CATEGORIES for all posts
- Arts-a-Poppin' (285)
- Beginnings (96)
- Chamber Works (44)
- Cinema Scope (340)
- LGBTQ Alphabet Soup (117)
- Literary Lyricism (94)
- Live! On Stage (95)
- Melodies Linger On (156)
- Musicabilia (43)
- Notes in the News (377)
- Poe Musicabres (211)
- The Speakeasy Chronicles (80)
- The Teaching Artist (43)
- Two-fisted Touristing (233)
Archives
- April 2026 (4)
- March 2026 (6)
- February 2026 (5)
- January 2026 (5)
- December 2025 (5)
- November 2025 (5)
- October 2025 (5)
- September 2025 (5)
- August 2025 (4)
- July 2025 (6)
- June 2025 (6)
- May 2025 (6)
- April 2025 (7)
- March 2025 (6)
- February 2025 (4)
- January 2025 (6)
- December 2024 (6)
- November 2024 (4)
- October 2024 (5)
- September 2024 (4)
- August 2024 (5)
- July 2024 (6)
- June 2024 (4)
- May 2024 (7)
- April 2024 (7)
- March 2024 (7)
- February 2024 (5)
- January 2024 (4)
- December 2023 (7)
- November 2023 (7)
- October 2023 (9)
- September 2023 (6)
- August 2023 (6)
- July 2023 (6)
- June 2023 (8)
- May 2023 (6)
- April 2023 (8)
- March 2023 (7)
- February 2023 (6)
- January 2023 (8)
- December 2022 (6)
- November 2022 (8)
- October 2022 (8)
- September 2022 (8)
- August 2022 (8)
- July 2022 (8)
- June 2022 (7)
- May 2022 (9)
- April 2022 (4)
- March 2022 (6)
- February 2022 (6)
- January 2022 (5)
- December 2021 (8)
- November 2021 (4)
- October 2021 (6)
- September 2021 (4)
- August 2021 (5)
- July 2021 (10)
- June 2021 (6)
- May 2021 (7)
- April 2021 (6)
- March 2021 (6)
- February 2021 (5)
- January 2021 (5)
- December 2020 (6)
- November 2020 (9)
- October 2020 (11)
- September 2020 (11)
- August 2020 (6)
- July 2020 (8)
- June 2020 (7)
- May 2020 (8)
- April 2020 (8)
- March 2020 (8)
- February 2020 (8)
- January 2020 (8)
- December 2019 (10)
- November 2019 (10)
- October 2019 (4)
- September 2019 (5)
- August 2019 (5)
- July 2019 (5)
- June 2019 (5)
- May 2019 (5)
- April 2019 (5)
- March 2019 (4)
- February 2019 (5)
- January 2019 (4)
- December 2018 (4)
- November 2018 (4)
- October 2018 (5)
- September 2018 (6)
- August 2018 (4)
- July 2018 (6)
- June 2018 (4)
- May 2018 (5)
- April 2018 (4)
- March 2018 (4)
- February 2018 (3)
- January 2018 (5)
- December 2017 (4)
- November 2017 (4)
- October 2017 (5)
- September 2017 (3)
- August 2017 (4)
- July 2017 (5)
- June 2017 (7)
- May 2017 (4)
- April 2017 (8)
- March 2017 (6)
- February 2017 (7)
- January 2017 (8)
- December 2016 (5)
- November 2016 (8)
- October 2016 (7)
- September 2016 (6)
- August 2016 (8)
- July 2016 (10)
- June 2016 (10)
- May 2016 (6)
- April 2016 (7)
- March 2016 (10)
- February 2016 (13)
- January 2016 (10)
- December 2015 (12)
- November 2015 (11)
- October 2015 (11)
- September 2015 (8)
- August 2015 (10)
- July 2015 (10)
- June 2015 (13)
- May 2015 (9)
- April 2015 (10)
- Follow Notes from a Composer on WordPress.com
Notes from a Composer
“Speakeasy” Selections
Category Archives: Two-fisted Touristing
UP THE ALASKAN BUTTE
There’s a Butte, specifically the Bodenberg Butte, in Alaska. It sits north of Anchorage in the Mat-Su Valley, and it makes for a lovely, steep hike and a really good spot on top from which to get some spectacular views … Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged Alaska, Anchorage, Bodenberg, Butte, Byers, Knik Glacier, Matanuska, Pioneer Peak, Valley
Leave a comment
CENTRAL PARK SILHOUETTES
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged Beethoven, Central Park, eagles, Edward Elder, Falcon, falconeer, lamp post, New York City, photography, pond, silhouette, skyscraper, statues
Leave a comment
Overcast Cherry Blossoms
Ed and I returned to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. It’s cherry blossom time. Last year the pandemic closed the gardens, and nobody except for BBG staff got to see the blossoms of the cherry esplanade bloom. This year the Sakura … Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged BBG, botanic, brooklyn, Cherry blossoms, Cherry Esplanade, daffodils, festival, first bloom, Fountain, Garden, overcast, peak bloom, pink, Red Elder, Sakura Matsuri, Tulips
Leave a comment
EIFFEL TOWER VIEWS
Making my way through the Great American Southwest posts took the focus off our 2018 trip to Paris. Much has been shared from that visit already, but there’s still more. And how could I have not yet included our trip … Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged Arche de Triomphe, Claire Eiffel, Ed Elder, Eiffel Tower, France, Gustave Eiffel, heights, Montmartre, Paris, photography, Seine, Thomas Edison
Leave a comment
EASTER KNICK-KNACK HUNT
A Game of Hide and Seek in Photos What I enjoy most about Easter is the hiding and seeking of treats. I best like hiding and having my loved ones do the seeking. It’s just Ed and me together today, … Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Beginnings, Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged back yard, beads, bear, Blow Up, cows, daffodils, dragon, Easter, frogs, game, Garden, hand puppet, hide, hunt, hyacinth, Lion, mardi-gras, mourning dove, Once Upon a Frog, photography, seek, toys, witch
1 Comment
Crocuses on the First Day of Spring
Ed and I visited the Brooklyn Botanic Garden yesterday, on the cool, sunny first day of Spring. The crocuses were in full bloom. Deeper into the gardens, the crocuses spectacularly blanket a particular hill.
