Best touring song?
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#27
120 bpm
I'm not sure what made me think of this, especially on Christmas, lol, but what's your favorite song, for touring? 🤔
For me, it's "Desperado" by The Eagles. You can improvise the lyrics just a bit, in your head, for a perfect fit. 😉
And just like that Seinfeld episode, it puts you in a certain "zone", that noone better mess with. 😎😁😉
So, what's your touring song?
For me, it's "Desperado" by The Eagles. You can improvise the lyrics just a bit, in your head, for a perfect fit. 😉
And just like that Seinfeld episode, it puts you in a certain "zone", that noone better mess with. 😎😁😉
So, what's your touring song?
“It’s 1910 and the eccentric researcher Leonard P. Ayres is watching the New York six-day bike race at Madison Square Garden. He’s got his stopwatch out, timing the riders as they whir around the velodrome. A brass band plays intermittently on the sidelines, generally for a few minutes at a time before stopping for a brief interval. As Ayres writes down lap times, he notices something quite fascinating.
When the band is playing, the riders take an average of 3:04 to ride a mile. When the band is silent, the average time increases to 3:21. The background music seems to be inspiring the riders to push harder as they fly around the track.”
From an article published in CyclingTips.
Not a spinner, I use music asynchronously, therefore 125-130 bpm does it for me.
AFAIK, only electronic music composers come up with tracks in the 10 minutes range, 15 extended remix aren’t rare.
When fighting a relentless headwind on flat cycle lane for miles, this music @125bpm, really helps.
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I've Been Everywhere - Geoff Mack: Australian Version, North American Version, UK Version, Texas Version
#33
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When necessary, I mentally play the Randy Newman song "Rider in the Rain," with the Eagles providing those great backup harmonies.
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#38
Italy or Spain? New Mexico?
Great suggestion! That haunting melody inspired me to watch the movie last night. (I missed it 57 years ago) Available on Kanopy, a free streaming service available from many libraries.
Great suggestion! That haunting melody inspired me to watch the movie last night. (I missed it 57 years ago) Available on Kanopy, a free streaming service available from many libraries.
Last edited by BobG; 01-09-23 at 07:54 AM.
#40
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If you're going to be northbound, starting at the US-Canada border, you'll have to go really fast to make it to New Mexico in a month. That's something like 23,000 miles. Bring some warm clothes for the polar regions.
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I can remember seeing (?) several of those Clint Eastwood movies, at the drive-in, when I was a kid. The question mark means I didn't really "see" the whole movie very often. I was a kid, so usually fell asleep. 😋😉
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#42
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Freudian slip, that’s still not clear which way I am going, each option North vs South has its pro and con... choices... choices.
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#43
Man, you'd really be taking the scenic route, for that many miles, lol. 😁😉
I can remember seeing (?) several of those Clint Eastwood movies, at the drive-in, when I was a kid. The question mark means I didn't really "see" the whole movie very often. I was a kid, so usually fell asleep. 😋😉
I can remember seeing (?) several of those Clint Eastwood movies, at the drive-in, when I was a kid. The question mark means I didn't really "see" the whole movie very often. I was a kid, so usually fell asleep. 😋😉
Have you played the video ?
Starting @3:30 Hold on to your handlebar, you shouldn’t fall asleep.
2021 sound recording quality doesn’t compare with 1966 recording (on a budget).
Interesting experiment, try to hum whilst riding Christine Nonbo Andersen part and compare your lung capacity with a professional soprano opera singer.
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#44
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Friends of mine who rode the route in 2021 went from Canada to New Mexico, and liked it. They thought it would be logistically difficult to do it in the other direction--the climatic window would be much narrower.
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Previously, no, but I'm glad you made me watch it. 😁😉 I think the 1966 version sounded pretty good, though, for coming through a drive-in speaker. 👍
EDIT: BTW, I've only ever met one Claude (pronounced cloud) in my life. It's a much less common name in the U.S. I think. 🤔
EDIT: BTW, I've only ever met one Claude (pronounced cloud) in my life. It's a much less common name in the U.S. I think. 🤔
Last edited by stardognine; 01-10-23 at 06:40 PM.
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#46
Previously, no, but I'm glad you made me watch it. 😁😉 I think the 1966 version sounded pretty good, though, for coming through a drive-in speaker. 👍
EDIT: BTW, I've only ever met one Claude (pronounced cloud) in my life. It's a much less common name in the U.S. I think. 🤔
EDIT: BTW, I've only ever met one Claude (pronounced cloud) in my life. It's a much less common name in the U.S. I think. 🤔
Had to google, possibly most remarkable American Claude was “Claude Elwood Shannon (April 30, 1916 – February 24, 2001) was an American mathematician, electrical engineer, and cryptographer known as "the father of information theory".
Try something between Swedish ĺ sound, German “au” in Klaus or Italian Claudia, that’ll do nicely or bureau with an American accent.
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#47
Yeah, sorry, just yanking your chain there for a bit. I figured you meant "north to south," not "northbound."
Friends of mine who rode the route in 2021 went from Canada to New Mexico, and liked it. They thought it would be logistically difficult to do it in the other direction--the climatic window would be much narrower.
Friends of mine who rode the route in 2021 went from Canada to New Mexico, and liked it. They thought it would be logistically difficult to do it in the other direction--the climatic window would be much narrower.
GDMBR riders southbound have more time to build up their “mountain lungs” incrementally.
Northbound is reputed to be more brutal.
No brainer for people who live in the Alps, the Pyrenees, even, or in Colorado above 6000 ft permanently, not so much for somebody who lives below sea level at high tide.
I ain’t no Sofiane Sehili who can sing whilst climbing at 12 000ft of elevation a dirt road in Columbia.