Wednesday, February 25, 2009

MIDTERM WEEK MIX


Mix #1- Midterm Week Mix


Everyone hates midterm week. It's like finals week, but with the added fun of jobs, extracurriculars, and normal classes! These are the songs I've been listening to in order to keep me pumped up and/or introspective on my walks to and from class. I highly suggest just listening to the mix at is at my youtube site (http://www.youtube.com/user/thehappyemogirlblog) as well as looking up these songs. It goes without saying that you should listen to these songs in order, as they are a musical journey of my warped midterms consciousness and should be appreciated as such.

OKAY! Here we go!

1. "Do the Panic"- Phantom Planet
2. "Stop Your Sobbing"- Pretenders
3. "Gotta Get Through This" (UK version)- Daniel Beddingfield
4. "I'm Not Okay (I Promise)"- My Chemical Romance
5. "The Phrase That Pays"- The Academy Is
6. "Livin' on a Prayer"- Bon Jovi
7. "Round Here"- Counting Crows
8. "Walking With a Ghost"- Tegan and Sara
9. "No Sunlight"- Death Cab For Cutie
10. "What About Everything?"- Carbon Leaf
11. "Long Walk Home"- Bruce Springsteen
12. "Section 12 (Hold Me Now)"- Polyphonic Spree
13. "This Year"- The Mountain Goats


I tried embedding the mix, but it didn't work that well. Instead, I direct you to this link. Click, and have a listen.

http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=thehappyemogirlblog&view=playlists

Mood Mixes- An Introduction

So. I decided that my blog should serve a higher purpose (besides being my extremely self-indulgent soapbox). After all, people aren't at all interested in what I have to say about everything. I want to provide a service.

That service will be weekly (at a minimum) mood mixes. If I had a penny for every time I've tried to get Mr. Internet to help me find more songs to go with a particular mood or mix or idea or concept, I would have hundreds of thousands of dollars in a bank account somewhere. Thus, I shall help others! I'm so very generous.

The first mix will be posted today.

Monday, February 23, 2009

New Year, Same Song

It's funny how the years change but nothing else really does. This time last year I started listening to this song on repeat to stay sane. One year later (down to the week, as a matter of fact), I find myself listening to it again.

I'm going to make it through this (academic) year if it kills me. . .

Thursday, February 19, 2009

BAD IDEA

It is a very bad idea to put a lot of youtube videos of something you like to watch in one place. You watch them again and again and again.

I want to be Yu-Na Kim

I've always loved ice skating, but I've never geeked out like this before about a figure skater. Or any athlete, to be brutally honest. I can't stop watching this girl- and she's not even American! She's Korean! When the Olympics roll around, I'm going to be a horrible American and root for Yu-Na Kim to win gold. It's unavoidable.

The ISU World Figure Skating Championships begin March 22nd, and I am already arranging my Friday schedule so that I can watch the ladies short programs live on March 27th. Saturday the 28th, same thing with free skating.

My fascination with Yu-Na is in part due to her intense rivalry with Japanese skater Mao Asada. These two girls are the best in the world. No contest. In terms of repertoire, the technical difficulty of their jumps, the beauty of presentation, these two girls blow everyone else out of the water. Ever since they emerged on the worlds stage, they've been neck in neck, edging ahead of each other in one competition or the other. They each have set records- Asada is the only woman to have landed two triple axels in a competition, and she holds the world record for best combined score in a competition. Both young women are held up as examples of Korea's and Japan's best female athletes and the two are national celebrities. Yu-Na Kim, in particular is a media figure of great national interest due to South Korea's limited supply of world-class athletes. Yu-Na is known as the "little sister of the nation" and "Queen Yu-Na"; Asada is spoken of as "Our Mao" and "Queen Asada."

The real question is, who will be the queen in Vancouver in 2010? I don't know! I can't wait to find out!

I have embedded examples of the beauty and glory that is Yu-Na Kim. Her most recent programs are towards the bottom, but all of these are fantastic. She's currently the world record holder for short program and free skate. She is a BAMF. Long story short.

Did I mention that they're both 18, and 5'5? Yeah, my height, practically my age, world champions. * Sigh *

Yu-Na Kim skating in the 2007 World Championships- Short Program "El Tango de Roxanne"
(This is the short program that held the world record for highest score under the ISU judging system until she beat it in 2009)


Yu-Na Kim skating in the 2008 Worlds Championships Gala- Exhibition "Only Hope"
(I. Love. This. Song. )


Yu-Na Kim skating in the 2009 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships- Short Program "Danse Macabre"
(This program currently holds the world record for highest scoring short program. She beat her own record.)


