American Go E-Journal » U.S./North America

Music in the stones: Wave Collector releases new go-inspired album

Monday April 18, 2022

It’s unsurprising that music and go found an intersection for Neal Wright. He had been involved with both for years. “I started playing go in middle school at the Boulder Go Club in Colorado,” Wright told the E-Journal. “While I didn’t study the game more seriously until years later, I always looked back fondly on that time. We were all just there to play a game we loved.”

Neal Wright

Music came soon after when Wright started writing songs at 19. Following his time in an indie rock band, he began experimenting with the electronic stylings that would eventually become his current project, Wave Collector. When he attended his first U.S. Go Congress in 2017, the two worlds came together.

“I…really got excited about studying the game. From there I came to appreciate the strategy on a deeper level and started learning about the history of the game. As I dug into some of the notable games in history, I realized it would be a perfect theme for an album.” That album would become Wave Games. Check it out on Spotify

The first song to manifest was inspired by Lee Sedol’s famous ladder game; it appears on the album under the name Broken Ladder. The song is reflective of Wave Collector’s style, which has been called downtempo electronic or even—appropriate for a go-themed album—”intelligent dance music.” The initial arpeggio of Broken Ladder is meant to “mimic the sort of back-and-forth nature of a ladder being played out.”

Then there’s Ghost Moves, named after the 1835 Blood Vomiting Game, one of the most famous games of the Edo period, in which it is said Jowa was given three brilliant moves by ghosts of long-dead players who rivaled the Inoue House. The vocals in the song are affected with a sort of ghostly quality and are meant to represent the spirits speaking to Jowa.

Wave Games cover art

The album was in the works for five years. Though the last of the nine songs were finished in 2020, the pandemic delayed production of the vinyl by more than a year. “I had always wanted to press this album to vinyl. So by the time I finally got (it), it was February of 2022…(and) I released it as soon as I could.”

Over the course of production, some song ideas didn’t make the cut, such as the Mirror Game, a call-and-response melody inspired by Go Seigen’s famous match against Kitani Minoru, and the Self-Atari Game, a melodic reincarnation of Nakano Yasuhiro’s famous game-losing self-atari. Others that did make the album include Bright Pearl Comes Out from the Sea (based on a famous go problem), Game Between Gods (inspired by the mythical Axe Handle Game), The Masterpiece (named after a Dosaku game), Move 78 (based on Lee Sedol’s winning move against AlphaGo), Move 127 (based on the Ear-Reddening Game) and Triple Ko.

Meanwhile, Wright is enjoying the satisfaction of completing a years-long project. “Despite the long delay, I’m really happy with how it turned out.”
– Hailey Renner

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AGF Teacher of the Year Nominations Open

Sunday April 10, 2022

Schumer (l) with a young player in Osaka in 2018

Nominations for the American Go Foundation’s  Teacher of the Year award are due by May 5th. The winner will receive an all expenses paid trip to the US Go Congress in Estes Park this summer.  To be eligible a teacher must be a member of the AGA and have been teaching go to children for at least one hour a week for two years. The award is now open to other kinds of teachers as well, including online efforts. Teachers of the Year for 2020 and 2021 are also invited, and all three will be honored at the awards banquet. Click here for more information.  If you would like to nominate someone for this award, including yourself, email mail@agfgo.org.  Nominations are due by May 5th and should include a description of the teacher’s activities, how long they have been teaching, and how many students attended their program. – Paul Barchilon, E-J Youth Editor. Photo: 2021 Teacher of the Year Pete Schumer

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NGC Cherry Blossom Tournament returns; Eric Lui sweeps

Saturday April 9, 2022

An enthusiastic crowd of 58 go players turned out on April 2 to welcome Spring and the return of the National Go Center’s Cherry Blossom Tournament after a two-year hiatus due to the pandemic. Because of the large group and general uncertainty over ratings with no recent tournament play, all games were played even without handicaps.

Eric Lui (1P) was the overall winner at 4-0 beating Alan Huang (7D) 3-1 in the final round for the championship. Cash prizes were awarded to the top players, and all 4 or 3 game winners got their choice of an NGC t-shirt or a go book. The other 4-0 winner was Ning-Yuan Ernest Wang (6K), back in the US on a business trip from Taiwan and still fondly remembered from his days at the Johns Hopkins Go Club.

The other three-game winners were Qi Huang (5d), Qingbo Zhang (5D), Joel Kenny (4D), Ching Long Lam (3D), Samantha Soo (2D), Alex Fan-Cui (1D), James Bonomo (2K), Ken Onishi (2K), Joseph Craig (3K), Anderson Barreal (4K), Robert Qi (5K), John Gipson (6K), Zhaorong Ma (8K), Mi=ulan Liu (10K), Amber Boyden (13K).

