07 January 2006

What to play ?


Who said I never mention the band ?!
The word's not "never" but only "seldom".

Tonight, we'll be recording a live studio demo. It's not going to be anything too pro, as we want to lay it as similar to what we can play live as possible. Mics and amps directly into the mixing board and then to a minidisc. No track recording.

The songs to be recorded (by Ctrl+Alt+Del, don't forget) are:

Pearl Jam - Better Man
Bon Jovi - Have a Nice Day
Maroon 5 - Harder To Breathe
U2 - Vertigo
Ugly Kid Joe - Everything About You
Velvet Revolver - Slither
Incubus - Megalomaniac
Alanis Morissette - You Oughta Know
Skunk Anansie - Weak
Jet - Are You Gonna Be My Girl
Bryan Adams - Summer of '69
Robert Palmer - Bad Case Of Loving You
John Cougar Mellencamp - Wild Nights
Jewel - Sweet Home Alabama
AC/DC - You Shook Me All Night Long

We're always changing our setlist.
What to play ?... Who can say ?

06 January 2006

One more destiny


"When I'm weak I draw strength from you
And when you're lost I know how to change your mood
And when I'm down you breathe life over me
Even though we're miles apart we are each other's destiny
"

          - Zero 7, in "Destiny"

05 January 2006

The return of H... a new age ?


It was 1996 and I was waiting to have cable installed. I had to visit a friend of mine (a 3-minute bike ride) to watch Martina play. She was chubby but eventually won consecutive matches. The other players seemed to play worse when they were facing her. a different look, during her hiatus Her mother's clapping seemed strange, as if she was supposed to win each and every match.

For some years, she was the indisputed best overall tennis player, and having to compete with Lindsay, Venus, Serena, Amelie, Kim, only made it more difficult (she wasn't always the no.1) but also more rewarding.

An injury kept her away from the courts.
It was 2002. Until this week...

"Martina Hingis made a successful return to competitive tennis after a three-year absence Monday, beating Venezuela's Maria Vento-Kabchi 6-2, 6-1 in the Australian women's hardcourt championships.

The 25-year-old Hingis, a five-time Grand Slam singles champion before retiring in 2002 because of ankle, heel and foot injuries, started tentatively as both players exchanged service breaks. But the three-time Australian Open champion showed no signs of the extended layoff as she easily outplayed Vento-Kabchi the rest of the match.

"I was a little nervous," Hingis told the capacity crowd at Royal Pines stadium after the match. "I'd like to thank my family and friends for supporting me."

It was Hingis' first WTA Tour match since losing to Elena Dementieva in Filderstadt, Germany, in October 2002. The Swiss star will face seventh-seeded Klara Koukalova of the Czech Republic in the second round, and also plans to play next week in the Sydney International as she prepares the Australian Open.

"Under the circumstances in the heat and not having played for three years, I'd say an eight (out of 10), other times even better," Hingis said. "I don't know what else I should have done today better than what I did. The score says it all."

Hingis' serve has improved and her groundstrokes appear considerably harder than when she retired at the age of 22 in 2002.

"Just wait until the next matches, I'll be even better," said Hingis, who had one ace. "You have to have a high percentage of first serves otherwise these girls today are going to kill you. They're very aggressive and they attack right away."
she stated".

          - Associated Press (USA).


"Un peu plus de trois ans après s'être retirée des courts et près d'une année après une première "demi-tentative" de retour au tournoi de Pattaya, Martina Hingis n'a pas manqué son vrai come back. the same smile, now that she has returned Débarassée de ses soucis aux chevilles, l'ancienne patronne du tennis mondiale s'est fait plaisir à Gold Coast et a surtout aisément battu Maria Vento-Kabchi en deux sets parfaitement maîtrisés (6-2, 6-1).

Si elle s'est montrée quelque peu "nerveuse" selon ses propres mots, la lauréate de cinq tournois du Grand Chelem a parfaitement géré cette première en 2006. Malgré la perte de sa première mise en jeu de la partie, la Suissesse s'est montrée conquérante et surtout dominatrice. A l'arrivée, Maria Vento-Kabchi (62e joueuse mondiale) n'a pu lutter.

Pour l'anecdote, la Vénézuélienne a moins résisté que lors de sa précédente et unique rencontre face à Hingis. En 2001à Doha, Hingis l'avait emporté 7-6 6-1. Au deuxième tour, Martina Hingis affrontera Klara Koukalova, 35e mondiale.
"

          - Eurosport (France).


"Martina Hingis bateu a venezuela Maria Vento-Kabchi na sua primeira partida oficial desde 2002. A antiga número 1 do ténis mundial regressa às vitórias depois de três anos de interrupção na carreira desportiva.

Hingis venceu sem dificuldades Maria Vento-Kabchi por 6-2 e 6-1 na 2ª ronda do Gold Coast, apesar de no início da partida se ter mostrado um pouco nervosa.

Vencedora de 5 títulos do Gram Slam, a tenista de 25 anos estava afastada da competição desde 2002 devido a uma grave lesão numa perna
".

          - Record (Portugal).


"Martina Hingis emerged from her three-year break looking trim in a sleek red-orange outfit, with a nervous smile and a small wave to the crowd that cheered her onto the intimate centre court at Royal Pines. Hingis would later remark on the cruel heat; in the beginning, her comeback match threatened to inflict a pain all of its own.

Six points had been played and lost before the Swiss won her first - through a double-fault from her opponent, Venezuelan veteran Maria Vento-Kabchi. A string of backhand errors preceded a wild serve that missed the box by metres, and Hingis realised that the main thing she had forgotten in her time away was the need to breathe.

