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#51 | ||||
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Senior Cook
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I have seen several threads in these forums regarding music. So far I have been able to resist commenting on what has happened to the art form. Way back in the fog of my memory I recall debates on electric guitars being real instruments, and the MOOG, and I clearly remember one or two outrages over the first electronic drum kits. At least there were HUMANS operating these instruments. And then there are CDs and MP3s ... About homogenization in other areas, I already mentioned CAD (but not everything I have to say about CAD and the GoofBalls running the programs, not by a long shot). Remember when desktop publishing first came out? It wasn't difficult to figure out not only if the 'work' was done on Mac or PC but which particular program was used. I mentioned photography. With digital dark rooms just about anyone can be a master, or at least proficient, in finishing. I've seen it written if the image is saved as raw data the 'picture can be taken again'. Coming from the land of film and chemicals many times I feel I'm not 'taking a picture' the first time. And ..... Quote:
All this easy access to information creates allot of posers. Back to you: Quote:
Regional? ?? A Several years ago a couple co-workers and myself were having a conversation about music. One guy was in his mid 50s and the other in his mid 20s. The kid had no real idea what kind of music there was and is because he grew up listening to top 40 Urban music. I'm sure there are many counterparts to the kid in/with every distinct genre of music. Radio play has become so segmented one could go what, their entire life?, without being exposed to something 'different'. The older Gent and I were explaining how many top 40 stations use to play just about everything, last song could have been rock, this song country, next song an instrumental, and so on. We're segmenting ourselves into narrower demographics. Wheres this going with technology ... Enter Satellite Radio. When I was a kid the Family would pack up the tent and go road tripping for a week or two. Go an hour or so and we were looking for another radio station. Go a day and it was apparent we were not near home anymore. Now we can cross the country, if not the world, and listen to the exact same thing we can hear at home. Fact I've seen SR advertised as taking home with you. What's the point of going all the way out there if your trying to recreate what you have here? Also in our road trips when I was a kid I noticed that we get part of a day away from home and the places just didn't look the same, get a day out and , WOW , The buildings and architecture sure is different. Last year Wife and I drove from Ohio to Florida on the east track and from Florida to Ohio leaning west. Mc Houses, Mc Plazas, Mc Architecture. Wife, who doesn't usually comment on such things, commented on this. And then a couple of months ago we went to Columbus. She said how she saw the same things in Florida. It's not that were losing our regional distinctions in Arts, it seems we're becoming the same bland pap everywhere. I'm not a Luddite (or what that word has come to mean), GOLLY, I HAVE TECHNOLOGY DEGREES!!!!! I would be cutting my own throat by trying to stop advancements or tying to turn back the clock. It's that not all new things are good, not all old things are bad or outdated, and if I don't get the grass cut Wife is going to Geld me.
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I use to place great faith in logic and reason. Then I realized actual events have little to do with either. "In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. But, in practice, there is." |
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#52 | |
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DC ADMINISTRATOR
Site Administrator
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Anyone who thinks that music these days is a lot of the same over and over is not hearing what is really out there. Sure stuff on the radio is more of the same, but there is plenty of music that is not radio friendly for the very reason that it is different than what is out there.
For a great example, check out Medeski Martin and Wood - Shack Man. |
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#53 | ||
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Certified Master Chef
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![]() i'm not sure if i was ever amazed at anything physical, outside of the beauty and complexity of nature (which has kinda always been there, and is still just as amazing to me). i was always so curious as to how and why electronic or mechanical things worked, so it was only a matter of "investigating them" to figure them out. it wasn't as much as amazing as it was a curiosity to be worked out.my poor mom and dad. they had few things that had not been disassembled and resassembled. the latter being optional.
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to the country i'm going, lay and laugh in the sun you can bring, bring your guitar along. well sing some songs, well have some fun |
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#54 | ||
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Certified Master Chef
Site Moderator
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Yep, polio was a scary thing. I remember getting a polio "shot" before the sugar cube dosage came around. Didn't like shots, like most children, but I couldn't dodge them. My daddy was a doctor. Buck's older brother, Billy, died at age 8 of polio. Shortly thereafter Buck contracted it. No residual effects, thank goodness. Buck's mother has a letter from Dr. Jonas Salk apologizing that his vaccine wasn't available in time to save her son. One of my elementary school classmates had polio and had to wear huge, heavy braces on her legs. As a child I was scared of the disease and the thought of braces like Becky's or of being confined to an iron lung.
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"As a girl I had zero interest in the stove." - Julia Child This is real inspiration. Look what Julia became! |
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#55 | |
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Certified Master Chef
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T.V.
Remote Controls Radios Cell Phones I know all of this has been mentioned already |
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#56 | |
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Certified Master Chef
Site Moderator
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As usual, this time of the year, Buck and I are sitting on our big front porch. Happened to glance over at our rose garden that has a pedestal with a beautiful cobalt-colored gazing ball.
That made us think of "why" gazing balls came to be. In Victorian times, folks amused themselves by gazing at things in shiny mercury glass balls out in their yards and gardens. Apparently they were entertained by the distortions the curved surfaces produced. Can you imagine how "wowed" they'd be seeing programs on today's big screen TVs?
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"As a girl I had zero interest in the stove." - Julia Child This is real inspiration. Look what Julia became! |
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#57 | |
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Sous Chef
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So true, Katie. I often wish my dad could have seen the computer games that are played today. He passed on in 1969 - and he loved pinball machines. He was fascinated with the little technology that was available then, and he would enjoy this all so much! (Your garden sounds wonderful, by the way. I'm glad you two are enjoying it.)
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Saludos, Karen |
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#58 | |
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Certified Executive Chef
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We became best friends with our Bradley childbirth teacher and her husband. She lent me her new fangled microwave for a few months to heat up my edited to let a moderator know that nothing AT ALL bad was meant by the initials I put in here, so I'll rephrase, natures perfect baby food when husband was home alone. Trying to make it easier on him. I was a stay at home mom, but on the rare occasions that I got to go out to the store or whatever alone, he stayed with the little ones and fed the new little guy.
When she hinted for it back, I was devastated. I finally relented and gave it back to her, but not without annoyance gad what a great invention I thought that was. Still do.And what about those Cuisinarts? They are fabulous.
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it's okay to cry because if you don't, your soul will drown or flood Last edited by LEFSElover; 05-12-2008 at 02:29 PM. |
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#59 | |
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Certified Executive Chef
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yep, I was the Pioneer Woman who led the way to buying the first microwave in the family----everyone else was dubious---my mother in law flat out refused to buy one----never would use it she said. Then she came for a 3 day visit and saw how easy it made my life with her first grandchild and how handily it heated up leftovers.........then she was hooked........got her first one for her birthday a few months later......btw my microwave still works to this day...23 years later.........
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The only difference between a "cook" and a "Chef" is who cleans up the kitchen.
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#60 | |
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Senior Cook
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It wasn't something that we marveled at, but child car seats are definitely something we take for granted now. When I was young, we used to just slide around in the back seat, or worse yet, slide around in the front seat with mom's outstretched arm being the only thing between us and the windsheild when we had to stop short. How did we survive?
Also, I remember "watching" the beginning of the first Gulf War on what was then a fledgling internet- anyone remember Prodigy? Text only, but we thought it was so cool. |
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