Archive for February, 2006

Feb 18 2006

Podcasts

Published by David under Uncategorized

Now that I have an iPod I have been getting into podcasting. Of course you don’t have to have an iPod to listen to podcasts but iTunes makes it all so easy. If only there was a linux version…

Anyway a couple of my favourite podcasts are the Ricky Gervais Show - pant-wettingly funny - and Dr Karl on triple j.

I hadn’t listened to the ABC for a long time and it is funny to hear how totally paranoid they are about mentioning a particular product by name on air. It is quite extraordinary. Even when identifying some commercial thing by name would make things so much clearer they always have to make these weird allusions to it. I guess it is in their charter or something as a non-commercial broadcaster but the BBC doesn’t seem to have a problem about stuff like that.

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Feb 16 2006

Bleep

Published by David under music

I decided to treat myself for going to the dentist today, so I bought some music from Bleep.

This is a really great and unique music download site with lots of interesting music that is totally DRM free. That’s right, according to their FAQ: “We believe that most people like to be treated as customers and not potential criminals - DRM is easily circumvented and just puts obstacles in the way of enjoying music.”

I bought an album by Ulrich Schnauss but they have high quality VBR MP3’s of artists from Autechre and the Arctic Monkeys to Bjork and Boards of Canada. Of course, because they are MP3s they work on any operating system.

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Feb 03 2006

Salzburg

Published by David under travel

Februrary 27 2006 was Mozart’s 250th birthday so we made the pilgrimage to his birthplace, Salzburg. Salzburg is a beautiful baroque town. In fact the Old Town is designated a World Cultural Heritage Site by UNESCO.

We arrived at our hotel, the Auersperg, late on Sunday night. It was really a very nice hotel with friendly staff and modern decor. The only downsides was that it was not in the Old Town and it only had a bar, not a restaurant.

The next day we discovered how cold Salzburg gets in the winter. Despite the long underwear and scarves we soon started to freeze. However, we found that if you tried to not stay outside for more than a couple of hours it wasn’t too bad. As we walked to the Old Town we passed a group of school kids wrapped up like Michelin men who seemed to be on a school tabogganing excursion. They needed the padding for more than just the cold as they tended to crash repeatedly in a most amusing way.

We visited Mozart’s birthplace, which didn’t have an awful lot to see and Mozart’s residence which had a bit more. We also went to the Residenz which was the Prince-Archbishop’s palace. It was only in 1815 that Salzburg became a part of Austria. Until then the whole province was an independant principality governed by the ecclesiastical ruler. The Residenz is very impressive but it is interesting to think that while Mozart was just a servant then, now it is he who is more famous and revered than the Prince-Archbishops who lived there.

Salzburg is a very small town with a population of about 150,000 but as it was Mozart Week in his 250th year we thought the town would be a little busier than it was. But the streets were quite empty, including the main street, the Getreidegasse.

We had booked tickets to see the VPO with Daniel Barenboim at the Grosses Festspielhaus on Monday night and were interested to see that about two thousand people had come from somewhere to practically fill the huge hall. I suppose they were mostly locals. They were also mostly over sixty.

Unfortunately Daniel Barenboim was ill so he couldn’t do the concert. Instead we had Manfred Honeck and Alexander Lonquich. This was rather disappointing considering the price of the tickets but the concert was still nice. I don’t think the VPO were as good as the LSO but they still made a nice sound. The strings were very good and the horns took every opportunity to remove their plumbing and upend their instruments.

Over the next couple of days we visited the Hohensalzburg Fortress on the peak of Festungsberg above the town, went to the quite interesting Natural History Museum and did some shopping on the Getriedegasse.

If I were to go back I would probably only go for two rather than three days as the town is really quite small. I would also go in warmer weather as although the town is beautiful when covered in snow, it really was frickin’ cold!

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