Thursday, November 13, 2014

Melodrama, Lightbulbs, and Chills


01. Myth, Beach House
02. Norway, Beach House
03. Suicide Saturday, Hippo Campus
04. Name on a Matchbook, Springtime Carnivore
05. Put a Light On, Generationals
06. So What, Avi Buffalo
07. Bikes, Lucy Rose
08. Last War (6 Music Session), Haley Bonar
09. Heaven's Made for Two, Haley Bonar
10. Heaven, The Walkmen
11. Home (Jon Hopkins remix), Daughter
12. Sunset, The XX
13. Blood Bank (FlicFlac edit), Bon Iver
14. Thriller (Live), Imogen Heap
15. Roslyn, Bon Iver & St. Vincent

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Party With Grown Ups

Once upon a Sunday afternoon, I was invited to a birthday party for my dearest friend Rachelle— we used to work at the public library together. It was a particularly exciting day because I was going to party with grown ups for the first time. Sure, I’ve been at parties with grown ups, but this time I was actually going to be partying with them. Totally different things. It was a small, casual party at a lovely apartment in a suburb of the Twin Cities, and obviously only cool people were going to be there. Rachelle was celebrating her 24th birthday, and everyone else was 24 and up. Me being the 18-year-old, I was slightly nervous about not fitting in. After all, how was I going to fit in with a group of nurses, dental and law school students, and people finishing up their degrees when I had just started college?

Our homemade spring roll station. Photo taken by Rachelle. Cuz she's so cool.

Photo taken by Rachelle.

Me accidentally photobombing. Photo taken by Rachelle. More photos in the Midwest Argonaut Volume 4.


But add a spring roll station, homemade dipping sauce, and Rachelle’s famous naanza (it’s basically pizza but with Indian naan bread), and I find that it’s not too difficult casually mingling with adults. Sure, I couldn’t totally relate to grad school or career anecdotes, and sure, I was called a baby a few times, but it was cool. I even got to lament about roommate problems, dining hall food, and weird college experiences every now and then. I even learned a few things: being a nurse is the thug life, grad school is miserable, and being an unmarried 30-year-old woman is cooler than people think, contrary to the popular belief that you should be married by your mid twenties. I even learned that philosopher mood swings are a real thing (there was a guy that showed up four hours late because he was having a philosopher mood swing).

More importantly, I learned that grown ups are really just big kids, and charades is a big deal. I played the most intense game of charades of my life that day, and I have no regrets. I have never met people so enthusiastic about charades, and I have never met people so good at it. I learned all about the gestures for syllables and genres and genders, how to set up a scene to act out things like siphoning gas, how to break up phrases into words, and acting out things that sound like the answers. I witnessed a man act out existential crisis and OBGYN. International relations was another notable one. So was Memory Lane.

At one point Rachelle got up and before she even started, Mitchell exclaimed, “Orgasm, diarrhea, constipation!”

“How did you know?”
“We’ve never had a game of charades without at least one of those words,” Mitchell replied matter-of-factly.

Overall, it was a really neat experience and I had a great deal of fun. In a weird way, my experience partying with grown ups made me dread adulthood less. Sure, you have to deal with paying bills, loan debt, and rent; you’re probably in more of an existential vacuum once you leave college and it’s probably weird seeing all your friends get married off, but you can still do your own thang, have fun, and not worry about parental consent. I like to think that you get to decide how you age; you can either age like wine, or age like a carton of milk. And I’d prefer to age like wine.

Monday, November 3, 2014

Concert Anecdote: Generationals






After months of not seeing the radness that is Joel Kimball, we reunited over a Generationals concert at the 7th St. Entry. To quickly summarize the pre-concert activities, we hung out at the Book House in Dinkytown, went over to Espresso Royale, then got dinner at Annie’s. After stuffing our faces with delicious burgers, an Oreo malt, and a so-called half serving of fries, we embarked on a ten block journey to the parking ramp in which he parked his car (the nearby ramps were filled as a result of the NFL football game that day). Once we finally got to his car, we blasted music in his cozy butt-warming-capable car, and drove off to Downtown. We got to the 7th St. Entry and waited outside patiently, only to get turned away as a result of my forgetting to bring my ID (somehow I managed to grab my school ID). And so we drove back to my dorm, where I quickly grabbed my ID, and came back.

