November 25, 2012

timemachineyeah:

Christmas music is officially in season.

I’m pretty sure I’ll be posting some pretty frequently for the next month. Because I love seasonal music, y’all. 

Hey everyone,

GUESS WHAT TIME OF YEAR IT IS AGAIN.

August 7, 2012

13. A song from the musical you loved from hearing the first note.

Listen to this damn song. This is how the movie opens

Who could blame me for loving it from the very start?

(Note: this was the first soundtrack I ever purchased, and I am still deeply obsessed with it. Every. Single. Song. is so good. I don’t even care that I’m an atheist, I looove this movie.)

August 4, 2012

12. A song you could listen to all day.

Sunset Boulevard, and of course I’m going to post the John Barrowman version. 

Have I mentioned here that I love songs that are fun to sing along to? Because this is SO MUCH FUN TO SING ALONG TO. Like, fill a small glass with some juice, treat it like whisky, and sing jadedly to an audience who isn’t there about being a sell-out writer. Yes, good. 

I may take more joy in this than most, as someone who would actually like a career as a screenwriter and moved to L.A. for that purpose, but come on. Can anyone resist how beautifully “seen it all, kid” this song is? How wonderfully fatalistic? And hedonistic? I just fucking loooove it. 

Plus, living near enough to the actual Sunset Boulevard, it gets stuck in my head allll the time! On the 101, see the sign, “Sunset Boulevard - 4 miles” and you better bet this song has just started blasting pleasingly through my brain.

Four years now of having it loop through my head, still not sick of it.

August 2, 2012

11. From the musical which made the most impact on you.

Oh, my little baby heart. Beauty and the Beast. The answer is so Beauty and Beast. 

Bookish Belle made me feel comfortable to be bookish me when I was a youngling in ways I can’t begin to describe. 

And, okay, I totally know the criticism. She ends up with her kidnapper at the end, and that is problematic. It’s very, very problematic.

But like, okay, I know I’ve said this stuff before, but like-

In a way the entire story is about consent, and serves as a primer for the definition of how consent works and what it is. It’s awesome.

Belle doesn’t love the Beast and change him. He loves her long before she loves him back, and-

We’re step by stepping this. 

Gaston, a figure who isn’t in any original version of the fairy tale I’ve come across, he is a clear definition for the audience of what it means to not respect the autonomy of others. Hell, in sex ed in middle school we even watched the cabin proposal scene in order to discuss bad behaviour and the definition of sexual harassment. 

Gaston feels entitled to Belle, and is so unwilling to acknowledge her personhood that the thought of her denying him doesn’t even occur to him as a possibility. 

And then Belle goes out to selflessly rescue her father, showing her nobility and her bravery. And we meet the Beast, who just like Gaston has no respect for Belle’s personhood. The Beast has been given to us as a figure who does not know how to love.  And this is the state in which we meet him, as someone who literally lacks the ability to love. 

But he can, in theory, learn to love. And so he selfishly keeps Belle in order to attempt to do this so he can break the spell. And this is awful, it’s an awful violation of consent, and is treated that way. It’s not treated as romantic, Belle cries, yells at the Beast for not letting her say goodbye and again when he tries to force her to have dinner with him. 

And every single turn in their relationship is instigated by his efforts. Belle is not a damsel in distress, nor does she make any attempt to change the Beast. When he says she can’t have dinner without him, she disobeys him. When he threatens her, she runs. When she’s about to be eaten by wolves, she picks up a stick and sets to defend herself. And when the Beast saves her life, she honestly considers leaving him to die (which would have been perfectly fine).

Even when kidnapped, she takes every opportunity to assert her will, to stand up to those who try to own her.

But that first move towards a better relationship? It was the Beast’s. He saved her life, so she saved his and looked after him. But she still didn’t put up with his crap, lecturing him when he tries to blame her for being the victim of his abuse.

And then they start spending time together, and he stops making demands of her. 

And he wants to show her kindness, so he gives her a library.

And he takes an interest in her interests.

And he asks her on a fancy date with a ballroom and a dress and dinner and dancing.

But does the movie say that he’s learned to love yet? No, not yet. Not yet.

The movie doesn’t say he’s learned to love until after he lets her go. 

Because saving her life, treating her with kindness, giving her gifts, enjoying her company - these things aren’t love. You can’t ever love without respecting the other person’s right to say no. 

And it was only when the Beast did that that he finally did love. It wasn’t love, couldn’t have been love, without that respect. The movie spells out that consent is necessary for love. That love cannot exist where there is coercion or force. 

But, Mrs. Potts says, that’s not enough to break the spell. Because here the movie spells out, she still doesn’t love him. That whole time, she didn’t love him!

And this is why I really love it. It wasn’t her ~love~ or her ~feminizing influence~ that changed him, because she didn’t love him. That whole time, she didn’t love him, so it wasn’t a story of her trying to groom him into some acceptable husband. He changed himself, because he wanted to be a better person. Was Belle the motivation for that? Absolutely. But it wasn’t something she did, it was something he did. He did it on his own, and for himself, because he figured out it was the right thing to do.

And she wasn’t able to love him until after he’d done it.

Is it still really problematic that she winds up with her kidnapper? Totally. But when I was a kid I never got “I can change him!” out of this movie. What I got was “Don’t put up with men who don’t respect you, no matter what.” Because Belle didn’t put up with it, and that was awesome. She never once put up with it, and didn’t allow herself to fall in love with anyone, man or Beast, who didn’t respect her.

I’ve talked forever, haven’t I? I JUST REALLY LOVE THIS MOVIE OKAY?

I love it so much that in my iTunes there’s this:

That is a playlist of the song Beauty and the Beast 41 times, in 41 different versions.

