… one of the strangest football matches that I have seen for quite some considerable time.
It’s the Welsh Cup this weekend and there are several banana skins lying aound. One of those is Carmarthen Town v Rhydaman, and this was shown on the live internet feed tonight.
Carmarthen are at the foot of the Welsh Premier League and struggling whereas Rhydaman, one division below them in the pyramid, are in 5th place and having a good run of form. Not the match that I would have picked – I’d have gone for Colwyn Bay v Airbus – but’s good enough. It’s the kind of game where you can smell that someone is in for a scalping.
And a scalping there certainly was. Rhydaman, playing away from home at Carmarthen, ran out winners. And not just by the odd goal either but they won 0-4.
You would have thought from the scoreline that this was a right spannering, but that was very far from the truth. Whilst Rhydaman were the better side, they weren’t all that better. The difference was that we were treated to 4 magic moments of Trundlemania
Yes, Lee Trundle. He must be 45 now if he’s a day but still proving that he can cut it with the best and while he’s slowed down considerably as you might expect, he still showed the kind of magic that made him a multi-million pound footballer in the days when multi-million pound footballers were still quite thin on the ground.
I mean – just HOW do you defend against something like this?
Despite a reasonably early night, I missed the alarms again. Not by much – only a few minutes in fact, but missed them nevertheless.
Not only that, although there was nothing on the dictaphone, I had a vague recollection that during the night I’d been on a voyage and found something that was way beyond exciting – the same feeling of elation that I had when I I came across that Santana concert after 42 years of searching.
But what it was, we shall never know now.
After the medication and breakfast, with no dictaphone notes to do, I attacked a couple of digital music files to break up into tracks.
One of them took me four hours to do, and for a variety of reasons too. It was an album of a live concert and with this digital sound analyser program that I have, I could see that it was a series of individual tracks that had been artificially joined together – and by a blind man by the looks of it too.
16 tracks altogether so it took me quite a while to edit all of the joints together properly so that it actually looks like a live concert as well as sounds like one too.
Then I had to break the file down into 16 individual tracks and save each one of those individually, but not before I’d copied about 15 decent applause tracks (some of which went on for half a minute and more) from the file, cut out any speech and unnecessary noise from them, boosted the volume in what are called “S-curves” in places to hide the difference in volume in the joins where I’ve cut things out, and then saved them to disk as 15 individual files.
Applause tracks are good and I love them because I can do all kinds of exciting things with them. But you need a good number of them from the same concert because if you “mix and match” applause tracks from different concerts, the applause doesn’t sound similar and it gives the appearance of being false. And if they are long applause tracks, you can cut them down and that gives you even more opportunity to make something different.
Round about 12:45 I knocked off for lunch.
No bread here and no lettuce either so a walk into town was on the cards. And quite right too. Past the docks where the harbour gates were open sothe trawlers could come inside to unload.
And Charles-Marie is still over there with her winter wrap on.
The gates to the harbour can’t have been open all that long because there were several fishing boats on their way into port right now.
This one coming into port just here gave me a good opportunity for a photo-shoot but as I took a shot, my photo was once more bombed by a blasted seagull.
They get absolutely everywhere, these perishing things.
At the Super-U the lettuce was extortionate. €1:39 for a small one. That’ll teach me to forget one at LIDL, won’t it?
At La Mie Caline I picked up my dejeunette and walked across to the Place general de gaulle to see what was going on.
Nothing right now as you can see, but clearly something will be going on in the very near future because we seem to have acquired a stage.
That’s going to upset a few of the marketeers tomorrow. It’ll quite take the shine off their sausages, now that they can begin to roast them again with charcoal following a recent Court decision.
But what about our famous ski slope in the town?
No room for any humans on there because we seem to have been overrun by animals. I can understand why they might want to use animals as decoration, but why beavers … or … errr … Castors to the French people around here.
What does a beaver have to do with the festive season?
This is much more like the kind of thing you would expect to see at Christmas, isn’t it?
We have a sledge here and a reindeer pulling it. Presumably there will be a Father Christmas around somewhere to travel in it.
But I have a cunning plan and I shall be having a word with Strawberry Moose in early course and we will go for a little walk together late one night for a photo opportunity.
Yesterday I mentioned and indeed showed you a photograph of the Christmas decorations that they were unloading at the Square Potel in the rue des Juifs, and I remember saying that I would go for a butcher’s today.
So here I am in the Square Potel with the decorations and I do have to say that I’m considerably underwhelmed by it all.
Mybe it’s just me I dunno, but I was expecting much more than this.
After lunch, I attacked the sound mixing desk for the vocals for the current project. It took me hours to figure out again how to record anything with it because I had forgotten what I did last time. And then I had to clean out all of the test files, set the volume levels and the like, and then clean out those test files too.
And then I could start.
The recording level is quite low using the built-in mike but my sound analyser program enhances that with no loss of quality. But there is a major problem with it, in that there’s no “pause” facility. So every time you stop for a think or to clear your throat, it restarts with a new track.
Trying to edit out about 40 of those into one coherent track and then split that down into tis segments is going to take me an age.
But I have made a startling discovery, and that is that the mikes that I bought for the mixing panel, using the adapter that came with them I can plug them into the dictaphone, which DOES have a pause facility. And also an output for headphones.
In view of this, I see a whole new world opening up for me here. For although the sound is somewhat tinny, it seems to be of a much higher quality.
One thing that I didn’t mention today is that the high winds are back. And with a vengeance too.
There was quite a storm raging out offshore and so even though the tide was on its way out, the waves were still rattling down on the rocks.
Not too many people out there today and that’s hardly a surprise given the conditions.
But overcast and miserable and foggy it might be here, over across the bay on the Brittany coast they were having a different kind of weather.
Low cloud, yes, but on the periphery there was bright sunshine and it was creating a most unusual lighting effect over there.
Wouldn’t it be nice if it could do the same thing around here on this side of the bay?
Going around the headland was taking my life in my hands with the wind that was sweeping around there.
narrowly avoiding being squidged on the pedestrian crossing, I went round the cliff to see what the waves were doing on the sea wall.
Not a lot, because the tide was going out rapidly. It must have bee quite impressive an hour or so ago.
Nothing changed at all in the chantier navale today, and Normandy Trader had sodded off too … “that was quick” – ed … so I stood and armired the waves for a little longer.
Every now and again there was a wave more powerful and deeper than the others, and that was providing me with some exciting entertainment.
But after a while I gave it up and headed for home and coffee.
Regular readers of this rubbish will recall that pathetic parking features quite regularly in these pages. Here’s another example.
I’d seen her pull up as I was on my way home with my lettuce and bread, and I thought to myself at the time “she’s not going to leave that car there, straddling two places and with 6 feet of room in front, is she?”
But yes she is. Gets right on my wick it does.
Back to the sound files and then a break for tea. I made a curry with the leftovers again and there were so many leftovers that there are some leftovers left over. That’ll be a tea for another night then, won’t it?
This evening it was raining when I went out so I didn’t hang around. I had my run though, right up to the top of the ramp and another 20 paces further on. It was feeling good today.
Then we had the football and now, considerably later than planned (like 01:45) I’m off to bed. I’m a busy boy tomorrow and another task has reared its ugly head as well.
Where will I find the time?