#and i DEFINITELY didn't think i'd hear like half the songs on the setlist
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completely inadequate and semi-incomprehensible concert post:
it was in fact raining the entire time and extremely cold but my best friend brought rain ponchos which literally saved our lives and also i lost touch with my physical form as soon as dionysus started so it’s cool
the only thing that actually did really suck about the rain (other than it just sucking in general) is that they didn’t do things like jungkook didn’t fly and they didn’t go on the bouncy slide. but to be fair most concerts don’t have flying or bouncy slides so, again, it’s cool
i genuinely couldn’t wild out to dionysus as much as i wanted because it was the first song and i was shook to my fucking core that i was staring at them to the point that i lost all other senses including hearing. also i was highkey so worried about them slipping on stage (they didn’t!!! thank god)
ok i’m not going to go through every song but i was in particular blown to pieces by each and every solo performance. of course i loved the ensemble songs to death and they were also incredible performances but there’s just something about being able to truly focus on one member at a time. it really hits in a different way
namjoon is the finest man i’ve ever seen in my life on god i’ve never felt a presence like his in my life. every time he looked in the camera i felt so disrespected like this man. he is literally not real
jin’s vocals actually knocked me off my fuckin feet, like i’ve always thought he has a nice voice but. i’m not kidding he literally has some of the best vocals i’ve ever heard live. if i read that statement a week ago i honestly would not have believed it but i’m a truly changed woman. my sister was lowkey a jin anti lmfao but she’s completely changed by his performance. epiphany was literally a religious experience. i truly think saw god in that moment.
hobi is literally. there are no words for this man. people are really really not joking when they say he OWNS the stage. if someone paid me a billion dollars to look away from him during just dance for half a millisecond i wouldn’t’ve been able to. what the fuck is up with that dude like. what the fuck. the things he did to me are NOT okay.
i am now sexually attracted to jimin and i do not want to talk about it .
jungkook’s stage presence really caught me off guard for some reason like he is powerful as hell and it’s REALLY something
tae is the only one who didn’t surprise me in any way. i KNEW how that bitch was gonna be and he lived up to every expectation exactly. i can’t remember singularity at all, i went into the most lust-fuelled rage of my goddamn life
yoongi. i really genuinely cannot explain this man’s aura. literally the only word that gets somewhat close is healing. i actually can’t write about it like....he’s exactly how you’d think he is but just seeing that it’s actually REAL is so fucking overwhelming and i don’t know what to do w how much i love him it is completely unsustainable. also his vocals really sounded different to me irl but in a really good way and it’s like ok can we get some recording technology that actually captures that specific tone PLEASE.
i feel like i should mention outro: tear here but i really already summed it up. really really not cute sob fest and it felt like it was 0.2 seconds long and i still can’t believe that i actually saw it
the energy there was just so good and i know that sounds obvious but truly they felt so genuine in their love and happiness
every time a member came up to the corner of the stage that was close to me i really felt all my organs liquify. hobi and yoongi in particular tbh like whatever they were radiating annihilated me
my expectations were HIGH and they still somehow exceeded them, both in my impressions of them as people and in their performances
there’s so much more but this is already stupidly long and obnoxious and i don’t know what else to say other than they are so so so beautiful and talented and know how to put on an incredible, incredible show. which all goes without saying but seeing and hearing it is. an Experience and ik this is corny to say but i really really hope that everyone gets to see them someday
#also: chicago is nice as HELL why didn't anyone tell me lmfao#i literally had zero expectations for the rest of the trip other than the concert and it was so nice and so so so much fun#but anyway i really feel conflicted abt talking about the concert#bc i know when i couldn't go to the love yourself tour the second anyone mentioned it my mood plummeted instantly#BUT i will say that i really thought i wasn't going to get to see them for a long long time#and i DEFINITELY didn't think i'd hear like half the songs on the setlist#so you really never know what'll happen in the future you know#ANYWAY this is such a mess lmfao i just knew that if i didn't write about it on here i'd regret it#and like. this is the first time i've been truly happy in a very. very long time.#the universe was really like ok here's 8 months of pure utter garbage and then we'll give you the best weekend of your entire life. sure#and the months before those 8 months also weren't great so like. anyway bts changed my life thank u and goodnight#my concert
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A Chat with a Bassist: Natalie Kim from Old Joy
Old Joy is an indie/alternative rock band that released their debut album on September 7th, 2018. They come from the underground New Brunswick scene and have played many basement shows around the area, with their most recent performance being for a student-run charity club at Rutgers University. This week, I got the chance to interview Old Joy's bassist, Natalie Kim, also a student at Rutgers University.
