Apparently Germany hates our cat

Our kitten Logan provides hours of entertainment at our house, and when we’re lucky we’re able to capture it on video: Kitteh going after balloon

Entertaining? Yes, but apparently Germany doesn’t like the video and has banned YouTube from showing it in that country.

I’m joking about the Germans not liking Logan, but the reality of it is that apparently this video is in violation of German copyright law, because our video has music “licensed and owned by Sony Music Entertainment.”

This just goes to show how asinine copyright law can be in some countries.  We didn’t intend to have this music playing as a soundtrack to Logan’s balloon hunting, it just happened to be on.  If I were to edit the audio out, I pretty much would be forced to eliminate Logan’s talking (or at least need to spend more time than anyone should editing a cat video). 

Last month I submitted a dispute with YouTube, albeit citing US law (which probably won’t be effective for a German takedown), but it has yet to be reviewed.

Monday’s to come Tuesday

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Ok, so I am technically making a post for Monday, but I am promising better content for Tuesday in the form of two posts. Mondays are hard for me as I follow my day at work with band rehearsal with Ken Stevens. Tonight was actually the first night of practice, and I left with a book full of drumming notes and a sore left wrist – I guess it has been a while since I’ve rehearsed a full evening.  Definitely a good time though. It feels nice to be back in the Saddle.

See you Tuesday!

Seeing Muse

Last night I went to the concert that we’ve been waiting 10 months to see – Muse at the Pepsi Center.  We originally bought tickets last December for a show that was supposed to happen in April, but a day-of-concert snowstorm postponed the show until October.  I’ll have to admit, with as much time that passed between buying the tickets and going to the show, I had a hard time getting excited about going – especially considering that Muse is #2 on my Last.fm list.

Once we got there, all that changed.  Muse definitely made it worth the 10 month wait, putting together a set-list that was top-tier.  With the exception of New Born, Assassin and Hyper Music, they played every song I wanted to hear. 

The stage was something else. Passion Pit opened for them playing in front of these three pillars, then when they finished the area in front of the pillars remained empty while the bands seemingly switched.  When the concert started, the covers came off the pillars, revealing the three band members in each one of them.

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The pillars moved up and down throughout the concert, eventually lowering the members down to the ground. At one point, they moved a baby grand piano onto Matt Bellamy’s pillar, moved it back up and once it came back down they replaced it with standing drums between songs. It was a total treat.

The visual experience was complimented with the pillars being video walls, in addition to lasers and lights flashing across the arena.  At one point, giant eyeball balloons floated down and surfed along the crowd.

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Lastly, no concert experience would be complete without the attendees providing the entertainment.  In this case it was by a middle-aged woman who spent the whole concert passionately/interpretive dancing.  Not to be ageist, but if this lady was a 15-year-old girl, I probably wouldn’t have given it a 2nd though – but the fact that she was pushing 40 made it all the more awesome. My favorite part is when she actually started doing jumping jacks.

This amazing concert gave me cause to revisit my list of top concerts and see where Muse fits amongst them.  I’ve compiled a list of over 40 shows that I’ve seen over 10 years, and am in the process of ranking them. I should hopefully that that post coming later this week.

In the meantime, what are some of your top concerts you’ve been to?  What aspects make it a great concert?

New Musical Frontiers [Announcements]

As I mentioned last month, we have closed the door on Greenfoot, which has freed up my time to look for another project.  After spending a few weeks searching, auditioning and considering, I’m happy to announce that I have joined a new project, partnering with Ken Stevens to take his acoustic music into a full band setting.

Ken and I share a lot of the same influences, and I’m really looking forward to the challenge of enhancing his music with my drumming, and putting together something that will be a lot of fun to see and hear.   We’re in the process of working through his acoustic originals, adding some covers and then playing out.

In the meantime, check Ken out on his web site, as well as his Facebook page and MySpace.  This should be exciting! Thank you for your support!

NaBloWriMo – Already my miserable failure

October is here, and with it is my participation in NaBloWriMo, a month where bloggers commit to blogging at least once per day throughout the whole month.  I did it last year and was very successful at it, putting together 36 blog posts in October.  I always have these great ideas that should become good blog posts, but usually being busy (or being lazy) gets in the way.  With that in mind, I was looking forward to NoBloWriMo to re-ignite the blogging spark…

…and of course October 1st goes by and I’ve already failed at posting for that day.

I do have a good excuse (at least for me) for not blogging on Friday.  After putting in a full day of work, I spent the afternoon helping my wife get our house ready to host some good friends over for a game night – and I’ll never trade in good experiences with my friends for anything, thus no blogging.  Besides, by the time we finished with game night, it was already October 2nd.

So here is my first post for October 2nd: explaining why I missed October 1st’s post.  If I keep this pattern up of explaining my blogging delinquencies, I’ll have 31 posts before I know it – by November 2nd.