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A Good Day to Adapt

May 25, 2010 in Blogs

It is Tuesday, which no longer has the crushing workload it once had and so commended itself as an opportunity to do a bit extra.  I had drafted the second article in the Adapting series, the first which actually does any adapting, and so after a bit more cleanup and expansion than I had envisioned I posted it, Adapting Bujold’s Shards of Honor, which occasions announcing it here first and elsewhere momentarily.  This particular adaptation focuses on the string of events that comprise the plot, and how to connect a verser character to so complex a story without necessarily derailing it completely.  That is not what all of the stories will do, but seemed the critical question in this one; hopefully most referees can adapt most of the technological and body skills found in the story, and if not, well, we can talk about them more in the forum (follow the link for Discussion Forums if you don’t know where they are).

The moment I posted it, I went back to the main page and actually looked at it instead of simply clicking through it as I so often do and must have done today and perhaps yesterday, and noticed that yesterday Eric “Tadeusz” Ashley launched a new series himself, a serial novel cleverly named Cereal Novel.  I have already opened the article but not yet read it, but I’ve read his work before and his fiction is good and worth reading, so sight unseen I will ask site fans to support him by reading Cereal Novel:  You Elsewhen, the first chapter of what I’m sure is a promising new story.

I’ve also been doing a bit of music.  Baxter, my primary partner in Collision, came to me Sunday night and asked if we could cover a song.  I told him he knows how I feel about covers, but since maybe you don’t I’ll tell you how I feel about them (but don’t get me started on tracks).  If you’re going to do a song someone else has made popular, you are going to be compared to the original, and almost certainly at a disadvantage.  You should only do them if one of three things is true:

  1. You can do it so much better than the original that the comparison has to make you look good, or
  2. You can do it so completely differently from the original that it becomes apples and oranges and no one would try to compare the two, or
  3. You have an audience who will never have heard the original and so can’t make the comparison.

The first and third are both unlikely when working with a popular song in your own genre, so if I’m going to cover a song I go for the second.  In this case, though, it was a very unusual challenge.  See, the song is a “worship song”, and although “worship” doesn’t really mean that, “worship song” generally means a quiet gentle song through which deep emotions are expressed (where “praise song” generally means a fast, exciting song, although not as consistently).  Collision is a rock band; quiet gentle songs are not really our medium, but it is the worship aspect of this song that particularly caught his ear and I had to arrange it for a rock band without losing the worship aspect entirely, while still making it significantly different from the original.  Then, to complicate the challenge, right now our “rock band” is generally represented by us, that is, two acoustic guitars and one voice, and so I have to convert a worship song into a rock rendition and then adapt the rock rendition for an acoustic set.  When I realized it, I smiled sardonically.

And yesterday, as I was driving two hours with company and two hours without and had about five minutes in the middle to pick up a guitar amd make certain that what I was hearing in my head matched what my fingers were able to do, I wrote that arrangement.  Late last night and earlier today I put a bit of time into putting it “on paper”–actually, using a midi interfacing program to generate the two guitar and one vocal parts, play them back for myself and Baxter, and print sheet music on them.  Computers are wonderful; it probably would have taken me all day to do the papers by hand and a week to record it with a reel-to-reel deck by doubletracking.  Bax thinks he likes it, although he’s going to want to try actually playing the parts live before he commits.

I really am better at music than all this other stuff.  Ah, well, at least I can do the other stuff, too.

–M. J. Young

‘Twas the Night After

December 26, 2007 in Blogs

I did not finish yesterday’s work yesterday. I got called away for an errand while working on the Lutheran forum, and when I returned the computer decided to freeze. Since I had to make a delivery of Christmas dinner and a poinsettia (the decorated tree never arrived) to my mother-in-law, I did so at that moment–and found myself struggling to stay awake at the wheel on the return drive, falling asleep in the driveway until my wife awakened me upon her late return from work. It seemed fruitless to attempt to continue at that point, so Tuesday’s work was finished this afternoon. I had several false starts today, including struggling at one point to awaken because I dreamt it was seven at night and the alarm had never sounded, but it was not yet noon and there was no need to rise.

I am further along today than I anticipated, but still have some ground to cover before I can quit, so I don’t expect to achieve much beyond the norm. I am anticipating a busy day tomorrow, but I’ll tell you about it when it comes.

