Wales!

Off to Wales… should be quite an adventure.


Jive Nation

As promised (you didn’t think I’d carry through, did you!) here is actual footage of me dancing. Last night was the last night in town for Sarah and Steve before they head off to Sydney (lots of ‘s’s for that family) to get married next month. I’m really going to miss them both but it’s going to be so weird not to have Sarah at the office, and then at the dance classes! I’m so glad everyone in the office is so nice, but it’s been especially great to get to know Sarah. In addition to being incredibly sweet and fun, she also manages to find more free things to do around London than I would have thought possible! She was kind enough to lend me her fiance for the dance; keep in mind that I am an absolute beginner (last night was one full week of dance classes!). Also, I overlayed the track because the music came out really fuzzy and there was a lot of chatter – so I just added in the sound again myself :).

Oh, I should mention, that the dance class uses jive steps but modern music, which is great for us as that means you can actually dance in a club somewhere, you don’t just have to wait for big band music. Alright, enough stalling. Here it is – the culmination of 7 Jive Nation dance classes.

Because it’s a little dark I’ll throw in a few more stills that Sarah took throughout the night (not that these were posed at all :-P).

So, that’ll probably be all you see from dancing for a while until my trusted photo- and film-ographers return from Sydney. Today is my day off which means I have more to do than I could possibly imagine. Off to Wales tomorrow morning!


Spoonfed Video Tour

At the risk of documenting something that will be a source of long-term embarrassment (if only because I always hate the sound of my own voice once it’s recorded) I’m just doing a quick update to share one of two videos I made for Spoonfed. This is a site tour for some of the basic features. Yes… I am an American doing the narration for a website about London. Unfortunately David Attenborough wasn’t available. Enjoy!


BBC Proms Adventure

[This has been reposted from the <a herf=”http://blog.spoonfedflavour.com”>Spoonfed Flavour Blog</a> where I originally wrote up my Sunday afternoon]

I’ve made it to this point in the summer without actually attending any of the BBC Proms events, a fact that I felt this weekend I should rectify.  Under the assumption that regardless of the event I would find myself more cultured, musically educated and generally better off, I didn’t bother to look up the composer or musical style before queuing up for my £5 gallery ticket on Sunday afternoon.  Had I found out before entering the Royal Albert Hall that Messiaen was, in fact, known for his relatively modern pipe organ pieces, it is incredibly likely that I would have picked a different concert to kick off my personal Promming season.  Under the misassumption that a Sunday afternoon would be prime Promming time, I jumped into the short queue at 3pm, a full hour before the concert began.  I entered the hall with a group that was clearly full of pipe organ enthusiasts.

“The Royal Albert organ has 999 pipes in the organ,” I was told in a tone that is generally reserved for rare archeological discoveries and stunning feats of physical prowess.  I mentally made a note never to bring any of my slightly OCD friends to the Royal Albert but trapped into the hall.

It’s a stunning venue, and it amazes every time.  The grand ceiling soared above but from my position in the gallery, I was just an arm’s length away from the empty stage.  I gazed longingly at the music-less stands, the harp with its dust cover, the darkened chairs, and was slightly annoyed that I was denied the experience of the full orchestra in favour of a single soloist on the pipe organ situated a few dozen metres above the stage.

The crowds of Prommers I had expected failed to appear (they had probably read the programme) and with only a few minutes to the opening of the programme, there were still only a few hundred patrons in the eight thousand person venue.  The BBC announcer welcomed us all and introduced Jennifer Bate, the organist for the afternoon.  Nearby, some of the other listeners closed their eyes in preparation for the opening notes.  Oh lord.  It would be one of those crowds.

With a (hopefully) intentional clash of major and minor notes, the concert began.  Now, I have to admit, most of my experience with organ music is limited to The Phantom of the Opera’s opening notes but I’ve always found that your range of sounds runs between a whistle that’s generally more suited for a dog’s range of hearing in the smaller pipes and something approximating the gods passing gas in the larger ones.  Add to that the fact that the chords often favour clashing notes and I was already prepared to scamper at the interval.

Then something amazing happened.  As the talented Jennifer Bate continued to pound out thunderous combinations of notes, I began to realise that I was enjoying myself.  I wasn’t admiring a symphony orchestra, there wasn’t anything resembling a melody, and I certainly won’t be adding Apparition de l’église éternelle to my iPod but there was something about the overwhelming power of all 999 pipes in that organ that really did approximate the religious fervor that Messiaen was aiming for with his compositions. I’ll admit it – I even closed my eyes.

I’m glad I attended the afternoon Proms on August 17, 2008.  It wasn’t what I had expected, or what I would have planned for an afternoon of music.  But I found myself overwhelmed by a new music style that I wouldn’t have otherwise discovered.  And really… isn’t that what the Proms is all about?

But now that I’ve actually read the programme, I’ll be attending Tchaikovsky’s Sleeping Beauty with the London Symphony Orchestra.  I’ll be the one up front with my eyes closed.


Huge Photo Post

It’s been a little while since I did a photo post and I actually took these pictures a while ago on a day when it was fairly clear, I had my camera, and I managed to get the front seat on the top level of the bus (the chances of all of these things happening again are quite slim). When I first started working with Spoonfed my mom asked me to take a picture of the commute and the office. I haven’t managed the office yet (honestly, there’s not much to see – lots of computers) but I now have pictures of the first leg of the trip coming home. You can see a full slide show in order here: Commute from Spoonfed to Bank Tube Stop but I’ve put a couple of my favourite pictures below:

I’ve also been making a dedicated effort to overcome my potentially dangerous eating adventures (although given the fact that my cooking has been more experimental, it’s possibly MORE likely that I’m eating something raw/undercooked/overcooked/mouldy/and so on). I’ve been taking pictures of some of the things I’ve made and please don’t think this is an accurate sample of my diet – I do eat very healthily, it just happened that the prettier things were the tastier ones. These are some of my creations over the last month or so.

Yesterday, I went with Sarah and Steve (the engaged couple with whom I go dancing) to Portabello Road where Sarah had to visit a bead shop to get materials to make her bridesmaids matching earrings. We also went into an amazing spice shop that had every single spice and herb you can imagine (and some you can’t). I took the obligatory picture of me next to the Portabello Road sign… now I’m just missing me in a phone box!

After Portabello Road, we went to Camden where there was a village fete-style event to raise money for an orphanage in Africa. I suppose I should feel guilty that through Spoonfed we got in for free and got free drinks so were probably offsetting the cause but it was a lot of fun and great for a free afternoon. Our next stop was going to be Poker in the Park – a free poker game in Leicester Square but by the time we got there it was finished. We weren’t ready to head home and the weather was so nice, we walked to Trafalgar Square where they had huge screens up to show the Olympics and the football matches were on so it was a huge crowd. It was incredible, sitting on the steps of the National Gallery, watching football in Trafalagar Square, with Westminster and Big Ben in the distance.

It was getting late and we were all hungry so we split to head back to our homes at about 8:30pm. Today, I’m heading off to the Victoria and Albert Museum which is almost always everyone’s favourite London museum. I haven’t been there yet but they have an exhibit about jewelery on so it should be fun. After that I’m going to the BBC Proms and hopefully will have some more pictures from the Royal Albert Hall. Should be another exciting day!