15:59 ; Tuesday, 19 July 2011
Zara

Nope, I was wrong. My next post (this one!) won't be about Rocket Science - soon, soon. While rummaging the high street shopping sites, I went to the higher end (for me, at least) Zara and came across a few gems on the sale/clearance sections. Alas, these prices (around £20) are still not good enough for me... I've become to used to delving into £2-3 markets that anything over £10 hurts me inside.

But I love these dresses and skirts - they're all so adorable and flarey. The skirts in particular appear to be just the right length for a shortie like myself! They're probably more suited to autumn actually, but I can imagine tiptoeing through Southbank and Greenwich, along the River, in the evening with just tights, a dress and a trench coat. Very Parisian image there... in very British places.




I was originally trying to find some good swimwear for my holiday to Sharm El Sheikh (those 1950s kind - like Deborah Kerr's yellow one in An Affair to Remember) to no avail. At least, not for less than £60! I think I'm drawn to it because of my self-consciousness and defiant insecurity. But c'est la vie...

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17:09 ; Saturday, 4 June 2011
a few of my favourite things #2

It's a really warm, sunny day in Old England; Sweet Disposition by the Temper Traps is on the radio; I've made myself some pink lemonade using this recipe (and it tastes lovely!); I've finished my Tudors revision and am taking a little break before I head onto politics; the mid-series finale of Doctor Who is on tonight.

Yes.



And River - River - RIVER!! I'm just in love with how badass she is, she's like a manly Captain Jack Harkness :) I loved Captain Jack. I really hope her storyline will be amazing.






I think this series, with Matt Smith, has been an emotional ride. He's exceeded my expectations and adoration for David Tennant, and although Tennant will always be my Doctor, Smithy has been incredible. One of the main things that have changed (noticeably the difference in Moffat and Davies' writings) is the lack of family ties for Amy. Which in a lot of ways doesn't ground her. But in a lot of other ways she gets a lot of freedom with Rory and the Doctor, and they've become this tiny surrogate family. Because families count.

I just can't wait.

 (photos sourced from Tumblr and various sites)

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19:43 ; Saturday, 26 March 2011
my week round-up (26/03)



a) Call me 18 years old, but I love Darren Criss. I've been listening to his music non-stop since he's been on Glee (yes, shock horror, "I didn't know Darren Criss before Glee"). I've been YouTube stalking him all day; he does a brilliant cover of 'Let It Be', 'Wish Upon a Star', and his own 'Not Alone' practically makes anyone, man or woman, swoon. And the videos with Charlene Kaye are so cute, they make me sick.

b) I've finished 'Into the Wild' which I hope to review soon, or else it'll go out of my min d forever. I've only started 'The Old Man...', so far it's a little... I don't know - dialoguey? - right now, but that's because I don't think I'm in the mood for one, though I know that when I do read more descriptive stuff, I plead for more dialogue. I'm going through a short stories phase, especially after reading two lagging novels. Before this I read a few of the stories from Richard Yates' 'Eleven Kinds of Loneliness' which was realistic, heartbreaking but beautiful, very telling of the complicated, messed up emotions we all have.

c) 30 Rock which is coming to an end. After 5 seasons, it's still hilarious with such GREAT acting from EVERYONE! I've made the decision that I want my life to come as close to Tina Fey's as possible. What a talented woman - if I was a man I would be overcome with lust.

d) British show Friday Night Dinner is great. I was a bit weary about what Channel 4 would throw at us in the absence of any real comedies as of late, but this show is great. The parents are probably what do it for me, though Jonny and Adam work so well together, they almost remind me of what my siblings and I would be like if we weren't so lazy.

p.s. how amazing is this?....


I've been playing Bright Eyes' latest album so much, it really has grown on me - not that it had much to grow already. I can't shake it off, not that I'd want to. It's fluffy in the right places and hard when it needs to be (don't take that out of context).

oh, and p.p.s. I'm not much of a photographer or a Photoshop-per, but I've been loving film grain effects all of a sudden. Something about the 60s/70s? I don't know, but for any child who feels like their were born in the wrong decade, or era, or minute, it is nice to wonder...

