Posts Tagged Colorado
Figaro, Figaro, Figaro
Posted by Bob Kumagai in Music, Technology, That's Life on February 8th, 2010
A Saturday night at Opera Colorado’s performance of The Barber of Seville was helped along by an ingenious iPhone app. Almost any event held at Denver’s Ellie Caulkins Opera House both benefits and suffers from the features of its seats, to wit, the incredibly uncomfortable seats (which could only have been selected because the folding chair manufacturer was out of stock) along with the clever electronic seatback titling system called, appropriately, Figaro. Since few of Denver’s opera fans are either fluent in Italian (or French and German) or have an intimate knowledge of the sung libretto, the English translation provided by the pale blue OLED displays makes the performances much easier to follow. Such translation titling in America’s opera houses was once viewed as hayseed – a reflection of the lack of sophistication of US audiences – but has grown to be adopted by other country bumpkin facilities in Milan, Barcelona, London and Vienna.

Figaro Titling at the Ellie Caulkins Opera House
Suffice it to say that none of row D’s occupants had working Figaro’s to accompany Figaro, creating a less than optimal experience and quite a bit of griping to the helpless ushers during intermission. Having seen Barber staged, albeit close to 20 years earlier, I recalled that Act II has a large amount of sung character narrative that propels the action; in other words, it’s pretty hard to follow what’s going on without some type of libretto. So what to do? In the age of the iPhone could there be an app to bail the casual opera fan out? Indeed there is. A quick search of the App Store revealed that the good folks at Intermundia had an app that contained not only an English/Italian libretto, but an adjustable slider that would allow the text to move at a speed consistent with the performance – brilliant. So while the rest of my row scratched their heads through to the conclusion, I was more able to enjoy the chaos of Rossini’s comedy.

Opera App Saves the Evening
As to the performance? Opera Colorado’s production of one of music’s most beloved comedies turned out to be great fun. Director David Gately has staged this warhorse 30 times before utilizing a broadly comic reading that includes plenty of sight gags, cartoonish versions of the Bartolo and Basilio characters and a silly slow-motion brawl that ends Act I that would make fans of The Matrix proud. Rosina was beautifully sung by Isabel Leonard (remember that name as she may the next great young mezzo-soprano), her debut performance in the role. The opening night “talk back” session held by General Director Greg Carpenter and Director of Artistic Planning Brad Trexell was a welcome chance to gain insight into the production planning and thought process of the company.
A hearty Bravo to the cast – and to the inventiveness and ingenuity of the iPhone app.
Shorts at 3 Degrees?
Posted by Bob Kumagai in Colorado, Parenting, That's Life on December 4th, 2009