Since it was my first time at the 7th St. Entry, I was amazed at how tiny and intimate the setting was. I had never been to a concert where I was close enough to the band to give them a high five or handshake, and to me, that was mindblowing. And amazingly enough, we managed to grab front row spots. The opening act (Springtime Carnivore) was awesome, and the main act was (obviously) awesome. One of my favorite parts of the night was when the equipment had a slight malfunction and the performance was abruptly halted. As 7th St. Entry staff and the band worked on fixing the malfunction, one of the Generationals dudes (Ted Joyner) took matters into his own hands and entertained the crowd with a conversation that turned into a stand up comedy routine. The guy’s hilarious by the way. Once the malfunction was corrected, the rest of the concert went on smoothly. The remainder of the night was filled with upbeat, feel-good tunes and an overall awesome vibe. I was also excited that they played songs from past albums, as well as their most recent one. Needless to say, Joel and I left the concert very satisfied with our excursion.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

A Sort of Halloween Playlist


01. Thriller, Michael Jackson
02. Banana Boat Song (Day O), Harry Belafonte
03. Monster Mash, Bobby Pickett
04. Time Warp, Rocky Horror Show
05. Phantom of the Opera, Phantom of the Opera
06. Psycho Killer, Talking Heads
07. Superstition, Stevie Wonder
08. There Is A Light That Never Goes Out, The Smiths
09. Halloween, Siouxsie and the Banshees
10. Heads Will Roll (A-Trak Remix), Yeah Yeah Yeahs
11. Disorder, Joy Division
12. Age of Consent, New Order
13. Teen Age Riot, Sonic Youth
14. Halloween, Sonic Youth
15. Tiptoe Through the Tulips, Tiny Tim

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Mall of America Hard Rock Cafe Grand Opening

Photo credit: Bridget Bennett. She's super cool.


So last night Maddy and I partied it up at the grand opening celebration of Mall of America's new Hard Rock Cafe. The private event was complete with red carpet pizzaz, guitar smashing ceremony, bite-sized delicacies, and live entertainment from funk-pop legends Morris Day and the Time.

Best quote of the night: "Morris Day isn't sweating, he's condensating... that's what happens when you're cool from the inside out."

Read all about it in my post for the Local Current blog here.

Listen to the story via Current airwaves here.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Crowd Diving, Sun Songs, and Romantic Comedies



01. How Can You Really, Foxygen
02. Swim & Sleep (Like a Shark), Unknown Mortal Orchestra
03. Taking Chances, Sharon Van Etten
04. Zero (RAC Mix), Yeah Yeah Yeahs
05. Lines of Latitude (feat. Frankie Rose), Small Black
06. Telegraph Ave., Childish Gambino
07. Fire Escape, Imaginary Future
08. Winter, Kina Grannis
09. Riptide (Vance Joy cover), Kina Grannis & Imaginary Future
10. Skeletons (Yeah Yeah Yeahs cover), Of Monsters and Men
11. Hideaway, Karen O and the Kids
12. On Directing, Tegan & Sara
13. Let Me In, Grouplove
14. Everybody's Heart's Breaking Now, Lavender Diamond
15. I'll Be Seeing You, Billie Holiday

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Concert Anecdote: Foxygen




Let’s just say it was the craziest concert I have experienced thus far in my short life. Most of the time I was convinced that the night would end in the lead singer a) breaking a leg, b) choking himself to death with the microphone cord, c) acquiring a concussion, or d) all of the above, especially with what happened at their Minneapolis gig last year. But thank goodness that didn’t happen. Anyway, it was great. Especially the part where he shoved a microphone down his pants and started erm, gyrating his hips, revealing a lack of underwear (just kidding that was weird, but then again Karen O did it).

