and as neither Nat nor I really fancied sticking our little fingers out at the champagne reception, we drove home, stopping on the way to collect a celebratory Sub sandwich, which I reckon must taste even better when you're eating it as a fully fledged Bachelor of Science :o)

Monday, July 12, 2010

Water boy

We have a hosepipe ban here in the North West of England, as of last Friday. You might remember I blogged on United Utilities' incompetence a while back, and now the predicted ban is in place.

Information on how to save water, and how to keep your garden alive without a hosepipe (save the bath water, the washing up water, use a watering can, etc, etc) abounds. Businesses that rely on hosepipes, such as the dodgy five-minute car wash places that have sprung up all over the place, largely unmonitored and, I suspect, not paying an awful lot of tax beyond what they're forced to pay on account of their water supply being metered, are exempt. This is understandable. We wouldn't want people thrown out of work just because we're running out of water, would we? No matter what tax avoidance scams they're getting away with.

But even so, I'd expected (in my naivete) that most businesses would at least be doing their bit to avoid wasting water. Not so the Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive, apparently. I drove home this morning past a man with a van, and a handy hose-and-spray attachment, giving our nearest bus shelter a quick squirt. Because let's face it the one thing everyone needs in the middle of the worst drought since 1929, is a clean bus shelter.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Shake your booty

For reasons I won't bore you with, we're doing a fair bit of sorting out at the moment. It means we've uncovered a lot of boxes marked "eBay" - more out of a desperate hope that they might somehow list themselves and walk out of the door, than with any expectation that we'll ever actively engage in their sale - as well as making life-changing decisions to finally throw out that box of bubble wrap and the futon base that's a bit split.

Having (almost) confronted the eBay demon, we started considering other options for tat disposal, the most obvious and convenient being a car boot sale. There's one held every weekend at Bowlers, so we decided to pop along there today for a bit of a nose, suss out the competition and get some idea what second-hand books, CDs and DVDs sell for these days.

This short visit was a revelation on many levels, the first being that in the approximately thirty years between my last car boot sale (as a vendor) and this (as a browser) Nothing. Has. Changed. Except perhaps that, here at least, some indoor pitches have power, and vendors plug their tat in to prove it still works. Oh, and it's £15 for a pitch now, when it used to be a fiver. But broken down pasting tables? Check! Dog-eared paperbacks? Check! Unrecognisable bits of kitchen paraphernalia? Check! Old clocks, mirrors, grandma's teeth mug, scuffed toys, jigsaw puzzles in broken boxes? Yes, they're all still there. Might be exactly the same stuff as I used to pick through thirty years ago as far as I can tell, apart from the DVDs of course. We didn't have DVDs in 1980.

Most DVDs look to be selling for a pound or two. Some vendors had attempted to arbitrarily apply a range of pricing based on some vague perception of rarity, popularity or whatever, in 50p increments starting at £1. Others just applied a tatty notice stating "all DVDs £2" to a boxful. But whatever pricing was in operation, we never saw anyone browsing the movies. We later discovered this particular venue has a bit of a reputation for carrying snide merchandise, which was a bit disappointing as we've a couple of dozen to shift. It wasn't just films - no-one seemed to be in a buying mood. Punters in general were a bit thin on the ground; surprising for such a sunny Sunday. Maybe having such a large sale every week in the same place suffers from the law of diminishing returns. Certainly, on the face of it, we'd be hard pushed to make back our pitch price, which kind of defeats the object. Anyone want to buy a model Ferrari?

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Silver Light

We attended a silver wedding event this evening for some friends, who also happen to be neighbours. One of the nicest families you could hope to meet, so it was an honour and a privilege to help them celebrate 25 years together, and a laugh to see all the old photos projected on the wall of the function room. That hair! That suit! That moustache! Etc. Well, it was 1985, and the eighties weren't exactly renowned for their fashions.

It occurred to me as we sat at the table and the conversation flowed around and through us, occasionally stopping to pick up some words and move on, like a verbal tram with an unpredictable timetable and a driver who may well have been R.P.McMurphy, that 1985 was also coincidentally the year I got married for the second time. Which means that, had I stuck it out, we too would be celebrating our silver wedding next month. Of course it's also true that, had I stuck it out, I would probably have been driving that tram, assuming I could have escaped the funny farm, so I think it's safe to say things have turned out for the best.

Our hosts being (reasonably) devout, we were "treated" to a blessing from "the father" at one point. Far be it from me to impose my beliefs and prejudices on anyone (although I hear fellow heretics shouting from the back "it never stops them!!"), but I could have happily done without hearing the message that the success of their marriage was actually nothing to do with their own efforts, but largely down to the beneficence of The Lord, who smiled down upon them from on high, probably on account of their having attended His Place of Worship on a regular basis.

Thankfully this drivel didn't go on for too long, as I was on the verge of converting to Dawkinism. I did wonder though, and not for the first time, exactly what credentials one requires to be a priest. Beyond the obvious predilection for... well... you know what I mean. By the look of the guy he must have been priesting for easily as long as our hosts have been married, and it wouldn't have surprised me to learn that he'd been at it twice that long. Yet in all that time he never found the time to actually learn the words of the blessing he delivered to the happy couple. Only a short passage, at most half the length of my introduction to this year's hotpot, which I learned in two weeks and delivered word-perfect on three occasions, and with many fewer polysyllabic utterances, but his years under the cloth had not provided sufficient opportunity to commit the simple homily to memory. He read it, falteringly it has to be said, from The Book, in a bored monotone utterly lacking in charisma or even any apparent interest. Apologies to Woody Allen but it made me think "those that can, do. Those that can't, teach. And those that can't teach, join the church."

