My housemate has complained that he's not on here yet. So the photo for today is of him (and two of my other housemates). So if I ever shoot to fame (highly unlikely), they won't be able to go anywhere without being mobbed!! I apologise for the poor photo quality, the light was terrible, and one of them was in the process of trying to conceal his face when I took it.
There isn't really a lot going on at the moment. Assignments, coursework and presentations are all cashing in their chips for my time right now, so not much on the music front. But you guys don't wanna read me babbling on about how much music I haven't written. And I don't wanna talk about it, because it's boring (because there's nothing to talk about), and it's unoriginal, and I enjoy being my own person and refusing to conform (so sucks to all the psych students who tried to do experiments on me through college!!). In fact, my nonconformity is very reminiscint (hah! cannot spell that!) of Kat in
Ten Thigs I Hate About You. I also used to conform to what people thought I should in order to fit in, and experienced a major life event in my last year of school that made me want to be free. People didn't accept the person I tried to be to impress them, so why bother? I would rather be me and be free. After all, I didn't exactly act normal through my teenage years:
- I had one major argument in my mother all through that decade of my life (and none since, I'm happy to say!)
- When I went through my teen rebellion rock music stage, my mum actually liked the music I played!! (I was shocked to discover, during her packing to move house, that she actually had loads of cool vinyls, like Led Zep, and Credence Clearwater. How cool is that?!!)
- I used to sit in fields and churchyards just listening to my walkman, for hours and hours in the evenings.
That last one I blame on living in a tiny little village in the middle of nowhere. But I'm grateful for it - if I'd grown up in a major urban area, instead of out in the sticks with no TV to kill my mind, I probably wouldn't be the creative person I am. Even now, living in the bustling metropolis of a capital city, I still miss those times I used to sit in a field at dusk and do nothing but listen to music and collect my thoughts. Sometimes I still try, although there aren't any fields, and no matter where you go, you can't escape the city here; you can never entirely block out the sounds, and there are people everywhere. And people are so shallow. This is a particular peeve of mine. What does fashion matter, when people are dying and the environment is being raped of all it's resources, so that the world we leave to our children is going to be nothing more than a polluted shell?? This is a theme that my friend Komakino picks up well on his site
www.retrojunkies.co.uk. Listening to Marillion's song
Blind Curve/Vocal Under a Bloodlight/Passing Strangers/Mylo/Perimeter Walk/Threshold, especially the Threshold part of the suite, always makes me think too. Fish writes:
I see convoys curb crawling ----------------------
Trying to pick up a war
They're going to even the score
Oh... I can't take any more
I see black flags on factories
Soup ladies poised on the lips of the poor
I see children with vacant stares, destined for rape in the alleyways
Does anybody care, I can't take any more!
Should we say goodbye?
I see priests, politicians?
Heroes in black plastic body-bags under nations' flags
I see children pleading with outstretched hands
Drenched in napalm, this is no Vietnam
I can't take any more, should we say goodbye
How can we justify?
They call us civilised!
I've edited part of this song to avoid any possibility of offense, although I don't think that it was written with racial intent
This is so true. How can we term ourselves civilised when we let the atrocities go on, and don't do anything about it? One of my housemates id the epitome of this. S/he has been heard saying that, "There's no point him/her doing any good in this world, as no-one else does, and no-one cares."
(Gender unspecified to protect his/her identity from those that read this) I thought that this was so sad, yet it is so true of our culture in affluency (by affluency I mean anyone who has a roof over their head and food to eat. And that's only about 10% of the world's population, at the upper limit). So I want to leave this challenge to every reader of this who has access to a computer to read it. What are YOU doing about this?
Bethi