“We had one player, Siddhant Rajoriya (28K), who had only been playing the game for one week,” says TD Gurujeet Khalsa. “He showed real aptitude for go, and we hope to see him playing at a Dan level next year. A shout-out goes to Samantha Soo’s mom also. She left New York City at 2 AM to bring Samantha and two other players to the event, which was great!”
photo courtesy Gurujeet Khalsa

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Go Congress filling up quickly

Saturday April 9, 2022

Registration for the 2022 Go Congress is proceeding briskly with over 170 attendees so far,” reports Co-Director Eric Wainwright.  “Rooms in the Main Lodge are almost filled up, but there’s still plenty of rooms left in the East Lodges.  If you’re thinking about staying at one of the many offsite locations around Estes Park, now’s the time to make your arrangements.

The main playing site is Assembly Hall situated in the center of the YMCA campus.  Built in 2009, it’s a modern facility with over eleven thousand square feet of space for tables to be spread out. Lectures, game reviews, and other events will take place in other buildings and cabins scattered nearby.  
”It looks like we’ll have sizable group of young players this year, as many pros and teachers are bringing their students,” reports Wainwright, “It’s a good thing that our Youth Room will be the size of a basketball court.  Actually, it is a basketball court!”‘

More information and registration are at GoCongress.org.

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Seeking candidates for AGA President

Wednesday April 6, 2022

The AGA Board of directors is seeking candidates to take on the Presidency of the AGA at the end of the current term (September 1, 2022). “The position involves a lot of work and a lot of responsibility,” says outgoing President Andy Okun, “but also the opportunity to join with the board, the chapters, and the members of the AGA to build a remarkable future for our game and our organization.”

The search committee established April 15 as the deadline for submissions in its initial March 15 announcement, so there is only a week to go. A brief functional description of the position can be found here.

Interested members should email a statement of candidacy and a CV to the AGA Presidential Search Committee at president-search-committee@usgo.org by April 15, 2022. Qualified candidates will be sent a preliminary questionnaire to submit for further review.

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2022 NAGF Pro Qualification Tournament set for June 26-July 1 in DC

Monday April 4, 2022

The North American Go Federation (NAGF) will hold the 2022 Pro Qualification Tournament at the National Go Center in Washington, D.C. from June 26 to July 1, 2022.

Because last year’s tournament was canceled due to covid, the NAGF will certify the top two players from this tournament as new professional players. For more information on the tournament, including eligibility requirements, please click here. The details of the competition rules and the selected contestants will be announced in May.

Any player who is eligible and interested in participating in the tournament must submit the application form by the end of April 24 to be considered for entrance.

For questions regarding this tournament, please contact the NAGF at contact@nagofed.org

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IN MEMORIAM: Jack Clark, Congress Pioneer

Saturday April 2, 2022

by Keith L. Arnold, hka

Word came to us this week that Jack Clark passed away on March 21.  Virtually all Congress veterans, seeing the headline, will no doubt be thinking “Jack who?” Most know Haskell Small as the “Father of the U.S. Go Congress” for heading the first Congress effort in 1985.  Those upon whom I inflict my oft-repeated stories might recall Arthur Lewis, longtime Secretary-Treasurer of Hal’s Greater Washington Go Club, whose careful book-selling and dues-taking put Small and company in the financial position to take the leap.  But who was Jack Clark? Not only did he never officially attend a Go Congress, I’m not sure he ever even played a rated game.

Jack Clark learned go while a math professor at the University of Massachusetts in the early 1970s. Around 1980 he became a Math and Computer Science professor at Western Maryland College in Westminster, Maryland.  And, as an enthusiastic go player, he would trek down to Kensington on Friday nights to play at the Greater Washington Go Club.  So when Haskell decided to initiate plans for the first U.S. Congress, Dr. Clark was there to help arrange for his school to be the site for the first Congress.

Dr. Clark’s go class

I probably met Dr. Clark at Western Maryland in 1979, and certainly not as a student, as I avoided the math department with a passion. Instead, I came upon him in the student center, playing a strange board game with some of his students.  Immediately fascinated, I recall watching on numerous occasions, gradually picking up the rules.  Finally, a student with an exam left early, and Dr. Clark allowed me to lay out nine stones in my first-ever game. I hadn’t even had any 9-by-9 practice, and I suspect I was quite an embarrassment; hopefully I played quickly. But I did know liberties and by some chance — or perhaps it was generosity — I pounced when Dr. Clark played a long string of stones into atari and I won my first-ever game of go.  Naturally this had the perhaps intended effect of creating an instant love of the game.  Dr. Clark made a nice show of regretting his error, those of you who know me may also regret the addiction it created.

Dr. Clark was probably around 2-3 kyu at that time, and I suspect he eventually flirted with shodan. Longtime friend Robert McGuigan (translator of the AGJ and Slate and Shell’s “Masterpieces of Handicap Go”), recalls his razor-sharp focus. As a kyu player “he learned/memorized all the variations in the three-volume Ishida joseki dictionary!” Bob recalls. “Typical of Jack,” it was nonetheless an impressive achievement, and believable in a time when passion for go was poured into book study without internet opponents to play. When he took up rock climbing as a graduate student at Stanford he spent “days on the face of Half Dome during a climb”.  A classical music lover, he “learned to recognize all 81 Haydn string quartets, which he tested by randomly choosing a record and putting the needle anywhere on it”.  When he took up cycling, he became a serious racer.

