Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Kuyaviak goes funky

Too stingy to buy stuff recorded on LP records anew on digital media - rather spending countless more expensive hours on digitizing them, I have made an exception for stuff I only have on cassette tape. The straightforward reasoning here is that I do not have any working cassette tape player anymore - and what does one do when waking up with a song in ones head?

iTunes to the rescue. Damn. Dayem! The music was so much better then. I downloaded some Jeff Beck group albums. "Rough and Ready" is a masterpiece, never mind the proto-hardrock vocals (they would have been Rod Stewards if Jeff did not have that car crash that broke up his first Group). The solo in Train Train was clearly the reason I started playing.

But this morning, for no apparent reason I woke up with a song that I did not hear for - well - 30 years? - which is Chinatown by Michal Urbaniak, the Polish Jazz Fusion Violinist. It is from Fusion III of 1975, but that took some Googling while on a phone conference. What a great album, why don't they make such music anymore, weird and way out, but melodic and full of drive and energy. Zbigniev Namyslovksy's Kuyaviak Goes Funky is also on there, as are some hardcore wordless vocals from Urszula Duziak.

It seems that my music processing has caught up till at least the early seventies. Odd that hardcore fusion stuff pops up in your head after an evening of hardcore coding. Well, my head, maybe not yours. Fusion III is playing now and pages in most of the seventies and early eighties. Next will probably be Herbie Hancock, Jean-Luc Ponty and Mahavishnu.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

rm -rf

This is why you should make backups. I was at the International Rexx Language Symposium. I was messing with the symbolic links in /usr/bin. Somehow my rm -rf rx*.dylib gained an extra space, just before the splat. I was root. And I was tired.

The amazing thing is that the machine kept on running, but died slowly over the next few days. This is no big surprise, because there is some essential Unix stuff like pam in there. So I could not switch screens anymore, nor mount usb stick discs or start applications that did not run yet. Keynote failed after a few hours, but Adobe reader kept on trucking, to the level I could hold my second presentation using it and a previously saved-as-pdf Keynote.

I make time machine backups - so when at home after the flight from the UK I mounted the backup disc on another machine, and used zip-y (after I found there was a number of symbolic links in that directory) and unzip to restore. I had to repair the permissions on the volume, then repair the disc structure. After that the machine ran like before.

This is why you should make backups.