Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

So, in late June, my fiancee, her son, his girlfriend and I will be travelling to TO for a vacation. For those of you who've been there or live there, what are THE must see attractions? We'll be taking in a Blue Jays game one night.

 

Any help is appreciated.

 

Posted (edited)
  On 5/5/2019 at 6:16 PM, BuffaloBill said:

Probably the most “touristy” thing to do is to go up the CN tower but it is pretty cool.  

Expand  

 

Never thought I was afraid of heights til I ventured outside on the observation deck!

 

Been a while since I’ve visited Canada’s largest city so, , besides CN Tower, all I can suggest is Yorkville, China Town, and Hockey Hall of Fame.  City Hall Plaza is cool, at least to me.  Adult beverages at the Royal York as well.  Eaton Center, if you like shopping.

 

Also, CBC has a broadcast studio at CN Tower with Glenn Gould’s actual Chickering Piano in the lobby, but I’m one of few who finds that interesting.

.

Edited by The Senator
Posted
  On 5/5/2019 at 6:32 PM, The Senator said:

 

Never thought I was afraid of heights til I ventured outside on the observation deck!

 

Been a while since I’ve visited Canada’s largest city so, , besides CN Tower, all I can suggest is Yorkville, China Town, and Hockey Hall of Fame.  City Hall Plaza is cool, at least to me.  Adult beverages at the Royal York as well.  Eaton Center, if you like shopping.

 

Also, CBC has a broadcast studio at CN Tower with Glenn Gould’s actual Chickering Piano in the lobby, but I’m one of few who find’s that interesting.

.

Expand  

 

 

If you are with a group Dim Sum in China town is awesome.

  • Like (+1) 1
Posted
  On 5/5/2019 at 6:32 PM, The Senator said:

 

Never thought I was afraid of heights til I ventured outside on the observation deck!

 

Been a while since I’ve visited Canada’s largest city so, , besides CN Tower, all I can suggest is Yorkville, China Town, and Hockey Hall of Fame.  City Hall Plaza is cool, at least to me.  Adult beverages at the Royal York as well.  Eaton Center, if you like shopping.

 

Also, CBC has a broadcast studio at CN Tower with Glenn Gould’s actual Chickering Piano in the lobby, but I’m one of few who finds that interesting.

.

Expand  

 

i have no huge fear of heights but wouldn't want to do something like that....

 

Glenn's CDs are a staple of my existence, especially his 20th century stuff like Krenek

 

 

 

 

Posted
  On 5/5/2019 at 6:33 PM, BuffaloBill said:

 

 

If you are with a group Dim Sum in China town is awesome.

Expand  

 

LOVE Dim Sum - made a point to go for breakfast at least once a month in SF.

 

Never went in TO but, on your recommendation, it’s now on my list!

.

 

Posted (edited)
  On 5/5/2019 at 6:37 PM, row_33 said:

 

i have no huge fear of heights but wouldn't want to do something like that....

 

Glenn's CDs are a staple of my existence, especially his 20th century stuff like Krenek

Expand  

 

Mine as well, but, being more of a traditionalist, I own everything he ever recorded by Bach (also have his recordings of all the Mozart and Beethoven sonatas, and Prokofiev and Wagner’s Sigfried Idyll).

 

I found his distaste for the Romantics quite odd, as I have a bootleg of Chopin’s 3rd piano sonata - Gould sounded like Horowitz!

 

Next time visit, I must go see Steinway CD318 at the National Library.  I believe the last person to perform on it was fellow Canadian Angela Hewitt, a brilliant interpreter of Bach whom I had the geat pleasure of seeing perform the ‘Goldbergs’ in their entirety, at Davies Hall in SF, when she was just on the cusp of her rise to fame.

.

.

Edited by The Senator
  • Awesome! (+1) 1
Posted
  On 5/5/2019 at 7:01 PM, The Senator said:

 

Mine as well, but, being more of a traditionalist, I own everything he ever recorded by Bach (also have his recordings of all the Mozart and Beethoven sonatas, and Prokofiev and Wagner’s Sigfried Idyll).

 

I found his distaste for the Romantics quite odd, as I have a bootleg of Chopin’s 3rd piano sonata - Gould sounded like Horowitz!

.

Expand  

 

good stuff

 

Glenn wanted to work on the 20th century rep that would not get wide release, John Ogdon was another who took to this line of composers, both had a tough time....

