Friday, 3 January 2014

Favourite EDM Tracks December 2013

Hey guys!

I figured I may as well knock out a music post while I'm on a roll, so here goes. The 13th of December was the date that Jakarta hosted DJAKARTA WAREHOUSE PROJECT (DWP2013), an annual rave concert that this year, featured (if I'm not wrong) over 40 artists both local and international. Notable names included Martin Solveig, David Guetta, Showtek, W&W,  and Zedd. I crawled home at 8 in the morning, completely exhausted, but it was 100% worth it! 

Here are a couple of photos from the event.



So DWP2013 was a great night, my first actual rave. Great experience. One artist I would have seriously loved to see, though, is Blasterjaxx. Hopefully!

Anyway, these are the EDM tracks that are currently being replayed over and over for me. Enjoy!




And lastly,




There's a good mix of DnB, club and dubstep there. I could include so many more, honestly, but these are probably my top picks. These songs weren't released in December, but they're the ones I listened to most often. 

Indie instalment of fav tracks coming soon!

anything to say? leave a comment. 



Review Roundup

Hey everyone!

In terms of books, here's what I've read more-or-less recently, and how I rate it.

Heroes of Olympus: House of Hades
Author: Rick Riordan

This spinoff series to the Percy Jackson and the Olympians books just keeps getting better and better. This fourth instalment in the series charts Percy and Annabeth's journey through Tartarus, while simultaneously following the adventures of Piper, Jason, Leo, Nico, Hazel and Frank as they attempt to reach the Doors of Death and close them for good. 

Key points to note about this book: 

1. Gay rights is rapidly becoming a cause that many authors are championing. ***SPOILER ALERT!*** Nico Di Angelo's homosexuality addresses this issue and takes the book from an easy read to something with real depth, something definitely more YA than the book's predecessors.

2. Percy and Annabeth's love for each other. You'll have to read it to understand, but Riordan's "Percy" POV conveys his love for Annabeth without the flowery language everyone tends to associate with love stories.

3. It's very Disney in the way that the characters always find their way out of bad situations. However, right up till they get out, you will be on the edge of your seat. It's that intense.

My rating: I'm pretty liberal with my ratings so I'm going to give this a 5/5! I was really impressed. Definitely something I'll re-read, just for comfort. 




Ostrich
Author: Matt Greene


After The Fault In Our Stars and other successful John Greene novels, we had high expectations for Matt Greene's debut novel Ostrich. From the synopsis, it seemed like exactly the kind of book I could appreciate, and something in the same vein as TFIOS with the characters having to deal with tragedy.

The story is written from the perspective of Alex, a 12-year-old boy recovering from brain surgery. Written in  a non-linear, slightly disjointed pattern, readers of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time will be able to see clear similarities between the protagonists of the two books.

Key Points:

1. THIS IS NOT A BOOK FOR CHILDREN. I cannot stress this enough, so please take my advice when I say that to any parents reading this, this is not for your pre-teen or early teen child. I'm seventeen, and I know for a fact that my mother would not want me to be reading this. The book is written from the point of view of a 12-year-old boy and it includes every aspect of his life. This means that the novel includes and addresses wet dreams, pornography, infidelity etc., in quite explicit detail.

2. Personally, I did not like the ending of the book. I read through the entire book convinced that eventually, somehow, all the weird little tangents in Alex's head would line up and create some huge revelation that would change my life. However, the book disappointed in terms of conclusion. I'm still not sure what happened at the end, and I spent a while obsessively Googling it for answers, but I came up blank.

3. This review is coming up pretty negative so far, but there were plenty of good things about it. For example, every now and then, the book has charming little misspellings ("I already know what it's like to feel ostrichized, which is a better word for excluded (because ostriches can't fly, so they often feel left out)." Alex often goes off on tangents (in his head (like this (using the brackets, I mean (Alex prefers calling them parentheses)))) which are quite interesting to read, but they do get distracting and tiring after a while. 

4. This book is humourous. It really, actually is funny and had me laughing out loud quite a few times. For example: "(The hat accent on top of the A is called a circumflex. It indicates that something is missing. I think a hat always indicates this.)"

5. Alright, so there weren't "plenty" of good things about the novel. Quite frankly, I doubt I'll read it again. At least, not for a while. Perhaps I'll re-read if I feel like I need to understand the ending. I was pretty excited about this novel, which could be the reason I was so disappointed at the end. 

My rating: I give this book a 3/5. It was interesting and fairly engaging but ultimately I thought it was a bit of a waste of time. 



Hard-Boiled Wonderland and The End of the World
Author: Haruki Murakami

I actually have nothing to say. This book was incredible, beautiful, insane, mind-boggling. When I was finally done reading (I think it took me over a month to finish it, because I couldn't handle more than five pages at a time) I felt like my brain had turned into soup. I can't even explain what it's about because it's simultaneously about so many things while actually being about nothing. Prepare to read about unicorns, about carnivorous, sewer-dwelling subterranean creatures, about Japanese cuisine, about sex, about what it's like to live your last day on Earth.