Vinyl: Blind Dog at St. Dunstan's

Artist: Caravan
Owned on digital media: No
Want to replace: Yes

And so we reach the first (alphabetically) of the Caravan albums in my original collection. The default position for "Want to replace" for the next 8 entries will be yes (apart from the two I already have), which is not surprising when you learn that for many years Caravan were my favourite band. Hard not to tell the entire story in this first post but I guess I should save some of the interesting bits for later.

So what to say about this one? It's notable in that it is the only one in my Caravan collection I didn't pay for. It's the first (and so far only) prize I won in a radio phone-in contest. I happened to be listening to Radio Nottingham (not a frequent or regular occurrence) one summer's holiday when the competition question "who are the only two members of the original line-up still with Caravan." To a fan of my calibre the answer - Pye Hastings and Richard Coughlan - was a doddle, so I phoned up and left my message. I was back at Uni when the result was announced and had it not been for my mate Pete being an avid RN listener (at the time) I would never have been able to claim my prize.

As it turned out that may not have mattered too much because, to put it politely, this is not one of their better efforts.

Friday, July 09, 2010

Faster than a speeding email

It never fails to amaze me how fast email is.

Nat's sat here with me in the study today, and we're both surfin' and browsin' and generally being good netizens when a writing opportunity pops up that I think she might be interested in.

"You know that site I was telling you about before?"
"Yeah?"
"Well they're recruiting new writers, I'll send you the link"
"Okay, thanks!"
*copies link into email and sends*
"Thank you!"

The time that elapsed between me clicking 'send' and her saying 'thank you' could only have been measured by the kind of chronometer you might find in a physics lab. It appeared to be instantaneous. Certainly an order of magnitude faster than I could have walked over and handed it to her, and she's sitting less that six feet away.

In't t'Internet brilliant?

Monday, July 05, 2010

Missing the festivals

We had a surfeit of festivals in Chorlton this weekend. The ZestQuest BeerFest - which we have been known to visit in years past - on Friday and Saturday; and the Beech Road Festival - which to be honest we've missed more than we've hit over the past ten years - on Sunday.

This year, we contrived to miss both. Couldn't really summon up the enthusiasm on Friday night, Saturday afternoon was never really an option (I can only do afternoon drinking if it's immediately followed by evening drinking), and I knew, based on last year's experience, that there'd be no beer left by Saturday night so there was no point going. In this at least I was proved right when a contingent of Chorlton Players were turned away at 7pm as most of the beer had run out. An organisational nadir for Chorlton's favourite (i.e. only) beer festival, it has to be said.

Sunday was forecast rain and in any case we had plans to begin the long task of tidying up the attic space, not to mention meeting our new neighbour, so we made an early decision to opt out of Beech Road festivities again this year. In this case it may have been the wrong decision, as the rain held off and a good time was (allegedly) had by all. But we had a good time too, so it wasn't all bad.

Not only did we greet our new neighbour, we were invited round to imbibe a few glasses of wine in the company of her and her parents. All very nice people and another fine addition to the community. 2010 is going to be a big year in terms of changes on the street, as the guys further along finally put their house on the market this week too, so assuming they have any luck selling we'll be welcoming yet another new arrival before the year's out.

Friday, July 02, 2010

Stuff my Mum said

We've all heard of "Shit My Dad Says", right? Well, you can Google it if you haven't. What? You want me to do everything for you? Good grief. Alright: here.

Anyway, where was I? Oh, yeah. Well my Mum doesn't say much these days that's worth reporting. It's not like she's as clued up as that guy's dad. But way back when I was a kid she used to say a bunch of weird shit. I mean, I was fifteen before I discovered who "our Side" was. I thought he was some fat bloke my Mum used to know. Whenever she saw a really fat person she'd say he (or she) was as fat as our Side.

Who was he - a long lost relative or something?

No. It was me not hearing properly. What she was really saying was that they were as fat as a HOUSE side.

Thursday, July 01, 2010

The Excellent Eight

In response to several (well OK, two) comments wanting me to come clean about which tracks in the Storm the Charts top 40 I'd rated "excellent" I thought I'd make them the subject of a post in their own right, rather than hiding them away in the comments. They are, after all, excellent. According to me at least. And according to several thousand other people too, if their current positions in the Amazon chart are any indication.

I've called this the "excellent eight" but as it happens the top 40 has been subjected to some last minute adjustments on account of a couple of acts not managing to make their work available through the required outlets in time. As a result of this, one of the tracks I didn't consider excellent was replaced by one that I did, so it's actually an "excellent nine" now. Oh well. I'm lucky enough to be able to afford the extra 49p.

49p you say? Don't you mean 79p? Well, maybe. But there's a good chance (I haven't checked) that this extra track is one of the 32 whose price Amazon has dropped this week. Are they supporting the Storm? Who knows, but as they say in retail "every little helps."

Anyway enough of this waffle, here are the tracks I'll be downloading later today, with their artists:

Emily Barker and the Red Clay Halo - Nostalgia.  [listen here] [buy here]

The Lovedays - House of Cards. [listen here] [buy here]

Woodpigeon - ...and as the ship went down, you'd never looked finer. [listen here] [buy here]

Pocket Satellite - Toy Train. [listen here] [buy here]

Olivia Broadfield - Don't Cry. [listen here] [buy here]

Rubika - Robots. [listen here] [buy here]

The Portland Authority - A New Year. [listen here] [buy here]

Penny Black - Green. [listen here] [buy here]

My Luminaries - Parasol. [listen here] [buy here]