New York (RSS)

Adventures in New York

Last night I watched a 88 year old man get his groove on...

And it was sublime.  Who was that 88 (soon to be 89) year old man?  Well, if you're still reading either you are a pervert or just plain curious.  The man was none other than Les Paul.  Yes, he is still alive and at 88 he plays a 2 sets every Monday night at the Iridium club.  He has a damn good time, as did we, and he's sharp, funny and plays a mean jazz guitar.  It was very, very cool to sit just 3 feet from the guy that invented the electric guitar, reverb, overdubbing and the 4 track.  His quintet is very talented and they are Lou Pallo, Nicki Parrott, Frank Vignola,  and John Colianni.  Lou's been playing with Les for 20 years and has a wonderful voice that is reminiscent of Chet Baker.  Nicki Parrott besides being very easy on the eyes has a sultry voice (think warm honey with a pinch of cayenne) and a mischievous style of play.  Watching Frank Vignola's left hand work the frets was like watching water cascade.  He truly has an effortless style of play.  And John Colianni plays like a race horse.  All of them together was very beguiling. 

After the first set we were lucky enough to have Nicki come by and sit with us for a while.  She then invited us back to meet Les.  We joked and cut up with Les for a while.  I asked Les what he wanted for his 89th birthday and my buddy said “Short term memory“.  That one caught him off guard and he got a good laugh out of it.  He asked what we did for a living and we informed him that we are all professional geeks.  He then started talking about about standards!  He said his biggest pain is no standards.  Pretty interesting that the guy who invented the electric guitar, and still is inventing at 88 is interested in technology.

If you live close to New York do yourself a favor and go see the legend, in person.  Go for the 8 o'clock show and stay for the second show at 10.  After the 10 o'clock show Les signs autographs, photos or guitars(Bring your Les Paul Gibson)!  You are able to take photos during the show so bring your camera!  We'll be there next week, so if you want to join us, contact me.

 

Sean

 

 


Dinner with Addy and culture

Addy and I had planned to meet with Tim of Loosely Coupled at “The Ginger Man”, but due to my work schedule a mis-understanding on time we didn't get to meet up.  The cool thing is that I got to have dinner with Addy at a very tasty Vietnamese place called “Saigon Grill” on the upper west side on NYC.  We talking about everything from the dizzying amount of knowledge sharing at Microsoft to living in New York.  (I don't live in New York, I'm up here on a project...   till April!) 

 

The coolest thing about Addy's first month at Microsoft is that there are a pant-load of focused, smart (and willing to share) people at Microsoft, which creates a fantastic culture that makes you want to stay for life.  I personally used to work for a smaller company with that same kind of mindset.  That company was bought by a giant company and I'm not really seeing that culture yet.  I guess I'm not looking in the right place.  I have meet some very smart and nice folks from “across the pond” in our labs division however; that mindset has not yet infused itself throughout the rest of the company, yet. 

The key to this kind of culture is that you have people that are interested in what they are doing, excited to talk or share about it and have a channel to share that information.  That channel can be anything from a listserver, a blog, a wiki or even a quick HALO death-match.  Addy says Microsoft has it, my old company had it.  The other cool thing about this kind of culture is that it doesn't have to be a five year plan that's ticked off as a metric.  If you have the items above, it will happen.

 

Sean