Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Matt's Blog

My friend Matt, who is a good source for musical recommendations and news, started a blog. Check it out here:


In my own news I just got back to London from Bruges, where I caught Messiaen's Quartet for the End of Time performed by the Ensemble Explorations of the Concertbegouw, as well as a lot of good beer, good chocolate, and very pretty medieval canals and buildings.

The quintet is almost finished, then it's on to writing for orchestra.

Hope everyone has a happy and safe Christmas/Hannukah/(insert holiday here)

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Concerts!

The first UK show was a success! Pieces were performed by the Stranded Ensemble, our newly founded graduate composers' ensemble at King's, to a full room who were very happy. Matias Hancke and Teodoro Cromberg also pulled out some sweet electronics with their project Senales e intersecciones. They have some shows in Rome next week if you're there.

At the intermission George Benjamin came up and said he really liked my piece and the idea behind it (88 was performed) and said that I should write more of them. Then after the second half he came up again with more ideas for it. I said, "you're thinking of writing one, aren't you?" and he said, "yes, I really am." That was really exciting. Messiaen's favorite student, Britain's superstar composer, likes my stuff. AWESOME.

Today was "Composing Through Art" at the National Gallery, with presentations and workshops from both art historians and composers. It's hard to convincingly say there was an instant change in all of my art perception, but there were a few profound realizations that are going to really influence the way I look at renaissance painting. And hearing Graham Fitkin and George Fenton speak and getting to ask questions was very cool.

Tomorrow I'm either seeing Sigur Ros or seeing Strauss's Elektra at the Royal Opera House. Either one sounds pretty good to me. Then Saturday is a concert from the Ionian Singers, in Dulwich, which you should really come to, because they're shooting for 100 to keep the venue happy. It's a really cool program of Sibelius, Holst, Debussy, Ravel, Faure, and others. Info is here.

Off to work!

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Reykjavik

Has an awesome scene. And the people there are outrageously nice. There is a record store there called 12 Tonar. It has cd players and couches all around the store, and the guys working there will recommend a bunch of stuff to listen to, then sit down with you and say "check out this track" and tell you all about the bands. I picked up an album by a band/project called Klive (I was unfortunately on a pretty tight budget, there was a lot of good stuff), and wrote down a few other bands to check out. Upon getting home and looking up Klive's website, I could see why the guy who suggested them smiled when I picked it. I don't know if he's in the band or not, but his picture is on the cover of one of their past records.

Similarly, I went up to a guy in a Converge shirt and more or less said "tell me about Icelandic hardcore." He went on to give me a history of their scene, walk around the store (this was a different, slightly larger one) picking out records, and put them on the store's sound system. I settled on a gem of Icelandic metal record called At The Borders of Arcadia, by a band called Celestine. Apparently their drummer is now working as a full time composer in the classical sense, so I've got to look up some of that too.

The scenery in the country, and the rest of the city outside of record stores, are both pretty unbelievable too, and the people's reputation of being warm and welcoming is well deserved. While we were walking around town someone actually honked, slowed down, and pointed out the window that my friend had dropped his glove.  In short, go to Iceland.

Here are some music pages:

Thursday, October 30, 2008

The Behavior of Clouds

New piece for violin and viola. Check it out:






Sorry I don't know how to post .pdfs on here. But there'll be a website soon enough.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Ionian Singers

I joined a choir that rehearses near Waterloo and does a lot of awesome music. They're called The Ionian Singers, and their website is here:


We have a show in Dulwich on 22 November, and you should come. Here's the program:

Sibelius - Rakastava, Op. 14
Holst - The Evening Watch, Op. 43 No. 1
Salter - Nocturne
Ravel - Trois Chansons
Debussy - Deux Arabesques (solo harp)
Vaughn Williams - Three Shakespeare Songs
Holst - Choral Hymns from The Rig Veda, Op. 26
Tournier - Etude de concert and Lolita la danseuse (solo harp)
Faure - Madrigal, Op. 35
Salter - English Folk Song arrangements: Cold Blows the Wind and O Soldier, Soldier



Really fun stuff, and it'll be my first time singing tenor.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Concepts

I just attended a god-awful concert, with great players, a supportive audience, and a cool venue. These things do not make up for bad music. So I am going to rant.