(For the record, I really like the Gregorian Chants version)

Okay, but anyway, Beauty and the Beast TOTES INFLUENCED ME IN A REALLY POSITIVE WAY. SO THERE.

August 2, 2012

10. From your least favourite musical.

Saturday’s Warrior. I used to like this musical when I was really little. A lot of it flew over my head. And if I am completely honest, there are still parts of it that I find funny (the kitsch of it didn’t go over even Mormon heads, but Mormons embrace kitsch and laugh along with it). The story of a kid who is STRUGGLING WITH HIS FAITH because WHY ARE HIS PARENTS HAVING SO MANY KIDS. I didn’t even catch this song when I was kid, where the villainous youths are like “LEGALIZE ABORTION BECAUSE BABEHS ARE EVUL” for what it was, I had no idea what it was talking about. 

Now that I’m older this film is cringeworthy, embarrassing, offensive, and so misrepresentative. Of course, I haven’t seen it in years and some part of me wants to sit down and watch it all the way through again for old times sake, just to see how much awfulness I didn’t catch on to when I was a kid. And I regret that when I first went apostate I would be so embarrassed and put off by this shuffling into my ipod that I deleted the music and no longer have it, even though it’s terrible. Sometimes it’s nice to have a record of the stuff, good and bad, that influenced my childhood.

I wouldn’t mind having a party and watching this movie for mocking’s sake with friends some time. It could be kind of cathartic. 

Anyway, Saturday’s Warrior is a terrible musical that I am unfortunately far too familiar with. 

August 2, 2012

9. From the musical you know all (or nearly all) the lines to.

Oh, god. Phantom of the Opera.

Every. Single. Line. 

Saw it in New York with my parents when I was thirteen (my brother and I were invited along during a business trip of my father’s. We were each allowed to pick one musical, and I picked this, and my parents were FURIOUS with me afterwards because it was “inappropriate and dark”). Bought the 2 disc cast recording with complete booklet and would sit in my room and read through the whole play over and over while listening all the way through. 

Every word of the dialogue and music is seared into my brain somewhere. This play is so familiar to me (and for the record, not a fan of most of the revised lyrics, with one small exception) that I can practically watch in my head all the way through. 

I recently purchased the 25th Anniversary Royal Albert Hall DVD of this show and enjoyed an evening in comfort with old familiar friends.

I haven’t seen the movie adaptation since watching it the first time in theaters and being utterly appalled by it (talking the lines! Not singing them! WHY WOULD YOU DO THAT?!). I’ve since wondered if I shouldn’t give it another chance. 

I have very different intellectual feelings on this show now that I’m older, but dammit my nostalgia goggles are firmly in place with loving it. I will probably love it forever. 

July 31, 2012

8. Sung by your favourite male singer in a musical.

Honestly, there are so many good answers to this question that I decided to answer with 1) a singer I think is underrated and 2) a singer who allows me to post a song from a musical that might not otherwise make it onto this list.

Team Starkid’s Starship is silly. It has small pacing problems and I wish it had more songs. And Dylan Saunders, unlike Joey Richter and Darren Criss, doesn’t have quite the same teen squee following. Even thought UNF HIS VOICE.

Along with being very UNF, Dylan Saunders has a voice that I have an easy time singing along to, which always makes me like a singer more because I LIKE TO SING ALONG AND PRETEND THAT I AM GOOD. 

So, we’re putting Dylan Saunders and his sexy voice here. 

July 23, 2012

7. A song sung by your favourite female singer in a musical.

Idina Menzel has the kind of singing voice I like to think I would have if I were at all a good singer. 

This makes me luff her singing more than most. Not everyone digs her, some feel she’s overrated (because of how popular Wicked really was) and some feel she overuses her belting voice (note: I love belting and YOU SINGING SNOBS CANNOT STOP ME) but I loooooove her and her voice and her adorable husband so there. 

The single greatest crime of Enchanted as a film wasn’t the occasional moments where they undermined their feminist premise with poor writing decisions. No, it was the fact that they cast IDINA MENZEL in a MUSICAL and DIDN’T. GIVE. HER. A. SONG.

DISNEY WHAT ARE YOU EVEN THINKING.

Anyway, Idina Menzel is awesome. Listen to her emotion devoted singing. I cannot even.

July 21, 2012

6. A song which makes you sad/teary.

Y’all have no idea how many songs I keep cycling through for this one. “I’m Here” from Matilda, “Fantasies Come True” from Avenue Q, “The I Love You Song” from 25th Annual Putnam Country Spelling Bee, like pretty much the entire second act of Les Mis (“Empty Chairs and Empty Tables” just exists to make me weepy, I swear), and, many many others.

Ultimately I chose “Will I?” because it just mourns. It’s not cloying or verbose (quite the opposite), it just asks those questions that have no good answers. 

I have a friend who died from cancer a while back, and he had questions like this. And I think whether your illness is physical or mental or whether you are the victim of unfortunate circumstances and not any illness at all, I feel like everyone who’s ever experienced inescapable torment and hurt can identify with the thoughts of this song.

Will I lose my dignity?
Will someone care?
Will I wake tomorrow from this nightmare? 

July 20, 2012

5. A song which makes you happy.

I am not embarrassed that I have the LotR stage musical cast recording. 

Well, not too embarrassed.

Because this song makes me happy and cuddly and want to hug all the things, okay? Sam and Frodo, okay? Like the stories they used to tell OKAY. OKAY? OKAY. Jeeze!

I mean, it’s not a giddy kind of happy. It’s a weepy kind of warm happy that makes me feel all “HOLD ME”, but still. 

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