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Foxymoron is...

  • Andrea Chiu
    — a writer, journalist, music fan, nomad

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    Please DO NOT directly link to mp3s. Download them and upload them on to your own server. Music files are only on-line for a limited time. Please support artists. These mp3s are provided for promotional purposes only. If you like what you hear, buy the album. Thanks.

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« December 2006 | Main | February 2007 »

January 26, 2007

This is fact not fiction

I am not a fan of global warming but in this bone-chilling weather, I am longing for the unseasonably warm weather of December. I am sick with a head cold so fierce, I can't remember what health feels like.

Last night, under the influence of Tylenol Cold medication, I actually dreamed of driving through Hong Kong in 20 degree weather. We must have been on our way to the Gold Cost. I had visions of green mountainsides against a blue sky. The cold must be making me extra emo because this dream was set to Death Cab for Cutie.

[mp3] Death Cab for Cutie - Lack of Color
[mp3] Kings of Convenience - Live Long

January 17, 2007

This modern love breaks me

I finally read the Guardian's interview with Bloc Party front man Kele Okereke in which he apparently "comes out" as a gay man. He doesn't actually speak the words "I'm gay" but he acknowledges that some of the songs on the upcoming A Weekend in the City, are about sexuality, respression and fear. Of the song "I Still Remember," Okereke says, "Can we call it a gay love story? Yeah, but is it a love story? It's one person longing for somebody they can't really have. But it's not consummated. It's not a mutual thing."

Last night, I listened to Silent Alarm in its entirety with a new appreciation — especially songs like "Blue Light" and my personal favourite "This Modern Love." The b-side, "Two More Years" seems especially applicable to a secret love affair.

[mp3] Bloc Party - Two More Years (MSTRKRFT Mix)
[mp3] Bloc Party - Blue Light

I want to say that Okereke's sexuality is a non-issue in 2007, but unfortunately that's not true. He is the front man of one of today's better bands and in the white heterosexual male world of rock and roll, he is a glaring exception. But this is a good thing, could a white heterosexual man write songs like Okereke? I don't think so. Regardless, if lead singles "I Still Remember" (above) and "The Prayer" and are any indication of what A Weekend in the City will be like, I can't wait for February 5th.

January 16, 2007

First snow of the year

Grandma in a tuque

Yesterday, the first real snowfall of the year left a pile of something white which remains unmoved on our driveway and stairs. It's not pure snow as the thick layer of ice produced by freezing rain tells the story of. Some of us are already asking "when will winter end already?" This isn't the kind of snow we had in mind. Snowballs are laced with ice spears, the road salt can't break through and now we leave the house through the garage, our front steps too dangerous still caked with five inches of ice.

[mp3] Hawksley Workman - First Snow of the Year
[mp3] Claps Your Hands Say Yeah - In This Home on Ice

So instead of attending the pizza and punch Golden Globes party downtown, I stayed inside my home and watched the ceremony. That Betty Suarez has my heart and my job! Three cheers for Ugly Betty and its surprise win. Three cheers for immigrant stories! Three cheers for the underdog!

[mp3] Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton - Winning

It's a much nicer day in Toronto today despite puddles, slush and seasonably normal temperatures below zero. Follow my adorable grandma's lead. Stay warm, wear  a tuque.

January 13, 2007

Talking 'bout my generation

Class of 1999

I've been mulling over the Globe and Mail's story "Flirting with Disaster" from today's Focus section. The article, by Alexandra Shimo discusses the increasing number of unambitious 20 to 30-somethings who sponge off of their parents and remain in their homes rent-free. I think Shimo makes some good points, but failed to go into the detail and explanations I'm looking for. For example, the fact that we're living in an increasingly immigrant Canada, and many ethnic families encourage their offspring to stay at home until they get married. Or how about how much we all owe in student loans. I think the problem is that this article paints these slackers as the rule of our generation rather than the exception.

[mp3] Green Day - Longview
[mp3] David Bowie- All The Young Dudes

January 11, 2007

The global soul

Hungry People

People have been asking me if I miss Hong Kong. I've been saying that aside from the few important relationships I've developed, no. I agree it's a great place for young people to make money, travel through, eat and shop but I never really felt at home there.

