Yellow is the color of her eyes

I DON’T KNOW HOW, or why, but my brain processes things by way of music. My friends call me a walking jukebox – I make it my life mission to pull music recommendations out of anywhere, at any time. When my friends ask if I have any songs to fit a certain mood, I’m always ready with 2 or 3 recommendations up my sleeve. When anything remotely life-altering happens to me, I’m already chalking up a new playlist for a very specific mood. When I’m in the middle of a conversation, I’ll have this strange lightbulb moment where I suddenly go, “hey, I know the perfect song for this!”.

This is precisely the reason why it didn’t shock me that when we first got the diagnosis that my Lola had stage 4 lung cancer, the first thing that popped into my head was not a memory, a specific task, or a face. It was Soccer Mommy’s “yellow is the color of her eyes”.

According to Sophie Allison, the singer-songwriter behind Soccer Mommy, the song tells the story of her coming to terms with her mom’s terminal illness. It opens with a striking image of Allison singing about a loved one’s eyes colored a sickly yellow, a color often associated with jaundice. The narrative proceeds to tackle themes of lying to oneself about the condition, coping from far away, and worrying that time is slipping away. The 7-minute piece comes to an end with Allison grappling with accepting the fact that her mom will eventually die, sooner rather than later. She sings in repetition:

Loving you isn’t enough
You’ll still be deep in the ground when it’s done
I’ll know the day when it comes
I’ll feel the cold as they put out my sun

It closes with a guitar interlude that slowly, surely comes to an end. Before you know it, 7 minutes are over. You almost don’t notice it – I definitely didn’t. There were nights where I just kept this song on repeat, somehow scratching the itch of not knowing how to deal with someone you love so deeply dying in front of your eyes.

My Lola was diagnosed in May. We lost her in June. And in the span of a few weeks, she went from being completely independent, to being confined in a wheelchair, and finally being completely unable to speak because of the pain. It was crushing to watch her shrink with every passing day. She suddenly looked so small.

This was a woman I had looked up to so much in my life, both literally and figuratively. Growing up, she was our non-negotiable. I spent so many days in her house, yellowing wood and all, playing in the garage, or the garden, or hiding in the old rooms where my mom and her siblings used to live in. Being with her meant never going hungry for the day: her bread baskets were never without fresh pan de sal, ripe bananas, and the occasional ice cream we would have to ask for her permission to eat. When the sun shined through the windows, the house would be the most potent shade of golden, and her laughs would always find their way into every corner of the room.

However, in the weeks before The Night Of (a term coined by me and my cousins to describe the night we lost her), I couldn’t find a way to describe the heaviness of trying to accept that sooner or later, that would be all gone. Of course, the moment we were told that this was probably the end of it all, we were the first people to concede. But no amount of repeating it to myself could ever prepare me to watch her gasping for air at 2am. Before I knew it, she was gone.

This is the first time I’ve experienced a major loss in the family, and it shows in the way I grieve. Grief is tricky and fickle. I feel like I’m constantly trying to find my legs, trying to push forward and move on, only to not take a step at all. I think about the sun in her room, spilling through the curtains, touching every part of room that was left just the way it was the night before. I think about how she could barely open her eyes, and the way she whispered my name. I think about how there is still so much but so little left of her in the spaces I know just like the back of my hand.

“yellow is the color of her eyes” starts with the lyric, “The bright August sun feels so yellow”. I don’t know if it’s fate, coincidence, or a coping mechanism, but Lola’s birthday is in August. I keep finding reasons to make the distance between here and the afterlife much shorter. I make sense of black butterflies and white doves. Sometimes, I close my eyes and I almost feel her – like sunlight washing over me. I can almost hold her.

Monthly Mix: January 2021 Picks

New year, new Monthly Mix entry!

The less-than-merry holiday season coupled with the gloomy rainy season resulted in an interesting mix of mostly R&B and different subgenres of alternative (rap, rock, and the like). I guess it should also be noted that I’ve spent a large majority (and when I mean large majority, I mean extremely large) of January listening to Phoebe Bridgers’ discography on repeat. This leaves this month’s monthly mix at a sparse 18 songs compared to my previous entries.

Either way, here are some of my top picks for January 2021 — a rainy-weather playlist for a gloomy and pandemic-filled year ahead).

Rapp Snitch Knishes feat Mr. Fantastik by MF DOOM

Starting off the playlist is The GOAT himself, MF DOOM, who left us right at the cusp of 2021. MM…FOOD is an album celebrated my critics and music lovers alike, and this bomb suave track is loved by all. Thank you for the tunes, MF DOOM.

