Birthdays

I either didn't know or forgot that Dave's birthday was near mine.  His is 8 days away. Mine is 9 days away. His is 50th. Mine is..43rd? Hmm. I thought I was 44 but I guess not.

I've been rather fuzzy about my age ever since I turned 40. I don't want to remember how old I am so I have do math to figure it out. Anyway, looks like I am 42 now. Good. I am younger than I thought. How do you forget how old you are? Just keep giving out different numbers to different people until you get confused enough. Don't worry; age confusion is sticky.

Korean age calculation being different doesn't help either. To Koreans, I am 43 already. On my birthday, I will become man-43 where man means full. In the next chinese newyear (whenver that is), I will become 44. Sheesh.

Free World

We live in a free world.  Free, not just in what we want to do, but free to take. I guess what Microsoft did with Internet Explorer to erase Netscape can be partially blamed. It's not just you who can afford to destroy, the world said.

Did you know that every single Korean popular song is availble on Pruna, a Korean P2P network compatiable with eDonkey network? That means Korean teeagers have to be rich, stupid, or stuck up to pay to listen to the latest songs. Yeah, it's very helpful to Korean musicians to hear that there is no way to turn back the clock and that they now live in the Free Culture. Who cares if copyright really means anything? Meanwhile misery and torment are supposed to do wonders for creativity.

Oy. Let's burn the house down to keep ourselves warm.

Korean Wave (aka Hanlyu)

Korea has started to emerge as a cultural powerhouse in asia, in a trend called Hanlyu (Korean Wave) which threatens to overshadow even Hollywood and American pop culture.  Korean movies, music, and games are increasingly taking the top spots in popularity charts in china, japan, and south eastern asia countries and it's TV programs are starting to sweep TV primetime slots in those countries.  For example, Jewel in the Palace (google), a Korean drama about an apprentice in the royal kitchen who became the nation's first female royal physician, was watched by more than 40% of the TV audiences in Hong Kong last month.

As a Korean-American, all this is amazing because I still find most Korean movies and dramas not very interesting.  My guess is that Korean cultural goods are popular because they:

  • are more familiar to eastern countries than western culture.
  • are not burdened by animosity against Japan
  • are of relatively high quality
  • offer more bang for the buck

While greedy copycat producers are still busy churning out trash in Korea, overall quality seems to be improving at a fast pace still so I think the trend will continue for a while.

Rowdy Piper’s Korean Howdy

Marc seems to be having a great time visiting Korea.  Yum, I just love that pickled raw-crab.  It's called gaejang (gae = crab, jang = pickled?).  There are several varieties but I only eat the kind that's pickled in hot red pepper.  Raw-crab pickled in soy sauce (gan-gaejang) is supposed to be as addictive as cigarette though.  Gan means soy sauce…I think.

Marc's picture of the Blue House (equivalent of White House) brings back memories.  I spent most of my childhood living in a house on the mountain (Yinwang-san) to the west of the Blue House.  My father built a row of three houses in the middle of that mountain in such a way that the houses could be seen clearly from the Blue House like as clearly as a middlefinger.

After being jailed so often by the dead dictator of the same last name, it's understandable.  The area behind our house  up the hill was a panja-chon (shabbily built houses) for the poor.  When I visited the place in 1988, that area was bulldozed and walled off.  Apparently the dictator who followed the dead one wanted to improve his view from the Blue House.

Marc, please fix your comment facility.  Typekey is annoying to use and it seems to be broken at the moment.

Innocent Love of a Dancer

Dancer of Sunjung (sungung means innocent love in Korean) is a Korean movie currently in production which I am looking very forward to.  It's a story about a young dancer from Yanbian competing in a Korean ballroom dance contest and finding love.  I hope it's as enjoyable as the original version of Shall We Dance was.

Goonyoung Moon, the young leading actress with a thousand cute faces, is one of my favorite Korean actresses.  I think she has the right stuff to become a world famous actress.  Here is one of the thousand that makes me laugh everytime I see it.

