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#singer jeff satur my beloved
itsmelb · 1 year
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Finally we are back with concert Jeff Satur aka handsome singer boy aka love of my life with out national anthem 😭😍🥵
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ditch-lily · 5 months
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these are the current things occupying my thoughts..
tma seasons 1 to 5 and all the horrors
tgmap (the horrors continue) the toxic office yuri sequel
all for the game series b/c neil and andrew will always fuck me up the best
amc interview with a vampire (armand's version)
jeff satur cause he just did his art boy hoe shit right in front of my eyes again
mushrooms cause its finallly fungi season here
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lvcdrms · 2 years
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henlo!! i’m still setting up this blog but atm i’m really looking for plots for a specific oc i’m dying to write. looking for romantic as well as platonic plots, preferrably on discord. i have loots of muse so if you’re willing to give him a chance be prepared for enthusiastic plotting & headcanons (heads up, i usually keep my muses private but this is an exception!)
about the oc! his name is dew thanayut, he’s a jeff satur faceclaim. around 28 yo. bisexual. a thai singer-songwriter, something of a rising star. independent artist, also ex-kpop idol who left the industry very traumatized, but has healed a lot since then. a history major in his spare time as well. very passionate about music. a hardworker, cat dad, outgoing introvert, hopeless romantic but kinda slow to fall in love & to actually open up to people in general. his full bio can be found right here (beware that the docs is kinda graphic heavy, but please check out at least the trigger warning session!)
i’m leaving a few plot ideas down below, but i’m open to pretty much anything, so feel free to bring me any beloved muse you wanna write or think would fit. however, muse has to be 24+ for romantic plots. my rules are on this blog’s pinned. if you’re interest, like this or just hit me up!
 plot ideas!
any connection that is professional at first, that being how they grow closer; can be another artist collabing with him (on a song or cover, on a photoshoot, even a mv cameo), a photographer, a producer, a stylist, etc. maybe they just play or used to play at the same bar;
good old “celebrity” romance! maybe they meet through a collab, or at an event, or through a mutual friend, or because your muse is an actor & dew is working on the ost for their new series. cue dating rumors (whether or not they’re really dating at the time), maybe some angst with bitter people online speculating it’s a pr relationship or dew is trying to take advantage of your muse’s fame, etc;
good old idol&celeb plot, whether platonic or romantic. dew’s always tried to connect with fans, and when he was beginning his solo career this was particularly easier since the fanbase was so small he could memorize names, faces,  personalities, etc. maybe muse can be a fan since then and they’ve met dew a few times, or they’re new to the fandom, or they were a fan of his ex-band that dew still recognized years afterwards and they’ve become friends since meeting again. many possibilities actually.
his first girlfriend! the one who was an idol in the same company as him. they did have a very loving and supportive relationship, but they lost touch after breaking up since they were living in different countries. dew just worries for her and wishes he’d manage to hear of her. can be romantic or platonic honestly, i’d love this muse, but please mind the triggers in their backstory.
any of his ex-bandmates (please mind the triggers in their backstory!), or anyone dew’s met while still in seoul and hasn’t seen in a while;
this plot;
friends in general, or childhood friends, or collegemates, or neighbours, or people with a shared history. even family (can be distant family). ordinary slice of life-ish plots are more than welcome. single parents muses are welcome too, just saying.
 extra! I’m 100% willing to write dew in different moments of his career, and up for flashbacks as well. keeping the options open.
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sinceileftyoublog · 7 years
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Live Picks: 2/16-2/22
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Brockhampton
BY JORDAN MAINZER
Here are our live picks for the week ahead, starting with the weekend and ending just before the next one!
2/16: Little Big Town & Kacey Musgraves, Allstate Arena
It’s hard for non- or casual country fans to remember that Alabama’s Little Big Town were around before they were singing about girl crushes on the Grammy Awards. Sure, their breakout and by my ears best album Pain Killer skyrocketed them into the mainstream, but they released five albums before then and have been around since the late 90′s. Though live they certainly play hits from Pain Killer and last year’s even more popular The Breakers, they often throw bones to fans that have been with them since even before 2012′s Tornado, especially when playing songs like Southern anthem “Boondocks”.
A woman deserving of a headlining slot, Texas country star Kacey Musgraves is the second of three acts on this tour (she’ll be opening for Harry Styles in June). She’s released two really good studio albums (2015′s Pageant Material landed in our top 40 albums of that year) and one surprisingly good Christmas album, and she’s planning to release a new record, Golden Hour, early this year. Expect to hear plenty of new songs during her set.
Breakout Texas country band Midland opens.
2/17 & 2/18: Oh Sees, Empty Bottle
Music Frozen Dancing, the Empty Bottle’s annual free winter outdoor concert, always seems to nab a great lineup, and this year’s no different, mostly due to the headliners: Oh Sees/OCS (formerly known as Thee Oh Sees and about a million different other names), whose devoted fan base makes sure they sell out every Chicago show. Memory of a Cut Off Head, their latest album as OCS, is a little different from their raucous punk and sounds like the band’s early stages. It’s a 60′s-indebted, mostly acoustic psychedelic collection of songs from founding member John Dwyer and former member Brigid Dawson. (It notably features horn arrangements and saxophone from Mikal Cronin.) Just before Memory but also released in 2017 came their first album as Oh Sees, their supposed new moniker for the near future, Orc, which is more consistent with the pummeling sound they’ve been known for over the past 10 or so years. (It notably features co-production from Cronin buddy Ty Segall). Live, though, they could play literally anything from their 20+ album discography, even new songs, considering the rate at which they put out music. Of their recent records, I’m a fan of 2016′s A Weird Exits as well as 2009′s Help, 2011′s Carrion Crawler/The Dream, 2013′s Floating Coffin, and 2015′s Mutilator Defeated At Last. And for a nice document of what they sound like live, check out their stellar Live in San Francisco album from a couple years back. Like King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, they’re simply nonstop in their distorted riffing, chaotic drumming, and yelping.
