Archive for July, 2006

Prove to me that you are happy.

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

Watching an old clip of David Letterman doing his shift as a part-timer at McD’s drive thru.

Customer: "What’s in the happy meal?"
David Letterman: "You have to prove to me you’re happy or you’re not getting anything."

And this:

David Letterman: "Is it alright if we touch your food before giving it to you?"

Classic.

More David Letterman’s links here:
Link 1 - David at Taco bell.
Link 2 - David visits GE.

The hilarious David Letterman Top Ten list is stored here, archived all the way to 1993.

The recent entry was titled Top Ten Dumb Guy Ideas For Lowering Gas Prices and this is how it went -

10. Make all roads downhill

9. Cheaper self-service price if you pump the oil and refine it yourself

8. Gas comes from dinosaurs, so all we need are more dinosaurs

7. Invade Iraq

Read the rest here.

  

I’m your man, I’m your fan (part 2).

Friday, July 28th, 2006

Some random snips.

"Not everything Bono does I would necessarily agree with, but you’ve got to acknowledge that everyone’s got their own particular opinion. We don’t like all that others do but it’s the compromise that makes it work." - The Edge, interviewed by Mark Ellen in Word Dec 2005.

"If anything, I wanted to understand things and then be free of them. I needed to learn how to telescope things, ideas. Things were too big to see all at once, like all the books in the library - everything laying around on all the tables. You might be able to put it all into one paragraph or into one verse of a song if you could get it right." - Bob Dylan, Chronicles Vol 1.

"There’s a school of poetry that believes ‘first thought, best thought’. That would have condemned me to a really inauspicious superficiality, because I don’t have any ideas. I don’t have an idea, and I don’t trust my opinions. I consider my thought-stream extremely uninteresting, and it’s only when I can discard it that I can say something that I can get behind." - Leonard Cohen, interviewed by Andy Gill in Word June 2006.


Lcohen_1

Leonard Cohen’s movie soundtrack is officially released on July 25, 2006. (See previous post). Allmusic.com gave it an excellent review, except for slamming down U2 and Bono’s "seemingly inauthentic  over emotional ache". Featuring an impressive lineup which includes the Wainwrights (both Rufus and Martha), Nick Cave, Beth Orton, Jarvis Cocker, Teddy Thompson, Antony, Perla Batalla, The Handsome Family and U2.

I doubt if there will ever be a Malaysian release for this album.

Songs from the soundtrack for your downloading pleasure:

Download Beth Orton Sisters of Mercy.mp3
Download The Handsome Family famous blue raincoat.mp3
Download Rufus Wainwright everybody knows.mp3

Incidentally, I first heard Teddy Thompson from Brokeback Mountain soundtrack. Since then I have become a fan. Here’s a song from his Separate Ways album:

Download sorry to see me go.mp3

Typomania and Meta.

Thursday, July 27th, 2006

This is Erik Spiekermann talking about typomania.

From the 80s, made for BBC, when Erik is still (relatively) young.

I am a proud owner of FF Meta (not pirated!).
It was shipped to me from USA, in 2 3.5 inch diskettes.

Just thought you may be interested.

Serving the serifs.

Friday, July 14th, 2006

Typofreak’s postings:

For consideration (When you have a strong identity, don’t change it - refresh it).

Sa

Beautiful papers.

Friday, July 14th, 2006

Dscn1919_sml_1

I have never spoken to a paper designer.
When Antalis Malaysia said they were flying in Emeric Thibierge to do a paper presentation, I went "who is that?"
Then they named the papers he created under the Thibierge and Comar brand:
Chromatico, Evanescent, Mineralis, Canevas…

I didn’t know they came from the same designer. I just know these are beautiful and expensive papers. Chromatico probably started the trend of nice colored translucent papers. Evanescent, with its shimmering surface, speaks of much elegance than the rest of the metalics/shiny paper in town.

Papers which I am always hoping to find a willing client as each piece of these papers cost around RM10.00.

I actually realise in paper trade no one cares much about the designer behind the paper. Unlike typefaces.

So I guess he will be the first paper designer whom I will meet.

A Frenchman. Interesting.

(If you are interested in meeting a French paper designer and want to know what goes through their head - come to this event. Don’t worry. Entry free-lah).

The provoker and the reaction.

