Blather

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Attend the Site of Sweeney Todd

Just saw a new TV spot for the upcoming movie Sweeney Todd and decided to visited the site which has been updated with clips from the songs. Somewhat of an exciting find for a day which has been pretty lousy. Here's my preliminary review of what I heard on the site. My guess is that many purists will hate most of it because it is different from the Broadway musical, but I suppose I'm more forgiving... or just not a purist. Of course it's going to be different from the stage version! (I thought the revival with the bald Sweeney and Patti LuPone as Lovett and all the cast members playing instruments sounded horrible. The movie will surely be better than that dismal conception.)

The songs are obviously not completely edited... there are silent moments in which the music plays but no one sings... in the movie there will be dialog filling these gaps. So I'm probably pre-judging these clips as they do sound like rough cuts indeed.

A Little Priest: Helen Bonham Carter is better than LuPone in my opinion. Nobody can beat Angela Lansbury in the role of Mrs. Lovett, but I think Lansbury would be too old at this point and would make the film very weird. They'd have to use CGI to get her to look young again, and that would look even weirder. But Carter doesn't sound bad at all. She sounds more mysterious than Lansbury; Lansbury was a bit more... wacky, but Carter sounds more deceptively kind. I'd love to eat her meat pies, she sounds so welcoming. God, that's good! Johnny Depp as Sweeney doesn't sound too bad in this song, but still bad. I hate how he speaks "I'll come again when you have judge on the menu" and his voice just sounds too much like he wants to be a pop or rock star... he hardly ever hits the notes purely, he puts all these weird inflections on them. I don't know much about singing, and Depp is singing better than I could, but it still bothers me.

By The Sea: Here I wish Carter would use a little more vibrato. Her nonvibrato makes the notes sound plain.

Epiphany: This is a great song in the Broadway musical, but here Depp rips it to shreds with his horrible attempt at singing. When he sings the word "die" I feel like I'm dying. After listening enough I can get used to it and focus on the melody and the lyrics, but it proves to me that Depp, as the main character, is the worst singer in the production. :( Why, Burton? Why?!

Green Finch: Now that's refreshing. Probably the best singer in this production is Johanna, better than whoever was in the original Broadway.

Johanna: Yikes! I wasn't expecting Anthony Hope's voice to be so high, but it still sounds good. No way anyone's voice can sound as bad as Depp's anyway.

No Place Like London: Well, Depp doesn't sound as bad as in "Epiphany" at least.

Pirelli's Miracle Elixer: Yikes again! I didn't expect Toby to be so young as he wasn't in the Broadway, but the character is actually supposed to be young, isn't he? It's great that the kid playing Toby is a better singer than Depp. They should have used him in the last Pirates movie as the kid who breaks out in song before being hung. I was disappointed though because it seems this song was really shortened. It speeds up at a very inappropriate time. It's one of the most catchy songs in the musical, why cut this one short? :( Why, Burton?! Next time, ask me for advice.

Pretty Women: Ugh! Snape's not a very good singer either... er... I mean Alan Rickman. I can't decide which one's worse, Depp or Rickman.

Worst Pies in London: I think the bass should be louder on the "blats" when Lovett is squishing bugs and pounding the dough, but a good song overall.

Unfortunately I think my favorite song from the musical, "Kiss Me", was cut. The song had a wonderful catchy melody and delicious counterpoint, along with some hilarious lyrics. :( I am sad.

Overall, the orchestration also great. I just wish the songs weren't cut so short though. :(

I still can't wait to see it. Short songs are better than no songs.

Oh, I also don't like how Sweeney's hair looks like Cruella DeVil's.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Happy Birthday to Me

I now enter my 23rd year of being alive and Wizard Walk enters it's fifth year of existence. I've been writing my children's/young adult fantasy novel for a year now, and there is still an incredible amount of story to go, mostly because I can't keep to my outlines and keep re-outlining it putting more stuff in...

Music-wise, it's been my most productive year, with 13 pieces completed, Opuses 28 through 41 (though as of writing this, 10 of those pieces still need to be posted on my website). By putting my music on YouTube, I have also been able to share my work with others who might never have heard it otherwise, which is... pretty cool.

School-wise, it's been my most horrible year... but let's not discuss that... unless you really want to. Just kidding.

I had a nice birthday and got some great gifts: Spongebob Mugs, the Jurassic Park trilogy on DVD, and the sci-fi series Firefly on DVD.

I've got two more ultra-busy weeks of classes left, then I must focus on finals for a couple more weeks. But studying for finals is easier than doing homeworks and projects. I have some really horrible classes this semester... I won't miss them. I can't wait to get this semester over with.

Should we fear the fear of fear?

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Twitterable

I really need to design a new template for this blog, this one feels squished and stale. Maybe I'll switch to WordPress or something... I've been seeing a few Vox blogs as well that looked really nice... guess I'll just try redesigning this one first. I should probably start a new blog that is focused only on technology blather though, eh? This one's much more eclectic.

I heard about a site called Twitter months ago on TWiT. It sounded like a stupid idea.

I've been keeping journals on and off since I was 8. (Actually, this blog is sort of meant to be a journal more than anything else... surprise!) This weekend I decided it would be fun to update a journal every couple of hours with short entries as a way of looking back on what I did throughout an entire day. Then I remembered hearing about Twitter, so I gave it a try.