The interview:
What kind of music do you guys play? How do you, as a band, characterize it?
It's kind of under the umbrella of Alt Rock and Indie just because we're in the local New Brunswick scene. So it's kind of like Indie, DIY kind of music.
How did the band get together?
So my two bandmates who started the band started it before I got to Rutgers. When I came here as a freshman, I met one of them, Phil, and he told me they were looking for a bassist so they kind of adopted me. And then we had no drummer, so we had to go out looking for a drummer. So yeah it started with those two people. The other two of us kind of made our way in.
How long has the band been together?
I joined at the very end of summer before freshman year, and back then we had a like a different drummer like every month.
That's interesting.
Yeah, it was kind of weird since I play bass. Bass and drum really have to work with each other so I would change what I played for like every person. It was kind of rocky to start with, but we found someone about 3 months in, who ended up staying for the rest of the next summer. So when we all decided we were in it for the long run, that's when we recorded our first album.
Wow, that's very cool. Yeah, but he decided to go back to school, so literally the day of our release party, we got a new drummer.
Oh wow! Fun fact, drummers are like the hardest people to find because if you're going to be a drummer, you have to be good because everyone can hear you. There was a really big shortage of drummers, and this is a problem that every band has.
I didn't know that.
So in this current state, we've been together about 2 months.
So even though the current band is fairly new, are you guys still playing songs from the first album?
Our new drummer, he didn't make his parts, he had to learn it. But obviously, from now on, it's going to be him.
Are you guys going to make any new music?
We've started making some new stuff, but we're probably going to record, I don't know, not for a while.
That makes sense.
Maybe sometime next year. But it's also a lot different, because the two members that started the band found me after everything was already written so like, in this case, it's everyone. It's more democratic in the way we're making music. It's like everyone is developing it together, rather than it being the work of two people.
So, I know you're a full-time student. It must be difficult to find time to practice.
It's f***ing hard. The good thing with my band is, they're really good at planning ahead. We'll set up a date for a rehearsal a week or two weeks in advance, I'm so grateful. The worst is definitely when we're recording an album. It was so hard last winter. I'd have to go down to the recording studio like twice a week, and it's like an hour away, so like what I ended up doing is bringing my homework and doing it in a dark lit basement. It was hard work, but it definitely paid off because now it's just basement shows and events, which are just a weekend sort of thing. Sticking it through recording was definitely a good idea.
Were you taught music/playing or writing? Are you self-taught?
Kind of, so like, I think I developed an ear for music growing up from piano lessons as a kid. Even though that only went up until like fifth grade, that's what taught me how to read music. And then through middle school, I played French horn, I played flute. And when I got into high school, that’s when I picked up bass and I really should've taken lessons then. I regret not taking lessons when I had the time to when I was like 14. I kind of just learned bass by ear. And the internet's fantastic.
I have other questions, but I'm trying to think of a question based on what you just said.
I mean I can keep talking if you want.
Yeah, go for it if you want!
I mean, here's the thing about bass, so like I've had my friends ask me to teach them before. A lot of people have this conception that "oh I have to start the same way I learned piano" with all the scales and fundamentals, but I think for bass it's heavy on intuition. Of course, you'll be a better musician if you know all the techniques and fundamentals but like you cannot be a bassist if you do not have some kind of musical intuition. Like over the first year I picked it up, by the end of the year, I listened to music differently. I never noticed bass parts before I started playing. And then once it like really clicks you start to listen for it, and that eventually grows into the intuition. Especially playing in a band versus an orchestra. I play in an orchestra every year, and it's much more technical. Playing in the underground music scene, its more about what sounds good, what works versus what doesn’t work.
So it's more about understanding the vibe?
Yeah, kind of. It's like what people say about writing, how you can't be a good writer unless you read a lot, it's the same way. You have to listen to a lot of music to be able to play well.
Do you guys ever spend time experimenting with different kinds of music, or do you stick to the same kind of genre?
Right now, most of our rehearsals are geared toward preparing for shows. But in terms of being experimental, I'd say there are 2 parts to that. Number one, there's a lot of cover songs. We'll just like jam sometimes and go off of each other and play whatever. But also we're like trying to be different for our second album… now that we're trying to follow up to our first album, we're trying to be more advanced in terms of adding more atmospheric sounds and big picture stuff. We're going to add some synth, maybe some more keyboard stuff. I think like in terms of experimenting, I'd like to do it more, but we're not going in the wrong direction.
