waitingman: (Social Animal)
Now that I have a new keyboard with a working 'z' key, I can tell you all about the holiday Long-Suffering Partner & I had in March - we cruised to, around & back from New Zealand, on Royal Caribbean's Ovation Of The Seas... just a small boat!!



ExpandEnter Our Floating Condominium!! )
waitingman: (Orang-Utan)
It's 10.30pm... It's 25 degrees celsius/centigrade (77 degrees fahrenheit) & we're supposed to be one week into Autumn

Yesterday's temperature where I'm working reached 38 celsius (100.4 fahrenheit) right when I was out & about doing inspections & measures in places without air-conditioning & in one case, without a roof. Today was a bit milder - only 33 celsius (91.4f), but this night's a killer... I don't mind hot days (well, I do mind actually, but you can't do much about that when the local star ups its ante), but FFS the sun went down almost 3 hours ago - enough already!!

Poor Bella is suffering as well - she's shedding excess fur at a rate that could see her become a Sphinx Cat by morning...
waitingman: (Default)
Proof that Gen X has still got it... even if we do move a bit slower the following day

Following on from the fantastic Del Amitri gig on Tuesday, Saturday night found us at the Manning Bar in Sydney University - a place I hadn't set foot in since the late 80s when I saw the criminally under-rated Shriekback there... The place seems to be bigger than I remember - which is not how memory usually works, but there you are...

So there we were, to see Electric Six - of Danger! High Voltage!' fame... & Gay Bar infamy... who were only an Electric Five on the night - their keyboard player absent due to "reasons" apparently - but I have to say he was barely missed, even on their (IMnotsoHO) best song, the keyboard-led Down At McDonaldz. It was so much fun to be at a 'pub rock' show after too many years without them, due to Covid & other 'reasons'. There was audience participation, a mosh pit & even some good old crowd surfing... though the consequences of us older generations crowd surfing are a little more fraught these days - we're heavier than we used to be & our hips break more easily when the crowd can't hold you up any more...

Smaller venue - better photos!





waitingman: (Default)
David who, you say??

David Lindley was a guitarist whose presence & playing on any number of songs by other artists, made the music just that much better. Imagine this song, which you'll all know, without his lap steel playing...



While he had his own bands & projects over the years, he'll always be one of those kind of anonymous 'session' players you've always heard, but never heard of...
waitingman: (Happy Droopy)
Saw one of my favourite bands last night... on apparently their first visit to Sydney in 30 years or so - but I don't remember them coming here 30 years ago - I'd have gone!!

Del Amitri, with 3 original members present (not bad for a band that's been going nearly 40 years!!) sounded every bit as good as their albums & belied their slightly more weathered & 'experienced' appearance with playing & vocals that were just spot-on. About 4 songs in, singer/bass/guitarist Justin Currie welcomed us to the gig, announced that they were going to do a slower song, so we could go to the bar if we wanted, but after that it would just be "hit, after hit, after hit". And while that may be an exaggeration in terms of the international music charts, for us, it was absolutely true. The only complaint I could have about the show was that, at 90 minutes, it was too darned short!!

Phone photos from the gig - not the greatest quality, but good enough...






Ian bloody Harvey... great guitarist but TURN AROUND, DAMMIT!!



Somebody posted a song from the gig!!



Just to prove they've still got it... here's the original from 1989



I'm a happy boy...
waitingman: Cameras (Cameras)
Okay... right at the start, let me say that I'm pretty much against racing animals for the benefit of the betting public - horses, dogs, frogs, crabs... whatever

The Australian greyhound racing industry & community came in for a bit of a well-deserved walloping a few years ago, when an enquiry sparked by a TV report found multiple cases of animal abuse, inhumane practices, drugs & unwarranted euthanising of dogs who either grew too old, too slow, or just weren't cut out to be race winners. Since then the industry has tried to clean up its act, introducing a raft of reforms, new regulations & creating the Greyhound Welfare Integrity Commission... though this 2022 article from the RSPCA regarding the myriad issues with racing dogs, suggests that not as much 'progress' has been made as you'd like...