In addition to its sort of journal-keeping aspect, it also serves as a sort of a window to the wider world. For some reason, when I'm working on some hard homework or sitting in a boring class, it helps to know that other people are hard at work too. Hmmmm... is that some form of schadenfreude? Anyway, it has quickly become addicting to log onto Twitter just to see what other people are up to. People also tend to post more interesting links on Twitter than on Digg, so if I have time to be side-tracked I go click-link happy.

I at first tried to update this blog once a day, but I couldn't keep up, so who knows how long I'll be able to keep up Twittering. Probably for a while.

Now go get your own Twitter account and follow me...

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Understanding Music

What the heck does that mean? "Understanding music"? I'm not a big fan of the phrase. Music is only music. Anything to "understand" about it is not musical. If I want to better understand an opera by Mozart, I learn about its creator, what he was doing at the time, what the rest of his country was doing, what the musical tastes and conventions were at the time, and probably some music theory (which is redundant because "music theory" is really just another way of saying "musical tastes and conventions of the time"). Though all these things affected the creation of the music, they are not the music. So basically, "understanding music" tends to mean "being aware of a piece's origins".

Understanding music can change a person's opinion of a piece. For example, a person may hate Tim Burton's Corpse Bride. Later on, that person may learn about all the labor that went into its stop-motion animation and may change his opinion, saying something like "it amazes me the dedication those animators had!" ... but then his opinion is no longer based on the end product itself, but on its origins.

Do you have to know a musical piece's origins before deciding whether or not you like it? If you heard a short waltz for piano and you were told it was written by Beethoven, would you like more than if it had been written by a six year old? Or some poor guy with some "rags-to-riches" story? Would you like it more if it had taken twenty years to write? What if it was written in less than an hour?

Unfortunately in the real world I think these outside factors do indeed influence opinions. Perhaps it's because people don't like to just be affected by music, they want to know the reason they're being affected. Alas, it's currently impossible to understand the way our chemical brains work, so many people just try to find reasons elsewhere and seek the fool's gold of "understanding music".

I'm not saying "understanding music" is bad; it can be extremely interesting and helpful, especially if you're a composer. But one should be cautious that his opinions of a piece of music are not dictated by his opinions of its origins.

Likewise, one should be cautious not to say something like "you don't like this music because you don't understand it." Those are the words of snobs who do let the origins of a piece dictate their opinions.

And this does not apply to all the arts, such as literature, for arts such as literature have much more objective concrete meanings. Music has no objective concrete meaning.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Restarting an iPod...

I have nothing else to blog about...

This morning I plugged my iPod in my computer to update it... but unfortunately my iTunes froze. My iPod was stuck on the "Do Not Disconnect" screen, even after I turned off my computer. I was worried that my iPod would screwed up by this incident, but fortunately there is a way to restart a frozen iPod (though if bad sectors have already been written on the hard drive due to an unsafe disconnect or something, restarting probably won't help much with that).

To restart the iPod:
  1. Turn the "Hold" on then off somewhat quickly.
  2. Hold the "Menu" button and the "select" button (middle button) down for 5 to 10 seconds.
  3. The iPod should restart and the Apple logo should be displayed.
The process saved me this morning.

So... make sure your iTunes is responding nicely before you plug in your iPod!

Saturday, November 3, 2007

A Good Idea is Torture

Torturing is not a good idea, but having a good idea for a novel can be torture when you must first finish the novel you're working on.

I have a weird sort of fantasy short story about half way done. I was listening to some music tonight when it dawned on me that with one big twist to the story, the story could easily expand to a novel, and the kind of magical innovative novel I would love to read myself. Well, at least it's innovative to me, though one could probably argue that it's not innovative at all. I'm still reluctant to say what it is, for fear someone will say, "oh, that's like such and such" which would destroy my temporary pride.

So I instantly jotted down notes on the basic story and I hope the ideas will continue to expand in my mind... but I still have at least another year's worth of work to put into The Game of Gynwig... if not two or three more years. It's torture! Torture I say!

Spring forward, Fall back... I get an extra hour of sleep tonight, so bye!

Friday, November 2, 2007

No NaNoWriMo this year

I spent most of today finishing unpacking from the move... my room still had a bunch of boxes all over the place, but I am now pretty much all set in here and the room is quite clean. Tomorrow morning I am expected to wake up early and help my parents prepare our old house for selling... blagh. Ouch, I just banged my elbow on the edge of my desk... :(

NaNoWriMoIt's now November, and that means it's Nation Novel Writing Month. Thousands of people are now setting about writing a 50,000 word piece of fiction. Unfortunately, I do not have the time for such things this year, but even if I did, I'm still working on The Game of Gynwig, the novel I started for NaNoWriMo last year, and I am refraining from starting any other books until I finish this one, despite much temptation. I don't know how anybody (well, any college or high school student at least) can write 50,000 words in one month... if you can, you're either insane or have too much time and not enough real work. And don't say "oh, if you love writing, you'll find the time" because I'm not talking about finding the time to write in general, I'm talking about 50,000 words of unplanned fiction in one month. Insane. Why couldn't July be NaNoWriMo? Why November, a very busy month for students?

It's easier and more interesting to make dinner and do laundry than to do homework.