Category: Music


ICCA 2008 videos! Hooray!

It turns out that ChiroJoel was able to sneak his camera into this year’s ICCA quarterfinals concert. Here’s the Youtube playlist of all the songs performed. Keep in mind that the SoCal VoCals and These Guys songs are private, so as to not give their opponents an advantage; once they’re no longer in the running, they’ll be made available to watch.

In the meantime, though…some highlights:

“Apologize,” by some guy who gets over-played on the radio. That there’s a lady winning the award for Best Beatboxer. Heck yes.

Host group TroyTones rocks up some Sister Act.

Claremont REPRESENT!

ICCA 2008

Last week Elaine and I went again to the ICCA acapella quarterfinals concert at USC. (Last year’s roundup here and here.) Unfortunately it seems this year no one taped the whole thing. However, there was, at least, a Reverse Osmosis fan in the audience. You may remember them as the 2006 winner, 2007 host group, and perennial melter of my face.

So, you can see their three songs. First, “Supermassive Black Hole”. The group also has a Knights of Cydonia/Carol of the Bells medley; clearly their arranger likes Muse. Good on them.

Mmm, rump-wiggling. Now for the “Best Solo” award winner:

I promise you, it was about a billion times as moving when not filtered through a crappy camera microphone. Somebody get that lady on American Idol already.

And now bask in the glory of “Carry On Wayward Son”:

And the crime of the evening: this set got fourth place. Fourth. Granted, SoCal VoCal’s set was also mind-blowing; if anyone’s got footage, I’d love to be reminded. (Hint hint.) But still. What.

Clearly none of the judges are Guitar Hero fans.

Thank you Cypress!

Rargh.

Right now, I am listening to Justin Timberlake and reading about the politics of fatness. Somehow, it seems like there ought to be a contradiction there, but I don’t know where exactly.

Well, that’s not true. Right now I am blogging. So let’s blog all the stuff I hadn’t gotten around to.

Had choir rehearsal with the orchestra tonight. My hand is still sore; it practically froze, arthritic, from holding my folder up for so long. Beethoven rambles on in Fantasie for like 20 minutes before the choir finally comes in, and we have to be attentive for that whole time. God forbid that the orchestra make a mistake and have to restart… Meanwhile Professor Lamkin directs Te Deum like 30% faster than Professor Kamm did and I still don’t really know the middle section… whee! It’s beautiful stuff, when we don’t lose track of where the hell we are in it…

Dear Haydn,

Yes, I get the joke. You wrote the “non confundar” section to be all chaotic, so that we’re literally praying “Dear God, let me not become confused” when we sing it. I get it. It’s getting old.

Love, Karen

Wow. It’s choir for five days straight this week. Yesterday was the Music of the Americas dress rehearsal and concert with Chamber Choir. Came out pretty good, I thought–the concert was a bit too long, but there were a lot of awesome pieces. It was probably the most irreverent vocal concert I’ve been in–there were mariachis and dancers, a prof performed part of La Bonne Cuisine while wearing a chef hat, and the final Chamber Choir act, “The Circus Band,” featured juggling, clown noses, random percussion, a four-hand piano part, and the director playing cymbals. Besides “The Circus Band,” we also sang “How Can I Keep From Singing,” “O Nata Lux,” and “The Coolin,” all a capella.

My computer also now has a non-functional CD drive (there’s a blank CD stuck in it; once in a blue moon the computer notices that it’s there and tries to eject it, to no avail) and the light on the power cable flickers on a semi-regular basis (though the computer doesn’t register the electricity being interrupted, so maybe it’s just the cable?). Le sigh.

I never got around to blogging it, but Lisa, Holly, and I made a piece of tape art for our media studies senior seminar project. Here’s a picture:

Project description: We explored problems of art and public space by creating a piece of public art at the Lang Art Building and inviting members of the Scripps community to participate in it. Translation: since we can’t mural Lang for stupid reasons, we semi-protested by attaching a flyer to a wall in a very artistic fashion, then leaving the tape out there for others to do the same. (There’s like four or five additions on the wall now; I’ll have to take more pictures.) We also made a video of the process, the final edited version of which I *still* haven’t seen. But we got our grade back for it today, and it was good, so hey…

I will be visiting Nelson in DC for fall break–only four short days left! The break couldn’t come sooner; school has been such a stress-fest the last few weeks, I could kill for a back rub.

