Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Bradley James Skistimas

Bradley James Skistimas of Five Time August.
Indie Music singer and song writer.



If there's one thing that almost everyone does it's listen to music!
Personally when I look for a group I try to find songs that are meaningful, and something I could relate to. In early 2009 I happened to find myself listening to a Five times august song, and I haven't stopped since. Though there were always questions on my mind, like how he does it, and what it's like to write a Cd. So In this interview, I ask him! 


Interview With Bradley James.
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Fancy Platypus: When did you get into music?

Bradley James Skistimas: I’ve been into music my whole life, ever since elementary school. On the
bus ride I always had my Walkman on. My interest has been a gradual (and
obsessive) build ever since then. I kept finding more and more music to
listen to and discover, eventually landing at the Beatles who made me want
to pick up a guitar at age 11. Once I started playing guitar it was all
over for me… THAT’s when music really took over my life.
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Fancy Platypus: How did you discover your voice?

Bradley James Skistimas: In high school I played guitar for the choir band. I wasn’t actually in
the choir but I picked up a lot from just being there and watching others
sing. I wasn’t really any good for a long time. I didn’t begin to find my
voice until I started writing the first Five Times August songs around the
age of 17/18. That was when I started developing my own style and tone.
However, listening back to early FTA recordings I don’t think it sounds
anything like my voice now, so it seems to have taken on a life of its
own over time, developing certain nuances and inflection built off my
years of performing. The same goes for my guitar playing and really the
two (my singing and guitar playing) go hand in hand. I don’t like singing
without my guitar.
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Fancy Platypus: What groups/artist would you say are inspirations for your music?

Bradley James Skistimas: When I started Five Times August I was really into John Mayer, Jason Mraz, Dave Matthews… the whole acoustic singer/songwriter thing. These days I’m
listening to a lot of music from the 50’s and 60’s, Jazz, Soul R&B, Blues,
really a whole mess of stuff… so my palette has become pretty broad. I
really like artists that write, sing, and play their own music. I relate
to that and have a lot respect for it because that’s where I fit in. It’s
getting harder for me to relate to modern music because it’s become more
about fashion and trends than true artistic merit.
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Fancy Platypus: Where do you draw inspiration for a new song?

Bradley James Skistimas: I never really know, sometimes it just builds and builds off messing about
on the guitar. Most of the time I’ll sing gibberish melody over the chords
and eventually sing something and think “hey that sounds like I am
saying…” and all of a sudden you have a lyric line that inspires the rest
of the song. I think the main inspiration for new songs just comes from
wanting to write music that I’d listen to myself. If I am happy with it in
the end then that’s great, hopefully most people like it. If not, well,
can’t please everyone!
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Fancy Platypus: What are your rituals for writing a song? When do you feel like your message has been passed?

Bradley James Skistimas: I don’t really have any rituals. I just sit down with a guitar and “feel
it out” as it happens. Sometimes it’s a few chords that sound nice that
lead to some humming that lead to lyrics, sometimes it hits me a whole
other direction. I don’t ever really know if my message gets through to
anyone until somebody tells me. A song like FTA’s “Up To Me” was extremely
personal when I wrote it; I didn’t think anyone would relate to it. But, 
out of all the songs I’ve released that one is the song I get more people
telling me they relate to than any other. So you just never know.
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Fancy Platypus: Being an Indie singer, songwriter, what are some of the pros and cons?

Bradley James Skistimas: That’s a loaded question for me. I could write several books on the pros
and cons of being independent. I guess when it comes down to it the
biggest pro is having complete creative control in every realm of my
career. The biggest con is the general public putting you in the same
class as an artist in the Top 40 who’s on a major record label. That has
an effect on how your success is perceived because when people decide
“I’ll just download his music for free” they think “He’ll be okay because
somebody else will buy it.” When in truth every sale matters to
independent artists. We’re not marketed like Katy Perry or Adele, we don’t
have that kind of money. Those artists might not miss a few CD sales, but
every indie artist out there could use that sale to invest back into their
career. The problem is most people don’t take the time to discover the
artist behind the music anymore so we’re all lumped together.
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Fancy Platypus: Where did you get the name “Five Time August” from?

Bradley James Skistimas: The name is derived from my birthday August 5th. I didn’t want to promote “Brad Skistimas” because my last name has always been confusing to some
folks so I thought it would be easier with a band name.
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Fancy Platypus: Why did you choose to drop the band name and continue under your own?

Bradley James Skistimas: I’m writing different music now and I really wanted a clean slate to work
from. I felt if I released this new stuff as “Five Times August” there
would be some sort of expectation based on my previous work. Releasing the
EP as “Bradley James” (my first and middle names) has cleared that
distraction for me. I’m sure fans will still compare it to what I’ve done
before but for me I just wanted a blank canvas mentally.
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Fancy Platypus: How many instruments do you play?

