4 Jul 2010, 1:34am
music travel lingual passages philippines
by marites
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passages, part i

sala
sala

sunday mornings in my dasmarinas life go something like this: i use my weekend rights to wake at 8 but get out of bed at 845a; visit the CR; stroll through the sala to the front porch where C and i have breakfast with Tita E. our breakfasts combine all the comfort foods my mom served only rarely and in separate sittings. this morning, for example, i gorged on garlic fried rice, lechon kawali, hot pan de sal and cheese wiz, and suman. as we eat, trikes rush by on our relatively busy street, leaving behind trails of exhaust and the gurgles of motors. Tita’s meal is usually interrupted a couple times by folks who swing by her corner store for something (a bag of cold water, a packet of crackers, a cigarette).

all the while, Tita blasts 102.7 Kiss FM, an aural privilege reserved especially for sundays. the station uses the same tag as the station in LA circa 1997, but instead of Rick Dees we have a less abrasive, Filipino-speaking DJ. and instead of pop hits from the 90s, the station plays ballads from the 1950s and 1960s.

lazy sunday morning saturation: the air is heavy with heat, moisture, exhaust, paul anka, weepy strings and dramatic musical climaxes; my stomach is weighted by lechon and grains. more ballads – elvis this time? – accompany the trek back through the darkened sala, back to my room.

one of my classmates here is puerto rican, and we often trade stories on motherlands, inflected by the lens of our experience now. she marvelled once at the lingual-colonial similarity, something like: “english is like a layer of garbage here, just like in puerto rico. it exists, but it’s in lower, vulgarized forms, left behind by US colonization.”

what i visualized when she said this were Coca-Cola images on handmade signs for corner stores that are more numerous than a 1:corner ratio, Rabsico wrappers that litter streets and waterways, and characters in teleseryas whose Tagalog is interrupted by English phrases used to heighten the drama.

my mind is still reeling from conversations with P, R, and A yesterday, part of the herculean and hubristic project i’ve taken on of sketching out communities of writers in cavite, the province where i’m staying this first month. (so far P, R, and A have offered me beautiful things: cavitenos and their writers are matapang, they are travelers and migrants, they are in a complex and dynamic relationship to metro maynila, which sits northeast of cavite and encroaches on the province through its cultural hegemony and exurban sprawl).

P, former editor of the literary folio at DLSU-D, shared stories of the enemies he’s made around campus because of his provocative columns. at one point he spoke with humor and scorn about one of his targets, a student group that exists specifically to further the practice of speaking English among its members.

he said, in tagalog, that the members of this group were of course the more wealthy students on campus. i laughed when he mimicked their english, the kind spoken by valley girls and teenagers in the US, at least in P’s demonstration: “like, you know.” (and in the back of my mind i thought, oh god this is how i talk). after his first stories about the difficulties of convincing the school of the importance of student publications, especially at a school whose funds are funneled to the business school (perhaps the same students of the english group), and after a few hours of hearing stories and thoughtful takes on cavite literature in tagalog (our chats could only be in tagalog, even my broken tagalog), i felt myself laughing with the same scorn and shaking my head with the same disdain.

low rider
low rider

for short distances within town we’ll sometimes take trikes, these motorbikes with covered sidecars. as a passenger in one of these, you sit low to the ground with the driver a few inches away to your left. there is no door to your right, so the street opens up to you with alternatingly terrifying and exciting immediacy. passengers in other trikes and sidewalk wares can be at an arm’s length away, and so can jeepneys and gargantuan buses (i can almost touch the tops of their wheels from my seat). i quickly learned to put my trust in the trike drivers even when they insist on inching into brisk traffic, because they maneuver so adeptly between buses and pedestrians, and because i just need to in order to get from one place to another, sanity in tact.

9 May 2010, 10:02am
music silliness
by marites
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writing bouts

trying to wrap up the dissertation proposal so i can leave for the philippines (finally!). 32 more days!

soundtrack for writing frantically:

soundtracks for a nonexistent past

nostalgia around my college years doesn’t appear so frequently and with force as it used to. now it’s more an odd matter of ahistoric memory through sound. music that i hadn’t heard until after college gets transposed onto places and scenes from my past, like i’m laying down a soundtrack across time. or maybe more accurately, it’s wishful thinking: it’s music that i associate with aesthetics, places, and people that i wish i had known or been immersed in when i was younger — nostalgia for memories that never existed for me.

i wish i had been at the greek theater in berkeley for this, if only because it would have been so apt:

watching and wishing this, though, i remember events that actually are part of my fabric: lots of events at the greek — common, ozomatli, pep rallies (!), graduation, and hearing/watching this under california stars:

14 Feb 2010, 10:19am
music travel los angeles aural memory
by marites
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heat for the ears

the heat in socal can be overwhelming in the summer. one september in high school we played a tennis match in 102-degree weather. it’s desert where we live, so there wasn’t so much stickyness so much as warmth everywhere - on the handles of racquets, between my skin and cotton shirt, on the vinyl seats of the school bus that took us to duarte. i slogged through my sets, barely being able to breathe, then afterward went in search of cooler temperatures. the gym was a noise of volleyball, yells, and handclaps, all generating their own kind of unbearable heat, and there was no shade (duarte high school - more trees, please!). i ended up back on the schoolbus with a few other teammates, slouched on hot green vinyl. my head throbbed, maybe from some combination of exhaust from the idling bus, the fiery furnace around me, and the ice cold water i drank. for the rest of the afternoon i sat still, staring out the window at trees and heat waves.