HAVING A CLEVER IDEA DOES NOT MEAN YOU'VE WRITTEN SOMETHING GOOD

All of the pieces performed tonight were driven (I use the term lightly) by single ideas. The first was to combine piano in unison with recorded speech. Maybe this would make for an interesting part of a larger piece, but on its own it gets tedious quickly, and points to a lack of ability, creativity, or follow through on the composer's part.

The "concept" of the next piece was to play some white noise over pianissimo (very quiet) instruments, with silence in between. Again, maybe this is a "cool sound," but after the third or fourth silence, as the next bout of static with quietly useless melodies an audience member has either a) figured out that this is the whole piece, b) is hoping something else is going to happen soon, or c) both. In the case of A, if you're the composer you've failed, and quit immediately. With B, if something else doesn't eventually happen, you have an unhappy audience member. You can figure C out for yourself.

The next of the evening continued this way. One of the pieces was a descending chromatic scale (over and over again, at various speeds, for about five minutes), for cello, electric guitar, and keyboard synth. Just because you've added electronics doesn't mean you've written something good. How the hell is "contemporary music," which is supposed to push boundaries, so far behind? This stuff was okay when it was being invented, but let's get real here. Listen to some Aphex Twin (or Phillipe Manoury, or Matt Burtner, or any good rock, for god's sake) and keep your experiments to yourself (unless that's the point AND you know what you're doing). Give me something compelling. Here's an idea:

Get an idea, then compose to completely destroy that idea, to force people to figure out for themselves what it is you're doing.

Here's another:

Write something that sounds good.

Maybe if you combine those two ideas you'll make some art. Or maybe this is wrong and you'll totally fail. If you do, hopefully it will be a complete enough failure to elicit some booing and shouting from the audience, maybe even to have a performer get punched if you've done things right. Anything would be better than sitting quietly through an evening of this to watch another composer's undeserved bow. Please excuse me, I've got music to write.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Parallels

Some people have said that composition is a lot like cooking. Maybe they're right, or maybe not. I'm not too concerned with it, I just wanted an excuse to share how awesome the garlic/spicy asian chile pepper/regular pepper/olive oil/onion sauce my roommate and I invented yesterday is. There's a big bowl of it marinating some meat in my fridge, and I am getting more and more excited the closer dinnertime gets.

Also, check out this website:

www.bugbrand.co.uk





Any ideas for a quintet?

Monday, October 13, 2008

London Contemporary Orchestra doing Messiaen, Jonny Greenwood, other good ones

I kind of can't believe the quality of musicianship in this town. I saw the London Contemporary Orchestra this past Friday, and I'd be surprised to find out if anyone in the ensemble is over the age of 25. The conductor, Hugh Brunt, graduated college just last year and already leads with a sort of balance of care and Boulez-esque precision that makes for killer shows in modern music. Brad Lubman has that too, and he's one of my favorites.

Anyway it was a sold out show, in St. Luke's church, which is a really cool venue with a kind of glass and wood box inside of the old church building, and featured the premiere of a new work by Emily Hall, called Put Flesh On! which was for orchestra, solo cello, and mixed electronics. On first listen I thought it sounded cool and that was about it, but the more I think about it the more I like it. The interplay between the soloist, orchestra, and recorded sounds is really interesting, and I think it takes hearing the whole piece to figure out what is going on.

Previous to that in the evening were Xenakis's Le Sacrifice and Britten's Serenade for tenor, horn, and strings. Sensitive performances were given to both, and I'm waking up to just how important Britten is as a composer over here. He doesn't get performed too much at home, but I've only been here a month and have already heard three of his pieces live and been assigned three more large scale ones to listen to an analyze a bit of. There's a really well balanced mix of all sorts of things going on with him, and the more I listen to the more I realize it. Xenakis was awesome as expected, short as it was.

After these three came the expected highlight of the evening, Jonny Greenwood's Popcorn Superhet Receiver. Hearing this live, especially the pizzicato section, was something I'd been looking forward to since first hearing it, so my view is probably a bit biased...but it was gorgeous, and I was just plain excited to be there, and felt like I did at a lot of rock shows as a kid through it. If you get the chance, see this piece live.

