Posts Tagged 'Everclear'

AM Radio……and Beyond

The VCR and the DVD – there wasn’t none of that crap back in 1970

We didn’t know about a World Wide Web

Was a whole different game being played back when I was a kid

Wanna get down in a cool way?

Picture yourself on a beautiful day

Big Bell Bottoms and groovy, long hair

Just a-walking in style with a portable CD player – No!

You would listen to the music on the AM Radio

Yeah, you could hear the music on the AM Radio

These are the opening lyrics to the song “AM Radio” from one of my favorite 90’s bands, Everclear.  I was a kid in the 1970’s and 80s, and I can very much relate to the picture painted by these lyrics.  While these lyrics are from the perspective of a kid growing up in the 70s, you could just as easily rewrite them from the perspective of a kid in 1990 or even 2010.

I still remember the excitement of getting an Atari, a “portable” jambox that weighed over 5 pounds, and cable TV.  The latter of which did not happen until I was in my late teens.  I remember feeling lucky to have a 12” black and white TV in my bedroom as a teenager, and it was a TV on which I had to use pliers to change the channel to pick up one of the 4 stations we could tune in over the air. I also remember going into debt when I was a junior in college to buy a Tandy (yes Tandy) computer so I could use a rudimentary spreadsheet program to help with my accounting classes.

I also remember getting my first laptop when I entered the  high flying world of Big 6 Consulting in the late 90’s – I don’t recall the exact specs of it, but my back to this day remembers that it was heavier than a brick.  And I recall connecting that laptop to pay phones (yes pay phones) at the airport so I could dial-into our Groupwise mail server.  And I can’t forget the awe and amazement when I was issued a cell phone a few years later.

Fast forward 15 years and I am now sitting on a plane writing this blog on a touch screen tablet that weighs less than 2 pounds and is connected via wireless to the entire world at 35,000 feet – all while listening to one of the 1000s of songs on a my iPod and thinking about which type of smartphone I want next  – smartphones that I am sure have more memory and horsepower than that first brick of a laptop I had and certainly much more than the Tandy computer that took me 2 years to pay off back in the early 90s.

As a kid, I never imagined we would have the real time interactions we have today.  To think that in my lifetime, I went from Polaroid picture to being able to stream real time video anywhere in the world from a 3 inch x 5 inch device in my hand is just crazy.  Just last week, I was riding in the back of car through the mountains of Colorado while having a conversation with a business associate in Australia via a tablet connected to a wireless hotspot.  While this is common place technology in today’s world, I couldn’t help but stop and think about how dang cool it was to do it.  And this is just the tip of the iceberg.

In the past two weeks I have had the opportunity to listen to people from Intel and Microsoft talk about what is coming down the technology pipe.  While many of us are amazed at the technology that is hitting the market now – all the touch laptops, tablets, phones and the ever increasing number of connected things – it sounds like what will become available in the next 18-24 months will rock our worlds – in how we work, how we learn and how we live.  The pace of technology innovation feels to be picking up.  The question is “Are we all ready to keep up with it?”

A few final disclosures:

1)      As a kid, my parent’s car had nothing but AM radio.

2)      We still have VHS tapes and a VCR to play them on at our house.

3)      I just recently took the very first DVD player I ever owned to Goodwill.

4)      I can now change the channel on my TV from my iPhone (no pliers needed)

5)      I still listen to AM radio on a regular basis.

2012 – The Summer of Long Anticipated Concerts

As you can probably tell by the long list of concerts I have on this site and my frequent use of song lyrics in my writings, I love music. While the number of concerts attended tailed off over the last decade (seems to coincide with start of fatherhood), I have not lost my passion for live music.

Fortunately the Summer of 2012 brought the opportunity for me and the Lovely Mrs. Neill to see three acts that for many years I had wanted to see but for one reason or the other had not seen. The three acts: Everclear, Dwight Yoakam, Lyle Lovett.

Everclear was first up on our Summer of Music tour. I have been an Everclear fan since the early 90s. Those that only know the 40+ me may find this surprising but it’s true. There is just something about that hard SoCal alternative rock sound. Everclear was a part of a five band lineup in the Summerland tour. We decided to make a long weekend around the concert so we headed to Ft Worth to see the show at Billy Bobs – the world’s largest honkytonk. It was a strange place to watch a bunch of alternative 90s bands to say the least. The weekend was great, but Everclear failed to wow me. In fact I was disappointed – the sound was bad and the energy that made me love their music was just not there. I am still happy to be able to check them off the list, but this was one concert I probably should have seen in my 20s, not in my 40s.

Concert number 2 was Dwight Yoakam. While I wouldn’t put Dwight in my Top 10 of musicians I just had to see, there is a history here that made this one special. Back in 1993, I had fallen madly in love with a recent UT graduate but she wasn’t feeling quite the same way just yet. I scored some free tickets to a Dwight Yoakam concert in Austin and invited her to go to the show with me. Long story short, she cancelled last minute on me and I ended up not going to concert. So fast forward to 2011. I had ended up marrying that fellow UT grad in 1994 and 17 years later we yet again had tickets to go see Dwight Yoakam. I was excited about it because it was the “date” that never happened back in 1993. Well as fate would have it, days before the show, I ended up having to make a last minute trip to the Philipines for work. So I had to cancel and dump the tickets. Luckily less than a year later Dwight booked a return gig in Austin at the ACL-Live venue. This time we bought 4 tickets so our daughters could go with us. What a treat it was. This time I got to go with three beautiful girls. We had a fun dinner beforehand, the venue was great, and Dwight put on a fantastic show. I have no doubt it was better in 2012 than it would have been back in 1993.

The final show in the trio was the legendary Lyle Lovett. I am almost ashamed as a born and bred Texan to admit that I waited this long to see Lyle. He is hands down a true Texas music legend. The show was once again at the ACL-Live venue. This time we left the kids out home and grabbed a great meal downtown before the show. Lyle brought along his Large Band for this show, and I think it may have been one of the most enjoyable concerts ever. There was also a special guest appearance by Shawn Colvin – one of my Austin favorites. The small venue feel was awesome and the musical talent was off the charts good. It was a fitting end to the trio of concerts. I would go watch Lyle anytime, anywhere.

Overall the Summer of Music was a success even if Everclear did not live up to my expectations. All three shows gave me a chance to relax and forget the chaos of work and life in general. I got to relieve some memories and hang out with my best friend. I can’t wait to do it again in the Summer 2013.


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