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19:40 ; Sunday, 20 February 2011
MUSIC: Bright Eyes - 'The People's Key'

Completely subjective review of Bright Eyes' latest album...


"In with the new, out with the old!"

Two feelings crossed me when I got the long-awaited and possibly last album of Bright Eyes through my letter box: 1) joy - this is long-awaited! This is it! This is Bright Eyes and it'll sound amazing whatever road he takes it down... and 2) anger, for it reminded me that, despite waking up half an hour before the Scala tickets went on sale and refreshing the page every minute, the tickets still managed to be sold out after the minute it took me to type my details in. I've seen the Youtube videos. The gig was beautiful. I almost hate life.

Anyhoos, for any Bright Eyes/Conor Oberst lover out there, it'd by now be gospel that Conor changes his musical style every flip of the coin. I suppose that's now one of the reasons why I love his music so much, it's very versatile because it never bores, it never stays on one path, it never says to the world "Yeah, I'll go along with what you think." I almost wish I could tell my 14 year old self the same. Reviewing this album is going to be tough, because there's so much to say, so little ways to say it, and will grow out from the boundaries of a decent review. So... cons, pros, the best and not so good tracks, and the verdict.


cons
Almost immediately I would say that the lyrics aren't as good as his earlier works (including 'Cassadaga', but especially 'LIFTED' - which arguably contained some of his best). That's not to say that some songs don't have good lyrics, I can pick out three with lyrics I love, but in many ways it isn't the same. In the other albums I always felt there was story depicted in each song, whether about being out of love or losing someone or travelling, and it was a clear story as well. In 'The People's Key', the songs are more about abstract concepts and freedom is probably the one that sticks out the most. That's not a bad thing at all, but for me it just doesn't deliver the way Bright Eyes' lyrics usually do.

Like 'Cassadaga', 'Fevers and Mirrors' and 'LIFTED' the album starts off with someone speaking. Typical Bright Eyes. I normally don't mind this, but for some reason the speech in this album sounds really preachy - which in a lot of ways helps with what the message he's trying to convey I suppose... The only other con is that, for those who didn't fancy 'Digital Ash' and 'Cassadaga' very much, 'The People's Key' probably won't make you very satisfied either.


pros
There's really a lot to love about this album. Sure, it doesn't have the doleful, subtle sound of 'F&M', 'LIFTED' and his other previous albums, but who wants to end on a low? This is definitely a high album (you know, as in ending on one...). Okay, it's partly not what I expected, but like 'Wide Awake/Digital Ash' and 'Cassadaga', I firmly believe it's a grower. There are some incredible songs on here I can imagine belting out if there were to be any more Bright Eyes gig (fingers exponentially crossed). This album sounds like a soundtrack, forgive me for saying, but when I listen to it I align scenes of desertion, finding love, riding in cars, running down stairs (all egotistically starring myself by the way). Okay, the songs don't refer to those experiences directly, but it certainly sets the scene for them.

I love this photo!
tracks:
Listen to - "Shell Games" for some amazing, poignant lyrics. "Jejune Stars" and "Haile Selasse" for an old rock n' roll vibe. "A Machine Spiritual (In The People's Key)" and "Triple Spiral" are my favourite tracks on the album - brilliant lyrics, sing-along stuff, beautiful imagery.  "Beginner's Mind" comes very close as my third favourite ("Stay awhile, my inner child!"), I feel that it's the closest track to some of his older stuff, at least I think it would fit on any one of them.

"Firewall" and "Approximate Sunlight" did very little... at least for now (I never know what I might feel in a few years time).

the verdict:
If this really is the end of Bright Eyes, I'm fine with how they're going out. In all honesty I was dreading that this album would be a reactionary movement to 'F&M' which wouldn't have been good. Its really an album about still being lost, still finding your way, confusion, life - it's just done from a more mature perspective. Like all Bright Eyes songs, there is one matching every mood, and everyone single one on this album is classic Bright Eyes - take it or leave it.

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About me
1) I'm a lazy blogger

2) This blog will generally include writings on films, music, books, fashion, locations, and other worldly movements.

3) I'm short and the best thing I have learnt to combat this is sewing.

4) I'm very bad at html things. Sorry if the layout looks nothing like it should be.

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