best coast, especially this cover art for one of her 7-inches last year, conjures memories like that.

best coast 7

as varied as LA childhoods can be, i suspect that most kids who grow up there can at least share the experience of sitting in some car on a clogged freeway, like the one downtown in the cover art (LA friends, is that the 110? or the 5?), while the sun beats down, and you’re staring out the window up at a brown-layered sky.

best coast’s music is like the aural descriptor. it’s a hazy slog, and like the heat, so loud in its noise to the point that you don’t complain, you just move through it. the pop vocals could be something i’d actually hear in the car when my parents tune the radio to the oldies station, which seemed to play a beach boys song every hour as if by socal mandate.

more than any accusation of materialism that could be launched against LA (which i don’t buy completely), what keeps me from settling back in LA is the threat of this malaise — that feeling of not wanting to do anything but sit there and move passively through. clogged heads and clogged freeways.

31 Jan 2010, 11:41pm
music silliness sonic morsels
by marites
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words as soundtrack

from john cage’s indeterminacy

an interpretation from kostelanetz, in his 1992 introduction:

“One theme is that indeterminacy differs from improvisation, because indeterminacy incorporates imaginative constraints. The idea of the poetry-jazz duets was that speaker and musicians would respond to one another, each spontaneously trying to reenforce the other, customarily in habitual ways. The principle of indeterminacy allows each other, each with scores designed to minimize habit. If a reader is required to speak only fifteen words in sixty seconds, he or she cannot resort to pet ways of phrasing.”

21 Dec 2009, 6:51am
music travel sonic morsels
by marites
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drumming for take-off

i’m limited by indecision and myopic musical taste to even attempt a ‘top five’ of the year, much less the decade. instead i offer a song, “i knew” by lightning dust, that kept me company this summer.

it’s a brief, 2.5 minutes of burgeoning excitement — a fast, steady pulse of a drum machine that gives way to fluttering vocals painting an image of a love out of nowhere, of its headlong first moments. the song knows its limits, and doesn’t try to do more than it should, even though it seems like those pulsings and synths would burst into something big. “i knew” acts as poetry should: brief, disciplined, aimed at capturing, verbalizing, and representing (however inadequately) specific snapshots of thought/life/feeling that will always escape verbalization anyway.

pretty much summer perfection.

edit:
for further appreciation: live. in tiny desk concert form, starting at 8:30 (file under: hippy-like; pregnant; knowing glances).

31 Oct 2009, 1:27am
music academic wax
by marites
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then i could settle down

she warbled the first few bars and the words rang in my ears, but not the melody. yes, i want the range life, if i could settle down. but the next song, also rang in my ears, reverberations across these past few years. i am the queen of..? what?

queen for an evening, until i need to declare some marxist feminist stance, address my particular audience of Americanists or radical Philippine feminists, please everyone again. for now, PhC.

25 Oct 2009, 1:04pm
music distraction academic wax
by marites
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fall flotations

during this past week, in the wake of the written exams, i’ve been on a consumingconsuming binge, grateful not to have to give any intellectual effort back in return: duck, pie, marzipan in my mouth, new dress on my back, atlas sound in my ears, romantic comedy on the eyes.

the premise of kate and leopold is pretty ridiculous: the duke of albany follows the not-mad-scientist into the future and falls in love with the scientist’s career ladder-climbing ex-girlfriend. the movie is predictable [kate follows him to the past; their reunion: “i love you!”, kiss, dance, end scene] but polished. it’s also infinitely readable — the policeman (the state) stepping in at the end, in a gesture to save kate from what seems to be her suicide but is actually her leap into the past [the state, whose presence is a reminder of the movie’s illogic, tears a rent into the movie’s world]. but what i really want to share is this moment, at the 4:45 mark, when leopold is taking in the wonders of his nyc some 130 years later:

hahaha: “are you suggesting madam there exists a law compelling gentlemen to lay hold of canine bowel movements?”

just ridiculous. and isn’t that the point?

atlas sound’s logos will keep me afloat, floating through the autumn quarter and maybe through winter. there’s an arc to this album, from the first track’s warm, sample-hugged arpeggio, through its pop-melodic middle tracks, to the bleep-bloops of its closing. the sonic arc holds together a collection of wanderings into spaces of loneliness (or fear of it?) that bradford cox is so good at rendering. the album is washed out and dreamy on the whole, insistent and sad when i need it to be, and otherwise just there, all melancholic background when my mind is somewhere else.

some of that jangly pop from the middle of the album:

this blog, said the gramophone, is one of those music blogs that lean indie pop. instead of passing judgement though, the tracks are accompanied by little narratives that have nothing to do explicitly with the songs but are rather in some “inspired by” relationship to them, like they’re meant to paint a visual, situational landscape alongside the aural experience. the songs aren’t always that interesting, but i like the reading/listening combo — soundtracks as you read, music that has just a slight, even tenuous connection to the text. if i wrote more and more seriously, i’d like to embark on a project of soundtracked short stories.

29 Sep 2009, 3:49pm
music distraction plans
by marites
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it’s autumn

that moment when summer stumbles into autumn.

the summer side [still summer in LA, no?]:

into autumn [and soon winter!] loneliness & chilly chilliest evening times:

what’s the deal with terry, julie, and this watcher-from-windows?