This sci-fi novel is a work of creative genius, in my opinion. It's sci-fi without being overwhelmingly so (which is a good thing because I really don't like sci-fi). Murakami's imagination is actual insanity. I have never read anything like this, ever.

Please read this. But don't make the mistake of thinking you'll finish this in two days. It's a difficult read, and it takes a lot out of you, but when you're done and your brain has melted, it will all be worth it. You will need patience, dedication and an open mind. Opening this book is less like reading something new and more like starting an exhausting project. But I promise you, your mind will be blown.

My rating: I give this  a 4.5 out of 5. It's crazy, bewildering, intense. Sometimes filled with too many complicated concepts. Definitely recommended!



That's all for now, guys! It's been a while since I posted anything because reviews honestly are a huge time investment, but I'm attempting to get more serious about blogging in general.

anything to say? leave a comment.

Thursday, 1 August 2013

Tiger, Tiger: The Review

Book data
Title: Tiger Tiger: A Memoir
Author: Margaux Fragoso
        ISBN(-13): 978-0374277628


I still think about Peter, the man I loved most in the world, all the time. At two in the afternoon, when he would come and pick me up and take me for rides; at five, when I would read to him, head on his chest; in the despair at seven p.m., when he would hold me and rub my belly for an hour; in the despair again at nine p.m. when we would go for a night ride, down to the Royal Cliffs Diner in Englewood Cliffs where I would buy a cup of coffee with precisely seven sugars and a lot of cream. We were friends, soul mates and lovers. 

I was seven. He was fifty-one.



Nat thinks: 

Goes without saying: Tiger, Tiger was a very difficult read for me. Not only because of the subject matter, but because of the way the story was told as well.

Were her parents blind and deaf and mentally impaired?
Was she blind and deaf and mentally impaired?


I have yet to read the old standard in paedophile stories - Lolita -  so I have nothing to really compare Tiger, Tiger to. This is both a curse and a blessing.

Margaux - pronounced Margo - is seven years old when she meets a man named Peter at the local pool. Both Margaux and her mother are instantly charmed by this man - this man, so very different from Margaux's holier-than-thou father; this man described by Margaux as having a childlike light in his eyes that drew her immediately; this man with a ramshackle, crowded menagerie of a house like nothing she'd ever seen before.

The book charts with painful detail the course of the relationship between Margaux and Peter. Because we know, we know, we do, we know what's going to happen - the innocent childhood games Margaux played with Peter as a seven-year-old have an underlying sinister edge that is just exquisite to read. It's the sort of thing that has your toes curling with dread at the thought of what's coming - and come it does.

I won't reveal too much, for fear of ruining the whole book for you - but here's my not-very-professional opinion on a few things in particular that struck me.

-One of these things was that throughout the duration of her relationship with Peter, Margaux never truly felt like a victim. At the end of the book, there's even a short note about how paedophilia can be treated before it gets out of control - that paedophilia, is, after all, a mental affliction, and can be cured.

-I haven't read Lolita, but I have read other, similar stories, and they all share one thing in common: the main character (be it the author or a fictional character) is victimised, and the entire story trumpets the triumph of overcoming the intense emotional scars left behind by whoever abused them. Tiger, Tiger, on the other hand, does no such thing. It is what it is: a memoir. The simple, to-the-point style that prevails throughout the story paints a clear picture of every scene, and the equally straight-forward ending leaves little to be desired. It tells a story, and the story does not necessarily have a conclusion. It's a little reminiscent of a diary in that way.

-At times while reading, I'd get a little frustrated, as there seemed to be too much irrelevant info-tossing happening. As the book progressed though, the little details about the childhood games and the family life tied together to show vividly Margaux's transformation from an affectionate, happy child to a suicidal young woman.

-My favourite character from the story - if you'll forgive my calling it a story - was an unexpected one. Margaux's father truly was my favourite character, because I absolutely did not know what to think of him. His affectionate nickname for Margaux - 'Kissy', which he pronounced as 'Keesy' due to his Spanish heritage - gave him instant cuddle points. But soon it was obvious that he was obsessive-compulsive, snobbish, and decidedly holier-than-thou. His endless complaints about Margaux and her mentally unwell mother were made tolerable by the fact that despite all his threats, he never left them. I still have yet to formulate an opinion on him. He's a character that made me ponder.



What I didn't like: The ending! After all my preaching about how the story was devoid of all the I-have-now-found-hope carbon-copy nonsense, I wanted more to the ending. I understood that Peter's part in Margaux's life was over. What I wanted was some insight into her current life, the life with her husband and their child. How did she reveal this story to her husband? To her child? If it had been me, I couldn't imagine telling anyone.



Nat's rating: 4 and a half out of 5. I took points off for the ending. 


Hope you enjoyed this review! I definitely enjoyed writing it. Keep checking back for book and film reviews, good music and possibly the odd normal blogspot here and there.


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cheers! 

Razihel - Bad Boy



Basically ridiculously catchy. End of.