Saturday, January 17, 2009

Settling In


SO. Long time no post. It's been just over a week since I've arrived in Hong Kong, and as many have seen from pictures I've posted elsewhere, I've left my room a little since I've been here. The university itself is a little out of sorts in its preparation for exchange students, which was probably not helped by my late arrival Friday night.

The flight itself was without incident, amusingly enough we ended the flight with a cup o' noodles. I caught up on Flight of the Conchords, which has been a gift and a curse, the latter more specifically when I've met New Zealanders here (hard to find a common ground on their country that doesnt involve hobbits or singing comedians, shows you how "worldly" I really am). After collecting my luggage, I met with my exchange buddy Oscar, who took me into town and to my residence. The hall itself is the farthest from campus, at least a 15 minute busride away, but has turned out quite nicely in the end. Built in the 1860s, the Victorian style mansion has been used as a British Lord's castle, a French Mission, a military base for the invading Japanese and finally a university residence. As I've indicated to a few of you, it has very much a "Harry Potter"-like feel, with high ceilings and various dated traditions, including a "High Table Dinner", a monthly occurrence that sees all hall residents decked out in robes and take part in a ceremonial meal. Having arrived late Friday, I missed the first one of the year, but my fellow exchangers (all 6 of them) declared it an...."interesting" experience.

The students residing in the hall are a mixed bag, exchange students aside. The majority are of course Hong Kong locals, many of whom stay up late doing god knows what, running and wrestling in the halls and keeping everybody up. School might not be the priority for some of them, or they just relish an escape from their families. There are other full-time students that come from other China-associated regions, some from the mainland, Taiwan and Macau. My closest association with permanent residents has been with a Macau national named Terrance (sp) and a Shanghainese named Ben. Both are roommates, Terrance is tall and quiet who helped me out with an initially troublesome room situation (they didn't have one for me when I arrived, I slept on a couch my first night, no biggy), and Ben is a more talkative, shorter character that chides Terrance often ("He's from Macau so his dad owns a Casino, that's why I'm his best friend" etc) and aspires to move to the West (he's taking his TOEFL exams this weekend).

Who are my roommates? Yes, I have 2, which is the case for most residences here. Luckily, my hall has some of HKU's largest rooms, which is a small relief. One roommate (Ash) is from Canada, goes to Schulich at York and has a job lined up at TD Securities. The other (Julian) is from Southern England, and is a bit of an unintentional character. He's an outspoken conservative and is quite proud of his proper "Oxford" accent, and aspires to work in estate management (essentially handling the wealth, possessions and property of Britain's upper class). He's always good for a new Britishism a day, for instance "queues" instead of lines, "rucksack" instead of backpack and "dappy" instead of...I didn't totally figure out what that one meant, but the intentions were the same as one would have to describe a dumb blonde.

The weather has been fantastic: Consistently 16-20 degrees during the day, usually without a cloud in the sky. However, clouds aren't necessary here to obstruct one's vision: smog is as bad as many of you might think. By about 3pm, good luck if you can see across the water to Kowloon. Some of the exchange students have tried running outside and have found that their lung capacity was hampered by the smog. The food? Great, and cheap. My first meal was dumplings. I'm forced to buy into a meal plan at residence, but it's generally barely edible and many of us go to a mall ten minutes away for cheap restaurants. It is a rarity that I've spent more than $10 on a square meal here. So far I've stuck mostly to local cuisine, with the exception of one night in which I had sushi and another where I ate Bubba Gump Shrimp at the top of what is one of Hong Kong's highest points (The Peak).

I'm going to take a breath there and leave you with the requisite music selection. I made a mix before I left Toronto on December 31st, thus it's name. It definitely has its moments, but it was definitely made on the fly and could've been better. In any case, enjoy!

Dr. Dreidel - The New Year's Randommix
http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=f81df8c

Friday, January 9, 2009

Van City



The New Home of Mats Sundin is a beautiful place. Instead of being used to snow as most Torontonians are with our fleet of snow plows, Vancouver is instead used to a constant torrent of rain, which i enjoyed during my brief 30 hours there. However, when it snows, as it did during the Canada-wide snow storm mid-December, they are incapable of dealing with the result. Many of the side-streets were still backlogged and full of snow.

