Wednesday, March 26, 2008

A (Matthew) Good Show...

...But not great show.
So last night I saw Matt Good play for the first time EVAR at the Highline Ballroom. I wasn't really sure what to expect going in - I'm a pretty big fan, and I guess I can trace my infatuation back to late highschool (although I clearly remember seeing the video for "Apparitions" on MuchMusic soon after I moved back to CT from Canada. Not sure if I cared though). My band at the time practiced and performed (only once, at the Outback Teen Center) a lackluster rendition of "Strange Days" - which I liked, a lot. I really, really started listening to him the summer of 2004. White Light Rock'n'Roll Review had just come out, so excitement was high, and I was looking for something new. Matt Good Band provided, with very few low points, from the opening lines of "Alabama Motel Room" (Last of the Ghetto Astronauts) to the closing notes of "Sort of a Protest Song" (Audio Of Being). Avalanche, Matt's 2003 record, is in my mind one of the finest solo debuts from someone coming off of a successful band - equal at least, possibly superior to Chris Cornell's excellent Euphoria Morning. White Light, in all honesty, kind of went right over my head (with the notable exception of "Blue Skies Over Bad Lands"). I could devote an entire post to his latest album, Hospital Music, released last July. I'll just say that it's pretty much great.
So anyway, I didn't know what to expect. Adam, Keith, and Alex had all seen him a few times this past year on the "Nothing To Hide" acoustic tour (as well as a memorable night in someone's Vegas living room) and pretty much unanimously agreed that it was a little underwhelming. Great to see him, at long last, but definitely not what they were expecting. That's where I fall, too. Great to see, but not what I was expecting. Here's the set list, from Matt's site:

I’m A Window
Suburbia
99% Of Us Is Failure
Born Losers
Tripoli
Strange Days
Load Me Up
A Silent Army In The Trees
Black Helicopter
She’s In It For The Money
Avalanche
Apparitions
True Love Will Find You In The End

Encore

Champions Of Nothing
Metal Airplanes

Thinking back, I guess the only real issue I had with the show was the arrangements. As I mentioned earlier, it was acoustic, but he didn't seem to make much of an effort to adapt the songs to that format - mostly, it just seemed that he was playing the acoustic guitar part of that song. There were a lot of blanks where you definitely missed the presence of a band - maybe even just another guitar. The only downright cringeworthy part for me was the opening of "99% Of Us Is Failure" which was sung acapella. I didn't really like the end of "Avalanche." In "Load Me Up," he actually did offer a different arrangement, which Alex thought was one of the better songs he does acoustically - I didn't really like it, but I like the original version so damn much that it is probably just me being stubborn. If I were seeing him play in that small, casual Vegas setting, all this would have been fine - great, even - but for a public performance at a real venue, it doesn't really cut it. There were some mic issues also, but I'm not going to count those as strikes against the performance.

All this is not to say that there were no highlights. "Apparitions," "Strange Days," and "Champions Of Nothing" all lend themselves very well to acoustic performance without any finagling (did I spell that correctly?). "Black Helicopters" was excellent. His voice was in top form. I'm really happy I was able to see him play, and I want to see him again soon. With a band. Because that will be even better.

Also, I kind of hope that the eternally-connected Matt Good (or one of his buddies) does not find this post and respond to the criticisms (it happened to Adam!).


Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Adam's DVD Order

So I got a big order in today. Some stuff for Keith, mostly stuff for Adam. A few seconds later, Adam and I have this conversation over AIM:

Pete: I hate you
Pete: Oh god I hate you
Adam: why?
Adam: why?
Adam: what happened?
Pete: Did you order "A Perfect Fake"?
Adam: ?
Adam: haha... why?
Adam: its a documentary
Adam: looked interesting?
Pete: I hate you
Adam: what happened?
Adam: HAHAHA! the COVER!
Pete: Nothing happened. It's just that i'm now on company record as ordering a documentary about sex dolls
Adam: haha
Adam: hahahaha
Adam: its about digital artistry
Adam: and THEN into sex dolls
Pete: So...did you really want this? Or were you just trying to be funny?
Pete: Did you really think this was about CGI?
Adam: I looked online
Pete: be honest. i'm trying to calculate the appropriate level of wrath with which to descend upon you
Adam: no seriously
Adam: i went lookng through the DVDs
Adam: under Documentary
Pete: and when you did this "research" it didn't occur to you what it was about?
Adam: yes
Adam: i read things stating it was about CGI and stuff
Adam: like the final fantasy film, where everyone was CGI
Pete: well, i read a little bit about it too, and one of the first things i gathered about it was the fact that it was about lonely Japanese men building detachable plastic vaginas into latex anime girls
Adam: wow
Adam: yea
Adam: i missed that stuff
Adam: that's funny though

