Lunar Orchestra
Monday, February 25th, 2008Okay that would be awesome.
Anyway,
This week has been a busy week for everyone, for some reason or another. It seems several people I know or relatives of people I know are ill or injured, and so I would like to take this beginning-of-post opportunity to wish all of those folks well.
Also, there has been insane levels of work (at least on my end, and I know with other folks) being put into school. Around this time you get the whole ‘when is this term over’ feeling, and I once complained (unnecessarily loudly, I’ll admit) about how glad I was that the break was coming up (at that time) in three weeks. And he argued (correctly, I feel) that I would feel that way regardless of whether it had been the seventh week of a ten week term or the twelfth week of a fifteen week term. But still, the end looms in sight.
And that marks the end of serious time.
In other news, I have recently been speaking with one of my professors to try and develop my Senior Honors Thesis, which (I hope) will end up being a game. I wasn’t sure if that would end up being acceptable, but I took a brief look at the kinds of theses we have in our library (we house them all for mildly clueless people like myself). And there was a masters thesis (I wasn’t paying attention to what kinds of theses I was looking at) that was simply the user interface to a computer game, so I figure if I step down the level of seriousness -Senior Honors Thesis instead of masters thesis- and step up the level of complexity (I assume, of course, since I did not fully read and therefore cannot fully appreciate the student’s thesis) -by making a complete, or relatively complete, game instead of just the interface to one- we should be good. This is all hope and speculation of course. Nothing has yet been submitted. When everything is set up, though, I would like to describe some of my ideas.
On….. um… Wednesday? Some friends and I watched the lunar eclipse, which was really cool. Of course, it was also extremely cold – so much so that my camera would continually say that my brand new batteries were dead. But we had a lot of fun, and for you, I have a picture!
So take that.
Though a note for any of you stargazing folks out there. I don’t know what possessed me to listen to the news people when they said the time of the eclipse, because, as an astronomical event, it took like 45 minutes to get any really nifty shots.
And finally, this Saturday was the Cardinals on Wheels Chicago Symphony Orchestra trip. We had fewer people go than we had planned, and that was mildly disappointing, but that was due to about a hundred thousand things going slightly awry. But we had a small, devoted group, that was really excited to go and that had a lot of fun.
As for the performance, it was amazing. Really amazing. There was this featured solo pianist who was essentially the epitome of incredible. She was a very small older woman who would play the piano incredibly smoothly in some places, and in others slammed on the keys such that her hair would bounce. She was intense.
And a picture from before we left.