As my flight to HK is beginning to board, i'll be brief.

Beautiful downtown, Gastown is a sick area for people my/our age (for those who are Torontonians, it's like moving the Distillery district into downtown, expanding it, and putting in more cool shops and restaurants). Hastings, only one block from the Gastown neighbourhood, is everything it's cracked (pun intended) up to be, and Stanley Park, which is an unbelievably short walk from downtown, is a beautiful place, with old growth forests keeping the city well-oxygenated. Lots of Japanese restaurants, and not of the western-type sushi-focused variety. There's an abundance of Izakaya-type restos. Ate at one for lunch (Ezogiku), and ate well. I'd like to go back in the summer.

Quick track to enjoy, for anybody who's going anywhere. Some Hip Hop to keep you bouncin.
Izza Kizza - Back to Miami
http://www.limelinx.com/files/03df05817f1ad8a5db1849284de34998

Next post will be from the other side of the world, likely in 2 days.

PEACE

Ps, somebody has a sense of humour:
For those who aren't uber-esoteric, "chill, winston" was a pretty amusing line from Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Bags Packed, Ready to Go (Almost)



As the title says, my bags are almost packed and I'm ready to go. Still have to write a two-page paper on why I want to be an accountant for my obligatory summer courses: fun stuff.

At moments of anxiety or change, I tend to listen to low-key, breakbeatish music. In recent years, this has shifted to DFA-style tracks. The group that finds itself most on repeat is Holy Ghost! Based out of the BK, these guys make some great edits and remixes to tracks, most notably that of Moby's "I Like to Move in Here" earlier this year. They often collab with fellow DFAers The Juan MacLean and LCD Soundsystem to produce Nu-Disco orgasms. Recently, they dubbed out the Curses! (Drop The Lime) track "The Deep End", which also features LCD Soundsystem collaber Nancy Whang and The Juan MacLean on vocals. My interest in this song was probably helped on by a recent trip to NYC and New Year's at Sneaky Dees (few better tracks to ring in a new year than Happy House). Unfortunately, its 128 kbs but its hard to notice ;-)

Curses! - The Deep End (Holy Ghost! Day School Dub)
http://www.zshare.net/audio/524489396f9b0eb1/

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Laziness and Apathy


So apparently it hasn't set in that I'm leaving in 3 days, packing's barely begun and I've wasted away, partially due to a post-new years-celebratory cold and also by sitting on my ass and watching an unnamed, slightly emasculating television show (Serena's mad hot though).

I recently had a nice gustatory experience at one of Canada's purported top Sushi restaurants, Sushi Kaji. Shared omakase with the missus and enjoyed the subtle taste creations of Kaji-San and his staff. Unfortunately, I mistook a layer of salt under a sea crab shell for the mountain potato that was described in the menu and enjoyed a nice 10 minute sodium shocker to the system. Meal was great, sushi was alright (New York fish > Toronto fish IMO), and I would visit again when I start generating some legit cash flow.

First Track I'm Posting (Tudor=music right? It was unavoidable):
Dirty Impact - All I Really Want (Barnes & Heatcliff Club Mix)
http://www14.zippyshare.com/v/92930194/file.html

This track was found thanks to the beauty of online music boards (Laidback Luke's website forum in this case) and a small purchase on Beatport. I had heard this track on a Laidback Luke mix back in October and had wanted to use it in a set, yet nobody had ID'ed it, even in the forums. I joined, posted a question asking if ANYBODY had since ID'ed the track, and somebody replied with the track information a few days later. While this won't incentivize me to live on the forumosphere like some shaggy characters I know (ahem....Truckle), it's made me realize that there are some friendly and helpful people out there online, and not just a lot of flamers and racist rednecks. The track itself is a great four to the floor electro-house track with a pulsating beat that just drives itself forward. Great mid-set track in an electro/progressive house mix, as it keeps the vibe going without being a banger itself.

Next post will hopefully be in Van City, where I have an inexplicable 36-hour layover. Anybody with suggestions of places to go in Downtown Vancouver for somebody with only a day to sightsee, please let me know. Left Side WUTT