So it was a bit of a moral dilemma when Long-Suffering Partner & I found ourselves at Wentworth Park in Sydney, for the weekly greyhound races... ostensibly for panning & tracking practice with our DSLRs - trying to get clear photos of dogs flashing past you at around 60km/h isn't easy - the night wasn't particularly well patronised by the viewing, or betting public, there were a lot of dogs 'scratched' from races for reasons unknown (hopefully because they'd been found unfit to participate & not then forced to run anyway...) & the overall atmosphere of the place was... well, there wasn't one. But the dogs looked healthy & a few of them were prancing excitedly as they were being led (on leashes) to the starting gates & we couldn't see any of the last placed dogs being taken away in unmarked vans, or across the road to the wholesale butchery (Not kidding - there's a big commercial meat supplier's office & warehouse almost directly opposite the track!!). And how is the industry to consider improving itself worthwhile if there's no money coming in. Not that we gave them much - $12 entry fee, then 2 cheap dinners & soft drinks & a $5 token bet where the money went straight to the TAB (Totalisator Agency Board - the betting agency conglomerate in Australia), rather than to the Greyhound Racing industry, though I'm sure they'll end up with some of it... barely enough for one serve of Puppy Chow

Anyway, here are some photos... you can see my panning technique improve race by race...


Fast Dogs 1 by Justin B. on 500px.com

'Worst' shot of the night, during the first race we were in position for... but I really like this one regardless


Fast Dogs 2 by Justin B. on 500px.com

Getting there - you can actually see some clear bits of dogs!!


Fast Dogs 3 by Justin B. on 500px.com

Best dog shot of the night - probably because they'd only just cleared the starting gate & hadn't reached top speed yet...


Best-tracked shot of the lot... & of course it has to be the 'electric rabbit' the dogs chase after. This was taken during its test run before the actual race... so again, probably not at full speed
waitingman: (Default)
These questions were written by sabcatt.

1. What’s the last thing you got in the mail?
Dear god... I can't really remember the last real thing I got in the mail, other than the occasional anachronistic bill. Actually I can - it was a Christmas card from an old, anachronistic friend!!

2. What’s the last thing you sent in the mail?
I returned, with extreme prejudice, 2 faulty Foxtel boxes... which they later tried to charge me for not receiving. Say what you like about snail mail - nothing beats a tangible receipt, printed on real paper!!!

3. How many unread emails are in your inbox right now?
Probably about 40 in the account I rarely use these days, as it's so old ALL the spambots know its address. In my current accounts - maybe a couple - I check both at least twice a day...

4. What is your most recent text message about?
Trying to contact a client whose mobile phone was"not accepting inbound calls at this time". Convenient how people always go dark when they're supposed to pay me money

5. Do you have a favorite postage stamp design?
In the absence of any of my favourite guitar players appearing on stamps - Elton John will do quite nicely...
waitingman: (Scream)
TikTok has discovered my local (literally local... about a kilometre's walk away... maybe not even that) inner-Sydney-Harbour beach... & while I don't go to the beach itself very often these days, it's always been nice to go on the headland bushwalk that goes past it, or drive on the roads near it without traffic hassles... basically enjoying the sleepy, tranquil atmosphere of the place

But no more - at least for now The bastards who have 'discovered it' describe it as a "hidden gem". Not now, it isn't - this treacherous article even describes how to get there by car, or on foot... Bastards!!

The good thing, I suppose, is that your average TikTokker's attention span is about as long as one of the videos, so I'm confident that by next Spring/Summer, they'll have found somewhere else to take their moving selfies
waitingman: (World Politics)
The story so far... China has been rattling its sabres & claiming increasing amounts of Asia as its own, both by stealth & a kind of 'Well, it's ours now, what are you going to do about it?!" schoolyard bully posturing, angering not only its direct neighbours, but the established 'powers' like the USA &, to a much lesser power, Australia

Now - a former US diplomat (why is it always a 'former' diplomat... or politician, or general?? Surely it's safer, at a personal level at least, to say this sort of thing out loud when you have an army behind you - even if it is just a bunch of angry civil servants) has claimed that Australia is being set up as the Ukraine of South-East Asia, in that China will be allowed to invade us, in order for the USA to wage its own war against China by proxy, just as it's fighting Russia by supplying Ukraine with weapons & technology, but no actual troops

