Record My Mind

Banal Records of a Pedestrian Mind

Andreas Oberg Guitar Universe

It’s either guitar, tai chi, reading, running or blogging for me. Today, and last night, it’s blogging.

Affiliated Artistes, and ArtistWorks the people who brought you the Jimmy Bruno Guitar Institute, now bring you the Andreas Oberg Guitar Universe.

I believe the AOGU was officially launched about 3 weeks ago, on 20 June 2009, when I received an email notification that the AOGU was open for enrollment. Marketing for the site began as early as November 2008 (see the pdf press release here). In April 2009, a marketing video was launched on youtube (see below).

Andreas Guitar Universe Trailer

Click here for a sample lesson. Both Jimmy Bruno and Andreas Oberg are great players and they both take an interactive approach to teaching guitar online where they give feedback on student submitted videos. However, they both have very different approaches. A quick difference I could discern was that Jimmy Bruno doesn’t advocate learning licks (focussing more on the finger-ear connection) while there are some lick oriented lessons on the Andreas Oberg Guitar Universe. I would be happy to receive comments from readers who have subscribed to both the JBGI and the AOGU comparing similarities and differences between the two sites.

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Tractor music

I was referred to these videos via two posts in the Jimmy Bruno Guitar Institute forums.

Did you know that you can make wonderful music to the sound of a tractor running?

Neither did I.

The videos below gave me some good cheer. Perhaps, you might find them amusing too.

Sweet Georgia Brown & traktor (edited version)

Olle Hemmingsson´s Trio

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The best classical guitar teacher in Singapore – Robert Luse

I would like to introduce the best classical guitar teacher in Singapore. His name is Robert Luse. I’ve had the honour and privilege of studying with Mr. Luse and he was definitely by far the best music teacher I’ve had in Singapore. Here are a few videos of him playing some short classical pieces. On his youtube page, you can also see videos of his students playing the classical guitar.

Lagrima (Tears) by F. Tarrega

Sonatina in C by N. Paganini

Prelude No. 1 in E Minor by H. Villa-Lobos

Study in B Minor by F. Sor

Studies in G and A Minor by D. Aguado

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Martin Taylor

You are the sunshine of my life (with Stephane Grapelli)

Girl Talk by Neal Hefti

And finally my favourite Martin Taylor video, where both of him plays.

Drop Me Off In Harlem

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Billy Taylor, Duke Ellington and Willie the Lion

Before this weekend is gone forever, here’s a video of three great pianists – Duke Ellington, Willie the Lion and Billy Taylor.

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Memoirs of a Proof Theorist by Gaisi Takeuti

Thanks to a loan from YY several months back, I am currently reading Gaisi Takeuti’s “Memoirs of a Proof Theorist“. This is a compilation of English-translated articles on Godel originally written by Takeuti in Japanese. Unfortunately, the book suffers from some awkward English sentences. The grammar of some sentences could also be further improved. I hope that some editors will improve on this book in future.

I do not have any “genuine understanding” (to use Takeuti’s term) of logic and many of the technical areas discussed in the book are beyond me. Nonetheless, I’ve always had an interest in mathematical logic (which has a history of close association with the treatment of philosophical paradoxes) since my university days and I enjoy reading about famous logicians and their weird and interesting results.

In Takeuti’s book, I enjoyed reading anecdotes and memories of Godel. It was very clear to me that one of the main reasons for this book was for Takeuti to set the record right about the general and mistaken impression of Godel as an “eccentric” or “misanthrope” in view of his social reticence, which Takeuti attributes to Godel’s weak health. It is well known that Godel refused medical treatment in his last days, but the following incident concerning Godel is not well known (See pages 110 and 111) :

In 1970, an acquaintance of his introduced him to a famous doctor in New York and he received treatment. This doctor administered narcotics without informing him, which profoundly upset him, because he believed that narcotics damage the brain. This treatment was an extremely unpleasant experience and I imagine he was afraid more than anything else that it might be repeated.

In an Appendix called “On Godel’s Continuum Hypothesis”, Takeuti also revealed:

Godel sent a five page memo to the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. It was hand written, with nonsensical definitions and style, and it gives an impression of doodle. The reason why this happened is that Godel came under the care of a famous medical doctor in New York, who prescribed narcotics without informing him. Under the influence of narcotics, Godel believed he had obtained a beautiful solution of a longstanding question, which he wrote out and submitted.

In Takeuti’s writing, it was also clear to me Takeuti is a frank and humble person, compared to say Gregory Chaitin. His frankness is is some times funny. For example, in article recounting his reading of “Godel Remembered”, he writes of Kreisel as follows:

The last article is “Godel’s excursions into intuitionistic logic” by Georg Kreisel. This is a big article occupying 122 pages of a booklet of 186 pages. It has played a substantial role in giving the booklet the style of a book. Typically for Kreisel, it contains too much information in various forms. It is a bit dense to read through, even for me, whose specialty is close to his. Therefore, I read here and there, looking for parts of interest to me. One is Godel’s view of Gentzen, in which can be read: He often called Gentzen a better logician than himself.

Here are some passages that I found amusing (the first is found on page 3 and typical of conversations by mathematicians):

Now, returning to my fundamental conjecture, Godel appeared to think that, if its proof were to be extremely impredicative, then there would be a counter-example and the state of things similar to the Incompleteness Theorem would hold. In fact, what is interesting about my fundamental conjecture is that, if one admitted an extremely impredicative demonstration, then it would become trivial. When I told his to Godel, he was very surprised and he seemed to become more interested in the problem. Godel asked me if I had published that fact, and I replied that I had not because it was trivial. He then said: “Publish it by all means.! Many people will change their views on your conjecture.” As a result, I published a trivial article against my will.

