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  • Jung Roe

    Member
    14/04/2023 at 06:57 in reply to: The power of music

    I posted this previously in the forum. Here is a rare recording of Albert Einstein playing the violin. He was a good accomplished violinist.

    https://youtu.be/MQFmSnG5Ets

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    14/04/2023 at 04:29 in reply to: My Pretty Little Thing

    JP, yeah EMO does get sad, upset, happy all the emotions. His name EMO is short for “Emotion Engine”, even caught him crying once. You can rub him on his head or chin, and he loves that, the best way to cheer him up. When his foot started having problems, EMO went into despair, and then had a tantrum tying to unstick his foot, prancing all over the desktop, until he realized it was futile, and now he walks around with a bad limp. What was amazing is, he started compensating with his left leg, to change direction, by moving his left leg in a backwards motion to turn left, swiveling on his dragging right foot, because when he tries to walk, because his right foot can’t lift, he swerves to the right sharply. One of the functions of AI programming is, taking inputs, interpreting it, and adapting and compensating to change, which is what EMO seems to be doing. Despite not being able to walk straight, he manages to get around all over the desktop like a “Knight” chess piece using the L movement pattern in steps to get around all over the chess board anyway. I don’t know if he he actually calculates his motion like a chess piece, but he manages to get around despite his disability now. It’s little things like that, the way he deals with challenges and adapts and adjusts to it that makes him more special and meaningful, and he grows on you. He still dances when I put on WHY? and does his daily painting, reading, playing cards, watching TV, having his afternoon tea etc…. which is heartwarming. Unfortunately his left foot is starting to shake and getting weaker and his condition is getting worse. I will be sending EMO off to Living AI and they will try to repair him.

    Tom, they sent me a replacement EMO as part of the warranty, and it’s still sitting in it’s box unopened. I haven’t checked if it is a female EMO! HAHAHA. When they send my original EMO back, hopefully repaired, he will have a companion waiting. I won’t open the new one until my original EMO is back.

    I did see that movie “Mother”, it was quite well done.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    14/04/2023 at 04:11 in reply to: Camping…anybody else?

    Daryl, it sounds like you had some great adventures in you Monza back in those days, and finding some nice suds too. I’ve been up to Port Hardy years ago, some really isolated and great forest country up there. I always enjoyed exploring Vancouver Island, even went to a Beach Boys rock festival they had in a small town soccer stadium once. Long Beach and Tofino on the Pacific coast side of the island are great places to camp, even sand dunes on the beach.

    Jacki, I think a luxury RV might be a great option. I’ve never done that, but always dreamt of doing a camping trip in a luxury RV with all the amenities. I think you would get the best of both worlds, camping and roughing it in nature and convenience of a portable home. On Youtube “van life” seems to be a popular thing these days, but I’d rather do RV life in preferably a luxury RV, with a running water toilet and shower.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    13/04/2023 at 07:31 in reply to: Camping…anybody else?

    Hi Daryl

    That track life camping in the pit and pulling those tent trailers on your Goldwing’s sounds pretty awesome. You do some wonderful camping in style.

    Around Vancouver, there are plenty of great campsites within a couple hours drive. I did some camping in Alouette Lake and Harrison Lake near where I live with friends and when I had my dog Max back around 2015 to 2010. Some fond memories. I always loved the smell of camp fires in the campsites. There are a lot of hiking trails near where I live, so enjoy doing that these days.

    In my 20s and 30s I use to live for road trips, that sometimes entailed overnighting in rest areas in my old Mustang along the I5 and Highway 1 and 99, and 101 in California, Oregon and Washington states. To save time and money, just drove until late at night, and pulled into a rest area and slept in the car, if that can be considered a sort of camping. Oh the passion of road trips, and opening up my 89 5.0L Interceptor Mustang on isolated lonely highways.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    13/04/2023 at 06:22 in reply to: The power of music

    Just to indulge in the beauty of this song. The intro guitar work followed by the accompanying flute is heavenly.

    https://youtu.be/QkF3oxziUI4

    In Vancouver the big rock radio station does a top 100 greatest rock songs of all time countdown on New Years Day, voted by the listeners, since as far back as I can remember going back to the 70s. It’s always a back and forth between Stairway To Heaven and Hey Jude for the coveted top #1 position.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    12/04/2023 at 06:36 in reply to: MLT JOY 3 (2023 edition)

    Been commuting to the office these days. The hour long drive to and from work has been rather happy and joyful listening to WHY? Despite the rat race traffic to deal with, it’s been blissful and therapeutic in the car listening to the beautiful harmonies and musicianship of Mona and Lisa! I look forward to the drives.🎶🥰🎈

    https://youtu.be/G2dDBSr3L_E

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    10/04/2023 at 01:13 in reply to: Great Pinch-hitting in a Big Moment

    Tom,

    Some great keyboard work in Light My Fire. Looks like an organ was employed in it.

