Writings and Vocal Lessons

I’m writing again, and this time it’s for real. The last story I came up with didn’t really cut it, but last week I came up with a fantastic idea for a sci-fi novel, inspired by a planet that’s recently been discovered to possibly be habitable, Gliese 581 g. I’m really excited, because this time the plot is writing itself in my head and I’m ready to tackle it properly. This is a short summary of my ideas so far:

The planet Qarteram orbits its star at exactly the right distance and is exactly the right size that it’s tidal locked, meaning its day is the same length as its year, so the same side is always facing the star, leaving the other side in total darkness. On the day side the countries and continents are prospering. They grow crops and have a host of clean, natural resources to use. The people are wealthy, cultured and happy. They are mostly at peace with one another and benefit from financial unions and diplomatic relations.

On the night side the people are poor. The governments are puppet governments ruled by crime lords constantly at war with each other over the few resources available. Industry consists mostly of mining and other dangerous and hazardous jobs. Many parts of the night side are completely uninhabitable due to the harsh, cold climate furthest away from the star where the air will freeze in your lungs. There is a high level of conflict with the day side, on whom they are dependent for foods, most prominently different types of grain which are almost impossible to grow and cultivate in greenhouses. The day side exploits the night side, trading food and medicine for minerals and metals, at poor rates.

Qarteram’s twilight zone is mostly ocean, but one island crosses the border between night and day: Cendar. Largely isolated from the rest of the world, Cendar exists in a state of perpetual sunrise, from the bright morning areas of the east, to the early dawn twilight in the west.

Introducing Andera. Born on the night side, her parents opposed their country’s puppet government and escaped to Cendar as political fugitives when she was very young. Andera has grown up watching her parents lead a resistance group intent on breaking down the criminal network on the night side and stop the corrupt exploitation of the night side’s people by the day side. Now, as she comes of age, Andera is ready to join in the fight to create a better world.

Meanwhile, the day side’s government are getting sick of dealing with what they consider the half-humans of the night side, and intend to escalate their conflicts to all-out war, getting rid of all the people and claiming the few resources there for themselves. When news of this reaches Cendar the resistance has little time to try to stop the all-out annihilation of the night side. If diplomatic means won’t cut it, it’s time to think differently.

The plot is likely to change a bit as I go along, but it’s a start. I’ve written one chapter (rough draft only, but as soon as it’s been refined a bit, I’ll post it) and have gotten started on the second. I’ve also done a bit of concept art to go with it. Here’s the planet:

The island you can see right at the border between day and night is Cendar, where we begin our story. The moon that is visible in this shot is Quenda, the larger of two satellites which the inhabitants use to tell time, given that there is no solar day or year. The smaller moon is called Pyulder.

I also drew my main character, Andera.

In Earth years I guess she’d be around twenty, though I haven’t quite worked out her age in “quen” yet, which is the calendar year of planet Qarteram, based on the cycle of the aforementioned moon Quenda.

I other news, I had my first vocal lesson today. Teacher seems nice and friendly, loves a lot of the same music as I do and was pretty good at making me feel comfortable with being there, which is a plus. I think we’ll get along fine. Gonna try to find something I can bring in to sing next week, so we can start working on repertoire for my whatsit concert thing at the end of the year.

I’ll be attending a meeting tomorrow about the Professional Project I’ll be working on all year, too. See if I can’t get a better idea of what it’s all about… It’s hard coming into third year and having no clue what people are on about half the time… I guess I’ll get used to it, though.

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Blogblogblog

Not sure I actually have much to say today… But I thought I might try to blog a bit anyway, since it’s almost a week since last time.

I had a great time at home. I got to see some friends, and more importantly my boyfriend. I went out on Friday to see The Pints play at Skuret, and got the chance to hang out with a few friends. I had a coffee with Jen, too.

My brother’s wedding was wonderful! Very cold atop a mountain in October, but what a fantastic view!

The ceremony was beautiful, too. The bride looked like a fairytale princess. And afterward we were treated to a fabulous dinner. Main course was reindeer. Yum!

