Cutting it a little bit close again today when it comes to getting a posting in before the cut-off. Go me. Today's musical endeavor was a big one. A customer had asked me a few weeks back to make up a soundtrack they were unable to locate. I was fairly confident that I had some of the music they were after, so I took on the project. It turned out that I had more of it than expected, but I still had to download quite a bit of music from itunes. The toughest song to find wound up being the title track from the movie, and let me tell you, finding an mp3 of that song took some serious work... (2 hours of digging through all of the legal channels available) but I did it, and in so doing was able to genuinely make someone's day/week/Christmas. All in all, it was quite the musical undertaking, and proved to me that I'm getting better at what I do for a living. If you want to be technical, it also proved to me that the lines between what I do for a living and what I do on my own time are blurring somewhat the longer I work where I do. Oh well, it was fun.
So, the new Springsteen disc is amazing. There's enough of a mixture of his upbeat rockers, his ballads, and his message songs to make this his best record since The Rising . And speaking of that record... Buying The Boss the day it comes out always takes me back to a specific moment in life. It was July 30th, 2002, the year after 9/11, the year after someone on the streets of New York told Springsteen "we need you now." I had driven to Oshkosh, WI to visit some friends, when I remembered that Springsteen's disc was scheduled to come out that day. I drove downtown to The Exclusive Company, but had to park a few blocks back. At the time, there wasn't much going on downtown, but when I got out of the car, I could hear this music coming from up the block somewhere. The closer I got to Exclusive, the more it began to dawn on me, they had set up a giant set of speakers in their upstairs windows, and were blasting the new album out into the streets....
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