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  • "Everything just is.
    Accept what comes your way.
    Appreciate what you've got.
    Asking & Expecting no more."

    "Attachment is forbidden.
    Possession is forbidden.
    Compassion, which I would define as unconditional love, is essential to a Jedi's life.
    So you might say that we are encouraged to love."

    "It's OK if you don't have all the answers, sometimes you just have to take the chance."

    "If the stars conspire, anything is possible...

My blog

  • Song Dedication to my homies at AnD...

    Thursday, Nov 6, 2008 3:31PM / Standard Entry

    I was just listening to Fierce's blog when she posted 2 New Edition songs in it... there's a New Edition song that I was sooo hooked on back when I was in school... I was probably around 11 or 12 years old when it came out, and I used to listen to it over and over again, I just loved it sooo much!

    This song is called "Cool It Now"... and I'm gonna dedicate it to my homies here at AnD, otherwise known as "Onimal's Pussycat Dolls"... cool it now, ladies!

    Here's New Edition performing on "Solid Gold", their hit song "Cool It Now"... if you remember watching "Solid Gold" on TV like I did... then that's your age showing... LOL! :-D

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfMBZ_sWB1E

     

    OK, while I was looking for clips of "Cool It Now" on YouTube, I also came across this other hot clip of the boys performing this song... check it out! It's Bill Cosby, folks! Anyone remember "The Cosby Show"?? Now, that would be your age showing too... LOL! :-D

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7oAf605HvM

     

    Enjoy, ladies! :-)


  • My Tribute To Michael Crichton (Part 2)

    Thursday, Nov 6, 2008 1:50PM / Standard Entry

    This is the article that I had written back in 1993,

    based on issues raised in Michael Crichton's book,

    "Jurassic Park". He inspired me and stimulated my 18-year-old

    mind to think hard about what was going on in the world...

     

     

    JURASSIC PARK

     

    “God creates dinosaurs

    God destroys dinosaurs

    God creates man

                                                     Man destroys God

    Man creates dinosaurs

    Dinosaurs eat man

    Women inherit the Earth”

     

    Witty, sexist, but there is more truth in that quote than meets the eye. Science today is making such rapid progress that the common person can hardly keep up with it. And this is what makes science, particularly biotechnology, so potent and dangerous.

     

    Firstly, science is knowledge that has been inherited by today’s scientists, passed down from yesterday’s scientists. There was honour in the research done by scientists then as they worked meticulously to get what we now know. And in the time they took to get that information, they also matured enough to know that they should not use the information frivolously. Whereas now, there is this furious haste to commercialize science – people who want to make a “quick buck” before there are any laws to check their activities.

     

    Biotechnology now is broad-based, it can be applied to almost all aspects of our lives. However, there is also a great deal of thoughtless and whimsical research going on in that field and it goes unchecked. There is so little “outside” commentary on this research and the dimensions and implications of this research are hardly understood at all. People are so excited about what they can do that they have not stopped to think if they should do it.

     

    In Jurassic Park, man tries to control nature, he tries to create a separate and isolated environment, but he does not realize that such isolation is impossible. The environment in which we live is a dynamic and integrated system, whereby no one element survives on its own. Man has to realize that mechanic systems and living systems are not the same. Mechanic systems are predictable, living systems are not. Living systems are in a constant state of change. Man has much to learn about life and it’s sanctity, much more than he already knows.

     

    “You can make a boat, but you can’t make the ocean.

    You can make an airplane, but you can’t make the air.

    Your powers are much less than your dreams of reason

    would have you believe.”

     

    Think about it.

     

     

     

    Written by Jeanette Chin

     

    Published In:

    "Voices", Holy Family Church’s Young Crusaders League Newsletter, September 1993.


  • My Tribute To Michael Crichton (Part 1)

    Thursday, Nov 6, 2008 1:13PM / Standard Entry

    We were just talking about doctors, and one of my most favourite author-doctors has just lost his fight with cancer... I love this man for his imaginative, exciting and fast-paced novels that made us think about what should or should not come to be, and what may well be possible... I always felt like I had learned something after reading one of his books.

    "Jurassic Park" was one of my favourites, but there were many others that I enjoyed as well... I have even written an article for my church's youth newsletter, based on issues that he had brought up in "Jurassic Park"... I will treasure all my Michael Crichton books... the saddest thing is that there will no longer be any new ones (apart from what is mentioned in the article below) to make us think twice about what we as human beings are doing with ourselves.