As the evening progressed, people became steadily more intoxicated, and it ended up with a bunch of us sitting in a corner playing guitar and singing (well, my eldest brother Tim did the guitar playing). I seem to remember some Pink Floyd and some Led Zeppelin, and Robbie Williams, but I was very tired… We also did Hallelujah, and Morten sang it so well! <3 We had so much fun, I don’t think I’ve laughed so hard in a very long time…

The bride was charmingly drunk and very happy, as was the groom. I think, all in all, that it was a complete success, with happy guests, happy couple, good food and lots of alcohol. If my wedding is half as lovely whenever I tie the knot I’ll be truly blessed!

So, my weekend’s been full of music, laughter, friends and family. Yay! This feels like a terribly mundane blogpost… Oh, well. I’ll be more interesting next time. Here follows a short video from the wedding ceremony, in poor quality, filmed with my mobile phone. Tim playing guitar for Kjetil and Anki:

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First Attempt at Video Blogging

Thought I’d give this stuff a go. So, for the sake of your amusement and mine, I give you: My Bedroom!

Opinions are always nice, so if you think I should keep video blogging, please let me know. More importantly, if you think it’s stupid, tell me, and I might listen, or I might say fuck you. :)

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Do the British have Shit Music Taste?

Well, not really shit… And certainly not all. But here is a list of the number one hit singles on the UK charts in 2009 (list copied off Wikipedia):

Lady Gaga featuring Colby O’Donis Just Dance
Lily Allen The Fear
Kelly Clarkson My Life Would Suck Without You
Flo Rida featuring Ke$ha Right Round
Vanessa Jenkins and Bryn West featuring Sir Tom Jones and Robin Gibb Islands in the Stream
Lady Gaga Poker Face
Calvin Harris I’m Not Alone
Tinchy Stryder featuring N-Dubz Number 1
Black Eyed Peas Boom Boom Pow
Dizzee Rascal Bonkers
Black Eyed Peas Boom Boom Pow
Pixie Lott Mama Do (Uh Oh, Uh Oh)
David Guetta featuring Kelly Rowland When Love Takes Over
La Roux Bulletproof
Cascada Evacuate the Dancefloor
JLS Beat Again
Black Eyed Peas I Gotta Feeling
Tinchy Stryder featuring Amelle Never Leave You
Black Eyed Peas I Gotta Feeling
David Guetta featuring Akon Sexy Bitch/Chick
Dizzee Rascal Holiday
Jay-Z featuring Rihanna and Kanye West Run This Town
Pixie Lott Boys and Girls
Taio Cruz Break Your Heart
Chipmunk featuring Dayo Olatunji Oopsy Daisy
Alexandra Burke featuring Flo Rida Bad Boys
Cheryl Cole Fight for This Love
JLS Everybody In Love
Black Eyed Peas Meet Me Halfway
The X Factor Finalists 2009 You Are Not Alone
Peter Kay’s Animated All Star Band The Official BBC Children in Need Medley
Lady Gaga Bad Romance
Rage Against the Machine Killing in the Name
Joe McElderry The Climb

With the exception of a very fortunate few, this is almost exclusively dance music. Club music. Don’t people want something to listen to in this country? Don’t they want something with substance? Granted, it’s impressive that a Rage Against the Machine made it on there. The only rock tune that did, even if it’s old as dirt, so I don’t quite get it… The Children in Need song was also very sweet, and I like it that people care enough about their charities and their kids to get it on there. I also don’t mind Lily Allen. But apart from those specific examples, I can’t say there’s a thing on there that I like. Some of it’s tolerable, and I don’t mind them so much, but mostly, I think these tunes are shit.

Which shouldn’t matter to you. My opinion affects you in no way at all. But the thing that really bothers me is that apart from two or three of these tracks, even among the ones I can stand to listen to, there’s hardly a single real instrument between them. So many fantastic instrumentalists out there, and these blood sucking record producers won’t spend a dime on them. They’ll get someone to programme a few loops instead, and that’ll be that.

I have no vendetta against electronic music. I quite like electronic music, when it’s done well, and when the computer is played like an instrument. But that’s not what this is. It’s cheap sound for an instant hit. It costs less and it makes more money for the record companies than most “real” musicians can ever dream of.

I’d like some music, please. Is that too much to ask?

EDIT: Regarding Rage Against the Machine, according to Wikipedia:

“In 2009 the song was part of a successful Facebook campaign to prevent The X Factor winner’s song from gaining the Christmas number one in the United Kingdom. The campaign provoked commentary from both groups and other musicians, as well as gaining coverage in national and international press. The song became the first single to reach Christmas number one spot on downloads alone.”

