badlybent.ca

Never apologize for your Art

Archive for the ‘It's All About Me!’ Category

The Websites, They Are A-Changin’

Sep-3-2010 By steviez

 

Badly Bent Records

 

Apologies to Bob Dylan for the title of this post….

Well, dear readers of this blog, the time has come for a little change….okay a HUGE change.  I’m going to be moving this blog to another page, and this page is (FINALLY!) going to become home for my record label, Badly Bent Records.  Yes, I’ve (FINALLY!) launched it, and big things are already afoot.  Sometime by Monday or Tuesday of next week the site will be flipped over to the record label site, and the blog will be moved.

Looking forward to writing more consistently again as well.  I’ll probably split this blog up into a regular blog from my own personal standpoint, as well as a blog about the music industry and the happenings in my tiny portion of it.

Take care, and we’ll see you on the other side…

Stevie Z

The 2010 RPM Challenge: Fin

Mar-12-2010 By steviez

  rpm.jpg

Well, it’s done.  The 2010 RPM Challenge is over,  and you know what ?

I did it.

Yup, yours truly, the Procrastibator himself actually finished it.   And it feels awesome!   You know what else feels awesome?  Yes, that too, but I’m talking in the context of the Challenge here.  Two other people whom I know and consider friends and fantastic songwriters also finished.  Don Sawchuk and Robbie Hancock, whom I had told about the challenge and had entered on their own did it too.  Maybe that’s what helped push me towards completion when the going was rough - knowing that 2 other guys I knew and respected were doing it, and most likely going to complete it, and there was no way that I, the guy that brought up the whole thing in the first place, wasn’t going to make it as well.

In case you don’t feel like following the above link, here is the Challenge in a nutshell:

A) Record an album - 35 minutes - of material in the time period of Feb. 1 to Feb. 28.  For the hardcore out there, it’s also preferable if you wrote the album in Feb. as well.

B) Send it in to RPM headquarters in New Hampshire.  Must be postmarked no later then noon on March 1.

C) Raise arms in victory.

D) Catch up on sleep, and detox.

And I did it.  I still can’t believe I did, but I did.  I know, holy shit, eh ?  It was close, very close.  I was doing the final mix of the final song at 11:55 on Feb. 28, and coincidentally I dropped it off at the post office at exactly 11:55 AM the next day.  I had to literally speed walk to the post office to do it, but it got done.

I almost once again fell victim to what i call the “Procrasti-Monster”.   Oh, it started off great: January 25th I got one of those write-on/wipe-off calendars and planned the month out completely.  I even had most of the songs already written.  I know that it’s preferable to write everything in Feb. as well, but hey, it was my first Challenge, and I didn’t want to try to accomplish too much in case I accomplished nothing.

As I was saying, the entire month was planned out, I contacted some visual artists I really respect to put some album art together, and as of Feb. 1 I was ready to roll.  In fact, just to make a point I started laying drum tracks down at 12:01 am on Feb 1.

My first track was a spoken word piece, inspired by a poem that The Scarborough Dude wrote and read on his podcast.  In fact, it was so inspiring that I decided to scrap Plan A entirely, and go with a newly-improvised Plan B.  It would be a…CONCEPT ALBUM! Yes - inspired by Scarborough Dude and the Olympics I decided to have a theme of Canada…with a couple of songs about cats just to round things out.  That would be awesome!  I was a musical GENIUS!  I began planning the new album immediately…..

….then something happened: I got a writer’s block.  Here I was with the greatest idea for a concept album since Pink Floyd’s The Wall (okay, not really, but at the time it seemed like it) and I couldn’t get things to flow the way I wanted them to.

Some people know how to deal with writer’s block.  I’ve tried dozens of methods over the year, and I’ll let ya’ll in on a few of them someday, but this time, maybe because I had an actual physical deadline nothing was working.  So I did the most logical thing….

…I froze.  Up.  completely.  I neither wrote nor recorded anything for almost 2 straight weeks.  I watched a little Olympic coverage, some American Idol (yes, I was that desperate) and puttered around the house.