    'Jurassic Park' author Michael Crichton dies at 66

    • By HILLEL ITALIE, AP National Writer Hillel Italie, Ap National Writer Wed Nov 5, 6:03 pm ET
    In this Dec. 7, 2004 file photo, author Michael Crichton poses at The Peninsula AP – In this Dec. 7, 2004 file photo, author Michael Crichton poses at The Peninsula Hotel in New York. Crichton …

    Michael Crichton, the million-selling author who made scientific research terrifying and irresistible in such thrillers as "Jurassic Park," "Timeline" and "The Andromeda Strain," has died of cancer, his family said. Crichton died Tuesday in Los Angeles at age 66 after privately battling cancer.

    "Through his books, Michael Crichton served as an inspiration to students of all ages, challenged scientists in many fields, and illuminated the mysteries of the world in a way we could all understand," his family said in a statement.

    "While the world knew him as a great storyteller that challenged our preconceived notions about the world around us — and entertained us all while doing so — his wife Sherri, daughter Taylor, family and friends knew Michael Crichton as a devoted husband, loving father and generous friend who inspired each of us to strive to see the wonders of our world through new eyes."

    He was an experimenter and popularizer known for his stories of disaster and systematic breakdown, such as the rampant microbe of "The Andromeda Strain" or the dinosaurs running madly in "Jurassic Park." Many of his books became major Hollywood movies, including "Jurassic Park," "Rising Sun" and "Disclosure." Crichton himself directed and wrote "The Great Train Robbery" and he co-wrote the script for the blockbuster "Twister."

    In 1994, he created the award-winning TV hospital series "ER." He's even had a dinosaur named for him, Crichton's ankylosaur.

    "Michael's talent out-scaled even his own dinosaurs of `Jurassic Park,'" said "Jurassic Park" director Steven Spielberg, a friend of Crichton's for 40 years. "He was the greatest at blending science with big theatrical concepts, which is what gave credibility to dinosaurs again walking the Earth. ... Michael was a gentle soul who reserved his flamboyant side for his novels. There is no one in the wings that will ever take his place."

    John Wells, executive producer of "ER" called the author "an extraordinary man. Brilliant, funny, erudite, gracious, exceptionally inquisitive and always thoughtful.

    "No lunch with Michael lasted less than three hours and no subject was too prosaic or obscure to attract his interest. Sexual politics, medical and scientific ethics, anthropology, archaeology, economics, astronomy, astrology, quantum physics, and molecular biology were all regular topics of conversation."

    Neal Baer, a physician who became an executive producer on "ER," was a fourth-year medical student at Harvard University when Wells, a longtime friend, sent him Crichton's script.

    "I said, `Wow, this is like my life.' Michael had been a medical student at Harvard in the early '70s and I was going through the same thing about 20 years later," said Baer. "ER" offered a fresh take on the TV medical drama, making doctors the central focus rather than patients. In the early life of "ER," Crichton, who hadn't been involved in medicine for years, and Spielberg would take part in writers' room discussions.

    In recent years, Crichton was the rare novelist granted a White House meeting with President Bush, perhaps because of his skepticism about global warming, which Crichton addressed in the 2004 novel, "State of Fear." Crichton's views were strongly condemned by environmentalists, who alleged that the author was hurting efforts to pass legislation to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide.

    If not a literary giant, he was a physical one, standing 6 feet and 9 inches, and ready for battle with the press. In a 2004 interview with The Associated Press, Crichton came with a tape recorder, text books and a pile of graphs and charts as he defended "State of Fear" and his take on global warming.

    "I have a lot of trouble with things that don't seem true to me," Crichton said at the time, his large, manicured hands gesturing to his graphs. "I'm very uncomfortable just accepting. There's something in me that wants to pound the table and say, 'That's not true.'"

    He spoke to few scientists about his questions, convinced that he could interpret the data himself. "If we put everything in the hands of experts and if we say that as intelligent outsiders, we are not qualified to look over the shoulder of anybody, then we're in some kind of really weird world," he said.

    A new novel by Crichton had been tentatively scheduled to come next month, but publisher HarperCollins said the book was postponed indefinitely because of his illness.

    One of four siblings, Crichton was born in Chicago and grew up in Roslyn, Long Island. His father was a journalist and young Michael spent much of his childhood writing extra papers for teachers. In third grade, he wrote a nine-page play that his father typed for him using carbon paper so the other kids would know their parts. He was tall, gangly and awkward, and used writing as a way to escape; Mark Twain and Alfred Hitchcock were his role models.