Improv, Jam-bands and Stuff

So today I had my first real lecture. I’m doing two modules this semester: The Improvising Musician and Songwriting Analysis. Today we started on the former.

The basic idea is obvious enough. It’s all about learning to improvise. So basically, what we’re gonna do is learn songs, improvise around them and then put on a show. We’ve been divided into bands, and are to play 6 songs each. Four of them have to be chosen from two lists we’ve been given (two songs from each list) and the final two are to be chosen freely. This means we can pick cover songs or write songs for ourselves, perhaps jam out a couple of songs. These are the songs we get to choose from:

List A
Phish – Birds of a Feather
Susan Tedeschi – Hampmotized
Grace Potter & The Nocturnals – Medicine
Dave Barnes – Chameleon
Jon Cleary (& The Absolute Monster Gentleman) – Sometimes I Wonder
Larry Carlton –Inkblot 11 (inst.)

List B
Steve Lukather & Los Lobotomys – Party In Simon’s Pants (inst.)
Derek Trucks – MaybeThis Time
String Cheese Incident – iBam (inst.)
Phish – Punch You In The Eye
Dave Matthews Band– Trippin Billies
Umphrey’s McGee – The Fuzz

My group has two guitarists, bass, drums and keys, and we’re one of the lucky ones cause we also get the saxophonist. Yay! I love the sax. It’ll add such a nice level to the amount of improvisation we’ll be able to do as well.

We took some time listening to some of the artists on the list. I was especially impressed by Grace Potter. Not her band quite so much, but she was amazing. We watched a video, and she just rocked the house. She had so much emotion and feeling, and you could just see that she really loved being on that stage. That’s what I want to be like!

The Jam-band genre isn’t really a genre per se… It’s more of a way of playing. The bands we listened to played rcok and blues and funk and all sorts of stuff, but what they all had in common was that a large portion of each song was dedicated to improvising. And improvising isn’t just soloing, either, it can be so much more. These people just throw themselves out there and play whatever they feel like, together. I hope that at the end of these weeks of rehearsals we have ahead of us we’ll feel comfortable enough to put on a show as good as what these people do.

The concerts will be on the 29th and 30th of November at the Newhampton Arts Centre. I don’t know which of the dates I’ll be playing yet, but more details to come. If you’re in the area, it would we absolutely brilliant if you’d like to come watch!

I’m beginning to look forward to this year. Hopefully I’ll manage to do a lot of cool stuff, and get to know these other musicians as well. I feel optimistic right now.

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Regarding Culture Shock & Music

One of the strangest things about being here is how different things actually are from home. You wouldn’t think that the differences would be so vast, but they really are. People are different, and the culture is different. One of the biggest culture shocks for me so far is probably ASDA.

The one closest to campus is a HUGE supermarket that’s open 24 hours a day on week days, and closes at 10 pm on Saturdays and 8 pm on Sundays. This place literally has everything from single malt whisky to kitchen knives and I haven’t even explored the whole place yet. This means that you can literally come in at 2 am, buy a bottle of whisky and a kitchen knife, down the whisky and go stab someone. WTF???

For my international readers, let me explain why this is strange to me. In Norway, no shop is allowed to sell beer after 8 pm on weekdays and 6 pm on Saturdays, and beer sales are closed on Sundays. Only special, government controlled shops are allowed to sell alcoholic beverages above 5% or so, and these shops close at 6 pm on weekdays and 3 pm on Saturdays. Quite apart from all this, only kiosks and things are allowed to be open 24 hours a day. NO WAY would ANY shop selling knives be allowed to stay open after 11 o’clock in the evening in Norway.

I’ve got to know some more music students. On Tuesday we went out for Karaoke, which was lots of fun. My flat mate Grace is AMAZING!!! Best soul voice I’ve ever heard in someone her age (she’s 18 years old) and definitely the best microphone technique! Karaoke was fun. I sang Africa by Toto and Supermassive Black Hole by Muse (which made Abi really happy). Some of the people there were pretty good, some were awful, but regardless it was a great evening. We all had fun, at least.

On Wednesday I went to Birmingham with a handful of first year pop music students for a concert. A Master student called Denis had his graduation show at a place called Jam House or some such thing. It was a reggae concert, and it was brilliant! I’m not even a big reggae fan, but I had a great time. All the music students who decided to stay behind really missed out, cause it was a great show. I talked to some more new people (I impressed myself by managing to discuss indie rock with one person, jazz with another and metal with a third in the space of about an hour or so), enjoyed the music and had a generally nice time.