With the Store, SAS webmastery, national and local free culture commitments, Chamber Choir, media studies liaisoning, Voice stuff, Hall Council, trying to not be a lard ass, keeping track of student loans, thesis, arguing with the Scripps administration, long-distance relationship maintenance, planning for post-grad crap, AND classwork… all together it’s really too much, but I really don’t know what I can cut back on. I’m already only taking 3.5 classes. If anything, I want to do *more* next semester: audit Tools and take Radical Political Theory and do a PE class and join an acapella group and go on outdoorsy trips and ARGH.

My frosh self was so ashamed that I wasn’t doing anything with my college career–that, compared with my high school resume, I was a complete slacker. (This has a lot to do with why I sucked it up and started the damn free culture chapter.) Well, frosh self, are you happy yet??

Time for some more fat politics.

OK Go was crazy!

Our story begins at the Future of Music office in Washington DC yesterday afternoon. After getting off work, Nelson and I, along with various other telecommunications/new media-related interns and activists (all of whom, coming straight from the office, were better dressed than we were) to mingle and meet the members of OK Go, who had been on Capitol Hill that day with Future of Music lobbying Congress about net neutrality and so forth. Nelson and I were talking to Andy, the lead guitar/keyboardist, and got very confused because he was talking about being a coder for Open Congress, a Sunlight Foundation project that filters through THOMAS data to make it digestible for humans and inform people what’s really going on on the Hill. It was like, wait, you’re part of the band, right? You don’t usually find rockers who are also code monkeys on the side…

Ironically enough, I had the opportunity to see another code monkey rocker for free that evening. Digital Freedom was having a band showcase the same night as OK Go’s concert that included Jonathan Coulton. However, you can’t meet a band and not go to their concert–besides, it was a golden opportunity to swagger up and tell the ticket people, “We’re on the guest list.” So Gavin, Nelson, two interns we’d just met (Sarah and Sara), and I decided to go to the OK Go concert, which was in Columbia, MD.

So how do we get there?

Gavin was convinced that the Beltway traffic would be suicidal, so we should find a way to get there by public transit. I looked up a route there, and off we went. A Red Line subway packed like sardines in a crushed tin box. An unairconditioned MARC train up to Laurel, MD. (It was 97° and steamy that day.)

The final leg was supposed to be the E bus. According to the transit authority’s website, the E bus stop was at Main and Washington. WRONG. It was a block or so away. Eventually a friendly Metrobus driver let us on (for free!) and drove us to the E bus stop on his route.

Maybe the broken WMATA database was telling us that we didn’t really want to take the E bus. We got on and got lost. Multiple times. I’m going to assume the driver was new, at least to the route, because he really didn’t know where he was going. The other passengers had to give him directions, which sometimes he followed. Also, the *heater* was on. Some of the passengers were pretty frustrated, since they were likely to miss their connections due to his screw-ups, and he was totally rude in response, threatening to kick complaining passengers off the bus from Hell.

Finally we made it to the concert venue. Doors had opened at 6; we didn’t get there until around 8, so we missed the first opening band, Mae. But whatever. We were there for OK Go.

What can I say? They totally rocked, playing ‘Invincible,’ ‘Do What You Want,’ and an absolutely nuts cover of ‘Don’t Bring Me Down’ by Electric Light Orchestra. It was Tim’s birthday, so they brought out a chocolate cake and sang ‘Happy Birthday’ for him. In the middle of the set it started raining a little, which cooled the air down a lot…thank God.

Stolen joke from Damian: So apparently there’s a city in Washington state that’s located right in the middle between Seattle and Tacoma. It’s called Seatac. So what do you call the area between Baltimore and Washington DC? Obviously, we need to create a city called Ballwash.

*ba-dum chh!*

OK Go was the second opening band, opening for The Fray, a band that I’d never heard of but recognized a couple songs from the radio. They seemed okay. We only listened for a little while, before it was time to go hang with the band.

Yep. We had backstage passes.

Probably my greatest impression of OK Go was how normal they were. Other than their paisley pseudo-oxford attire, it wasn’t readily apparent that they were rockers. In person they just seemed like cool dudes who would open you a beer with a bottled water cap, ask a roadie to get you a free t-shirt, offer to check out your album once it comes out, and take you backstage (like, on the actual stage, behind the equipment) for a bit to watch the Fray.

