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Client: Koko Marina Center, Honolulu HI
Christmas Event Poster
2005

Koko Marina Center in Honolulu, located on the ocean, has a traditional Keiki Kalikimaka Parade each year to kick off the Christmas season. One of the unique highlights of this 30-year old event is when Santa shows up on a speedboat, much to the delight of all the keikis. They wanted to capitalize on this particular feature. I took an idea that immediately came to mind and ran with it.

Can you resist the urge?

A cool exercise Jon showed me last night. Tap quarter notes on your foot, and play the following patterns with your hands:

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Start by treating the Rights as accents. Once you’ve gotten that, you can take the idea wherever you want to go.

If played in 4/4 time, note that the five pattern will repeat every five bars, the seven every seven bars. Used this way in the context of 4/4, you achieve the true “over the bar” feel.

Like everything in the universe, these are relative. I wrote these patterns out in odd times of 5/4 and 7/4 for the sake of understanding them on paper. The patterns can be applied in any meter.

I Hit West L.A. Music with a friend today today for a Steve Gadd clinic. Sensational. Both the clinic and the conversation were greatly inspiring on so many levels.

Interestingly enough, I think one of the things I found so inspiring about the whole clinic was when Steve discussed the occasional need to get outside of his own head, describing his brain as “a rough neighborhood. It’s not safe to go alone.”

I know what he means.

He also shared his view on minimalism and variation. He’s fascinated with taking something very simple, and exploring how many various ways it can be experienced.

I know what he means.

On a mechanical note, Steve shared a particular sticking pattern that he says he’s gotten lots of mileage on over the years due to its flexibility. Jon and I went over it over a couple pops afterwards. It’s a 16th pattern, and goes like this:

R-RL RRLR LRRL RRLR

A variation is this:

R-RL RRLR LRRL RRLL

Notice the double stroke at the end.

Gadd demonstrated how useful this is by playing it across the drum set, over a samba pattern played on the feet.

Played this one on the way home. Start by feeling the Rights as accents, then start moving the accents around. Try different drums, or as was in my case, the steering wheel and the dashboard.

R-RL RRLR LRRL RRLR
R-RL RRLR LRRL RRLR
R-RL RRLR LRRL RRLR
R-RL RRLR LRRL RRLL

I know what he means!

jace

I was in NYC in March of 2004. A couple friends and I got up one morning and took the train up to the Bronx to take a 12pm tour of Yankee Stadium, the House that Ruth Built. A haunted house at that.

Sprinting from the subway, we made it just in time.

We visited the Press Box, the Clubhouse, the bullpen, the field, and the famous “Monument Park” over the left field wall which has bronze plaques of all the greats like Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio, Mantle, etc. A tour guide gave us some in-depth Yankee history and trivia, and invited us to ask questions.

If you’re curious — as I was — Yankee Stadium is oriented so that the pitcher, when facing the plate, is facing west. This was the case for the oldest of ballparks, as they’d play during the daytime without lights. Parks were set up this way so that the batter wouldn’t have the late afternoon sun in his eyes. It’s the outfielders — especially the centerfielder — that take the pain.

*This is also the origin of the term “southpaw”. A pitcher’s left arm is to the south of him as he’s facing the batter.

Change was in the New York air that year as spring was approaching. The Yanks had just signed Alex Rodriguez (scheduled to play third base), Gary Sheffield, Kevin Brown, and Kenny Lofton, mercilessly piling more talent on top of their already potent line-up which already included the recent addition of Jason Giambi. Their dynasty promised to continue in 2004 and beyond.

But alas, October’s drama showed the world that you can’t buy a World Series Championship. This was 2004, and it was in the stars for the Boston Red Sox to finally break the Curse of the Bambino. Boston accomplished something that has never been done before in the history of sports: down 3-0 in a best of seven series, they came back to win four straight to win the American League Pennant. Against the mightiest of Yankee teams, in Yankee Stadium. It was the best series we’d ever seen. The curse had been broken.

This was my first visit to Yankee Stadium. I stepped on the field. I took a few blades of outfield grass and put it in my wallet. I touched the Babe in Monument Park. I won’t go so far as to say it was our visit that broke the curse, but hey, it’s a fun concept to think about. :)

The Boston Red Sox, in case you’ve been hiding under a rock on a deserted island in the Pacific for the last couple years, went on to win the 2004 World Series, sweeping the Cardinals.

For comparison, we took the train out to Queens the next day to visit Shea Stadium, where the Mets play:

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Put it this way: if Yankee Stadium was Disneyland, then Shea Stadium would be the public restroom at your nearest municipal city park. Poor guys. Gotta love ’em!

*Note: More pix posted here.

Rotating Rays

The inset appears to move.

Source: A. Kitaoka

Today’s a big day. After needing help all his life, and after numerous failed attempts at doing it without such help, Vivor finally jumped into the MINI by himself! Twice!

“Is it progress if a cannibal uses a knife and fork?”
— Stanislaw Lec

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