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Concert Anecdotes: Kina Grannis


Wednesday night was a blissful blur.


It all started in the early evening when I found Maddy, floundering around the East Bank, toting around a chunky electric blue sleeping bag and backpack (we had agreed to meet at the West Bank Station but then the circulator screwed me over by arriving earlier than expected and so we just decided to walk in each other's general direction and hope that it would work). We walked back to my room and I excitedly introduced her to my 9th floor cohort. After a delicious dining hall meal, we got ready and headed off to Varsity.

Following a reckless game of Follow the Leader, nearly getting run over by dozens of cars, and narrowly escaping our deaths, we found ourselves in line in front of the theater. We had originally planned on making a Chatime run, but the dozen or so people in line convinced us to hop on in. 

To quickly summarize our concert line experience, Maddy and I briefly FaceTimed Dalena, Dan and Joyce were being Dan and Joyce, and the ID checker dude mistook Dan for a 21+ year-old (no worries, she didn't raid the bar). And yes, Dan is a girl.

Once we got inside, I ran for the front row to get us a comfy spot. Due to the inconvenient nature of my height, I have to either snag a front row spot or find a seat, otherwise suffer via hours of standing on my tippy toes. We waited and waited, took selfies, conversed with a pair of high school girls with VIP passes (one of which referred to herself as a "fetus" a little too much for comfort), and shared college life anecdotes. 

-----

Finally, the background music turned off and the opening act showed up. Twas Imaginary Future—the heavily bearded guitar-strumming guy with the dreamy voice (Maddy says his beard glistens under the light). He quickly won over the crowd's hearts with his soothing acoustic love tunes, the kind that makes you a) think lovey dovey thoughts or b) bitterly question why you're single. Needless to say, that kind of stuff really pulls at your heart strings. One of my favorite parts was when he pulled out a dreamy rendition of Fly Me to the Moon, which, if you don't know, is one of my favorite songs. Some other favorites of mine include April and Fire Escape, both of which would fit perfectly in a romantic comedy. All in all, I thoroughly enjoyed being gently smothered by Imaginary Future's achy love songs. 

After the opening act was done, the crowd was restless. Now they were really ready for some Kina lovin'. 

And so when Kina came on, they went wild. 

How do I even begin to describe her performance? After all, me, Dan, and Joyce listened to her album three times over one night just to make sure we were prepared for it.

Well, it was excellent. Let me begin by asking, are people even allowed to be as drop dead gorgeous as her? Not fair. But anyway, she opened with Dear River, and it just went uphill from there. The rest of the concert was filled with beautiful Kina-crooning, interesting anecdotes, fan karaoke, and head bobbing. I was particularly excited when The Fire, Winter, Sweater Weather (I voted on that one), and My Dear played. The most intense moment of the night though, was when she explained the back story of the song Forever Blue. I could feel myself choking on tears and wanting to give her a big hug. 

In conclusion, it was a great show. I really enjoyed the intimate, up-close-and-personal nature of the concert. Both acts, opening and main, were spectacular, and of course everyone thought it was cute because y'know, they're married (they never did mention it though). The ambiance was on point, the back up band was awesome, and the performance was kickass. I get cozy feelings just thinking about it right now. 

-----

And to quickly inform you all of what we did after the concert, we stopped by Insomnia Cookies and headed back to our living quarters. Later that night Maddy and I had a crazy two-person dance party (awesome Snapchats included) and casually analyzed a 1950s Colonial-era flick on TCM at 2 in the morning (we deduced that it was a terrible movie). It was a good night.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Midterms, Dance Parties, and Cool Walks.


