Last Christmas, Wifeoseyo and I stopped at a rest stop on our way to Jeollanamdo, and spotted a pair of fellas who Wifeoseyo identified as 1980s popstars, singing in front of a donation bucket, raising money for goodwill.
Yesterday, while walking by the Chunggyecheon in Downtown Seoul, I wandered around and heard somebody playing a Sarah Brightman CD... and then turned around, and saw that it was a lady singing it, right there in front of me.
So I don't know if this lady's one of Korea's professional popera singers or not, but her voice is lovely, and she sings this song effortlessly, and buddy, after stomping around downtown for hours yesterday to take video about the light shows in downtown Seoul... it was a welcome reprieve from the clanging bells.
Listen. Enjoy. It was way better live, as it always is. And if you recognize the voice, or the be-shadowed face, let me know who it is in the comments.
I was also with my buddy in almost the same place (you can hear my voice at the end of the clip) to spot a traditional Korean marching band playing "jingle bells". A.We.Some.
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Korea's Sarah Brightman?
Labels:
christmas,
holidays,
music,
video clip
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
The Little Drum and Bass Boy
See, the Little Drummer Boy is an annoying song to me, because it's about a drummer and the rhythm section is the most boring in all Christmas music.
So this, linked to me by This Is Me Posting, in the last post, is a real breath of fresh air.
The Youtube Channel is "Songs to Wear Pants To"
The only version I've heard, other than this one, that I've liked, was the version by The Temptations on A Motown Christmas. The harmonies. Yeh.
So this, linked to me by This Is Me Posting, in the last post, is a real breath of fresh air.
The Youtube Channel is "Songs to Wear Pants To"
The only version I've heard, other than this one, that I've liked, was the version by The Temptations on A Motown Christmas. The harmonies. Yeh.
Labels:
christmas,
holidays,
music,
video clip
Sunday, December 19, 2010
christmas is coming...
say what you want about the song from... the boat movie... Celine Dion got her christmas music right.
Christmas is the time when homesickness cuts deepest, not just for me, but for a lot of expats -- the only way to get across how big a deal Christmas is to North Americans (can't speak for the rest) is to ask your Korean friends to imagine Seollal, Chuseok, and Childrens' Day, all on one day.
Christmas in Korea is different - way different - than back home. I talk about that here (from last year, responding to Brian in JND's response to Korea's "Christmas of Dumb Hats")
Most of my opinions haven't changed much since last year...
Now, given that the entire Christmas symbology is here, but it's used differently, maybe it's not accurate to ask my Korean friends to imagine Chuseok alone in a place where nobody knows what shikke or songpyun are... maybe a more accurage analogy is to imaging having Chuseok alone in a place where shikke is used exclusively as a mixer for rum drinks, and songpyeon is made of popcorn balls, which people throw at the boy or girl they like, in a holiday courtship ritual.
In previous Christmases, I've come across really cynical or dismissive of Christmas in Korea... but the fact is, every year I try hard to have some kind of Christmassy experience. I seek out friends, and festivals, and do sappy things, and hunt after the foods I eat for Christmas in Canada. This year, it's been particularly poignant, because 1. Wifeoseyo only gets the weekend off - nothing extra - and 2. it's my first Christmas with wifeoseyo, so I DO have family in Korea... (but Christmas will still always be an afterthought to most of them).
but on Saturday we went down to Goseok Terminal (subway lines 3, 6 and 9, if I remember correctly), where there are scads of Christmas decoration shops, and bought some candles, and shiny things, and hanging things, and a cute little tree. So the house looks like Christmas now. At least a little.
And we also got some ingredients, and I made my first Gluhwein today, as I experiment with it this week, to try and offer up something good for some friends this weekend.
Initial result: I'm gonna score it a 5/10. Hopefully I can get this going before friends come over.
I'll post more of the results from my gluhwein experiments over the course of the week.
Later, readers!
Rob
Christmas is the time when homesickness cuts deepest, not just for me, but for a lot of expats -- the only way to get across how big a deal Christmas is to North Americans (can't speak for the rest) is to ask your Korean friends to imagine Seollal, Chuseok, and Childrens' Day, all on one day.
Christmas in Korea is different - way different - than back home. I talk about that here (from last year, responding to Brian in JND's response to Korea's "Christmas of Dumb Hats")
Most of my opinions haven't changed much since last year...
[Some say] we have to respect the ways other cultures observe holidays, and if Korea wants to create a commercial monstrosity with stupid hats, that's their prerogative, and the other side [says], "it's all well and good to be a cultural relativist, but it's still jarring and maybe sad to see Christmas observed in a way that is so distant from the warm family holiday we remember from our childhood" (or even from the Christmas we see in movies like A Christmas Story, It's A Wonderful Life, and Love Actually... which is huge in Korea, maybe partly because it reinforces that Christmas is a couple holiday to Koreans.