    Figuring he would not be able to make a living as writer, and not good enough at basketball, he decided to become a doctor. He studied anthropology at Harvard College, and later graduated from Harvard Medical School. During medical school, he turned out books under pseudonyms. (One that the tall author used was Jeffrey Hudson, a 17th-century dwarf in the court of King Charles II of England.) He had modest success with his writing and decided to pursue it.

    His first hit, "The Andromeda Strain," was written while he was still in medical school and quickly caught on upon its 1969 release. It was a featured selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club and was sold to Universal in Hollywood for $250,000.

    "A few of the teachers feel I'm wasting my time, and that in some ways I have wasted theirs," he told The New York Times in 1969. "When I asked for a couple of days off to go to California about a movie sale, that raised an eyebrow."

    His books seemed designed to provoke debate, whether the theories of quantum physics in "Timeline," the reverse sexual discrimination of "Disclosure" or the spectre of Japanese eminence in "Rising Sun."

    "The initial response from the (Japanese) establishment was, 'You're a racist,'" he told the AP. "So then, because I'm always trying to deal with data, I went on a tour talking about it and gave a very careful argument, and their response came back, 'Well you say that but we know you're a racist.'"

    Crichton had a rigid work schedule: rising before dawn and writing from about 6 a.m. to around 3 p.m., breaking only for lunch. He enjoyed being one of the few novelists recognized in public, but he also felt limited by fame.

    "Of course, the celebrity is nice. But when I go do research, it's much more difficult now. The kind of freedom I had 10 years ago is gone," he told the AP. "You have to have good table manners; you can't have spaghetti hanging out of your mouth at a restaurant."

    Crichton was married five times and had one child. A private funeral is planned.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Colleen Long in New York contributed to this story.


  • Top Asian Musical Talents: Wang Lee Hom (Part 2)

    Monday, Nov 3, 2008 5:31AM / Standard Entry / Top Asian Musical Talents

    Some time ago, I wrote a blog entry about one of Asia's top musical talents, Wang Lee Hom... http://www.alivenotdead.com/jedijean/Top+Asian+Musical+Talents%3A+Wang+Lee+Hom-profile-192064.html

    In that entry, I promised myself that I would go watch Lee Hom in concert, the next time he came to Singapore, because till now I had been missing his concerts each and every time he came to Singapore.

    On 01 Nov 2008, I fulfilled that promise to myself and watched my first ever Lee Hom concert at the Singapore Indoor Stadium. The concert was part of Lee Hom's Music-Man Tour, and apparently, Singapore was the 3rd stop in this tour.

    I had some pretty good tickets, sitting on the right side of the stage (that would be the left side of the stage, if you were standing on the stage and facing the audience). My seat was the first seat in the 4th row on the slope, but that seat was closer to the stage than even the first row on the ground, and I was so close that I could actually sneak peeks under the stage and watch people moving around underneath it... fascinating. I don't have any pictures of this concert though, 'cos I didn't bring my digicam with me.

    What can I say about the show... I enjoyed the music, because they had some really wonderful musicians playing onstage... Kheng Long, Jamie Wilson, Jingles, and Eric Fawcett (drummer of N.E.R.D. and Pharrell Williams)... and some wonderful background vocalists too, like Kaira, Yingying, Lisa, and AnD Artist, Tay Kewei, who was singing onstage that night with Lee Hom. Of course, her journey with him on the concert tour started long before the concert came to Singapore. You can check out her blog here at AnD to read more about her experience working on the show in Taipei. She has some great pictures there too! :-)

    So what are my feelings about the show and seeing Lee Hom in the flesh for the first time... boy, I'm glad I got such good tickets! Whenever Lee Hom came over to our side of the stage, I was able to lean over the railing and get real close to all the action, so to speak... he was less than 10 feet away.

    I loved the way he rocked the stage with his brand new guitar... I loved it even more when he sat down at his piano and started singing all those lovely ballads... but I think what really moved me the most is when he played the violin onstage and sang the song that was inspired by the movie "Lust Caution"... it was a performance that almost moved me to tears... the sound of the violin is like a human voice, and in the hands of the right player, it's a sound that can penetrate right thru' your very being, right down into the core of your soul, and that's what I felt that night when Lee Hom stood onstage playing his violin and singing that song... it was breathtaking and it was hauntingly beautiful.

