Saturday, November 7, 2015

808s & Dalloway



sings Tyler Joseph, lead-singer of the alternative/indie-pop due Twenty One Pilots, over trap inspired drums and synth generated undertones on their recently released album Blurryface. Tyler describes the album itself as being a character who "represents all the things that I as an individual, but also everyone around, is insecure about." Themes like these of anxiety, depression, love, and existentialism have always been prevalent in music but recently artist in a wide variety of genres have started to emerge and are stretching the ideas of lyrical subject matter and what it is that males experience in today's culture. Bands such as Pierce the Veil, Dance Gavin Dance, Emarosa, and Sleeping with Sirens that belong to the post-hardcore genre are characterized by their "angsty" sound and fast-paced, brash, yet experimental music. These groups are characteristically composed of all males or have male lead-singers and also deal with the aforementioned themes, breaking barriers and using their music as a vehicle to let off steam and express their struggles.  Males are generally thought of as composed and "put together" human beings who deal with more materialistic burdens but can endure because of who they are. But these artist are challenging the societal notions that have been placed upon males today and showing that we deal with just as many problems as women do. Due to this men are not traditionally thought of as "broken" but these artist are challenging that ideal and showing fans that men mentally and emotionally become broken too. This is also much like the character of Richard Brown in The Hours who in his own way sort of represents a fragmented version of the three main male characters in Mrs.Dalloway. The three characters of Richard Dalloway, Peter Walsh and Septimus Warren, I think, represent the perceptions and problems that males face in today's society. Artist such as Frank Ocean on his critically acclaimed album Channel Orange deal with themes of unrequited love, existential longing, sex and sexuality, opening up the minds of it's listeners and portraying a new kind of male, one that is vulnerable and broken ad would give Peter Walsh a run for his money in the game of love. Ocean much like Peter deals with the plight of unrequited love, but in Oceans case from a male, and the heartbreak that has to be endured in the process of having to find yourself when rejection causes you to become lost. Ocean's upcoming album is aptly title Boy's Don't Cry, getting at the social constructs that have been placed on the male gender and what it means to be a strong and enduring male. 
Septimus's so called "insanity" is comparable to the mental stresses portrayed by artist such as the Earl Sweatshirt and the aforementioned Twenty One Pilots, who's lyrics portray a sense of suffocation that forces you to retreat so far inside your own head that you ultimately implode due to being there for so long. This kind of mental instability is becoming more in more present in the music of contemporary artist, taking even more hardcore and lyrically vulgar genres such as hip-hop and creating sub-genres labeled "conscious-rap". Kanye West's own 808s and Heartbreak was a major component in the birth of this genre and acted as an inspiration for new male artist who started to deal with more emotional and introspective subject matter. This experimental body of work was thought of as a departure from Kanye's hip-hop sound and was predicted to flop because it dealt more with subject matter of love, longing and loss, due to Kanye's recent breaking off of an engagement as well as the death of his mother. The electronic and robotic nature of the album makes Kanye seem so nonhuman that it ultimately portrays him at his most humane, as a depressed and broken man searching for the next step in his life and subsequently today the album remains one of the most influential pieces of work in hip-hop and opened up the door for lyrical subject matter that wasn't traditionally looked at as accepted in hip-hop music. 



It is this problem that males face in today's culture that I think is being overlooked and ignored. Males are seen as basic and shallow individuals with no capacity for certain human components such as emotions and empathy and with an ignorance to how we are treated and spoon-fed in today's society,. There is this idea of manhood and endurance that we have to show and I think it creates perceptions by others and ourselves on what we can be and what we can't do that is thought of a characteristically female. We are not allowed to come to terms with our insecurities because we shouldn't have any in the first place but in all reality we have some of the same struggles that women do, not similar ones, but the same one's. We try to get pretty for women too, not muscular or jacked but pretty, we just can't show it because of the damage it does. Just like the male characters in Mrs. Dalloway today's musicians are challenging these notions and putting themselves out there through their music, making people think and opening up the eyes of our culture to the struggle of being a man, or better yet being human. 

Questions:
1. What do you think about the social construct placed on males in today's culture? Do you believe they exists?

2. How do you think musicians can have an effect on changing the views of males today and emotionally what they are capable of? Do you believe people are actually "listening" to their lyrics? Are you yourself?

3.How do you think our own generation views males and what expectations and notions do females have about males in our culture?

4. Do you see insecurities and the themes mentioned in the post as being present in your own male friends or in any male in your life? Do you believe that males have a reason to experience any of those things i.e. longing, loss, existentialism, anxiety etc.? 

