16 April 2011

#twitterjoketrial

This:

Lead to this:


(As seen at the #twitterjoketrial gig, which functioned as a fundraiser for an idiot who joked on Twitter that he was going to blow up an airport but got taken too seriously and has now evolved into a cause Stephen Fry would go to jail for)

15 April 2011

My First Paper©

The full thing will be online next Tuesday for everyone to enjoy (I'll link it up then), but for now, you can enjoy the abstract and be baffled by the number of initials in my name.

7 April 2011

Goals

I've got a list of things that would be very nice if I would achieve them at some point but wouldn't mind very much if I didn't. One could call them 'goals' - which I have done in the title of this post in the sake of brevity - but I'm not getting all worked up about them. I would view my life as complete though if I were to make (one of) them reality.
The list comprises:
  • Publishing in the BMJ (I like their font)
  • Publishing in the Guardian (I like their font and their interview style)
  • Owning a dishwasher
I would be especially pleased to achieve the latter, though I now seem to have a shot at achieving the second one in a 'future science writers prize' organised by the Wellcome Trust, the Guardian and the Observer, which are three of my favourite entities in this world. The prize includes publication in the Guardian and £1000 which ought to be enough for a dishwasher. I think I'm entering.

6 April 2011

Cold Cave @ The Lexington 5 April 2011

Even Charlie Brooker on a bad-hair day wouldn't be able to muster the amount of vitriol needed to review opening act Drum Cunt (...), so we'll just leave you with a warning.

Cold Cave seem to expand further everything time I see them: this time there's five of them. Or rather, four of 'them' and Wesley Eisold who has decided to become David Bowie. Last time he seemed to not even notice there were any people in the same room, and now he seems to be on the way to become an extravagant frontman - he's got the flashy rings and goth shirt to show it. The photographers apparently were in the know about this change in appearence as they gathered en masse in front of the stage in an attempt to blind the entire audience with an abundance of bright flashes not seen since the last supernova (which is not an awful lot better than the deafening effect that usually ensues after seeing Cold Cave).
Once control over some of the senses is regained, confusion reigns. Is this camp band really the same Cold Cave as before, though with added guitar player? Is Wesley Eisold really making all those Brett Anderson-like poses on stage? Okay, he is supposed to be a poet, so he's allowed to be weird, but this seems like 180 degree turn in the opposite direction. Hell! One song even sounds like a 'Love is a Battlefield' cover (if it was: kudos to you, Sir, my ears weren't cooperating enough to actually make the words out)!
Eisold still can't really sing, but we've got whole hordes of tv shows just to tell us that it isn't about the singing, but the songwriting, so yeah, that's okay. Or is it? On the first album, the songs were loud enough to hide the fact that most of the lyrics were just shouted into the mic, now that he seems to be flirting with disco, his lack in holding a tune kinda shows. 'The Great Pan is Dead' is still a loud enough song to make for it, but other than it Cold Cave seem to be this year's Foals, which is sad as I really enjoyed their first album (and might have already ordered the new one on a whim - any takers?)