Incidentally, I found an escape hatch. And if made one recipe this morning, you know, then I could stitch this afternoon, knowing that I had that new recipe for caramels done that I wanted to give for gifts this year….
And I could make a recipe of Sringerle dough and get it in the fridge, right? Ooooooh geeeeeeee. But hey, the music is good! I receive a lot of emails that I gloss over and sometimes unsubscribe.
Yours, however, is always lovingly appreciated. I may gloss over some, but never do I consider unsubscribing. When I have time, I read them. I read through to the bottom! So, on the note of procrastinating, you send emails daily except for weekends?
How do you have time for anything else?! We can all see ourselves in it. You have helped me recognize aspects of myself, which is much more valuable than getting the things done that we procrastinate over!
I loved this post. This time of year, though, everything kind of gets muddled! Procrastinate, procrastinate, put off all the things you hate — sounds like me. All I can say is this: Go on! Thanks, Sarah! How that resonates! I have just a little stitching to do on a piece that needs to go to the framer.
I planned to make a sweater for my sister for Christmas — I have two inches of the back knitted. I feel better that you have the disease too. Should we start a program? Merry Christmas, Mary! Yes, we could put off the meetings each week….
Well, bi-monthly this time, because something came up. How about we meet twice a year? Hey, Charlotte, my friends and I started a Procrastinators Anonymous several years ago!
We should be having our first meeting some time in the next couple of months. LOL, Mary!!! I know the feeling. I just finished my last ornament, the baby quilt for xmas gifts. Thank you for a wonderful year of distractions Mary and thank you for all your hard work. Have a wonderful, blessed and safe Christmas and New Year.
Mary, Mary, Mary , we all know exactly what you mean and at this moment we all feel like we can feel a little less guilty about those lovely projects we have tucked away waiting to be finished because we know they will be beautiful but they are BORING. I started crocheting a layette for the birth of my first niece. When I finished it some 18 years later, I gave it to a friend for her first child.
Lesson: never hurry a project! So you have a whole year to finish it — technically. I can totally relate to this! I bite off more than I can chew all the time — My cheerleader tells me the same things!! Yes, I could easily have written this same post. The only difference is that I sit before I go to bed and make my plan for the next day, rather than in the morning. But the outcome is [often] the same.
And my redwork project is nearing its 10th anniversary! I am starting to think that over-optimism is not bad, though, because it does get us started. And sometimes, we do something amazing that makes it all worthwhile! Mary, I think this beautiful red work runner would be fabulous at Valentines day! It is red, has hearts…perfect! New goal! Perhaps all who suffer from this syndrome do so as a result of having a creative mind??
One can hope. And here I am reading your blog rather than working on my Christmas ornament gifts. I LOVE your website and your blog. I have only found you recently — via your Craftsy posts. I do wish you would teach a Craftsy class!! Thanks so much for all the inspiration! Thanks, Margaret! Yes, I think it definitely stems from having a creative mind. Now I feel better about it! I must say, though the runner is spectacularly beautiful, I could never attempt it! I need the variation of colour and stitch to keep me interested.
Hello, Other Alice! Yep, it can be particularly trying, to stitch only in one color on one big project. In our defense, it is just that we have so many things we dream of doing, and fully intend to do them!! Hurray Us!! This text made me smile. You know, when my windows were the cleanest ones and all my rooms were in the best order?
Of course, when I had to study for my exams. Which must be done for Christmas Eve. Qlons - "Hiver" - BPM. Qlons - "Summer " - BPM. FLA 04 Jul 13 Techno. Reve En Couleurs EP. Tus Ojos EP. Tus Ojos - BPM. Etrange Lundi - BPM.
Tus Ojos Remixes EP. Grand Angle. Grand Angle - BPM. Rama - BPM. Ice Motion - BPM. Osmosis - BPM. Morning Lights. Morning Light - 61 BPM. Inscrutable Sphere - BPM.
Azar - 74 BPM. Mac Boxer. Strictly House original mix - BPM. Perpetual Motion original mix - BPM. Inclusif Is This Techno? Vol Barber - "Ascenders" - BPM. Kevi - "Hypno" - BPM. Xzique - "Same" - BPM. Talkin' Deep Vol Animalist - "Timber" - BPM. Underground Musique Vol Qlons - "Constellation" - BPM. Deep Club Connection Vol Let's Get Deeper Vol Teino - "" - BPM. Ricochet - "Issues" - BPM. Tominic - "Shine" original mix - BPM.
Sonority - "Evolved" original mix - BPM. Oniris - "Summertime" original mix - BPM. Peet - "Timers" original mix - BPM. Minotor - "Innervisions" original mix - BPM. Mononoid - "Fialka" original mix - BPM. S22 - "Wish You Were Gear! Egokind - "Blood" original mix - BPM. Frazier - "Hey Coco! Koelenz - "Marco" original mix - BPM.