As far-fetched as that sounds, I suppose it's not beyond the limits of belief. The British were quite prepared to let Australia be invaded by the Japanese in WWII, having evacuated Singapore with barely a shot fired, thinking that invading a large landmass like ours would spread the Japanese too thin & weaken their overall strength... It's kind of like invading Russia - the place is too damned big to have any kind of meaningful & useful control over & large portions of the landscape are inhospitable, or downright uninhabitable. Ask the French & Germans... about Russia I mean, not Australia... yet. So it's a tried & true tactic to let your enemy advance past its realistic limits, much as Russia has found out in the battle with its own inadequate capacity to supply its troops in Ukraine

The only problem I see with this scenario is that our elected leader doesn't have a little fingernail's amount of the kind of charisma & inspirational qualities displayed constantly by Zelenskyy... We're doomed!
waitingman: (Default)
These questions were written by [personal profile] sabcatt.

1. What's your favorite fruit or vegetable to look at?
I love the look of Durian, but it's... shall we say... an acquired taste!!

2. What's your favorite juice?
Orange & pineapple juices have had to be removed from my diet, due to their tendency to start a war in my digestive tract, so these days, it's a tie between mandarin juice & apple juice. Though I remain devoted to the juice of red grapes after suitable fermentation & barrel-aging...

3. What fruit tree would you like to have in your yard?
Mandarin &/or lemon... though I'm afraid I'd have to find an unfriendly method of keeping the local possums away - they killed the last lemon tree we had by eating not only the fruit (!?!?!?) but also the leaves, new twig shoots... some days I don't like possums very much

4. What vegetable name do you think makes the best nickname?
I can only think of slightly derogatory uses for them - you absolute turnip!!!...

5. What fruits and vegetables would your personal "fruit hat" contain?
Red & white grapes, lemons, mandarins, Fuji apples, all on a base of rockmelons & topped with an explosion of really tall spinach leaves
waitingman: Cameras (Cameras)

Storm 9.2.23.2 by Justin B. on 500px.com


Love a storm at sunset... Not much rain in it though - just enough to keep everything humid!!


Storm 9.2.23.3 by Justin B. on 500px.com



Storm 9.2.23.1 by Justin B. on 500px.com
waitingman: (Scream)
I really can't care any more - you're on your own, guys...







waitingman: (Scream)
I assembled a post last night about the current spate of 'Sovereign Citizen' nutjobs in Australia & a funeral in the USA that was attended by Marjorie Taylor-Greene & Donald Trump which turned into... no surprise... a kind of MAGA rally, with everyone competitively shoving their tongues up Trump's cloaca - metaphorically at least & if it was more than that, the report didn't say & I don't want to know

But I just couldn't be bothered to post it. I can't decide whether the world really is getting more stupid, or if the 24/7 media are so desperate for 'stories' that they'll give this kind of lowest-common-denominator idiocy the platform it so vehemently wants & under no circumstances actually deserves

Croc

Jan. 22nd, 2023 04:14 pm
waitingman: Cameras (Cameras)




My pick of the bunch of today's photo editing...
waitingman: (Default)
Haven't done one of these in a while...

1. Who would you like to be able to get into contact with?
There are a few people in my social orbit who are a bit like comets - they only turn up once in a quite long while, but generally, I don't think I have a hole in my life in the shape of anyone...

2. How do you make yourself go to sleep when you can’t seem to get to sleep?
I get up, I play some Solitaire or Sudoku on the computer, I read... & try again

3. What language(s) do you wish you could speak?
Mandarin, Spanish...

4. What is it about people that confused you the most?
Their determination to be offended by things they either don't agree with, or more often, don't understand. Their eagerness to abandon personal responsibility, critical thought & any kind of consideration for others.
Their willingness to swallow divisive rhetoric by the truckload

5. What major company do you despise the most?
Rupert Murdoch's Fox group of companies... ALL of them
waitingman: (Default)
Not very well known outside of Australia, but one of our most respected singers of the last 50 years, Renée Geyer has died of cancer

A Diva in the true sense of the word... this may as well be her theme song...



