Thursday, June 21, 2007

3rd century view: time to stop peacocking

Just hit third century view photo with the albino peacock shot featured in an earlier post.

I suppose I'm now at this point where I have a certain critical mass of photos approaching the 100 mark so there should be a few more century views on the horizon. The novelty/excitement of hitting 3 digits has certainly worn off considerably.

Must think of a new milestone now, which is realistic and achievable but at the same time has some oomph factor. Hitting a thousand views for a single photo would be a bit much.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

My 2nd Century View photo - Siew Mai's furry belly!

Amazing - within 24 hours of putting up this photo, it hit 125 views. Certainly this is the first time it has ever happened to any of my Flickr photos. I admit it is a really cute photo - that tummy really says "RUB ME" but I didn't expect it to get so popular so fast. The spillover effects are limited as the photos just before and after haven't had a significant increase in views. And I must also admit to some slight disappointment that my two most viewed cat photos are not of my own little sweeties....

Anyway, Siew Mai is one of my colleagues' four cats. We met when I went over to my colleague's place for her housewarming party. Unfortunately, the other three cats were scared of all the nasty visitors and were hiding away. Siew Mai and my colleague's dog, Har Kau, are named after dim sum dishes (dim sum are small little Cantonese snack like dishes which are consumed normally for breakfast or lunch or maybe even brunch. A Siew Mai is a little meat dumpling.) Siew Mai, as can be seen, is a very friendly cat, allowing near strangers to rub her belly. I love the way her little paw waves in the air in this photo and although you can't quite see it she does have a happy look on her face. See more Siew Mai photos here.

The cat I really wanted to see is this heroine who survived a fall down thirteen floors. I had read previously online that cats can survive a fall from incredible heights. They can twist their flexible little bodies in the air such that they are able to make use of the air resistance to slow down the rate of descent but need time to do so. Hence, if the height is less than seven floors they don't have time to adjust. My colleague's tabby managed to wriggle through the protective netting at one window and fell. After a 4-hour search, my colleague found her cat on the ground, alive, but with broken limbs. The cat is still going strong today. Sadly, when I visited, she was hiding behind the washing machine the whole time. So no cat to be seen, and no photo.

Nonetheless, all hail to that marvellous animal, the cat!

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Doorkeeper

I went for a little concert last night, by singer-songwriter Dawn Fung. The venue: Pitchblack, a small cafe cum art gallery cum screening room in Haji Lane (parallel to Arab Street). Haji Lane is one of those one-horse lane type roads which must have survived from the early days when this area was first built up. Old shophouses line each side of the road. These days, new boutiques, restaurants bars, and funky cafes like Pitchblack are moving in.

Dawn Fung sings folk music, or rather folk music with a Christian orientation, and that's the kind of music she also writes. She plays the guitarlele which I suppose is some cross between a guitar and a ukelele but in reality looks like a mini guitar. She was accompanied by another guitarist and a violinist.

I enjoyed the performance. Dawn has a sweet clear voice which suited the intimate setting of the small upper room. The songs were pleasant too, with interesting harmonies and rhythms but could do with a little more variation in composition as there was a certain sameness throughout the performance. Dawn takes the Bible as a source of inspiration. Eg one song was based on Isaiah and another the famous verse in Ecclesiastes which has already inspired a number one hit song many many years ago. I must confess also that I was a little surprised that she sang so many hymns, as the poster advertising the performance didn't really mention it - the plug was that the Doorkeeper was a "brief visit to into the world of bedtime stories". All in all, a good performance but the songs need to be a little more memorable. When I left, the song running through my head was "To every thing (turn, turn, turn), there is a season (turn, turn, turn)..."

p.s. Dawn also sang that old favourite, "Blessed Assurance". Now that takes me back to my convent school days :-)

Friday, June 08, 2007

My first century view photo!


Treed
Originally uploaded by Taking5
I've been on Flickr for a little more than 9 months and today, I finally had a photo which reached 100 views! This photo was taken with a camera phone. I did do a little touch up but it started off a nice sharp good quality shot.

I took the photo last December at East Coast Park, when we were doing twice weekly morning walks. We spotted various strays a.k.a community cats about the place, as recorded here. This particular chap we found one morning up a tree. He was too shy to come down from his tree to eat the cat food we brought for him. There was another cat wandering around so I don't think he managed to get anything even after we left.

It has been a while since we went walking at the East Coast Park. Hopefully our feline friends have been faring ok in our absence.

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Optical Identity: T'ang Quartet and Theatre Cryptic

I just came back from a Singapore Arts Festival performance by the T'ang Quartet called "Optical Identity". This was a contemporary classical music performance. I'm not really a big fan - in fact I've only attended one other contemporary classical performance (see review here). What is supposed to make this concert different is T'ang's tie up with Theatre Cryptic: this is supposed to be "visual music"; a more multi-media type experience with lights, staging and other effects thrown in. Promising?

Well, I was rather worried that it would be frightfully pretentious. And, when the curtain rose to display the performers sitting with their backs to the audience, I feared (to be honest) the worst. I could not see what they were wearing clearly, but it appeared to be white pyjamas. Later on in the performance they started walking around and we could see that they were wearing what looked like jackets with the sleeves cut out, or rather white sleeveless vests in addition to their white trousers. No shirts. But at that moment, what we saw were four dark thrones arranged in a semi-circle with their backs to the audience. The backs of each throne were shaped such that they looked rather like rocks. There was also a shape cut out of the back so we could get sight of the performers. The effect was of musicians sitting in a cavern whilst we the observers watched them play.

They played their first piece, White Man Sleeps by Kevin Volans, in this position. I enjoyed the piece - in fact it was my favourite of the evening. The first dance started off with a rather rhythmic sound, continued in the second dance with the cello setting the pace for the movement. The lighting effects were not particularly interesting in this session. This changed somewhat during the third dance, where a green shaft of light hit the back of one of the thrones. Instead of a cavern, the musicians sat in a forest glade and the pizzicato of the strings brought to mind falling drops of water. I had to admit that the multi-media elements certainly added to the musical experience.


But the second piece was somewhat less impressive. I much preferred the third piece, whereby the musicians on the stage were joined by their images projected on a huge screen behind them. It was quite interesting to see huge images of the bow moving across the violin strings behind the performers. It got even more interesting when the image expanded to show the musician as well... and revealed that the vest was off! Camera started showing (at all angles) the movement of the brawny arms and muscular backs as the violinist played. But this was a major distraction. I put it to you : four musicians on stage, clad in white vests and trousers, vs images of bare breasted musicians at work in the background - where do you think everyone's eyes will be? And as for the music... frankly that just didn't register.

Far less distracting was the next segment, when this man in black starts walking around the stage with a video camera capturing the musicians as they performed and projecting this on the screen "live". I actually quite enjoyed this, as the musicians entered into a sort of musical face-off, two against two. Unfortunately the music was somewhat discordant so I was reminded of two sets of cats snarling and hissing at each other. (No doubt, due to the many such episodes taking place in my house every day).

In brief: a very different classical performance, which I would certainly say is more memorable than most. But I am a little afraid that the effects outshone the music at times, rather than enhanced it.

The complete programme for Optical Identity:

  • String Quartet No. 1: White Man Sleeps, by Kevin Volans
  • Phonotype I (Parts I-IV), by Rolf Wallin
  • Mugam Sayagi, by Franghiz Ali-Zadeh
  • Phonotype I (Part V), by Rolf Wallin
  • Manual Override, by Joby Talbot

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