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Archive for June 2006

Sunday, 25 June 2006

Bazan at the Black Cat

David Bazan at the Black Cat I saw David Bazan (of Pedro the Lion fame) last night at the Black Cat in DC. His solitary voice was accompanied by only his acoustic guitar, and his playing was competent, save for the handful of requests that he granted on the spur of the moment. He managed to play all five songs from his recent EP, Fewer Moving Parts, albeit spread out over the course of his 70 minute set.

He puzzlingly described the new song “Fewer Broken Pieces” as his saddest song ever. I had been listening to it for for a few days, but didn’t regard it as especially sad. Sometimes, you need someone to sing it to you live for it to set in properly. The lyrics are personal and describe the breakup of Pedro the Lion. Bazan appears to be writing from the deepest part of his heart on this one — there’s no pretense. From that perspective, it is the saddest song he’s written. His stories of infidelity, murder, suicide, and depression are sad in their own ways, but only to the extent that the listener draw parallels between the songs and his own memories. “Fewer Broken Pieces” doesn’t ask much of the listener, but it demands much from Bazan.

Anousheh Khalili at the Black Cat Opening first for Bazan was Anousheh Khalili, a young woman who has recently gained some notoriety as the voice on a couple of Deep Dish tracks, “Flashdance” and “Say Hello”. Khalili’s voice begged comparison with Neko Case at first, but it had a sly swagger not unlike that of Fiona Apple.

Following Khalili was Andy Zipf. He, like Bazan, had no band and accompanied himself on an acoustic guitar. His voice sounded at times like Cinjun Tate of Remy Zero, and at other times like Greg Gilbert of the Delays. Toward the end of his set, he did an offbeat cover of “Goodbye, Yellowbrick Road”. I could tell he was struggling a bit with the chord changes; I never really realized what a complex song it was.

Thursday, 22 June 2006

Riddle me this

Why are there about 441,000 hits on Google for the phrase “riddle me this“, but absolutely no results for the likely answer, “I riddled him that“?

Friday, 16 June 2006

Emil Stenström on inline styles

Emil Stenström weighs in with why Inline CSS should not be allowed in strict doctypes:

Inline CSS goes against all the logic involved in the idea of two distinct doctypes. Why should you want to include design information inside of a document that you just explicitly stated would separate the two?

Remember that the word cascading appears in CSS. Inline styles, while not esthetically pleasing, nevertheless allow for economy of code.

If, for instance, you implement a style that appears only once on only one page, than an inline style makes sense. Or, if you find yourself implementing that style in multiple areas of your site, then by all means, place it in an external document.

The beauty of cascading style sheets is that a style can be implemented on a single tag, a single page, or multiple pages, depending upon your desired level of specificity.

Wednesday, 14 June 2006

950 L’Enfant

I moved into a new office today, albeit temporarily. It’s an attractive location, as the building has direct access to the L’Enfant station. My cube is about 100 feet away from a US Post Office. Dry cleaners? Around 60 feet. Espresso bar? 100 feet. McDonalds? 200 feet or so. Okay, so the last one isn’t really a factor, considering my long-standing aversion to McDonald’s food.

Saturday, 10 June 2006

M&G’s engagement party

Eliot, Dick, me Christie, Annie, Jade Garin Miko Amy Ray Indrani Yes, I know this is a few weeks late, but better late than never. Here are a few of pictures from Miko and Garin’s engagement party (28 May 2006). Funny, I couldn’t even find a single decent picture of both Miko and Garin.

Thursday, 8 June 2006

Bon Echo quirk

I found an aberration today while using Bon Echo build 2006052616. I was clicking on a link to an html file, but the browser interpreted it as an object to be downloaded. A second later, I saw the file show up in my downloads window. I then tried opening up a blank page using about:blank and Bon Echo actually dumped a zero-length file called “blank” into my downloads directory. Hmm. A simple restart of the browser alleviated the problem, and I haven’t seen the anomaly since.