December - What Not To Wear
The recent arrival of bitter cold temperatures in Denver has many of us discarding concerns around global warming in favor of nudging the thermostat up and dramatically increasing our carbon footprint. Rising sea levels may be bad for California but freezing in your own home is far more of an immediate climate crisis. Most people tend to dress appropriately for these frigid conditions – indeed those heinous fur-lined Crocs take on an entirely different fashion value in these desperate times. It is not uncommon to see people dressed as though they are competing in the Iditarod, this in spite of the fact that they are sitting on the freeway in the Suburban with the heat cranked-up to 80. This alignment between cold temperatures and climate-appropriate clothing does not appear to apply to the average American teenage boy. Especially mine.
Tom Whittaker wrote yesterday in his witty blog of witnessing some heartless parent in a luxury car practically kicking his son out at the bus stop. The kid was wearing a t-shirt. Temperature in the single digits. This, understandably, struck Tom as an example of lousy parenting. It seemed to me to be par for the course. His post set off a string of comments (I’m guilty too) that reveals that there are two groups of people in the world – 1) those that value and cherish the safety, health and well-being of children and; 2) the parents of teenagers.
Those in group #2 most likely were members of group #1 until their children hit the brick wall that is adolescence. As a card-carrying member of group #2, I have grown weary of the daily battles surrounding what my kids wear (or don’t), what they eat (or won’t), as well as what they say (or should). I am no longer aghast at my son’s choice of shorts, t-shirt and pool slides for arctic conditions that would have made Sir Ernest Shackleton run for the closest REI store. This morning, a balmy 6 degrees, I received a fittingly icy stare in response to my suggestion that some type of coat might be helpful. Like most group #2 members, each loving and well-intentioned kernal of parental guidance (aka control) is met with the rolled-eyes that signal how fatiguing it is to have been cursed with parents that are so annoying. (Someone once said that his daughter’s eye rolls were so dramatic that he could hear them roll. I can attest to the truth in this).
This is the karma payback that I get for taking my then recalcitrant 4 year old to preschool wearing only his pajama bottoms. The parenting class said, “children must be allowed to make their own choices and learn that those choices have consequences”. So when, for the umpteenth time, he refused to get dressed for preschool, it seemed perfectly fitting to march him out to the car, through the snow, for the ride to school. As we drove the mile to preschool I could barely hear my son screaming at me – what with the A/C blowing full-blast and the windows rolled down! I assured him that I understood that he was cold but to not worry because I had chosen to wear a coat and shoes, so was really warm. He looked like a hypothermia survivor of an Everest expedition gone bad, albeit one that was equipped with cowboy pajamas instead of Gore-Tex. The result was not a well-deserved visit from Child Protective Services but a kid that no longer required any encouragement to dress appropriately for winter weather. “Lesson learned!” I gloated and it worked for another few years. But slowly, the defiance grew over time until today I am resigned to being one of “those parents” that group #1 looks at as if my kids should be placed into foster care until I learn some parenting skills.
As you pass the bus stop this winter, know that the middle school kids that are dressed more for the beach than for the arctic cold, actually do have parents that have helped them survive to this point. They’ve just given up on this particular battle.
Politicians Need To Stop Using Twitter
Posted by Bob Kumagai in Colorado, Politics on November 13th, 2009
State Sen. Dave Schultheis of Colorado Springs has joined former Kansas City Chief Larry Johnson in the “Think Before Pushing Update Button on Twitter Club” by this recent tweet:
@Sen_Schultheis: Don’t for a second think Obama wants what is best for U.S. He is flying the U.S. Plane right into the ground at full speed. Let’s Roll
Mr. Schultheis has found himself in PR hot water before and appears to pride himself on his rather blunt communication style. As the notion of constructive and thoughtful engagement with those with whom you may disagree has become tiresome, the rejection of political decorum and the embrace of lobbing verbal bombs in order to garner attention (You Lie!) is now a badge of honor and has become a fundraising bonanza. It isn’t a surprise that Americans view most politicians as somewhere between used car salesmen and child molestors. Disappointing, but so what else is new?
How about politicians and commentators on both the right and the left quit this type of name-calling and get on with the serious business of leading to solutions.
You’ve Got Sand Where?
Posted by Bob Kumagai in Colorado on May 18th, 2009
This weekend I traveled to Colorado’s Great Sand Dunes, one of the most freakish accidents of nature and topography in North America. As you descend La Veta Pass into the San Luis Valley, you’re met with a ridiculous vista of giant sand dunes nestled up against the Sangre de Cristo mountain range. A surreal landscape where the mountains meet the Sahara Desert. It’s a pretty good haul from Denver – 3 to 4 hours of alternating beauty (Pikes Peak and the Spanish Peaks) and the hideously ugly (Pueblo) but is well-worth the drive.
This was the annual Boy Scout campout – about two dozen sand-covered kids scrambling across the frigid water of Medano Creek at midnight in search of the Great Sand Dunes Tiger Beetle – all in wind gusts strong enough to knock you off of your feet. The drive is too long for a day-trip, but Alamosa is nearby for those who prefer to stay in accomodations that do not involve a walk down the hill to the cold water sink. Either way – tent or motel – this a great weekend trip, particularly for families.