The evening's closer was Messiaen's Les Offrandes Oubliees. It's impossible to put Messiaen into words, especially considering how many people have tried and failed. Just listen to it. I haven't been that moved at a concert in quite some time. Between those two I'd put this on my list of all time favorite shows right alongside Radiohead this summer, Music for Eighteen Musicians two years ago, and Bright Eyes at the Disney Hall a while back too. It put me in a good mood all weekend, which got me working a lot on the violin/viola duo. Which is what I'm off to work on now. Tomorrow night George Benjamin conducts the London Sinfonietta in the first UK performance of Grisey's Les Espaces Acoustiques, at Queen Elizabeth Hall, so I'm looking forward to that too. Cheers.

Friday, October 3, 2008

London

To say that this city has a lot going on would be an understatement. Wednesday night, after hearing one of the producers for the BBC talk about a music/film series she curated, some friends and I went to go hear the Budapest Festival Orchestra perform Schoenberg's Transfigured Night and Mahler's Song of the Earth. They weren't on their A game for Transfigured Night, but the Mahler was killer. Afterwards we walked along the river to a bar called The Rake, which is very quickly becoming my favorite, mostly for their selection.

Thursday morning I met my friend Lee, from home, at Waterloo station. He's in town visiting family but had a day to hang out, so we had an extremely fresh lunch at Borough Market, by my flat, followed by tea in the courtyard of Southwark Cathedral. From there we went to see the Rothko exhibit at the Tate Modern, then to a lecture on campus by George Benjamin, about French musical life in the 70's and to introduce Grisey's Espaces Acoustique, which will have it's first performance in the UK next week. For the evening we went to go see a play called Riflemind, mostly because Philip Seymour Hoffman was directing it. Good stuff, although the lead actress was pretty weak.

And today was a whole bunch of studying and composing and running a few errands. I think I'm a bit saturated for going out and doing things anyway. Gotta go keep writing/listen to Benjamin Britten's Church Parables. 

Friday, September 26, 2008

Has It Really Been Since June?

Apparently I'm not very good at keeping up a blog. Maybe that's a good thing though, as I've been spending just about all of my time doing music since last time I've updated. Here's what happened this summer:

1. Graduated UCSD, degree in music and political theory. Cool!

2. Moved to Paris, to study for summer at L'Ecole Normale Du Musique Du Paris. I spent most of my time doing counterpoint and harmony and ear training and the like in the Nadia Boulanger method, but got to compose a bit under Michel Merlet, who was a student of Messiaen's. Also made some great friends, from all over the place. I wrote a string trio, that I started during an all-nighter on the sidewalk in pouring rain in a small town called Arras, after seeing Radiohead and Sigur Ros there. You can hear it from the Paris show at the end of July here.

3. Went back to California for a couple of weeks, where I helped out some friends in The Honest Iago Music and Arts Collective with some recording and writing. I'll put a link up to their site when the songs are released. Also had shows with them, which went very well.

4. Said a very sad but hopeful goodbye to my friends and girlfriend and family and moved to London. I'm now here and studying composition with Rob Keeley for an MMus at King's College London, and generally enjoying the music scene and meeting people. Finally saw the Rite of Spring live and it was a religious experience on Wednesday, especially when coupled with Ligeti's Atmospheres and performed by the London Philharmonic. This is a great town for music, as that concert was only 4 pounds, and they seem to have something similar almost every day. The next night (Thursday) my friends Tom, Nil, and I went to go see Strike Anywhere at the Camden Underworld, also a great show. I did get a very solid kick in the face, but it feels a bit better tonight. It looks like we are starting a composers'/new music ensemble at King's with some of the other people in the program, and I'm getting close already with a guy from Cornwall named Tom, and an Irish guy named Donal, who are both composers and really great guys.

5. There's a duo for violin and viola on the way, and it's going to be entirely new territory for me. That's all folks.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Interview

On the UCSD Music Department website,



Enjoy!

Saturday, June 7, 2008

End of the Year

It has (yet again) been a while since I've updated, mostly because I've been very busy. There's lots of good news to share though.

Densities, for piano, is finished, for the time being. It was given a premiere by William Fried a few weeks ago, in a well attended concert. The crowd seemed to like it, so that was very exciting.

