Things You Should Know


Hey. My name is Rowan. I'm from this place called Pretoria. It's alright. For those of you who don't know, it's in Africa. Down south. In South Africa. In fact, it's the capital. And no, we don't ride elephants to school. Idiots. I have this thing for literature, music, theatre, film. You catch my drift. I'm highly opinionated about many things, so if I offend you at any time; I'm not sorry. I myself am a lyricist and songwriter, albeit not professionally as yet. I do occasionally try my hand at musical theatre. Occasionally. And this is where I spill my heart and soul.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Eine Kleine Nachtmusik

We are now thoroughly into exams, and I find myself sitting the day before my first Varsity accounting paper, on the web. Listening to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's resplendent "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik". And it struck me. The famous composer hit it right on the nose all those years ago. We've made music so commercial it's sickening. We've polluted it with formulae and samples, so much so that nothing's original any more. Whenever you turn on the radio you think "Oh, that sounds like..." and precede to name at least one other artist already doing the same thing. But the same cannot be said for Mozart. When you listen to his music, it's pure emotion. Pure, raw emotion. Happy, sad, discontented, it matters not. It will be there. What emotion do you hear when you turn on your mainstream radio station? Unless there's an emotion called skanky, I doubt you will find any other emotion but desperation. Desperation. It seems that desperation is the root of the death of creativity. People are so desperate that they will do anything for their 3 minutes of fame. To hear their own voice playing over the airwaves thanks to some dirty lyrics and a torturous and repetitive "beat". And people say it's better than classical music. The ignorance. Personally I am an Indie/Alternative/Blues/Folk kinda guy, which is already leagues ahead of the utter crap polluting our ears from day to day. But even I can't deny that Mozart, in all his glory, captures human emotion better than any other of any other time. Even the 60's hero Bob Dylan with "The Times They Are A-Changing" or John Lennon's "Imagine" can't compare with the musical prowess. Of course I am committing contemporary musical blasphemy. Lennon and Dylan were beyond any of the last 100 years in the way that they affected and continue to affect generations of people, inspired by their works as musicians and activists. But when the Great Composers are brought into the equation, there are none that can compare. These masters of music were revolutionary for their time, but their music was popular because it was of high quality. Not because it can sell a certain number of records, or because it could've made them rich. It was because it was their lives. And their whole lives. And if we want to return to a place where people are respected because of the quality of their work, and not the profit it can make the record label fat cats, we need to take a good hard look at ourselves and really consider what we've done to our society. Or maybe, just maybe, all we really need, is A Little Night Music?

Friday, June 1, 2012

Friends. And Other Disappearing Acts.

Many will say that such is life. That when you reach Varsity some friends, who were so important to you, fade into the abyss. And, I guess, that's true. Many friends of mine have seemingly evaporated from my life faster than a glass of water on warm Sudanese day. But this begs the question; Are WE to blame? Perhaps the societal expectations of leaving school and going to university demands that we let go of, or try desperately to hold on to, once perfect friendships? I can easily name 10+ "friends" who have vacated their once prized spots since school ended and university began. But were they true "friends" to begin with? Or were they forced acquaintances that occurred due to circumstance? These are questions all first year students process. Often we're told that the friends we make while studying are friends forever and that you make most of your friends at university, in class and the like. This is when I begin to worry, for several reasons. First, I made no friends in any of my first semester classes. Only acquaintances that I was led to believe I would enjoy working with. I was wrong. But I find all these myths about university are there to force people into a specific social group I call the Wrongs. They are the ones who are forced into a friend group they probably have very little interest in due to necessity. Shame. I find it's a lot more productive to find one person, who you have a true friendly interest in, to be friends with. Cause she more than likely has other friends, who are equally as awesome as she is. True story. But even this has it's downside. This route will more than likely led you to comparing everyone you meet to said awesome person. Like your room mate. Who doesn't understand how to stop the slightly unfixed toilet from running. Or makes way too many attempts at poor conversation. Or insists on looking over your shoulder while you're navigating the hallowed pages of the web. You can see why this is an issue. But none the less, said awesome friend will end up letting you break her car. And allow you to subject her to endless hours of conversation about several other interests. Some of which are her friends. And allow you to become more awesome because of her awesomeness. For which, I am eternally grateful. So kids, the moral of the ever-so-enticing story? Lose friends. Cause you make better ones.