Wednesday, July 12th, 2006

On headbutting:

"You hear those things once and you try to walk away. That’s what
I wanted to do because I am retiring. You hear it a second time and
then a third time …"

"Do you imagine that in a World Cup final like that with just 10 minutes to go to the end of my career, I am going to do something like that because it gives me pleasure?"

- Zidane

Takes a whole lot for a man to smile at insults and walk away silently.

Egoistic genius.

Tuesday, July 11th, 2006

I am always troubled after delivering my introduction to David Carson.

It would be gross injustice to deny his place in the history of graphic design, especially in typography. David Carson’s distinctive chaotic design style released the floodgates to the era of grunge design, bred thousands imitators and propagated the cult of ugly. His arrival as the new design wunderkind in the mid 90s hogged enough spotlight to displace the cool-functional-modernists and the almighty Americans who were monopolising most of the design awards (the Pentagrams in particular - Paula Scher, Kit Hinrichs, Michael Bierut; the undisputed virtuoso of magazine design, Fred Woodward; and the retro charm of the minneapolis gang led by Charles Spencer Anderson and Joe Duffy).

David Carson became the design idol. He became the epitome of "cool". Aspiring designers - young professionals and design students alike worshipped him for the spirit of liberation. For once, everyone could put aside design theories, mainstream typography and grids, big ideas and strategies and just design. As David aptly put in, design as according to intuition.

But is Carson just an overrated designer?

Here’s the confession. I used to go goo-goo-ga-ga over every issue of Raygun. The damned dirty typography. The who-heck-cares screwed layouts. It was both inspiring and liberating. It was all the things that I am not supposed to do in real life. Strangely, many of Carson’s magazine spreads were
beautiful. And somehow, Carson has his ways to discover many new talents (for example,
Hayes Henderson).

Back then I was a Carson groupie.

I am well over my Carson-phase. The troubling thing about Carson is that he built an entire career over his signature style. When it was the "in" thing, Carson was king. It would be unthinkable to do a Carson-style design right now. The cool-minimal-functional-modernists are still popular. Pentagram is growing stronger. Joe Duffy has become a multinational branding company. The new "in" thing of vector graphics (with that unmistakable floral leaves and patterns + butterflies + cute deers) is still everywhere. But it ain’t cool to do the Carson thing now.

As a designer I have come to realise what’s most important in designing is to ensure the meeting of communicative objectives. However much I admire those who excel with distinguished styles (M/M Paris, Non-format UK etc), stylistic executions mean nothing if the design does not communicate.

Meanwhile Carson lives in his past glory as he goes around the world conducting workshops and seminars. He is also notoriusly known as conference organisers’ worst nightmare - for cancelling appearances at the very last minute, or simply disappearing at the moment he is supposed to be on stage, most likely to be found drunk in his hotel room. On a side note, some designer I knew mentioned Carson had a thing about flirting and hitting on Asian girls - how true that is - I am not sure.

One thing for sure - it is creepy for an established designer to decorate his official web page with more testimonials than a teenager’s friendster page. He’s got a seriously inflated ego to deal with.

That chap called David Carson.

David

——————————————————

Just found out that the co-founder of Pink Floyd, Syd Barrett has died. Syd, together with Roger Waters, Nick Mason and Rick Wright made the original lineup of Pink Floyd. Syd was the original bandleader, hammering out groundbreaking psychedelic gems. As Syd became mentally instable, Dave Gilmour was brought in to replace him. Eventually Dave and Roger Waters would form the troubled creative partnership that delivered Dark Side of the Moon and The Wall. Syd gradually faded into oblivion.

The mad genius that went down the path of destruction.

Syd Barrett’s composition: see emily play.mp3
His mates’ song for him: wish you were here.mp3

2 classics from The Wall: another brick in the wall part 2.mp3, hey you.mp3

Shooting star.

Saturday, July 1st, 2006

A song which I can’t get out of my head:

Seen a shooting star tonight

And I thought of me.

If I was still the same

If I ever became what you wanted me to be

Did I miss the mark or

Over-step the line

That only you could see?
- Bob Dylan

Nothing in particular to post, just some songs for the weekend.

Download regina spektor fidelity
Download sharashka aurora

Download
portishead glory box
Download portastatic truckstop cassettes
Download alif tree  i feel blue