July 2009

Noche Flamenca 2009 Tour

Posted on July 19, 2009 at 1:11 am in

Home from watching Noche Flamenca. Ms Rosita was kind enough to have an earlier class today so I could run home to get ready, but I was still rushing.

We’d met a couple of the dancers earlier in the week. Madam Principal had organized two evenings of workshops. I signed up for Level 1, which felt more like Level 100, at the rate Juan Fernandez was going. He was a fabulous teacher, but he went at the pace of what flamenco dance schools in Spain apparently go. Which is the speed of light.

Unfortunately I couldn’t stay to watch the other two levels on the first evening, having to run off to tango lessons. Which sucked, I would have loved to have seen what Soledad Barrio taught the higher levels. Her performance made up for missing the first evening. I did manage to catch the second evening, but the teacher this time was El Torombo. The only way I could describe him at the class is: nuts.

Seriously. He played a snippet of flamenco music, mostly cante (singing) and then he stops, and his 5-minute ramble went something like this to my ear (and brain):

ElTorombo: Spanish spanish spanish spanish Bob Marley spanish spanish spanish Michael Jackson.
MyBrain: What. The. Fuck.

Cue him playing an MJ tune. I had to hide my face at that moment, though I am sure Madame Principal must have thrown me a dirty look at some point because I could not hide my shaking shoulders. Thankfully I did not start howling with laughter. He was a strange fellow, you had to see his antics. I understood what he was trying to explain at some point, but really, did it need to involve metaphors of trains and borrowing a handbag to illustrate god knows what?

Gina and Ryn (my seniors) had warned he was even more flamboyant on stage. At one of the shows, he took off his shirt. I prayed to the gods I would not be witness to this, hoping that the improvisation so embedded in flamenco will keep that from being a repeat performance. His style is a lot less controlled than that of Barrio’s or Fernandez’s. It was a lot more fun, though. That’s not to say that Fernandez wasn’t as good, I loved his farruca, the strength in that piece was pretty amazing. And he’s just a really lovely dancer to watch, with a really friendly smile. Between Juan Fernandez and Joaquin Cortez, I pick Fernandez. Sorry Joaquin, you’re like the Ronaldo of flamenco, therefore, wtf.

So Gina and Ryn figured out the Spanish phrase for “Nice ass!” for when Juan Fernandez next came onstage, much to my horror. Look, he was a lovely teacher, very friendly, etc. but the urge to grab a pair of scissors to snip the mullet off? Unstoppable if I didn’t have any common sense. And then, karma is laughing somewhere and then he does this booty-swaying thing at the finale and my eyes bugged out, followed by an “OY VEY.” However, I would still not tap that. Come on. Ew.

(I was standing in the front row at the workshops. Karma is totally laughing at me.)

Soledad Barrio had my jaw on the floor the whole time. For one thing, none of her performances involved a bata de cola. Yes, it’s very impressive to dance with a skirt that has a long train, but it just gets kind of old if it’s used all the time. Gala Flamenca drove me bonkers when every single female dancer, including the great Belen Maya, danced wearing a bata de cola. Barrio kept her costumes simple, preferring to let the footwork do all the talking. Boy, did it talk. The speed of some of her footwork could put the Bionic Woman to shame.

After the show, Gina and Ryn wanted to find the stage door. I managed to persuade them to come get a drink at the bar first, not wanting to use my Stage Door Locating Skillz of We Will Rock You Origin superpower. Of course I doubt this particular show would attract many screaming groupies. Also, El Torombo scared the bejesus out of me, Barrio was just plain intimidating on account of being an Awesome Flamenco Dancer, and Fernandez, well, I did not have a pair of scissors, but I would have totally checked out his booty at that close a range and it would not have been very discreet.

So the entire week of flamenco overload is over. I’m partly glad, because I’ve had the flu, and now I can sleeeeeeeeep.

Zing-ed

Posted on July 11, 2009 at 11:35 pm in

Flipping through the junk of catalogues in the mail, I found one that featured Jonas Brothers and Miley Cyrus-themed bedsheets. I snorted, then texted Haz.

Me: Do you want Jonas Brothers bedsheets?
Haz: Do you want to be strangled in your sleep?
Me: Miley ones then?
Haz: Do you know why Owen got signed on to your club? This is why.
Me: OH NO YOU DIDN’T.

Dahla my face seeing Owen in training is all kinds of D: D: D: accompanied by screaming because his training shirt had the number 15 on it (”OI! ITU VIDIC PUNYA NOMBOR BAGI BALIK I DON’T CARE IF IT’S TRAINING SESSION ONLY!!”). Jules is not helping the situation by constantly e-mailing me with “Owen 7″. I may actually need to be restrained during the opening season’s game.

That Owen transfer

Posted on July 4, 2009 at 11:11 pm in

UNCLEAN. UNCLEAAAAAAAN. HOMG SO UNCLEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Words cannot describe the magnitude of my horror.

Next time, keep walking

Posted on July 4, 2009 at 9:37 pm in

Honestly, what month is this, Hit On Random People?

Yesterday, I left work rather late – when I finally stepped out of the building the sun had already set. I shoved my earphones in and turned up the volume to The Script, and set off on my walk home. Being in the corporate district of the city, it’s generally quite safe, filled with posh restaurants, bars and harmless yuppies. It’s when I cross the pedestrian bridge into the nightclub district that I tend to be more alert than usual.

Instead, as I made my way down the sidewalk, I walked past a fellow who looked about Papa’s age, dressed in Friday smart-casual attire, holding a leather folder in his hands. He said something as we passed but with Breakeven playing at full blast, I had no idea what he said. I turned back to give him a strange look, wondering if I’d interviewed him before or worked in the same company. I walked a few paces to the side of the street, waiting for the red man to turn green. I turned back and he was still standing there, looking at me. I rolled my eyes, and walked back to him.

Big freaking mistake.

Me: Do I know you?
Him: No, do you want to?
Me: NO!

Thankfully the red man turned green and I quickly crossed the road, wondering what the hell that was all about. I practically ran all the way after that, worried he might have followed me.

Let’s not even go there with getting hit on at tango lessons.

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