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Singing of a satellite December 17, 2007

Posted by merujo in Dolby, Mutha Russia, concerts, creativity, music.
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I’m smiling this morning. See Point #2 here to see why. :)

The lovely song in question can be seen below – start around the four minute mark to see/hear it, but I highly, highly recommend listening to the whole performance, which is all available in four parts on YouTube and also broken into segments as QT movies on Thomas Dolby’s blog here.

For my friends who understand Russian, our fearless non-Russian-speaking duet heroes do pretty darn well, don’t you think? There is a consonant that vexed one of them in the bridge, and a vowel or two that needed to be shorter or longer, but I’m really proud of them! It’s hard enough to sing in Russian when you actually understand the language, but when you’re doing this from someone’s e-mailed phonetic transliteration with almost no rehearsal time, well, that’s really damn impressive! Good going, Thomas and Bruce!!

For the handful of you who govorit’ po-russki, here are my original lyrics – read them out loud like an overblown, crazy-haired, 50s avant garde Soviet poet, and they sound pretty freakin’ cool:

О! звезда улетела
Наша родина пела
Шар серебра!
Мечта наша!

Мы слышали ваш сигнал
Музыку ангел играл
Великий дар!
Небесный царь!

Ученые нашей страны нашли ответ
Наша гордость горела как радостный свет

О! звезда улетела
Наша родина пела
Шар серебра!
Мечта наша!

Мечта наша!

I think my mother would be delighted to know that I’m still using my college education for a good purpose. Most Russian I’ve used in three years.

If anyone out here knows a venue/event that would be interested in a performance of the Sputnik and Beyond concert, Thomas is pondering the possibility of a university/art circuit/museum tour. You can leave suggestions/recommendations/contacts on his blog!

Wings of Glass November 2, 2007

Posted by merujo in art, creativity, friends, glass, life.
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I am surrounded by friends who give me inspiration. The Sasquatch has returned to graduate school – online and after work (consuming most of his time) – to get an MFA in Graphic Design. The Atomic Editor has taken on a new role at a dream institution where he can edit some awfully fine writing and put together one of the nation’s coolest magazines. And Javi, of course, is overseeing the move of his comicbook creation to the small screen. (I have to wonder if Javi has to strike against himself, being a Writers Guild guy… hmm…)

Now, my fabulously talented friend, glass artist extraordinaire Lunesse, has a new page on TalentDatabase.com, highlighting her beautiful beads and jewelry. Take a gander at the gorgeous pieces she has on her portfolio page there. Pretty rockin’ stuff, eh? The girl’s got talent, and now she’s balancing her glass craft with watching her new kiddo, just arrived in August. I’m impressed. As most of you know, I have trouble finding matching socks in the morning. By the way, if you get a hankering to buy something that Lunesse has created, you can click on her store link, her Etsy link, or – if you dig making your stuff – her JustBeads link for, well, just beads. (If I had any skills at all in making my own jewelry, I’d buy some of her funky beads, but since I’m less than adept at such things, I’ll just keep saving my pennies to buy a piece of her fab jewelry!)

Lunesse, along with being a gifted artist, is a tremendous writer and a damn fine web designer, too. She left a successful tech career in the IT mecca of the San Francisco Bay area to become a glass artist. I can’t begin to tell you how much I admire her for that! It’s an amazing life change – and one that requires bravery and strength of character along with real talent and tenacity.

There are days when I would love to chuck the office life and just pursue writing, but I have always been just a little too afraid to do it. Lunesse did it. She leapt off that cliff and found she had wings. Wings of beautiful glass.

I hope I am willing to take that creative leap of faith someday, too. In the meantime, though, I’ll just be delighted to see what new things she and the rest of my friends make.

It’s a wonderful thing to have creatively inspired friends. They encourage me to want to do better, to aspire to more.

I’m damn lucky to have such people around me, and I know it.

Sad October 17, 2007

Posted by merujo in cinema, creativity, fame, genius, tragedy.
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Orson Welles’ only Oscar, for Citizen Kane, is going under the hammer.

I love Citizen Kane. I’m typing this right now under a fabulous UK quad poster for the film’s re-release a few years ago.
I think Orson Welles was a genius, and I’m saddened that he declined into a joke in his later years. Tragic, really.
The guy was freaking brilliant.

