Saturday, December 27, 2008
Been working to put on good habits.
Hi friends!
Christmas was totally marvelous for me this year! My family and I traveled up to Fresno to stay with my grandma and have christmas with all of my dad's side of the family. It was such fun! I received such great presents, and since I got a job at Islands in the summer, I actually was able to buy nice gifts for a few of my friends and family!
As far as awesome presents that I was given, I got three CD's: Moby - Last Night, Animal Collective - Sung Tongs, and Laurie Anderson - Big Science.
I've listened to all three in their entirety from start to finish, and I could probably talk about each for lots of paragraphs. But I won't, because I like having people read my blog, and I wouldn't want to torture you guys. But I mean, I don't know. I guess blogging is all about writing and reading stuff. But...uh I'm not sure. I feel like it would be annoying...maybe. I don't want to risk that. Or something. Frick. Shutup kenny.
Ahh! I also got a video camera!!! It's so freaking cool! It's a really nice Mini DV Sony HandyCam. Which, I know, isn't crazy nice or anything, but it's a quality camera and I already know how to use it (and final cut!) thanks to digital media. :) High school may have been useful after all.
Also, the day after christmas my Mom, Dad, brother and I all went to Yosemite! Everything was covered in snow, but the skies were astoundingly clear when we got there. It was maybe the most pristine and beautiful thing I have ever seen in my life so far. Don't feel like you missed out, because I recorded tons of footage and will have a sweet video up soon enough!
Speaking of videos, my YouTube account is: kennychiwa147
Check me out! :)
Oh, and also. A little side note.
The title of this blog entry is a line from the song "Who Could Win a Rabbit" from Animal Collective's album titled "Sung Tongs" (that I got for Christmas).
If you want to broaden your musical horizons, I plead you to check out this album! It's one of the most creative and musically insane things that I have ever listened to, and I totally love it!
animal collective ftw!
Thursday, December 4, 2008
December!
I'm not sure why, but I didn't post anything for the entire month of November. Maybe it's because I realized that nobody reads this blog. So I guess it doesn't really matter. :)
Anyways, it's December! I love December!
Also: I decided that I'm going to buy a video camera and start video blogging and making other sweet videos on youtube! I guess you could say that I became inspired after watching some peoples vlogs.
Plus I already know how to edit videos, and I have iMovie HD AND Final Cut Pro! :)
I know no one reads this, but I'll put the link to my channel once I get that camera and start filming things!
Hooray! :)
Monday, September 29, 2008
Surgery
I'll start this off by saying that life for me has reached some sort of peak lately, but in the way that things keep getting better and better. It's been something that has been happening for the last few months, but lately things have been remarkably incredible.
I wish I could tell you more, but I wont, and you will just have to be content knowing that I'm incredibly happy with where I'm at right now. I really hope that I can remember these good times, especially when things get tougher and it becomes harder to remember that God is good and life is always an incredible experience that should never be taken for granted.
Anyways, amidst all of these countless amazing circumstances that have been happening lately, there's been this small looming dark spot, that being my surgery. Which is actually scheduled for today, being 12:30 am right now. I won't go into so much detail, but basically they will be cleaning out my sinuses of these weird growths I get called polyps. This will let me not get so many sinus infections all the time and have improved hearing and be able to smell! For the first time in five years! (if you did not already know this about me, I presently don't have a sense of smell because these polyps block it). The reason that this surgery is sort of considered a "small looming dark spot" to me is because there is a risk that I'll go blind or suffer some brain malfunction and become a vegetable for the rest of my life. But I've overcome that mostly, and I have faith in my surgeon. Especially since he's (successfully) done this operation on me three times already.
So anyways I've been imagining what things will be like with my ability to smell fully restored, and I think I expect life to be slightly more colorful and vibrant somehow. But who knows....I guess you do (if you can smell that is).
Anyways, I'll end this by saying a goodbye to my fellow anosmiacs! I travel somewhere that you cannot follow!
Goodnight! :)
I wish I could tell you more, but I wont, and you will just have to be content knowing that I'm incredibly happy with where I'm at right now. I really hope that I can remember these good times, especially when things get tougher and it becomes harder to remember that God is good and life is always an incredible experience that should never be taken for granted.
Anyways, amidst all of these countless amazing circumstances that have been happening lately, there's been this small looming dark spot, that being my surgery. Which is actually scheduled for today, being 12:30 am right now. I won't go into so much detail, but basically they will be cleaning out my sinuses of these weird growths I get called polyps. This will let me not get so many sinus infections all the time and have improved hearing and be able to smell! For the first time in five years! (if you did not already know this about me, I presently don't have a sense of smell because these polyps block it). The reason that this surgery is sort of considered a "small looming dark spot" to me is because there is a risk that I'll go blind or suffer some brain malfunction and become a vegetable for the rest of my life. But I've overcome that mostly, and I have faith in my surgeon. Especially since he's (successfully) done this operation on me three times already.
