Archive for the ‘Bits ‘n Pieces’ Category

‘Tis the season to be silly…

And here comes a small break in posting. Again. Or perhaps it already has started. Oh… I’m confused.

In any case, since last I have worked and slept. And also made my first ever performance as a rock/pop singer… Eeeek! You see, Viktor had the good taste of marrying. The band for the night was Indigo, with Henrik-The-Former-Boss on bass. And thus: yours truly made a guest appearance in the band, belting my way through Proud Mary, Unchain My Heart, I Feel Good and others. In fact, I stayed on the entire set doing backing vocals and looking slightly silly. And great fun it was!

(I won’t comment on how it sounded as I’m hardly qualified to judge that. Viktor seemed very happy though which was the important bit anyway).

And now? We’ll the mysterious R+V and I are off to the mountains tomorrow. I’ll bring my camera for silly pictures.

Which reminds me: This is how a chamber choir might look on tour in Normandy.

Oh, and as a parting note: This might be the coolest club I’ve heard of for a while, Stockholm Malt & Metal Society. I’m hoping to know someone there, I want to join!

I’m off, see you next week.

Updated book library: Design and fantasy

My book library have been updated. First, the latest installment of Steven Erikson’s epic fantasy series, The Bonehunters. I am, as I suspect many others, slightly in awe of Erikson. Extremely complex. Extremely well written. Extremely good stuff.

The second update is the classic The Design of Everyday Things, by Donald A. Norman. This is really good stuff, and anyone aspiring to design software, be it GUI or API’s, really, really should read it. I picked it up after reading an interview with Ken Arnold over at Artima.com:

Taste is a very personal thing. There is no textbook. When people ask me about books on object design, the books I hand them have nothing to do with object design per se. I commonly recommend The Design of Everyday Things, by Donald Norman. This book promotes focusing on usability in the design of doors, teapots, and faucets – everyday things. If you do that for objects, you’ll have the idea. 

Oh yes, Ken Arnold as in:

State is hell. 

Or:

Every program has at least one bug and can be shortened by at least one instruction — from which, by induction, it is evident that every program can be reduced to one instruction that does not work. 

Places where I’ve lived

I just realized Google Earth has been ported to Linux… Ooooh, it is fun to play with, isn’t it? But anyway, it got me thinking, so for the love of satellite imagery, nostalgia and the sheer hell of it…Places where I’ve lived – In order

  1. Redskapsgatan, Arboga, 16 years (exact hit)
  2. Allmogeplatsen, Västerås, 2 years (exact hit)
  3. Hammarbacksvägen, Västerås, 1 year (west end of house)
  4. Dalarö Folkhögskola, Dalarö, 1 year (wrong house, look north)
  5. Storgatan 105, Piteå, 8 months (house north of marker)
  6. Storgatan 69, Piteå, > 2 years (exact hit)
  7. Nygatan 66, Piteå, 10 months (exact hit)
  8. Sundial Court, London, 1 year (exact hit)
  9. Västra Andersgårdsgatan 7, Göteborg, 2 years (exact hit)
  10. 23 Derwent Grove, East Dulwich, > 1 month (exact hit)
  11. 149 Dudley Road, Birmingham, < 2 years (exact hit)
  12. Eklandagatan 44, Göteborg, 3 months (exact hit)
  13. Adventsvägen 17, Göteborg, > 2 years (exact hit)
  14. Odengatan 36, Stockholm, > 1 year and counting (exact hit)

I’ve only included the places where I lived, that is to say the places which  not just felt like pit stops in my life. As a result, my brothers place isn’t there, nor is the Bed and Breakfast I stayed in for a month or two in Birmingham, etc. But as a bonus, here’s where I spent most of my childhood summers:

As these places appear in many, and very different, phases of my life it is hard to point out any favorites, although… perhaps… Ah, sod it: #3, #6, #9 and #13. OK?