What I'll say is this: I was never a big fan of commercial Christmas anywhere...but the fact that Christmas is not only mostly divorced from the old religious roots (didn't see a single nativity scene in two nights of walking around, haven't heard more than a few sacred carols on the Christmas music playlists in Korean shops), but ALSO divorced from the Christmas we remember from back home -- as far and away the number one family holiday of the year -- is jarring, and it sharpens the twinge of homesickness, or the sting of culture shock, for most of the month of December, for many of us. I always miss my family more at Christmas, and my students and Korean friends don't get that unless I ask how they'd feel spending Chuseok away from home, in a place where nobody knows what shikke or songpyun is..."
Now, given that the entire Christmas symbology is here, but it's used differently, maybe it's not accurate to ask my Korean friends to imagine Chuseok alone in a place where nobody knows what shikke or songpyun are... maybe a more accurage analogy is to imaging having Chuseok alone in a place where shikke is used exclusively as a mixer for rum drinks, and songpyeon is made of popcorn balls, which people throw at the boy or girl they like, in a holiday courtship ritual.
In previous Christmases, I've come across really cynical or dismissive of Christmas in Korea... but the fact is, every year I try hard to have some kind of Christmassy experience. I seek out friends, and festivals, and do sappy things, and hunt after the foods I eat for Christmas in Canada. This year, it's been particularly poignant, because 1. Wifeoseyo only gets the weekend off - nothing extra - and 2. it's my first Christmas with wifeoseyo, so I DO have family in Korea... (but Christmas will still always be an afterthought to most of them).
but on Saturday we went down to Goseok Terminal (subway lines 3, 6 and 9, if I remember correctly), where there are scads of Christmas decoration shops, and bought some candles, and shiny things, and hanging things, and a cute little tree. So the house looks like Christmas now. At least a little.
And we also got some ingredients, and I made my first Gluhwein today, as I experiment with it this week, to try and offer up something good for some friends this weekend.
Initial result: I'm gonna score it a 5/10. Hopefully I can get this going before friends come over.
I'll post more of the results from my gluhwein experiments over the course of the week.
Later, readers!
Rob
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Do You Know who Knows it's Christmas
So I just read about the Band Aid recording of "Do They Know it's Christmas" and watched the video..
it was all recorded in one night, and you're free to your opinion on the song (I'm not wild about it) but...
1. so much feathered hair
2. so many famous singers without stage makeup, in a badly lit studio
3. a fun game of spot the '80s star (looking awful)
4. a fun game of "do you remember who that is?" - exacerbated by the fact many of these singers aren't there intheir usual band costumes, or with their bandmates.
so...
Do They Know it's Christmas?
more of my rantings on Christmas music, with links to the rest of my christmas rantings, here.
and if there were a new "Band Aid" recording, organized by Oprah Winfrey (who else would have the pull to get ANY band involved), who would be in YOUR starting lineup?
Answer in the comments.
it was all recorded in one night, and you're free to your opinion on the song (I'm not wild about it) but...
1. so much feathered hair
2. so many famous singers without stage makeup, in a badly lit studio
3. a fun game of spot the '80s star (looking awful)
4. a fun game of "do you remember who that is?" - exacerbated by the fact many of these singers aren't there intheir usual band costumes, or with their bandmates.
so...
Do They Know it's Christmas?
more of my rantings on Christmas music, with links to the rest of my christmas rantings, here.
and if there were a new "Band Aid" recording, organized by Oprah Winfrey (who else would have the pull to get ANY band involved), who would be in YOUR starting lineup?
Answer in the comments.
Labels:
christmas,
holidays,
music,
video clip
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Roboseyo's Favorite Things About Winter In Korea, and Two Rabbit Trails
It's cold.
Or in the words of the young lady I stood next to at the bus stop, "It's cold. It's cold. It's cold. Oh! It's cold. It's cold. It's cold. It's cold. It's cold."
Cold is funny in Roboseyoland, though, for a few reasons. First of all, communication with Wifeoseyo about cold is very entertaining.
An analogy: my grandmother will notice if you drop a single jalapeno into a six person meal's worth of spaghetti sauce. And imagine her eating something, and saying, "Say, this is really, really spicy! It's way too spicy for me."
Then, imagine my (imaginary) friend Vijay, who grew up in the spiciest province of India, raised on Mama "Five Days of Afterburn" Sen's five alarm curry. He takes a spoonful of something, and says, "Yeah, this is a bit hot, I guess."