    I don't remember the exact order of the songs he performed that night, nor do I remember every single song that was sung that night, but I do recall hearing these songs...
    **W-H-Y
    **Forever Love
    **Kiss Goodbye
    **Di Yi Ge Qing Chen
    **Gai Shi Ying Xiong
    **Ni Bu Zai
    **Xin Zhong De Re Yue
    **Ai Cuo
    **Yi Shou Jian Dan De Ge
    **Zhu Lin Shen Chu
    **Liu Lei Shou Xin
    **Da Cheng Xiao Ai
    **Nu Peng You
    **Long De Chuan Ren

    I'm sure there are a few songs that I might have missed out... if anyone else here knows what they are, pls do remind me.

    During "Forever Love", he came down from the stage to shake hands with the crowd... and without giving too much away, let's just say that the show was literally "magical"... and if you think you saw or heard more than one Lee Hom onstage at one point in the show, then hmmm... maybe you did!

    There's one other magic trick that Lee Hom pulls off during the show, but I won't say what it is... it's a good one though! But if you wanna know what it is, then you're just going to have to buy tickets to go see his concert to find out... but I can promise you one thing, this trick is a GOOD one!! **winks**

    One more little tip for all you Lee Hom fans out there... if you make it to the merchandise stands, buy the t-shirt with the white background, 'cos that's the one Lee Hom will be wearing onstage... of course, if you don't fancy looking like Lee Hom, then just get the one I got... it's all black in colour.

    One very big Asian celebrity was in the audience that night... Stefanie Sun! I'm not sure if it was real or not, or if it was just a part of the show, but it seemed pretty real to me!

    Among the folks who sponsored the show in Singapore were Hype Records, Sony Ericsson, StarHub, Bausch & Lomb, and Marina Mandarin Hotel. Once again, I don't recall every single sponsor's name, as I'm not a member of the press, so there isn't exactly any press kit readily available to me when I'm writing about this concert... no song list and no sponsors list either... so whatever I'm mentioning here in my blog is whatever I can recall very quickly from the back of my mind.

    All in all, a good show... Lee Hom plays guitar, piano, violin, and maybe drums during the show (although I can't be sure if it was really him or just an illusion - guess you could say that their magic consultant guy did a good job).

    It was pretty incredible being able to sing melody, while Lee Hom sings harmony for "Yi Shou Jian Dan De Ge" in a "live" setting... now I can say that I have sung with Lee Hom before... haha! Just kidding. I merely got a small taste of what it might sound like... but with everyone else in the crowd singing along, and at the top of their lungs too, it's a little hard to hear what your own voice might sound like with his... but OMG, if that really came true, I'd have to pinch myself over and over again, just to be sure that I was awake and not just dreaming.

    Hmmm... some questions I'd like to just voice out here... please feel free to tell me your answers.

    Question 1: If you could do a duet with Lee Hom, what song would you pick, and why?

    My answer: Interesting question, but a pretty tough one for me to answer... I'd probably have to choose between "Gong Zuan Zhi Zuan/Revolution", "Forever Love" and "Kiss Goodbye". Why? Because they are my most favourite Lee Hom ballads, they are beautifully composed songs with moving lyrics and a great melody... and I personally believe that a composer's heart may sometimes be found in their works... oh yeah, and did I mention, I'm a sucker for a good love song?!?? LOL! :-p

    Question 2: If you could see Lee Hom play a musical instrument (and maybe jam along with him), what instrument would you pick, and why?

    My answer: If I had to watch him play an instrument without jamming with him, I'd pick the violin, because he plays it beautifully and I'm pretty sure he could move me to tears just by playing the violin. But if I had to jam with him, then I'd pick the piano, because I think he plays real pretty on the piano, and I'd love to play along with him on an instrument that I'm more familiar with. So maybe we could both jam on the piano, like he did with JJ Lin in one of his previous concert tours... except that we'd be playing on the same piano. I know at one point, Lee Hom said that he hated playing the piano and much preferred the violin, but jazz piano soon became one of his most favourite subjects in school. I'd like to get jazzy with Lee Hom on the piano. It might be fun! :-)

    Oh yeah, one more thing you might wanna look out for if you're attending any of the Music-Man concerts... pyrotechnics are used for the show, so do stay safe and keep a respectful distance from the stage.

    OK, that's all the energy I have left for blogging today... catch up with you again another time for more on Lee Hom.


  • Isn't His Music Lovely?? (And Isn't She Lovely Too?)