Links:

Monday, November 2, 2015

Becky Hammon : Breaking Boundaries


Equality for women in sports has always been an intensely debated topic, but in recent years the conversation has truly heated up as women have begun to make greater advances in the world of sports. Specifically, one woman who has shattered through the glass ceiling preventing women from being “on the same level” as men in athletics is Becky Hammon. As of August 5th 2014, the San Antonio Spurs hired Hammon as the first female full time assistant coach in NBA history. When asked about taking a coaching position from a potential man, Hammon stated “If you have a daughter, or even a woman in your life, it is worth supporting because of the bigger picture, because of the opportunities it will lead to down the road for little girls,” Hammon said. “We’re not asking the male to get up and leave his seat. We’re just saying scoot over a little bit. Make a little room at the table for the ladies” (SI). Not only is Hammon the first female full time coach in NBA history, but is also the first female assistant coach in any of the four major sports (basketball, football, baseball, hockey) in North America. Now, you may be thinking “Why would the Spurs make such a movement and hire this girl?” Well, Hammon isn’t exactly your typical “girls girl”. Coming into the WNBA undrafted meant that Hammon would be facing adversity before she even stepped foot onto the court. Despite no team wanting her in the draft, Hammon managed to sneak her way onto the New York Liberty, where she was able to carve out a little name for herself as a scrappy player. Despite playing reasonably well, the Liberty didn’t want Hammon, and traded her to the San Antonio Stars. On the Stars, Hammon was able to accomplish amazing things such as making multiple All-star and All-WNBA teams, and being one of only seven women ever to score 5,000 points at the professional level. Just as everything was going Hammon’s way, she tragically blew out her knee and knew at that moment that her basketball playing days were finished. Just like any other time in her adult life that Hammon had been faced with adversity, she made the most of her opportunity. Because she couldn’t play or even practice with her WNBA team, Hammon started watching practices of the male affiliate to the Stars, the San Antonio Spurs. After months of patiently watching and learning about men’s basketball, Hammon’s “sitting in:” on practices of the Spurs started turning into Hammon interjecting her thoughts every now and then to the coaching staff and players, which turned into the players and coaches asking Hammon for advice, which turned into the Spurs offering Hammon the full time assistant coaching job. When asked about her aspirations for the future, Hammon stated “I want to be a head coach somewhere”(USAtoday). Hammon’s work with the Spurs has not come without controversy, as specifically on social media there has been many upset with the decision who took it into their hands to tweet negative things at Becky and start rumors about her and the players on the Spurs. @imf_alive goes as far to say “I bet Becky Hammon goin’ be pregnant by Tony Parker by the all-star break, or a few days after the break”, or @holeyfield85 who writes “Spurs making history with the Becky Hammon hire. She needs to be careful of Tony Parker. She’ll be on the team for real”. These are just a few of the hundreds of upsetting posts at Hammon. These posts are saying that just because Hammon is a woman means that she is at risk of being sexually active with Tony Parker. These posts also suggest that because she is a woman, she “belongs” to Parker, and needs to watch out for herself so he cannot take her. Just like Hammon has done every other time adversity has come her way in life, she will find a way to persevere and improve upon the situation. Lastly, Hammon is not just doing this for herself, but is leading the charge for all women in America. After Hammon was hired by the Spurs, women’s basketball legend Nancy Libermen accepted a full time assistant coaching job with the Sacramento Kings, and Jen Welter was named assistant coach of the Arizona Cardinals. Setting the pace for women in sports everywhere, Hammon says “I think anything is possible, just because something’s never been done doesn’t mean it can’t be done. Leadership has no gender” (SI).

Questions:
1.      Do you think that leadership has a gender? Does being a male/female define you as a leader?
2.      Is Becky Hammon just a special case, or are all women capable of doing what Hammon currently is?
3.      If Becky Hammon were a male, do you still believe she would have gotten the job? 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Becky_Hammon
http://www.si.com/nba/2015/08/03/becky-hammon-spurs-liberty-gregg-popovich-nancy-lieberman-kings
http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/2015/07/16/becky-hammon-interview-spurs-summer-league/30270355/
https://www.google.com/search?q=becky+hammon&espv=2&biw=1280&bih=699&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAWoVChMIrq3ugvfxyAIVQVY-Ch3FdQ3g#imgrc=IwXJMk3XS6LtQM%3A
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/11312366/becky-hammon-hired-san-antonio-spurs