Tanabata

Tonight is Tanabata, the Japanese star festival, celebrating the once-a-year meeting of Orihime and Hikoboshi.

Long long ago, on the west bank of the Milky Way, there lived a beautiful girl Orihime. She was a skilled weaver and worked very hard every day. Tentei, the Emperor of the sky was very happy with her diligence and married her to a very hard working cowboy Hikoboshi from across the Milky Way. Hikoboshi and Orihime fell in love and started to live happily on the east bank. However, they spent all day long having fun together and forgot about their work. This made her father very angry, and he separated the two to opposite sides of the river, so that they could not meet. Orihime was so sad that she cried for days and nights. However, once a year on the seventh day of the seventh month, a flock of magpies forms a bridge across the Milky Way, and the two lovers are able to be with each other on this one night.

ささのはさらさら
のきばにゆれる
おほしさまきらきら
きんぎんすなご

Men (in tights)

Well, it's Tour de France time again and readers who usually stop by for music will know that the frequency of cycling posts for the next 2 1/2 weeks will probably outnumber posts about music. In addition to checking the usual daily cycling sources, cycling fans might want to take a trip over to a relatively new cycling blog called Men (in tights). As you might expect from their name, there is a good deal of tongue-in-cheek fun, and a great deal of editorializing. They got their first real boost after getting plugged on PEZ. Although their writing had a bit more depth when it was more intermitent, their TdF coverage has been a little scrappy (much like the sprints these last two days)—daily posting is hard work sometimes. However, I'm confident they'll grow into their roles as daily peloton pundits.

Double take

Was I the only one to have to read today's headline, "Crack Found In Shuttle's Foam Insulation," more than once? Maybe it's because I'm moving back to Baltimore soon . . .

Out. Of. Control.

On the eve of the start of the 2006 Tour de France in Strasbourg—the first TdF in seven years sans one dominating American rider, the first TdF since Pantani in 1998 that could complete the "double," a tour that was simply oozing excitement before it even started—bombs were dropped in the wake of the now infamous Operación Puerto affair. Under immense pressure from the UCI, the tour organizers, sponsors, and non-affected teams, teams have suspended their riders implicated in the biggest doping scandal since Festina at the 1998 Tour. The initial list totaled 31 riders, with more being tacked on as we write. And we're talking big name boys on the list. Jan shall not be redeemed. Basso can kiss his double hopes goodbye. It's really incredibly disappointing that the first Tour in the post-Armstrong era has to be run under this cloud of scandal, whose outcome, no matter how special for one rider, will always contain asterisks and "what if's."

The biggest loser: Alexandre Vinokourov (currently kicking himself for choosing the doomed Astaná-Würth (formerly known as Liberty Seguros) over Ag2R). The biggest winner(s): Discovery Channel (currently licking its lips), Floyd, and Levi.

More photos

I've uploaded several of my "artsy" photos from Korea to my Flickr page. Happy viewing!

BIT on WNT

I was pleasantly surprised to see that my pet project, Bags In Trees, received a mention on the off kilter news source Weird News Today. And our three-week vacation-induced absence from the blogosphere even incited a passionate reaction from one Baltimore reader. There's only one thing to glean from this: people love bags in trees.

Sunday confession

I have a confession to make: today was the first day I played my instrument in a month. Hard to believe? There were a variety of reasons for my not-really-forced hiatus from the saxophone, including the conclusion of a tiring concert season, the stress of a job search while still teaching full-time, and a much-needed, extremely wonderful vacation to South Korea.

I'm not upset about it. Nor do I feel guilty. In the summer I usually take some time off from the saxophone—and I mean completely away from it. I do this 1) so I can recharge my mind and 2) ease off from all the hectic music-learning I have to do during the year. However, it's nice to come back to it—after having time away—because I can just take it slow, at my own pace, with nothing pressing, and it also gives me time to really focus on what are the problems with my playing. I like that a lot. A chance to rebuild and make myself a better player. So often during the year I don't have the time to really "practice" because all the time is spent learning new music for the next concert or series of concerts. This is magnified because I am mostly a new music performer, meaning it's hard to just fall back on repertoire I already know—I am constantly learning new music that has no performance history or precedent. I have to make the performance history. And often I have to make it with just one week to learn the music! It's all fun and exciting (and sometimes very stressful, like SPARK festival preparations) but I always like the time to dig back in to the basics of my instrument.

I learned this lesson of balance rather early on in my musical career. It happened the summer after my junior year of college. That year—and the two years prior to that—I lived, breathed, ate, drank, slept, and dreamed about the saxophone and its music. I practiced compulsively, until I was kicked out of the music building at night, swallowing my meals whole because time eating meant time not in the practice room, fingering through my music while riding the bus, not walking around without a set of headphones on, avoiding any sort of extracurricular social activity that didn't involve listening to or making music, waking up in the morning feeling like I hadn't slept at all. I had also just spent a year on the competition circuit, which meant keeping nearly 90 minutes of music memorized and at my fingertips all year long. Needless to say, at the end of that year I felt like I was headed for burnout. I was just sick of it all.

I realized pretty quickly that what I had been doing was a little unhealthy and that I needed to have some balance in my life—another interest to stimulate my mind and to transport me away from music. For me, that came in the form of tacking Japanese language and literature—a subject I'd already been doing coursework in—onto my schedule as a full-fledged academic minor. That summer I read Murasaki Shikibu's The Tale of Genji and got my wish. I was transported away, completely absorbed and engaged in the book. to make a long story short, I went on to write my senior honors thesis in Japanese literature on The Tale of Genji, but more importantly, I learned that achieving a sense of balance in one's life is not only healthy, but necessary.