October 30th, 2005.

I’m full. I’m tired. I might die.

The last couple of days have been Lovely, but very full. I’ve been falling asleep at around 7am this past week, and then Saturday morning I had to wake up at 7.45am to go to a meeting for the Emergenza festivals. Saturday was also PLOJ so I knew I was going to be up late, late, late… after PLOJ I even went over to a friends’ house and hung out till dawn.

I’m very, very tired.

It’s Heather’s birthday weekend and so we’re also eating. A lot. Of everything. And it was PLOJ. And Joylene likes to make sure people are fed. Oh God.

This house is around the corner from my mom's house, and they always fill their yard with decorations for Christmas and for Halloween. It's something you've got to do every year, drop by and see what they've added.
This house is around the corner from my mom’s house, and they always fill their yard with decorations for Christmas and for Halloween. It’s something you’ve got to do every year, drop by and see what they’ve added.
It looks like they're trying to do some cross-over with the manger-ish stuff. Pop out the skeleton, pop in the Jesus. Happy days.
It looks like they’re trying to do some cross-over with the manger-ish stuff. Pop out the skeleton, pop in the Jesus. Happy days.

Friday night, Heather and I played with Dan Layman-Kennedy back at the Cup in Bel Air, MD. We played hard and fast and won over a lot of people. A woman remarked that I reminded her of Obi-Wan Kenobi from Star Wars III. I’m not sure if I’m flattered by that or not (Episode I? Hell yeah!) but at least I’m not the cone-headed one or small and green.

Her response? When I start introducing music with “Play you this song I will” THEN I’ll be in trouble.

After the show I went over to Chris and Joylene’s to expose them to the Chicken. The Robot Chicken. Thank GOD they wore out after about 6 episodes. After that I find that my attention span becomes eroded for the next couple of days. As it was, Chris and I still sat around singing the theme song, voices dropping with fatigue.

Heather trying on some hair for our Halloween PLOJ.
Heather trying on some hair for our Halloween PLOJ.
Cat being all dressy for Halloween at the College Perk in College Park, MD. My mom is standing over my shoulder remarking how beautiful Cat looks in this picture... she's right... though then she says "Though I'm almost afraid to ask you about her top - sometimes you need to use DISGRESSION." Yes mom.
Cat being all dressy for Halloween at the College Perk in College Park, MD. My mom is standing over my shoulder remarking how beautiful Cat looks in this picture… she’s right… though then she says “Though I’m almost afraid to ask you about her top – sometimes you need to use DISGRESSION.” Yes mom.

The next day, this Emergenza thing, I’m not entirely sure what to make of it.

On the one hand, I like the ideas behind it – Indie, I like how organized it is. On the other hand, I really hate all these competitions, and this is a little closer to a Battle of the Bands than any of these competitive folk festivals we’ve done over the course of this year.

Tim (of Might Could) brought a banjo and proceeded to shred on it. That's of course Rowan filling the foreground. This is the second shot like this - the first one, Rowan caught me and swivelled around just in time to fill the frame with forehead.
Tim (of Might Could) brought a banjo and proceeded to shred on it. That’s of course Rowan filling the foreground. This is the second shot like this – the first one, Rowan caught me and swivelled around just in time to fill the frame with forehead.
Meredith, Rob (big R) and Jon playing at PLOJ XXXIV at the College Perk in College Park, MD. I'm so flattered that Meredith drives (well, her whole FAMILY drives!) all the way up to College Park to play these things. I Love listening to her, too... and yes... look very closely and you'll see a Spine on Jon's guitar. Rob opened up with more than his fiddle this time around too and blew me away with a voice that none of us knew he had.
Meredith, Rob (big R) and Jon playing at PLOJ XXXIV at the College Perk in College Park, MD. I’m so flattered that Meredith drives (well, her whole FAMILY drives!) all the way up to College Park to play these things. I Love listening to her, too… and yes… look very closely and you’ll see a Spine on Jon’s guitar. Rob opened up with more than his fiddle this time around too and blew me away with a voice that none of us knew he had.

I don’t have high hopes of getting anywhere in it, but it could be really really cool – and even if we only get through the first stage, well, it’d be a huge coup to play some of these venues that perhaps we couldn’t get into on our own. Of course, then my own internal competitive side speaks up – the vicious side – that knows that if we DON’T make it through the first round I’ll internally compare us (unfavourably) to the accomplishments of the Dreamscapes Project. I hate it when I do that. I worry that somewhere in my subconscious, my brain is plotting harm to my friends’ bands.

Saturday night was PLOJ XXXIV. Ugh. We ended at around 1 in the morning, which is really, really early to end the PLOJ – there simply wasn’t any enthusiasm left. I’m beginning to think of moving the whole thing some place else, at least during the school year – I miss having the Pot Lucks at a private home, but simply have no friends that have a large enough space.

We just didn’t have the numbers of songwriters this time around to hit that critical mass where the jams shift and form and drop and there’s a lot of real variety. The last couple of PLOJes have been mostly glorified mass sing-alongs, more appropriate to camp fires than to what PLOJ has always been. That aspect is welcome, but when it becomes the focus… and the older writers I think just don’t appreciate the atmosphere of Perk.

I don’t know if that’s really true, but I’ve had a couple of people remark that they don’t plan to come to another PLOJ as long as it’s held there… but I don’t really know where to turn just yet…

Big sigh.

Zoe Mulford came to PLOJ XXXIV for a bit. She's the woman who beat me out at Susquehanna Music and Arts Festival this year. She deserves all her accolades. To the right is Greta Ehrig. Much to my regret she just came to be social and we didn't force her to play.
Zoe Mulford came to PLOJ XXXIV for a bit. She’s the woman who beat me out at Susquehanna Music and Arts Festival this year. She deserves all her accolades. To the right is Greta Ehrig. Much to my regret she just came to be social and we didn’t force her to play.
Dan Zimmerman playing the songs that I wish I'd written. Yes... his inmate number is pi.
Dan Zimmerman playing the songs that I wish I’d written. Yes… his inmate number is pi.

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