01. No Mediocre feat. Iggy Azalea, T.I.
02. Trophies, Drake
03. Flawless (Remix) feat. Nicki Minaj, Beyoncé
04. 3005, Childish Gambino
05. No Love (Remix) feat. Nicki Minaj, August Alsina
06. Don't Tell Em feat. YG, Jeremih
07. 2 On feat. Schoolboy Q, (TOKIMONSTA Remix), Tinashe
08. Stand Up (LeMarquis Remix), Ludacris
09. Drunk in Love feat. Jay-Z (Diplo Remix), Beyoncé
10. Gorgeous, SOS
11. Without You, ODESZA
12. She Moves feat. Graham Candy (Hippie Sabotage Remix), Alle Farban
13. Habits (Stay High) (Hippie Sabotage Remix), Tove Lo
14. (I Just) Died In Your Arms, Bastille
15. Partition (Dave Aude Extended Remix), Beyoncé

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Jesus Henry Christ

Release date: April 20, 2012
Director: Dennis Lee
Stars: Michael Sheen, Toni Collette
Genre: Comedy

Once upon a lonely Friday night, I was bored and made the decision to flip through Netflix. And then I found this.

Jesus Henry Christ is about a brainiac ten-year-old boy named Henry James Hermin, who was conceived in a petri-dish and raised by his feminist mother. In search of his biological father, he meets a Post-It note-obsessed man and his miserable daughter, and discovers the family he never knew he wanted. 

While I wouldn't say that it's my favorite comedy or even really worthy of four stars, I did enjoy it. There were some really zany moments that I appreciated, including an entire scene filmed in Spanish. The movie is filled with quirks and there's some neat-o dialogue here and there. The cast was excellent and I was overall satisfied with their performances. Despite the one star rating on Rotten Tomatoes, I do believe that the movie deserves more on the basis of its charm and bright colors. I'd recommend this movie to anyone looking for a casual late night Netflix session. 

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Playlist: Candle-Lit Breakfasts and the Moon



01. Pretty Thoughts, Alina Baraz & Galimatias 
02. Youth in Decline, SOS 
03. Heart Skipped a Beat, The XX 
04. Sweetest Kill, Broken Social Scene 
05. Sweater Weather (Cover), Kina Grannis 
06. It's Cold, Epik High feat. Lee Hi 
07. Let's Get Lost, G-Eazy feat. Devon Baldwin 
08. Dead or Alive, SOS 
09. Stay Ready (What a Life), Jhene Aiko feat. Kendrick Lamar 
10. Heaven, Beyoncé 
11. Hood, Perfume Genius 
12. My Dear, Kina Grannis 
13. Implode, BoA 
14. Renee, SALES 
15. Call it Off, Tegan & Sara

Monday, October 6, 2014

Minnehaha, Pickled Veggies, & Awkward Bus Rides


As a college student constantly bombarded with homework, one tends to forget that there is life outside of the dorm room. And so Maddy and I, temporarily brushing our homework to the side, embarked on a journey to Minnehaha Falls.

We met at the East Bank Station, then headed to downtown Minneapolis, where we hopped aboard the Blue Line and got off at Minnehaha. It was slightly blustery, but overall sunny and pleasant. Wedding pictures were being taken, people were walking their ginormous dogs, and couples were taking selfies with the waterfall in the background. We went for a nice walk around the park, got in touch with our inner children at the playground, and had a nice talk about 60s movies, the psychology behind childish urges, and Woody Allen, among other things. More importantly, we took some kickass photos [check Maddy’s blog for more].






How to look badass while riding a chipmunk.



After we were done with our Minnehaha activities, we hopped back on the light rail and took the bus to Peninsula, the Malaysian restaurant on Nicollet Ave. We ordered achat salad, roti canai, and red curry chicken. Maddy had pickled vegetables with peanuts and fluffy pancake-ish things with curry for the first time, and she enjoyed it very much.


We had a bit of a sweet tooth afterwards, so we walked across the street to Glam Doll Donuts, a retro, pin-up style donut shop filled with delicious 100% made-from-scratch donuts. We had two donuts: the Femme Fatale and the Peanut Butter and Sriracha.