So anyways I've been imagining what things will be like with my ability to smell fully restored, and I think I expect life to be slightly more colorful and vibrant somehow. But who knows....I guess you do (if you can smell that is).
Anyways, I'll end this by saying a goodbye to my fellow anosmiacs! I travel somewhere that you cannot follow!
Goodnight! :)
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Girls
I'm becoming more and more thankful for the fact that the fall and winter seasons are coming up. Mostly because it means colder weather, and subsequently that girls won't be able to dress like prostitutes anymore. Though I'm sure there will be a few that will still manage.
Maybe they do it for attention, or maybe they're oblivious, but I doubt it. Either way, I've determined that the amount a girl "shows off", or how ever scantily clad she chooses to dress is directly proportional to how much of an idiot she is.
It's true.
Maybe they do it for attention, or maybe they're oblivious, but I doubt it. Either way, I've determined that the amount a girl "shows off", or how ever scantily clad she chooses to dress is directly proportional to how much of an idiot she is.
It's true.
Monday, August 25, 2008
Music
Today was my first day of my second year in college. Which is actually better considered my first year of college because my real first year of college was an absolute waste. Also my first day isn't over yet because I have another class at 5:00 pm. Still, today is my first day of school. Pretty exciting, considering how I'm actually planning on trying this time.
Anyway, I have an Introduction to Music class, and today we discussed the question "What is music?", which was very intriguing. The following is my attempt at conveying and reflecting on my own thoughts, the thoughts of my classmates, and my professors during that hour or so of class.
So, what is music?
Trying to define music from a logical scientific approach is pointless because you would have to say something like, "Music is using some kind of instrument; your hands, a computer, piano, etc. to create and manipulate vibrations that produce different ranges of frequencies." But the commonly held theory about matter, as we presently know it, is that it's all just vibrating atoms. So from that perspective, everything is music. Which is cool, and could be true, but not in the way that the scientific definition means it. Also, we know inherently that music is much deeper and more mysterious than just sound, or even the lack of sound. The experimental American composer John Cage created a piece titled 4'33", which quickly became, and remains as, one of the most controversial pieces of music ever. A performance of 4'33" would begin by the performer sitting at the piano bench, closing the keyboard lid, then setting his watch on it, which he would periodically check just to monitor the time. The performance consists of three movements, during which the performer sits at the piano, not playing a single note, for four minutes and thirty three seconds. What is then intended to become apparent to the viewers is that they in fact are the music. The subsequent mumbling of confusion and amusement that eventually emerges from the audience and reverberates off the walls and ceiling of the concert hall is the entire point of the piece.
A challenging notion indeed, that music is more than creating sound, and can actually be not only not sound but the candid reactions of people in an audience, who don't even realize that they are the ones performing.
There's this idea that music is defined as some kind of universal language. Which sounds nice, but when examined closely is actually untrue. In a literal sense, music does not always convey information the way a language does. (Louis XVI being one of the few exceptions :) ). But even a song that has lyrics containing facts about the life of a French king could only be understood by those who are familiar with the language that the lyrics are in in the first place. In a similar light, music is not a universal language because whatever the original creator of some piece of music meant when creating it (assuming he or she even meant anything in the first place) could be completely misinterpreted by the listeners. Which leads to another point, that music doesn't always have to be auditory. Ludwig van Beethoven, for example, gradually lost his hearing in his twenties and eventually became completely deaf. But he still continued to compose and conduct entire symphonies, adding his name to an ever growing list of countless deaf musicians.
So after exhausting a few more vague ideas of what music is, which really all ended up being more like definitions of what music has become to us today in our modern culture, our teacher eventually stopped the conversation and concluded with how he had been asking this question for nearly his entire life. He told us that the most satisfying answer to him so far has been that music is simply whatever you make it to be. Pure creation. Sometimes it's an expression, sometimes it's not. Sometimes it has motives, sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes it has melodies and harmonies and dynamics and can be listened to through headphones, and sometimes it's the sound of a confused audience. It's not a universal language, it's a universal phenomenon.
Which means that you can't say that one person is a "better" musician than someone else, or that any "type" of music is better than another, or that one song is "good" and another is "bad". For we are all musicians, but some have chosen to practice and have become more skilled in the way that they prefer to create. There are no different "types" of music, only differences and similarities that some music shares and does not share with other music. And what someone really means when they say that a particular song is "good" is not that it is objectively good, but just that it happens to appeal to their own personal preference. Which raises the question, where do our preferences come from and what influences and shapes them to become what they are?