I really don't like the way this year has started... Reboot please!!
waitingman: (WorkHouse)
I resigned from my job today... to take up another role in about 2 weeks time - same industry, same kind of work, more money

I've known the guy I'm going to work with for about 3-4 years & am reasonably confident he'll be an okay 'boss'... there's just this little part of me that is always suspicious of glittering, gold things - after all, I was made a quite substantial financial offer for my services by another company last year, only for it to all fall apart within 6-7 weeks & I was pretty close to becoming a bus driver before another company - the one I'm now leaving - stepped in with a good offer. Trouble in Paradise started in December, when they restructured my remuneration, lowering my base salary & introducing sales target incentive bonuses... something I don't like, don't trust or believe in & plain don't want. Just pay me what I'm worth & don't fuck me around, is that so much to ask?

Hopefully I won't have to worry about that with this new role... except I do worry... & I will
waitingman: (Default)
Farewell to the electric guitar genius Jeff Beck

The first of the top 3 guitar players in my life has gone... never suspected he'd be the first one to go, but bacterial meningitis doesn't play favourites

3 reasons why he was known as 'the guitarist's guitarist'...







And there's so much more... Thanks Jeff, for showing us that breaking the 'rules' could be a wonderful thing... & for so much wonderful music. Unforgettable & utterly irreplaceable
waitingman: (Evil Cat)
... & if there's a heaven... & god lets this guy into it...

Then that god is either a blinkered, uncaring & unknowing idiot... or a rampant, unapologetic kiddy-fiddler. Because George Pell was without doubt one of those things... & possibly both

Either way, it's not a heaven I'd want to spend any time in, if that's the kind of company I'd have to keep

Divergence

Jan. 1st, 2023 12:00 pm
waitingman: (Scream)
Someone I've known since 1988, worked with for about 3 years & played in a couple of music projects with was at the NYE gathering L-SP & I attended last night &... oh dear

We'd already found out she was an Anti-Vaxxer when our regular NYE hosts contacted me about NYE2021-2... To their credit, they didn't ostracise her, but wanted everyone to know so they could make their own decision - which turned out to be moot anyway when, oh the irony, our hosts caught Covid!!

Anyway, she was there last night & I asked what she'd been up to during the year. Turned out she's 'working' with a group called NO 5G who are "looking to cause trouble where trouble needs to be caused"... What her beliefs are about chemtrails, the Illuminati Lizard People, a flat &/or hollow Earth & 9/11 being an inside job remain unknown, as I tried to both change the subject & get someone else involved in the conversation so I could gracefully withdraw from it...

I really don't know where to start with people like this, so maybe the best option is actually to stop
waitingman: Cameras (Cameras)

Baby Saltwater Crocodile - Australian Museum, Sydney. Yes, it's alive!!


Freshwater Crocodile - Taronga Zoo, Sydney


Stormy Sydney, with the Sydney skyline disappearing


Bay of Fires, Tasmania


Cradle Mountain, Tasmania - on a very rare clear day!


Port Arthur, Tasmania


Drone self-portrait - above the Sturt Highway, New South Wales


Sunset at Lake Tyrell, Victoria


Giant Redwoods - Warburton, Victoria


Australian Fur Seal - Taronga Zoo, Sydney
waitingman: (Road Trip)
An overnight roadtrip, just to finish off what's been a well-travelled year

Dropped a yowling Bella off at her Vet lodgings on Wednesday morning & headed south-west for Cootamundra & Junee. Why? Well no particular reason, save that we'd driven through & past those towns & country a few times without ever really stopping there & it looked nice. And only approximately 6 hours drive from WaitingManor? Easy!!

Cootamundra is the birthplace of Australian cricket hero Don Bradman, a master batsman who played for & captained Australia between 1928 - 1948, playing only 52 Test matches in that time (well... there was a minor global conflict that took 7 years to sort itself out!!). These days, players can notch up 52 Test matches in no time at all - Steve Smith, a current Australian batsman, has played 91 Test matches since his debut in 2010!! The most famous Bradman statistic is his batting score average of 99.94 runs per innings. It would have been 100 if he hadn't been bowled out for 0 runs in his final inning... if he'd just scored 4 more runs... No other cricketer EVER has a batting average that high. The next closest is Adam Voges, another Australian who only played a comparative handful of matches, with 61.87. Bradman was so dominant that the English cricket team who toured Australia in 1932 had to come up with a style of bowling designed specifically to restrict his run-scoring (&, to be fair, several other Australian batsmen who were also excellent players), by aiming to bowl straight at the body... at pace & occasionally at head height. 'Bodyline' bowling certainly curtailed Bradman & the Australian team, but its use was quickly banned by the international cricket community after that tour... & after many concussions, bloodied noses & bruises... there were no helmets or body pads used back in those days

Anyway, Cootamundra is rightly proud of its most famous son... in a subtle way


Gum tree for scale...