Left: The Femme Fatale, right: Peanut butter and Sriracha
By the time we walked out of the donut shop, we were stuffed. We quickly checked out the boutique next door and then took the bus back to the U. It involved a really long wait and the overhearing of some really bizarre conversations. Overall, it was a successful day of adventuring. It was nice getting in touch with Mother Nature and all, and it was also nice to get a break from dining hall food.

For more info on Minnehaha in all its glory and historical significance, click here.

For more info on Glam Doll Donuts, click here.

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Concert Anecdotes: Perfume Genius

We casually bumped into Mike Hadreas behind Triple Rock. The result? A beautiful group picture. 
[Note: Rachelle’s name is actually pronounced like Rachel. Just so you pronounce it in your head correctly.]

Yesterday at around 6pm, Jason and I headed to Centennial to drop off his stuff and then to the Tofu House. We were roughly an hour late. Once we got there, we found Mitchell and Rachelle conversing at a table by the window. We were mildly and jokingly scolded, but then I rushed to Rachelle’s side and gave her a bear hug (it was my first time seeing her in months). While Mitchell and Rachelle were slowly recovering from their feast, Jason and I ate our tofu bowls with steamed rice. We had a nice talk about college living, friends back home, and adulthood. It’s funny how I always forget the six-year age gap between us.

After we finished our meal, we walked to Rachelle’s car and headed to Triple Rock Social Club. It took some getting through lousy bikers and awful pedestrians, with Mitchell sticking his head out of the window and door to scream at them, but after a ten minute car ride, we had arrived at our destination. As it turned out, we were super early and therefore were (pretty much) the only ones in the room for an hour or so. On the bright side, we got some great seats (and waited in them for another hour and a half). 

To kill time, we talked about Jason’s malpracticing orthodontist that accidentally removed an extra tooth and totally denied it (Mitchell, being a dentistry student and aspiring orthodontist himself, was very interested and enraged by the anecdote), more adultly things like loans and paying the rent, horror electrocution stories, and Chinese philosophy. I even carefully crafted two paper cranes. And at one point, Mitchell and Rachelle were reading the broken English-filled text messages my mom sent me in the last week. 

After a long wait, the opening act finally showed up. Her name was Matteah Baim, and she brought along a bearded guy with glasses in a rather comfy looking black cotton dress. It was pretty interesting stuff. The instrumentals were pretty nice and relaxing. They were pretty bleak. But cool, I guess.

Once Matteah Baim was finished, the music came back on the speakers and the club was bustling with conversation once again. It would be another fifteen minutes before the main act would arrive. The club began to fill up at a more rapid pace. The floor began to flood and a few rows of people stood behind us. Jason and I rambled to one another about life once more, and before we knew it, Perfume Genius had arrived.

“Shoot, I had like two more sentences left,” I whispered.
Jason crouched over and leaned his left ear toward me.
Discomforted by the sudden pressure to complete my thought in a timely and satisfying manner, I paused.
“Nevermind, I’ll tell you later!” I whispered.
“Okay, remember to tell me!” he whispered back.
[I never did actually remember to tell him.]

The next hour or so was filled with aching vocals, powerful screams, impressive falsetto, and piano-heavy love songs. I could feel myself sinking into my chair and wanting to hug the man (Mike Hadreas), especially when he sang Take Me Home and Mr. Peterson. Another one of my favorite performances was the one of Floating Spit. Pretty soothing, in my opinion. Overall, I enjoyed myself. But if you thought I was having fun, you should’ve seen Mitchell and Rachelle. They were constantly recording, taking video Snapchats, predicting the next songs, and squealing in their seats. I could hear Mitchell next to me:

“Oh my gahhhd, he is so cool.”
“Ahh I love this song!”
“Oh my gosh I think he’s gonna play this song, and it’s gonna be so great.”
“Isn’t this beautiful?”
“This is so good.”
“He is amazing.”