Bradley James Skistimas: Guitar, Bass, Piano, and whatever else I need to figure out for various
bits while I’m in the studio.
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Fancy Platypus: What was your inspiration for “Where did I go?”

Bradley James Skistimas: I’ve been wanting to do a side-project since 2009, something different
from FTA. I’ve grown a lot as an artist and musician and have wanted to
see what else I can do. I wanted to make music that was something of a
tribute to the way it used to be made. We recorded the basic tracks live
in the studio together without a click track, so you’re getting a real
live performance. With FTA tunes a good 60-75% was modern programmable
instruments. Rather go that route again, about 95% of the instrumentation
on the new EP is all performed live by real people.
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Fancy Platypus: What are your hopes for “Where did I go?"

Bradley James Skistimas: Right now I’m just hoping to get through the Pledge Music campaign so I
can release the songs. If I can get the tracks mixed, mastered, and on to
CD I’ll be happy. Once I get there we’ll see what else happens but I don’t
really want to get ahead of myself right now. Just taking one step at a
time.
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Fancy Platypus: What is your favorite thing about writing a new cd?

Bradley James Skistimas: I’m most happy as an artist when I’m moving forward. Making new music and trying new things, releasing a new record, that process always makes me
feel like I am doing that. I usually favor whatever I am working on most
recently over anything I’ve done in the past. I like that if you go back
to the earliest FTA recordings and listen from one album to the next you
hear growth and maturity. My favorite thing is whenever I impress myself.
Turning around one day and getting to say “I made that” is pretty awesome.
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Fancy Platypus: Is there a tour planned in the future?

Bradley James Skistimas: Not any time too soon, perhaps next year. I spent six years straight on
the road with my wife Kelly and we just had a baby this year so we are
enjoying home life for the first time in a long-long time.
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Fancy Platypus: What are your plans for the future?

Bradley James Skistimas: After I see what happens with the new EP I’ll probably dabble in several
other side projects. I’d really like to work on a children’s album or TV show. I also have a lot of ideas for funny film shorts that may eventually get made and posted on YouTube. I’m really just playing it by ear right now. The current music industry is completely unreliable so I don’t want
to bank on keeping my career afloat on the same things I have previously.
It’s a good time to try new things so I’ll have my hands in a lot of
different projects over the next few years.
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Fancy Platypus: What do you do when you’re not writing, performing, or recording?

Bradley James Skistimas: Right now any spare moment I have is spent with my new son Dylan who just turned 6 months. It’s a completely new world being a dad. I absolutely
love it, but I am adjusting my schedule completely. It’s a new challenge
but it’s so nice to not feel like I have to be anywhere but here right
now. We’ve never had time to just be at home so we’re literally just
“hanging out” watching TV or grocery shopping like normal folk do when
they’re not at work.
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Fancy Platypus: What words of wisdom would you give to new coming artists?

Bradley James Skistimas: Be prepared to work hard. Success is not an overnight thing for most
people. It doesn’t matter if you think you have the greatest song in the
world, nobody will hear it unless you rely on yourself (and only yourself)
to get it out there. The one great thing about today’s music industry is
that there are no rules, so however creative you can be in getting your
music out there and make money doing it the better off you’ll be.
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Bradley James is honestly has one of the best voices ( In my opinion) around at this time.
If you all haven't already ran to Youtube to sample one of his songs you should really do that! 
Five times august has been one of my favourite bands since I heard beautiful girls back when I was 14.
I would like to thank you all for reading my interview, and a very big thank you to Bradley James for actually giving me his time.
Also Please check all these links out! Especially the Pledgemusic page!

CHECK IT OUT!

Five Time August Facebook page:http://www.facebook.com/FiveTimesAugust

Bradley James Facebook Page:http://www.facebook.com/MusicByBradleyJames

Monday, August 13, 2012

Monika Lee


Monika Lee
Cosplaying Wonder Woman
At San Diego Comic Con


                       Monika Lee is no stranger to convention centers, or the hobby of cosplaying. 
When I asked her if I could possibly ask her a few questions about how it all came to be she kindly agreed to my offer. In my short interview she tells me: how she came to find cosplaying, what it means to her now, and what she does to put herself in the characters skin. 

Interview With Monika Lee
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 Me: How old were you when you discovered cosplaying?

           Monika Lee: I was 13 years old when I first started cosplaying so it's been about 6 years or so since then. 
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     Me: What was your first convention? Did you cosplay?

