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Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts

Thursday, January 12, 2012

a year running

A Documentation of Running in 2011
OR
Proof of A Less Than Mild Case of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Last November, I tweaked my knee. I'm not even sure how it happened; I woke up one morning for work, and it was mildly swollen. Flexing it to walk up stairs or elevators was almost impossible until the joint was warmed-up & stretched-out, around noon. I attribute it to walking through some urban fields on the way to return some books at the Irvington library branch. I stepped in a divot, or slid momentarily through a congealed pile of dog mess, twisting slightly some tendons or ligaments.


View NIFS Indoor Track in a larger map
NIFS Indoor Track. 97 runs; 417 miles.

After that, I was mostly laid up for nearly a month, beyond some stationary biking as December 2010 progressed. I joined NIFS, a fantastic gym at IUPUI, and began doing some bike/jog workouts the last week of December, before Amelia, Wes, and I drove 12-hours to spend a week with my family at a beach house in the Florida panhandle. A stovepipe of a building, 6 flights of steep stairs were required to get to the top floor, a small, lofted room, on the floor of which Amelia & I were sleeping on a mattress (well, mattress in name only). Climbing up & down those stairs for the week really strained my knee at first, but by the last couple days, I was feeling noticeably stronger. The stairs had healed my knee! Either that, or a week's worth of Yuengling Black & Tan had lubricated my body's joints so they felt no pain.


View Neighborhood Running Route in a larger map
Neighborhood running route. 54 runs; 257.4 miles.

On returning to Indianapolis, I made a goal to work-out/run 150 times in the year. I'd never paid for a gym membership before, and I'm a particularly cheap bastard, so I wanted to make it worthwhile. What began as a 3-times-a-week chore, morphed into 4 or 5 days a week, plus stationary bike riding...and eventually, into long runs once a week to train up for the Carmel (Half) Marathon (follow the link for my entry on the race itself).


View Canal Route 1 in a larger map
Canal running route. 25 runs; 130.5 miles.

July came, and running became a sort of morning obsession. In the height of Hoosier heat, I ran 20 times, each one reducing me to a pile of sweat on the front stoop, dripping random droplet constellations onto the dry concrete while stretching. The runs had become less training, and more therapeutic---necessary in their exertion-level; I needed it to clear my mind, to feel alright inside my world. I didn't see that coming.


View Bellingham Neighborhood Route in a larger map
Bellingham neighborhood running route. 3 runs; 12 miles.

Took some days off while on vacation, but I still took my shoes & ran neighborhood routes, not to mention did a lot of walking & biking around the beautiful Pacific Northwest. When I returned, I switched back to afternoon running, much to the pleasure of my digestive system, which has never become completely assimilated to morning runs (well; it responds in kind, if you get my drift). Internally, running was now something I felt weird if I didn't do. Even on days off (which I do need; 3 or 4 days in a row will render me stiff as a board until mid-morning, at least); I don't feel quite as lucid as on running days.


View Trail Route in Land o' Lakes in a larger map
Land o' Lakes nature trail. 1 run; 5 miles.

I began the year with the goal of 150 runs, though by late Fall I was chalking up a good four every week, which continued through the early winter months with the help of an indoor track. I pushed through the holiday season on the same schedule, hitting 182 official run/work-outs by the end of 2011, while at the same time getting back to my high school playing weight of 145. What can I say, I have the arms of an early middle-schooler.


View Carmel 2011 Half-Marathon in a larger map
Carmel Half-Marathon. 1 run; 13.1 miles.

My total for the year? As best as I can figure, 841 miles in 182 runs. On just two pairs of shoes, which have served me pretty well. Guess I'm about due for another pair; my goal for 2012 is 200 runs.


View Monon Trail in a larger map
Monon Trail. 1 run; 6 miles.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

back to the present

things i have been up to lately:
  • Writing album features (here and here) for Musical Family Tree, the Indiana-related digital music repository.
  • Went to Florida with Amelia to see my parents, who reside in Land O' Lakes...not the home of the butter. We walked beaches, ate fresh shrimp & grouper, saw botanical gardens, rode bikes on nature trails, slept-in, made pancakes, drank lots of coffee, saw dolphins, river otters, and all kinds of cranes, visited my Mom's co-op, introduced my parents to Cuban food...had a great time.


    My parents & I outside their house in Florida. I think we were all looking into the sun...which is out 95% of the time. Now I remember why people move there...

  • An extra-sauced Thanksgiving due to generous tastings of Amelia's cousin's cider...
  • A mini-roadtrip on a freezing & rainy day to Cincinnati to see German experimentalist/improviser/elder-statesman Roedelius, in an art-space converted from a century-old brewery & warehouse, the Mockbee. also ate one of the finer meals of our life at Senate Pub---my review here.


    One of the best live shows I've ever seen...(6-part vocal harmonies? Yes, please.) Enjoy this nugget filmed in their home-base of Athens, GA.