Neither here nor there, but… October 6, 2007

Posted by merujo in Dolby, TV, creativity, lost opportunities, the Crapmobile.
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Watching NBC season opener reruns tonight, I had to smile when the hapless Nerd Herd’er guy-filled-with-secrets “Chuck” reveals one of the dark government secrets in his head to be how Oceanic Flight 815 went down. Of course, as the secrets are spilling out of his brain (and his mouth) he only gets to say, “Oceanic Flight 815 was shot down by…”

Heh. Good one.

I like the thought of totally unrelated TV shows being part of the same universe.

Oooh — interesting tangential point: during the post-concert meet & greet in Annapolis, I heard Thomas tell a fan that his friend JJ Abrams had written a whole episode of “Alias” around the song “One of Our Submarines Is Missing.” Guess it never was produced. Shame – that would have been very cool!

On the personal front…

Bad news: my back is still killing me today.

Good news: I may have found a new old car. Keep fingers, toes, and eyes crossed for me!

Sputnik October 4, 2007

Posted by merujo in Dolby, Mutha Russia, creativity, friends, fun, music.
2 comments

Fifty years ago today, the Soviet Union changed the world by launching Sputnik 1, the first man-made object to orbit the Earth. Thus began the Space Race and the rush to create agencies in the United States like NASA and DARPA. Dollars were poured into scientific research and education. Many things we take for granted now – like the Internet – eventually came out of the West’s panicked reaction to Sputnik and the thought of Soviet superiority in space.


I am just old enough and young enough that Sputnik’s shadow hovered over my childhood. I was born just a little more than a handful of years after that first metal satellite orbited our planet, and nearly a handful of years before man set foot on the moon. It was a point when the Cold War was growing warmer, and I developed an early fascination with All Things Soviet.

Without the mania and growth and competition and fear that came in Sputnik’s wake, who knows if I would have grown up to become a Russian-speaking kinda-historian? I was a Cold War baby who wanted to see what was on the other side of the Iron Curtain. And, in time, I saw it, in spades.

That all seems like a lifetime ago.

Today, I rarely use my language skills, except at the local Russian grocery store or to talk back to the pseudo-intellectuals that yammer on the local Russian cable TV channel. But last month, a friend of mine gave me an opportunity I couldn’t pass up. He asked if I could help him with a small element of a project he was preparing. Could I come up with Russian song lyrics for a melody he’d crafted for an upcoming concert in England to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the launch of Sputnik?

Who could say no to that?!?


It was a blast to help a friend and collaborate on something really creative. Writing lyrics that make sense and rhyme and match the rhythm of a melody is tough enough in your native language, but it was a good head-scratcher in Russian. I loved it. Made me think. I even ran the lyrics past my old Russian professor at Mac (who gave me a good drubbing for my single grammar mistake, which I fixed with the change of one verb, I’m happy to say.) I think my friend was pleased with the finished product – I made him an mp3 of me singing it (fortunately, right before I completely lost my voice to pneumonia!) where I went awfully sharp, but he was still able to add keyboards to it for me to get an idea of what the final song would sound like – ambient, ethereal, celestial. Just lovely.

The concert was last night, in a city where I once lived (and got many bad 80s haircuts!) I’m so sorry I couldn’t be there. But, even had I been able to buy a ticket to London, I don’t think my back, post-accident, would have tolerated the transatlantic flight.

And so, yesterday evening I missed my great three-minute or so debut as Thomas Dolby’s Russian-language lyricist, but that’s okay. It was simply a delight to help him out. And I hope the audience really dug the song, sung as a duet by Thomas and his friend, Bruce Woolley. Bruce plays the theremin, which is pretty damn cool. Bruce, with Trevor Horn & co., wrote a little ditty called “Video Killed the Radio Star” back in the day. How cool is that, mah fellow children of the real MTV era?

I sent Bruce a note via his MySpace page last week, and he sent back the nicest message as he was working to learn the phonetic Russian I’d provided. I’ve been humming the song to myself for weeks now. When I was working on the lyrics, I was concentrating so hard, I apparently sang it out loud as I pumped gas one afternoon. The guy across the pump from me just stared like I had a third eye. Considering the number of Soviet emigres in my ‘hood, it’s entirely possible he understood me and was just wondering what the F I was singing about.

Before he left for the UK, I gave Thomas two vintage Soviet lapel pins, celebrating the launch of Sputnik. They were cast in either 1957 or 1958. I can’t quite remember. And I managed to maim Thomas with them when he put them in his pocket and one of those suckers stabbed him in the finger. Lovely. Stab the keyboardist’s hand while he’s on tour. Jeez, Merujo!

