
White throated sparrows pass through Toronto each spring then head north. Right now we have some hanging out in one of the big spruce trees out back.


White throated sparrows pass through Toronto each spring then head north. Right now we have some hanging out in one of the big spruce trees out back.

Last evening I won 5 of 6 games, playing Go online with Vox. The games were mostly scrappy and competitive, but I was able to retain an edge over the evening. Next time out, Vox will take a 2 stone handicap and we’ll put that edge to the test.

In the first game, I was able to attack Vox’s groups aggressively, but halfway through, he had held his ground and my attacks were not leading to the profit I had planned on. Finally I was able to cut off and kill a group of 6 stones, giving me some reasonable territory. I won by 5.5 in a game that was all about fighting.

In the second game, Vox exploited weaknesses in my shape nicely. N8 was a beautiful move. I had to defend the group underneath it but he had 2 cutting points available above. My game was falling apart and a few moves later I had no option but to resign.

The latest episode of The Agency Podcast is up and it’s called Not Enough Material. You can listen to it here or find it in the usual places.
From windmills to goop to cobalt.
We not only watch two versions of 3:10 To Yuma but also read the original Elmore Leonard short story. I present an installment of The Comfort Food Diner and we talk about Michael Moore’s presentation of Jeff Gibbs movie Planet of the Humans, (available for free on Youtube), celebrating the 50th anniversary of Earth Day.
Today let’s listen to a couple versions of Hot Corn Cold Corn. I stumbled into this first performance on the YouTube. Chris Sharp does a guitar and vocal recording then adds in a banjo track with additional vocals. What a great job!
Dave Rawlings and his crew do this one up right as well… enjoy.
Last evening I played 6 games of go with Vox online, and won 5. He beat me in the second game by 2.5 points. I was white and komi just wasn’t quite enough. As well he had a good shot at defeating me in game 4, until during the endgame when I found a flaw in his shape and destroyed a group. I won game 6 by .5 points, the narrowest of margins. The other games I won handily.

Here’s a look at Game 5. I was able to kill the black stones in the top right. To do this I played an internal move to force him to make one eye, then use the knight’s move at M13 to stop him from running away. He made an attempt to connect, but my next move, at L19, stopped both a connection and his second eye.
The fact that we’ve been forced to play online has led to us reviewing each of our games. I think once we go back to playing over-the-board, I’d like to continue to try to review, to the degree our memories allow. I think we will both get better at it. As well, I’ve started an online notebook, so that for each of our sessions I now chart the wins and losses and also store some screen shots and a few notes about some of the games. All of these things are helping me learn from my mistakes.
It has been some time since Vox has won the majority of games during an evening of play. We’re going to play at even strength again next time but if I dominate play again, I will offer a 2-stone handicap until he figures out how to beat me.
Some songs seem to transcend style, fad and fashion and have endured in our collective imagination for a long time. Shortnin’ Bread has been a kind of cure-all for the soul, an Afro-American song dating back to the 1890s.
Three little children, lying in bed
Two was sick and the other ‘most dead
Send for the doctor and the doctor said
“feed them children on short’nin’ bread”
When those children, sick in bed,
heard that talk ’bout short’nin’ bread.
They popped up well, to dance and sing,
skipping around and cut the pigeon wing.
It seems that now in the time of Covid-19, a lot of us have turned to making bread – not so much to “cure” anything but to get back in touch with some basic life skills in a time when our world has been turned upside-down.
Mingus re-establishes context…(language not for the kiddies)
Chicken Train….this is one helluva old time outfit – featuring the hot clawhammer playing of John Herrmann. I’ve shared this one before, but I just know you want to hear it again.
The Cramps….sometimes folk music is just so damned adaptable
Fats Waller – ya! My dad introduced me to the music of Fats Waller when I was a kid
Sending this post out to Thom Hickey, who is responsible for the 388 fabulous posts on The Immortal Jukebox. I’m grateful that Thom is also a regular visitor to this little bus stop in the blog swamp. If you’re hanging out at home waiting out the virus, and you’re looking to listen to and read about a fantastic assortment of music, check it out.
The latest episode of The Agency Podcast is up! It’s called Right to Repair. You can listen right here or find The Agency in the usual places.

We have two guests this week. Brian is a friend of the The Agency. Candy was moved by a Facebook post he recently made, and asked him to join us to give his perspective on Covid-19 and isolation. We’re also joined by Stagg – the Emperor of Ephemera and Candy’s partner – to discuss Dirty Harry, Ikiru and more.
Here’s David Bromberg…. (another tune for our times)
Last evening I played some online Go with my friend Vox for the first time since I had my knee repaired. I was worried about two things. First, would I be able to sit at the computer for a sustained period of time? Earlier in the day I had watched a movie on the computer as part of my usual podcast R&D and found I had to do so in two parts, as after a while I became uncomfortable and had to go elevate my leg for a while. My other worry was focus. Would I be able to concentrate well enough to offer Vox some competitive games? At this point I had mostly stopped taking the heavier-duty pain meds the surgeon prescribed for me, which I know had messed with my ability to focus.
I started off well enough with a 7.5 point win playing the white stones. The next two games I lost by resignation after failing to see the obvious danger a group of my stones were in. In the first of those games, my positions crumbled quickly after I blundered away a group of stones.
In the second, I opened in an unusual way, with the tengen (10-10 point), then played aggressively. Vox withstood my early attacking very well and it became a tight game. I thought this one was pretty much done and I was ahead by just a couple points. In fact I had to respond to a move to make a group safe. How could I not see such an obvious thing? I guess I just couldn’t focus in detail well enough. I played elsewhere and Vox proceeded to kill my group. My misread was devastating and in failing to read it properly, I deserved to lose. I have to say that I seriously dislike making that kind of obvious error.
In the 4th game, I opened with a low Chinese fuseki. I dominated this game and won by 28.5 points. I was able to bother his groups all over the board and force him to think about how to make his eye-shape. You don’t have to kill stones when you attack, just gain profit from the effort. I won the 5th as well, but it was a tough, close game.

Vox likes to play the sansan points (3-3) in many of his openings, something I very rarely do. This time out I thought I’d take his own game to him, and I opened with sansans on the right side of the board. Although I did OK and squeaked out a victory, I can’t say I enjoyed opening up this way. It just seems too slow. I prefer to develop faster and map out larger frameworks early in the game. On the other hand, playing lots of games against the same person, it’s interesting to change things up and create new looks and situations for Vox to cope with.
Overall last evening, I won 3 of the 5 games. I didn’t dominate as much as I did in other recent sessions. It is true that in the two games I lost, I made inexcusable blunders. It’s also fair to say, though, that Vox played stronger games over all than he has in a while. One of the things he improved was being more attentive to his shapes.
When I consider why it is I’ve had an edge recently, I think Vox needs to focus more on sente, seizing the initiative. I can think of some examples in which he has made a move that might reduce my potential but doesn’t force me to respond. As well, sometimes I’ve noticed he will make a move that just isn’t worth enough to be sente and I’ll ignore and play a bigger one elsewhere. The other thing I’ve noticed is that sometimes Vox will allow me to pen him into a corner in which he takes territory. There have been times in which I think he would be better to push out to the centre and refuse to be surrounded, even if it means not getting as many points of territory.
As always, I look forward to more games soon.
Since The Agency Podcast started up in late summer, we’ve been pretty reliable in getting new episodes up on some time each Tuesday. Last week we published on Thursday and this week, it will be the same deal. We’ll be recording mid-afternoon today and making the episode available for you as quickly as possible. Thanks for waiting. We really appreciate all our listeners who keep coming back for more!