Mount Hood

The Smashing Pumpkins’ “Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness” Turns 20

By: Declan Hertel 
Entertainment Editor

Being a teenager is hard. You have a newfound independence and no idea what to do with it, your body changes in strange and unsettling ways, your emotions are beginning to acutely develop before you know how to handle them, and all the authority figures in your life tell you that none of your devastating, all-consuming problems really matter.

No one wants to hear you when you need most to be heard.

When The Smashing Pumpkins released “Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness” in 1995, a generation of teenagers finally found something that understood and acknowledged their plight in Billy Corgan’s sprawling double album.

It’s an album that, throughout the course of 28 tracks and just over two hours of run time, explores every difficulty of adolescence. It moves through expressions of blind rage, undying love, being hopelessly lost, and the occasional moments of clarity.

I was introduced to this album relatively recently by a good friend, during one of our many conversations about music.

He was surprised I hadn’t heard of it: an angsty, experimental, prog-influenced, concept double album? Right up my alley. I purchased it and set to listening to it immediately. It was exactly as ‘me’ as he had said, even more so as it had appeared at a particularly emotionally tumultuous time for me.

This is definitely a work for the emotionally vulnerable, but also those who once were. A song like the stellar lead single “1979” expresses to me unsureness about times just past and what they mean for my future, but for someone older it could just as easily be a reminder of that teenage “lostness” they once saw.

A nihilistic burn-it-down song like “Zero” plays to teenagers as relating directly to their experience, while an adult will hear it and shake their head at “those poor kids.” “Mellon Collie” as an album has a sort of timelessness for anyone who was ever lost and confused and angry.

I feel that “Infinite Sadness” will be a record that stays with me over time, as it has been for those who were there when it appeared.

It is a work of art that perfectly encapsulates the experience of adolescence. While I listen to it now with all the attitudes of my overlong angsty-teenager period, maybe when I finally grow up I’ll hear it with my old ears and understand something about the turmoil of youth that you can’t see while young.

Superglued to the screen: “Goodnight Mommy” terrifies

By: Declan Hertel
 Entertainment Editor

I’m going to start right off the bat by saying I am going to try really hard to not spoil anything about “Goodnight Mommy,” a fantastic piece of psychological horror out of Austria.

Please, do not look up anything about this movie before seeing it. Here is all you need to know: the mother of twin boys comes home with a bandaged face and distant demeanor after an operation, and the boys develop doubts over if she really is their mother.

It is really, really good and you should seek it out as soon as possible.

There’s no obvious place to start talking about the movie, so I guess I’ll start with the fact that it is supremely unsettling. I’d be hard pressed to think of a movie I felt more physically uncomfortable watching.

As the film rolled on down the tracks with near-perfect pacing, I was squirming more and more. There is nothing rushed during “Goodnight Mommy” (“Ich Seh Ich Seh,” or “I See I See” in the original German); every moment is long and slow and savage in its stark delivery, and I was unable to look away.

Directors Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz use lighting masterfully throughout “Goodnight Mommy,” as evidenced by the film’s tone growing darker as the images on the screen grow lighter, a reversal of the normal strategy in horror.

Just as good is the usage of sound: the movie contains little dialogue and is mostly scored by ambient noise, but the heavy silence is occasionally punctuated by low rumblings and spikes in volume that are as unnerving as anything I’ve seen in a movie.

Child actors in horror movies are near-universally reviled, so I was very glad to see that Lukas and Elias Schwarz, as the twins, deliver excellent, wonderfully restrained performances. Susanne Wuest also turns in a spectacular performance as their mother (or is she?). The interplay between Wuest and the Schwarz boys is impeccable.

I wish I could say more than that, but anything beyond “they’re just so great” would ruin a great deal of the film.

One final note: yes, it is a foreign film and all the actors speak German. That said, there is very little dialogue in the movie, so subtitles are minimal, and it’s a really great movie. If you can handle a small amount of reading over the course of a tight, tense 100 minutes (which you can), you really ought to expose yourself to the magic of foreign cinema. But if subtitles truly are enough to keep you from enjoying a really great movie, there’s no hope for you anyway.

A great piece of psychological horror seems rare in this time of “Paranormal Activity” and its knockoffs saturating the horror market, but in “Goodnight Mommy,” we find a slice of salvation.

It’s disturbing in a big way, and will stick with you for a long time after the credits roll. Seek it out and spend an evening in glorious terror.

4 out of 4 Paws

Freak Out for “Fallout 4”

By: Jenna Beresheim 
News Editor

“Fallout” fans are rejoicing as the long-awaited continuation of a story sets into motion, with the official release date for “Fallout 4” fast approaching on November 10, 2015.