Totally sweet.

We left around 11:15 or so, and realized we had no way to get home. All the Future of Music people had come in one full car–no room for five hapless interns. We had no faith in the E bus, even if we could find the stop (we’re pretty sure the driver just left us off wherever, as there was no bus stop sign), and the last MARC train left at 11:30. Crap.

Some of us wanted to take a taxi to DC, but I knew there was no way I could afford that, even split five ways. Standing in the divider of a road in the rain late at night, I was preparing myself to sleep in the mall parking garage or something. Until…

“Hey, do you know where we could find a gas station?”

A car pulled up, headed to Fairfax. The dude and lady in the car were very cool people, and upon hearing our plight offered us a ride in exchange for gas once we found a station. So five of us piled into the backseat of their car, getting to know each other and howling along to “I Want You to Want Me” on the radio. It was a miracle.

Colt and Allison dropped us off at the apartment, Nelson and I drove the Sara(h)s home to Georgetown, and everyone collapsed for the night. I’m still surprised that we survived. But we did, and it was totally excellent!

You know how sometimes you see something and all of a sudden, you never knew you wanted it before, but now it is something you HAVE to have?

Two cases in point:

I humbly submit that a complete a capella version of “Knights of Cydonia” must come into existence. THE UNIVERSE DEMANDS IT. This is the closest thing to it so far, as far as I know:

Okay, this already exists, thanks to those lovely lovely kids at BYU. But I think that it should be a required element of every self-respecting a capella group’s repetoire.

BARHAH!

I’m thinking about only taking three classes next semester.

Hear me out.

First, it’s really more like 3.5, since I want to get back into Concert Choir next year.

Second, I’ve got more than enough credits to do it.

Third, while the other three classes are ones I really want/need to take, there isn’t anything really capturing the fourth spot for me (yet, at least).

Fourth, I’ve already got one job set up for next year, and I want to get as much web freelancing/other employment as I can get my grubby little hands on. (Both because I ran out of college money this year and because I want to furiously build my portfolio in the hopes that somebody will employ me someday.)

Fifth, there’s a bunch of other extracurricular commitments I’m setting myself up for next year. I’m going to be a Media Studies liaison (woo hoo!) so I’ll be organizing cool (*NOT* film/video-oriented, goddammit!) events for the media studies department. I’ll be proposing and starting my spring Senior Project (a graphic novel! so excited!). Whether we or USC host the West Coast free culture conference, I’m sure I’ll have stuff to do for that, not to mention all the other events FC5C will be doing (I have a list of them here! Oh, the joys of budget applications!). I want to bring Antenna Alliance to Claremont by starting a CC-themed radio show with Carolyn and creating an on-campus, Jam Society-esque music recording studio (with our music programs and such, how does this not already exist??). Inspired by the ICCA concert, I want to make another go at trying out for an acapella group. And so forth.

Also, with three (point five) classes, this is what my schedule would look like:
TR 8:10a – 9:25a Interdisciplinary Intro to Law
TR 10:30a – 12:30p Advanced Web Projects
TR 1:15p – 2:30p Senior Exercise
TR 4:15p – 5:30p Concert Choir
(R 8:00p – 9:30p Free Culture 5C Meeting)

Four-day weekends, w00t!!

Then again, I could take a fourth class and still avoid Monday and Friday. Several of the classes I’m pondering would do that. There’s “The Making of Modern Iran and Afghanistan,” which meets on Wednesday afternoons and sounds really interesting. Or there’s Intro to Creative Writing, also on Wednesdays. It’s been really long since I’ve done any (written) fiction, it could be good to get back into that. Especially if any of the writing projects Nelson and I have discussed are ever going to become more than vaportext. Or, I could always take “Directed Reading in Media Studies” (basically an independent study) and use it as an excuse to read all those tomes in the Free Culture canon that I haven’t gotten to yet (“Copyrights and Copywrongs”, “Freedom of Expression”, “Shamans, Software, and Spleens”, etc).

I dunno. Any thoughts?

ICCA 2007 videos

Someone at the a capella concert I went to back in February had a video camera and likes to share. YouTube has pretty much the whole concert up, if you know what to search. Of course, it’s not the same as seeing it live in the third row…but whee!!!

