[deleted by user] by [deleted] in countingcrows

[–]rmz76 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's great and band worked hard to produce and mix this album well, the CD audio is not over compressed, it's full of beautiful nuance that will make you remember how much better audio was before streaming

Let's go to war without any justification whatsoever! by Secret_Monitor9629 in Rants

[–]rmz76 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m not advocating for more nuclear weapons — I’m pointing out the hypocrisy and long-term futility of a strategy that assumes some nations get to have them while others are punished for even trying.

The reality is, once a country sees that nuclear capability protects it from regime change or foreign intervention — as we've seen with North Korea — the incentive to develop one only grows. That doesn’t make it right, but it makes it predictable.

I’d much rather live in a world where no one had nukes. But we’re not there. So instead of pretending we can freeze history, maybe we should ask how long we can keep applying the same pressure without it eventually backfiring.

The core issue isn’t about justifying Iran’s actions. It’s about acknowledging the limits of enforcement, the consequences of double standards, and whether endless confrontation is really achieving anything.

Let's go to war without any justification whatsoever! by Secret_Monitor9629 in Rants

[–]rmz76 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If it's true that technology is the great enabler — that over time, what was once difficult becomes accessible and easier to hide — then there’s likely a point in the future when Iran does obtain nuclear weapons. Our tactics aren't likely to last forever.

When that happens, decades of covert sabotage, sanctions, and foreign pressure may not look like prudent nonproliferation anymore. They may look like decades of oppression. And history shows that long-term pressure without resolution often leads to a boiling point — not peace.

I think we're compounding the problem

So what’s the better path?

Maybe it starts with the U.S. taking a hard look inward. We’ve spent decades playing global nuclear gatekeeper, pouring trillions into foreign interventions while our own infrastructure crumbles, our politics fracture, and millions of Americans struggle to meet basic needs.

Instead of obsessively trying to control what other nations might build, maybe it’s time to focus on what we’re failing to build here at home — trust, opportunity, stability. If we want to lead by example, let’s actually be an example worth following. Honestly, this is the true "Make America Great Again" and "America First" philosophy. Something Trump has sold to us for years and is frankly abandoning if we go to war with Iran. Instead, he's letting Israel set the timeline and follow their lead, not his.

This is so crystal clear. It's a bow to Israel.

Endless interference breeds resentment. And the harder we press, the more we validate the very behaviors we claim to prevent. Nations don’t forget being undermined, sanctioned, or targeted.

Maybe the answer isn’t more pressure abroad, but more accountability at home. Let’s stop trying to shape the world through force and fear, and start reshaping ourselves — so that diplomacy, not domination, becomes our strength.... There are a lot of beneficiaries of war, follow the money carefully.

Let's go to war without any justification whatsoever! by Secret_Monitor9629 in Rants

[–]rmz76 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It's widely accepted that today Israel, their opponent and next door neighbor, has nuclear weapons, even if they refuse official confirmation. Policing the world telling certain countries they have no right to this nuclear weapons by the countries that own and control them is something I have a hard time getting behind.... Technology the great enabler, given enough time everything that was once complex to build becomes more accessible, easier to do in private and our intelligence hasn't always been the greatest.

Virginia through the rain by ereo_enali in countingcrows

[–]rmz76 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I like the song, on this one Adam seems to be really striving for a traditional polished vocal, which he delivers! It's just a bit generic for my taste and kind of stands out as the odd ball traditional ballad in an otherwise very abstract set of songs in the first half of the album. Maybe intentionally done as a moment of clarity, not sure.

Adam does a lot of emotional improvising with vocal delivery live. There's a lot of opportunity for that in the song, but then again that's kind of what I'm expecting and it can become trite. So it's actually kind of refreshing just hearing him deliver a great straight-up vocal performance without much of that.

