Archive for the ‘music’ Category

Earplugs For Artful Living

“What did you say?”

“Could you repeat what you just said?”

“I’m sorry, I didn’t hear that. Could you speak up?”

“Huh?”

When a young person asks these questions a few too many times, I visibly swallow hard before asking a question of my own: when’s the last time you had your hearing checked?

More and more young people are showing up with mild to moderate hearing loss, and the sad fact is this: most of them do not even know they have suffered a loss. While second hand smoke exposure may be the cause of some hearing loss (as found in a research study published in Archives of Otolaryngology — Head and Neck Surgery), the main reason for hearing loss in young people is exposure to loud noises. The culprit: earbuds connected to personal players blasting loud music (above 85 decibles, which is approximately the sound of a vacuum cleaner). While there are other loud sounds that can cause hearing loss, there is a definite connection between extended earbud use at higher decibles and hearing loss. Here’s why I’m buying custom ear plugs for my artful life.

Blocking Out Noise: My Journey Into Headphones

Last year, I purchased a pair of Sony noise-canceling headphones. They were reasonably priced, and they do the trick as an over-the-ear headset to protect my ears from the noise of construction around my office in Pioneer Square, as well as block out most of the world of sound when I’m working on something that needs my full attention. Because of the dangers of hearing loss while using earbuds, I not only abandoned my higher-end earbuds for my iPod/iPhone4, I even switched to a Bluetooth for the phone.

I love my noise-canceling headphones, but there are limits of usefulness.

Problem: as an artist, wearing noise-canceling headphones in loud places is not socially acceptable, nor is it practical. Can you imagine wearing these in a bar? [real date-killer, I'd say]. How about at a rock concert? [so dorky]. Worse yet, at a musician and dancer practice [I'd be afraid to insult others, but you can't dance with these on anyway].  Even if you sleep alone in an apartment near a busy street, headphones just aren’t practical, unless you like to sleep on your back the entire night. After the second time of having to run out of concert because the sound was unbearable with a pair of standard commercial earplugs, I was gifted with a fitting for Musicians Earplugs by Etymotic Research Inc.  In a few weeks, I’ll have pair of custom-molded silicone earplugs designed to protect my ears from some of the loudest musical sources of noise, so I can get on with my artful living in style.

Why Commercial Ear Plugs Might Not Be Good Enough For You

Standard commercial ear plugs do a fair job of blocking some noise. They are cheaper, and if you’re lucky, you might be able to get a good enough seal around the plug to get away with them for things like riding the bus or hoping a plane. However, they aren’t designed to fit into the second bend of the ear canal (the part that is in front of the ear drum). Without a good seal, sound slips around a commercial ear plug, and you can still get hearing damage. In my case, I discovered that I have very tiny ear canals; the commercial plugs, while much better than those yellow or orange foam plugs you see handed out at rock concerts, left my ears exposed to sound. Within minutes of the opening band, I left the room, my left ear in particular throbbing in pain.

Foam plugs essentially muffle sound. If you were using them in a noisy restaurant, you would not be able to hear the music well, nor hear conversations distinctly. In my case, I wouldn’t even have hope of getting a foam ear plug deeply embedded in the canal to reduce the sound into a safer level. Additionally, the lack of poor seal causes the wearer to hear a low, boomy sound in their own voice when speaking, singing, or playing certain instruments; this effect is called the occlusion effect. This effect is unpleasant [let's just leave it at this: yuck], and it’s the reason why wearing non-custom earplugs to bed is useless if you’re a snorer.

Custom Ear Plugs For High Fidelity

Up to this year, I hadn’t been to many loud concerts where I needed custom ear plugs. Suddenly, I found myself at more than a few [and I'm attending the Kansas concert on 07/31]. I can’t figure out if venues are having to turn up the volume because so many attendees have hearing loss, but whatever the reason, it’s just a wall of sound falling on your head. In one case, the speakers were turned up so loud, each bass note blew my clothes a couple of centimeters! Custom ear plugs do not simply muffle the sound; they allow music and speech to be heard in high fidelity (trueness) but at a safer loudness level.

Custom ear plugs give you high fidelity and protection from hearing loss.

The set of ER-25 plugs I was gifted with come with removable, interchangeable attenuator buttons that reduce sound  through the difference ranges (or frequencies) of sound. A tiny cotton tampon attached to a string is placed against the drum before squirting a generous dollop of cold silicon in the ear. After about five minutes, the silicon is poped out of your ear by pulling on the string.  Silicon in your ear is a weird sensation, like having a pet salamander lick inside your ear ever-so-slowly with the world’s coldest tongue. My ear canals were so tiny, the first round didn’t work; we had to do a second round.

You can choose from a multitude of solid colors, color swirls (up to three colors), and even have each plug designated a different color (for ease of identifying right and left). There’s even choices with sparkles. Button colors are limited to five colors. I decided to order mine in bright, Wonder Woman-esque colors, so that I wouldn’t easily misplace them.