With a little less then 2 weeks to go, a plan started to emerge from the fog.  It was an idea for another concept album, one that would free me from the constraints of having to do picture-perfect recordings, would allow me to write it in February after all, and one that I could actually pull off!

I’ll get into more detail about the album in my next post, but suffice it to say that I’ve got a lot of people to thank for getting done what I needed done, whether it be collaborative work, ideas, voices, etc.   I’ll mention them here, but I go into greater detail in the liner notes, and will also go into more detail on my post regarding the album itself. In no special order, I’d like to thank The Luverly Michelle(tm), Mark and Natalie Shantz, The Scarborough Dude, Paul, Tanja and Mackenzie McCallum, Dr. Ignatio Castillo, Robbie Hancock, Don Sawchuk,  and Mike the guitar tech from Sherwood Music.  If it wasn’t for the above people, well, the album might have got done, but it wouldn’t have been nearly as cool as it turned out.

Perhaps most of all, however, I’d like to thank the people behind the RPM Challenge.  What they do over there is pure brilliance.   As they like to say “it doesn’t have to be the album, it just has to be an album”.  While I’m not sure anyone who participated in the Challenge thinks that their Challenge album is the best thing they’ve ever produced, it’s a good way to force people to write and record.  As Robbie said at one point it got him “motivated to record some songs that should have been recorded years ago”.  Amen brother.  The Challenge got me thinking, writing and recording.  It’s a known fact that the more you do something, the better you get at it.  The RPM Challenge got me to write an album that would never have existed otherwise.  I guess the reason that I dig the Challenge so much is because it also does what I tried to get people to do with the Monthly Sieve Song Challenge.  Anytime somebody creates a song that never existed before, the world is a better place.  Unless it’s Nickelback, but face it, they’ve been creating the same song over and over for years anyways.

To celebrate the victory that Robbie, Don and I had just achieved, I invited them over to my place on March 1 for a “Listening Party” so we could hear what each other had done, and open the bottle of champagne that I had purchased for the occasion.  Listening to what Don and Robbie did reminded me again that they are both great songwriters, and it was a pleasure to be able to hear new stuff from both of them.   As I expected, after hearing what both of them had done, mine was a complete left-turn.

Speaking of how my album turned out, I have to say that although I’m thrilled to death with it, I’m also not totally happy with the final product.  See, when you have a deadline that’s zooming at you like a runaway Toyota you tend to have to say “that’s good enough” a lot .  There are a lot of mistakes on the album, a lot of production tweaks that need to be made, little touch ups here and there to be done, and to be totally honest two more tracks to be recorded that I didn’t have the time to do.

So, I’m going to spend the next couple of months lovingly tuning and honing each track until it’s as polished as it needs to be for me to be happy with it, and then maybe I’ll throw it up on iTunes and put out the CD for sale.  Who knows?

This Challenge has given me lots of ideas, most of which are still sitting there, waiting to be snatched up and placed with care into their own cradles of song, and I’ve learned a lot more about the recording, editing and mixing process.   And, it’s given me something I never had before: and actual ALBUM.

As a matter of fact, it’s given lots of people albums, and even more then that, it’s helped midwife into existence a ton of music that never even existed before February 1, 2010.

And that can only be a good thing.

Peace, Love, and Guiness,

Stevie Z

Create or Consume?

Dec-10-2009 By steviez

ipod-guitar.jpg 

By Stevie Z

    Well, it’s that time of the year again: time for either myself or The Luverly Michelle™ to purchase something for ourselves.  Every year at Christmas we are ‘allowed’ to buy something worth more money then we would usually spend.  I don’t mean ‘allowed’ by each other, but more along the lines of it taking most of the year to save up the cash to purchase something that costs a little extra dough.  Each Christmas we buy each other a few smaller things, and then we alternate each year on whom gets the bonus ‘goodie’.

     Just to clarify - we’re not talking thousands of dollars here, last year I got an M-Audio MIDI controller keyboard, this year Michelle is getting a sewing machine.  These things generally amount to only a few hundred bucks.

