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Beck at Wolf Trap with Thirty Years Worth of Gold

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The thing is, we were too lazy to conjure up tickets on the day of release.  Or maybe too busy.  But anyway, there were none left for a while.  Then a few popped up for too much money on the Ticketmaster resale site.  And we were off to the races.

Boy are we glad we went.  It was a great show. It all started with empanadas from Gringo Gordo at sunset and some properly-made dark and stormies.

We had never been on time for a wolf trap gates opening line before. Dang. Fortunately we had seats in the seventh row.

The orchestra started in, and into the sonic ocean walked Beck. Yeah, the National Symphony (who had performed maybe one run through) was very good indeed.

Lonesome Tears was the first song (track 4 on Sea Changes…from which Beck plucked many a great song to play with the National Symphony).

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And then it was time for some salsa. I guess Beck was in Rio for the Chalmers wedding too, though he must have attended in disguise.

Honestly, Tropicalia was one of the weakest pieces on the program (and it wasn’t bad). The orchestra was having a hard time moving the four against the three of the bass player (and the conductor beating only a downbeat was not helping). Oh well.

In the end, Beck got the audience to clap the beat.

Tropicalia


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We Live Again

Morning


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Known for his romantic “dreariness” part of the time, there is also the most pit Beck.

The audience got to their feet for Where It’s At.

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Oh yeah!

Then the orchestra filed out and Beck screwed around on stage for a bit. Some slide guitar was improvised.

Romey was rewarded with Devil’s Haircut.


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By that time, we were all singing. (Sadly, we missed recording Loser.) And then it was final bows.

A magical evening.

Total Eclipse

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“There is no dark side in the moon really
Matter of fact, it’s all dark”

You are reminded in a visceral way that you are an animal. Not just any animal, but an animal on a small planet circling a minor star at the edge of one arm of an insignificant spiral galaxy. I mean, we all kind of know that intellectually. But when you experience totality first hand you come to know it in your bones. Actually, more in your skin. You come to know it in your skin.

Can your skin really know something? Why yes. Yes it can. Every hair on end as you look carefully at the backs of hands that may or may not be yours lit by the wrong wavelengths of light.

Or maybe this.  If you’ve ever experimented with psychedelics, the onset feeling is exactly the same. It’s an all natural trip.

When the last grain of sand drops through the hourglass, the plug is pulled and the magic water drains, you are left feeling a little empty and worn.

Anyway, it’s a thing.  And doing the thing on a boat in the middle of Lake Monroe in Indiana is a very good idea.

All that you touch
And all that you see
All that you taste
All you feel

It started way earlier than it could have, but it was worth seeing the sun rise and set on the same day that it was completely occluded.  Romey and I headed just around the long skinny bay to the state park to pick up our 26 foot pontoon.

The crew arrived—a collection of grad students and young adults from all over: Virginia, Turkey, Columbia, Chicago, India. It was early.

Safety first. A perfunctory boat lesson that imparted not much at all. The first lesson was far superior (and delivered by the guy who actually owns the boat).

We had most abundant and most excellent supplies.

We spotted a beaver, but then something even more rare.  Is Elyse really eating a pop tart? Here is photographic evidence.

Yes. It was a bit chilly.

 

A newbie captain learns to drive the boat! We headed down to the dam (and back).  Mom called to give some instructions from India.

And all that you loved
And all that you hate
All you distrust
All you save

After a stop to pick up our last passenger (who was inside the perimeter but still attached to a computer), we headed back out from the docks and to the less trafficked side of the bridge.  We passed another marina and headed toward the river, putting out an anchor after a short drift.

Lunch was served. That is, lunch that was brought by the able young crew: pasta salad with fresh mozerella and basil, focaccia, mortadella, humus. It was quite an up shift from the morning pop tarts.

There was even time for a dip before the sun was touched by the moon.

 

Of course there were Dark and Stormies on board. And of course the rum was particularly apt. We ran out.

And all that you give
And all that you deal
And all that you buy
Beg, borrow, or steal

The perfect shirt.

 

And then it was time. The eclipse began about an hour before totality.  My first mate looked the part.

We made pinhole cameras out of aluminum foil (once we determined how to pronounce that).

 

But most importantly, we experienced the event in a very present way. The magic really was magic.

And all you create
And all you destroy
And all that you do
And all that you say
And all that you eat
And everyone you meet

TOTALITY

Eli’s excellent musical curation was perfection itself.

Surrounded by sunrise. Let your life renew itself. Remember why you are here.

What words can’t describe, creepy accidental slow-mo can!

 

And all that you slight
And everyone you fight
And all that is now
And all that is gone
And all that’s to come
And everything under the sun is in tune
But the sun is eclipsed by the moon

 

One of these things…

Is not like the other.

We all come down. Lifetime high.  Something even a pop tart can’t fix.

Or can it?

It was an incredible day on the water. Five stars. Will do again.

And then we were back at home base, kindly provided by Rob and Katy.

First you are there.

Then you are not.

The sun set again over Lake Monroe and the day moved into night.

Homemade Ginger Beer

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cross-posted at noplasticshowers.com

The dark and stormy is a famous drink of sailors worldwide. The usual way to make a dark and stormy is to liberally add a bunch of good rum to some real ginger beer. The more drinks you have, the more rum and less ginger beer ends up in the mix. This leads to talking like a pirate and toe sailing in most situations.

For the house dark and stormy, we’re getting fancy First off we use Amy’s homemade ginger beer (grated ginger, yeast, sugar, water plus time). Then we add some Angostura bitters and lime to the ginger beer to plus it up.

Dark and Stormy ][+
2 oz Mt Gay Extra Old Rum (could use Goslings)
3/4 cup fresh ginger geer
4 dashes Angostura bitters
1/2 oz fresh lime
Stir the ginger beer, bitters and lime together in a whiskey glass with a big ice cube. Float the rum over the mixture.

Did we party?!

Did we party?!