 

 

 

Posted
  On 5/5/2019 at 7:07 PM, row_33 said:

 

good stuff

 

Glenn wanted to work on the 20th century rep that would not get wide release, John Ogdon was another who took to this line of composers, both had a tough time....

Expand  

 

Gould’s success and brilliance with the more ‘traditional repertoire’, and success in the stock market, made it much easier for him to indulge his ‘less traditional tastes.

 

I wish some of his 20h century recordings included Rachmaninov.  When discussing Carl Orff’s ‘Carmina Burana’ (way over-played at sporting events), Gould humorously stated, “And you thought Phillip Glass found an easy way to earn a living!”

 

I’m glad he never recorded  John Cage’s ‘4’33’!

 

If you haven’t read Tim Page’s ‘The Glenn Gould Reader’, I highly suggest it.  Likewise, the movie, ‘Thirty Short Films About Glenn Gould’.

.

 

 

  On 5/5/2019 at 7:25 PM, Ridgewaycynic2013 said:

So do I.  ‘That’s What I Like About You’ was a kicka$$ song!

Expand  

 

Sure was, If you enjoy senseless lyrics over the simplest 3-chord progression . ?

.

  • Haha (+1) 1
Posted
  On 5/5/2019 at 7:26 PM, The Senator said:

Sure was, If you enjoy senseless lyrics over the simplest 3-chord progression . 

.

Expand  

Although my comprehension of the intricacies of classical is woefully inadequate, both have a place in my listening.  Pardon my whiskey breath, I just rode in from Butte...  ?

  • Like (+1) 1
Posted (edited)
  On 5/5/2019 at 7:35 PM, Ridgewaycynic2013 said:

Although my comprehension of the intricacies of classical is woefully inadequate, both have a place in my listening.  Pardon my whiskey breath, I just rode in from Butte...  ?

Expand  

 

Well, no probs, you didn’t spend a lifetime studying it, and are certainly very knowledgable of things I am completely ignorant.

 

BTW, I enjoy almost very form of music, save for rap, which I probably should appreciate since it reminds me of the first primitive humans beating a hollow log (rhythm), or stretching an animal hide across one (drums), or an stretching an animal sinew across one to discover the harmonic series (melody) and invent the first string instrument.

 

I adore Oscar Peterson, Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis, Sinatra, Connick, etc., as much as I adore Van Morrison, the Rolling Stones, Steely Dan, Frank Zappa, Springsteen, Dylan, Skynard, Little Feat, etc., as much as I like any music.

 

As long as it’s good music, I like it.

 

(BTW, I enjoy good whiskey too - had probably a bit too much bourbon yesterday, but understandable, I hope - I lost a bit of money.)

 

You didn’t really ‘ride in’ from Butte?  Must have saddle sores!

.

.

Edited by The Senator
  • Like (+1) 3
Posted
  On 5/5/2019 at 5:35 PM, Joe in Winslow said:

So, in late June, my fiancee, her son, his girlfriend and I will be travelling to TO for a vacation. For those of you who've been there or live there, what are THE must see attractions? We'll be taking in a Blue Jays game one night.

 

Any help is appreciated.

 

Expand  

African Lion Safari is about an hour away from the GTA..well worth the ride imo.As others stated...Hockey HOF is a no miss.

Very good Thai places around if you folks like that type of food.

Posted

You guys are better at hijacking than the plo

  On 5/5/2019 at 7:59 PM, Misterbluesky said:

African Lion Safari is about an hour away from the GTA..well worth the ride imo.As others stated...Hockey HOF is a no miss.

Very good Thai places around if you folks like that type of food.

Expand  

 

Thank you!

Posted (edited)
  On 5/5/2019 at 8:16 PM, Joe in Winslow said:

You guys are better at hijacking than the plo

Expand  

 

Yeah, sorry.

 

Thai is probably my favorite - go eat some.

 

(Also, head up to Mt. Pleasant cemetery to see the Gould grave site - has the first few measures of the ‘Goldberg Variations’, his most famous recording and only piece of music he recorded twice, in 1955 and again in 1980, etched on his tombstone.)

 

?

.

D30B1CBD-03F9-4937-BFA0-29995E1DFAC7.jpeg

Edited by The Senator
×
×
  • Create New...