Having been more of a bowler than a batsman back in my school sporting days, I couldn't resist having a crack at that wicket...



The cricket ball came from the Bradman Museum down the road from the Oval, inside the house where he was born &, on Wednesday at least, manned by a septuagenarian cricket & rugby league fan who very quickly had me pegged as someone 'good for a chat' when Long-Suffering Partner & I walked in. It took me 15 minutes to try & pay him the entry fee then actually go into the rest of the place. Fortunately there were other visitors arriving as we left or we might still be there

On to the town of Junee then - about 30 minutes away & a larger town than Cootamundra (it has 3 pubs!!) with a nicely restored railway station...


That clock's only right twice a day though...

Junee's only connection to sporting greatness is being the birthplace of Ray 'Rabbits' Warren - a sports broadcaster who started out calling horse races, before becoming 'The Voice' of Australian rugby league & could whip up excitement for any race... be it Commonwealth Games or Olympic swimmers, or 2 blowflies on a pub window


I did expect him to be taller...

Junee also has a chocolate & licorice factory of some repute, so the following morning, in the absence of other breakfast options, we headed down the road to it. Their breakfast menu, fortunately, was full of non-chocolatey options & their coffee was delicious. While eating, I couldn't help but notice a locked cabinet in a corner of the dining area, full of what looked to be whiskey bottles... turned out that a nearby distillery did tastings here & one was due to start in about 5 minutes. A whiskey tasting at 10.30am? Absolutely... don't mind if I do



Corowa Distilling Company, we now know, do a fine variety of single malt & blended whiskeys & have a charming salesman who, if the car parked outside is an indication, roared into town via Copperhead Rd



Did the long drive back to Sydney with the aftertaste of a whiskey party in my mouth & throat... Didn't get breath-tested outside of Yass - I would have been fine, but explaining why I had whiskey on my breath would have been an interesting conversation... Collected Bella from the Vet, headed home, watched the latest Dune movie & to bed

Breakfast today? Across town to our favourite Chinese restaurant, home of the best Shao-Long Bao you'll ever eat 3 servings of...

waitingman: Cameras (Cameras)
Some dead, some alive. You pick 'em

















Okay, the last one's a bit of a giveaway... or is it?
waitingman: (Happy Droopy)
Last night, Long-Suffering Partner surprised me with 2 tickets to RockWiz Live at Sydney's State Theatre RockWiz is a long-running Australian TV music quiz show, where ordinary audience members have the chance to appear alongside Australian & international musicians in a 2 team game to see who is the biggest music nerd. The show also features a live band & performances by the musical guests & has always been filmed in the Esplanade Hotel in Melbourne, a well-known music venue pub, so it always has the atmosphere of a great live gig. Of course, I've been watching the show for many years, doing that possibly annoying thing of answering most of the questions on my couch, before a lot of the contestants on the actual show do... so when the show started going 'on the road' over a decade ago, playing at various theatres & music festivals around the country, L-SP made it her mission to get me on there. Last night, on our 3rd attempt, I made it

ExpandThe roar of the greasepaint, the smell of the crowd )

Long-Suffering Partner now needs a new Quest & is wondering how she'll top this one... I really don't think she has to - this was a night I'll never forget. Which is why I'm writing it all down now, before I forget it
waitingman: Cameras (Cameras)

Cradle Mountain


Port Arthur


Bay Of Fires


The road up Ben Lomond... fun!!


Cataract Gorge, Launceston - from above


Tessellated Steps, Pirate Cove


Lake Leake


Port Arthur
waitingman: Cameras (Cameras)
From about 20 minutes ago...