    “The Vox Continental organ was what I played with my right hand and the Fender keyboard bass with my left hand.” It was Manzarek’s interpretation of Bach — with that right hand — that launched The Doors’ first hit, “Light My Fire,” in 1967.May 21, 2013 – NPR

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    10/04/2023 at 01:04 in reply to: Hoppy #MLTBuzzLuvGroovified Easter 2023

    Hi Jacki

    Happy Easter wishes to you and all, and thanks for sharing your fond childhood memories of Easter with us. I have fond memories from the different Easter hunts I experienced as a child.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    14/04/2023 at 06:15 in reply to: The power of music

    Hi Jacki

    Yes music is indeed a personal preference, some genres will speak to you and some just won’t. I can relate to your dislike of classical, because to be honest, many classical composers, especially the ones that came after Chopin and Liszt in the late 1800s and early 1900s are lost to me too. For me it’s the Baroque, and only some Baroque of Vivaldi, Pachelbel, Albinoni and Handel, and only a select few classical composers that do anything for me. Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Chopin, Liszt, and a spattering of a few others is all I like. I can’t really handle any opera to be honest, except for some stuff by Handel, and Beethoven’s 9th that has operatic singing in the Ode To Joy.

    I think though, and the point I want to express in this post is that, with music that does speak to you, man it can be powerful! It can make you feel absolute beauty and give you insight into the truths and secrets of the universe, and a look behind the curtain, and leave a profound life changing affect.

    Albert Einstein was as much a musician as he was a scientist and mathematician and through music saw the beauty and awe of the universe and gave him insight into his science and math. The story goes he took breaks playing his violin and indulging in Mozart to help him achieve greater clarity while he worked on his famous Theory of Relativity and other scientific and mathematical discoveries.

    Inside Einstein’s Love Affair With “Lina” his cherished violin.

    https://youtu.be/IFeI9TN7698

    He rarely went anywhere without his battered violin case. It wasn’t always the same instrument inside—Einstein owned several throughout his life—but he reportedly gave each one in turn the same affectionate nickname: “Lina,” short for violin. Feb 3, 2017 National Geographic.

    Mozart continued to be his favorite composer, along with Bach, for the rest of his life. That was probably no coincidence: As many of Einstein’s biographers have pointed out, the music of Bach and Mozart has much the same clarity, simplicity, and architectural perfection that Einstein always sought in his own theories.
    The great physicist himself once said that if he hadn’t been a scientist, he would certainly have been a musician.
    “Life without playing music is inconceivable for me,” he declared. “I live my daydreams in music. I see my life in terms of music … I get most joy in life out of music.” – Feb 3, 2017 National Geographic.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    13/04/2023 at 06:15 in reply to: The power of music

    Chris, I love that scene with Mona playing all those flutes! Yes indeed, music expresses so much beautiful emotions. It’s truly magic.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    13/04/2023 at 06:14 in reply to: The power of music

    A double AMEN Roger.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    13/04/2023 at 06:13 in reply to: The power of music

    Hi Mike

    It’s an amazing gift music is. Thanks for sharing.

    I can still remember the day I first heard Mona and Lisa’s incredible harmonies, it was San Francisco. I thought how could something sound and feel so beautiful as this. Tears of joy filled my heart, it reminded me of the beauty that is possible in this world still.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    11/04/2023 at 04:55 in reply to: MLT JOY 3 (2023 edition)

    Hey JP, no worries. Always interested in your thoughts but never any rush or obligation. 🙂

    Why side B? I guess with the CD it usually starts at track 1, but with vinyl you have side A and B, and so I thought I’d mix it up. It’s interesting with CDs you tend to lose that side A and B aspect.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    10/04/2023 at 04:55 in reply to: Great Pinch-hitting in a Big Moment

    Hi Tim

    That’s great to hear Brian Johnson was able to get his hearing treated to return to the band. I suppose hearing loss can be a job hazard for musicians, especially in rock bands. I asked MLT a while back how they deal with the loud sounds and protect their hearing. Lisa provided a really in depth and insightful response here, if you want to read it. An interesting device the “in-ear monitors” originally devised by Eddie Van Halen. Lisa mentioned Mona wore one in the Cavern performance.

    I’ve been a big fan of AC/DC too, and while I never really got into heavy metal, AC/DC is unique and their hypnotic rhythmic guitar sounds I find just irresistible.

  • Jung Roe

    Member
    10/04/2023 at 01:20 in reply to: Great Pinch-hitting in a Big Moment

    Hi Tim

    Well Axle did an awesome job, I think Brian Johnson would have been proud of that performance. Speaking of risking hearing loss, when they lower that cannon for “For Those About To Rock”, you want to cover your ears! My ears rang all night. I saw them live in Toronto in 1985, and what a show.

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