Issue 2 of Crevé is now available:
Valves - should it be Presta or Schroeder? A spirited debate from both camps reveals that it is not an open and shut valve.
The Inner Tube - from the author of The Inner Game a new discussion into the psychology of pressure and how high it could or should go. Off the scale? - you decide.
Blow Up! - (1966) is director Michelangelo Antonioni's view of mod fashion and an engaging, provocative murder mystery that examines the existential nature of reality through the world of punctures and flared trousers.
FREE! pre-glued, jumbo puncture repair patch - with every new subscription to Crevé.
See also blog #78
Saturday, August 26, 2006
Thursday, August 24, 2006
Wednesday, August 23, 2006
#88 Rare CD (live)
I just found this CD in the remainder bin at our
local supermarket - for only 2 euros!
I might put it on eBay and see what happens.
Nathan Wiltshire is modern pop music's ultimate chameleon, bouncing from pop to country and even orchestral experiments all with the breathless enthusiasm of the newly converted.
Wiltshire has explored soul and funk before, but never with the conviction he shows here in this rare live recording.
Its a rare classic, don't you know (grin).
local supermarket - for only 2 euros!
I might put it on eBay and see what happens.
Nathan Wiltshire is modern pop music's ultimate chameleon, bouncing from pop to country and even orchestral experiments all with the breathless enthusiasm of the newly converted.
Wiltshire has explored soul and funk before, but never with the conviction he shows here in this rare live recording.
Its a rare classic, don't you know (grin).
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
#86 Thai Fish Curry
How I cook a fish curry in about 20 minutes:
Ingredients:
olive or coconut oil for frying
red onion(s)
2 cloves of garlic
fresh ginger, peeled and finely chopped
1 red chilli, finely chopped
1 tablespoon fish sauce
juice of 1 or 2 limes
half a can of coconut milk
fillets of firm fish (Perch for preference) cut into cubes
½ mango (also in cubes)
some fresh coriander
Method:
1. Heat the oil in a frying pan over a medium heat and fry the onion and garlic until soft. Add the ginger and chillies and fry further 2 - 3 minutes.
2. Stir in the fish sauce, lime juice, coconut milk and cook for a further few minutes.
3. Add the fish and simmer for 5 minutes or until the fish is nearly cooked, then add mango, cook for 2 more minutes.
4. Dress with freshly chopped coriander.
Finally
Serve with rice or noodles.
More curries #73 and #69
Ingredients:
olive or coconut oil for frying
red onion(s)
2 cloves of garlic
fresh ginger, peeled and finely chopped
1 red chilli, finely chopped
1 tablespoon fish sauce
juice of 1 or 2 limes
half a can of coconut milk
fillets of firm fish (Perch for preference) cut into cubes
½ mango (also in cubes)
some fresh coriander
Method:
1. Heat the oil in a frying pan over a medium heat and fry the onion and garlic until soft. Add the ginger and chillies and fry further 2 - 3 minutes.
2. Stir in the fish sauce, lime juice, coconut milk and cook for a further few minutes.
3. Add the fish and simmer for 5 minutes or until the fish is nearly cooked, then add mango, cook for 2 more minutes.
4. Dress with freshly chopped coriander.
Finally
Serve with rice or noodles.
More curries #73 and #69
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
#85 Moors and Christians
A thousand and a bit years ago, Spain had a ding-dong between the Moors and the Christians. These days it might be called 'ethnic cleansing' as the Christians sent the Moors packing back to Africa.
Now, we have a fiesta to commemorate the event - and everyone enjoys themselves!
Groups of men and women parade up and down the High Street dressed in their particular persuasion. Then they shout at each other, have a mock battle and get even more pissed!
Viva España!
top picture: a line of Moors - North American Indian division.
below: . . . . . . . your guess is as good as mine.
Sunday, August 13, 2006
#84 Out for a Bike Ride
Wednesday, August 09, 2006
#83 More Front Doors
Sunday, August 06, 2006
#82 Now Playing
Three new LP's on my Danset record player:
1. Ali Farka Touré - Savane
African guitarist and bluesman Ali Farka Touré's final solo studio album.
2. Gerry Mulligan and Astor Piazzolla - Reunión Cumbre
Jazz y Tango, recorded in 1974 - nice :-)
3. Anouar Brahem - Le Voyage de Sahar
Amazon said a load of bollox (including):
"Tunisian oud master Brahem continues his by-now-well-established collaboration with François Couturier (piano) and Jean-Louis Matinier (accordion.)
The trio's improvisations are miracles of weightless precision; while sounding like nobody else, they also evoke chanting medieval monks, Keith Jarrett's florid keyboard sagas, Parisian bal musette, the long-vanished Moorish kingdom of Granada via 20th-century Spanish composer Manuel de Falla, languid recollections of French impressionist Eric Satie plus dissonant gleanings from Astor Piazzolla's sardonic Argentinean neo-tangos.
Despite this complex array of intellectual influences, which permeate the trio's constructions like smoke rings, their works come across as disarmingly simple and unpretentious, a tidily diffuse combination of Arabic modes, European classical disciplines and jazzy intuition".
. . . . . . . . . . even so, it's quite good.
1. Ali Farka Touré - Savane
African guitarist and bluesman Ali Farka Touré's final solo studio album.
2. Gerry Mulligan and Astor Piazzolla - Reunión Cumbre
Jazz y Tango, recorded in 1974 - nice :-)
3. Anouar Brahem - Le Voyage de Sahar
Amazon said a load of bollox (including):
"Tunisian oud master Brahem continues his by-now-well-established collaboration with François Couturier (piano) and Jean-Louis Matinier (accordion.)
The trio's improvisations are miracles of weightless precision; while sounding like nobody else, they also evoke chanting medieval monks, Keith Jarrett's florid keyboard sagas, Parisian bal musette, the long-vanished Moorish kingdom of Granada via 20th-century Spanish composer Manuel de Falla, languid recollections of French impressionist Eric Satie plus dissonant gleanings from Astor Piazzolla's sardonic Argentinean neo-tangos.
Despite this complex array of intellectual influences, which permeate the trio's constructions like smoke rings, their works come across as disarmingly simple and unpretentious, a tidily diffuse combination of Arabic modes, European classical disciplines and jazzy intuition".
. . . . . . . . . . even so, it's quite good.
Friday, August 04, 2006
#79 Lunatic Ahoy!
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
#78 Puncture Victims Magazine!
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