In a few weeks, I’ll return to the office for a fitting to make sure the custom plugs create the seal needed to protect my hearing. To be honest, I’m looking forward to not only using them at concerts where I’m the listener, but possibly also performances where I am the dancer in a live music setting. With as many performances as bellydancers have in a year, we’re exposed to very loud music in high frequencies, including zills and high-pitched tablas. While my first bellydance teacher used to laugh about how all dancers go deaf after their first 10 years, I’m hoping to be the exception while being in perfect sync. And I can’t say that the plugs won’t get some use in my building on an occasional noisy evening.

Do you own musician’s earplugs? Have you thought about getting them? Does this article make you think twice before you scream some music through your earbuds? Ever read Apple’s recommendation regarding earbuds and iPod use? Please share your stories. But I hope they don’t start with, “I can’t hear you.”


Bellydance Festival Medfest 2011 In Seattle

You wouldn’t know it by the weather, but it is well into festival season for Seattle. I once had the opportunity to be a part of the Seafair royal court as a princess, and one of the duties is to attend ALL the Seattle area neighborhood festivals and events. The Seafair court rode about in convertible cars, floats waving to the crowds and throwing candy to kids (note: thowing candy has long since been banned). While I have my favorite summer events, such as the Pirate landing at West Seattle, the Mediterranean Fantasy Festival has been a part of my Seattle summers since 2002, and if you attend, you’ll see why Seattle has the best bellydance festival, rain or shine.

Mediterranean Fantasy Festival
Sponsored by the Babs (aka Babylonian Ensemble), the Mediterranean Fantasy Festival has been running some 22 years in West Seattle’s Hiawatha Community Center and grounds. The public sees two days of bellydance from beginners to award-winning dancers on two stages. The grounds fill with vendors selling Middle Eastern drums, CD’s, instructional DVDs, costumes, and accessories. MedFest runs July 15 – 17, 2011, with stages for dance starting 10 am Saturday July 16.

For myself, I’ve digitally archived five years of performances on the indoor and outdoor stages, using the time as an opportunity to gather with my network of friends as well as introduce new people to the world of modern bellydance. I believe the festival not only shows off some incredibly gifted dancers and troupes, but it also allows people of all ages and sizes to imagine themselves dancing, whether it be for fitness and fun, or for performance and a career.


MedFest 2008, choreography by Sabura

For you aspiring dancers, you can get great ideas for music, costuming, makeup, and thematic presentations by attending festivals like MedFest and dozens of others that have performance artists offering free shows. I can’t tell you how important it is to take the time to observe others dance, sing, act, and otherwise emote. Sometimes, it’s the glint of the eye and the powerful and timely extension of an arm that changes an “OK” performance to one with soul and drama.

For more information about the local Seattle bellydance scene, check out this link from the West Seattle Blog (@WestSeattleBlog) that was published earlier last week.

If you’ve been wondering, “Hey, I haven’t seen any videos or many blogposts from Hips For Hire lately,” now you know why. In order to perform and create, I’ll be the first to say that writing and promotions suffer a bit. Interestingly enough, I recently received a blogpost via Facebook about John Mayer’s plea to resist the temptation to spend all your time doing promotion of your work. If you are a serious artist, I encourage you to read this post. Please share what you think of his position, and compare that to the band Moonalice, who uses Social Media to promote almost all of their work (granted, the main players had a lot going for them beforehand).


Mix and Match With Mashups

After the last artwalk in the historic Old Rainier Brewery building, I took some time to think about what I liked about curated artwalks and art events in general. One element I enjoy is how clever organizers and museum curators combine disperate elements in a single gallery space. My personal preference is to mix and match with a kind of physical mashup. In honor of that aesthetic, here are a few artistic and life hacking mashups for your artistic life.

Old And Young, East And West

There are some mashups music-wise that you just need to experience live to fully appreciate. The Charles Lloyd Quartet is one of them. They recently played at the Bellevue Jazz Festival to a sold-out crowd.

Charles Lloyd

Zakir Hussain

Unfortunately, no picture taking from the audience was allowed, but even pictures do not do this quartet credit. Imagine for a moment the legendary Charles Lloyd as a wandering shaman of jazz, floating around the stage while healing the audience with the soulful tunes and storytelling notes. Occasionally, Lloyd picked up shakers, rattled the piano and gave it back to young virtuoso Jason Moran, and delighted two lengthy drum therapy sessions between tabla player Zakir Hussain and Eric Harlund on drums.

From an excerpt of Charles Lloyd: “Music is a healing force. It has the ability to transcend boundaries, it can touch the heart directly, it can speak to a depth of the spirit where no words are needed. It is a most powerful form of communication and expression of beauty.”

Lash Out With These Fluffy Ones

Eyes are very alluring. But on stage, artists must learn the tricks of the trade to help the audience in the furthest reach of the room to see the expression of the eyes. While I am wholeheartedly against the Westernization of the typical shape of the asian eye, I welcome the use of temporary false eyelashes, eye lash extensions, and mascara.

Eyelashes: Talk to your audience

I even like mascara on men. Yes, I have gotten used of walking into the MAC store and seeing the guys at the counter wearing black mascara. It just reminds me of the boy bands of the 1990′s *sigh*.