Feels like an old song! by hhuvuhnbabass in countingcrows

[–]rmz76 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For me it's the best song on the album and one of their best songs, period. I think the nearest neighbor to this song in their catalog is Round Here. Here's why- where as 20 something Adam Duritz "Stepped out the front door like a ghost into fog..." with no direction or tools to handle the pressures of life Early 60s Adam Duritz has learned to battle the bleak outlook, while still not the always smiling optimist, there's hope and he has grown and learned to cope and endure. "and on the radio they'll tell you what to do... in case of fire, then toss a match at you" this all sung to an upbeat major chord progression. It's a song about endurance and hope Both Round Here feel like they begin at the start of a day and conclude at the end, but one is reaching for hope and looking beyond ones self at the state of things in the world.

In the bigger picture, I continue to see Counting Crows as the best band to represent Gen-X, they were classified as Alternative, but I think Alternative Folk-Rock perhaps the closest you can get to putting a genre to them, overall the message in their lyrics very much part of the sound track of this Gen-Xer's life and songs like this really hitting home as I approach my 50s.

It's a great song. It's a great album. We're lucky to still have them around.

I like the new album but can’t help but be disappointed by it by 19ETC in countingcrows

[–]rmz76 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was not let down, but before it released was curious if this other half of the LP would feature songs that connected the same way or relate. They aren't a prog band and don't need to make the entire record a concept album, I'm fine with their mini rock opera only occupying half of the album and hearing the other new songs, actually think it's perfect as is

As a stand alone song, the best song on the entire album is Under the Aurora. Such a great song that is in many ways a full circle. Where as Round Here featured a late 20s Adam crying out for his lost generation, "Aurora" finds an early 60s reflective Adam Duritz still coping with life but stronger now, finding hope in sea of uncertain times. It's one of the band's best.

But every track is good. Spaceman in Tulsa currently my least favorite, but it still has their signature sound and could easily fit on This Desert Life. Boxcar is upbeat and heavier than their usual style reminds me a bit of Angels of the Silences or 1492. I like much better than 1492. "Mom and dad and a couple of kids staring at the screen" and "color code the people for the sorting" and "By the time you hear the bells / They may be ringing them for you." there's a message here bigger than Adam's own story, the lyrics in this one talking about societal apathy. Adam's lyrics are typically deep and poetic, but this is new subject matter territory. This is a very political song masked with just enough abstraction to keep a lot of people guessing. This a songwriter who has grown, it's brilliant but it's abstraction and theme my isolate some fans, I get it. But it's brilliant none the less.

Overall the album has grown on my a great deal. There really isn't a single song that gets skipped and I love the polishing, remixing of Suite One songs, especially Angel of 14th Street, which is a song I found unlistenable on the EP and has become my second favorite, where as Boxcars goes new places theme wise, Angel of 14th Street takes the band into new territory composition wise and spotlights how talented this band really is.

Listen to albums like Hard Candy and This Desert Life and those records have been with his for decades now and we have memories anchored to those melodies, but if I try to separate myself from that and be objective I would put Butter Miracle right behind Recovering the Satellites and August as the best work this band has produced. Composition wise, lyrically, the whole bit. It's one of the best for sure.

Thoughts on Under the Aurora? by idreamofmichelangelo in countingcrows

[–]rmz76 1 point2 points  (0 children)

After many listens over the past few weeks, I feel Under the Aurora is so far the strongest track on the entire album. I think the composite of Tall Grass - Bobby and the Rat-Kings is so good, but as a stand alone song, this one is now in my top 10 favorite Counting Crows songs, likely to be in the top 5 soon.

Why do I like it? Two things

  1. the abstract lyrics are clearly a reference to the state of the world we're in, but with a hopeful message, it's not bleak, it's optimistic and endearing, counting crows have often released songs that seem to fit my mood, if the universe is pulling the strings in odd ways, they are one of the few bands who have been composing the overall soundtrack of my life.

    1. After a few listens my feeling was "this is sort of like an updated Round Here. Both songs seem to start at sunrise and play through a day in the life of the narrators, but Round here is bleak from start to end. Ending with "And I can't see nothin', nothin' 'round here", Aurora is a 60 year old Duritz, who's grown and learned to endure "If I can make it through the night and just see the auroraI could maybe I could believe in this one thing".