At the same concert Kimberley Turney gave the premiere of An Everchanging House, which I wrote almost two years ago. It got a great recording by Harvey Sollberger, but was never actually performed until now, and a few people there really dug that one too. Harvey's recording is on my myspace page.

The UCSD guitar ensemble gave a second (and final) performance to Under a Neon Sky. This won me the Stewart Prize from the music department, for the most outstanding creative work of the year. 

A week after that was my senior guitar recital, which was small and informal, with just a few friends, but I did perform Steve Reich's "Electric Counterpoint" with the ensemble, and that was sweet.

Yet another week later came the second performance of the Reich, on the ensemble's year end concert. This completely sold out, and marks my first sold out show. This is very exciting.

I'm in Newbury Park right now, and am driving up to Ojai each day until Sunday for the Ojai Music Festival. It's great so far, but I'll give a full update once it's over.

Monday, April 21, 2008

Karate Snow Machine

My friend Alex and I started playing together a little while ago, and just recorded a bit of it this weekend and put it online. Listen to it here: www.myspace.com/karatesnowmachine.

If you're wondering about the name, my roommate Matt reminded me how awesome the season 3 finale of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia was with this quote:

"Karate snow machine chopsit
I'm chopping all of my action
And mostly power"

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Densities, again

The more I listen to/delve into the piece I am working on for piano and drum set, the more that I realize that it needs to be a percussion ensemble piece to have the desired effect. I can also now see one of the major challenges of being a working composer, which is writing music to a deadline. Having (thought I) completely finished it, after only about three months of work, my final product is only a sketch for the piece I now envision that I want people to hear. And yet a concert is expected in a little over a month. This is certainly a conundrum.


In other news I've been accepted for a Masters of Music in Composition at King's College, London. Looks like I'm leaving town for a while.

Noise

My friend Alex Chiu and I played some music a couple of nights ago, and things went really well. He plays violin and sings a little bit, and I was playing with a synth, and we made some very loud, very long soundscapes, with a whole lot of static, reading out of a French phrase book, and playing a kalimba with a scissors. It was stuff that most people would probably hate. This makes me wonder why that is.

First possible response: it doesn't make sense. The probable rational for this would be that there is no structure to what we're doing, because for music to make "sense" (to a listener at least) having some sort of structure is important. My defense is that, even if it doesn't make sense aurally, the concept of music without  structure is an artistically important one to pursue, as it stands in opposition to the accepted norm, and pushing far beyond the norms is what art is often all about. I'm not taking credit for this idea, just restating it as a relevant argument.

Second possible response: it doesn't sound good, or it is not easy to listen to. I'm not well-enough-read on aesthetic philosophy to make a valid counter argument, but I can say from experience that a whole lot of art doesn't look good or isn't easy to understand, but is still of high quality. Easy recent example: The Counterfeiters is not an easy to watch film, but is of extremely high quality, and pushes challenging questions (in this case of morality) on the viewer. Art is supposed to affect those who view or listen to it, and repulsion or confusion are both strong feelings, far stronger than those of relaxation or comfort conjured up by the latest four chord alternapop jam. (Personally, I love relaxing music, because life is pretty hectic right now, but I try to find such relaxation in beautiful, serene musics that are well written, theoretically interesting, or that offer a counterpoint to the more chaotic sounds I enjoy. Easy listening can be a powerful tool if you frame it with chaos.)

Third possible response: it's just noise. No thought goes in, nothing interesting comes out. Defending this is easy, as noise is generally defined as "unwanted sound," as is evidenced by the common use of phrases like "signal to noise ratio" by recording technicians. This could fall apart as a semantic argument, but if it's intentional, it's not noise. If you are watching tv and it goes to the black and white specks with the loud static instead of Planet Earth, that is both visual and audio noise. If you decide to use the same sound to introduce a guitar part on a rock record, it's sound/music/signal/what you want/not noise. As to no thought going in and nothing interesting going out...well if not thought went in, nothing would come out, because producing sound requires conscious action. The term interesting can be a bit messy, but this is basically a matter of opinion. If a listener does not care to be challenged or to look at the bigger picture, beyond what the sound waves are shaped like, then sure, it's not very interesting. If he or she is looking to expand his or her horizons, or is curious about raw, on the spot artistic creation, then this kind of music is very very interesting.




