Hi all,
This one is a PIGGYBACK BLOG, - I'm just passing on Katie Melus's latest note that she sent me today and which is now going up on her own site (http://www.katiemelua.com)
'Ere it is..
Cheers
Mike
_______________________________________
Hi Everyone,
I'm such a poor 21st century candidate, I haven't done a blog a tweet or even taken a picture of my pet dog for anyone that might be interested. Please accept my apologies. I know I need to catch up on a few things. First of all thank you for all my birthday cards and wishes back in September. I received and read them all and I was so touched by the effort and time you put into them.
Since September, things have been pretty crazy leading up to the studio time and it's now been two weeks since we started recording. Iit’s been suggested that to take small bites of pictures while we're in the studio- (as William does) - as a way of staying in touch. I think I'll try it. Otherwise it's so easy to go underground and stay hidden in the recordings. For some reason the studio we're in and the way the control room and the live room are set out really remind me of the Star Trek Enterprise Star ships. I keep picturing us flying through space and time!
I don't want to talk too much about the album as you'll hear it soon enough but one thing I'm working on at the moment is a song which has so many words but no breathing space and I am totally adamant not to cheat with protools so just now I've been practicing getting my lung capacity to be bigger and get through a whole verse with just one breath. I'm not too far, there are ten lines and I can do seven so far. I'll let you know how I manage!
Ironically I had a small incident with air supply last Saturday. Mike (@Mike_Batt) tweeted about me nearly drowning. I told him about my little "episode" the other day in the studio cafe, when he came to visit and see how it was all going. The incident was all my own fault. What kind of nutter goes scuba diving in December in a lake near Heathrow airport? I did! You see, I'm really keen to get my drysuit diving qualification done. For those of you who don’t know about diving, - people usually dive with a wet suit, which is just like skin. It keeps you warm but you get wet. With a dry suit you stay totally dry, and they're usuful in extreme cold waters. I want to quilify as a drysuit diver so I can fulfil my longtime wish of diving in the Arctic or Antarctic circle and see penguins, whales and ice!
So there I was last weekend shlugging my airtank, BCD and the heaviest rubber suit you've ever seen! One thing I forgot to mention is that your neck is where the drysuit ends so it has to be super tight round you neck. My neck was so small they had to add a rubber band round the opening to make it extra tight! Getting to the water was both extatic because the gear becomes much lighter, - and horrifiyng cause the water is 7 degrees. We swam out to the middle of the lake and when we first descended I was shocked by the icy water hitting my head; it felt like the North Pole in my brain. We reached the bottom which was luckily only 15 meters down.
Once there, we were practicing standard procedure, taking out the regulator from your mouth (your air supply) and replacing it. I don't know what happened, I think I was stressed by the cold, the tight rubber ring round my throat plus the visibility was very poor - the water was pitch black - so I wasn't concentrating. When I tried to replace my regulator I didn't do it properly, so I breathed in and choked on a lungful of water. I tried to stay calm and clear the regulator but I kept choking on water. Because of the pressure, the force and speed at which the water invaded my mouth was such a shock. I did start to panic, especially as you can't go to the surface because of the bends. It was the first time (out of 40 or so dives that I've done) that I had to pull the "out of air" hand signal. Luckily my teacher was right there helping me through my sorry state of horror. She replaced the regulator in my mouth and I managed to summon up the strength to breathe out any tiny bubbles of air to clear the water out of the regulator, and when I next inhaled I finally had some air! Looking back at it now I was such an idiot! There's a button on the regulator that clears the water and it's probably what my teacher used to help me, as well as having it properly in my mouth. I really hope this hasn't put anyone off diving, it's still one of my favourite things in the world to do and I’d recommend it to anyone.
Hope you are well, wherever you are. I’ll try to get some pics and more frequent blogs going from now on!
The new album is scheduled for next May, so we have a busy time ahead.
All the best,
Katie
Thursday, 3 December 2009
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WONDERFUL BLOG, Thanks Katie!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing it with us,Big M!
We visited Antarctica this year, if you get the weather right, it's a trip of a lifetime.
ReplyDeleteA few pictures can be seen on our web www.mike-young.co.uk.
Take care next time you go for a swim !!!!!!
A big, big 'Dankeschön' for the new blog :-)
ReplyDeleteMr Batt,
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing Ms Melua's blog entry and for allowing comments here. With your production skills and so many websites to your name can you help with her website as well? Seems she is in a dire need of professional service there:
Connection Error
MySQL Error : Connection Error
Error Number: 1040 Too many connections
Date : Thu, December 31, 2009 14:14:22
IP : 24.151.63.70
Browser : Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.0; en-US; rv:1.9.0.16) Gecko/2009120208 Firefox/3.0.16 (.NET CLR 3.5.30729)
Referer : http://www.katiemelua.com/guestbook.html
PHP Version : 4.3.9
OS : Linux
Server : Apache/2.0.52 (CentOS)
Server Name : www.katiemelua.com
I have found really useful this commenting software, but I'm not really endorsing them. IMHO, there are reasons for IT upgrades, believe it or not. Maybe, letting some of the fans create and edit content will alleviate the acute lack of time and attention from the artist herself...just a thought.
almost forgot,
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year!
Australia is already there; GMT, EST, and PST will follow.