  • A month prior, roadtrip to Columbus to see a recently reunited (and completely awesome) Olivia Tremor Control at the fabulous Wexner Center, preceded as always by the irresistible Clever Crow pizza.
  • Released (digitally-only, for now, vinyl to follow in February) the new Everything, Now! album, Do It On The Moon, via the wonderful musician's tool Bandcamp. Check it out here.


    Cover of the new Everything, Now! record, Do It On The Moon. Painting by Allen, our guitarist.

  • Read at least three incredible books, Steinbeck's East of Eden, and Orhan Pamuk's Snow, and Dexter Filkins' The Forever War.
  • Watched way too much 30 Rock / Parks & Recreation via Netflix, and finished the currently-streamable, anxiety & stress-producing, overall way too depressing seasons of Mad Men. Also discovered, thanks to my brother Wes, the British-comedy Peep Show, with its near-constant internal monologue.


    One of the best moments of Season 4...had me rolling around on the couch with awkward laughter.

  • Third annual post-Thanksgiving bash filled our house with good friends & good times. Along with breaking the fire-code for bodies in the building, lentil stew & cranberry cake were served, along with a baby keg from Sun King, and aforementioned ciders. As a sign of getting old, the night slowed down pretty early & ended with a sleepy round of Scattergories (I blame this on so many English degrees in one place).
  • Two impromptu basement recording sessions with amigos Andy & Tyler have produced roughly 8 workable tunes. Went into the basement with just ideas, came out hours later with live tracks recorded through a 4-track into Garageband. Mixing & Chicago-apartment-overdub session is imminent for January 2012, with an internet release to follow shortly thereafter, with the nom de plume of.......well, I can't say. "D's P" for short.
  • Lastly and most recently, trip to Louisville for the family Christmas. Stayed in my sister's sweet new home, dined at the now-traditional Irish Rover (been coming here for a good 2/3rds of my life...yikes!), exchanged some small gifts, and helped cook a ridiculously awesome Christmas dinner of beef tenderloin, cheesy potatoes, balsamic brussels sprouts, garlic & butter green beans, homemade bread, and strawberry & cream cheese jello. Decadent to say the least. Who knew we'd all be able to cook so well! Oh, and can't forget the yearly treat of Buckeyes, as made by Jennifer. Thanks sis! Now, back to running...
  • Tuesday, March 29, 2011

    March 2011 Mix: Slow Burn


    Recorded in glorious mono!


    Click here to download.
    Side A
    1. Kreidler - Cube
    2. Konono No. 1 - Kule Kule Reprise
    3. Bablicon - Snipanet 1
    4. Beach Boys - Do It Again
    5. Olivia Tremor Control - I'm Not Feeling Human
    6. Beatles - The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill
    7. Sapat - Dark Silver

    Side B
    8. Can - Mushroom
    9. Yo la Tengo - Nuclear War (Version 1)
    10. Phantom Band - E.F. 1
    11. Al Green - It Ain't No Fun to Me
    12. Rolling Stones - Ain't Too Proud to Beg

    The key to this mix was pacing...I wanted to keep things steady, pulling from records with no editing (what can I say, sometimes I can't hit the pause button fast enough on the stereo.) Kreidler starts things out with a pulse, almost dance music, but coming from a factory, or microwave. Segueing from such thoughtful, prim & precise into "Kule Kule Reprise", played on homemade giant thumb pianos made of old auto parts, magnets, junk, is an exercise in juxtaposition. Both retain formal elements of repetition, repetition, repetition, layers indecipherably moving in and out of the mix. "Snipanet 1" enters with the first riff, although a bass guitar riff, jazzy but backed by some suitcase percussion.


    I once watched a pallet full of Bablicon CDs get sent to be destroyed. I only rescued 3 of each, and now feel guilty for not piling them all in a dusty box. Some of the most overlooked, adventurous sounds of the 90s and early aughts.


    Very organic; which doesn't describe the synth-stomp that begins "Do It Again", which is about as heavy as the Beach Boys get. Skronky, filtered guitars sounding like live wires (is there anyone that uses recording like an instrument as well as OTC did?) highlight "I'm Not Feeling Human", which toes the line between the well-combed Boys and their moptop counterparts, who follow with the galloping story of "Bungalow Bill." Sapat ends Side A (it's vinyl, you gotta keep it to around 20, fools) with "Dark Silver", an unhinged bit of murky, funked-rock, guitar and woodwind solos snaking through the tree-tops.

    Kreidler - Kremlin rules from Jörg Langkau on Vimeo.


    Try not to blink.

    Always wanted to begin a side with "Mushroom", one of the most unique sounding compositions of all-time, with the standout being the shuffling drum beat that has the odd reverb of a fetid tunnel, or laundry shaft. "Nuclear War (Version 1)" is a more light-hearted pieces that again possesses one of my favorite beats in this sing-along version of Sun Ra's "classic." Phantom Band takes it further into space with the calm & collected electro-reggae of "E.F. 1", a smooth landing into the stutter-stomp of "It Ain't Fun to Be Me", finishing with the amped-up "Ain't To Proud to Beg."


    Understated but classic cover. And I left off the version with little kids singing; but I'm sure you can find it. Surprisingly feel-good!