      Since this year is Michelle’s year to get ‘The Big One’, it’s my year to get smaller stuff.  I’m always easy to buy for as far as the category of gifts go - something music-related.  See? Easy.  Where it gets agonizing is trying to decide which subcategory I’m leaning towards.  I look at it as 2 choices.

     Creation Vs. Consumption.

     Since I’m also a songwriter, and am aspiring to be a producer/engineer to some degree as well, I’m always looking at acquiring the stuff I need to achieve my goal of creating great songs, whether writing and playing my own, or helping someone else with theirs.

   While I know some people have a bad case of G.A.S. (Gear Acquisition Syndrome) wherein they’re always pining after (and buying!) the latest, greatest guitar/mic/software/effects, etc, I have a very concrete idea of what I want to achieve, and know what I need to get it.   I’ve never been a fan of newest/shiniest anyways, not when older/used/less expensive gets the job done. 

     At the other end of the equation sits Consumption.  By this I mean the act of listening to music that others have created, such as the latest Corb Lund album.   My MP3 player is an older Sansa SanDisk 8GB, and it’s starting to show it’s age.  When you think that I use it for an average of 4-5 hours per day for listening to podcasts and music in a not-so-healthy-for-electronics environment, I believe it’s held up amazingly well, and was a very good buy.  The only problems are, as I say, it’s getting older, and starting to act a little eccentric now and again, and also, for some reason nobody (including Sansa or Apple apparently) understands, my Mac won’t acknowledge the fact that it exists when I plug it in.  This means that I have to download music and podcasts to a memory stick, then use a windows (ick) based machine to transfer it to my MP3 Player.

     I know, I know.  I keep thinking it too: “Good lord you lazy bastard, 10 years ago the technology for this kind of portable music player wasn’t even within your grasp, and now you’re bitching because it takes you an extra 5 minutes to be able to perform the miracle of being able to hear whatever music you want, whenever you want!”  Yeah, it is kind of nit-picky.  And also, I feel really guilty whenever I think “man, I wish this thing was bigger then 8GB so I could have more music on it.”  I mean, seriously?  My first computer had, I believe, a 256k hard drive!  8GB is a lot of tunes.  I don’t really need an iPod….I mean, they’re neato, and shiny, and do lots of neat stuff, and if I spend enough on one (an iPod Touch, for example has music creation apps available for it) then I can kind of  bridge the gap between creation and consumption.  But we’re talking $400 plus, and I can’t really justify that, not even to myself, never mind Michelle.  Actually, Michelle is a lot more easy-going about that kind of thing. 

   So to help me decide, I asked myself the following question:

    Do I want the ability to be able to listen to Peter Judd’s songs wherever and whenever I want to, which I can already do, but make it slightly easier, or do I want the ability to help amazing songwriters like a Peter Judd or a Robbie Hancock get their songs out so other people can hear them?

     Feedback from other people who share this dilemma is welcome…..

    Stevie Z

confused.jpg

 

     Yeah, I know.  I’ve been reminded by several kind, well-meaning people, some with a degree of subtlety and some without that I’ve still to put a podcast out.  I whined previously that my Wincrap Shitstsa computer sucked too much, and that I needed something that would work.  So, I got a Mac, which incidentally works better then any computer I’ve ever even dreamed of using.  So what’s the holdup ?

     Well…..it’s me, basically.  I’ve been suffering a sort of ‘crisis of faith’ for a little while now, as far as the blog and podcast go - I’ve wanted to do a few different things, none of which went very well together, and I wanted to prevent The Sieve! from becoming one of those rambly mish-mashy podcasts which I hate. 

    To that end, I believe I’m going to do the following:  I’m going to re-launch The Sieve! in May, retooled and re tweaked, and I’m also going to launch another podcast in May as well, that will showcase an entire different world of stuff.  The Sieve! will also showcase the songwriting challenge, which I’ve had a lot of emails and IMs asking about.l  I think the blog here at badlybent.ca will continue to be a catch-all for everything that is Stevie Z (sorry about that ;)  but I think I’ll also launch another blog site as well for the new podcast.

