Holding It All Together

I just realized that no one’s asking, but I figured I’d put this up anyway. I’m not dead or even sick. I’ve not given up on anything. I’ve been taking photos every single day that I’ve not blogged. I’ve just been hella busy and not had time to put up any photos. In some cases I’ve not even been near a computer. The first time I was able to sit down and download everything going back to Thursday night was on Sunday night. Do you know how long it takes to download 919 pictures off of a Nikon using iPhoto and the sync chord? One hour and eight minutes. At the end of it, there wasn’t time to do anything else. Now I know why people have card readers. I also know why people buy spare batteries for their cameras, and why they have more than one memory card for same. Live and learn. This photo club is giving me experiences I’ve never had before.

So, tonight I hope to bring you some interesting pics from the past five days. I also hope to get the Chevelle running for its scheduled shoot Thursday night for the zombie movie “8 Wheels of Death.” I’m a little busy!

Crispy, Part Two

Some burned wire snippets, some carb cleaner - the makings of a beautiful evening, I tell ya.

Some burned wire snippets, some carb cleaner - the makings of a beautiful evening, I tell ya.

Yeah, it’s more burned wire, but see what I did? So how I “changed it up” for you? I put the wires ON THE GROUND(!!!!!), and then I *gasp* PUT A CAN OF CARB CLEANER NEXT TO THEM!!!!!! AND THE WIRES HAVE CRUSTY, GOOEY, CUT-UP ELECTRICAL TAPE ON THEM!

I know, you’re shocked. See, that’s how I am, always out there on the creative edge, thinking, planning, creatively creating. Yeah, it’s all in the composition, and the lighting, that too. You’re welcome.

(Any semblance between this carefully orchestrated image and the leftovers of an hour spent pulling filthy, burnt wiring out from under the hood of a ’67 Chevelle is purely coincidental. No part of this blog entry is based on real characters or events, especially if those events make those characters look like mechanical gastropods.)

With Steel

True heavy metal guitar.

True heavy metal guitar.

I played a gig last night. I almost forgot to take my camera, which would have been a very bad thing, since I hadn’t taken any pictures that day, and the only way to get in my one-pic-a-day was to shoot at the gig before midnight. I don’t know what to think about this picture. I guess I think it’s kind of nice, but if I post it on one of the forums someone will say, “It’s really red,” or something that I’d not realized or was aware of. Anyway, I have to keep at it. At least the subject is fairly interesting. It’s my bandleader’s National Steel guitar, which is one of the coolest-sounding instruments on the face of the earth, lemme tell ya.

In other news, I’ve not been getting much of anything done lately, or so it feels. I read about or see other people accomplishing stuff, and my life seems to be at a standstill. I haven’t completed anything in I don’t know how long. I don’t feel like I’ve overcome any obstacles or learned anything new in months. Stuff that wasn’t complete in December still sits uncompleted. Stuff that I wanted to learn last summer still remains unlearned a year later. I would love to quit my job and go to school full time, take about fifty classes a semester, learn absolutely everything there is to know about everything, that type of thing. I wish I’d realized just how much great stuff there was out there to learn about when I was young and had such freedom to pursue education. It seems I wasted so much time back then.

These days I have to do things like cut the fence row growth down out back, clean the house, figure out the bills, do laundry, go to the day job, get the tires and brakes done on my car, weed the front yard – all this stuff that doesn’t seem to do a thing for my life, but which I can’t ignore lest I want to suffer some unpleasant consequences.

There has to be a better way to do this. There has to be some way I can make this stuff work.

Crispy

It's really not as bad as it looks.  In fact, this is the good part.  The bad part looks terrible.

It's really not as bad as it looks. In fact, this is the good part. The bad part looks terrible.

“The Chevelle caught on fire,” my brother said.

That was what he told me over the phone right after I congratulated him on getting the brakes fixed up. Some mysterious wiring snafu took place the day he got the brakes all squared away, and the main power wire under the hood literally went up in smoke. My brother is awesome, and kept further and much more serious damage from occurring, but now the existing damage must be fixed. I don’t know what happened, but suspect it was just one of those things that happens to thirty year old wires. Something corroded or finally wore through, and a “situation” developed. I’m working on it. I only took four pictures today, and all of them were of wiring. This isn’t even the burned part, it’s just a soldered connection I needed to memorialize so that I can put it all back together when I replace the wires. Maybe you’ll get to see burnt wiring tomorrow. I’m sure you’re breathless with anticipation.

Highway High Roller

1941 Oldsmobile, slightly modified.

1941 Oldsmobile, slightly modified.

There was a street rod show somewhere between Indiana and Knoxville, Tennessee during our weekend on the road. The entire time we were in Kentucky and Tennessee we kept seeing them rolling down the highway, headed north on Saturday, and south on Sunday. A few, however, were actually heading the same direction we were, and I goofed around with the camera trying to catch some of them as they passed. In general, the lighting angles were lousy and I did a poor job of framing them, but this one was so odd I decided to put it up. It’s a 1941 Oldsmobile, and, no, they didn’t come in two shades of raspberry when they were new. I don’t recall ever in the last 20-some years seeing one of these in real life, or even in pictures. Sadly, I had to do a web image search to find it and fully identify it (though I am proud to say that it only took two searches to figure out the correct year = consolation prize for me.)

