Roland JP-4 synthesizer "Introducing the new standard..." full-page black and white advertisement from page 55 in the November 1978 issue of Contemporary Keyboard.
I picked this advertisement for one big reason in particular. I'll let you listen for yourself.
Yup. The arpeggiator. I ***love*** arpeggiators. ***LOVE*** them.
In particular that riff from Duran Duran's Rio!
And now, every time I hear that arpeggiator I get a little weepy.
Let me tell you a little story.
I live in Canada. The middle of Canada. And around this time of year it begins to get cold. Right now we are hitting 0 degrees Celsius at night. The garden is done and squirrels are getting drunk on fermented crab-apples that have fallen off the trees. They are brave little suckers when they're bagged.
Anyways, last Sunday morning I decided it was finally time to turn on the furnace. After a couple of minutes, the familiar warmth that usually begins to slowly permiate my house was... well... it wasn't. No heat!
Huh.
So I ventured down into my basement and took the cover off the furnace. I could feel the vibration of the furnace fan, but I swear I couldn't feel air flow. So, without thinking my next action through to its possible logical conclusions, I stuck my left index finger into the fan motor.
Hey neat - blood!
Lots of it.
Wait... that's MY blood.
That's when I realized the fan took off the end of my finger. Not a lot of it. But enough that the nurse at Urgent Care would later describe it as a "gaping hole". A "gaping hole" deep enough that the doctor was concerned about bone infection.
It was a stupid thing to do. And I felt pretty foolish.
But those good peeps at the hospital fixed me up and sent me home in under two hours. Who says Canada's health care system sucks?*
*Not me.
And I gotta say, the nurse that first bandaged me up was super nice about it. She calmed me down and was very understanding and kind about the whole thing. All I could think about was how she probably had a shitty week of no sleep and here I was taking time out of her busy schedule to attend to the result of my extreme stupidity when I'm sure she had a lot of other things to do.
Nurses are good people. Okay, she may have been kinda hot too. Just sayin'...
Anyways, it took a few days before I finally man-up'd and posted a photo on Facebook for my friends. Mostly because when I went back yesterday night for a check-up, the nurse did an awesome job of creating a harness-like system to keep everything in place.
I also posted it to get some group sympathy. And it worked.
But one commenter in particular said something that struck a chord (pun intended):
"EEEK! Your arpeggio finger!"
LOL!
1 comment:
Ouch - I've (sorta) done that. Got myself with a knife once, took the tip off. More shock than pain, but... It's gonna take six months to heal, at least, so be prepared.
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