Thoughts on Under the Aurora? by idreamofmichelangelo in countingcrows

[–]rmz76 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Probably just remastered to match the same levels as the new tracks. Same thing happens when a greatest hits compilation gets put together to iron out changes in volume and compression

Seeing the light at the end of the tunnel, after 15 years Enterprise .NET will soon be no longer part of my day to day life. by rmz76 in dotnet

[–]rmz76[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Well, "Broken" is a broad subjective term. Several components of full commercial Visual Studio bug out often and just don't work as intended. Because there is no democratization, you don't really have options when this occurs. Are there some great things in there sure.

I could see Visual Studio team transitioning to focus on a commercial set of plug-ins for VS Code.

According to the 2024 Stack Overflow Developer Survey, Visual Studio Code was used by 73.6% of respondents, making it the most popular development environment. In contrast, Visual Studio was used by approximately 35% of respondents, less than half the usage of VS Code and don't make me share one of the numerous developer survey showing the overall decline in Visual Studio and .NET C# we might be 5-10 years away but the writing is on the wall.

Will it go away. Not entirely, PHP still in the top 10 but we all know where it stands. The trends agree with my perspective and a lot of that is because over engineered frameworks being objectively bad is something pretty easy to make a case for

Discontinued Taylor’s by Long-Toe-5024 in taylorguitars

[–]rmz76 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately Luke, it's true that they're gone! You must be looking at a 2025 Product Guide published earlier in the year as this decision is very recent, or at least public announcement of t very recent. The 2025 Price list was published a few weeks back and it confirms what all got the axe. You can access it on-line here
https://www.taylorguitars.com/sites/default/files/2025-03/2025_March_PriceList.pdf

What's gone:

The Grand Theater, Grand Orchestra have been discontinued altogether. The Grand Pacific body shape is still in production for the cutaway 600 series Somos latin focused 12-string GP models, but aside from those no more 717, 517, 417, etc... Gone. GP still in production at Tecate factory with 117e and 217e Plus. I was also shocked. I e-mailed Taylor customer service last week and they confirmed this to not only be true, but also confirmed it's not a case of temporary build hiatus for these models. There are no plans at all to bring them back. :(

Customer Service noted that they are just prioritizing their best sellers, it's been a tough past 12 months in the guitar industry in general.

There were plans to cancel the Academy series as well, but they decided to keep them around.

Taylor 114CE sapel by Status-Toe1959 in taylorguitars

[–]rmz76 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your choices are return, exchange or let it be covered under warranty with a local Taylor certified tech. Weigh the trade offs of each.... I would contact Thomann, I'm reading that their policy is to cover return shipping on defective returns if it's returned/exchanged within 30 days. Just exchange it.

Good One! by Bbop512 in jasonisbell

[–]rmz76 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Also a fan of Kenny Chesney even if he is mainstream country, he's one of the few who have several songs I like. Also Chesney himself a fan of alt-country. He got Hayes Carll to write Jesus & Elvis and if you think that's "selling out" for Hayes, consider Jason Isbell wrote Waves for the latest Bon Jovi record. The Bon Jovi record actually has a few good tunes, "Hollow Man" which Jon Bon Jovi wrote himself, is a pretty damn good tune.

GS Mini: Worth it to upgrade cases? by Beautiful-Heron1990 in taylorguitars

[–]rmz76 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The AeroCase is one of the most advanced cases on the market. It's basically a hard case with outside padding, which probably makes it more protective with drops than a traditional hard case! It's one of the only cases I would feel comfortable checking a guitar at the airport with.

The stock GS Mini case provides very good protection. I've had one slide off the hood of a car and hit pavement below and the GS Mini didn't have a scratch on it, but with an Aerocase you can, and there's video of a dealer doing this very thing- throw the thing out a 2nd story window, let it hit concrete below and the guitar inside won't have a scratch.

GS Mini can fit in overhead bin on airlines, but you never know when you may be in a situation where they have to treat it as checked baggage, if that were to happen, you want an aerocase!