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Archive for July, 2003

things change.

not for better or worse.. just for.. the different. been observing the people around me, and taking stock of the things in life i care about; a far cry from times as recent as 6 months ago. life isn’t just about the whys anymore… nor plainly the whos and hows but the whats and wherefores too.

god i feel old already.

PS: have just returned from a discussion with benson, gavin, tianyun and sebastian. it was… thought provoking, to say the least.

oh yes. how things have changed. how things change.

introbar

been too tied up these couple of days to do any serious updating. chilled out at the introbar sat night with jared, huijun and tianyun. nice place. planning to visit equinox someday soon (i hope).

prometheus finally over… everyone’s breathing a sigh of relief. then again, finding oneself suddenly with most nights free is kinda shocking. will take some getting used to.

just finished tomorrow’s tut. knee still hurts like shit from when i injured it two sats ago. went for a run with tianyun, kexin, huijun and lifang just now… intention being to take it slow and easy. no difference. still hurts.

lectures starting to take solid shape, though i find most of my subjects indistinguishable from one another. can’t remember the names of the modules and their corresponding subject codes. this can’t be very good.

on the bright side, however, they seem to depend a lot on 102, which happens to be the only module i ever aced.

bored. shall catch some z’s now.

damn.

didn’t check my school account soon enough… and as a result, got this mail way too late.

<lj-cut>>Subject: FW: Your invitation to Singapore’s 1st Spontaneous Orchestra
>
>
>This will be fun
>
>********************************
>* *
>* Flash Mob SG: *
>* The Spontaneous Orchestra *
>* *
>********************************
>
>You are invited to take part in the above, a project that creates an
>inexplicable mob of people in Singapore for less than a minute. Please
>forward this to other people you know who might like to join.
>
>(If you’re wondering what a flash mob is, scroll down to Annex A for some
>background information.)
>
>
>Start time: Thursday, July 17th, 1:15pm
>Duration: 2 minutes
>
>
>INSTRUCTIONS:
>
>1) At some point in the morning on July 17th, synchronize your phone clock &
>watch to http://www.mapzones.com/world/asia/singapore/timeindex.php
>
>2) Set the alarm on your phone and watch (if available) to go off at 1:15pm.
>Set the volume on your phone to its max.
>
>3) Come down in no bigger than groups of four by 1:05pm latest, to the
>outskirts of the lawn/open space just above Raffles Place MRT station. For
>eg. you may just nonchalantly hang around the following spots: Caltex House,
>OUB Centre, Republic Plaza, etc.
>
>4) At exactly 1:14pm on your phone, start to make your way down to the
>centre of the lawn/open space and be there by EXACTLY 1:15pm.
>
>5) Enjoy the symphony that you’re creating. :D
>
>6) After approximately 30 seconds, DISPERSE and have a good lunch… :D.
>Note: Leave with your original group in some random direction. Try to avoid
>going with some other human traffic flow. Please don’t head down to the MRT
>station as it’ll cause some sorta human traffic jam that we don’t want.
>Stroll down to China Square or walk down to One Fullerton or Esplanade for
>lunch. Don’t stop to say hello to anyone you may recognise from the crowd.
>Don’t stop to pick up chicks. Don’t stop to buy The New Paper. The beauty of
>a flash mob is that it dissolves immediately and everyone heads off to do
>their own thing… puzzling onlookers. Hurrah!
>
>6) Give yourself a pat on the back… Congratulations, you’d have been a
>part of what we believe to be the first spontaneous orchestra in Singapore!
>
>
>
>—————————————————————————-
>Annex A
>—————————————————————————-
>
>flash mob (FLASH mawb) n.
>
>A large group of people who gather in a predetermined location, perform
>some brief action, and then quickly disperse. –v., –adj. –flash
>mobber n. –flash mobbing pp.
>
>Example Citation
>———————————
>The Internet has spawned a gaggle of new verbs — Googling, surfing and
>flaming are words most of us are used to hearing in everyday
>conversation. Now you can add “flash mobbing” to that list.
>
>In recent weeks, New Yorkers have been using forwarded e-mails to
>coordinate “flash mobs,” or not-so-random crowds that appear and
>dissipate within a matter of minutes. Is it performance art? The cutting
>edge of a new social movement? Or just an easy way to flummox carpet
>salesmen?
>
>To protect the planned serendipity of each event, participants aren’t
>told exactly what the mob is supposed to do until just before the event
>happens. For the most recent New York happening on July 2, participants
>passed around an e-mail telling them to assemble at the food court in
>Grand Central Station, where organizers (identifiable by the copies of
>the New York Review of Books they were holding) then gave mobbers
>printed instructions regarding what to do next.
>
>The result: Shortly after 7 p.m., about 200 people suddenly assembled on
>the mezzanine level of the Grand Hyatt Hotel next to Grand Central
>Station, applauded loudly for 15 seconds, then left. –Maureen Ryan,
>”All in a flash: Meet, mob and move on,” Chicago Tribune, July 11, 2003
>
>Backgrounder
>———————————
>This phrase was most likely inspired by two related phrases. The first
>is “flash crowd,” which I define as a sharp and often overwhelming
>increase in the number of users attempting to access a Web site
>simultaneously, usually in response to some event or announcement (see
>the Word Spy entry for this term to get a bit of background about its
>origins); the second is “smart mob,” the leaderless gathering and moving
>of like-minded people who are organized using technologies such as cell
>phones, e-mail, and the Web. The latter was popularized by the writer
>Howard Rheingold in his 2002 book _Smart Mobs: The Next Social
>Revolution_.
>
>Earliest Citation
>———————————
>As proof that some people have way too much time on their hands,
>consider the “flash mob” phenomenon.
>
>Organizing a “flash mob” basically involves e-mailing a bunch of people
>with instructions to show up at a certain place for a few moments, then
>disappear.
>
>According to www.cheesebikini.com, salespeople in New York were a bit
>confused when there was a huge, instant gathering around a particular
>rug. The flash mobbers agreed to tell the salespeople they all lived
>together in a warehouse in Queens and were thinking of buying a rug. The
>crowd dissipated after precisely 10 minutes. Poof. –Kim Lamb Gregory,
>”Briefs,” Ventura County Star, July 1, 2003
>
>First Use
>———————————
>Our senior Manhattan correspondent David Danzig reports that New Yorkers
>are using e-mail to coordinate “inexplicable mobs” — huge crowds that
>materialize in public places and suddenly dissipate 10 minutes later.
>–”Flash Mobs Take Manhattan,” cheesebikini.com, June 16, 2003
>
>
>
>—— End of Forwarded Message </lj-cut>