The dangerous pins in question.

When I find a review of the show online, I’ll share it with you. Here’s a little skinny from the venue, so you know what this was all about.

I might have been stuck on the sofa in Maryland with my heat pad and a fistful of painkillers last night, but I was in London in spirit, kids. Big time.

The Last (for now ) Dolby Hurrah & the Jazz Mafia Blog September 20, 2007

Posted by merujo in Dolby, blogging, creativity, friends, music, sadness, the Birchmere.
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So, tonight is my last Dolby concert for a good long time. Thomas has moved to the UK for a while (sounds like his kids are digging being in school in England) where he will work on his new CD. (I was doing to write “album” but I realized just how old that would make me sound!) FYI — he’s making this new recording entirely “off the grid” – he’ll be recording in a green studio (wind, water, solar-powered) and on a sailboat, using this cool technology called eSession to work with collaborators long-distance. I think that’s pretty brilliant, actually. As Thomas said on Wednesday night, the new CD will be out “when it’s out.” We could have a long wait, but that’s okay. Part of the fun will be the adventure of seeing how it all comes together. There’s a good podcast interview from Electronic Musician magazine with Thomas about the green recording plans and eSession.

But I’m a little bit sad that I won’t see him again for quite some time. Over the years I’ve known him, we’ve only met up in person a handful of times before the tour. Such is the way with friendships struck up via the Internet! I have some friends I’ve NEVER met in a decade-plus of knowing them. (Which is strange, perhaps, but, in some sweet way, much like pen pals of old – a little linkage to our letter-writing past.) It’s been a real joy to share the gigs with dear friends. I’ll miss it all.

But we all have things we need to do – lots of creative stuff for everyone on the horizon. And the time is coming to take a deep breath and dig in. Get to it! Autumn will be here on Sunday, and it’s my new year, as far as I’m concerned. Bring it on, Mutha Nature. I’m ready!

(Now, if I could just shake this friggin’ case of pneumonia, thanks!)

On another topic — in case you’re a Dolby fan and you’ve missed my links previously, the Jazz Mafia Horns have a blog, and Adam Theis, trombonist extraordinaire, has been blogging from the road with Thomas. If you check out the most recent post, you might even see a fuzzy photo of Gonzomantis, the Sasquatch and me (photos are appropriately fuzzy when a Sasquatch is involved, I do believe!)

Off to launder and enjoy a little of my flex day before the Birchmere gig…

Blinking into the sunlight September 8, 2007

Posted by merujo in creativity, growth, life, opportunities, sick.
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Ahhhh, after waking up coughing over and over last night, I finally got some solid sleep. Woke up at noon, feeling a little out of it, but rested. I have so much work to do for deadlines this week, I really should go into the office today, but I’m afraid if I do that I’ll just get more sick. I e-mailed myself a ton of documents to review and tweak, and maybe — if the coughing settles down a bit — I’ll take the laptop up to the coffee shop to revise text, just to get a little distance between work and the sickbed here.

Time is moving so fast right now, I’m just a little overwhelmed. So much is going on, I don’t even have time to worry about my messed up finances. I could easily stay at the office until midnight each day and not get everything done. And I’ve got creative side projects piling up. Need to finish more radio stuff. Need to be better about updating the blog with things that are actually interesting to peruse. And, an editor wants to see two book proposals from me.

Honest to god.

Two book proposals.

Intimidating as hell, that is. But in a very good way.

Now, I just have to feel better, get caught up at the office, and find a little time to breathe.

Breathing is good, I hear. Not overrated.

I have to take some leave soon. I would love to take a week at a cabin somewhere, just to breathe, walk, think, revive myself in fresh air. But until I know someone with a free cabin available — driving distance from Chez Merde — that ain’t gonna happen! (And I have doubts about my ability to turn enough, uh, “speciality tricks” to raise the capital for a week’s retreat.) I think my week off will just be spent at home and the coffee shop, which is okay, too.

This is a time of major highs and lows. I’ve been alternately dissed and praised over and over again in recent weeks. Vexed by problems I can’t just resolve on my own (which is frustrating as hell) and offered great opportunities that I have to find the energy and the will and the confidence to accept. As I’ve gotten older, I have become more firm in how I handle some things, but I am still weak in many ways. My bravura melts around certain friends and family members. Lots of tears (which has to be exhausting for them.)

I am still a work in progress.

But aren’t we all?