Last night I stayed in and watched My Fair Lady with Emma. Seems like tonight is gonna be another one of those quiet nights. Abi’s got Jodi over, and Grace’s boyfriend is coming so he and Luke are gonna sit in Luke’s room and play guitar. Emma and I are in the kitchen with each our laptop. Annette is the only one who’s gone out tonight. Still, I’m feeling pretty good. I’m eating normally again, no longer nervous and panicking… I hope I can keep this up.

I’m taking a trip home on the 29th. That helps, too.

I borrowed the photo from Grace, hope it’s okay. Left to right: Me, Emma, Luke, Annette & Grace.

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Petrified, but Whole

So here I am. Yesterday I got up at 5 am (Norwegian time), took a shower and headed to the airport at about 5:30. My parents picked me up to take me there, and my boyfriend came with us to see me off. We had a sad goodbye, I went through security and got on the plane just before 7:30.  Plane took off on time, arrived ahead of schedule, but was delayed when it reached Heathrow because its “parking space” was occupied. I got my luggage quick enough and made my way in to London by express train.

Then I got lost at Paddington, but did find my way to Euston station in the end, where I procured a rail card and a ticket to Walsall. The train to Birmingham was quicker than I’d feared, and the train to Walsall left shortly after, so I arrived here at about 2 pm.

When I’d got my room key and been showed to my accommodation (Mathias from NISS was an angel and helped me carry my very heavy luggage up the stairs), I had a brief panic attack, took a shower and went out to the kitchen to meet my flatmates.

I’ve been very lucky. They’re all friendly people, and two of them are music students, albeit first years. I tried to eat something (which failed miserably), and we went out to a club in Wolverhampton where I drank ridiculously cheap Stella Artois (no way I’d ever find it in a pub in Norway for less than the equivalent of £4 or £5). I’ve never been clubbing before. It was fun, though. I hung out with the girls from my hall for a while, dancing, and then I found Mathias, Espen and a guy called Glen, who’s also from NISS and who studies sound engineering. We sat down in a quieter room, an imitation of a French Budoir or something, where they played mostly jazz tunes, drum and bass and other pleasant music, and less loudly.

It was here that I met new friends (not counting Abi from my hall, whom I already get along with really well and who’s really friendly and who gave me toilet paper when I’d forgotten to buy some). I got into a conversation with a guy called Louis, who turned out to be both a goth and a commie. He introduced me to a bunch of his friends, the most immediately fun of whom was this guy named Paul who had the most fantastic all over the place fuzzy styled hair. I had a great time talking to all of them, and my spirits lifted slightly in finding that there are people here who are, you know, my kind of people, as well.

I’m really, really homesick, and it’s unlikely to get any better for a while, but I think I’ll manage. At least now I’ve met some people and I know what I’m getting into. I’ve signed up for modules, completed my enrollment, just need my student card now… Gonna talk to Espen and Mathias about it as I’m not entirely certain how to get it, but I suppose it’ll all sort out. I am, at the very least, now officially a student at the University of Wolverhampton. I live here now. This is to be my home. And as soon as I get round to hanging up a few posters and making this room more my own, I might just feel it, too.

Still scared.

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Belated Blogging

It’s hard to find the time to blog sometimes. Or, more like, it’s hard to find the energy. My travel nerves have turned more to apathy than anything else in the last few days, and I haven’t been doing much of anything. I’ve started packing (found that my MIDI keyboard won’t fit in my suitcase, so I need to figure out some way to ship it), I’ve bought everything I need (travel adapters for my electronics and such), and I’ve said my goodbyes to most people. I leave on Sunday.

Despite the apathy, today was a good day. This morning I Skyped with my best friend and wee sis KayKay, who’s studying in Japan. It was good to see her face and hear her voice. Made me feel happy to see her well (with a nasty cold, apparently, but, you know, alive and in the flesh and all that). She seems to be doing really well, and I’m happy for it. Makes me think, if she can manage on her own in Japan, it shouldn’t be such a big deal for me to manage in the UK, where I do after all speak the language and know the culture. Makes me feel like a big sissy, too, for being so scared.