I'm part of the latter crowd on that last point, and we'll be recording it the next time we do it, so that you can decide for yourself.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Densities/Blueprints

I'm currently working on a piece called Densities. It deals with relationships between numbers at is for piano and drum set. My good friend Ian Crandell is helping me out with some of the math that needs to be performed for its composition. When it's finished, I plan on rescoring it for piano and tape, drum set and tape, and percussion ensemble. I will also post a description of some of the techniques that went into it.

I've begun making plans for my next two pieces as well. Both involve spoken word. There may also be a string quartet based on some of the pitch material in the current piece, Densities, on the way. We'll see what the priorities are come the end of this one.

I'll be in Paris studying counterpoint and harmony at L'Ecole Normale de Musique de Paris for the month of July. I'll also be studying composition with Sofia Gubaidulina. If you're there during that time, drop me a line.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Concerts, new piece in the works

If you're in the San Diego area, I've got a few shows coming up, with various groups. Here are the dates and locations:

March 13, 6 pm: UCSD Guitar Ensemble performs my piece "Under a Neon Sky" at Erickson Hall, UCSD

April 17, 12 pm: Honest Iago is playing in a battle of the bands in Price Center to open on the mainstage for the Sun God festival.

May 7, 8 pm: My pieces Under a Neon Sky, 88, and the new one called Densities will be performed at Mandeville Recital Hall

May 17, 8 pm: I'll be the soloist in a performance of Steve Reich's epic Electric Counterpoint, Erickson Hall

May 31, 8 pm: Another performance of Electric Counterpoint




Hope to see you at one of them!

Friday, February 8, 2008

88, as recorded by William Fried

Scroll down to the first entry for the sheet music to this one, otherwise, give it a listen. This is my piece for solo piano, entitled 88, as recorded by the pianist William Fried earlier this week.

Listen by clicking here.


Wednesday, January 16, 2008

College Radio

My friends Eric and Sara and I have a show on KSDT, Wednesday nights from 6 till 8 pacific time. There'll be an exciting mix of noise, experimental, electronic, jazz, post rock, hardcore, punk, modern concert music, and indie, so tune in. You can listen to it by going to ksdt.ucsd.edu or clicking here.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

On Serialism

Total Serialism, in and of itself, is a failed experiment. It is an attempt to bring back to music an order that has, in the most basic sense, disappeared. Since Cage and the experimental movement in the nineteen sixties, literally anything- even those things that do not produce sound- can be considered music, from the mixing of a vegetable smoothie to continuing to walk in a certain direction. This loss of definition of music and subsequent infinite multiplication of available musical materials is a nearly overwhelming prospect for a composer to face, and total Serialism is merely a means of coping. To clarify what I mean by this, I will first offer a brief explanation of total serial technique and its goal of establishing order in an otherwise chaotic and disorganized system, then explain the shortcomings of such a technique. This will lead to the conclusion that, while total Serialism can be a useful source of material, it should not be considered an artistic standard that composers should aspire to fulfill.


Serialism is a technique by which the twelve pitches are organized into “rows.” These rows can be manipulated mathematically through transposition, inversion, retrograding, recombination, and any combination of these techniques. This mode of composition was created by Arnold Schoenberg at the beginning of the twentieth century and was practiced most popularly by his students Alban Berg and Anton Webern. This trio, affectionately referred to as the Second Viennese School, used Serialism as a system of organization for atonal music. The most pertinent (though not entirely correct) analogy is that of serial rows to tonal scales or keys. The composers of the Second Viennese School used the system to find pitch material, but inserted their personal voices, or a human element, through rhythm, dynamics, expression, tempo, timbre, and instrumentation.


Composers after the Second World War, most notably Pierre Boulez, considered the work of the Second Viennese School an important step in the modernization of compositional technique, but thought that the potential of the system had not been fully realized. They began to apply the technique used for pitches to all aspects of music, such as rhythm and dynamics. This fuller application of the technique defines total Serialism. In this system, pitches are often assigned numbers as per set theory, and these are entered into a matrix for manipulation. By translating the pitches into number values, these values can be retranslated into durations, volumes, or whatever else the composer might desire. The following diagram will be of use for understanding the technique. It illustrates how first the pitches are translated into numbers, and then how the numbers are entered into a matrix.