           Monika Lee: My first convention was Dragon*Con 2005 before I started cosplaying. My dad is a bit of a Trekkie so he took me with him (mostly because I was dying to see James Marsters from Buffy! haha) and it was amazing! I've been going ever since and it's still the best convention I've ever been to. It was only till Dragon*Con 2006 that I started cosplaying.
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         Me: What was your first cosplay?
        Monika Lee:  My first cosplay was Temari from Naruto. I was a huge Naruto nerd and I thought she was such a badass character with her giant fan!
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        Me: Who were the people who supported you the most?

            Monika Lee: I'd probably say my best friend Christy and my mom! Christy and I had been cosplaying from the beginning and for the first couple of years; we would go to every convention together, always cosplaying together. To this day, she's been nothing but supportive. :) My mom is also extremely supportive, going as far as to making a run to Wal*Mart at midnight when I run out of thread or something. Sometimes she worries more about finishing my costumes than I do ha-ha.
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       Me: What is your experience with the public at the conventions such as Comic con? Were they excited to see you?

           Monika Lee:  San Diego Comic Con was crazy as far as the crowd goes. I always enjoy it when people get super excited about me cosplaying as their favorite character because then we can nerd out together.
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         Me: When you cosplay is it what you want or is there a “What would the fans like?” Sort of edge on your costumes?

            Monika Lee: My main motivation for cosplaying is either something from a series/video game/etc. that I love or if my friends want to do a group together. I don't want to waste all my time and effort on a costume if I'm not excited about the design or the experience that I can have in it.
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       Me: What characters do you have in mind for future cosplays?

           Monika Lee:  Right now, I'm working on a Diablo III wizard. I'm thinking of doing Jubilee from X-Men, Maya from Borderlands 2 and more for next year. 
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        Me: What sort of places are you hoping to go with your cosplaying?

            Monika Lee: I'm hoping to go to conventions...? Ha-ha, I think cosplay can be a great way for learning new skills and people, but at the end of the day it's just a really awesome hobby. 
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         Me: Do you make your own costumes? Or do you have someone to make them?

           Monika Lee:  I've always made my own costumes. I love to be able to proudly answer that I've made everything myself. :)
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         Me: Are they expensive? 

           Monika Lee:  Ha-ha YEP. I either spend my money on food or costume supplies. After a while, you have to learn to be thrifty by using a lot of coupons or waiting for sales.
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        Me: Do you do your own makeup? Or do you have it done by someone?

            Monika Lee: Yep, I do my own! I've learned just by looking at the ways other people have done their makeup or just by browsing through online tutorials.
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         Me: What was your favourite cosplay you’ve done? Why?

           Monika Lee:  So far, it's my Little Sister from Bioshock. I love the creepy effect that comes from the theatrical makeup/contacts and eeriness of the video game's design. I'm also super obsessed with Bioshock, ha-ha. Take my money, Irrational Games!
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        Me: Speaking from experience, what do you think it takes to be a well-known cosplayer?

            Monika Lee: When I cosplay, I don't do it for the intention of being "famous". If that's what you're doing, then you're doing it for the wrong reasons. If your skills/talents happen to get some recognition, I think that's really great and it's a nice confidence boost. However, people looking for advice to be "well-known" in cosplay should probably rethink why they're cosplaying in the first place.
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         Me: Do you have anyone you look up to in cosplaying?

            Monika Lee: Holy poop, yes! All my friends are so incredibly talented, it blows my mind! Especially in Atlanta, there are so many talented and amazing cosplayers (Yaya Han, Riddle, Lindze, Katie, to name a few). In addition to them, my friends Jessica, Victoria and Meagan-Marie are awesome cosplayers and I look up to all of them.
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        Me: How long do you plan on cosplaying? 

           Monika Lee:  Oh man, that's a good question! I really have no idea--maybe until I get my dream job and I'm finally rolling in money? Ha-ha.
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         Me: Do you have any advice for future cosplayers?

           Monika Lee:  I think the main thing is to not look for fame or power in cosplay. Cosplaying is an amazing way to learn extremely useful skills and to meet some talented people that share in the same nerdy interests as you. It's so much more enjoyable if you enjoy the process of creating a cosplay and if at the end of the day, you love what you've made. It's even better if you can share your love of the hobby with others. Just be a nerd and love everyone! Ha-ha.
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Monika Lee is a brilliant Cosplayer, and I personally think everyone who has a chance should check her out. Even if you're not a fan of cosplaying it never hurts to take a look, you never know you might see something you like.
I would like to thank you all for reading my first interview, and a very big thank you to Monika Lee for giving her time to answering my question.

You can check out Monika Lee at:

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/London2191Cosplay

Twitter: https://twitter.com/MnikaLee