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The return of Rodent-Man

Well, Katie and I were supposed to wait on line among the “Rentheads” on Monday for a lottery to win one of 17 pairs of $20 tickets to a special 10th anniversary concert of “Rent.” But due to scheduling conflicts, we didn’t go.

As it turns out, that was a good choice. Why? Well, judging by the size of the crowd, we would have had a better chance of winning the MegaMillions or Powerball.

The other reason?

The world’s biggest rodent, Constantine Maroulis from last season’s “American Idol,” was in attendance…and I wouldn’t have reacted well to that.

Worse was that he was still giving that stupid “look” of his to the cameras. Dude, it’s over…you didn’t win…STOP THE POUTING!

I’m also wondering why there were even cameras taking pictures of him. He’s a has been that never was…and never will be. And if this is what women consider sexy these days, well, I guess I’m destined to remain single. What a freakin’ tool.

I apologize for turning my blog into Gawker.

A new demo…now with a bridge

NOTE: The previous post regarding my latest musical creation wasn’t functioning properly so I reposted it with a comment from Christian included (because it wasn’t showing up in the original post…at least it wasn’t for me). Since I updated this post about the same time Christian posted his comment, I’m almost inclined to believe that the simultaneous actions of my editing the post and his commenting on it somehow caused a glitch in the publishing process…but that’s just a theory.

Well, I guess the song-in-progress below is somewhat inspired by seeing the Tony Levin band perform earlier this week…I started playing around with a bass line and turned it into something a little heavier than my more recent attempts at songwriting.

Yes, it still needs a lot of work and, obviously, there are no lyrics yet. But considering I only worked on it for a few hours this weekend, I think it has come together rather nicely up to this point.

The working title, “Carpe Diem,” was borrowed from something I wrote around 1992 or so. There were some similarities between the two songs so I just slapped that title on this new demo. However, I am pretty sure “Carpe Diem” won’t be the actual title of this song once it is finished. But enjoy this in-progress version of “Carpe Diem” for now…

Nice song Brian! Can’t wait to hear the finished version. Is that piano a Yamaha CP70 sample? Me like.


Posted by Christian to Tandem with the Random at 4/23/2006 08:02:53 PM

In the presence of greatness

Last night, Christian Beach and I saw the Tony Levin Band play at The Saint in Asbury Park, NJ. Wow! What a great freakin’ show! Never thought I would hear Genesis’ “Back in NYC” from “The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway” performed live, but Tony & Co. made it happen.

For the uninitiated, Tony Levin is best known as bass player extraordinaire for Peter Gabriel and King Crimson. The band consists of New Jersey’s own Larry Fast, a pioneer in synthesizer-based music known for his work under the name Synergy and his collaborations with Peter Gabriel; drummer Jerry Marotta, also known for his work with Peter Gabriel as well as with Hall & Oates and Indigo Girls; guitarist Jesse Gress, who regulary tours and records with Todd Rundgren; and keyboardist Pete Levin, Tony’s brother.

Anyway, Tony and Larry were kind enough to take pics with me and Christian (who, by the way, played on the same stage the night before with Transfusion M)…


Me and Tony Levin

Larry Fast and Christian

I create ballpark magic once again


Well, when I went to the Dodgers-Phillies doubleheader last Sunday, I saw the Phils win their first game of the season after an 0-4 start when Bobby Abreu hit a two-out, three-run walk-off homer in the bottom of the ninth inning for a 6-3 victory. Of course, the Phils dropped the nightcap of the twinbill, but I was there for the first win…that’s the important part of the story.

So since I was driving into Ocean County, NJ, today to visit my parents for Easter, I took in today’s South Atlantic League battle between the Delmarva Shorebirds (Baltimore Orioles’ Class A team) and the Lakewood BlueClaws (Phillies’ Class A team) at Lakewood’s beautiful FirstEnergy Park.

Another reason I wanted to see the game was because Shorebirds reliever Jim Hoey is a former Rider pitcher who has been in the Orioles’ system for a couple of years but has suffered some arm problems. However, he is pitching pretty well so far this year.

Anyway, the BlueClaws have been terrible out of the gate this season. In fact, that may be an understatement. Going into today, the ‘Claws were 0-9. And with Lakewood trailing 7-3 going into the bottom of the ninth, it looked like 0-10 was imminent.

That’s when a little bit of the magic from last Sunday’s Phillies win rubbed off on their Class A affiliate…the BlueClaws struck for four runs in the ninth (fortunately, the damage didn’t come against Hoey, who didn’t pitch…or else I would have been conflicted) to tie the game at 7-7 and send it into extra innings.

Four extra innings, to be exact.

With two outs and nobody on base in the bottom of the 13th inning, the BlueClaws’ Julian Williams drew a walk. Then, with Williams running, Sean Gamble—son of former major leaguer Oscar Gamble—hit a soft liner up the middle into shallow right- center field. With the speedy Williams nearly at third by the time the Shorebirds’ outfielder retrieved Gamble’s hit, the third base coach waved Williams around to try to score the winning run all the way from first base on a single. The throw home was way off line, allowing Williams to cross the plate and give the BlueClaws a dramatic 8-7 victory—their first of the season.

Here is a pic of the celebration near home plate…as you can see, the BlueClaws didn’t know quite how to react to actually winning a game…

Here is a pic of Shorebirds reliever and Rider product Jim Hoey…

And a couple of pics of FirstEnergy Park…


Now, I’m going to close down all my apps but BitTorrent with the hope of speeding up the download of the BBC season premiere of “Doctor Who.”

Doctor Who weekend extravaganza

While Americans will get to see one of the best “Doctor Who” episodes of the 2005 season, “Dalek,” on SciFi Channel tonight, those across the pond in the U.K. will get to see the first episode of the 2006 season when the episode titled “New Earth” premieres on BBC One Saturday evening.

The BBC ran a rather lengthy—nearly three minutes—trailer for the 2006 season the other day and a vSocial user was kind enough to share with the world. I have embedded the video below. Enjoy!

More pics from a day at the ballpark

Well, I moved to a new seat late in Game 1 of the doubleheader (see previous post for my original seat location) and took these pics.

To update my previous post, I wound up having a total of five hot dogs on Dollar Dog Day. Since I was getting two games for the price of one AND paying $1 for hot dogs, I wanted to see how much money I could save on this trip to Citizens Bank Park. Here is the tally for the day:

Game ticket: $12
Parking: $0 (parked along the curb on Packer Ave.)
Food & Drink: 5 hot dogs@$1 each=$5; 1-liter Pepsi (purchased at Wawa) = $1.69
Gas: Approx. 2 gallons@$2.57/gallon (price at local Wawa gas station)= $5.14

TOTAL: $23.83

(NOTE: After a first-time experience at a Sheetz in the Middle of Nowhere, PA, this past weekend, I think Wawa might be a Native American word for “Sheetz suckz!”)

Anyway, besides the upgrade in vantage point, another advantage of changing my seat was leaving behind the idiot Phillies fans making such asinine comments like, “Go back to Venezuela,” when Bobby Abreu came up to bat. Of course, if Abreu had gone back to Venezuela, he wouldn’t have hit the three-run home run with two outs in the ninth inning to win Game 1 of the doubleheader for the Phillies.

After moving my seat, I found these creatures much more intelligent than the “fans” who had been sitting around me…