    Now, I can hear you all already “but face it, asshat, you don’t even do one show on a regular basis, do you expect us to believe that you’re going to do two now?!?!”  Well, yes, because the new format for The Sieve! and the new podcast will be much simpler, more effective, and more entertaining then ever.  Hard to believe?  Believe it, mes amis!  And also, I’m really hoping to bring in some co-hosts, which make my job easier.

    So expect the next couple of weeks to be filled with the sounds of hammers, saws, drills, marmots, and cussin’ because we’re talking some major overhauls….

    One last note - one of the reasons for bringing back The Sieve! Song Challenge and really really wanting to promote it is partly because A) I want an excuse to play my own crap on the air, and B) I had the extreme honour of being a judge for the Inaugural Cambridge Songwriting Competition two weeks in a row, and I’ve met some amazing people, both onstage and at the judges table, who have really reminded me how much j’adore independent, unusual, and to some extent, local, music and musicians.  That got me itchin’ to start recording my own stuff again, and more importantly to offer yet another platform for the unheard to be, well, heard.

    Of course, I might sober up tomorrow and decide that all this is bull and just keep putting out a show every two months, filled with worthless meanderings…..

    Peace, Love, and Songwriting!

    Stevie Z

……And I Love Her

Apr-16-2009 By steviez

By Stevie Z

Well, it’s April 16th.  As I start to write this, actually, it’s April 14th.  I’m hoping to get a jump start so that it comes out in time.

April the 16th of 2009 will mean that I will have been married to The Luverly Michelle for exactly 4 years.   I thought it was 3, but I was corrected….fairly sternly as a matter of fact, that it was indeed 4.  Time has sure flown.  When I started my podcast and blog I decided that I was going to wait for episode 100 to divulge the entire story of our wedding.  That was about a year and a half ago though, and since I’m only on episode 17 or so, by the time I reach episode 100 I probably won’t even REMEMBER what the story of our wedding was - I’ll just publish episode 100, eat my dinner pill, fly my jet car home, and go to sleep in my capsule on Mars.  Get it?  See, by the time I actually do publish episode 100 it will be the distant future and……never mind.

Since the Ballad of Steve and Michelle could fill several blog posts, I’ll focus on a Reader’s Digest version of our wedding, give you the key points to whet your interest, and then direct you to an upcoming episode of The Sieve! (my podcast, which I assure you DOES exist)

The Luverly Michelle (hereafter in this blog post referred to simply as “Michelle” to save ink in the court transcripts which will likely follow) and myself (hereafter referred to as doofus Stevie Z)  got married in a Cancer Hospice.  Wow, even typing those words has brought back a flood.

In order for the wedding to happen as it did, a number of things had to go off perfectly, most of which should never have happened.  Caterers that shouldn’t have been able to do a smaller wedding in such a short notice were suddenly free, people that weren’t supposed to be able to attend because of out of town trips suddenly found their plans changed, ministers that weren’t supposed to be able to officiate found a space on their calender, and people that shouldn’t have been in any condition to help plan a wedding made sure that things were all lined up and ready to proceed.

By now the words “Cancer Hospice” have probably burrowed into your mind to the point where you’re ready to start skimming through this post to figure out what the hell I’m talking about.  As I said, I’m not going into too much detail here, but suffice it to say that Michelle’s mother was a guest at the hospice, and it was her situation that prompted the venue.

I’ve typed this particular paragraph about 4 times now, and I honestly can’t find the way to say what I want to say, so I will say this: perhaps some of the greatest amount of thanks and….I can’t even figure out the WORD to use, should go to the staff of Lisaard House (the cancer hospice where we had the wedding) for first of all suggesting the venue in the first place, and making sure that things went the way they should.

The next biggest helping of thanks, Kudos, smiles, hugs, kisses and Love, should go to Michelle, who was my gorgeous bride four years ago today.  I still don’t know why she agreed to marry me, I mean, I sure as hell wouldn’t have married me, but she did, and I’m thankful every day for it…..especially when she lets me buy music equipment and Macs - which, by the way, I have been informed is my birthday/anniversary/Christmas/Easter/Valentines/Groundhog Day present for the next year.

