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Hey guys! My name is Jozef, but my friends call me "Mojo." I am completely and absolutely in love with planet Earth. Back in 2004, I made it my mission to experience as much of this crazy/beautiful world as I possibly could in a lifetime. In September 2012, I moved to Brazil. These are my adventures. I hope you enjoy!

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

On this day...



On this day in 1969, Benjamin Chase Harper was born.

Ben Harper is my favourite musician.  His music has been the soundtrack of my life for many years.  His words have helped me enjoy the good times, get through the tough times and think more deeply about everything from religion to politics to love.

On September 29th, 2008 I saw Ben Harper and The Innocent Criminals in concert.  To be so close to someone whose music and words touch you so deeply is an incredible, emotional and euphoric experience.  It will go down as one of the best night of my life.

Happy Birthday Ben Harper!



Saturday, October 18, 2008

Back to the Gower


When Doctor Emmett Brown's plutonium powered DeLorean DMC-12 reached 88 miles per hour it produced enough energy to activate the flux capacitor and travel through time.  

I don't have a flux capacitor.  
I certainly don't have any plutonium.
But on Sunday evening I went back in time in a blue Mazda 3, at about 35 miles per hour.

With Jamie at the wheel and his wife Sarah riding shotgun, I sat in the rear of the little Japanese hatchback as we veered through the narrow streets of Swansea, jamming to Bob Marley.  We hung a left on to an avenue with a Welsh name that had too many consonants and not enough vowels for me to even try to pronounce, but you can give it a go if you like;  "Cwymbwrla."  Yeah... I know.  There must be some RIDICULOUS high scores in a Welsh game of Scrabble.

The road continued to narrow, almost beyond reason.  We drove up a two-way street that was about as wide as one lane in North America.  Every time we passed an oncoming car we must have been only inches from taking off a side mirror.  Perhaps I should have felt a little tense due to these near collisions, but Mr. Marley's reassuring voice was telling me not to worry about a thing, because every little thing was gonna be alright.  And I believed him.  So, I sat back and enjoyed the view out the other side.

It didn't take me long to notice that things were looking a little different.  Everything looked older.  Not run-down, but as if from another era.  

"Jamie," I asked.  "Where are we?"
"We're in the Gower."
"Oh.  Lovely."

The "Gower" is how locals refer to the Gower Peninsula- a beautiful stretch of coast in the South of Wales.  So beautiful in fact, that it was one of the first places in the United Kingdom to be officially designated an "Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty".  Another nickname for the region could be "The Place That Time Forgot", because everything looks exactly as it must have 100 years ago.


Our destination was the village of Port Eynon.  At one time this little port town was booming with oyster fishing, crabbing and lobstering, but the community also has an infamous smuggling history.  At the far end of Port Eynon Bay is an old, derelict Salt House that was once used to extract salt from the sea water.  It is commonly thought that even the Salt House was set up as a cover to smuggle goods (think of it as the Welsh equivalent to an Italian restaurant in New York).

It was here that I turned into a ten year-old boy again.  The ruins were like a playground that I just had to climb.  And climb I did.  I ran ahead of Jamie and Sarah like an excited little kid runs ahead of his parents and started to mount the stone structure.  I climbed over walls and under walls.  Through a window and down a chimney.  My surrogate parents stayed below and took pictures.  I reached the highest part of the ruins and looked out across the bay, humbled by the beauty and vastness.  After a few minutes I looked behind me and realized that the Salt House was just the beginning.  Looking down at "mum and dad" I declared:

"I... have got... to climb that."
 

To Be Continued...

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Playing with myself in the Swansea Vale Nature Reserve

There is a sign in my neighbourhood that reads "Swansea Vale Nature Reserve", and behind it, a path leading into the brush.  Every time I pass that sign I'm overcome with curiosity, much like Alice when she stumbled across her rabbit hole.  I want to know what's down that path, but I'm always on my way somewhere when I walk by.

I didn't have much to do today, so I grabbed my camera and headed for the trail, hoping to find my very own Wonderland.  There were no White Knights, no head-hunting Queens, and not a single walrus or carpenter... but I did have a pretty good time acting like a kid again.  

I returned home and put together the following video.



Wednesday, October 8, 2008

In Living Karma

In Living Karma


By Jozef L.K.

http://whereintheworldismojo.blogspot.com



Down the dimly lit stairway and into the crimson-red catacomb of Madame Jojo's, Coppers for Karma is about to take the stage.  


The night is young and the crowd at Madame Jojo's is still shuffling in.  People are buying their drinks, finding their seats and chatting with friends.  A few have made it down to the pit in front of the stage--  but a few is not enough for lead singer and guitarist Richard Soward:


"Come down here!" he says into the microphone, pointing to the floor below him.  "Come down here if you want to have your socks rocked off!"


A thunderous fury from Wojciech Hydzik's drums, Andy Hill's bass and Richard's guitar kick off the night.  The intro to Another Day Another Dollar attacks the crowd before transitioning into a swing-like groove that draws people down to the pit like the work of the Pied Piper.


Richard is the classic frontman.  Good looking.  Charming.  And most importantly; talented.  He jams on his sunburst guitar with precision and sings with a unique sound.  Full of emotion, full of life, and with his London accent always evident. 


Andy is dawning a Superman necktie and appears to have the ability to contort his body faster than a speeding ska beat and leap over tall amplifiers.  He is the most animated member of the group, entertaining the fans with his intricate bass-lines as well as his elastic facial expressions and spastic body movements.


Wojciech, the Polish Man-Mountain lives up to his moniker with not only his size but his steady-as-a-rock drumming.  Powerful and skilled, throughout the night he shows off his diversity on the skins.  The big man was the last piece to join the C4K puzzle and he truly completes the band.