She was nervous, obviously. "No kidding." Well, how nervous? "I guess you saw the first six points, didn't you? But it's normal. Even when I played the exhibitions or when I played Team Tennis I was always nervous the first two, three games."

Indeed, while it was not until the 24th point that she hit her first winner, improvement was steady. By late in the first set Hingis had settled into a comfortable rhythm, running the portly Vento-Kabchi around the court and stroking the ball with her old confidence and some new force.

martina in action, during the comeback game


From 3-2, Hingis won eight consecutive games, allowing Vento-Kabchi just one more before serving out the match 6-2, 6-1 to a deserved ovation. "I hope [the crowd] just enjoy it if I can play [as] well as I used to, maybe even better at times," Hingis said. "Today I really felt like I played well, three or four games in the second set I almost didn't miss a shot, and just started serving better and loosening up."

The Australian Women's Hardcourts is a modest little tournament, laid-back in the Queensland way, at which spectators can drink straight from stubbies and wear their thongs - in the corporate boxes. Hingis, too, has been relaxed since her arrival, accommodating organisers' requests and yesterday playing freely and well once she had settled in.

When the match ended on a final Vento-Kabchi error after just 51 minutes, Hingis could not disguise her joy, grinning as she jogged to the net and then leaving the court for a kiss and hug from her stepfather, Mario Widmer, and hitting partner Radim Valigura. There was also a congratulatory pat from fellow Swiss Patty Schnyder, the top seed.

The only cautionary note is that Vento-Kabchi was, well, lamentable. If that is representative of top-60 standard, then Hingis has already well exceeded it. Next is Klara Koukalova, a top-30 fringe-dweller, and although that will give a better indication, the best test would come in a quarter-final against 13th-ranked Francesca Schiavone, the feisty Italian second seed.
"

          - Sydney Morning Herald (Australia).


All quotes from January, the 2nd, 2006.
There will be more news, hopefully for a long time to come.

04 January 2006

Uno bacio, due baci...


An email arrived. Long.
Sweet and sour. Strong and desperate.

"Tonight, I want to kiss you.
You're pretty, but that's not why
I don't know how to be
What you need me to be.
Hush, hush, I'll be there soon
While the crying moon graces the sky.
"

An SMS arrived. Short.
Sweet, so sweet. Just that.

"Hopefully, she'll be here soon.
She's late, and I know why.
A thought of mine runs free,
I can't escape or flee.
It seems there's no crying moon,
A lost word dwelling in my mind.
"

          - Hyug Badox, just now.

I don't know that much italian. Knowing a latin language does help to understand the others (portuguese, spanish, french, italian and romanian all descend from latin). And I felt I was going to write something about that.

Until the email arrived.

Labels:


03 January 2006

Uninteresting as we are


Have you realised how uninteresting we all are ?... Being ignorant regarding certain issues makes us uncomfortable. We avoid subjects that make us uncomfortable, increasing the possibility of becoming more ignorant and, subsequently, more uninteresting.

"There is no such thing on earth as an uninteresting subject; the only thing that can exist is an uninterested person."

          - Gilbert K. Chesterton (1874-1936)

Or, if one disagree or think otherwise, one can always put himself/herself in the comfortable seat and list other views...

"Without tenderness, a man is uninteresting."

          - Marlene Dietrich (1901-1992)

I, personally, would say: "May we all live in interesting times !", whatever this means for each of us. You can quote me on this... as I'm quoting someone who does not exist. Not much of a disclosure here.

02 January 2006

Day two


The second day of the new year.
Also new for these words... in another way.

"On his second day there, he was shot. He died".

          - Doreen Rappaport, about Mr. Luther King's stay in Memphis on April of '68, in "Martin's Big Words: The Life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr."

01 January 2006

The world is our home


New Year has just arrived... and once more, I undertook the quest of making it become somewhat of an improvement or at least a temporal space for growth, when compared to its predecessor.

There's no denying that the world is our home and past midnight was another piece of the puzzle that proves just so. I was among some of my long-known friends (one has been living in Canada for more than a decade, another is spanish despite being born in London) and midnight passed while some of us were singing, playing, dreaming, sleeping, thinking of our distant friends... the ones living next door and others living a world apart (ZIP 94523, I can add one, for example). Distance is merely a factor. Insignificant, one can add, when it comes to thoughts.

People we know, people we love, they all can be present (truly they are), regardless of their geographic position. Regardless of anything.

I have recently found a poem regarding a specific geographic spot: Mt. Moosilauke. This one is located in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, a part of rural New England (USA) enlivened by seasonal forays of summer visitors. Not that it is remarkable or that beautiful, but for each of us, there are places like this that have an extra meaning. Not for me, in this case. I just liked the poem. Hope you do too.

"O, the wind howls over the hills tonight
And wide is the lonely sky
These are our hills when the snows drift deep
When roaring freshets flow
When under the summer moon they sleep
And when the red leaves blow
And where'er we go and whatever we do
Memories will remain.

These are our hills when the snows drift deep
When roaring freshets flow
When under the summer moon they sleep
And when the red leaves blow
And where'er we go and whatever we do
Memories will remain
Of the winds that blew on the trails we knew
In snow and sun and rain.

We shall have known what the dawn wind sings
High on a lonely peak
And learned the challenge the lightning flings
And heard the thunder speak
The splendor of noon and sunset's gold
The stars shall speak their lore
And when we are old all the firelight told
We shall see in our dreams once more
".

          - H.P. Haile, in "Mt. Moosilauke"

Simple, right ?!
But nice, like the place seems to be... let's see what tomorrow brings.