My new-to-me product is Revlon’s CustomEyes in waterpoof blackest black (noir intense), with lash separators on a chubby brush, and two dial-up settings: length and drama, and length and definition. I know some of you girly-girls only buy your mascara from a department store, but the way I go through mascara, I’d be broke for something you put on and take off every day. I bought two of these mascaras as a BOGO deal through a drug store, and you can probably get a similar deal by buying online in conjunction with your other purchases; otherwise, it retails for about $5 each.

Mascara helps eyes look "open" and expressive, on and off stage

Of course, I read someone else’s negative review of this product. For entertainment, read her rant about the same product. I personally didn’t find it clumpy at all. But I do agree that the dials might not make a difference; however, I didn’t pay anything extra for them.

Making It White Again

I have a confession to make. I threw out a perfectly good electric toothbrush because the outside casing had oxidized. Every time I touched the plastic, I had an icky feeling. Eventually, it sat in its charging stand, unused. My dentist noticed I developed a tiny amount of gum recession from over-brushing, and inquired about it. I had to tell him that I had started to use a regular toothbrush again, and maybe, just maybe, I was under a little stress. He knew that I liked to brush my teeth up to five times a day, so he suggested I get a new electric toothbrush that had a different finish on the plastic part so I wouldn’t have the same oxidation problem. I tossed the old one out, and bought a new one.

When it goes yellow and brown, I say, "Yuck".


But what happens if the item that oxidizes on you is something a bit more expensive, and not old at all? I bought a pair of high end, couture-brand eyeglasses, and after the second year of wear, I noticed that the white plastic on the inside of the nosepiece had begun to oxidize. Yuck! It wasn’t an option to buy metal finished lenses, as they would have been too heavy for my prescription. Want to know what you can do about oxidizing plastic?

From the cleaning website howtocleanstuff.net, you need to determine what kind of job you have on your hands. Here is one sample from the site on how to clean ABS plastic:

Peroxide Method (for ABS plastic)
You Will Need:
Hydrogen peroxide
Oxy laundry booster
Sunshine or UV light
Water
Bucket or large bowl
Rubber gloves
Goggles

Steps to Whiten the Plastic:
Begin by protecting yourself with rubber gloves and goggles.
Fill the bucket with hydrogen peroxide.
Add ¼ teaspoon of Oxy laundry booster for each gallon of peroxide.
Place the yellowed plastic pieces into the solution and allow them to soak.
The soaking time will vary with most pieces whitening in 2-6 hours. The mixture will last for up to four days before it needs to be replaced. Retr0Bright has also developed a way to make this into a gel that can be spread onto the plastic. This is especially helpful for larger items.
Set the items under a UV light or out in the sunshine.
When the item has reached the desired whiteness, remove and rinse thoroughly to remove any remaining cleaning products.
If necessary, wash with dish detergent and water.

Umm, did you note the need for UV light or sunshine? If you live in a high northern hemisphere city like Seattle, that’s a problem. Finding natural sunlight in Seattle has been like trying to snap a picture of my cat yawning; it’s hit and miss. And, I don’t know about you, but I don’t have a cheap UV lamp on hand either. However, my optician at Optix in West Seattle offered to loan me his spare UV lamp to try this technique out. Instead of soaking the entire set of eyeglasses, however, I am going to only allow the small section of oxidized plastic to be treated with the peroxide mixture. I’ll let you know how it turns out when we conduct our little experiment at home. If it works, pop off those old plastic keys from your white Macbook, and whiten those plastic storage boxes filled with your favorite things.

BTW, if you like these mashup blog posts, please leave a comment. Be sure to put in your two cents on what you’d like to see here.


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Seattle World Eats Upcoming Schedule

Do you live in Seattle?

Do you like world cuisine? How about world dance? Wine and noms?

I created #SeattleWorldEats for Twtvite.com, so locals could find out where I'm dancing, producing world dance shows hosted in restaurants and venues serving exotic food, or catching Hips For Hire branded events around town featuring the delicious cuisine and wine.

Next Seattle World Eats events:

AUGUST 2011

Friday August 5, 2011 Costas Opa in Fremont, bellydance at 7:30 pm

Saturday August 6, 2011 Hacienda Pacifica 4 pm - 12 midnight. Kenmore, WA, featuring House of Tarab and guest musicians, dancers.

Friday August 12, 2011 Spiro's Greek Island in Kent, WA. Bellydance shows at 7 and 8 pm.

Friday August 19, 2011 Costas Opa in Fremont, bellydance at 7:30 pm.

Saturday August 20, 2011 Enat Ethiopian Restaurant, North Seattle. Bellydance show at 6 pm, featuring Mirabai, with guest dancers Breann and Imei. $5 cover. Join their Facebook page for updates on their monthly show. http://on.fb.me/rkniuR

SEPTEMBER 2011

[Off the grid August 29 - September 6. New schedule for September coming soon!]

Saturday September 24, 2011 Dance Against Domestic Violence (DaDa) Fundraiser for Thriver's Action Group, 6:30pm - 10 pm
E/M Fine Art Gallery stage, 410 Dexter Ave N, Seattle, WA 98109. For more info: http://goo.gl/nwaL7
$35 tickets available at brownpapertickets.com

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