In Pico Iyer's The Global Soul, he introduces the concept of what a "Global Soul" is by talking about himself. Iyer was born to Indian parents in England, moved to the U.S. when he was a boy, schooled in the U.K. and now lives in suburban Japan. He says:

"The country where people look like me is the one where I can't speak the language, the country where people sound like me is a place where I look highly alien, and the country where people live like me is the most foreign space of all. And though, when I was growing up, I was nearly always the only mongrel in my classroom or neighbourhood, now, when I look around, there are more and more people in a similar state, the children of blurred boundaries and global mobility."

I read this and immediately empathized with Iyer's experience. Although my parents are from Hong Kong, I never felt like I belonged there. It didn't help that I also looked "mixed" to the average Hong Konger, (OK, so I am actually a blend of Chinese, Malaysian and Indian,) and therefore a pre-determined outsider, regardless of how well I spoke Cantonese. But in Hong Kong, despite its claim to being a world class international city, there is a general unacceptance towards everyone that isn't a "real" Hong Konger, be it towards domestic helpers, mainland Chinese, and even, Caucasian expats (masked by its appreciation for expat money). There was always an "us vs. them" attitude that made me uncomfortable.

Iyer continues his exploration of the Global Soul as he tackles migration by living in LAX. He even devotes a chapter to the global marketplace by examining (where else?) Hong Kong. But exactly 101 pages after Iyer tells us of his confusion with space and identity, he describes Toronto as a New World city for Global Souls:

"For a Global Soul like me--for anyone born to several cultures--the challenge in the modern world is to find a city that speaks to as many of our homes as possible. The process of interacting with a place is a little like the rite of a cocktail party, at which, upon being introduced to a stranger, we cast about to find a name, a place, a person we might have in common: a friend is someone who can bring as many of our selves to the table as possible.

In that respect, Toronto felt entirely on my wavelength. It assembled many of the pasts that I knew, from Asia and America and Europe; yet unlike other such outposts of Empire--Adelaide, for example, or Durban--it offered the prospect of uniting all the fragments in a stained-glass whole. Canada could put all the pieces of our lives together, it told me (and others like me), without all the king's horses and all the king's men."

Devoting 55 pages to discuss multiculturalism through Toronto, Iyer reminds me of the main reason why I love this city. Yes, my heart flutters with excitement every time I open the listings pages of our weekly papers but it is the open acceptance of difference that has made me feel more and more at home here. There is no us vs. them. Here, everyone is an insider. It's not yet a national thing, as my negative experiences in London, ON proved, but a Toronto thing. Iyer acknowledges that Toronto's multicultural landscape is not perfect, but he agrees, as many of my fellow Torontonians will as well, what we have here is a beautiful thing.

[mp3] Air - People in the City
[mp3] Josh Rouse - Scenes from a Bar in Toronto

January 08, 2007

Oops

Last night, I accidentally published an entry that was merely a draft. Sorry kids, it will return shortly. In the meantime, enjoy this video: Bright Eyes' "First Day of My Life." I was reminded of this song while making a mix CD for a friend. I love its simplicity and I think the video can warm even the coldest of hearts. (Hey, is that the chick from L Word?) Bright Eyes (aka Conor Oberst) will release a new album later this year, and if you haven't already, get a preview at his official website which is currently streaming the new track, "Endless Entertainment."

January 01, 2007

The beginning

Building Tops

Caught in the rain and without a real plan, we ended up ringing in the new year at the mouth of a Queen St. alley. At midnight, with a bottle of champagne between the six of us, we called loved ones in other parts of the city to shout "Happy new year!" over background noises and traffic. Earlier, I said I dread New Year's Eve for all of its pressures and I do. But if last night's good-spirited fun is a sign of what 2007 will bring, then it shall be a good year.

[mp3] K'naan - In The Beginning

This evening, I'm trading in the rich homemade truffles, creamy smoked salmon dip and white wine punch for chicken broth and water. It sounds sad, but it's what I really want. After numerous Chinese multi-course banquets, dim sum brunches, turkey dinners, cakes and cocktails, I feel my body deteriorating. I need to detoxify my body and am seriously thinking of doing this 10-day fast. Once I get the cayenne pepper and organic maple syrup, the foodless journey will commence. This is a test of willpower as much as it is a detoxification.

In the meantime, the following song goes out to everyone who is feeling like I'm feeling today. I first posted it two years ago when the album was released, but today it's extra applicable:

[mp3] Jason Collett ft. Emily Haines - Hangover Days