Once the concert ended, people started filing out the door. Mitchell went first, Rachelle and I followed, then Jason. I didn’t realize just how crowded it was until I found myself in a human traffic jam. When we finally got out of the venue, we found Mitchell standing by the door. Our group assembled and headed to the car. But beforehand, Mitchell grabbed the concert poster taped to the glass door.Turns out Mitchell is a mild concert kleptomaniac. We briskly walked to the Jeep and jumped inside. Just as Rachelle was about to start the car, we noticed something.

“Oh my God, is that him?”

Standing outside the back door was a man in a black jacket, rather familiar looking, puffing on a cigarette alongside another guy.

“Oh. My. God.”
“Do you have a Sharpie?”
“No, but I have a pen.”
“You guys, let’s get a selfie!”
“Noo, I’m too scared! I’m going to embarrass myself.”
“No you won’t.”
“I’ll do it for ya.”
“No, don’t do that.”

Rachelle and I got out of the car and headed towards the genius that is Mike Hadreas.
“Hey, great job tonight! My friend is a really huge fan, and I was wondering if you could sign this for him,” said Rachelle. 
Finishing his puff, Mike looked up at us and smiled, his cigarette casually placed between his fingers.
“Sure. What’s his name?”
“Mitch,” we replied in unison.
He put the poster up against the wall and tried writing on it, but to no avail.
“Oh shoot, is the pen not working?”
“It’s okay, I’ll go grab a Sharpie.” How awesome is it that he went out of his way to grab us a Sharpie? So cool.
He promptly returned with his Sharpie and signed the poster.
“Did you want a picture, Brenda?” asked Rachelle.
I nodded eagerly. “Yes, of course!”
“--Wait, we need to grab Mitchell! Can we grab our friend quick?”
Mike nodded.
As Rachelle ran back to the car, Mike turned to me. “Oh, he’s here? I thought he was sick or something. Why didn’t he just come with you?”
“He’s just scared. He absolutely loves you. You know he stole that concert poster off the door for you? And during the show he kept turning to me and gushing about how cool you are” I answered. 

Mike nodded his head, as if he truly understood just how much Mitchell adored him.

Mitchell and Jason got out of the car and came over. After brief introductions, we lined up for the picture, me awkwardly standing in the front because I was so short and couldn’t squeeze in from the side. 

“It’s okay, that was like me in every single high school picture,” joked Mike. 

Our photographer, the cool dude playing with Matteah Baim, snapped a few pictures before handing the phone back to Rachelle. With much jubilee, we thanked Mike and black cotton dress dude and headed back to the car. 

As we drove along, we gushed.

“That was so cool.”
“He probably thought we were being weird. Those girls were being all cool and came in with their cigarettes like ‘Oh we tried to cover you once, but it did no justice.’ Nope. I was just like ‘Homghomg I love you.”
“I had no idea he was wearing lipstick this whole time.”
“He stepped on my toe. It was soo cool.”
“He was definitely wearing nail polish.”
“Oh my God that was so exciting. We’re going to get married.”

Needless to say, it was a great night.



Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Quarters of an Argonaut

Once upon a Tuesday afternoon, I had the room all to myself, no roommates. So naturally, I pulled out the camera, and took some shots of my little corner of the room. Some highlights of my corner include my spider plant Quentin, my not-so-portable record player, and a pimped out closet door. 

Quentin was obtained at a Welcome Week event on the St. Paul campus. Good thing he's virtually indestructible, because I always forget to water him. He really is a cute thing. 

Two Renoir paintings, a free poster from the Electric Fetus, and some New York postcards Dalena gave me.

Nowadays the only record I ever really listen to is my Lena, Sarah, Billie, and Ella record. It's perfect any time of day. 


A Monet painting, a NASA picture from an old National Geographic magazine, and some posters I got from a poster book.