Yanbian, fyi, is a Chinese prefecture bordering Russia and North Korea which is heavily populated (~40%) by descendents of Korean origin called Chosun-jok.  Enough Koreans have lived there for long enough to even have evolved their own accent which is faithfully reproduced in the movie.

I would love to learn ballroom dancing but I've had only about 5 ballroom dancing lessons over the past 20 years because I just don't enjoy the way ballroom dancing is taught traditionally: too much focus on steps and not enough on how to weave them together into a dance.

As it is now, it's as bewildering as learning to program in assembly language although I've been known to spin girls confidently (and unfortunately uncontrollably) on the dance floor given enough drinks under the belt.

Pansori

Here are some links to samples of pansori, traditional Korean music which to me sounds like a wonderful fusion of opera and street rap.  Pansori can be a monologue by a singler or a dialogue between two or more singers.  Interaction with the audience is also not uncommon in informal performances or if the audience is small.  Feedback is usually short affirmative shouts like JOTTAH! (great) or prodding like GOORAESU (Go on!).

This is only a small subset of varieties of pansori there are.  My favorite kind of pansori sound is very similar in tone to daekoom except it feels as if daekoom was made out of human bone, dipped in tears for years, burnt over fires of war, and speckled with fading spots of blood.  Sorry if I am being too graphical but this is what soul music is to me.

And here is a short sample of the Millenium Crane instrumental (731K MP3) mentioned in my previous post.  Very moving and graceful like an ancient crane in flight.

Traditional Korean Music

I enjoy all kinds of music but I particularly enjoy traditional korean music.  If you are interested in listening to some, the best album to get started with is the OST album for the Korean movie Sopyonje.

It starts with a bamboo flute instrumental titled Thousand Year-Old Millenium Crane.  The instrument is called daekoom, my favorite instrument, which sounds similar to shakuhachi although I think it's deeper and coarser in a satisfying way that sooths (actually more like hollowing) the aching parts of your heart (lungs?).  Some daekoom songs will leave you totally drained emotionally though.

Then it moves on to several pansori songs which to me sounds like a fusion of rap and opera.  I just love pansori!  The only problem is that the CD might be difficult to find outside Korea.

Good Nap

I had a good nap today…
because I needed an excuse to post this picture.

I don't know whose puppy it is
but it reminded me of my old dog when she was a puppy.

She used to sleep like that with a full belly,
sometimes pissing on herself without waking.

What’s up between Japan and Korea

History Lesson: Heart of the matter by Hayami Ichikawa and others at Asahi Shimbun in Japan pinpoints the real issue behind the ongoing conflict between Japan and Korea over Dokdo (Takeshima) islets: Koizumi and his cabinet are clueless.

Hayami understands why Koreans are so upset over Dokdo and explains it well:

To the South Koreans, Takeshima, a group of islets called Tokto in Korean, represents a symbol of Japan's 1910-45 colonization of the Korean Peninsula.

The incorporation of the Sea of Japan isles into Shimane Prefecture on Feb. 22, 1905, is viewed as a prelude to what Japan was later to inflict upon the peninsula.

It's now 2005 and it seems to be happening all over again.

Japanese government's history whitewashing service covers US too because mentions of the fact that no WMD has been found in Iraq were removed from school textbook drafts at the request of Japanese government officials.

Pretty funny?  Well, not if you consider that Japan is trying to buy a seat in the UN Security Council.  Brrrrr!

Dokdo according to China

Xinhua, China's state run news agency makes it clear what China's position in the dispute is.  Here is an excerpt from Chosun newspaper (couldn't find an english version of the Xinhua article):

When we look at history, Dokdo has been recorded as Korean territory since 512 A.D., while Japan began considering it Japanese territory from 1905… – Xinhua News Agency

While China has their own territorial dispute with Japan and the current Chinese government has been accused of rewriting history just like Japan, my own bias tells me they are being truthful here.