100 Major II-V-I Bebop Lines Single Key Edition

Editing “100 Major II-V-I Bebop Lines Single Key Edition” with tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter’s classic album Speak No Evil mellifluously sounded in speakers was a stylishly humbling process. I fashioned the active with few transitory thoughts on Occasionalsim, midnight freezing temperature, and an intense minuet of café noir. Minutes were eroded throughout the absorption of Shorter’s brilliance and I oddly decided to search my meekness of life in tonight’s boundless dreamland.

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Aurora, Nebraska

Hamilton County Courthouse | Aurora, Nebraska | 2009 | Photo by Jen-Kuang Chang

Archiving photos, taken in a charming afternoon in Aurora, Nebraska, with Theo’s 84% cocoa Single-Origin Ghana Dark Chocolate Bars and Zhang Yimou’s film Raise the Red Lantern elegiacally playing in the background felt more like a protracted arty ritual than a snowy-Sunday-indulgence. Images of Aurora soundlessly composed uninterrupted stories of stillness, while bits of Theo’s heavenly bitterness waltzed my senses, step after step.

Aurora, Nebraska | 2009 | Photo by Jen-Kuang Chang

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The Sunken Gardens & The Hamann Rose Garden

The Sunken Gardens | 2010 | Photo by Jen-Kuang Chang

After few weeks of snow-snow-snow-and-more-snow, I almost forgot how to correctly wake up with sunshine exuberantly licking my frosty cheek. A quick peek outside of the window was enough to ascertain that today was the very first thoroughbred-sunny-day of February. Excited. I geared up. Jumpy like a puppy about to take his first outdoor walk. With Sam Taylor-Wood’s Prelude in Air repeatedly flashing back in my head, I slowly moved my happy feet toward the Sunken Gardens and the Hamann Rose Garden, gleefully baking myself in tons and tons of sunlight.

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National Roller Skating Museum

National Roller Skating Museum | 2010 | Photo by Jen-Kuang Chang

The mystery of the National Roller Skating Museum’s peculiar visiting hours, Monday-Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., was solved the second I walked into the building. The primary function of the space, as it appeared, served as the headquarters for the U.S.A. Roller Skating Confederation and the attached museum was essentially a roomful of wonderful roller-skating-things on the back of the building. The museum featured five main exhibitions, including Inline Skating, Artistic Skating, Roller Hockey, Speed Skating, and Roller Derby. My fun-lesson-of-the-day was to learn about the clamp-on horse skate and the story about “Jimmy” the skating horse.

National Roller Skating Museum

National Roller Skating Museum | 2010 | Photo by Jen-Kuang Chang
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The World’s Largest Time Capsule and Pyramid

World’s Largest Time Capsule and Pyramid | 2010 | Photo by Jen-Kuang Chang

The World’s Largest Time Capsule and Pyramid, located in Seward, Nebraska, was the creation of Harold Keith Davisson. In July 4, 1975, Davisson sealed the original capsule filled with thousands of letters, memorabilia, a new Kawasaki motorcycle, and a new 1975 Chevrolet Vega with the goal “to preserve the present for future generations.” In 1977, officials at Guinness Book of World Records certified Davisson’s capsule as the largest one in the world and this certification was met with waves of objections from Oglethorpe University of Atlanta, Georgia. Officials at Oglethorpe University claimed its time capsule, known as “Crypt of Civilization,” sealed in 1940, should claim the title. The dispute continued until Guinness Records dropped the Time Capsule category. In 1983, Davisson built the second time capsule in the shape of pyramid filled with memorabilia and a “badly beaten-up 1975 Toyota.” The capsule will be opened July 4, 2025.

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