Masterton - "Mathilda" original mix - BPM. Ariose - "Mist" original mix - BPM. Macajey - "Blooms" original mix - BPM. Review: Clocking in at 50 tracks, Tour shows that the German label isn't just about naive trance melodies and rickety, minimal beats. It starts with the deep ambience of Tominic's "Shine", which over the course of nine minutes moves into bleepy, minimal pulses. Despite this, trance fans won't be left disappointed; there's the buzzsaw bass and organic textures of Theo Meier's "Eichhorn", the gentle, spiralling melodies of Peet's seductive "Timers" and best of all, the brittle rhythm and day-glo hooks on Reinier Zonneveld's "Gevorderd Spelers".
This time around the material dives much deeper into full-on psychedelia, yet retains -and even improves on- the band's excellent songwriting. While a lot of contemporary psych bands revel in endless blasts of somewhat monotonous spacerock, it has become a rare thing to find an album of song based psychedelia, which is exactly what 'Broken Circle' is.
This edition is limited to only copies on black vinyl. Recorded on the tail-end of a year playing clubs and festivals across North America, Australia and Europe opening for Dan Auerbach and Dr. Dog, and more recently for Alberta Cross , this new album brings heavier grooves and flavor to the '60s harmonies sound the band is known for. Unfairly, this album has always remained obscure, even among Voxx releases. Perhaps this is due to their style, which is freeform and creative, rather than the formulaic approach audiences seem to prefer.
With influences ranging from Cream to Led Zep to little-known British bands like July, Head blew a lot of minds in Los Angeles in the early '90s with their light show and extended trip-jams. For their album debut, they chose a different approach: using all the studio tricks at their command to make a finely-crafted collage of sounds designed to flow through a listener's most spaced-out headphone session.
But this long album also includes most of their live freakout favorites, and there are frequent moments of sublime ensemble playing. The band is fronted by Heath Green, a singer who bears the Eddie Hinton mantle as much as anyone living does.
Check them out performing live in the studio for the Spectra Sonic Sound Sessions here. Prepare to be blown away! Musically the band still moves somehere between The Sonics and Reigning Sound, with a touch from The Hives as well, while never losing their main focus: writing future sixties pop classics, served with the power and intensity of punk. Pulling from the roots of rock, soul, ballads, folk and jam this hybrid sound feels as comfortable as your old jeans and sneakers on a stroll through sunlit paths.
Get-up-and-jam tracks are mixed with patient ballads and they all sound distinctive. Superior songwriting, analog processing and a self-evident dedication to musical excellence across the board has resulted in a total package of musical intensity.
Take a pause, just for a moment. Check Hollis Brown out. That task can wait. That email can wait. Invest just a single moment to take a listen to this amazing band. They clearly enjoy weaving solos throughout non-traditional song structures, wheeling around like a Ray Manzarek curiosity. Eerie, spindly guitar sounds lie within the mix, voicing nostalgic progressions evocative of '60s West Coast psychedelia.
One of the most unknown artifacts that ever came from the American psych-folk land. Originally released in by TOPO records. It has an exact reproduction of the original cover, label, 4-page insert and poster as well as extra triptych insert with bio and photos.
Two extra tracks are also included. Included are all the band's A- and B-sides as released by Deram during the years Masque Club band. Four lovely re-tellings of classic songs from the sixties. Sleeve artwork is by John Hurford.
A superb collection of sing-along power-pop, bittersweet midtempo melodic-punk and some killer blasts of mean punk'n'roll thrown in for good measure. A must for fans of the Spanish punk pop sound of the '90s and for anyone interested in classy punk rock. These recordings date from and were made at studios in Cologne and surroundings.
The material was produced by Toby Robinson, mainly to have fun at the studio. Bands would come in for practice sessions, to record demos, and during slack periods impromptu jams would happen. Most of these sessions were recorded by Toby, and they feature Toby himself plus a revolving cast of friends and musicians some of them apparently big Kraut names using made up monikers.
Lovingly curated by master collectors extraordinaire, remastered from the best sources and packaged with informative liner notes and pictures. Busy Bee are proud to help put out the 11th installment in the series, jam-packed with delights you've never heard of. After two volumes of only US bands this one goes back to the initial formula 's from all around the world- and once again lets you explore great sixties punk and pop from Africa, Asia, America and Europe.
Unfortunately no tracks from Antarctica. Maybe on vol 12, right? Limited edition of copies, vinyl only. Grab it while you can! SIDE 1: 1. The toxic sound of '60s garage punk never sounded so good!
0コメント