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged botanic garden, brooklyn, Cherry Esplanade, Crocus, Edward Elder, geese, shadow play, Snoopy, Spring
Leave a comment
ALL OF THE GREAT AMERICAN WEST BLOG POSTS
All 26 Southwest USA Twofisted Touristing Posts Collected in One Spot OK, I can’t actually promise the full Great American West, that would basically be all of this: The area Ed and I toured August 2019, and from which the … Continue reading Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged American West, Antelope Canyon, Arizona, Bryce Canyon, Canyon, Canyon de Chelly, Colorado River, Death Valley, Grand Canyon, Grand Staicase-Escalante, Hoover Dam, Horseshoe Bend, Lake Powell, Las Vegas, Meteor Crater, Monument Valley, Navajo, Nevada, North Rim, Petrified Forest, Rainbow Bridge, Red Rock, Sedona, South Rim, Utah, Valley of Fire, Walnut Canyon, Zion
Leave a comment
MONUMENT VALLEY
Our final magnificent stop of the Great American West Tour Ed and I took the summer of 2019 was Monument Valley on Navajo land right at the border of southeastern Utah and northeastern Arizona. Certainly saved one of the best … Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Cinema Scope, Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged Arizona, Artist's Point, Butte, Ear of the Wind, East Mitten, Great American West, Hogan, Hollywood, John Ford, John Wayne, Merrick, Monument Valley, Navajo, petroglyph, photography, selfie, Stagecoach, Sun's Eye, Totem Pole, Utah, West Mitten, Western, Yei Bi Chei
2 Comments
Canyon de Chelly
The most famous feature of Canyon de Chelly is Spider Rock, a 750 feet (229 m) tall sandstone spire. So I will start this blog post with it, even though it is not the first thing visitors entering Canyon de Chelly … Continue reading
ARIZONA VISTAS
Continuing our August 2019 tour of the American West, after we left the grounds near the Petrified Forest Visitor Center, we drove on into the Petrified Forest National Park, a large national park in Eastern Arizona, with more petrified trees, … Continue reading
PETRIFIED FOREST
If a tree falls in a forest 200 million years ago, can you hear it? Well, no, you probably will not hear it. But if the tree is carried away by flood waters, and quickly submerged in silt… … it … Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged Arizona, desert, Edward Elder, forest, fossils, National Park, Petrified Forest, petrified log, photography, stone, trees
Leave a comment
A TOWN OF TWO LUCYS
In the village of Celoron, part of the town of Ellicott, on the western boundary of the city of Jamestown, in Chautauqua County, in the state of New York, United States, a statue was erected in honor of Lucille Ball, … Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged Celoron, Chautauqua, Dave Poulin, Ellicott, Jamestown, Lake, lighthouse, Lucille Ball, Lucy, Mark & Jetta Wilson, memorial, New Lucy, New York, park, Scary Lucy, sculpture, statue, Vitameatavegamin
Leave a comment
AUTUMNAL SPLENDOR in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Ed and I took some pretty pictures last Sunday in the the Brooklyn Botanic Garden…
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged Autumn, botanic garden, brooklyn, Brooklyn Museum, Cherry Esplanade, colors, Fall, Japanese Garden, leaves, nature, New York City, November, photography
Leave a comment
TELL-TALE NYLIFF AWARDS
NYLIFF – NEW YORK LONG ISLAND FILM FESTIVAL gives “THE TELL-TALE HEART – a musicabre” the BEST THRILLER – SHORT award as well as a SPECIAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARD to Danny Ashkenasi
Posted in Cinema Scope, Notes in the News, Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged Award, Covid 19, festival, film, Lindenhurst, Long Island, Mask, Moose Lodge, musicabre, New York, NYLIFF, short, short film, Special Achievement, The Tell-Tale Heart, Thriller
Leave a comment
GRAND ARMY FOUNTAIN
Statues Splashed in Water and Light I have already posted pictures of what I called The Lovers of Grand Army Plaza. But those spring pics are few and overcast compared to these sun drenched shots I took over several days … Continue reading
Posted in Arts-a-Poppin', Two-fisted Touristing
Tagged arch, cherub, civil war, Fountain, Grand Army Plaza, JFK, lovers, memorial, photography, Prospect Park, statues, sun, Union Street, water
Leave a comment