...

Nov. 22nd, 2022 11:02 pm
waitingman: Cameras (Cameras)



Thanks to the Australian Museum for the photography course...



Noises

Oct. 3rd, 2022 11:18 am
waitingman: (Default)
How Pelican Daughters albums are made. Part I


Old school digital technology & a vintage Korg MS-20 analogue synth


A selection of my collection - thumb piano, wind tube, melodica & an electric kazoo, as well as bass & guitar. All of which sound weird & wonderful through the ME-80 effect unit


The acoustic drumkit...
waitingman: (World Cow)
So... people of colour in fantasy TV shows. How do you feel about that? Do you think that having black, or Asian elves, or a black Queen in 'Rings of Power' somehow ruins the fantasy for you, or it isn't "canon"...?! Does the fact that there's a black family in House of the Dragon offend your sensibilities?!

If your answer to either of those questions is "Yes", then please unfollow me now. We will not be friends

2 nights ago, in a little restaurant in town, there was a table of young 20-something males who came in - 3 Asians & a white guy & their unnecessarily loud table banter quickly turned to the above topic. Surprisingly, it was one of the Asian guys who was vehemently against the supposed diversity mandate that has forced his beloved fantasy genre to have actors who aren't white, playing elves etc... Apparently he finds it unrealistic, because the stories are based on European folklore & history, so there shouldn't be any people of any colour in them at all. It was the white guy who pointed out that the stories, while written by white guys are made up!!... that there isn't any reason there shouldn't be black, brown, or Asian elves... After all, if humans can look different depending on their country of origin from all across the world, why can't a fantasy character?

What bothered me though, was that this guy could suspend his reality enough to believe in dragons, wizards, magic & how people could cover huge distances in a conveniently short amount of time, but the fact that there's a black actor on screen ruins it all. Doesn't matter how good the actor is in the role, it's not right because they're not white

And don't get me started on those idiots complaining about a dark-skinned Little Mermaid. If we really wanted an accurate portrayal of a mermaid, she'd be played by a manatee & the cinema audience would have to be drunk on ship-distilled rum to see her...
waitingman: (Default)
There's a new program on ABC television (the Australian channel!) called 'Take 5', based on a podcast series by host Zan Rowe, inspired by her original radio segment of the same name, where she asks various musicians & other well-known people what 5 songs are most important to them or represent life-changing events...

I'm never going to be famous enough to be on the show, but I love this kind of thing - being a bit of a music fan, so here's version 1 of 5 songs that have meant something to me over the last 50 years or so...

'I Want You (She's So Heavy)' - the Beatles: One of the first songs I can remember hearing as a child - my Father used to play the Abbey Road & Sgt Pepper's albums a lot, along with other interesting things like the Electric Prunes & 'In A Gadda Da Vida' by Iron Butterfly, as well as Pink Floyd's Relics album - a collection of songs & singles from the Syd Barrett era. But even though 'I Want You...' has a kind of scary ending when you're 4-5yrs old, with that Moog synthesiser storm drowning out the music, I was still kind of fascinated & would always sit & listen when Father would put it on. It's still my favourite track on that album, along with 'She's Leaving Home' from Sgt Pepper's, so I have a foot firmly planted in both the Lennon & McCartney camps. In the mid-70s there was a new radio station 2JJ that used to regularly trot out obscure (to me, certainly & to most Australians at that time too, I'd say) & esoteric things like 'Roundabout' & 'Close To The Edge' by Yes, 'Autobahn' & 'The Model' by Kraftwerk & on one memorably long occasion, the entire 'Lamb Lies Down On Broadway' album by Genesis. All that 60s-70s sonic experimentation would obviously have an influence on my first band 12 years later...