Just in case you were curious, here's the cover:




Friday, March 07, 2008

Writing About Nothing

Whenever I try to commit myself to a blog, it never lasts more than two or three entries. I haven’t looked at this thing since September – or possibly October – I can’t really tell as I’m writing this in MS Word on the train to Boston, and I don’t have internet access.

But since I want to write, and I don’t know what to write about, and I’m not trying to impress anyone anyway, I’ll write about my Paladin.

Ceinwynn (whose name is derived from the excellent Warlord Chronicles by Bernard Cornwell) is doing well – she’s on the bleeding edge of useless content, with Artisan Riding and three (!) epic flying mounts – and a number of ground mounts as well.

-The Summoned Warhorse
-The Summoned Charger
-A Silver Riding Talbuk (Requires Exalted with the Kurenai faction)
-A Swift Brewfest Ram
-A Snowy Gryphon
-A Swift Purple Gryphon
-An Azure Netherdrake (Requires Exalted with the Netherwing)
-A Turbo-Charged Flying Machine (Requires 375 Engineering skill to build and use)

Mounts are fun, but my main reason for having so many (six more than I really need) is to give Cein a little bit of much needed individuality among the other 25,000 or so characters on Durotan. Pre-BC and flying mounts, being a Paladin was enough because she had a Charger – a unique epic mount, only available to Paladins. The quest line to receive it was, and still is, the longest of all the Paladin class quests, and deemed annoying enough that many other Paladins frequently passed it up in favor of buying their training and mounts.

After that, I was lucky enough (or patient enough) to save up the money for Artisan Riding fairly early in BC’s life cycle, about three months after release (this was before Daily quests were available – I did it the hard way). At this point, epic flying was rare as it is, and the Swift Gryphon was enough to distinguish her from most other people. But, since amassing great wealth is more or less a joke now, a lot of other people soon picked up the epic flight skill as well. By this time, of course, the Netherwing faction was added – a month of casual questing netted me the Drake. Flying around very quickly on a fucking Dragon is pretty tough to beat until everyone else is doing it too.

Right now, I’m going with the Turbo-Charged Flying Machine (also known as a “Roflcopter” because it is hilarious). You don’t see too many of them, as capping Engineering is still sufficiently irritating that only people like me (who consider mastering a crafting profession “endgame”) really pursue it.

There are, however, some serious benefits to being a Master Engineer that outclass even a unique, attractive mount - particularly if you happen to be a Paladin. Patch 2.1 added the epic Engineering goggles for all classes and armor proficiencies, and the Paladin, being one of the two plate-wearing classes currently in the game and a true specialist, is in the privileged position of being able to wear all three versions of the plate goggles – one each for healers, tanks, and melee damage-dealers. As these are Bind on Pickup, and require 350 Engineering to build and equip, they are still fairly uncommon and difficult to acquire, so the stats on them are very generous – they hover somewhere between tier 5 and 6 armor, in terms of quality. I am particularly happy with these because unless my situation and playing habits change dramatically, I won’t replace them until sometime into the next expansion. I currently have two of them – the Justice Bringer 2000 Specs (for healing) and the Tankatronic Goggles (for…tanking). I primarily use the tanking goggles, as I am primarily specc’ed for tanking.

While better gear is never a bad thing, I’m actually very content with the place Cein is right now. She’s sitting at somewhere around 13k armor, with decent avoidance and mitigation – not yet “uncrushable,” but crushability is not an issue, considering I’m only looking to tank basic level 70 five-mans and heroics. She has achieved 485 defense, which effectively pushes critical hits off of the attack table where heroics are concerned, and that is more than enough to satisfy me for the moment. Considering her gear level, her health is particularly high, sitting at around 12.5k before any buffs. Threat output is, of course, phenomenal – Cein actually has a decent bit more +spellpower than is recommended as a minimum for tanking Karazhan and beyond. In pretty much every way, she is actually the ideal choice to tank any five-man or heroic. In short, she’s doing well.

/nerding