Wednesday, December 14, 2016

What I've learned from Hamilton

For my last blog I have decided to talk about everything that Hamilton has taught me this semester! First off the thing that strikes me the most is that things are not easy! They will never be easy, but that does not mean that i should ever give up! Take a look at Alexander Hamilton, he went through a hard life, before he was 12 he was an orphan and had almost died, from the same illness that mother died from, but he kept going. Then the person who adopted him shot himself. He had a hard life, but he kept pushing and he did not give up. And I won't either.

The next thing that goes along with not giving up is not giving up my shot. If there is an opportunity take it, don't let it get away from you. Seek out opportunities to thrive and make a name for yourself. Alexander Hamilton also to not ruin my name by publishing the bad things I have done. You would think this would be obvious, but no i learned it from this Musical. 

Last but not least I learned that people can not really be satisfied if they are longing for other humans that they can not have so Im going to stop doing that, and be happy with the people I do have. The people that are around you love you, so do not take them for granted. EVER.




Monday, December 12, 2016

Non Stop (spoilers)


NON STOP
"Non Stop" is my favorite song in the entire musical. First off the fact that Burr narrates this is genius. We've been watching Burr compare himself to Hamilton the entire musical so far, which is what makes this song perfect. We see Burr who has been waiting for it this entire time, right next to Hamilton who has been doing things non stop to get his way. He climbs the ladder of success so quickly and it frustrates Burr, at the same impressing him.
I also loves this song because we get to see Hamilton after the war finally. Before this it was Hamilton building up to the war and then fighting in it, and it was a nice change in pace to see him out side of the war mindset, the tempo of the song also changes to go along with this change... and it is a PERFECT song. I love the way they orchestrate the song to quickly show Alexander's success. 

Non stop is slightly ambiguous in the way that it is used as well. It stands for the way he is non stop in his writing. He keeps writing and writing and writing and writing and never stops. He writes to the point where it gets obsessive. The other meaning is a foreshadow to the second act of the play. He is a non stop force of nature, just like a hurricane(haha get it), that doesn't stop for anything in his way. 

The last reason I like this song is the way that they bring in many songs from the first act into the final part of the song. It basically sums up the first act of the play. All the voices come together and make a beautiful collage of sounds. It even ends on the line "I'm not throwing away my shot" to show that Hamilton will never stop for anything until he gets what he wants. He will not throw away his shot to make a name for himself and leave his legacy.

Sunday, December 11, 2016

Congratulations (mixtape related) (spoilers)

In the song "The Reynolds Pamphlet" we get to see the encounter between Angelica and Hamilton after she finds out about what Hamilton did to Eliza, by sleeping with Maria Reynolds. We hear a small glimpse at how betrayed she feels herself, because she gave Alexander up for her sister and he hurt Eliza. All Angelica wanted to do was make Eliza happy by letting Hamilton marry her instead of Angelica, even though she so desperately longed for him. In the Reynolds Pamphlet we see that Angelica comes all the way back to help Eliza out after she is so hurt by the Reynolds pamphlet.

In the Hamilton Mixtape there is a song called "Congratulations" sung by Dessa. This gives us a more inside look at how Angelica felt about the whole situation. She congratulates him for being stupid, and hurting the best wife on the face of the earth. She even brings up how she suffered through a loveless marriage to watch Hamilton hurt her sister in a way she never wanted to see happen. It hurt Angelica so much to watch her sister get hurt in that way. 

The best line in the song is "You know why Jefferson can do what he wants? He doesn't dignify schoolyard taunts with a response!". This one line sums up why Jefferson has been succeeding over Hamilton the entire play. Hamilton has to be right and feel like he is the best, he can't feel like he is wrong, so he does everything he can to prove that he is just that, right, even if it hurts people and messes other things up along the way. 

I really appreciate Lin Manuel Miranda for writing this song so I can see more into Angelica's mind. I think she is one of the best charecters in the musical, and even though she gets a lot of on stage time, I always wished she had more, and that's exactly what this song gives us!!

Immigrants They Get the Job Done(spoilers)(Mixtape related)


 Something that "Hamilton" is known for is how the musical talks about Immigrants. The main character, Alexander Hamilton, was intact an immigrant. The opening song states that his home town collected funds and sent him to America. The guy on our $10 bill is an immigrant. The play wants to make it clear that one of our founding fathers was not even from America. Not only was
Hamilton not from America, but neither was Lafayette, one of our greatest generals, who helped win the Revolutionary war, yet he was a Frenchman. They are trying to get rid of the stigma that immigrants are a threat to our country.


Lin Manuel Miranda wants the world to know that immigrants are not going to hurt our country, in fact America would never have been founded if it was not for immigration. America is known as the melting pot, because we were founded as a country that does not judge who you are, what you believe, or where you came from, but now theres bad connotations for certain countries. How are we supposed to be the the melting pot if we do not include all the ingredients, aka all the countries. 

In the new Hamilton mixtape, there is a song about the connotations that are associated with immigration nowadays. the song is called "Immigrants (we get the job done)". It talks a lot about the way immigrants are treated in the country now a days, and how when people say they are taking our jobs, that that phrase is not correct. It also talks about the everyday lives of immigrants and how it is very hard in this country to to the way people view them. Many of the lower jobs are done by people who immigrated here, yet no one wants to do them, so the fact that we say they take our jobs is incorrect. The fact that we even talk about them being worse people is insane. We are all humans, we are all one race... Human Race. 

Lin Manuel Miranda wrote "Hamilton"  to help talk about these types of issues. He does a great job executing the topic, and does a lot to get his message out there, that immigrants are not hurting us. This country was supposed to be a safe place for everyone. It was made for EVERYONE. 

Friday, December 9, 2016

The Hamilton Mixtape-An Open Letter (slightly explicit)

"Sit down John, you fat mother F*****" (Hamilton- "The Adams Administration", Lin Manuel Miranda) One of the the most popular lines in the Hamilton Musical. Many fans have gotten this line printed on T-shirts, phone cases, and even pillows. But what not many fans know is that there was originally an entire rap done by Lin himself to go along with this line, but sadly the show was running to long, so it was cut, due to the fact that you never actually meet John Adams in the musical itself. 

Because the Hamilton cast loves giving it's fans some love, and wonderful surprises, Lin Manuel Miranda once preformed the rap(YOU CAN FIND IT RIGHT HERE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUI8b17YGx8) when he was not in character.  And because Lin loves his fans so much, he produced the Hamilton Mixtape and released the song with the title"An Open Letter" rapped by Watsky. This was the entire response Hamilton wrote to Adams, which was cut down for the musical to just the one line. When fans, such as myself, heard the song on the mix tape, it made them extremely happy. Not only was it a brand new rap that was only preformed one other time for a very small group of people, but it made sone of the best historical jokes in the play.

One of the greatest digs taken at Adams in the rap was "But you never show up to work Give my regards to Abigail Next time you write about my lack of moral compass At least I do my job up in this rumpus"("An Open Letter", Lin Manuel Miranda). Many people are not aware of the fact that when John Adams was in office, his wife Abigail did a large part in helping make decisions and basically helped him do his job as the president. 

Lin Manuel Miranda really did his research, and he knew his American History when he wrote the play. So thank you, Lin, for not only gifting us with the original musical but with doing so much Extra and giving us the Hamilton Mixtape as well, because we can never get enough Hamilton.