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Thursday, November 25, 2010

The World's Most Popular Psychoactive Substance

Coffee.
After the resident Mr. Coffee machine in the apartment bit the dust (about three weeks into use), it was time to graduate to new means of caffeine intake. These classic methods require a bit more work than the newer drippy spitters, but these classics have been wonderful. Behold the results:


Bodum Chambord French Press - $30

Bialetti Moka Express Stovetop Espresso Maker - $30
The two really shine when mated with cold, filtered water and any of the delicious coffees available at The Merc (9th & Iowa). I prefer the Instant Karma blend from Lawrence's own Z's Divine Espresso for my press coffee. It's bold, but not quite so dark as a French roast, and features smooth flavors with subtle hints of dark chocolate and perhaps blackberry - I'm not certain. Roastgardless, make sure to get a course grind when using with a French Press to avoid excess dregs in your mug (paper filters still work with these, just press them down). Conversely, you want to be certain to get a fine grind of the espresso blend, nearly as fine as Turkish coffee. Here, I stick with Z's again, this time the Organic Espresso Blend. Their website describes it as:


"The real thing folks! NOT some over roasted stuff like you find in the grocery store. Rather, 5 beans chosen, roasted and blended specifically to bring that great coffee flavor to drinks made with steamed milk—sweet, smooth, a little chocolaty, and NOT bitter. NOT recommended for drip coffee or press pot brewing—just espresso. But do what you want. Go figure."


One more thing:
The Bialetti Latté/Cappuccino set includes the original espresso maker and a very effective milk frother. I have found that it is worth the extra $15 to have home-made lattés, cappuccinos, and macchiatos. Any of these make great gifts! If you are looking for a little something extra, buy coffee and bundle them. If you are looking for something a little more affordable, just get the coffee!

Klimt Background

The first of many computer backgrounds I hope to release, this is a Photoshopped version of Gustav Klimt's 1907 Water Snakes II (Friends II). Click the image wherever you would like (to see full resolution)!

Quiet Houses

Listen to Fleet Foxes.

The gist of this post comes down to the four words above, so you may as well start your download or playlist now, then come right on back here. Born from a Seattle suburb, this five-piece group makes beautiful and harmonic melodies that evoke a sense of spatiality, peace, and calm. In 2008, the group's excellent Sun Giant EP debuted, followed by their still-better self-titled LP (see left).

Leads Robin Pecknold and Skyler Skjelset share a gift for creating masterful and wonderous vocal arrangements, which seems to sonically differentiate Fleet Foxes from other folk-influenced contemporaries such as The Dodos, Bon Iver, and Iron & Wine. The music comes across as wide as a national park (see video). Percussion is rhythmic and upbeat when present, expressed with excited tambourines, simple shakers, open and acoustic tom-work, not so unlike that of Grizzly Bear's Christopher Bear. Instrumentation is somewhat varied, at least for the genre, predominately featuring a two-acoustic-guitars, vocals, and drums lineup. The group does well integrating electric guitar (Sun it Rises), mandolin (Blue Ridge Mountains), and flute (Your Protector), evoking different moods as they see fit. The overall mood is one of mature calm, painted in the utmost of sincerity by a young band destined to make more beautiful music in the coming years. Hear them for yourself.


Yellowstone from Andrew Curtis on Vimeo.

Thxgvn

Old School 1940 Reproduction from Color Slide - Image via the Denver Post
Happy Thanksgiving.
Take a step back and appreciate every last thing you can, then go ahead and find a few more things that you just haven't valued in the world. Feel free to treasure those things too.

I saw these pictures a couple months ago, which were created by restoring rare color slides from 1939-1943 into photographs. It is strange and interesting to see these types of scenes in color, given that most accounts of this era represent it in black and white. While they don't necessarily pertain to Thanksgiving, they sure do make me feel like eating a hearty meal with friends and family.

Have a good one, and don't forget to give thanks all year.
Alex

Alpha Alpha Alpha

It's Thanksgiving (Fall) Break, and finding myself in my home town of Wichita for the first time in a few months has been harsh. Wichita isn't Lawrence. It isn't. It just does not function the way that Lawrence functions, look the way Lawrence looks, breathe the same way Lawrence breathes, or think the way Lawrence thinks. I won't go into Wichita too much, as it is not particularly exceptional, save for being exceptionally average. Lawrence isn't average. But you know that.


This blog comes from the sky. It will be about the great blue at times, but will mostly focus on what's going on under the azure. This should entail concert, album, song, movie, and book reviews, photos, upcoming events, vague descriptions of some thoughts I am grappling with, other cool stuff on the internet, obscure facts, strange quotes, sweet pictures - a culmination of interesting stuff.


Ch-check it out.