The use of total Serialism entirely changes the role of the composer. In the Second Viennese School, once the pitches had been selected, the composers would manipulate them to create an expressive, emotional meaning (possibly a holdover from the romantic era’s view of music as a tool for expression). With total Serialism, whatever formula for the application of rows the composer decided to use predicted how the music would sound. The argument in favor of this is that the composers of the time, just after the end of the war, wanted to remove themselves from the music entirely. They thought that personal expression (especially nationalism) in music had been partly to blame for the worldwide tragedy of the war, and that by removing themselves from the music a similar catastrophe in the future could be avoided.


Whether or not this self-centered view of the world is healthy, the composers accomplished their goal of removing themselves from the music. The sound of much total serial music is stark and sterile, like Boulez’s Structures for two pianos, and the often creative and ingenious mathematical thinking that goes into writing such music is lost on the listener. Here is where the practice of total Serialism begins to fall apart.


The total serialists criticized the Second Viennese School for not having taken Serialism far enough, yet they themselves did not fully expand its possibilities. For example, they remained connected to the music of the past that they were trying to break away from by continuing to use the same system of twelve tones, as opposed to reconsidering their basic notions of music, as many of the experimentalists did. Their philosophy and technique did not realize its full potential, and with the current move towards the postmodern juxtaposition of contrasting styles and research into twelve-tone tonality, it most likely never will.


In evaluating the total serialists’ goal and achievement, they should be given credit for creativity and for attempting something entirely unheard of in music before them. The common problem that many of the total serialist composers share is that in their dedication to their systems, they have entirely neglected the importance of the surface aesthetic of the music.


One from their generation, however, stands above the others for his ability to combine expression with total Serialism, and that is Luigi Nono. In his Il Canto Sospeso, the pitch, duration, timbre, and dynamics are all dictated by serial methods, but his application of these procedures, as well as his willingness to break with what the system dictates, give the piece not only a clear sense of lyricism (the “pop-sensibility” lacking in much avant-garde music) but a personal, human touch. Nono would even leave out notes that the formula demanded in the name of lyricism and expressivity. This, as is elucidated by Nono in his essay The Historical Reality of Music Today, is because he is conscious of the past, and tries to learn what he can from it while using the new system and the sounds it opens up for use.


Many people enjoy Nono’s music far more than that of the other total serialists. His music has commonalities with the kinds of music people most frequently enjoy: rock, pop, hip hop, and jazz. The best known and most listened to concert music comes from the classical and romantic eras. These musical genres are highly expressive, and are often lyrical, two characteristics which are attractive to many people. We find these in Nono’s work, and people connect with music that has a meaning in its sound.


I do not propose that we, as composers and musicians, regress to a musical style that is over a hundred years old. Serialism can be a useful source of material, but that material is most effective when used in a meaningful context. Locking oneself into such a restrictive system discloses a fear of having to choose which materials to use from the virtually unlimited resources available, and places strict limits on artistic creativity. To accept any one system as a standard for all composition seems simply naïve. Yet, the serialists made an important contribution to the palate of sounds and ideas that we composers can draw from. We can use the sounds the serialists have invented in combination with historical precedents and our own new creations to push music into new grounds and open up new sonic worlds for the enjoyment of our listeners.

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Books

I just went on an amazon.com shopping spree with a collection of gift cards from Christmas, and bought some books and scores that are going to be very informative and fun and exciting to read. Here's the list of things I'm now waiting for in the mail.

Schoenberg - Style and Idea
Schoenberg - Structural Functions of Harmony
Mick Goodrick - The Advancing Guitarist
Lewis Porter - John Coltrane: His Life and Music
Debussy - Three Orchestral Works
Stravinsky - The Rite of Spring


I can't decide which I'm most excited about, but both Style and Idea and The Advancing Guitarist have been recommended to me numerous times, so those should be cool.


Also, if you read the last entry, a guy named Tom North was recommended to me (I think by Mark Dresser, if so thanks) to ask about bitone stuff. I also found a composer/guitarist from Australia named Chris Sainsbury who has written some cool stuff using them, and wrote him, and he said he will mail me his writings on the subject. You can find these two guys here:


Tom North (listen to The Parallax Gambit)



Happy new year everyone.