That was the name of my favorite drumline cadence in high school. And reminds me of a fantastic Muse song called Dark Shines. Enjoy!
That was the name of my favorite drumline cadence in high school. And reminds me of a fantastic Muse song called Dark Shines. Enjoy!
Posted at 12:05 PM in MUSE | Permalink | Comments (0)
While casually browsing through Twitter, I stumbled across an account dedicated to Muse lyrics. As I started reading through them, it occurred to me that all of them were unfamiliar even though I've been listening to the band since 2005. I know the notes, melodies, harmonies, rhythms... everything but the lyrics. It's probably a good thing too. While they're eloquent and well thought out, they're quite negative.
Matt could be singing in gibberish for all I care. I want to experience the emotions called out from the songs without the specifics.
Posted at 10:44 PM in MUSE | Permalink | Comments (0)
I got to see my boyfriend last night <3
The main problem is that he's a Gemini. I'm more astrologically compatible with this one:
I went to the festival all by myself. I was one among 75,000 or so, and I was only there to see Muse. It took about 4 hours to fight my way to the front of the crowd, which is unusual seeing as how I'm not overly assertive/aggressive. It was so cramped that I had to ask the guy behind me to reach into my back pocket and hand me my camera because I couldn't reach it myself. My knee twisted, my skin is toasty, my neck can't move, my voice is gone, and my ears are still ringing.
BUT IT WAS WORTH IT. Check it out- 15 people away from the front... close enough to see my lovers' eyes <3
(p.s. - this was shot with a Canon Powershot model whatever. It's a great little camera)
Posted at 02:04 AM in Cool videos, MUSE, Music | Permalink | Comments (0)
Granted, it's a very old quote, but it's relevant to my recent revelations on emotions and expression. Yet another reason to love Muse.
"I remember the first real concert we've ever made was for a band competition,” says Matt “We were the only real rock band; all the others were pop or funk-pop, kinda Jamiroquai if you want. We knew we had no chance to win - we were not the best musicians - it was a matter of 'fitting'. So we did the best we could, we took advantage of our feeling of being 'different'. We came on stage with make up all over our face, we were very aggressive, we played very violently and then we broke everything on stage. All that to say that the will, the attitude meant a lot to us. So we won. And I think that psychologically it changed many things in our heads. Because we came to lose, we expected to lose. And we were angry somehow. And we had just realized at this time that we could replace lots of things. We realized that emotion, the vibrations that you create are as important as your technical skills. We had just discovered something: music is a matter of emotion."
My improv teachers keep telling us to commit to a character and just go for it all the way. Commit, express, be affected, allow yourself to get caught up in the emotions of the moment. That's unfamiliar territory in my case, but I'm learning.
Posted at 05:04 PM in Improv , MUSE | Permalink | Comments (0)
If I were to get a tattoo, it would be "5 5 5." I don't think I'd ever do it since I'm a baby about needles, but the number 5 5 5 appears on my body pretty often courtesy of a steady hand and some super heavy-duty waterproof black eyeliner.
Posted at 02:26 PM in MUSE | Permalink | Comments (0)
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