Co-headlining Music Frozen Dancing are Detroit electropunks ADULT. Rounding out the lineup are Brooklyn rockers B Boys, DJ Taye of local footwork behemoth Teklife, and local hardcore band C.H.E.W.
The band is also playing a Music Frozen Dancing after party, a ticketed (and already sold out, of course) club show at the Bottle itself. Opening the show are local noise rockers Rash and garage punks Skip Church.
2/18 & 2/19: BROCKHAMPTON, House of Blues
They call themselves the world’s first Internet boy band, but that’s misleading in more ways than one. BROCKHAMPTON aren’t the first boy band to benefit from the viral tendencies of the web, for one. More importantly, they’re not what you think of when you think boy band. A giant hip-hop, pop, and R & B collective, the band is more freewheeling and prolific than heavily and carefully curated, releasing three albums in 2017, culminating in SATURATION III, the most realized of the three that found a way to be experimental, catchy, and cohesive. Their fourth studio album, Team Effort, is set to be released this year, but you can expect them to perform SATURATION songs almost entirely. 
2/20: Robert Plant & The Sensational Space Shifters, Riviera
At this point, pretty much anybody who vaguely pays attention to guitar music knows about Robert Plant’s full-fledged transition from classic rocker to old folk fogey--Raising Sand, his collaboration with bluegrass singer Alison Krauss, won them Album of the Year at the 2009 Grammy Awards. But lesser known and just as solid are Plant’s two albums with his new-ish band The Sensational Space Shifters, 2014′s Lullaby and... The Ceaseless Roar and last year’s Carry Fire, which allowed Plant to bend beyond the traditions of rock, bluegrass, or folk, incorporating elements of Arabic and North African influence into his arsenal. Luckily, however, for Zeppelin fans, Plant tends to mix beloved rock radio classics in with his newer material, overall making for a set that exudes old school songwriting, familiarity, and warmth whether you’ve heard the new songs or not.
Sensational Space Shifters band member and English folk singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Seth Lakeman opens with a solo set.
2/21: Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn, SPACE
Béla Fleck and Abigail Washburn are both prominent musicians in their own name, two of the most proficient banjo players ever, Washburn’s clawhammer composition skills unrivaled, just like Fleck’s technical prowess. Together, the two are more than just husband and wife--they’re natural musical collaborators, having released two albums and an EP of both traditional and original material. They’ll be playing two shows Wednesday at SPACE, but if you miss that, you can catch them at two more shows next Saturday at Old Town School of Folk Music.
2/21: Adam Torres, Empty Bottle
Singer-songwriter and former Southeast Engine member Adam Torres finally released Pearls To Swine two years ago, 10 years after self-releasing cult classic Nostra Nova. He’s a folk singer with an otherworldly voice, his ability to reach high notes and wail with yearning rivaling Jeff Buckley, and his band--consisting of violinist Aisha Burns, bassist/pianist/Molly Burch collaborator Dailey Tolliver, and Swans percussionist Thor Harris. Thankfully, it didn’t take Torres long to reach the follow-up to Pearls; granted, it was a 4-song EP recorded at the same time, entitled I Came To Sing The Song. But it felt different, its songs notably more insular than the expansive, epic Pearls. I can only imagine a Torres live set achieves both ends admirably.
Indie pop band Wild Pink co-headline. Rock band Minor Characters opens.
2/22: Architects, House of Blues
I don’t think I’ve ever heard of a tour named after a non-album single, but Brighton metalcore band Architects are doing it anyway. Their “Doomsday” tour, named after, yes, a non-album single that followed their 2016 album All Our Gods Have Abandoned Us, the heaviest, darkest, and perhaps best album the band has ever released. They know it, too; in recent live sets, the band has heavily favored that record, even in favor of recent beloved releases like Lost Forever // Lost Together and Daybreaker.
Hardcore punks Stick To Your Guns and Counterparts open.
2/22: Shame, Schubas
Songs of Praise is the debut album from London post-punks Shame that came out just a month ago and is already seeming like it’s going to be one of the best debuts of the year. The band tackles serious subjects with dark humor over pummeling guitars and drums and, when they feel like it, melodies that could rival peak Britpop.
Pittsburgh post-punk revivalists The Gotobeds open.
2/22: Four Year Strong, Concord Music Hall
Worcester pop punk band Four Year Strong just released Some of You Will Like This, Some of You Won't, a collection of unplugged rarities. For hardcore fans, it was perhaps welcome. But for casual fans and in comparison to their Go Down in History EP and especially raw 2015 self-titled record, the latter of which was produced by Converge’s Kurt Ballou, it came across as too soft and tender for a band who proved to be so good at eliciting sore neck headbanging. Lucky for us, live, the band who has been playing 2007 album Rise or Die Trying in full every night should bring the same level of energy they had 10 years younger to a co-headlining set at Concord Music Hall.
Gainesville ska punks Less Than Jake co-headline. Pop punk bands Direct Hit! and Bearings open. 
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