This will be the fifth installment in the series by the ever-popular production company Bethesda. The game developer is known for their work with “Fallout 3,” “Fallout Shelter,” and the “Elder Scrolls” series.

One bad thing Bethesda has been known for is their rush to publish games before all of the bugs, glitches, and patches have been dealt with. Their products have garnered backlash from the gaming community before, but that has yet to stop people from playing their games, apparently.

“Fallout 4” will be no different, with the hype extending to real-world consumables. Bethesda has announced that they will be producing a Nuka Cola Quantum by Jones Soda, soon to be available at Target, as well as a “Fallout” Beer, which will only be available in Europe.

But there is already a split between the fans. While this new game boasts stunning graphics, a vast expanse of dialogue options, and all along new features guaranteed to satisfy, fans are still apprehensive.

Over the past week, screenshots, clips, and more information have steadily been leaked into gaming forums and communities. But the response has not been a positive one. Gamers claim that the graphics are lacking and textures appear flat.

The game takes place in Boston, Massachusetts 200 years after a nuclear war between the US and China, known as the Great War. The player is the sole survivor from vault 111 and must make their way out into the wild as done in previous “Fallout” games.

A few new features for fans to look forward to include the ability to build settlements and buildings, sending a brahmin, a mutated type of cattle, between their settlements, and one of the biggest pieces of news is that there is no level cap.

Bethesda also boasts that skill building will now be more of a tree system, weapons will be fully customizable, and that the player can continue their story well after the main quest line “ends.”

Between all of these options, it’s understandable that a game may lack in the graphics department from the start.

The producers are focusing more on the gameplay and interactions of characters, as well as the growth of the player’s personal character—this more so than keeping up with the quickly evolving gaming systems it is being made for.

Expect to see “Fallout” madness in stores soon, along with “Fallout” products in Target stores, but as per usual, I have complete faith in Bethesda pulling through, even if it takes a few post-release patches.

Personally, I’m just happy that the dog companion will never perish during a risky quest again.

Western Art and Design Club welcomes new members

By: Emily Pate 
Staff Writer

The Art and Design Club meets every Wednesday and Thursday at 6 p.m. on the third floor of Campbell Hall. They also hold free life drawing sessions on Tuesdays.

Wednesday, Nov. 4, the club spent their meeting finger painting on wooden boards procured by club president Max McEvilly.

McEvilly, a senior and art major, said that one of the goals of the club is to broaden horizons and give club members a chance to experiment with new mediums and styles.

He also wants to use the club to quell the anxiety art majors feel about their post-graduation careers.

The club is not just for art majors as they offer a helpful, relaxed, and nonjudgmental environment for anyone who wants to try their hand at creating art.

“It’s a small enough club that an individual can come up with an idea of what to do and we can just do it,” McEvilly said.

Raquel Graham, a first year psychology major, especially enjoyed a collaborative project when a dance instructor asked the club to make masks for a dance show. “It was cool that my work got to be shown,” she said. She encourages other non-art majors to join the club.

The Art and Design Club hosted a popular Halloween event last month. “I’m pretty proud of what we did,” McEvilly said, “I hope we can do something even bigger next year.”

McEvilly has a lot of ideas for the future for the Art and Design Club, including a commission booth in Werner and a painting wall. He encourages Western students to come give the club a try. “It’s a no strings attached kind of club,” he said.

“If you like art, it’s a good place for you,” Graham continued. “You have a lot of fun. You do a lot of things that you normally don’t get to do.”

One Month, One Novel

By: Stephanie Blair 
Photo Editor

National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) is a creative writing Internet sensation started by author and Stanford professor Chris Baty in 1999.

What started as a project undertaken by 30 people has now grown in both renown and participation, clocking in at over 325,000 registered “wrimos” around the world last November. In fact, participants can be found on six of the seven continents.

As stated on the official NaNoWriMo website, NaNoWriMo is “a fun, seat-of-your-pants approach to creative writing.” However, it’s not just a fun annual event; NaNoWriMo is also a 501(c)3 non-profit organization.

While companies such as Evernote, Kindle Direct Publishing, and Nook Press officially sponsor NaNoWriMo, participants are given the opportunity to fundraise for the non-profit programs as well.

NaNoWriMo has three nonprofit programs: Camp NaNoWriMo, the Young Writers Program, and the Come Write In (CWI) program.

The purpose of these, nanowrimo.org says, is “to empower and encourage writing and vibrant creativity around the world.”