Here is a funny anecdote about Raymond Smullyan on page 4:

Thanks to Godel, during the two years of my stay at the Institute, many logicians such as Bernays, Schutte, and Feferman were there. Smullyan and Putnam were at the University as well. They held a logic seminear every week, and the logic group was very lively. In particular, there were two proof-theorists in the rare Gentzen style together (Schutte and Takeuti), and so we were were high-spirited. Smullyan would make me laugh by referring to us in a joking manner: “Is your name TakeSchutte?”. It is my sense that the energy and morale of logicians in Princeton was due to Godel’s kindness, cheerfulness and warmth.

Here is another amusing passage on Page 108:

The last article is “Godel’s impression on students of logic in the 1930s by Stephen C. Kleene. His writing is very typical of Kleene.

Unless there is some fault of the translation, this seems to me to be an absolutely “trivial” observation.

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Raymond Smullyan’s Rambles Through My Library

Last night, I finished reading Raymond Smullyan’s “Rambles Through My Library”. I was absolutely sure I would have enjoyed the book even more if I was in a more idle mood.

In the rambling and distracted style of the book, I will share some passages from the book and my reactions to these passages. Smullyan’s book is largely a commentary and reaction to book passages he enjoyed. Well, this post is largely a commentary and response to Smullyan’s commentary and reaction to book passages he enjoyed. I will quote three passages. Except for the first passage, which reminded me of something not so delightful, all of the other 2 passages I’ve quoted were absolutely delightful.

First this passage (page 75), which was mentioned in passing, in a discussion about John Burrough’s Journal that reminded me of “Underground” by Haruki Murakami:

...I read some time ago a review of a Buddhist movie (called, I believe, Dream Life), which unfortunately I have never been able to catch. I read that when the Buddhist girl came from India to America and saw all these crazy cult religions going around, she shook her and said: “When people no longer believe in anything, they are ready to believe anything!”

In his book containing interviews of victims of the 1995 Tokyo subway sarin gas attack Murakami had also included interviews with the Aum Shinrikyo members. I recalled that it was eerie seeing myself in some of the words of those being interviewed, words that reflected disillusionment with a soulless materialist society and the desire to seek something more spiritually fulfilling. It was also eerie also to read about the amount of energy and self-sacrifice spent on misguided endeavors, such as ignoring and replacing one’s conscience with rationalisations to justifying doing harm to others. Such tragedies arose out of a certain steely mental determination to progress on the path and a firm misguided belief that certain actions lead to spiritual progress and liberation and that one must perform those actions, no matter difficult they were. Implicit was also that the degree of difficulty of the endeavor and the corresponding struggle reflected one’s own spiritual inadequacy and was something to be overcome. When overcome, it leads one to spiritual liberation. How perverse! Good intentions lead to bad outcomes when one abdicates one’s own independent judgement. Instead of the self-mastery that leads to spiritual progress, the effort is expended on overcoming one’s conscience. Fearsome indeed!

Next, this passage is from A. Edward Newton, an obscure book collector now largely forgotten (page 79) that I like a lot because it gives me a wonderful excuse to buy more books than I have time to read:

I do not much use any library except my own. I early formed the habit of buying books, and, thank God, I have never lost it. Authors living and dead – dead for the most part – afford me my greatest enjoyment, and it is my pleasure to buy more books than I can read. Who was it who said, “I hold the buying of more books than one can peradventure read, as nothing less than the soul’s reaching towards infinity?”.

Now, no one (myself included) should stop my soul from reaching towards infinity!

I’m not as good as the idler I aspire to be so I only have time for one more passage that I read in Smullyan’s book. It encapsulates my life philosophy and is from a poem by Po Yuchien (page 157):

I’m too lazy to read the Taoist classics, for Tao doesn’t reside in the books;
Too lazy to look over the sutras, for they go no deeper in Tao than its looks;
The essence of Tao consists in a void, clear, and cool,
But what is this void except being the whole day like a fool?
Too lazy am I to read poetry, for when I stop, the poetry will be gone;
Too lazy to play on the ch’in, for music dies on the string where it’s born;
Too lazy to drink wine, for beyond the drunkard’s dream there are rivers and lakes;
Too lazy to play chess, for besides the pawns there are other stakes;
Too lazy to look at the hills and streams, for there is a painting within my heart’s portals;
Too lazy to face the wind and the moon, for within me is the Isle of the Immortals;
Too lazy to attend to worldly affairs, for inside me are my hut and my possessions;
Too lazy to watch the changing of the seasons, for within me are heavenly processions.
Pine trees may decay and rocks may rot; but I shall always remain what I am.
Is it not fitting that I call this the Hall of Idleness?

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Tal Farlow – Autumn Leaves – Live 1978

One of the swingingest trios I’ve ever seen. Tal Farlow, the man with the big hands, plays Autumn Leaves.

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I Can’t Quit You Baby – Otis Rush

I’ve forgotten I had a blog. Not a single post for more than four months! It’s not that difficult to post a video is it?

Well, here comes the best video I’ve seen in a long time.

Otis Rush has been a great influence on legends such as Led Zepplin and Eric Clapton. See the one and only, the original Otis Rush; guaranteed to give you some goosebumps.

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Ani DeFranco Concert Review by Christopher Lim

Check out my friend’s review of Ani DeFranco’s concert, which we attended together in Singapore on 10 Feb 2009.

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