Throughout the show, Coppers for Karma blend together elements of rock, funk, reggae, ska and even 1960's-style ballads (notably at the end of the song Flowershop) to create what has been referred to as "funk-a-billy".  Their lyrics are like a peephole that let the listener peer through and see the clever way the boys look at everyday life.  This allows their songs to be both poetic and relatable.


The band loves playing to the crowd which fills the night with memorable moments, such as opening the song Femme Fatale with a few bars from You Are My Sunshine.  Or Richard changing his voice and singing in a high falsetto to mimic a girl in Talk to Frank.  Or Andy, who constantly appears to be having wordless conversations with members of the audience strictly using his eyebrows.  It's obvious that they are truly enjoying every moment, as is everyone in crowd.


C4K closes the set with Is it Enough? and has the whole crowd belting out the final words.  With their arms in the air and their voices full of conviction the crowd chants, "Too much is not enough, too much is not, too much is not enough..." over and over.  When the song ends the fans proceed to demonstrate that they have not had enough of Coppers for Karma and they incessantly call for an encore.  The boys agree to play one more song on the condition that the crowd join arms and sway along to the music.  As Richard sings the words, "When talking I slip into a haze...", everyone-- the band, the crowd, the bartender, the sound guy-- is rocking back and forth in unison.  Everyone can feel the good Karma.


After the set, the boys come out and visit with the crowd before leading a mass of people back to their place for one of their legendary after-parties.  


Coppers for Karma is a true live band.  To get the real C4K experience you have to see them in person.  And it really is an experience--  from the very first note at the club to the very last drink at their flat.


Visit www.coppersforkarma.com

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Foot Fetish

I made a very groundbreaking discovery today:  I don't hate soccer!

(For the rest of this post, 'soccer' will be referred to as 'football'... the actual name of the sport.)

I have tried to watch football on television before but I have trouble fully respecting a sport where falling down and pretending to be hurt is considered good strategy.  I also find it to be incredibly long and uneventful.  In terms of unbearable experiences watching a football match on TV would rank somewhere between paper-cutting the corners of my mouth and sticking a birthday cake sparkler up my urethra (while lit).

Canadian stand-up comedian Tim Steeves has a great bit in which he impersonates an English football commentator: "Desperation is setting in.  Only a glimmer of hope remains.  Down by a goal with only... 4 hours remaining." Ha ha ha..... oh, Tim.

Here in the United Kingdom, football is ALL over the telly.  I can't seem to escape it.  It stalks me with the inhuman determination of a 1980's slasher-movie killer.  Football is Michael Myers, I am Laurie Strode.  Football is Jason, I am an 18-year-old girl about to give up my virginity at summer camp.  Today, I'm going to have to face my fears because I've been invited to attend my first ever live football match.  Aled is taking me to Liberty Stadium to see the hometown Swansea City Swans take on the Wolfhampton Wanderers (Great Britain sure loves athletic alliteration, apparently).

The day begins just like a scene from one of those horror movies.  It's mid-afternoon but the sky is as dark as night.  It's raining hard and fast with drops the size of chocolate Kisses.  Winds are so strong the Hershey's candy-sized precipitation is not so much dropping on me as flying at me.  I'm outside the stadium.  I'm alone.  Aled is late (or dead, if football really is a killer).  I take cover in a doorway and watch dozens of Swans supporters scramble to find a refuge of their own.  Most are desperately trying to control their umbrellas but most umbrellas have been turned inside out by the violent gale.

Aled finally arrives.  "You're alive!!" I shout as I wrap my arms around him.  He finds this to be a rather unusual greeting (I don't blame him) and we awkwardly break the hug with a few manly pats on the back.  He hands me my season-ticket holder lanyard and we enter the stadium.  Liberty is an impressive bowl.  Today it is filled with 15,000 Swansea faithful wearing the black and white.  And 2,500 Wolfhampton fans in their own designated section.  That's right, North American sports fans; the away team sits in their own section, segregated from the home team... with massive police presence surrounding them.  Over 100 heddlu (that's Welsh for police) stand between the Swansea Jacks (that's slang for Swansea fans) and the Wolfhampton supporters (that's pretty straightforward).  This seems a little extreme to me, but it doesn't take long to see why it's necessary.  Despite the number of Swansea's finest on hand, these hooligans can't help but try to get at each other.  Several get ejected before the game even begins.  This is great!  If the game is as boring as I'm expecting, I can look to the hooligans for entertainment.

The starting lineups are introduced, followed by kickoff.  A quick turnover and the Swans are on the attack.  Charging into the offensive zone, a fancy passing play ends with Jordi Gomez firing a low shot right into the back of the netting.  GOOOOOOAAAAAAAAALLLLLLLLL!!!!  25 seconds into the game!  About 10 minutes later the Wolves respond with a goal causing their section of the crowd to lose their damn minds and then spend the next 5 minutes shouting obscenities towards the Swansea fans as if they've just won the game.  I don't understand why they're being so arrogant.  In North America, 1-1 is a tie and I believe that's a pretty common definition in the sporting world.

I have to admit, it's a pretty exciting game.  Even in the unforgiving rain the players are demonstrating lots of skill and more grit than I was expecting.  There is some questionable officiating (which sadly, can be found in any sport) and some terrible overacting by players on the ground (which I still think is embarrassing), but all in all it's a good contest.  Best of all, Swans striker Jason Scotland nets two fantastic goals and leads Swansea to a 3-1 victory.  Yay!

Now, I'm not exactly ready for membership in the Jacks Army but maybe football isn't so bad after all.