2 deaths; A house and a teacher – pt II

As time goes by things passes. People and places flow in front of our eyes, and even though we often would like to stop the motion, hold the current, we never can. And sometimes, you don’t even notice loved things passing until they are already out of sight.Really. Normally I wouldn’t write this post. I really haven’t got much to say. Last time I saw the man was 14 years ago. And really, my memory isn’t the best. But nevertheless.And, all I could find on the net, other than the sporadic listing of dead peoples, was a short mention in the protocol from “kyrkorådet” in Domkyrkan from December 2004. And somehow, it doesn’t seem enough.So. Nevertheless.RIP Ulf Ehnbom, 1943 – 2004Yesterday, meeting some friends, word finally reached me that Ulf Ehnbom, long time history and religion teacher at Carlforsska Gymnasiet in Västerås, had passed away almost 3 years ago.Ulf was “klassföreståndare” for the music course students at Carlforsska Gymnasiet, 90 – 92. He didn’t really want to be, and his first word to the collected students in front of him that warm autumn day 17 years ago was: “I have been given you for my sins.” What a thing to say to a confused group of 16 year olds! We were some 30 people in the course and more than half of them had moved away from home to attend. And what is it you’re told on the first day of that new life? The guts of the man! What he meant wasn’t as bad as it sounds though, being responsible and taking care of the music students at that time was a chore, and as he explained to us, “music students in general often show quite ambivalent behavior, on one hand, intelligent, thoughtful and expressive, and on the other, right little bastards.” He ended the information meeting with something in the line of: “and now I’m supposed to take you around the school, show you were the principals office is, where the restaurant is etc. But really, I’d much rather go home and stretch out with a beer. I mean, you’re 16 years old, I do think you can find your way cantina without me hold your hand.” There was general agreement in the class. And the word on the street afterwards was that he’ll be alright. Somewhat strange, but alright.Over the 2 years he was responsible for us, we gradually started to respect him like no other teacher we had. You see, we were without doubt right little bastards at times, but what Ulf did and what, for me at least, was quite a revelation, was not caring overmuch. What we did wasn’t really his problem. He would look us in the eye and tell us when, and importantly, how, we were wrong. But at the end of the day, he considered us grownups and if we wanted to fuck up badly he had at least warned us. It may sound like a cold relationship, but in our eyes, he respected us and our choices, misguided as they may have been, he gave us the freedom to screw up badly, he didn’t take all the more or less ridiculous things we did very personally, and in return we gave him respect back.Some strange results came out of that relationship. For example, almost everyone in the class studied hard for his examinations. Everyone. This might not sound strange to you, but if you had met us at the time, right little bastards as we were, you’d probably be surprised we went to school at all. We really only cared about music, and every other subject, and its teachers, was in for a nasty surprise when meting us. But for Ulfs exams, the entire class studied.More than any other single person, Ulf taught me how to think. That using your brain wasn’t about learning algebra from a list. That learning history wasn’t about years or dates or even names. That separating history from religion in western Europe was a futile academic exercise. That understanding causes and effects was much more important than the fiddly little details. That it is OK being intelligent and to use your brain, even when others might not think it politically correct. (He considered writing an academic paper on the conflicts among the disciples in the new testament, just because he knew it would annoy certain persons in aforementioned “kyrkorådet”).Of course, everything wasn’t peaches. I know that others don’t remember him fondly at all. But such is life when it is not cencored, and I’ll leave it to them to voice their opinions. I do know though, that Ulf was the only teacher from that time that I wanted to meet again. That I’d wonder from time to time what and how he was doing. And I know I’m not alone in that: Marcus, Erik, Gustaf et. al. would certainly agree.And now it is getting late. For certain things it is already too late. But before I blow out the candles tonight I’ll pour myself a generous dram and raise my glass. For what it is worth: thank you Ulf. We remember.

Let my weary soul find release for a whileIn the moment of death, I will smile- Hansi Kürsch

2 deaths; A house and a teacher – pt I

As time goes by things passes. People and places flow in front of our eyes, and even though we often would like to stop the motion, hold the current, we never can. And sometimes, you don’t even notice loved things passing until they are already out of sight.

The first item on the menu for the posts of today is the demise of the jazz club Village in Västerås. Apparently it went tits up last summer. And even though I haven’t been there, or even visited, for some 16 years, I couldn’t help feeling a bit sad. In the 90′s Village was arguably one of the three most prominent jazz clubs in the country, the other two being Fasching in Stockholm and Nefertiti in Gothenburg. Year after years a slew of great Swedish and international musicians would stop by the small house in the harbor and gift us with music. They also had a policy to let music students from the local senior high school in for free, or for a modest sum, if there was only room to squeeze them in. Among those yours truly.

And so, between the ages 16 – 19, I was a regular. To enumerate all the fabulous nights I’ve had there would be impossible. I can still, by only closing my eyes, feel with my entire body the exhilaration walking away late a weekday night with my friends, after hearing, say, Red Mitchell, the pick a name from the stack, or any other great set, live. The adrenaline, the dreams and the laughter.

In this tale though, not everything is dark. Village lives yet in the form of “the friends of Village” who are even now, working to find a new home, new money and new artists.

So, here’s to hope of life after death.

To Have or not to Have

Anyone really surprised? We all know god dislikes sex. Funny though, how abstinence education doesn’t work. I guess Satan,  the Intertubes and the Liberals have destroyed our children. Repent ye sinners. Repent I say!

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