I suspect he may have offered the second-ever go course in US college history (I believe Ted Drange was first in West Virginia).  Although I did not take the class, it did provide me with a few opponents to feed my addiction.  I did crash the class one day and played a simultaneous 9-by-9 game with the late Don Weiner; the boisterous Weiner was quite a contrast with the quiet, eccentric Dr. Clark. Warren Litt, my predecessor as head of the GWRM Baltimore Go Club often would tell the story of playing go at Dr. Clark’s home, relating that he would heat the stones up in the oven because he did not like them to be cold to the touch.

I hope to see many of you at this year’s U.S. Go Congress, July 30-August 7 in Estes Park, Colorado. I will be thinking of Dr. Clark. I am fortunate to be able to recall my first opponent, but none of us can know our last. As we return to the Go Congress, let’s make every game memorable.

photos by Keith Arnold and Western Maryland College Yearbook 1980, 1981

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Yang, Kang & Huang top Gotham tourney

Tuesday March 29, 2022

Kevin Yang, Boyang Kang and Alan Huang topped the Gotham Go Tournament 2022 last weekend at The Glow Community Center in Flushing, NY as in-person tournament go returned to New York City. “We had 74 players and gave out over $1,800 in cash prizes, lots of good food, and even Gotham Go Group tee-shirts and magnets for all participants,” reports Peter Armenia. “Thank you Joel Kenny, Jino Choung, Gretchen Hanser, and Howard Wong for helping make this tournament a great success!”

Pictures and full results are posted here.

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Midwest Open Tournament returns

Sunday March 27, 2022

The Midwest Open Tournament on March 12-13 attracted 53 players from throughout the region, from home state Ohio, as well as Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and even Virginia. This was the second edition of the event, the first having taken place in January 2020, just before the pandemic.

Casual Games: Eric Yoder plays James Funk & Patrick Kidwell plays Samual Blyveis. photo by Devin Fraze.

The Midwest Open was held at the new Yokoso Center in Columbus’s Japan Marketplace, and participants were greeted with custom, high-quality name tags and a welcome by the Columbus Kyoto Ensemble, who kicked things off with a performance of Japanese music in traditional kimono dress. 

The Open Division, consisting of 16 players, was a traditional bracket system of four intense rounds. The Main Division featured an innovative “Arena Style” pairing: participants were paired for the first round by the tournament director, but the remainder of the games were self-paired and managed with custom software, which will be available soon to organizers via Baduk.club. This allowed players to take breaks and manage their own availability, get food as needed, and record their games using the software app. Division winners all received medals, and the Open winners were able to select among rare, high-value go-related prizes. Albert Yen swept the section; click here for his analysis of his Round 2 game.

Sunday morning also saw the final match of the Ohio State Championship, a lively showdown between a father and son. The winner, Soren Jaffe, was crowned Ohio State Champion.

Organizers extended special thanks “to all the members of the Baduk House, who assisted greatly to the success of the tournament.” To learn more about the Baduk House residency program and volunteering for future events, click here. See below for the winners list, and information about the tournament—and next year’s Open—is available here.

  • reporting/photos by Devin Fraze, edited by Hailey Renner. TD/Open winners photo (below left) by Eva-Dee Beech.

Ohio State Champion: Soren Jaffe

Juggernaut Award (most games and most wins): Jamin Kochman

Open: 1st Albert Yen; 2nd Edward Zhang; 3rd Alex Qi

Dan: 1st Shawn Ray; 2nd Jerry Jaffe; 3rd Mitchell Schmeisser
High SDK: 1st Dylan Jian; 2nd David Rohlfing; 3rd Manny Juargegui
Low SDK: 1st Richard Crawley; 2nd Angelo Di Lorenzo; 3rd Steven A Zilber
High DDK: 1st Joe Miller; 2nd Kara Ray; 3rd Winston Yan
Low DDK: 1st Jamin Kochman; 2nd Paul Mendola; 3rd Abhinav Gadde

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Who wants to play a 7-dan?

Thursday March 24, 2022

Kevin Yang (right) takes on his brother, Tony (5-dan), in a friendly game.

For more than a year now, 2021 California Go Champion Kevin Yang 7d has been playing games against challengers online. The two players immediately analyze the game afterwards, while San Diego Go Club (SDGC) members watch and learn. This has been a volunteer project for Kevin ever since he started high school.

Any AGA member who would like to challenge Kevin to an even or handicap game can do so at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesdays on KGS (SDGC room). If more than one challenger would like to play, the higher rated player is usually given the game. Or a player can email Ted.Terpstra@gmail.com to reserve a specific Tuesday.

As a special incentive/bonus, if a player beats Kevin, she will be sent a San Diego Go Club T-shirt.

Ted Terpstra, San Diego Go Club

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