Showing posts with label Governor's Ball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Governor's Ball. Show all posts

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Soul Food

A spiritual experience. It wasn't quite what I was actively searching for, but it was a hidden desire, buried deep underneath layers of post-middle school dust and slowly being shaken awake by my recently kindled fascination with yoga. But I think I found it. Or I found one

Religion is and always has been debatable, but spirituality? No, that's personal, you can't deny someone a supernal, holy moment. I think, perhaps, that's one of the things I love about Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros. The band--quite literally a band of people--offers the world a chunk of rawness dislodged from the core of each of them, and ultimately from the core of humanity. And what is more raw than one's spirituality? One could argue love, or sex, but in the end, spirituality encompasses both of those in a succinct, broader sense. Edward Sharpe was borne of deep loss, a natural root of pain, and thus began a route to combatting that inherent and inevitable pain of existence. Oftentimes when people are grieving, or in a bad mental place, they claim--although "claim" alludes to disbelief; belief in the claim is subjective--to see supernatural apparitions, voices of (a) God/god, angels, seraphs, holy choirs, etcetera. That's where Edward Sharpe's music comes from. That place of distress, and then the spiritual release, the saving grace. 

I wasn't in desperate need of a cosmic intervention per se when I discovered the band's first CD, Up From Below. I was only thirteen, but the music spoke to me in a way that everyone else was afraid to. They sang of intense love, of sexual desire, of mind-altering substances, of things that thirteen-year-olds are taught, generally, to be wrong. But I was never deterred by the messages I was sent throughout my childhood. When I read Romeo and Juliet, I found myself even more attracted to the idea of I'll-die-for-you love; everyone else in my seventh grade class wrote their papers arguing free will, whereas I was the sole student that fervently argued the power of fate. Our "adolescent issues" class was aimed at teaching us the perils of teenage sexual encounters ("If you have sex you will get pregnant and die" -- Mean Girls) and the irreversible dangers of alcohol and illicit drugs (say no to everyone! Everyone is trying to get you addicted to everything! Say NO!), and I will admit that for a while, I religiously, for lack of a better word, believed in those rules. And then I heard the music. 

Their voices crack(ed), they clap(ped) and stomp(ed), they were (are) loud and they didn't (don't) care, they love(d) the universe with no reserve. Me: a frightened quiet middle school graduate with too much to do. I wanted whatever it was that they had. I played the CD on repeat, all sixteen songs, and I prayed for a gust of fairy-dust-wind to whisk me away and take me to the magical land in which I could find all these wonderful and foreign things of which they spoke. 

CD number two came out a year later, entitled Here, a word that I just recently discovered the importance of. The songs were a little sadder, a little happier, a little more aware of what they wanted. I was a little sadder, a little happier, a little more/less aware of what I wanted.

Edward Sharpe songs are the kind of songs you must treat like classical music: you must either play them very softly or very loudly, never in between, or else the effect is lost. Perfect for falling asleep to, perfect for blasting from speakers while lying on the floor waiting to feel okay again, perfect for a jubilant dance party, perfect for sing-along car rides, perfect for putting on mixtapes, perfect for getting you through long subway rides...Just all around perfect, but perfect in their imperfection. Like people. Humans. That's it, maybe; their music is irrevocably human. And that's really the only thing we can truly know about, as people: what it's like to be who we are. We can study a million other things, astrology, zoology, botany, but in the end we're not stars or tigers or flowers, we're human beings. And that's where Edward Sharpe writes and composes from, that impossible-to-ignore but often impossible-to-tap-into place of pure existence. Not human survival, no Darwinian theories or Freudian philosophies or academia at all, because none of that is truly relatable.

But these songs--they hit on something, a rare and treasured thing that is nearly inexplicable, but may best be described as harmony, as finding the point of peace among discordance. If you look at the demographics of people that listen to their music, it will shock you. This much I can tell you from going to see them play at Governor's Ball in June. There were Long Island teenagers, doctors, middle-aged office workers, art students--and this was only among the people I could see within a five-foot-radius of myself. Everyone was swaying and singing and chanting and maybe even crying together, complete strangers united by a common sound and feeling. I could attribute that to the universality of their music, but another theory comes to mind. The band's all-around vibe, emanating from their songs, their appearance, and their performance, exudes a feeling of "I DON'T CARE WHAT YOU THINK ABOUT ME," something that everyone needs more of. Especially in modern society, a time and place in which almost all we do is care what other people think about us, this is refreshing. I'm a guy and I have long hair and sometimes I don't wear shoes and cry? YEAH WHO CARES. I'm a girl and I have short hair and I don't shave my legs and I'm fragile? GO AWAY IF YOU THINK I CARE. I'm singing about things that aren't dancing in clubs and getting drunk out of my mind, and instead I'm talking about universal love and spirituality and peace? THERE'S NO WAY YOU'RE GOING TO MAKE ME THINK I'M WEIRD. 

If Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeroes teaches us anything, it's that we shouldn't be afraid. (This is really drilled into us in their eponymous third album that came out last month.) Don't fear, the world loves you, we love you, the flowers and the sand and the asteroids love you, and as long as you love yourself, "everything will be alright forever and forever and forever" (The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac). Wear what you want, say what you want, do what you want, because the only thing that's holding you back from living without inhibition is what you think everyone else will think of you. Thus the only thing holding you back is you, because in the end, you are you and that's really all that's certain. They don't teach us to break the laws and go smash things and commit arson and murder, but more that we're not as trapped as we think we are. The shackles are invisible, all it takes is a little bit of power to break yourself free. 

*Of course this all relates to fashion. Everything relates to fashion because fashion iz lyfe amirite holla at me if I'm rite 

[First five photos taken by me; last two photos taken from Google.]