Well, my grandmother going, "This is way, way, way too hot for me," is a about like Wifeoseyo saying, "Roboseyo," (she actually calls me that), "Dress up really warm! It's going to be really really cold today! You better be ready!"
And Vijay going, "It's kinda spicy," is like me going, "Yeah, it's kinda cool today," when Wifeoseyo asks about the weather.
(image)
This leads to funny miscommunications, and the development of the 140/70 rule: When she says it's cold, she describes it as being 140% as cold as it actually is. When I say it's cold, she understands that I'm understating the weather at about 70%.
The funniest thing was this weekend, when the inlaws were in town, mom-in-law-oseyo told me it would be cold... and overrated the cold at exactly the same rate Wifeoseyo does.
And despite this, Wifeoseyo underdresses for the cold. But this is an opportunity in disguise for me:
Roboseyo's Favorite Thing About Korean Winter #1:
(This message is for the guys:) You see, gentlemen, if you're dating a Korean lady, you should know there's a Korean saying that a fashionable woman is cold in the winter... and this works to your advantage, because chivalry is not dead in Korea. Just keep an extra pair of gloves in your pockets all winter. And wear a scarf you don't actually need when you meet her, so that you can pull it off and give it to her.
Wifeoseyo eats it up every time. It's one of my best tricks. That and cooking breakfast.
Chivalry. Korea. Not dead. Sir Walter Raleigh and Queen Elizabeth I, and Hamlet Cigars. The stuff you find on Youtube with the right keywords.
But yeah. Chivalry is not dead here.
Roboseyo's Favorite Thing About Winter #2:
Ondol. Heated floors are glorious.
Roboseyo's Favorite Thing About Winter #3:
Balgan Naebok
(Rabbit Trail 1)
My brother lives in a place so cold that the Wal Mart parking lot has an electric outlet at every parking space so that you can plug in your car's block heater while you're shopping, and it's so cold there, that during the dead of winter, you need to.
But Canadians aren't actually tougher than others: we don't have special cold-repellent skin like polar bears or tauntauns (see below). We just know how to dress for the cold.
Some Koreans also dress for the cold: the long underwear section in Korea is awesome, because it's so egregiously unfashionable: it's called "bbalgan naebok" (빨간내복) or "red under clothes"
(source)
But good luck finding someone under 40 wearing it.
In Edmonton, they don't say "A fashionable lady is cold," just "It's freezing out dere, eh? Bundle up, dumbass." I grew up in Southern Ontario, with weather like Michigan, or Buffalo, for you United Stonians.
(image: a tauntaun. That'll cover my nerd quota for the week.)
(Rabbit Trail 2)
Since you asked, here are my three pieces of advice for managing the cold:
1. Head Feet Hands. If your head is warm, your feet are warm and dry, and your hands are warm, you'll be OK in the end. If your head is bare, your jacket can be warm enough to collect pit-stains, and you still won't feel warm. Meanwhile, cold feet = unhappy Roboseyo.
2. Layers. If you overdress, and sweat in your winter clothes, it's going to end badly. Layer, and use zippers, so you can tie things around your waist, unzip things, zip things up, and pile on and undo layers, so that you're never over-chilled, nor over-warm. Include at least one layer that is wind resistant. Wool is warm, but porous.
Roboseyo's Favorite Thing About Winter in Korea #3:
3. These things.
Neck buffs. See, sometimes I have to give my scarf to Wifeoseyo. I'm OK with that. Because neck buffs are so fantastically multipurpose, I can keep warm whatever part has been exposed.
(photo)Plus, they pack away tiny into your pocket, which is a total boon for a dude who likes giving his wife his winter gear. They're also machine washable, unlike gloves with that thinsulate crap in them. Layers are WAY better than extra insulation. And in the summer, they breathe enough to be decent sun protection, too.
Doubleplus, these buffs are the ultimate layering aid. On top of, or below the scarf, the hat, or whatever else you've got, they trap all kinds of heat, despite being small and thin. Pull them over your mouth or under your chin. I always have one or two of these things on me, and I swear by them.
You can find them at most hiking goods stores: I just got one in Namdaemun. If you look around carefully, you can find quality ones for 18000 to 25000 won, or you can get the cheapie ones for 5000 won, and the cheapos are just as good for layering. Another good place to find them is biking stores: moped and scooter bikers are exposed to the elements, and wear them. http://www.guideschoice.com/scripts/prodview.asp?idproduct=834
Roboseyo's Favorite Thing About Winter in Korea #4:
Not Christmas.
More about that later.
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