Wednesday, 29 June 2011
i can’t do the talk, like the talk on the tv
I heard on the radio an old favourite the other day. Romeo and Juliet. But not the Dire Straights’ original; this was The Killers’ version. Brandon Flowers gets me every time. He has me thinking that this version is better than the original. I know there will be some very protective Dire Straights fans out there, but this version is the one I flick to time and time again on my iPod. Obviously it is nothing without the original’s popularity etc, but sometimes it’s just better the second time around. Mark Ronson made a whole record hoping to achieve this. He got pretty close with Valerie! Most people wouldn’t know who sang the original to Florence and the Machine’s You Got The Love, she’s made it her own. How about Johnny Cash and Hurt? Below are my pick. What are yours?
Thursday, 23 June 2011
can I get an encore, do you want more
I have the Glastonbury blues.
As far as music goes, I don’t think I have been a part of anything as special as this clip below. Stevie Wonder had just given Eavis a gift for all the good he brings to the world through creating and running Glastonbury. It was a gift he had only given to one other person- Barack Obama. Then he belts this out for Glastonbury’s 40th year. Spine tingling!
I'll be wistfully watching this year unfold.
Wednesday, 22 June 2011
sun is shining, weather is sweet
Chiang Khan. What a gorgeous place! I love it’s style-so far my experience with the heavy touristy Koh Samui, Bangkok and also Koh Phangan had left me with the impression that Thailand didn’t have a savvy style within. Well, excuse my ignorance! Cue Chiang Khan. A sleepy village that lies somewhere between hip and hippy. On the main stretch there are gift shops and guesthouses made of dense wood, but walk a little further and there lies a French inspired treasure with polished cement floors and minimal furniture. LOVE. Sitting out on the balcony little geckos run over the white walls.
A lot of the guesthouses on the main street (including mine) back onto the Mekong River. Laos is a doggy paddle away and it’s pretty tempting since every night we could hear music. Would someone tell that country next door to keep it down?!
This place is a holiday destination but it’s Thai tourists it attracts-mostly younger. The gift shops are mainly packed with postcards and t-shirts with bikes on them. Each shop trying to out cool it’s neighbour. Please take your shoes off before entering...
A lot of the guesthouses on the main street (including mine) back onto the Mekong River. Laos is a doggy paddle away and it’s pretty tempting since every night we could hear music. Would someone tell that country next door to keep it down?!
This place is a holiday destination but it’s Thai tourists it attracts-mostly younger. The gift shops are mainly packed with postcards and t-shirts with bikes on them. Each shop trying to out cool it’s neighbour. Please take your shoes off before entering...
Tuesday, 21 June 2011
like a rolling stone
Being in 'a mood' when travelling solo can be dangerous- if you feel like taking a back seat for the day you miss out. You can’t fall on your travelling buddy to do the organising or tell you to get a move on.
This was one thing I worried about when I went to Chiang Mai for a few days on my own, staying in a hotel instead of the usual choice of a hostel. If I got in one of my indecisive moods I could spend way too much time tethered to my hotel room. This is coming from someone who can spend an hour wandering the supermarket on the way home from work due to being too indecisive to pick one thing to cook myself for dinner. Hopeless.
Don’t get me wrong-I’m not someone who needs a schedule for the day and I like to wander, that’s when you come across the sparkly gems. But since I was only there 3 days I needed to have a bit of a clue as to what I was doing to make sure I was content.
It was almost looking grim too. After a few small outings on foot I still wasn’t feeling motivated to look into what I could do, and the place was starting to have a dirty Bangkok feel to it with lots of dodgy looking massage parlours. Luckily I threw out a floating device and saved me from myself. I went and talked to a girl at the hotel and found out where Thai “teenagers” (I think she meant 18-30year olds because the area was next to a University) hung out. Also I booked a cooking class, and found out where she liked to go with her friends for dinner (ah...that makes me sound like a creep!). Now that wasn’t hard, was it?!