Lead singer Alexander Ebert at Governor's Ball

Lead singer Alexander Ebert stomping it out at Governor's Ball

Lead singer Alexander Ebert stomping it out on the other side at Governor's Ball

Lead singer Alexander Ebert concentrating on the ~soul~ at Governor's Ball

Band member and vocalist Jade Castrinos acting cute while singing at Governor's Ball

Band member and vocalist Jade Castrinos swaying with a tambourine

The whole crew on the grass

Check out all of their albums on iTunes, or on YouTube (The YooHoo, as sometimes I like to refer to it, as in, "How can I download these darn em-pee twos from The YooHoo?!"), or Spotify, or wherever.

PS DON'T FORGET TO ENTER THE SOLE PROVISIONS GIVEAWAY...PLEASE....


Friday, June 14, 2013

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Here comes the semi-juicy stuff. We're working our way up to the finale post of this lil mini-series about Governor's Ball, because I've been waiting months to write about a certain ~thing~ and I had to wait until the day of the concert had come and passed. 

Now that I think about it, there's not really much to relate to all you good people out there except for
a) MUD
b) the music was incredible 
     b1) we saw Dirty Projectors at 3:45 pm. There was a drunk woman and all her annoying friends standing right next to me and at one point said woman began crying and falling on me and being straight up dumb, but eventually they all left. It was a miracle. Also, the band was effing amazing and managed to play nearly the exact playlist that I had sent them telepathically. I think they got a few wrong merely because the signals were interrupted by the stupid lady falling all over me. 
    b2) then we saw Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, and it was a spiritual experience. I guess I can't keep the secret in much longer, so I'll just release the information now that that third post is all about Edward Sharpe. They have contributed 23% to saving my life, and for that I owe them everything. And they owe me more music. 
    b3) the last band we saw was Animal Collective. I don't know much of their music, but they happened to only play one song that I knew, so I was just sort of bobbing my head for an hour and twenty minutes waiting for a moment when I could actually sing along. And it was also very dark and very muddy and everyone was very rambunctious. 
c) I had some decent Chinese food 
d) we met a tall Latvian man named Roma 
e) we had to endure twenty minutes of drunken flirtations between a neurosurgeon named Megan and Roma 
f) MUD
g) it was quite loud and we got up pretty close to the stage all three times
h) the whole day was bangin' 

[Photos by me.]

The muddy expanse.

Dirty Projectors! They sounded awesome and were a pleasure to watch. Especially David Longstreth because Alina aptly described him as a baby sloth. And if you rearrange and cut out some letters in his last name it would spell 'sloth.'

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros! Jade and Alexander singing to/with each other! ~~LUV IS IN THE AIR~~

Animal Collective! Lots of crazy sounds and crazy lights and crazy people. 

Now that I have time to do stuff I've spent most of my non-test-taking time going running. But now I feel like a crazy person and need to do some really creative things to get all my insanity out of my system. Who's with me?

P.S. Congrats to my sister and all her friends for graduating high school yesterday, and especially to the entire class of 2013 for completely botching up their rendition of the school's Alma Mater. That was atrocious.


Monday, June 10, 2013

The Secret Life of Mud

The day finally came. This past Saturday, I went to Governor's Ball. There are another two blog posts dedicated to the actual event coming up in the near future, but in this one I'm just gonna focus on what me and my quasi-date Alina wore. 

Festival fashion is kind of like, a big deal. The fact that there's a certain class of trends dedicated to what people wear to music festivals is telling enough. Since it was hella hot out, most of the ladies were wearing some semblance of shorts and bustiers/bra tops à la the spring 2013 shows. A few women were just wearing straight up bras. Props to them. About one-third of the people had been there on Friday and lived through the rain and knew to wear rain boots. The rest of us were wearing anything but rain boots. Alina was wearing jelly shoes and some people were wearing canvas shoes or flip flops or nothing suitable for mud. I was luckily wearing my hiking boots, but by the end of the day they were just blocks of mud that I was dragging around. I had to hose those puppies down well, but I still feel like there's going to be a little farm inside those shoes forever more. 

I decided to take an alternate route in terms of what I wore. The road less traveled by, if you will. I wore my mom's maternity dress, wrapped a weird black and white flower choker around my neck, put my hair in lil dumplings, got on my Timbs (that's Timberlands for those that don't understand abbreviations), and put a temporary tattoo of a sun on my chest. Alina also wore a dress, a tent dress of sorts from Topshop, with her pink jelly shoes. She had to take them off and walk barefoot because the mud was too slippery. She stepped on a helluva lot of smushed beer cans. 

Enough talking, you must now look. 

[Photos of me by Olive; photos of Alina by me.]

Dress: my mom's maternity dress
Boots: Timberlands
Choker: shared by me and my sister, from the baby years
Watch: present from my mom

Just hangin' in the mud.

This is the point at which I became a puppy. 

Dancing prep. Gotta keep the machine well-oiled, ya know? 

Dress: Topshop
Belt: yo idk this ain't my wardrobe
Choker: on loan from me
Temporary tattoo: probably Claire's....

Baby Alina, bein' cayute. 

Costume change! 

Overalls: Forever 21
Bustier: Topshop
Backpack: Topshop
Mud: courtesy of the stupid effin' weather

The next installment in this series will be about the music and the bands I saw. Despite the mud and the heat, EVERYTHING ROCKED. I was jamming out so hard and I was in my main element. Plus my hair was up in dumplings, so everything was perfect.

Also, today was my last day of school. THANK GOD THANK GOD THANK GOD THANK GOD I'M DONE I MADE IT IT'S OVER HOLY EFF. I can't believe I made it. And that was only 10th grade. ...Fuq.....