Tag: celebration

  • Lauren Maslin – June 2025 대학 축제와 깜짝 게스트: 우리 학교 140주년 기념 음악 축제

    대학 축제와 깜짝 게스트: 우리 학교 140주년 기념 음악 축제

    날씨가 따뜻해지기 시작하면, 한국의 여러 대학교 캠퍼스에서는 다양한 축제가 열립니다. 길거리 음식, 동아리 활동, 테마 부스, 그리고 라이브 콘서트까지 더해진 이 축제들은 많은 대학생들에게 중간고사 기간의 지루함을 잠시나마 잊게 해주는 소중한 시간이다.

    보통 각 대학교의 총학생회가 축제를 주관하고 준비하는데, 말 그대로 ‘학생들이 직접 만드는, 학생들을 위한’ 행사라고 할 수 있다. 또 이 시기는 학생들만을 위한 연예인 공연을 볼 수 있는 최고의 기회이기도 하다.

    특히 올해는 우리 학교에게 특별한 해였다. 2025년은 학교가 설립된 지 140주년이 되는 해였기 때문이다. 이를 기념하여 학장님 중 한 분과 학교 채플린, 총학생회가 나와 축하 연설을 했고, 한국식 축제 분위기에 빠질 수 없는 MC도 함께했다.

    MC는 ‘마스터 오브 세레모니(Master of Ceremonies)’의 줄임말로, 공연을 소개하고 무대와 관객 사이를 이어주는 역할을 한다. 박수 타이밍을 유도하거나 관객과 소통하고, 퍼포머와 인터뷰하는 등 축제의 분위기를 끌어올리는 중요한 존재다.

    한국의 음악 축제를 떠올릴 때 빠질 수 없는 특징 중 하나는 공연 사이사이에 오가는 많은 이야기들이다. MC는 관객에게 소소한 미션을 주고 상품을 나눠주거나, 방금 본 무대에 대해 이야기하기도 하고, 무대에 오른 댄서, 래퍼, 밴드, 가수들과 인터뷰를 하며 그들의 전공, 음악을 좋아하게 된 계기 등에 대해 묻는다. 기다리는 시간이 조금 길게 느껴질 때도 있었지만, 원어민들이 자연스럽게 대화하는 모습을 들으며 재미있게 한국어 듣기 연습을 할 수 있는 좋은 기회였다.

    이번 축제에는 정말 다양한 장르의 공연이 있었다. 힙합부터 케이팝, 발라드, 록까지 다채롭게 이어졌고, 학생들과 프로 가수들이 함께 무대를 꾸몄다. 나는 친구들을 초대해서 함께 즐겼는데, 공연 하나하나가 너무 신나고 에너지가 넘쳐서 정말 좋은 시간이었다.

    예상치 못한 재미도 있었다. 일정한 간격으로 물총에서 시원한 물줄기가 뿜어져 나왔고, 모두가 젖은 채로 노래를 따라 부르며 춤을 추었다. 마치 여름밤의 축제를 온몸으로 즐기는 느낌이었다.

    그리고 축제의 진짜 하이라이트는 마지막 날 저녁에 찾아왔다. 갑자기 무대 위로 걸어나온 사람은… 바로 세계적인 레전드 싸이였다! 무대 조명이 화려하게 터지고, 하늘에서 물이 쏟아지는 가운데 관객들은 열광했고, 나는 그 순간을 믿을 수가 없었다. 싸이는 내가 처음 알게 된 한국 가수였는데, 이제는 진짜 한국 땅에서, 그것도 한국 대학생들과 함께 싸이의 노래를 부르고, 춤추고, 소리 지르며 그 무대를 직접 보고 있다니 꿈만 같았다.

    혹시 이름이 익숙하지 않더라도, 그의 세계적인 히트곡 ‘강남스타일’을 모르는 사람은 없을 것이다. 방탄소년단 팬이라면 슈가와 함께한 ‘That That’도 알 것이다. 내 인생에서 잊을 수 없는 음악적 경험이었다고 말해도 절대 과장이 아니다.

