OK, you’re setting your clocks ahead before you go to bed tonight, so that means everything that happens tomorrow will seem earlier. That’s because it will be earlier even though our clocks will tell us differently. Honestly, I don’t much like this business of changing time twice a year. And setting clocks ahead seems to be much more difficult than setting them back. It’s not because we supposedly lose an hour of sleep. It’s because it feels funny. In fact, early studies on circadian rhythms showed that when people could control their own light and were not exposed to any time cues, they gravitated toward almost a 25 hour day (sometimes referred to as a “lunar day”) — essentially synchronizing their inner “body clocks” with the tides. (It takes the Earth 24 hours 50 minutes to rotate to the same position relative to the moon.)
Anyhow the point is that if you’re gonna feel weird, you might as well take advantage of the fact that good music starts at 11 AM tomorrow (it’ll feel like 10). Then there’s music starting at 5:00, 5:30, 6:00, 6:30 and 8, when you can catch Marina Evans at Rhumb Line (good for those of you who were bummed because The Grove cancelled her last night). Check the full live music schedule here.

I agree with you! This crazy clock-changing dates back to an agrarian society. It messes with our internal time clocks, & always takes a week or so to get used to — no matter what age you are.
That being said, good music is good, no matter what the hour!
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Great post and pic ofthe earth, All day today I feel like I am running behind
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The Moon is Magnificent Desolation. Buzz Aldrin said that.
How do you get a nickname like BUZZ?
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According to Wikipedia, “The nickname “Buzz” originated in childhood: the younger of his two elder sisters mispronounced “brother” as “buzzer”, and this was shortened to Buzz. Aldrin made it his legal first name in 1988.”
What’s more interesting is that his mother’s maiden name was Moon.
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