Thank you Sugar Beet Babydoll Honey etc etc.  I love you even more then I did before - 4 years more, to be exact.  Here’s to many more years of me not quite pissing you off enough to leave me.

wedding-photo-dance.jpg

Love ya Sweetie,

Stevie Z

computer_crash_2.jpg 

By Stevie Z

    Fans of my podcast, The Sieve! (okay, FAN of my podcast) may have noticed that I haven’t put out any shows for quite some time now.

    I actually DID manage to get a show recorded in between computer crashes,  file corruptions, etc. and it has remained, on my external hard drive,  1/2 edited for about 2 months now.  In it, I go into some (but not too much, I hope) detail about my life for the past six months, the prepping and listing of our house and subsequent fun, fun, fun.  I can’t remember if I go into much detail about the recording/computer woes I’ve been dealing with, but they have been substantial.

    I’ve been trying desperately to put together a little ’studio’ worth of recording equipment since I was 14 years old.  Nothing amazingly fantastic, you understand, just enough to be able to get down on tape (originally) or now on MP3, the thoughts and ideas I have careening around in my skull.  Since that time I’ve tried to put together both the equipment and the space to do such.  And since I was 14, I’ve failed.  Oh, I’ve gotten closer and closer, and I’m getting there, but I’m still not there.  The only real thing standing in my way right now, is a stable, decent recording platform (IE computer)

   I’ve got the software, I’ve got the instruments, mics, etc.  I’m just missing one small, but critical, piece of the puzzle.  Okay, I could use some extra ‘talent’ too, but there’s not much I can do about that……

    Since I spend my days making money as a Lubricant Distribution Technician, the whole “recording thing” (music and podcasting) falls distinctly into the ‘hobby’ field.  I looked up the definition of the word ‘hobby’ and among other things, dictionary.com defines a ‘hobby’ as “an activity or interest pursued for pleasure or relaxation”.

    Since, every time I try to record/edit/tweak anything, I end up swearing and cursing (and now recently: kicking) my computer, I would have to say that it has moved well beyond the realm of hobby, and into ‘albatross’.

    So what?

    Well, I believe that I’m on the brink of finally putting that last piece into place.  If all goes according to plan (it won’t but at least there IS a plan) then I should have an Apple Mac to record with within the next few weeks, or within the next month.  And then, look forward to my next podcast piece wherein I take my Windows Vista POS PC into the backyard and turn it into tiny pieces of nothing with my sledgehammer.  Then maybe I’ll drop the pieces off in front of the door of the Microsoft HQ in Toronto.  Hmm, I smell a video podcast……

    Anyhoo, thanks for being patient, everyone.  Or at least, those of you who have been patient.   Those of you who have lost patience and moved on, well, then I guess you won’t be reading this, but I apologize to you was well anyways.  I also apologize to my liver, who has also borne the brunt of my aggravation……

    Stevie Z

 PS - Yes, I understand that, in the grand scheme of the world, not having a good computer is pretty trite and unimportant.  I have a home, I have a job, I have food and clothing, and am whining about something that is considered by most a luxury.

 skelton-computer.bmp

It’s been a hell of a few months.  Actually, in the grand scheme of things, compared to some people’s lives, I guess I don’t have that much to complain about.  A lot of people had and have it worse off then me, so I’ll give ya’ll a brief rundown, and stop me if I start whining:

First of all, I’ve been working on home renovations.  Not huge layout-altering stuff, but over the last few months my house has pretty much been completely painted.  Top to bottom, literally inside and out.  It’s also been fixed all over the place, and decluttered like crazy.  We are now the proud renters of a 10×10 storage space that’s packed to the rafters with stuff that, for the most part, turns out we didn’t really need.