Camp NaNoWriMo is a month long “virtual writing retreat” meant to help writers complete projects at any time of year, but with the same support and structure as NaNoWriMo.

“The Young Writers Program promotes writing fluency, creative education, and the sheer joy of novel-writing in K-12 classrooms,” the website states. More than 2,000 classrooms receive free classroom kits, writing workbooks, and other educational materials to assist in this effort.

The CWI program, which had 849 centers last year, is NaNoWriMo’s way to connect neighborhood spaces such as community centers, libraries, bookstores, and coffee shops with “wrimos” to create safe and supportive writing spaces.

CWI locations receive a “Come Write In kit”, which includes a window cling, a poster, and bookmarks to help promote the event. Additionally, NaNoWriMo connects CWI locations with others who are hosting events through an online forum, and local volunteers to help publicize, co-host events, as well as keeping the center informed about other events in the region.

This year, Western’s Writing Center, located on the third floor of the APSC, will be holding weekly meet-ups every Wednesday at 5 p.m. for “wrimos” on campus as a CWI center.

Among this year’s participants are “BookTube” stars Kat O’Keeffe (youtube.com/Katytastic) and Sasha Alsberg (youtube.com/abookutopia), as well as The Journal’s Managing Editor Katrina Penaflor, author of “Under the Surface,” and Staff Writer Emily Pate here at Western.

Although the month has already started, all who are interested are encouraged to join in. NaNoWriMo happenings, and more information, can be found on facebook.com/nanowrimo, twitter.com/nanowrimo, and nanowrimo.org.

Humans of Western

By: Megan Clark
Campus Life Editor

“I was a correctional officer for many years, and, uh, I think I stuck with it because I felt like I was perhaps making a difference in people’s lives. If they made poor decisions and they ended up in prison, maybe my role-modeling made a difference to them. But at the end of the day, I felt like I wasn’t making enough of a positive difference, so I wanted to change my life.”

“My mom had been clean and sober for twelve years, and then in April she fell off the wagon … Right now, I go back and forth between being really upset with addiction … and then also thinking about how lucky I was to have gotten to have those times with her in those twelve years.”

“The most memorable thing [about being a correctional officer] for me was an interaction with an inmate … she had made significant changes in the way she saw the world around her, what we call in the system ‘criminal thinking’… she got out, and it was probably about four months later, I saw her in a commercial for Goodwill and she had gotten a job and became a spokesperson for the company, and it touched me.”

Flugelhornist Works Jazz Magic

FlugelBW

By: Rachael Jackson
Staff Writer

Renowned flugelhornist Dmitri Matheny came to the Smith Recital Hall on Nov. 4 to perform with a local jazz trio. The trio consisted of Western instructor Dan Gaynor on the piano, Todd Strait on the drums, and Chris Higgins playing the bass.

For those unsure of what a flugelhorn is, Matheny explains, “A flugelhorn is like a trumpet that sounds good.” The response yielded laughter from the audience and helped set a casual mood for the concert.

The four musicians played a light and airy bossa nova by Bruno Martino, as well as “Stormy Weather” by famous composer Harold Arlen. Matheny left the stage for the next song so the trio could showcase their talents.

The trio played “Fried Pies” by Wes Montgomery. Both of Gaynor’s feet were occupied, one busy with the piano’s pedals, the other tapping in time to the rhythm of the song.

An unexpected mixture of breaks and solos characterized the song itself, and the stage came alive as all of the musicians grooved to the music.

Matheny rejoined the stage for “Red Reflections,” a song off his album “Sagebrush Rebellion” that they played as a double-timed samba. The song was inspired by sitting in traffic during a rainy day.

“You’ll see the reflections from the taillights of the cars in front of you, and on the pavement,” he explained. “You can get stressed out about that, or you can think, ‘Oh, this is a hip vibe.’”

The highlight of the night was when they played Eclypso, a piece arranged by Matheny’s former teacher, the late Art Farmer. The song was a fast tempo ditty that rang throughout the hall, but something was missing—dancing.

“Jazz has always been a social thing, people should be dancing to music like this, always,” mused Nick Nielsen, a bassist, and junior music major.

Emily Lowry, senior business major, had been unsure about whether she would enjoy a jazz concert, as she had expected that jazz would be far slower.

“The faster and upbeat tempo was unexpected. It makes you want to dance,” Lowry remarked.

The night ended with a bang as the jazz trio and Matheny performed their rendition of “Golden Lady” by Stevie Wonder.

Missed this show and feeling sore? Come hear Spanish Song Treasures in the Smith Recital Hall on Tuesday, Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. Check out the Music department’s website for even more events and ticketing information.