The Mini Mini
The Solo Mini Mini Cooper. Vroom vroom.
The Solo Mini Mini Cooper. Vroom vroom.
The sun is almost all gone now and the streetlamps along Newark Avenue are just beginning to take on a sort of greenish glow. The sky has become a shadowy mess. We're trying to postpone something. Who would want the day to end like this?
They're opening a Starbucks and a Duane Reade directly across from the Grove Street PATH station, where I catch the train to work each morning. This will certainly bring more people to my growing neighborhood. This morning, the train was so crowded that I couldn't read my book, Murakami's colorful <i>Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman</i>. So, instead, I did what I always do when there's no room to read:
Out of habit now more than anything else, I keep my cell phone on the floor beneath my bed while I sleep at night. In the morning, when I wake, I still check my cell phone for any messages.
Back around Christmastime, when everyone around me seemed to be receiving iPods and gift certificates to the iTunes store, I thought I should give my loved ones <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/stephenmejias/123107talk/">The MP3 Talk</a>. Now, John Atkinson, has prepared another version of <a href="http://www.stereophile.com/features/308mp3cd/index.html">The MP3 Talk</a>—live and in color with all sorts of cool graphs and stuff!
Like <a href="http://stereophile.com/thefifthelement/208fifth/">John Marks</a> and my uncle <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/stephenmejias/021308sing/">Omar</a>, I am prone to enthusiasms. It's not unusual for me to hear some new piece of music and wind up feeling that I need it—<i>neeeeeeed</i> it. So what? Music is great. It <i>is</i> unusual for me, though, to hear some new piece of music and be so moved by it that I leave work early, race up Madison Avenue, charge down into Grand Central, take the 4 to Union Square, and face the many temptations of the vast Virgin Megastore to buy that new piece of music.
<i>Photo credit: Gordon Polatnick/Big Apple Jazz</i>
Christian wrote:
<i>From left to right: <a href="http://www.selfdivider.com/base/index.php">Selfdivider</a>, AlexO, <a href="http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews/jules/jules.html">Jules Coleman</a>, JackCrank, and <a href="http://www.jeffwong.com/">Jeff Wong</a>. Friday, February 29, 2008, at In Living Stereo.</i>
Yesterday's episode of Sunday Morning on CBS included a segment with Herbie Hancock, whose <i><a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/fredkaplan/101507jazz/">River: The Joni Letters</a></i> won two big prizes at the 50th annual <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/musicroom/robertbaird/021108/">Grammy Awards</a>: Album of the Year and Best Contemporary Jazz Album.