would have been fun.

crossed. and crossed again.

final full-dress rehearsal of crossed at dbs arts center the night before… went to geylang for supper with jared, huijun and tianyun. dim sum, then crossed the road for soya bean milk and <i>mee sua</i>.

first run of crossed last night. bugged by a slew of problems… fly bar got caught in the overhead wiring, spotlights blew out, and the logistics lorry broke down, among others. bad luck? or simply because we decided to do away with the <i>bai tai</i> ceremony?? taking no chances. we’re doing it later.

went for supper at the 24-hour coffee shop after the production… then drank at the 38 stone table with huijun, yunjia, jared and kexin. william, steven, joanne and hanping came and left… then liqiang joined in… traded ghost stories till about now.

gotta catch some sleep…

The Melodic Minor (Excerpt from Everything2)

The Melodic Minor - The WHY?!:

Well by now you might wonder why on Earth this whole ascending and descending business is going on (refer to the writeups above about how the melodic minor scale changes depending on if it’s ascending or descending). It’s the only scale used commonly to do such a whack thing and the reason is because people can’t sing in key.

Let me explain.

Background. Back in the day, that being the 9th century AD or so, monks used to sing Gregorian chant, Anglican chant, and Plainsong in the monestaries in Europe. These songs had some semblances of rhythms, including a few rhythmic modes, but no meter as we understand it today. They also didn’t have chords or harmony. Eventually, these chants were worked modes, based from Greek modes: Aeolian, MixoLydian, Lydian, HypoLydian, HyperPhrygian and HyperLydian. But I digress.
You and I take the idea for granted, but chords weren’t really used at all back then, and when monks started getting spunky and singing a fourth away from the melody line, thereby implying chords, the concept of “tonic” was born. Also, the first Church Modes were born through music theory.
Tonic, in a musical sense, is the “most important note” in a song or key. It’s what a song is “in” when I say that Mozart wrote something “in” B-flat. 4,999 out of 5,000 songs you’ve heard end on a tonic chord.

The Reason. Well, since chords and this tonic thing being a new to those monks, they had a tendancy to go sharp when they approached tonic at the top of a scale. When they descended the scale, they’d sing in tune again (being drawn to the dominant, fifth note of the scale). Sharps and flats had not yet been “invented” (or at least acknowledged) yet, and so “accidentals” - that being sharps, flats, naturals, double-flats, and double-sharps - were added to account for their errors. Today we still use the scale.

Reasons that are less amusing. The melodic minor is able to have a leading tone in the melody by raising the 7th. This gives a nice ‘push’ up to the top note, tonic. Still, since you don’t want an Augmented 2nd (1 1/2 steps) in the scale (which sounds Oriental), you raise the 6th as well. When descending the scale, it is not necessary and usually unwanted to have a half-step, because of it’s strong tendency to go up.
So this is the scale used in the melody (hence the name) - it is modified depending on a scale. That is why you have the different forms of minor scales. Natural minor is the base form, and the harmonic tweaks with the 7th so that the V and vii chords are Major and diminished (instead of minor and minor, which would be unusual and strange to Western ears). Often, a voice (tenor, bass, soprano, alto, an instrument, whatever) will change minor modes depending on the situation. Still … I can just picture those monks … warbling …..

Reality check. Really, though, the reason we have these three minor scales (Melodic, Harmonic, and Natural) is because people decided that way they sounded good and used it in their music. When a pattern is used frequently in real music, it is useful to pin it down as ‘theory’ and practice it as an exercise.

FOC just over

haven’t updated for some time… been busy with FOC. why can’t things like these happen a few times a year? while i’m not very sure many would agree, i know for a fact i enjoyed myself… thinking of joining OMC next year as a main programmer.. ah well.. i still have approx 300 days to consider..

just for the record,
OC chair eric
chief GL tienwei
chief programmer liqiang
main programmers louise, qiuyi, lawrence, joanne
publicity william
bizmags jane, sandra, sean
secretary karen
financial controller huiming
publications daphne
welfare yangtai
log officer nicholas
ex-o’s me and albert

hmmm dunno what else to write about.. will stop for now.

sigh.

sick. on antibiotics. stuck at home. been in bed for most of the previous 18 hours. spending time reading slashdot.