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Uncooked Composition 2
Here's another short session of random piano noodling. As far as I can picture, this would be suitable for a montage in a film where the protagonist is mulling over the fact that his wife has left him and it takes him a while to get used to the idea but he finds solace in his dog. Or something like that.
If the end seems a bit abrupt, it's because Jenni came in and reminded me we were actually supposed to have gone to the shops 10 minutes previous.
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Testing CSS3 stuff
You may have seen Google's 'Watch this space' advertising appearing all over the place. They have quite eye-catching diagonally striped backgrounds in various colours. A couple of days ago, I was wondering how easy it would be to recreate this in CSS without images. Unfortunately, the state of CSS 3 is such that some things work wonderfully, some just plain don't (scoped attribute, I'm looking at you). The following code relies on vendor extensions and so, unless you're willing to tend it and correct it after the spec is finalised, don't use this on a production server.
The most obvious thing to notice from the following code, though, is the competing syntax for the repeating linear gradient style. Mozilla have separated it into a distinct style (
-moz-repeating-linear-gradient
) while Webkit have built it as an option to their general gradient style (-webkit-gradient
).body { background-image: -moz-repeating-linear-gradient( -45deg, transparent, transparent 25%, rgba(0,0,0,0.15) 25%, rgba(0,0,0,0.15) 50%, transparent 50%, transparent 75%, rgba(0,0,0,0.15) 75%, rgba(0,0,0,0.15) ); background-image: -webkit-gradient( linear, 0% 0%, 100% 100%, from(transparent), color-stop(0.25, transparent), color-stop(0.25, rgba(0,0,0,0.15)), color-stop(0.50, rgba(0,0,0,0.15)), color-stop(0.50, transparent), color-stop(0.75, transparent), color-stop(0.75, rgba(0,0,0,0.15)), to(rgba(0,0,0,0.15)) ); }
To get a better idea of what this does, view source on this demo page. This includes a button to change the class on the body (using JS) which simply changes the background colour – the stripes are semi-transparent on top of that. Remember, due to the vendor prefixes, this only works in -moz or -webkit browsers.
It's supposed to look like this:
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Tokyo Recommendations
Food
If you're going out for food the best place I can recommend is Shin Hi no Moto (a.k.a. Andy's Izakaya). It's run by a friendly English guy (Andy) and his family. It gets really busy later on so you're best to phone and book on +81 3 3214 8021. It's okay, you can book in English. They do amazing sashimi platters and big mugs of beer. Just make sure you don't order rice (there's no rice in an izakaya and they might scowl at you if you do). You can get there by taking the Yamanote line to Yurakucho.
For general daily eats, I'm addicted to Yoshinoya. Especially their Gyuu-don. Tasty, healthy and cheap. You can find Yoshinoya everywhere.
Walks
West Central Tokyo
If you're going to be there over a Sunday, you have to go to Harajuku. Even if you aren't there on a Sunday, the walk up Takeshita-dori is great fun. Here's a map of a little walk you can take up Takeshita-dori, round Harajuku and down to Shibuya:
North-East Central Tokyo
If you fancy some culture, try this route. It takes in the Imperial Palace, Sumo museum and Edo-Toyko museum. You can finish off in Akihabara for sheer geek awesome or save that for another day.
Tokyo bay/Odaiba
Some people called me crazy for enjoying it but I like the walk across the rainbow bridge to Odaiba. Take the Yamanote to Tamachi and wander east-ish. You'll see the bridge once you're closer to the shore. You can take the lift up to the start of the walk and then wander out for some amazing views. It is, unfortunately, very noisy due to all the traffic but it's worth it. Head right across the bridge and follow it down, it'll probably take about an hour. Once you're on dry land again on Odaiba, you can wander around the shopping malls there (Aquacity, Seaside mall), take in the Statue of Liberty, go for a bite to eat and eventually head back. If you time it for getting dark, you can either get some amazing views of the bridge lit up at night or just enjoy the Yurikamome ride back (it's a completely automated train with no driver).
Views
For the best view across Tokyo, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government building (a.k.a. TMG or Tocho) really can't be beaten (especially as it's free to go up). It's in Shinjuku.
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Uncooked Composition
Music, much like mathematics, is a young person's game. If you haven't made it by the time you're 25, your chances of making an impact on the world are significantly diminished. That's not to say it's impossible, it's just much less likely.
Basically, I'm beginning to come to the realisation I'm not going to be a rock star. I might not even make it into space. To that end, I've decided that, instead of scribbling away at writing and rewriting the same songs I've been trying to improve for the last 10 years, I'd go the other way. A few months ago, I put a dictaphone next to the piano and started recording the occasional random improvisation. Originally, the idea had been to pick the best bits and rework them for some reason or another but after listening back to them, I found there's some appeal in just hearing the raw first-take complete with do-overs and occasional accidental 'quotes' from other pieces.
Over the next little while, I'll be uploading some of them just so that I know I've done something with them other than leave them on a tape in the back of a drawer. When listening to them, bear in mind two things:
- The piano needs retuned almost every week so some of it might be a bit rough.
- This is, as the title says, 'Uncooked Composition'. I come in from work, take my shoes off, sit down at the piano, press record. There's no post-processing anywhere so there will be mistakes and do-overs.