But aside from that is a question even more intriguing: why are things this way? Why do we all have a desire to create? Why exactly is music a universal phenomenon? What do we find in merely creating that deeply satisfies us?
The Bible tells us that God created us in His image. I think that you can get a lot from this statement, but what presently interests me is that God created us. Maybe this is why music appeals to us. Maybe we were made to be creative in nature because He is creative in nature.
Maybe...um...I don't know...
Maybe I'm finally out of thoughts for now and will be late for class if I keep writing.
Anyway, I have an Introduction to Music class, and today we discussed the question "What is music?", which was very intriguing. The following is my attempt at conveying and reflecting on my own thoughts, the thoughts of my classmates, and my professors during that hour or so of class.
So, what is music?
Trying to define music from a logical scientific approach is pointless because you would have to say something like, "Music is using some kind of instrument; your hands, a computer, piano, etc. to create and manipulate vibrations that produce different ranges of frequencies." But the commonly held theory about matter, as we presently know it, is that it's all just vibrating atoms. So from that perspective, everything is music. Which is cool, and could be true, but not in the way that the scientific definition means it. Also, we know inherently that music is much deeper and more mysterious than just sound, or even the lack of sound. The experimental American composer John Cage created a piece titled 4'33", which quickly became, and remains as, one of the most controversial pieces of music ever. A performance of 4'33" would begin by the performer sitting at the piano bench, closing the keyboard lid, then setting his watch on it, which he would periodically check just to monitor the time. The performance consists of three movements, during which the performer sits at the piano, not playing a single note, for four minutes and thirty three seconds. What is then intended to become apparent to the viewers is that they in fact are the music. The subsequent mumbling of confusion and amusement that eventually emerges from the audience and reverberates off the walls and ceiling of the concert hall is the entire point of the piece.
A challenging notion indeed, that music is more than creating sound, and can actually be not only not sound but the candid reactions of people in an audience, who don't even realize that they are the ones performing.
There's this idea that music is defined as some kind of universal language. Which sounds nice, but when examined closely is actually untrue. In a literal sense, music does not always convey information the way a language does. (Louis XVI being one of the few exceptions :) ). But even a song that has lyrics containing facts about the life of a French king could only be understood by those who are familiar with the language that the lyrics are in in the first place. In a similar light, music is not a universal language because whatever the original creator of some piece of music meant when creating it (assuming he or she even meant anything in the first place) could be completely misinterpreted by the listeners. Which leads to another point, that music doesn't always have to be auditory. Ludwig van Beethoven, for example, gradually lost his hearing in his twenties and eventually became completely deaf. But he still continued to compose and conduct entire symphonies, adding his name to an ever growing list of countless deaf musicians.
So after exhausting a few more vague ideas of what music is, which really all ended up being more like definitions of what music has become to us today in our modern culture, our teacher eventually stopped the conversation and concluded with how he had been asking this question for nearly his entire life. He told us that the most satisfying answer to him so far has been that music is simply whatever you make it to be. Pure creation. Sometimes it's an expression, sometimes it's not. Sometimes it has motives, sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes it has melodies and harmonies and dynamics and can be listened to through headphones, and sometimes it's the sound of a confused audience. It's not a universal language, it's a universal phenomenon.
Which means that you can't say that one person is a "better" musician than someone else, or that any "type" of music is better than another, or that one song is "good" and another is "bad". For we are all musicians, but some have chosen to practice and have become more skilled in the way that they prefer to create. There are no different "types" of music, only differences and similarities that some music shares and does not share with other music. And what someone really means when they say that a particular song is "good" is not that it is objectively good, but just that it happens to appeal to their own personal preference. Which raises the question, where do our preferences come from and what influences and shapes them to become what they are?
But aside from that is a question even more intriguing: why are things this way? Why do we all have a desire to create? Why exactly is music a universal phenomenon? What do we find in merely creating that deeply satisfies us?
The Bible tells us that God created us in His image. I think that you can get a lot from this statement, but what presently interests me is that God created us. Maybe this is why music appeals to us. Maybe we were made to be creative in nature because He is creative in nature.
Maybe...um...I don't know...
Maybe I'm finally out of thoughts for now and will be late for class if I keep writing.
Monday, July 14, 2008
The Abandoned Fish Factory
I'll just get this out of the way up front: I'm not too sure why I chose this as my name for my blog. I guess it just sounds intriguing and cool yet still extremely vague.
I wanted to write a lot about it, about some kind of cool symbolism or something, But really the name just comes from a scene in Heima. The one where Sigur Ròs plays in the dark, underground-looking, concrete remnants of an old fish factory in Iceland. I won't mention anything else about it except for that it's incredibly beautiful.
Sounds interesting? Go buy Heima! It will change everything you know about music!
Oh and welcome to my blog.
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