'This Is Tomorrow' - Bryan Ferry: The lead single from his 'In Your Mind' album, which was the first record I 'bought' - though really it was the first record I actually requested be bought for me, as opposed to always getting those hit parade compilation albums. In hindsight, I may have actually wanted the 'Let's Stick Together' album, released about a year before, as the video for its title song had made quite an impression on me, with Jerry Hall slinking around her then boyfriend Bryan in a gold lamé dress & guitarist Chris Spedding all in leather, portraying the epitome of 'cool guitarist'. I ended up getting that album not long after as my 2nd album I 'bought'. But the 'In Your Mind' album, while less immediately appealing as its precursor, has some great stuff on there beyond 'This Is Tomorrow' (which I used to play in one of many covers bands in the 80s-90s), including the epic 'Love Me Madly', which became my favourite track on the album & probably still is. It was through both these albums that I discovered Roxy Music, through which I learned about Brian Eno, Phil Manzanera & the myriad side projects of the band, which included 'The Rock Follies' - a UK series that launched the careers of Julie Covington, Rula Lenska & others, featuring music by Andy Mckay of Roxy Music

Heroes' - David Bowie: The first song of Bowie's I really remember hearing. Living in Australia in the 70s, Bowie's whole Ziggy/Thin White Duke progression hadn't troubled the local radio stations at all - I don't even remember any of it on 2JJ, so I assumed at the time, this song was his follow-up to 'Space Oddity', which was the only other Bowie song I'd heard... When the video for this song was first played on 'Countdown' (the Australian equivalent of the UK's 'Top Of The Pops', only less formulaic & professional & more anarchic & interesting), I was hooked, not only by Bowie's performance, but by the otherworldly music. When Father bought the album, I found at least one familiar name in its credits - Brian Eno, but was wholly captivated by the guitar work of Robert Fripp. A few years later, when I used to save my lunch money all week to buy records instead, I picked up several Brian Eno albums that also had Robert Fripp on them & decided to investigate this guy a bit more. Which led me to...

'Waiting Man' - King Crimson: Though it was probably 'Neal & Jack & Me', the opening track on the 'Beat' album, which was the first time I heard the band & was instantly smitten, why let the truth get in the way of a good story & besides, it's certainly 'Waiting Man' that has stuck with me in more ways than just a username - it opened & twisted my mind regarding what music could be. It was around this time that I met my longest-standing musical partner, the other Pelican Daughter, at my high school. We were introduced by a mutual friend because we were both into that 'weird' music. He introduced me to a swathe of British bands I'd never heard, or heard of & also to the nascent Industrial/Experimental works of bands like Australia's SPK & Severed Heads, the pan-Atlantic Throbbing Gristle & European outfits like Liaisons Dangereuses, Nocturnal Emissions & Einstürzende Neubauten. Marrying all these new sounds & approaches with my love of King Crimson & Eno's minimalist albums 'Before & After Science' & 'Another Green World' (both featuring a certain R. Fripp), my mind was set on the kind of music I wanted to make. In a sign of both the times & how isolated Australia is, it was only in the late 90s (long before YouTube!!!) that I saw my first video footage of King Crimson in concert & their opening song was 'Waiting Man'. Finally I could see how they made all those wonderful sounds & found out what a Chapman Stick was... & how Tony Levin was playing a lot of things on it I'd assumed were guitars. And speaking of guitars...

'Have You Ever Loved A Woman' - Derek & The Dominos: Truth be told, I can't remember the first time I heard Eric Clapton & he awoke an overwhelming desire to play guitar like THAT!! So I'll pick this track for 2 reasons - it has what I still consider to be his best guitar solo on it & it also features Duane Allman - no slouch in the guitar stakes himself - Before that unknown transformative Clapton song, I was a lacklustre & lackadaisical piano player, being forced to go through the grades playing classical pieces I had no interest in - I wanted to play like Jerry Lee Lewis & Dr John, not Richard Clayderman!! Soon I'd laid hands on first an acoustic guitar, then an electric one (thanks Stuart, I'll never forget!!) & was buying up Blues & Jazz albums like a teenager possessed & learning to play along. This also led me to the Rolling Stones & then the glam/r&b/rock bands of the 70s, mostly because it was all blues-based, but being in a band that played 'Ballroom Blitz' was much more fun than yet another staid & earnest version of 'Ramblin' On My Mind'... & people used to dance!! To this day, I have 2 different approaches to the guitar & to music in general - the 'player' side & the experimental 'tone generator' side. I've played in many bands & projects using one or the other, but my only 2 attempts to have a band that allowed me to use both, ended in indifference & failure. Maybe one day... or maybe not!!

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