Brother by Ryan Beatty

This track comes off Beatty’s most recent album, Dreaming of David. It features his signature vocal stylings and an ambient guitar for accompaniment. What kept this track on replay for me were the lyrics — Beatty tells us a story of trying to reach out to someone who doesn’t want your help. It’s simple but moving.

Drunk by Dijon

I can’t remember what sent me on a Dijon trip but I spent a good chunk of January just listening to his discography. The stripped-down production in the track, Drunk made it a favorite to play at full blast during those rainy nights. A recurring theme between the Ryan Beatty and this track is the use of layered vocals and harmonies to push the song forward despite the simpler production.

She’s My Religion by Pale Waves

This is quite the genre change from the other tracks featured on this list, but I fell in love with the very 90s-early 2000s banger from the United Kingdom-based rock band, Pale Waves. It’s here, it’s queer, and it’s nostalgia at its finest. The production is wonderful with front woman Heather Baron-Gracie’s killer vocals being complemented by the instruments.

There it is! These are my top 5 tracks of January (not counting the Phoebe Bridgers discography). Just like with other Monthly Mixes, you can find the full playlist on my Spotify here:

Monthly Mix is Kara Angan’s attempt of writing at least one piece on this blog per month. It features her favorite songs from the month with mini-reviews on stand-out tracks. All monthly mixes can be found on her (very messy) Spotify account.

Monthly Mix: December 2020 Picks

Monthly Mix v12.20 marks the end of the terrible year that is 2020. This playlist reflects the state of mind I’ve had for the whole month — lethargy, confusion, and the search for an escape. These emotions more or less affected my music choices for the past few weeks, especially given the somber holiday season that was a crazy mix of COVID-19 related sadness and the finals week that waits for me in January 2021.

Just like I did with last month’s Monthly Mix, here are some of the standout tracks that I had on repeat.

Just A Little Bit of Rain by She’s Only Sixteen

One of the new tracks off of She’s Only Sixteen‘s newest EP, The Other Side, just fit in perfectly with the rain and lethargy of December. Just A Little Bit of Rain is a track perfect for staring outside windows during a regularly-scheduled existential crisis session in bed. It’s the perfect year-ender song: everything that could possibly go wrong went wrong, but it will all pass sooner or later.

Bad Friend by Rina Sawayama (Dream Wife Remix)

This. Song. Hurts. Like. A. Motherfucker. There are quite a few versions of this song off of British-Japanese artist Rina Sawayama’s debut album, XS. The End of the World Remix is more upbeat and fast-paced, while the acoustic version is a good, stripped-down version. I personally prefer the Dream Wife remix because it adds new layers and instrumentals without taking away too much from the original feeling of the song. Rina’s lyrics hit home hard; I’ve definitely had this track on repeat during a few Bad Mental Health(TM) sessions.

Kill Your Local Indie Softboy by Izzy Camina

British-American singer-songwriter Izzy Camina’s tongue-in-cheek track is an ode to our favorite cuffed jean, Converse-wearing, pretentious men. As a self-proclaimed victim of indie softboys, the catchy hook and hilarious lyrics (And he swears that he’s not a fuckboy / But he’s worse, he’s an arty indie softboy) drew me in. Some of the lyrics are are borderline crass rather than witty but that didn’t stop me from humming along the chorus every other day.

Jason by BONNIE PARKER

Gender-bender musician BONNIE PARKER pens a cute, queer, indie-pop track with Jason. Parker’s storytelling is short and sweet with a killer hook. I fell in love with this song for just how high school it is. Not much to say here other than it’s fun and perky.

randy’s track by Kennedy

Alternative hip-hop boyband Kennedy is back on the Monthly Mix with randy’s track. It’s only a minute long — an interlude, almost. Rapper Randy Begtang’s ode to growing up perfectly encapsulates the feeling of confusion and being directionless while the rest of your peers seem leagues ahead. Kennedy vocalist Moimoi Bulut’s dream-like vocals wrapping up the song coupled with the full synths and music box-like backing make the song one of the more polished tracks in the mixtape. Regardless, every Kennedy track that gets released continues to push the envelope for their musical potential. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again — Kennedy is definitely one to root for.

Listen to the December edition of Monthly Mix here:

Monthly Mix is Kara Angan’s attempt of writing at least one piece on this blog per month. It features her favorite songs from the month with mini-reviews on stand-out tracks. All monthly mixes can be found on her (very messy) Spotify account.