I've been sick, busy, and lazy the past few weeks and haven't written much.
Loi Kratrong has come and gone. This is a Buddhist holiday where we float krathongs, or small rafts with candles, for good luck. I went to the Rungsit campus with the rest of the BUIC staff to run our annual fund raising booth. What do we do to make money? We let people hit us with pie cream, for 10 baht a plate. It was great fun, but in over two weeks and a bottle of shampoo, I am just now starting to get the last bits of lard off my head.
That same weekend I passed up a soccer game to go audition for a motorcycle commercial This was my second time casting and possibly my last. I just don't have very good acting talent. Every time I've done casting I am dressed up in clothes I'd never consider wearing and powdered with layers of makeup. Then I'm told by two lady-boys holding a small video camera to turn in circles, jump around, and smile pretty. I just can't handle that part. How am I supposed to act "cool and appealing" while I blow bubbles and skip around in a small room. Afterwards I get yelled at for being too straight. I'd rather be behind the camera I think.
Or behind a guitar. I was warned by my Grandfather on my last trip home that I shouldn't spend my time on music and focus on school. I agree but disagree. At the moment school is pretty spaced out. I mean that in a sense of time. I have 6 classes a week, but really only a two-hour class a day. So I'm gonna have fun with music while I can and without stopping school. My fellow staff members First and Oh have decided to play music together and just see how we like it. No record deals, no bars, just trying things out for a bit. It's fun and when we're ready we could play in restaurants to make some extra money. A really cool thing in Thailand that the US doesn't have a "practice rooms". These are everywhere in Bangkok. A person takes a small room and soundproofs it, adds a drum kit, bass, guitar, amps and a mic, then rents the room to people for about $5 an hour.
I'm in student government I think! The huge speech I was worrying about a few weeks ago was done yesterday without any problems. My topic was student unions and BUIC's lack of one. We all pay student union fees but receive absolutely no support. While doing research I found that BUIC has an elected student government ! Bullshit. I've never voted for people to represent me and I'm quite sure my classmates haven't either. So who is this group of elected students??? BUIC "staff". ME. It makes a bit more sense now why we put on all the activities and attend so many meetings. Ah the power feels good. I'm going to refer to myself as co-president Dan from now on.
Last weekend I went to the 2006 Fat Radio Festival or FAT FEST. 2 days of non-stop music on 4 stages, and booths from all sorts of bands and magazines. Lotta fun! I got myself an Artist pass from Pancake and wandered around with a friend of mine. I met the Bhudda Bless guys who way nicer guys than I had imagined and Joey Boy who I'd ever got to chat with before. Pancake, Thaitanium, ผัดพริกแกงไก่ (you must buy this cd), Slot Machine, Paradox, and Silly Fools were really great too. Paradox was the best out of the 100+ bands that played I think. Their concerts are just so much fun for everyone in the crowd. I got to meet my guitar idol too. P'Ton Silly Fools. He let me play guitar while he was warming up and told me about how he writes songs. Very nice guy. Silly Fools are getting older now. Kids, wives, new singer. Only 2 songs :(
Last Tuesday was Co-Pres. Oh's birthday. He rented a room on Ekkmai above the Tuba restaurant which was really fun. Maybe 20 people in the room, karaoke on a projector screen, pool table, food and drinks, the works. We all had a lot of fun. Everyone started to leave by 11 o'clock so the people left went to eat noodles together. We all loaded in Opp's modified pickup which seats 8 but manages 10. Opp hadn't been drinking but was maybe going a bit fast. With an attitude of most taxi drivers in BKK, race everywhere... even if it is to get behind the stopped car in front of you, a taxi preceded to do this: Raced by our left side going twice our speed... on a curve, then swerves left to avoid the parked car he didn't see before he tried the stunt. Opp slams on his breaks and swerves away from oncoming traffic, skidding into the parked car, bouncing, then skidding further into the curve. This all happened in slow motion because we were skidding to a halt before the impact. I grabbed the girl next to me and First because I knew they weren't wearing seatbelts. Luckly the truck hit both the car and guardrail at a 45 degree angle which absorbed the impact and kept us all from whiplash. Nobody was hurt. Parked car was pretty banged up and Opp's lower-riding converted Nissan pickup lost all the front corner up to the wheel. The impact actually blew the tire out! We waited a good two hours for the car owner and insurance to show up, then took taxis home.
In Modern Presentation class we are required to present 3 speeches of different genres: entertainment, informative, and persuasive. I've learned my lesson with group projects and friends, so I picked the Chinese couple and my Nepalan buddy Shy. We all sat down and decided what we want to accomplish. All four of us saw that most Thai students were going to give mono-tone presentations about why smoking is bad for you or something we've all heard before.
We decided to take the taboo subject of sex and persuade students that they shouldn't be ashamed of or shy to buy condoms for protected sex. This is going to be challenging in that we might really embarrass our teacher and peers. But as my Chinese friend said while brainstorming "Fucking get a grip. You are 20 [yrs. old] and people have sex."
The entertainment speech will be a bit more lame. We were thinking of telling each of our life stories as super heroes. It's easy and it is easy enough language for people to understand.
Informative we aren't sure of yet. Has to be something crazy and not "Why trees grow" or something simple you would expect from this class.
I just aranged a meeting tomorrow afternoon to talk about how we'll do this stuff. It's 3am and I'm off to bed.
1 Comments:
Hey, This is Paul in Seattle. Don't stop the music. You'll never be so young again. As you get older, it only gets harder; you are at the tail end of your best music-learning years right now. I am almost 50 and I play mediocre guitar, when I know I have the aptitude to play pro level. I blew my opportunities at your age. If school needs more attention, you can do less music without giving it up.
I'm guessing your grandfather is concerned for your financial security, and sees success in school as crucial to this. Well, he might be reassured to understand that music can enhance your success in school. I am far too lazy to look it up, but there is research showing that playing music activates many areas of the brain and enhances learning in many subjects, including math. So think of it as your homework. Need a topic for an informitive speech? Start Googling about music and learning.
He might also feel reassured knowing that there are a lot of career opportunities in the music world. He probably imagines that it is nearly impossible to make a living as a performer--and, in the Seattle market, he would be right. Too many players, not enough gigs. But, not only is the Bangkok scene more open than here, but there are lots of opportunities besides performing.
You're a communications major, correct? That means maybe journalism, TV, radio. The music world is huge in all those fields. You are *very* well connected in the Thai music scene already--you could seriously make a living in music journalism over there, if you wanted to. You are already doing pro photo shoots. Would you have had that opportunity if you weren't interested in music and hanging out with musicians?
Right now I am in Shoreline Community college's Music Technology program. There is a course on "Vocational Music", exploring ways to make money in music-related careers. Dude, you are so well positioned right now. In that class, I'm learning that 25 years ago I should have been doing exactly what you're doing now. It's all about making connections and getting to know people. Your network is already developing nicely.
You talked about helping one of your friends with their effects settings for their recording. Dude, people make their living doing that sort of thing. Theyre called "studio technicians", "recording engineers", "producers". Any one of those occupations could find themselves working with a guitarist's effect settings. I heard Jack Endino, who produced records by Nirvana, Sound Garden, and I'm not sure who else. He's huge in the recording world. He said it's important for producers to be able to play music. Your instincts are leading you right where you need to go.
Check out my school's studio website:http://success.shoreline.edu/sccstudio/flash
Check this website out for scientific approaches to improving musicianship:
www.giml.org . Music Learning Theory could save you a lot of time developing as a musician.
I wish you all success.
Give my love to Thailand...
Paul
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