Here’s the first song of the night, my introduction to how awesome a cappella could be. (It’s a large group, and some of the choreography’s hard to see from so far out; it’s still awesome):

Tra-La-La/Do You Believe/Night at the Roxbury medley–for anyone with an Internet connection:

Don’t Stop Me Now–for Nelson:

They did a song from The Goofy Movie. Whaaa? Also, their tenor soloist is insane:

Hm… The winning group, a bunch of Mormon ladies called “Noteworthy,” used to have one of their songs up on YouTube, but I can’t find it now. Or anything else from this year. Darn. They had some pretty sweet choreography.

“Fix You.” Has a gorgeous build-up. Lady beatboxers in mixed groups are sexy as hell and far too rare:

“District Sleeps Alone Tonight.” Last summer Nelson was talking about recording an acapella version of this song, but I don’t think I can match this. The Postal Service has been covered to death by college a capella, but in this instance I don’t care:

Yep, another Reverse Osmosis song…they would’ve won in a heartbeat if they weren’t hosting:

Want more? You can find most of the songs from the concert up here.

…argh! one more!

Saturday: After putting in laundry, Nelson and I went up to Linde to hang out with Suite Hedonism. We went to Costco, made a massively awesome dinner (spinach, cucumber, and corn salad with vinagrette, jambalaya with kielbasa, polenta, and pasta for Nelson), played poker, and watched “Shaun of the Dead,” which Nelson hadn’t seen. He liked the Queen songs in the movie. :)

Sunday: In the morning we went to the Claremont farmer’s market and bought onions, strawberries, broccoli, and a case of oranges, which we haphazardly brought back to the apartment several blocks away using Glenn’s skateboard. Next time we use the car, methinks.

In the evening, Nelson wanted to go to 300. Kathleen had mentioned that there was a drive-in theatre in Montclair, so we checked out their website and found that they were showing it. So we went, paid less for two movies than you pay for one in a normal theatre (despite drive-ins being so much cooler!), and had an awesome time. I hadn’t anticipated much liking the movie, as Frank Miller is not known for his enlightened portrayal of women and excessive gore can get to me, but as it turned out I loved it. The queen is human, yet bad-ass as heck–they treated her and Leonidas’ relationship really well, much better than the comic book. Sure there’s gore–it’s a hand-to-hand-combat war movie, after all!–but it’s stylized comic-book gore. I barely noticed it at all–for me, the focus of the movie was the plot and tactics. And pretty film. So much pretty film. Definitely worth seeing in theatres.

Nelson and I didn’t actually watch the second feature, we were too busy talking about the movie and tactics and everything. Nelson’d read the original comic book, and knew something about the battle/ancient military strategy (he took Latin in high school), so it was cool hearing his take on it. And then we went home, ate broccoli, and talked about giant rodent wars. ‘Twas a lovely date. :)

Monday: Nelson decided he wanted to go to an open mike. We looked on openmikes.org and the only open mike in the area on Monday was in Orange, CA–24 miles away. I looked at the map. “Wow, that’s almost to the beach.”

“…”

“Day trip to the beach!!”

So after lunch we spontaneously drove to Corona Del Mar, climbed down the technically-handicapped-accessible-but-suicidally-steep path, and hung out at the beach! We ate strawberries and grapes, walked the length of the beach and back, and waded in the waves. This beach, just south of Balboa (where I went with my family frosh year), was much rockier, with a cave and tidepools to explore. Clambering around rocks in the ocean waves nearly naked with no foot protection, both of us got scraped up a good bit. I injured my leg when I slipped on a rock I couldn’t see through the water, then got hit with a wave so I couldn’t regain my balance. But it was so cool! There were rocks with mussels and barnacles all over. There were lots of anemones, which closed if you poked them. I held a cute little hermit crab with tiny red antennae! Squee! Tidepools are so much cooler outside of a museum.

We went to dinner in Orange, at an Italian place called Aldo’s Ristorante, then walked two blocks north to the open mike. Lots of antique/non-chain stores, a roundabout, non-Mediterranean architecture… The neighborhood was eerily similar to Lancaster, PA–it felt much more East Coast than West!

The open mike was okay–the owner wasn’t particularly personable, and few people attended. But the audience members were neat–the guy who played after us, Kurt Hunter, was really talented and humorous–and it was fun rocking out.

Six more days and my conclusion already is: spring break is awesome.

Especially the cellists. :)

*sniff*…I still like Pachelbel’s Canon…

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