we will get there


Posted in daily rumblings by sin2dy on the 26 October, 2008

not motivated to put in my best.

geez, kill myself.

*_*

Posted in daily rumblings by sin2dy on the 26 October, 2008

The above emoticon is my way of showing eyes brimming with tears.

I kiapped my poor thumb between the door and wall this morning.

*_* *_* *_* *_* *_* *_* *_* *_* *_*

>_< : Apart from the above, this emoticon is my way of showing I’m umchio-ing. (secretly happy)

My parents im-me-diate-ly rushed to my side & looked at it.

>_< >_< >_< >_< >_< >_< >_<

ps. weird post. I shall try to salvage by posting….. Wannnnnnng Su qin! *lols. that is my ms prof =p*

This one has a higher priority. Wang Lee Hom =) =)

Besides looking gorgeous, he is dammmmn gifted.

Fun Facts:

- Wang graduated from Sutherland High School with high honors and as class valedictorian

- Wang scored a perfect 1600 on his SAT and chose to attend Williams College, where he graduated with honors, majoring in Music and minoring in Asian Studies

- Although he did not begin learning Mandarin until he was 18, Wang is now fluent in Mandarin in both speaking and writing

- Wang plays over 10 musical instruments. In his albums and live concerts, Wang can be heard playing piano, drums, guitar, bass, violin, vibraphone, erhu, xun, and more

- Best Producer of the Year and Best Male Vocalist of the 10th Golden Melody Awards in 1999. He was just 22, making him the youngest person ever to win the award in either of the two categories

- Wang was chosen as one of the few Chinese torchbearers to run in Greece. Wang was torchbearer number 17 on March 24th, the first day of the torch relay

- His single One World One Dream was chosen as a Olympic Games participation song. The single was written, sung, produced, and scored entirely by himself.

- Chinked-out is a new kind of musical style developed by Wang that involves modern “west” music of R&B, Hip Hop, rap, and Dance, along with “east” music of heavy Chinese instrument influences, more notably the koudi, tuhu, and ijac

coined the term chinked-out. Derived from the historically derogatory racial slur chink, used to put-down Chinese people, chinked-out reclaims the word, turns its negative connotations upside-down, and uses them as material to fuel the new sound of this music. The term describes an effort to create a sound that is international, and at the same time, Chinese. In this album, I decided to implement some of China’s most precious and untapped resources, the musics of its shaoshu minzu [少數民族], or ethnic minorities, concentrating on the regions of Yunnan, Shangri-La, Tibet, Xinjiang, and Mongolia. This is not one of those world music CDs. It’s an R&B/Hip Hop album that creates a new vibe the whole world can identify as being Chinese.

God must be thinking of ‘a perfect man’ when he was making this guy. *swoons*