Then I went to NISS, talked to some of my old school mates who are second years now, and then I had a chat with Audun, the head of the music department, in his office. He’s meeting up with Espen and Mathias, the other two guys who are going to Walsall, in Wolverhampton on Friday, but since I’m not leaving until Sunday I won’t be able to join them. So, we talked for a little while, discussed the future and my expectations from the school, etc. It was rather pleasant.

After that, I went out for beers with my friends. I got presents from Stephanie and Chris, and Linda gave me one of the bracelets she was wearing, which was very sweet of her, I thought. Loads of people turned up, actually, and I had a great time chatting with people I haven’t had a chance to talk with for a while. I might be seeing some of them on Friday as well, if I feel up for it, as there’s a birthday party then. I’m going to my mum’s for dinner first, though, so we’ll have to see.

The hardest part will still be to leave Morten. He’s been really sweet about it all, but I think it’s starting to sink in for him that I’m leaving, too. It’ll be so sad to leave him here and go off on my own… But I suppose it must be done. We have to do difficult things sometimes.

Right now I just love all my friends so much. I was so touched that so many people turned out to something I’d only advertised as a Facebook status. They’re all wonderful people.

I’ve started writing again. Or, I got this idea a couple of weeks ago and started writing a little bit. Haven’t had time to do a lot with it yet – I’ve been so busy being nervous and apathetic. I’ll try to get cracking again once I get settled in at Uni, though.

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YouTube Updates

I’ve made two new playlists on YouTube, with the videos from the Motown concert and the last original tunes concert I played at NISS. And here’s the video recording of The Day and the Night. Sounds better with video, doesn’t it?

Also, if you’d care to take a look, an old childhood friend of mine is studying animation and has a YouTube channel where she posts some of her work. Please check out YamiNoRisu’s YouTube Channel!

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Concert Review: You Wish @ Skuret, 10th August 2010

Band: You Wish
Venue: Skuret Kulturpub, Oslo
Date: 10th of August, 2010

There is always a slight problem with reviewing bands you know personally, in that it’s not always so easy to be entirely objective. In addition to not really wanting to say anything bad about ones friends, ever, there’s also the chance that they might actually read this at some point, and what if they don’t like what they read?

All the same, I will try my damndest to be as objective as I can.

I have already raved about this band here. You Wish play music of a genre of their own creation, called Ghost Pop. It’s not really easy to describe, but the words “haunting” and “dance music” certainly fit in the mix. It’s a five-piece band, with guitar, drums, bass, keytar and vocals, and the music itself is based on hauntingly beautiful chords and somewhat unusual rhythmic patterns, though it is, perhaps, the vocals that most immediately sets it apart.

You Wish started their concert in a way that would have been extremely effective and awesome, had they been playing at a real concert venue rather than a pub, because between all the people talking, laughing and ordering beer it was a bit hard to tell whether they’d actually started playing yet or not. However, once they picked up the pace they seemed to get everyone’s attention. I was in the front, but looking behind me I don’t think I could see a single face that wasn’t turned towards the stage.

This was my first time seeing them play a full concert, so I was unfamiliar with most of the songs. I found most of them to be absolutely fantastic, and the ones I did know I sang along with as well as I could. If you’re anything like me, you can’t stand still to this kind of music. This was more true for some than others, and there was especially one couple dancing so violently they almost knocked me over twice.

There was an unfortunate mishap with the vocalist’s microphone in the middle of the concert, whereupon she was forced to switch microphones with the bassist (who is also backing singer), but after this, the concert went relatively smoothly. Pub sound is never as good as you’d want it to be, and the sound tech was less than attentive to the band’s gesticulations regarding monitoring, etc.

For such a tiny stage in such a dingy pub, the stage show was amazing. They were all wearing make-up and masks, feathers and glitter, and little butterflies pinned to their clothes. They were all rocking out and communicated with the audience pretty well.

The vocal harmonies were gorgeous and, given the monitoring in that place sucks on the best of days, very clean indeed. The main vocalist and the keytarist, who sometimes shares the main vocals, sing very well together, and communicate well.

I very much enjoyed the concert, and would like to recommend seeing this band to anyone who has the opportunity. So far that probably just means Norwegians, but keep your eyes peeled; you never know when these guys are gonna break through internationally. They’re certainly not far off from making it big here – I’m absolutely sure of it!

Photos were taken by me with my mobile phone. Sorry about the quality, or lack thereof.

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