–M. J. Young

KBPS

October 10, 2007 in Blogs

In the wake of those computer problems, I am trying to catch up. I would like to think that I am working as fast as I can, but truth be told I’m distracted and derailed and jumbled, as if my internal modem is trying to transmit and receive on too many channels and my internal processor is handling too many tasks. My baud rate is not so adjustable as that of a machine, and although some respect me for my processing power, that’s got its limits also.

Yesterday, Tuesday, I managed to finish Monday’s work; today I am hoping to complete what I should have done yesterday, and maybe get started on the e-mail for today. However, I’m not certain I will accomplish any of that, and I’ve got to make dinner as well (and come to think if it, I don’t think I have a clean roasting pan suitable for the pork loin I just put in the microwave, so I have some dishwashing to do as well). We do what we can of what we must, though, so I’ll be getting to that quickly.

–M. J. Young

Incomplete Unofficial Support

September 25, 2007 in Blogs

I was a bit surprised to have a bit of extra time last night, so I tackled the new project I mentioned yesterday, creating links pages for unofficial Multiverser support. I’ve only actually done my own, and it is a paltry beginning which includes links to the Martial Arts site in its new location, Intuition and Surprise, I’m Not a Lawyer, but I Play One in a Game, the three-part Law and Enforcement in Imaginary Realms series, and the three-part Theory 101 series. There are also links to Gaming Outpost (for the Game Ideas Unlimited series), and to the Chaplain’s Corner of the Christian Gamers Guild (for the Faith and Gaming series), but part of me says I really need to go through all those articles, re-index them, and select the cream of the crop for Multiverser support. It’s a lot of work, but I’ll figure it out eventually.

In that connection, I also already put a link on the file copy of the main support page to an as yet non-existent (O.K., existent but not having correct content) page of links to Eric “Tadeusz” “World-a-Week” Ashley’s support materials, which I consider a valuable contribution to the Multiverser corpus. I need to scrape together enough time to tackle those links, which probably will not happen today (it might, though), so I can upload the entire package.

I got an early start today thanks to the cat. I think she was looking for a new hiding place for her kittens and decided to look behind my night table. I was disturbed by the sound of her rooting around back there, and looked at the clock–which was blank, because it had no power. That can be any of several problems, of course, so potential panic arose within me, and I jumped out of bed to determine the nature of the problem. It turned out to be the least problematic problem–the cat had unplugged everything from the outlet–but by the time I’d visited the bathroom and returned, I figured I was awake. Since Tuesday has my heaviest online workload, I figured I might as well stay awake and get started.

So, I’m started.

–M. J. Young

A Brief Nine Hour Recap

September 11, 2007 in Blogs

It appears that the Brief Nine Hour Errand post I mentioned writing yesterday has not resurfaced. Permit me to summarize it briefly, if that is possible. These were the things done since Sunday night, mostly on Monday:

  • The Multiverser.org web site was expanded with a fairly decent support section including On the Fly character creation papers, Magic Skills Worksheets, and hand-outs and maps from the world books. There’s a lot more to do, but at least there is something there.
  • I took my mother-in-law to get medical tests. Since this included a fasting blood test, I had to leave the house around eight so she would not be starving; she was not ready when I arrived, and we had trouble finding the lab (which was inside a building which did not indicate anywhere on the outside that it was there), and then had to go elsewhere for the x-ray. We scheduled this for Monday so that I would not have to make multiple trips this week, but it meant taking her out for breakfast after the tests, which proved to be lunch since it was after noon by then. We stopped by the house before going shopping, and the brief visit to pack away her leftovers from the diner turned into a lost hour. Note that I am fighting for consciousness during the downtimes, and occasionally losing. The trip to the store followed, but my departure from her house was delayed a bit longer than usual because she missed her daughter’s birthday and needed me to deliver card and gift, which had to be prepared. It was after five by the time I was on the road again, and I was exhausted.
  • Mercifully, one of our houseguests manages a sandwich shop/deli, and he was able to arrange for food for everyone at a cost considerably below what I’d expected to pay. On the other hand, it was not pizza, not the sort of thing that is shared among several, and two houseguests arrived late last night who were apparently expected, but not by me. Still, it was after six by the time I got home, and I was completely exhausted and glad to have brought supper with me, which I hid in the oven before crashing for almost three hours, asleep in front of a television. Then I began my morning study.
  • That ten hours was not entirely lost. I took my Romans editing with me and made some progress, when I could stay awake to do it.
  • As I mentioned yesterday, I was logged out on both sides when I got here. That seems to be why I lost the post.