So, a day on the road with eye candy driving by and gorgeous scenery. Nice.

Power Up!

Green power.

Green power.

This photo is from Saturday the eighth. Went down to Norris, Tennessee to play at a wedding reception this weekend. There’s a dam at Norris, and it just so happened that the wedding reception was taking place very close to said dam. Before getting to the location and setting up our gear, the drummer and I stopped to check things out, and I shot this photo. I suppose I could have showed you the other side of the dam where the lake was with a couple of boats on it, but that was a bit of a yawn photo. Yes, the water was nice and still, but nothing was happening, and the light wasn’t so OMGamazing as to make it into some kind of gorgeous panorama. Plus, I like mechanical-ish stuff, and powerplants run off of water power are kind of cool in my little opinion. I think the structure of the plant surrounded by all the incredible greenery of the valley makes for a rather interesting photo. Indiana is just flat, which is probably partly why I go, “Oh! Look at all the pretty hills!” Throw in a hydro plant and it gets a little more interesting for all, or so I hope.

Down and Out

From outside one of Bloomington's most famous watering holes.

From outside one of Bloomington's most famous watering holes.

I went to Bloomington, IN tonight for dinner with a friend. We ate at Laughing Planet, because they have bodaciously good vegetarian burritos (I got the Cuban), and afterward we walked around a bit, me shooting pics occasionally. This shot is outside one of the most well-known bars in town. A similar photo was used as a cover of an CD some years ago for a band by the name of Old Pike, a band which attained some form of notoriety and looked like it might head on to bigger and better things at a certain point. I had to play around with the shot myself for fun. As I positioned myself low and outside for this one, the guy in the right of the frame just happened to walk out while I was putting it together, so I made him part of the shot.

RIP John Hughes

Plenty of writers have already gone to press/web with writeups and synopsese of Hughes and his career. For more background, you can read articles such as this one, and I won’t try to outdo those or simply repeat them. I’ll simply say that John Hughes was responsible for work that made me laugh my friggin’ ass off and feel pretty good about life during some years where I otherwise spent far too much time looking for ways to be miserable. Thanks, John, for the reminder of just how much there is to enjoy out of life.

And this blog entry is just about the most priceless thing I could ever think of to uncover on this subject. It’s about a young girl who took the time to write to John back in the Breakfast Club days and wound up with a friend. Read it. It’s an outstanding example of how reaching out can have an enriching effect on our lives. If someone inspires you, be it a parent, an artist, a sibling, a friend, a photographer, a musican – let them know. You may never hear anything back from them, but that doesn’t mean you didn’t make ripples on the water.

Tin Sandwich

Mouthful o' metal.

Mouthful o' metal.

I did a bunch of finagling on iPhoto with this one. Can’t tell can you? Yeah, I thought it was okay that way for a while, and as soon as I finished I thought otherwise. It should be doing something it’s not doing. I don’t know what it should be doing, though, or how it should be doing it. This photography stuff is really tough. I’m pushing myself in much different areas than I ever have before. I only had one class in it ever, and it met twice a week. My total instruction in lighting – all of the whole of the subject of lighting – was 90 minutes in length. You might see why certain abilities are beyond my grasp. Honestly, looking at stuff I’ve been doing these past couple of weeks, I’m stunned anyone ever paid me to do work for them. I’m also stunned that I was able to produce work for them that really was halfway decent. This isn’t it. Good thing they didn’t need this, whatever it was I was going for.

We’ll see, kids. I’m finding it very hard to keep up with things lately. I have pretty much filled my plate with things. I love them all, but I wonder how wise this all is. At the same time, I want to give none of them up. Didn’t I blog about this a week ago or something? Probably. Perhaps you’ll have to hear me rant about it for some months before I figure something out. It occurs to me that Bruce Springsteen never had this problem. I’ve read about him. He knew, from the moment he picked up a guitar, that that was it. He’d found IT in his life. He said, “The first time in my life I could stand to look at myself in the mirror was the first time I ever looked in it and held a guitar.”

I don’t have that. I seem to have many choices, and unfortunately I have some amount of ability in many areas. I suppose that’s better than when I used to think I was only good at one or maybe two things, but it brings with it a wealth of other issues, issues which I’m struggling with right now. The universe isn’t reaching out with any obvious answers just yet, either. I’m waiting for some outside force to make things a little clearer, for someone to say to me, “We’re going to pay you sixty grand a year to write for us,” or “We want you to do this public installation of this sculpture,” or “Someone broke into your car and stole your camera,” or “We need someone who can build an engine while taking photos, writing, and playing harmonica.” You know, something like that. SOMEthing!

And while I wait, I keep doing.

Oh, tonight’s writing group meeting went well. It was a mad rush getting there, but I made it, and the folks said I did a great job on my writing prompt, the “barn exercise” taken from John Gardner’s much-lauded “The Art of Fiction.” I’ve not read it yet myself, but it’s on the to-do list. The exercise: describe a barn from the point of view of a man who has just found out he lost his son in war. Do not mention the son, death, or war.

It took me about four hours to write one page, but at least an hour of that was devoted to reading about barns so that I could describe on appropriately. I think I used a single word from that hour of research, but somehow the whole thing was a help anyway.

Keep at it, folks. Keep creating. You owe it to yourself.