I know Old Joy plays a lot of basement shows. What other kinds of gigs do you guys play?
Just last Friday we performed at the student center for the Seeing Eye club, I forget exactly what the event was called. Yeah so we did that, it was a fundraiser. And in a month we're going to be doing Overnight Sensations which is like a program run by WRSU, which is a Rutgers radio station. So every week they have bands come late at night. We've also done a lot of other charity shows.
And as far as setlist goes, do you have a specific order you play in?
Our album is 7, 8 songs. There are some songs that we all love, and some that we all don't want to play. So we'll play 4 to 5 songs and we'll do like one cover.
So it's short.
Yeah, it's usually like a half hour set. Also a lot of these songs, we recorded them in the winter so almost a year ago. Now that we're more mature musicians it's kind of like, I wish we recorded this differently or played this differently.
Do you guys tease new music in your shows?
Yeah we played a new song at our last show, which was last Friday… but yeah definitely.
Do you need to think about the audience, or do you just do you (as a band)?
It depends. We don't have very many songs yet, so there's a skeleton that we have to follow. It's usually the cover that we'll very. And then the other thing we'll mix up is the order. Sometimes it’s the energetic songs first if everyone seems dead. The hardest part is definitely when everyone's like "one more song!" and we don't have any more song.
What's your response to that? Do you guys play a song from the album that you wouldn't normally play?
We'll play another cover song, we have stuff that we kind of keep in the back in case we need it. But I wish we had more stuff.
How does recording working?
So basically what happens is, first everyone plays, to get a scratch track for timing purposes. Then everyone will go in on their own and we'll put it into the computer and do it as many times as it takes to get it right. It can take forever sometimes. And so the way we did this album was each time we went down there, we'd record one song. It took a while, but it turned out ok. The recording was less than half. The rest of the time was just mixing and then sending it out to get it mastered. Honestly, I'm not a fan of recording because sometimes I can get really perfectionistic. That’s why I really like playing basement shows. I don’t think I've ever played the same song the same way twice. Like this kind of goes back to the experimental thing. Thank god we play live shows because that's where you get to be creative as a musician.
How did you guys come up with the order of the album?
It's weird, I don’t think we discussed the whys of it. We all kind of came to a consensus. It might be a little bit subconscious, and it kind of goes back to the intuition of it. There might be some legitimate reason to it, like songs being in the same key. From what I can observe, I think the biggest things are tempo and mood. As an Alt rock, indie almost emo band, there are energetic happy songs like typical Alt Rock songs, but there are also songs that are really emotional. Like we have this one song "Rover Shore". Watching Phil do the vocals for that was literally spiritual. Like I've never seen anyone put so much emotion into one song. So obviously you wouldn't put that first. We put that sort of in the middle near the end. We never discussed the explicit details, it just flows somehow.
Yeah, it just feels right.
Do you guys plan on making music videos?
We filmed a music video last year, but because we switched drummers, we had to scratch all of that. I really wanted to because one of the girls in the band is a film major. It's definitely possible, the only issue is we all have no time. 3 of us are students, and one graduated but he has a full-time job. Yeah, the biggest issue is definitely time. I understand why some bands buy a house and live together like it definitely makes sense.
Do you have any other interesting stories? Anything cool!
The most exciting moment of being in this band was this Friday. We were at a house for a show and me and my bandmate we were just walking from one side of the room to the other, and we heard a group of people talking and they said Old Joy. It was the coolest thing 'cause it was like people actually know us. That was so exciting even though it was such a small thing because people actually recognize us. Like last week someone was at work and they said some of our music was on the radio. It was really cool!
What's weird is that the style of music that we play is not my style.
So what is your style?
I've never really gotten into indie music, but I figured I'd try it out. When I play on my own, I play a lot of Jazz and Funk. So this is very very very different. And this type of music isn't what I listen to but it's so interesting because the number of things you can do on bass is infinite. I do appreciate it, it's definitely grown on me. Before, all indie music sounded the same. Like to the average person, all classical music sounded the same. It's cool that I've learned so much through this.
Does it make it hard, not having listened to indie music beforehand?
When I first started, I didn’t really know what I was doing. I was sticking to the root notes, keeping time. Super simple. By the time recording rolled around, I got the hang of it enough to create my own tracks, but looking back on it now, I would do things 100% differently.
Natalie Kim is a talented young artist making her way through with her bandmates. With the first album already out, and another in the works, Old Joy is already paving their path into music. It's cool to see the beginning of a band that is transforming into something bigger, especially coming out of a local music scene.
Check out some of their songs:
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