The Luverly Michelle(TM) decided that it was time we sold our house and moved.  I’ll get into more detail at some other time about why that was her call to make, but we both knew when we bought it that at some point she’d need to move.  So, we engaged the services of THE best real estate agent this side of the Pecos (we call her our Real Estate Ninja) and made the mistake of asking her for a list of stuff we should do to make the house more salable.  And, much to our dismay, she gave us a list.  A huge list.  Of course, it was our decision to do anything, but since she was the expert, we did it.  We would have gotten everything done on the list, except for a couple of things like money and time.  See, I didn’t think things through quite enough, and had relegated some things further down the list, and turns out we couldn’t do them because they were dependant on outside temperature, which was rapidly plummeting.  Ever try to paint exterior trim on a house at +3 Celsius?  Yeah, it’s a blast.

Then, while painting outside, I fell off the ladder.  Nothing too spectacular, I was only about 4 feet up, in fact, I kind of ‘jumped’ down instead of falling when I felt the ladder shift.  Guess I just landed a little bit wrong, and did something to my lower back.  You know those really annoying back injuries that just hurt enough to piss you off and keep you from doing stuff?  It was one of those.

Then after that had finally healed, I managed to whack my kneecap hard enough trying to run through a doorway (and missing it slightly, apparently) that I could barely walk for about 2 weeks, and after 2 months was still pretty sore.

Hmmm, I think I’m starting to whine now….so I’ll leave the injuries there.  Those were the major ones anyways.

Ever renovate your home with your spouse?  Well, not literally “with” your spouse - obviously you use paint brushes and hammers and stuff, but I mean alongside your spouse?  How did that go?  Yeah, it went a ton worse with us too.  Between the regular life stresses, plus extra stresses, and then the stresses of renovating a house to sell it, well, The Luverly Michelle(TM) and I were getting along about as well as two rabid marmots with PMS and hangnails, stuffed in a sack, dunked in water and then shaken vigorously.  But with less fur.  Only moderately though.

That pretty much sums up most of the crap.  I’m glad that 2008 is over with, and I’m really looking forward to 2009.  Of course, a guy who keeps getting kicked in the nuts would probably appreciate a punch in face, just for something different…..

I’ve actually got big plans, social medially speaking.  Look for The Sieve! to be back in full force in the next couple weeks, along with the possible launching of a NEW podcast.   The Sieve! Monthly Song Challenge will be back up and running in the next couple of weeks too, and I’ve tweaked it a bit based on some comments I’ve received from people.  I’m hoping to really get people writing some great stuff too - in times like this, with economic uncertainty, plus all the other crap that’s going on in the world, it’s always a good thing to create inspiring and amazing art.

I’m also helping a couple of people in getting their online presence up and running as well.   Hey, I guess I can start calling myself an expert now!  Neato. 

I’m also going to be re-launching my band that a friend and I had last year, new direction, new sound, new songs, and I’m starting to write and record again.  It’s amazing the stuff that you can accomplish when you’re not spending every spare minute and dime working on a house.  Go figure.

 So, I’ve missed you all…..well, okay maybe not ALL of you - some of you I didn’t miss one bit….and you know who you are…but the rest of you I’ve missed a lot.

Looking forward to a prosperous 2009!

Stevie Z

Billie Holiday Makes me Cry.

Aug-25-2008 By steviez

Lady Day.

By Stevie Z

Hot on the trail of the “6 Things” Confessional, comes this little tidbit you may have not known about Yours Truly.

Billie Holiday makes me cry.

No, not the cowboy with the quick draw - that’s Doc Halliday. I’m talking about Billie Holiday, the Jazz Singer.

I think it’s because it’s one of those “perfect storms” of emotion.

  1. It’s evocative of a certain time of my life.
  2. I was introduced to her music by someone I hold very dear to my heart.
  3. C’mon, have you ever heard her voice and her music?!?!? hello!
  4. Her life was tragic from start to too-soon finish, and you could hear it in every note.

Let’s explore, shall we?

I found Billie at a time when my life had no direction, and music was the thing I was clinging to…and hey, there are worse people you could cling to then Lady Day. Something about the pain in her voice…I was like an over-emotional teenager all over again. Then when I read about her life, it just amplified everything that much more.