So that’s what I did yesterday.

Today is not doing that much better. It is, of course, Tuesday, and that makes it my busiest day. I was looking for coffee when I arose right around noon when I was told that I had been asked to pick up someone and take him to work, so without coffee I got dressed and made that trip. It dovetailed into the next, taking my wife to work. I already knew that tonight my youngest would have to attend orientation for school, and this would bite into my time here; yet even as I have been writing this I got a phone call insisting that in the very little time I have between now and then I need to take him to the stores half an hour away (the local stores not having the right quality) to acquire a decent bookbag for the start of school in the morning. My predictions at this point have me starting the heaviest part of the workload sometime after midnight, getting up at six to get the boy on the bus before seven, leaving from then to take a houseguest to her school half an hour away, and picking her up from it around one in the afternoon. Hopefully I will be permitted to eat and sleep at some point, but it’s not promising.

However, I am grateful to the houseguest who has eagerly undertaken oversight of dinner. At least everyone will eat, and it will be good, and I might even have the opportunity to enjoy some myself.

I had better get that bookbag. Look for me on the forums later.

–M. J. Young

Driven To Work

September 4, 2007 in Blogs

I did not mention yesterday that I was again logged out. I discovered this when Aaron asked me about consolidating some articles under one account, and I bounced over here to check which account was the current active one. That was eight days after the previous event, but that’s insufficient information on which to base any conclusions. Also, I was logged out of both sides, which are different account names and logins but seem to be in synch on the logout cycle.

It was a late night last night, but I eventually finished everything. I was awakened early enough to think it early, by a cute girl who is very interested in my youngest son, who stayed up so late last night he heard neither the doorbell nor the dog barks both of which were located in the living room where he was sleeping on the couch. It was late enough that I couldn’t reasonably argue the desperate need for more sleep, particularly given the twin facts that Tuesday is usually a very heavy day and I had already agreed to run someone to work (in a few minutes, so I’ll be interrupting myself as soon as I finish this blog post) and to do something online for a friend. To that, I have since had to add running someone else to work, as he was needed abruptly, but overall I’m not unhappy with today’s progress, and I might manage to make headway on more than just the usual.

That is, if I get through the usual I may be able to get beyond it.

–M. J. Young

Six Down Six to Go

August 29, 2007 in Blogs

Thanks in part to a few interruptions, it was six in the morning by the time I managed to finish yesterday’s Tuesday workload. That’s not a complaint, just a fact; some of the interruptions were enjoyable, and other than sitting in the car waiting for my wife to come out of work (during which time I did some editing on those Romans study notes and caught a half hour nap) most of them were relatively brief.

It is now six at night, and a little after; I need to attend to the making of dinner, but I also see substantial activity on the forum, so I’ve got a few hours of work here, too.

The new car is now insured, but I need the proof of insurance papers; I hope to be able to print those tonight, because tomorrow the car goes for a tune-up, and the papers need to be in it. I had to pick up and order parts for that today.

There was a bit of a tiff here while I was asleep, apparently. That friend who so often helps my wife clean her house, who is staying with us at the moment (a situation that still has not been explained to me), decided early this morning to rearrange the living room. When my wife wandered out there bleary-eyed in search of her first cup of coffee, she was immediately distressed by the new arrangement, and blurted out something about it, which really upset the girl who had hoped, of course, that her vision of a better way to arrange the living room would have been seen as a wonderful improvement. There were apologies, and I think it’s been smoothed. The entire account makes me feel secretly better, because I am always distressed by the changes this girl makes around here, and always being told that I need to accept the things I don’t like because of how much help she is. So maybe I have a dark side there. As far as the living room goes, I don’t know whether it was put back as it was or whether I’m just not aware enough of that room (I rarely do more than pass through it) to realize that it has been altered.

I ought to be making myself more aware of the need to make dinner.

–M. J. Young