The day started with pointless wandering and warning bells, but finished strongly with looking around a great cafe strip and finding some beautiful jewellery.
In the evening after dinner I followed the sound of music to the other side of the river only to find the local fruit and flower market. The colours and exotic fruits were magic. Add in a night cap Long Island Iced Tea back at the hotel bar...life is good!
Don’t get me wrong-I’m not someone who needs a schedule for the day and I like to wander, that’s when you come across the sparkly gems. But since I was only there 3 days I needed to have a bit of a clue as to what I was doing to make sure I was content.
It was almost looking grim too. After a few small outings on foot I still wasn’t feeling motivated to look into what I could do, and the place was starting to have a dirty Bangkok feel to it with lots of dodgy looking massage parlours. Luckily I threw out a floating device and saved me from myself. I went and talked to a girl at the hotel and found out where Thai “teenagers” (I think she meant 18-30year olds because the area was next to a University) hung out. Also I booked a cooking class, and found out where she liked to go with her friends for dinner (ah...that makes me sound like a creep!). Now that wasn’t hard, was it?!
The day started with pointless wandering and warning bells, but finished strongly with looking around a great cafe strip and finding some beautiful jewellery.
In the evening after dinner I followed the sound of music to the other side of the river only to find the local fruit and flower market. The colours and exotic fruits were magic. Add in a night cap Long Island Iced Tea back at the hotel bar...life is good!
Sunday, 19 June 2011
food glorious food
Order, eat, repeat. Here are some amazing dishes I tried in Chiang Mai. I honestly didn't stop eating!
Tuesday, 7 June 2011
going to the chapel and we're going to get married...
There are some travel experiences that money can’t buy and this weekend I’m going to be a part of one. A wedding! A wedding in Thailand! Before you envision a Phuket beach with sunburnt bridesmaids, this one is a little different. The real Thai deal. My Cousin and his wife-to-be are getting hitched in her home town Chiang Khan which is a little place in North East Thailand. Sitting on the border of Laos there may be no beaches in sight but there will be sun. Oh yes, get me out of this Melbourne freezer.
My cuz Andy has explained the format of the day, which starts when the Monks rise and walk through the village during their morning alms. As they walk through we will offer them food. The wedding and 'parade' is then at 9:09am (the specific time relating to good luck and prosperity) and the Groom’s side (that’s me!) carry plates of food and also plants as we jig, dance and sing down the village towards the Bride’s house. The groom then has to retrieve the bride from the house and pay his way in! The final instalment to the day is in the evening, where we eat beautiful Thai food and be merry with my old friend Thai whiskey. Oh what fun! Family, culture, food, sun. I am one excited girl.
My cuz Andy has explained the format of the day, which starts when the Monks rise and walk through the village during their morning alms. As they walk through we will offer them food. The wedding and 'parade' is then at 9:09am (the specific time relating to good luck and prosperity) and the Groom’s side (that’s me!) carry plates of food and also plants as we jig, dance and sing down the village towards the Bride’s house. The groom then has to retrieve the bride from the house and pay his way in! The final instalment to the day is in the evening, where we eat beautiful Thai food and be merry with my old friend Thai whiskey. Oh what fun! Family, culture, food, sun. I am one excited girl.
Sa wa dtii ka.....
Thursday, 2 June 2011
Wednesday, 1 June 2011
there's a bear in there....
I love gigs like Friday’s Boy and Bear at The Corner. $20 tickets, snap them up before they tour in another years time...tickets will be $50 by then. The guys will be wishing they charged a little more, selling out all three shows with their first show selling out in record time for The Corner-40minutes. The Corner has seen some legends in their time so well done to B&B. They owe Crowded House a drink since a big part of their success and ‘Triple J appeal’ is thanks to a little tune ‘Fall at your Feet’.
The gig was fun, everyone was in good spirits and although I’d like to give my own two bob about the show I’m afraid I've got my Friday vino lightweight reputation to uphold, so things are a little hazy.
A more worthy review:
What I remember of the night:
Wrong gig? Oh. I'll do better next time.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)