Sunday, July 29, 2007

Illuminares Recorded

I missed Illuminares, the lantern festival held at Trout Lake, this year. It has become one of my Vancouver traditions to be with friends for it. However, in this super fast-moving summer, the plans to gather for the festival did not come together and Rufus's concert, one that I bought tickets for several months in advance, became scheduled on the same night.

What I missed by not making it to Illuminares was the festive and somewhat magical setting of Trout Lake at sunset and into the early night. The show that the volunteers and all of the attendees put on is great. The creativity, time, and effort that is put into all the costumes and lanterns is incredible to see. Late last night I luckily got a glimpse of the magic of Illuminares thanks to the photography of MA. A full gallery is up now and I encourage you to check it out.

A plan to attend Illuminares next summer has already been created. A group lantern will be created in the theme of Hawaii. Stay tuned for more details as the festival gets closer.

Rufus Live

Rufus Wainwright played the Centre for Performing Arts last night and I was in the house to see the show.

Sarah Slean
opened with a solo set that bounced back and forth between soft soul-bearing ballads and carnivalesque cheeky numbers. She was really working to entertain the audience with her stories of misconceptions of Paris, Vancouver versus Toronto, and enjoying the sophisticated venue of the Centre for her show.

Two sets of performance by Rufus included lots of numbers with his full band, which now includes a full horns (sax/flute, trumpet, french horn) section, and several times accompanied simply with his own piano-playing. For me it wasn't the never-let-me-down performance that he put on a few years at the Vogue Theatre, but it was full of highlights. Shining moments for me were Harvester of Hearts, Slideshow, Tulsa, and the Judy Garland numbers. The backdrop, explained after the first few songs, resembled the American flag with the bad things of the country represented in the black and white stripes and the good in the brooches that took the places of the stars. The encore included the skirt, nylons-only legs, high heels, and bright red lipstick that has become the signature showstopper for this tour. The crowd was roaring with their approval.


The ticket was printed "No Cameras/No Recorders," so photos (Vancouver) and video (not Vancouver) are borrowed.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Caprese

I love the combo of tomatoes, fresh basil, and boccocini dressed with olive oil, balsamic vinegar, and salt and pepper. It has been showing up over and over on my lunch and dinner plates - in sandwiches, in a toasted panini, on a pizza crust, and as a stand-alone salad.

Tonight, the TB&B was on top of mixed greens. The big-ass tub of prewashed mixed salad greens was on sale at IGA. It is a lot of greens for a single person to consume in the time that it stays fresh!

Monday, July 23, 2007

The "long time no post" round-up

Not a complex post. Just a mention of some of my new finds from the past few weeks in Vancouver.

Eating:

Checked out Toratatsu, the lil' sister restaurant of Shiru Bay. Rather than the center of trendy, stylish Yaletown, this one is tucked in close to the approach to Stanley Park on Denman. No open kitchen, so it doesn't have the lively attitude of the Bay. Gorgeous deep red walls that glow in candle light, funky artifacts and decorations. Lots of carryovers from Shiru Bay on the menu at what I thought were possibly slightly lower prices - Ebi Chili Mayo, yum! Service was iffy.

Shopping:

Enflux! Saw this store from the B-Line bus route and looked like a worthy reason to explore what is happening on West 10th Ave. This store reminds me a lot of Canoe and Relish in Portland; stores that I fell in love with. I'll be looking out for the launch of their new website, which I was told would be up in a couple of weeks. Came home with this tea stick by Blomus. Mmm, tea stick.

Viewing:

Transformers Movie (2007) - I had been looking forward to this since a time when Michael Bay and Spielburg bringing it to the screen was just a rumour. That could have lead to an unreasonable level of expectation. I loved how good the movie looked. I loved the cheesy lines and situations. I expected more Transformers. Too much focus on humans. I want to see robots disguised as vehicles. I want to see the full Autobot army fight off the Decepticon army. Maybe in the sequels.

Ratatouille - This one got it right spending a bit of time on the humans and lots of time on the, here, rats. Looked amazing. Paris was gorgeous. The frantic kitchen shots were great. Fun! Something that I thought would be passed over from Disney animated features to the Pixar movies would be the big ballad song scenes (think Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin), but neither Disney nor Pixar seems to do this anymore. I'm not quite sure when it died (but suspect it was about the time that Disney features went to pot - Pocahontas or Hercules maybe), but it is something that will have its time on the screen once again.

Listening:

Interpol - Our Love to Admire. I'm surprised that iTunes isn't smart enough to recognize a typo in its search field. I mistyped "inteprol" into the search field and it came up with no results. I would have thought it would pick up that I meant "Interpol." The disc arrived today as a contest prize via Beyond Robson. Free music is good.

Ryan Adams - Easy Tiger. I own Gold, Demolition, and Rock N Roll by Ryan Adams. I listen often to Gold, but rarely listen to Demolition and Rock N Roll. After my first listen, I'm guessing Easy Tiger will be somewhere between the two groups in listen counts. I read that Easy Tiger was released as a solo artist album due to the music label's demands. Though Ryan's voice is very recognizable upfront, this album does sound more like a band than the much-more-solo disc Gold.

Infuriating:

Purolator. I spoke to four separate Purolator employees on three separate days to finally make arrangements to pick up a package today. I understand that couriers are a service that caters to the business market (i.e., Monday to Friday, 9-5 crowd), and know that each and every time I will be receiving a package it will be a hassle. I did not expect that the hassle would be each time I was given a pick-up time, I should have considered it only tentatively scheduled. For each pick-up time, I called to confirm the parcel was at the correct location and was available, I was given a new pick-up time and told that the previous employee was mistaken with the information they provided.

Friday, July 6, 2007

It's nuts that I'm still in school

Very early in my schooling career (kindergarten or early primary school) I planted a chestnut and it grew. When this plant was about two feet tall and had just a few broad leaves, it got transplanted to the lakeside property that my parents part-own.

For each year that I've been in school, the tree has grown, receiving an occasional pruning from the folks at the lake. I visited the lake this past weekend and the tree is huge, now towering over the trailers and trucks.


Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Home for a rest

I was back to Revelstoke for the Canada Day long weekend. For now, a few photos collected from those few days back home.