Terminal ave.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
No. 6: "Set my compass north, I got winter in my blood..."
My first night in Korea, a co-worker took me to a bar called Old Rock. Old Rock is an LP bar, meaning it has a huge record collection that’s played by request. These places are fairly popular over here, and, because they happen to marry two of my favourite hobbies, they’re all cool. Old Rock, though, is special. The vibe is right. It’s dark and soothing and there are no neon lights. People chat quietly and smoke cigarettes and salarymen get drunk and play “Rivers of Babylon.” It’s owned by a fellow with excellent taste in jazz and classic rock – that’s his likeness in the above photo. (Yes, he really pretty much does look like that.)
Old Rock is the only spot in Ilsan where you could call me a regular. The second or third time I hung out there, I requested “Cantaloupe Island,” by Herbie Hancock. The owner (I still don’t know his name) shot me a thumbs up, and played everything I asked for the rest of night, from Morrissey, to Sly & the Family Stone, to Jerry Jeff Walker. How could I resist?
I stopped in for a drink with a fellow Canuck just after Christmas. We were both feeling a little homesick, so we ran through a set of very Canadian songs, just to twist the knife, I guess. Homesickness is a strange feeling. Not loneliness, really, but something like it. Kind of a dull, faint ache. As we stand up to leave, the owner shines a flashlight at me and says, “Sit! Your song!” And he plays “Acadian Driftwood,” by The Band, which is, for my money, one of the best songs ever written about Canada. We have to stay for another round.
Tonight, I walk into Old Rock to find it empty but for one of the bartenders. I’m disappointed the owner’s not around, because I brought him a Canadian five-dollar bill. He’s got a corkboard up behind the bar with money from all over the world, but nothing from Canada. As I sit down at the bar, the owner walks through the door. I wave hello, and greet him in Korean. He answers me in English, and makes for the record shelves behind the bar. He plays “Acadian Driftwood.” I give him the five-dollar bill, and say, “I’m from Canada.” He holds up the record sleeve, pointing to the Band: “I know.” Over the next hour, he plays Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, the Guess Who. He’s plays “The Canadian Railroad Trilogy,” start to finish!
Canadians are often criticized (usually by other Canadians) for identifying themselves in the negative. The perception is that, as a young nation, we’ve no identity, and so this is how we’ve come to know ourselves – by emphasizing what we are not rather than what we are. Listening to those records, I wonder if this is always case. When this middle-aged Korean man listens to The Band, he thinks about Canada. What does he think of, I wonder? “Wild, majestic mountains” or “green dark forest, too silent to be real”?
The Canada of these songs no longer exists, if it ever did. It’s about as real for me as it is for him. Those landscapes are going or gone, the stories growing more remote. But if that’s what comes to mind to a person half a world of way when they think of Canada, then maybe we haven't had all that tough a time self-identifying. (And romanticized half-fiction or not, I like that version a lot more than the current one that's governed by a craven autocrat and getting deservedly bitch-slapped in The Guardian by George Monbiot.)
Or, he might speak very limited English, and have no idea what the lyrics to any of those songs mean. Entirely possible. In that case, here’s something you can be sure of: when he sees that five on his corkboard, he’ll remember me. He’ll remember that Canadians listen to good jazz, drink good (cheap) whiskey, are friendly, and they love their home. Good enough for me.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Small note on Avatar
As a a piece of narrative film-making, it's bunk. Bloated and hackneyed with one-note characters and lame, jackhammer-subtle dialogue.
As a demo reel of possible cinematic futures, though, it's exciting. Avatar is, in its best moments, so gorgeous, so absorbing. Imagine what a filmmaker like Christopher Nolan could do with James Cameron's piggy-bank and toy-box.
As a demo reel of possible cinematic futures, though, it's exciting. Avatar is, in its best moments, so gorgeous, so absorbing. Imagine what a filmmaker like Christopher Nolan could do with James Cameron's piggy-bank and toy-box.
Friday, December 25, 2009
No. 4: Photos from my school's Christmas party
Thursday, December 24, 2009
No. 3: Observations on Korean fashion
One: fashion is serious business in Korea. I sink a fair amount of time into my appearance, but it’s clearly a full-time job for young Koreans, men and women alike. It’s borderline obsessive, and sort of weird. We’re talking mirrors in front of the urinals so you can fix your hair while you piss. We’re talking six-inch heels, day and night, rain or shine. It’s cool, because everyone looks like a million bucks, all the time, but it’s probably not healthy.
Two: these cats go gaga for pricey, North American outdoor gear. The streets are seas of North Face puffer coats.