Secondly, while I was ‘wandering through the wilderness’ I met someone who reminded me that I shouldn’t be such an Emo crybaby, and that I should accept what life throws at me, appreciate it, better it when I can, and not get all freaked out about the stuff I can’t do anything about…and oh yeah, by the way, check out this singer named Billie Holiday, you can borrow my CDs. The Ironic thing…and I do love irony…is that since that time that person has now lost their way, and gotten themselves into something that won’t be easy to extricate themselves from…and there is no way that I can help them as they once helped me. Sometimes, Irony sucks….a lot.

However, if you strip away all of the surrounding events and circumstances from my discovering her music, you still have the music itself - haunting, beautiful, timeless, agonizing, uplifting…those are only worlds, and words can’t quite get you there. Only the music, and the voice can. And damn, she sure is something to look at, too.

Finally, I don’t know how many times I’ve heard from people that when they’re feeling down they put on some Billie Holiday. There’s something instinctual about her voice and her music that just helps you get through, you know what I mean ?

Of course, I’m just sayin’

Stevie Z

Six Random Things About Me…

Aug-21-2008 By steviez

By Stevie Z

    Okay, for those of you who don’t know what an “internet meme” is….well, don’t ask me, I can’t really explain it, if you’re that curious about the specifics go here.   If you’re lazy, like me, accept that I’m going to tell you it appears to be a question or set of questions that someone answers on their blog or podcast, and then ‘tags’ some other people, meaning that now they have to answer the question(s) as well, and then tag more people.  I guess it’s kind of like a chain letter, but one that requires effort.

   Having said all that, I’ve now been ‘tagged’ by 2 people - Bob Goyetche and Mark Blevis to list 6 Random Things About Me….I’ll vary between the fun and frivoulous, and the stuff that inquiring minds want to know:

  1.  If I had inherited all of my father’s creativity and all of my mother’s ambition, I would have been ruling the world by now…instead I’m just this kind of weird guy that a few people have heard about.
  2. I have a love/hate relationship with cats.  And yes, I own 2.  I love their playfulness and intelligence, respect their incredible indifference to the world around them, and am very jealous of their ability to lick themselves anywhere, anytime.
  3. I have huge self-doubt issues whenever I create anything, from a blog post to a podcast episode, to a song, to a comment on someone else’s site.  And that is really odd when you think that I take critisicm very well.  The biggest problem it creates is limiting my creative content and output.
  4. I not only still own a rotary dial phone, it’s hooked up in my basement, and I frequently use it…especially when calling certain people because I know it drives them insane that I’m using such old technology.
  5. I would probably be willing to give up a testicle for trade for an early 70’s era Fender Twin Reverb amp and a Telecaster Thinline guitar…especially in birdseye green with gold hardware…mmmmmmm.
  6. I once got so drunk on Tequila in Duluth, Minnesota that I woke up in the hotel room in the morning in the bathtub naked except for my socks, covered in Dorito crumbs, and with a woman’s name, her phone number and the word “thanks” written on my arm in pen.  And I couldn’t find my jeans anywhere…till I got on the elevator to leave.  Then I found them.   I never did call the phone number….or drink Tequila again.

   So there ya go, that’s 6.  I’ll save the rest for the next time this floats around.   Now I’m supposed to ‘tag’ 6 other people to post this….well, a couple of them don’t have blogs, but I would love to know their anwers.

   My tagees are as follows:    Ignacio Castillo, Robbie Hancock, Sean McGaugheyCat from The Catsfish Show (hey, at least it’ll give ya something new to put on your blog :) , Tommy Vallier,  and Bastion Feddern.

   Okay, for those of you tagged, here (apparently) are the rules, as I was given:
1. Link to the person who tagged you.
2. Post the rules on the blog.
3. Write six random things about yourself.
4. Tag six people at the end of your post.
5. Let each person know they have been tagged.
6. Let the tagger know when your entry is up.

    Okay peeps, it’s up to you now…..

Stevie Z