Yu-Na Kim skating in the 2009 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships- Exhibition "Gold"


AND- FOR COMPARISON-

Mao Asada skating in the 2008 Grand Prix Figure Skating Final- Long Program "Masquerade" (This is the one where she lands the two triple axels!)


Who do you like better?

~THEG

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

My Brain on Music

People who don't know me (or don't think the same way that I do) often don't understand the way my brain interacts with music. My brother, for example, thinks that my use of the phrase "this song is my life right now" is horribly affected, although in my mind it's completely true. My roommate understands what it means to "love" a song, but she doesn't have the same kind of reaction to music as I do. I can only think of, oh, maybe three or four people off the top of my head who have this mentality.

Sometimes, like today, the way I feel is perfectly matched by a song and I need to listen to that song as much as I can. Sometimes it's one artist in particular, but most of the time it's one song whose lyrics, music, and style fits like a puzzle piece into my overall emotional and physical state. Even if I'm in a horrible mood, as that perfect song slides into place, my body and mind relaxes. "Oh," my body says, "that's what that missing piece was. Okay. You can go on now. You've found it."

I don't exaggerate when it comes to songs and this little personal phenomenon and I love nothing more than when I don't need to explain myself. Last semester I walked into a class with one of my musically-minded friends, looked her in the eye and thanked for for the Carbon Leaf album she'd burned for me. I said, quite simply without any melodrama, that the song "What About Everything" was saving my life at that moment, and she didn't need any further explanation. I didn't mean that the one song was single-handedly preventing me from killing myself (obviously- I'm a happy emo and lack suicidal inclinations), but at that time my life was so hectic and crazy and this one song about the important things in life and the search to find the real and true things about human existence kept me grounded. I love how when I was adjusting to the realities of a long-distance relationship this fall, I could call up another one of my friends and say, "I'm listening to (Damien Rice's) 'O' on repeat" and his immediate reaction was "Fun. That's not good. Let's talk." No explanation necessary. With very few exceptions, you can tell how I am by what music I'm listening to, and few people in my life understand this.

Songs move me. Music moves me. I can't just listen, and I can't just see or hear music for what it is. That's why I adore TV shows like Scrubs that use music as it's supposed to be used, to add to the overall viewing and, in my mind, living experience.

My life has a soundtrack. I have my musical obsessions, like everyone else, but I have my instant, no hesitation, mood-changing music. James Taylor and Carly Simon soothe me like nothing else, because I associate them with my parents and my childhood. They remind me of my parents and their love for me. Classical piano music, especially Chopin, immediately focuses my brain, because of my intense piano training as a child (and my scary, scary piano teacher).

I don't understand people who take music at face value. It's so much more than that.

And, just for the record, the song I've listened to on repeat to day is Joshua Radin's "Winter." Make of that what you will.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Fmylife.com

On days like today, when I have overslept and arrived late (we're talking very late) to my favorite class, with my favorite professor, I am reminded that there are people whose lives are much worse than my own, courtesy of the delightful http://www.fmylife.com

I'm really pretty okay! For example, my parents haven't been celebrating my birthday on the wrong day my entire life. I'm not pregnant. I'm sure my boyfriend isn't cheating on me. So yes, I may occasionally say "fuck my life" on days like today, but in reality I'm fine and should suck it up.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Piscean Love Song

They never tell you the silly little things you'll miss about home when you head off to college. Like water. Moving water. Rivers and oceans.

Take today, for example. Horrible day. I'd rank it about a 7 on a shit scale. Started with my roommate going off on me at 3AM (I deserved it, but still...) and ended with the meeting from hell. Not to mention classes and normalcies of college life in below freezing temperatures in between.

In high school, on days like this I'd wait until my parents were asleep and climb out my window onto the kitchen roof. From there, I'd sit, wrapped up in a blanket, and watch the moon rise over the river. If it was a truly nasty day, I'd climb from the roof to the deck to the ground and walk out to the dock. I'd sit, my toes dangling in the water, until everything felt right again. Something about water has always soothed me. I miss that at school. I suppose it's nice that we have two lakes, but they always freeze over, and even during the fall and late spring, if you just stop and sit on a bench to enjoy the gentle sounds of water, the crazy jogging people give you strangely possessive looks as they run by. The lakes are not for those who wish to sit and contemplate life- they are simply obstacles to conquer, measures of distance.

Long story short, I miss the water. And if we can't have moving water, we should at least have bathtubs in the dorms. Nice, clean ones.