    Wednesday, Oct 29, 2008 8:24PM / Standard Entry

    Hi everyone! I've missed this place sooo much! :-)

    So here I am, just got back to Singapore from being in Taipei and Chungli the past few days, and I've fallen in love with someone's music...

    I first heard about this artist here at Alive Not Dead, but I wasn't sure who he was or what he had sung before, and call me slow and all, but I was in a music store called "Rose" which was located just across the street from my hotel in Chungli, and I finally saw a few of his CDs there... but as is my usual pattern of buying behaviour, I didn't get any of his CDs... though I did recall the thought going thru' my mind that if I didn't buy them now, I might regret it later... instead, loyal as ever, I decided to pick up a "San Jiao Cool" CD and placed this artist's CD back on the shelf (OK, I hear giggles of pleasure coming from the Machi folks now).

    But yeah, just as I expected, I visited YouTube a few moments ago to check out some of his songs, and I was pretty much blown away by it all... and then I realised that I had missed his coming to Singapore as well... so as it always seems to be with me and all those good artists whose amazing works I admire... once again, I've fallen for this artist's works at a later time than all those "early bird" admirers.

    So who on earth am I just going on and on about here??

    Just watch this music video, and let him blow you away with his "Love Song", his music and his voice...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYXks2xFzpA

    I had first heard Khalil Fong's "Love Song" being sung by another AnD artist, Tay Kewei. She had also sung "Su Li Zhen" before, which is another incredible song by Khalil Fong.

    A little bit about Kewei and how I got to know about her... I was attending a David Tao concert, my second one to date, and Kewei was in his show as one of his background vocalists. She played the erhu that night, and even dueted with him onstage in place of Jolin Tsai who had previously dueted with David Tao on the same track entitled, "Marry Me Today".

    Other than being the background vocalist for David Tao, Kewei has also sung background vocals for A-Mei, JJ Lin and Wang Lee Hom. She has performed as an artist in her own right back home in Singapore at various clubs. She sings, plays guitar and keyboards. Kewei has performed at various corporate events and public events, and in venues like the Esplanade. She was recently the guest artist, singing with the Singapore Philharmonic Winds.

    Kewei would like to cut her own album some day, and instead of just waiting for record labels to come looking for her, she has decided to take the reins herself and she has gone ahead to start recording her album on her own.

    Well, without saying too much more, Kewei has very kindly allowed me to share her video clips with you here in my AnD blog, so here are her versions of Khalil Fong's songs, the way I first heard them being sung... I thought her voice was incredibly sweet in these songs... this is Kewei singing Khalil's "Love Song", together with her friend, Ein who plays the keyboards here...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wX9A73DX6qs

    As I mentioned earlier, Kewei also sang "Su Li Zhen",,, and that's how I first got to know about this song... of course, at the time I heard it, I didn't know who the original artist was, only that Kewei had sung this song... once again, here's Kewei with Ein on the keyboards...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqYEFMNmAqE

    In case you're wondering, Kewei really did get to sing with Khalil for real... I love this sweet duet that they had recorded on an impromptu basis while on a radio show... check this out, Khalil and Kewei singing "Su Li Zhen" together... lovely stuff! :-)

    http://taykewei.blogspot.com/2008/04/khalil-and-kewei-duet.html

    Khalil Fong is otherwise known as Fang Da Tong, and apparently, he already has 3 CD albums out, but I've only just really gotten into him now.

    Let me share a few more of my favourite Khalil songs with you... this song is called "Ai Ai Ai" (English Translation: "Love Love Love"), and this is one of his award-winning songs...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bO9qWDPeU8o

    I have to admit I don't know much about Khalil Fong, so don't ask me about his background, profile or biodata, all I know is that his music is just heavenly, so I'm just gonna let his music do all the talking... here's more to feast your ears on... "Su Li Zhen" by Khalil Fong... hear it the way he had originally sung it...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VaKnOaZjP0g

    Another of my favourites, "Gou Bu Gou" (English translation: "Enough or Not Enough") by Khalil Fong...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZLoOJSc3rc

    And as if that isn't enough, check out this clip of Khalil Fong singing Stevie Wonder's "Isn't She Lovely?"... I think this is one of the most decent performances of the song that I have ever heard...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ku6kD5gEIx4

    So what do you think of Khalil Fong? And what do you think of Tay Kewei?

    Quite the talented dude, eh? And quite the talented lass, huh? :-)


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