Chelsea vs Atletico Madrid

By , October 21, 2009

I went to my first football match tonight. Miguel managed to get some tickets to the Champions League match between Chelsea and Club Atlético de Madrid at Stamford Bridge.

It was a lot of fun! Things didn’t go too well for Atletico, though. Despite some determined singing from the Spanish fans Chelsea cruised to a 4 – 0 victory.

After ten years in London and seven years in Chelsea it was good to finally see a real football match. The noise that erupted from 30,000 fans when the Blues scored a goal was amazing.

Thanks, Miguel!

Anniversary

By , October 13, 2009

The 39 StepsYesterday was our 7th wedding anniversary and to celebrate we went to the Criterion Restaurant for an early dinner before seeing The 39 Steps at the Criterion Theatre.

Opened in 1873, the restaurant is an amazing building. A long shoebox shaped hall that stretches back from Piccadilly Circus. Marble pillars flank huge mirrors that reflect the gold mosaic tiled ceiling. It looks more like some kind of opulent Turkish bath than a restaurant.

It was at the Criterion Long Bar, on January 1 1881, that Dr Watson mentioned to his friend Stamford that he was looking for someone to share lodgings with.

From A Study in Scarlet:

I was standing at the Criterion Bar, when some one tapped me on the shoulder, and turning round I recognized young Stamford, who had been a dresser under me at Barts. The sight of a friendly face in the great wilderness of London is a pleasant thing indeed to a lonely man. In old days Stamford had never been a particular crony of mine, but now I hailed him with enthusiasm, and he, in his turn, appeared to be delighted to see me. In the exuberance of my joy, I asked him to lunch with me at the Holborn, and we started off together in a hansom.

“Whatever have you been doing with yourself, Watson?” he asked in undisguised wonder, as we rattled through the crowded London streets. “You are as thin as a lath and as brown as a nut.”

I gave him a short sketch of my adventures, and had hardly concluded it by the time that we reached our destination.

“Poor devil!” he said, commiseratingly, after he had listened to my misfortunes. “What are you up to now?”

“Looking for lodgings,” I answered. “Trying to solve the problem as to whether it is possible to get comfortable rooms at a reasonable price.”

After lunch they walked to St Bartholemew’s Hospital where Stamford introduced Watson to Sherlock Holmes…

We, on the other hand, walked next door to the Criterion Theatre.

The Criterion is a lovely little theatre. Built on the site of an old coaching inn called the White Bear it was originally intended to be a concert hall but after building work had begun it was turned into a theatre instead.

The theatre is unusual in that it is built underground. In 1882 the Metropolitan Board of Works condemned it on the grounds that it was unsafe in the event of a fire and, as it was lit by gas, there was a risk of toxic fumes so a number of alterations were made including installing electric lights and an air conditioning system. In WWII the BBC took over the underground theatre to use for broadcasts.

The 39 Steps was great. The story follows the 1935 Alfred Hitchcock film (with lots of Hitchcock references and, of course, a cameo) but somehow manages to combine the original spy thriller with a comedy. And it works really well. With nothing but a change of coat, hat and accent, the energetic cast of four manage to portray a hilarious array of characters as Richard Hannay is pursued from his flat in Portland Place to the Scottish Highlands and back again for the thrilling climax at the London Palladium.

New camera

By , October 4, 2009

I took a few photos on my shiny new Canon EOS 7D today.  It’s a pretty awesome camera but it’s going to take me a while to learn what all the buttons do.  I think I’m also going to need a bigger, faster memory card; it does a good machine gun impression when you hold the shutter down…

I also had a go at making a couple of HDR photographs.  I used the trial version of Photomatix which is why they are covered in watermarks but I think they came out pretty good for a first attempt!

Musical Tree

By , September 20, 2009

The other day I was thinking about music teachers and the idea occurred to me that you could trace your musical history like you could your family history.

If you were to follow your teachers’ teachers back through time you would end up with something like a family tree, except it would be a musical tree.

With that in mind, it didn’t take long to trace (one branch of) my musical tree back through the centuries where names like Artur Nikisch and Louis Spohr turned up. It turns out I can trace a direct musical line from me to Albrechtsberger and Salieri — these guys knew Mozart and Beethoven!

Musical Tree

The return of Buzz Lightyear

By , September 17, 2009

Buzz Lightyear

Buzz Lightyear returned from space on Sept. 11, aboard space shuttle Discovery’s STS-128 mission after 15 months aboard the International Space Station. His time on the orbiting laboratory will be celebrated in a ticker-tape parade together with his space station crewmates and former Apollo 11 moonwalker Buzz Aldrin on Oct. 2, at Walt Disney World in Florida.

Image: NASA

Yippee-ki-yay

By , September 14, 2009

Cool.  Just received notification my new t-shirts have shipped from Last Exit to Nowhere.  Can you recognise them without clicking through to the site?

BBC London – Be Part of It

By , September 13, 2009

Love London? I love this ad.

Stravinsky on conductors

By , September 9, 2009

Igor Stravinsky by Richard AvedonIt is said that one morning in London he was with a friend in a taxi when, just as they came to Ludgate Hill, the bells of St. Paul’s began to ring.

He leaned forward to listen and tapped on the window for the driver to stop.  Then he turned to his friend and said:

‘That is really the ideal way to make music.  A man pulls a rope; but what happens at the other end is of no importance to him.  He cannot make the bells ring more softly or more loudly; he cannot alter their rhythm, nor increase nor diminish their tone.  He has nothing to do, except pull the rope the bells do all the rest.  The music is not in him; it lives in the bells. The man at the rope is the prototype of the ideal conductor.’

From Stravinsky A Critical Survey by Eric Walter White.

Imogen Heap – Ellipse

By , August 18, 2009

Ooh, new Imogen Heap album!

Austral Sinfonietta Summer Concert 2009

By , August 17, 2009

Austral Sinfonietta 18 September 2009Those of you who read my other blog will have noticed a total lack of new posts recently. This is only partly because of the four week break in Grands Prix. It is mostly because all my spare time is taken up with getting ready for another Austral Sinfonietta concert in September.

We will be playing Stravinsky’s Pulcinella Suite as well as symphonies by Haydn and Mozart — I’ve just realised that every Austral concert has had at least one piece by Mozart in it.

Studying the scores has brought back memories of Alan. Back in 2001, he encouraged me to stage my own concerts in London and gave me the many kicks up the backside needed to see that I actually did it. God, those first couple of concerts were stressful!

It makes me sad that he is going to miss this one and I wish I could talk to him about the music or ask his advice on things but I will be using his old stick and as most of the band are CCO, I suppose he will be there in spirit if not body.

Anyway, if you are free on Friday the 18th of September and can make it to St James’s Church on Piccadilly for 7.30 pm, I’d love to see you there.

It’s not a long programme so there will be plenty of time for a few in Walkers after the concert!

Panorama Theme by Themocracy

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline