Monthly Archive for February, 2006

New Members of the Family

It is my pleasure to semi-officially notify you of what many of you all already know: James Patrick McGuirk and Margaret Claire McGuirk, or Jimmy and Maggie as we’ve taken to calling them, were born on Tuesday, February 14th, 2006. We’re sketchy on the details, like how much they weighed, and at exactly what time they were born, but we do know that they exist, are perfectly healthy, and are absolutely beautiful. And now we have photographic proof: Uncle John has sent me a few of the very first photos ever taken of them, and, being the resident technophile in the McGuirk family, it’s my responsibility to put them up and distribute them widely.

Here’s a link to the Flickr photo set, and here’s a cute sample to get you psyched:

The Twins together

In other news, I’m told that Aunt Cathy is doing a bit better, but still making a slow and painful recovery from the whole ordeal. All my thoughts and prayers are with her, and I’m sure yours are too.

Now, on the other side of the country, I have to congratulate my awesome cousin Michelle for the delivery of her baby girl, my new cousin Keira LaSalle Johnson!

Keira LaSalle Johnson

With Keira, we do know that she weighed 8 lbs, 6.6 oz and was 21 inches tall (long?) at birth. Michelle and Sean have been much more proactive about appeasing extended family about unimportant but notable details like that.

It’s been a good week. A great week. Thanks be to God that everyone’s come through this process alive and well and that we have three new gorgeous additions to our family.

This is the meaning of joy.

UPDATE:  James was 5lb 10oz, Margaret was 6lb 6oz.  It should be noted that these weights are anomalously large, given everything.  I’m told the average for twins generally is around 5lbs flat.  This is fantastically good news.  I love having healthy cousins…

A Scanner Darkly

Any movie based on a Philip K. Dick novel is, probably, going to be really good and really mindblowing. A Scanner Darkly looks no different (link is a direct quicktime link).

(0)

And I Broke It

I have no idea how, but I broke my blog.  My b.  I’ll fix it tomorrow.

Intro to Western Music – A Mini-Review

MU1 is called “Introduction to Western Music,” but thus far it’s been “Introduction to Musical and Audio Concepts with Western Examples.” Most of the work that we’ve done in the first two weeks has been, basically, an extended exercise to equip us with a musical-analytical framework.

This has been a valuable experience in and of itself. It’s been a long time since I played any music intensively, and our discussions of key and mode and harmony, and particularly our refresher on musical notation bring to mind long-dormant memories of afternoons at my early piano teacher’s house. I remember how the white shades on Susan’s french doors used to blow in the wind when the front windows were open in the spring and summer. Sometimes I’d wear shorts to my lessons, and the underside of my leg would squeak on her polished piano bench. I used to practice in our living room at Arbor Drive. The first real memory of me playing the piano was when my cousin Sarah-Jane came out to visit (no idea how old I was). She brought her sheet music to practice. I remember watching her play, then get up and walk into the kitchen. I jumped on the piano bench and started to play, just looking for sounds that sounded like they should be together. After that, Mom started me with Susan.

My current music teacher is neither as tall, blond or pretty as Susan, but has an undeniable and unique appeal all his own. Professor Josephson is a 50ish, small, mildly squat, graying man with notably big ears. (Upon meeting him, one cannot help but wonder if this last notable attribute is in some way responsible for his other immediately notable one: his dazzling, passionate, deep love of music.)

Class meets Monday, Wednesday, Friday at 9AM. There is a 2.5 hour listening session on Wednesday afternoons. The typical format of the class is that we talk about musical concepts for a while, perhaps with Prof. Josephson playing notes on the Stetson Grand off to the right in our small, stadium seating classroom. Then we listen to song samples, sometimes whole, sometimes just quick sections to illustrate a point.

Discussion is not like most classes, to put it lightly. Professor Josephson is a stickler for good grammar, in both written and spoken form. (Strunck & White is a required book for the course.) He particularly detests the use of fillers like “like”, “um”, or “uh.” When he feels the need to pause to think of how to phrase something correctly, he just breathes out in a particularly throaty manner, his head arched slightly back. The look in his eye is when he does this is of mild shock, not dissimilar to a man surprised not to find he tea in its customary cupboard. He checks another cupboard of his vast stores, frowns that someone put his tea back in the wrong place, then leans his head back forward and launches into his now fully formed thought. All the while, this mildly throaty breath has been slowly given back to the world, perhaps his span spins a bit at the wrist, conjuring up the words.

He is terrible with names, the fact of which he made full-disclosure the first day. People who are not too right or not too wrong do not need names. People who respond outside of this anonymous average trigger Josephson’s realization that he does not remember their name. Hearing it, he points, repeats the name, and walks on. He tries to look like he’ll remember it now, but smiles anyway out of self-knowledge.

The lectures, such as they are, are filled to the brim with historical and personal anecdotes, interesting musical etymologies, and sardonic, semi-cynical commentary on the state of the American political system. What comes across most, though, is a powerful love of the music we study in class. There have been several times when we noticed tears in his eyes while he was discussing topics in class. The two examples most prominent in my head are when he talked about Bach and his compositional genius, and when he talked about Leontyne Price, the African-American soprano prodigy, who seems to have stolen his heart from a very young age.

It’s a great class, with enough energy, richness, and daily surprise to get me out of bed early three days a week. There’s maybe no better compliment I can give than my consistent attendance.

The Stories I Should Have Told

Yes. Back. Alive. Well. Upbeat. Breathing.

I have five minutes before I have to get to my class, and there are a lot of thoughts just bubbling up inside me. Rather than get them all down on paper/blog, I thought I’d just list off to you the things I’m going to be writing about in the next week or so:

  • Just one shining moment from my trek, back in India. It was exhilarating and spiritual and I never really wrote about it.
  • How Clancy came and left our lives, and how it feels different without him.
  • I went to Kansas between Christmas and New Years and had an amazing time. My cousins rock. You shall soon know how much.
  • New Years Resolutions. I’m actually keeping them this year, doing pretty well, for the first time… ever. I’ve lost about 9 pounds in 3 weeks. This is a good thing.
  • Richard Clarke is an amazing human being. Mini-book review of “Against All Enemies.”
  • Dave Eggers is close to being added to my list of idols, just following JFK and Bono. Mini-book review of “How We Are Hungry.”
  • My classes are great this semester, as well as very managable. Thank God. Updates and descriptions of each one to follow.
  • Solitude does wonders for concentration: My life in the Rock.
  • Politics, politics. The Republicans can’t even spell shame anymore, let alone have enough decency to remember what it actually is. A quick rant on ethics, policy, and how we need someone (Governor Warner, perhaps?) who just knows how to govern. The place is falling apart. Also, how George W. Bush is killing old people, and Newt Gingrich may actually have the right idea about healthcare reform and UN Reform.

That’s it for now. Stay Tuned. I’ve got all this damn energy now, all these thoughts buzzing around, and it’s your collective responsibilty to help me process them and figure out how to move us forward or better appreciate where we are right now.

Here’s to the Clean Slate.