Three: one of my students came to class wearing UGGs with LA Gear-style light-up heels. Frankensteining two or more trends into one article of clothing seems to be the norm.
Four: Koreans can’t seem to get enough of the Cleveland Indians logo. Chief Wahoo is everywhere. It remains, despite heavy baggage (centuries of colonial oppression, cultural genocide, that sort of thing), a classic design, so I guess I can’t fault ‘em for it. Wonder how they’d feel if there was an NPB team called the Nagasaki Kimchees with a similarly offensive caricature for a logo.
Two: these cats go gaga for pricey, North American outdoor gear. The streets are seas of North Face puffer coats.
Three: one of my students came to class wearing UGGs with LA Gear-style light-up heels. Frankensteining two or more trends into one article of clothing seems to be the norm.
Four: Koreans can’t seem to get enough of the Cleveland Indians logo. Chief Wahoo is everywhere. It remains, despite heavy baggage (centuries of colonial oppression, cultural genocide, that sort of thing), a classic design, so I guess I can’t fault ‘em for it. Wonder how they’d feel if there was an NPB team called the Nagasaki Kimchees with a similarly offensive caricature for a logo.
Monday, December 21, 2009
No. 2: About
I guess this should have been No. 1.
I moved to Korea a little over a week ago to teach English. I've created this blog because I'm hoping that some of my experiences here will be of genuine interest to friends and family in Canada. I've been gone less than two weeks, but things are very, very different here, and I don't anticipate having much difficulty generating interesting content. Personal blogging never seemed like a good idea back home, because who wants to read about me drinking coffee at Manic or eating a pita and watching 30 Rock in my apartment? Here, you can't even buy a pita! And that's a post right there.
Naturally, what I write will be tailored to my specific interests - music, cities, film, baseball, literature, sneakers, expensive hoodies, etc.
Enjoy, please!
I moved to Korea a little over a week ago to teach English. I've created this blog because I'm hoping that some of my experiences here will be of genuine interest to friends and family in Canada. I've been gone less than two weeks, but things are very, very different here, and I don't anticipate having much difficulty generating interesting content. Personal blogging never seemed like a good idea back home, because who wants to read about me drinking coffee at Manic or eating a pita and watching 30 Rock in my apartment? Here, you can't even buy a pita! And that's a post right there.
Naturally, what I write will be tailored to my specific interests - music, cities, film, baseball, literature, sneakers, expensive hoodies, etc.
Enjoy, please!
Sunday, December 20, 2009
No. 1: Macdonald-Cartier to Pearson to Narita to Incheon
Funny, isn't it, how the world's shrunk? There's no place on the planet farther away than a meal, a movie, and a nap. My flight from Ottawa to Seoul took just about twenty-four hours, but I can't say it felt that long. Hard to explain just how it felt. Surreal, certainly. Dreamlike, in the way that I wandered thru airports, blithely accepting it all as though I was about to wake up.
The Toronto-Tokyo leg was especially strange. I was in the air nearly twelve hours, nowhere near a window, with an analog watch. Though my sense of time was decalibrated, the most disorienting thing about the flight was being unplugged - this was the longest I'd gone without checking my email or sending a text message in something like eight years. It was a strange, unwelcome feeling, to've been wrenched from that superconnected network.
A brief stopover at Narita International Airport (where the above photo was taken), and I was in Seoul, crusing along the Han River, listening to what I was told is the city's only English radio station ("One Sweet Day" - classic Mariah/Boyz II Men jam). Though I'm living just outside Seoul, in Ilsan, it was nice to see the city proper. It's teeming with life, choked with people and bathed in neon light. I'm drawn to that dense, flickering cityscape - it reminds me of Blade Runner, William Gibson's novels, even Lost in Translation. It's frightening and beautiful - kind of sublime.
The Toronto-Tokyo leg was especially strange. I was in the air nearly twelve hours, nowhere near a window, with an analog watch. Though my sense of time was decalibrated, the most disorienting thing about the flight was being unplugged - this was the longest I'd gone without checking my email or sending a text message in something like eight years. It was a strange, unwelcome feeling, to've been wrenched from that superconnected network.
A brief stopover at Narita International Airport (where the above photo was taken), and I was in Seoul, crusing along the Han River, listening to what I was told is the city's only English radio station ("One Sweet Day" - classic Mariah/Boyz II Men jam). Though I'm living just outside Seoul, in Ilsan, it was nice to see the city proper. It's teeming with life, choked with people and bathed in neon light. I'm drawn to that dense, flickering cityscape - it reminds me of Blade Runner, William Gibson's novels, even Lost in Translation. It's frightening and beautiful - kind of sublime.
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