    돌이켜보면, 이런 축제는 한국에서의 교환학생 생활 중 가장 기억에 남는 순간 중 하나였다. 학생들이 힘을 합치면 이렇게 멋진 행사를 만들 수 있다는 걸 느꼈고, 캠퍼스 생활이 얼마나 즐거울 수 있는지도 새삼 깨달았다. 물에 흠뻑 젖으면서 춤을 추던 순간도, 친구들과 길거리 음식을 먹으며 수다를 떨던 시간도, 싸이와 함께 노래를 부르던 감동의 순간도, 모두가 함께 만들어낸 소중한 추억이었다. 한국 학생들과 외국인 학생들이 함께 어우러졌던 그 분위기가 정말 인상 깊었다.

    이런 경험이 바로 교환학생 생활의 진짜 매력인 것 같다. 수업과 시험도 물론 중요하지만, 예고 없이 찾아오는 즐거운 저녁들이야말로 오래오래 기억에 남을 순간이다.

     

    University Music Festivals and a Surprise Guest: My University’s 140th Anniversary Celebration

    As the weather warms up in South Korea, a variety of festivals are held on university campuses across the country. These lively events—featuring street food, club-led activities, themed booths, and live concerts—are the highlight of many Korean university students’ social calendars. They offer a much-welcomed break from the monotony of midterm exam preparation, revision, and lectures.

    Each university’s student council typically organises and prepares the festival, making it a student-led initiative – by the students, for the students. It’s also one of the best chances to see a celebrity performance, often arranged just for the student community.

    This year was especially remarkable for our university, as 2025 marks the 140th anniversary of its founding. To celebrate the occasion, there were speeches from one of the deans, the university chaplain, and the student council. In true Korean festival style, the event also featured an MC – short for “Master of Ceremonies”. In Korea, the MC introduces the performers, interviews them, interacts with the audience, and brings the energy up with clapping cues, commentary, and plenty of engagement.

    One distinctive aspect of Korean music festivals is the amount of conversation that happens between performances. The MC chats with the audience, gives out challenges with prizes, and reflects on the performances. They also talk to the performers – be they dancers, rappers, bands, or singers – asking them to introduce themselves, share their major, and speak about why they enjoy music. At times, the waiting could feel a little long, but listening to the natural conversations between native Korean speakers was undeniably beneficial and gave me the chance to practise my Korean listening skills in a fun and immersive way.

    The festival featured a wide variety of performances – from hip-hop to K-pop, ballads to rock. Both students and professional artists took the stage, and it was a joy to watch. I invited some friends to come along, and we spent the evening enjoying the exciting and energetic atmosphere together.

    Unexpectedly, there was also a water gun that sprayed a shower of cold water at intervals. Everyone danced in the “rain” and sang along to our favourite songs—it felt like the perfect blend of chaos and joy!

    The true climax of the festival came on the final evening. Suddenly, stepping out onto the stage, was none other than a global legend – the one and only PSY. The crowd erupted in cheers as pyrotechnic lights lit up the sky and water rained down over us. I was absolutely starstruck – I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. PSY was the first Korean artist I had ever heard of, and now I was standing in South Korea, surrounded by university students, singing, dancing, and screaming along to one of the most iconic artists in the world.

    You might not recognise his name immediately, but you’ll definitely know his record-breaking hit, Gangnam Style. And fans of BTS will also know That That, a popular collaboration between PSY and SUGA. To say this was an unforgettable musical experience would be an understatement.

    I think these festivals will one of the best parts of my time studying abroad in Korea. They have showed me how much students can do when they work together and how fun campus life can be. Whether it was becoming soaked by surprise water sprays, eating street food with friends, or singing along with PSY, it was amazing to share those moments with both Korean and international students.

    These are the kinds of experiences that make studying abroad special. The lectures and exams matter, but it’s the fun, unexpected evenings like this that I will remember most fondly!

  • Tag der deutschen Einheit

    3rd October. Since 2004 many people of my generation will think of mean girls when someone says this date, but in Berlin and Germany this date has a very different, less trivial meaning, “Der Tag der deutschen Einheit” i.e. the day in 1990 when East and West Germany reunified and became Germany once again. I was very lucky to not only be in Berlin on this date, but in 2015, as this marked 25 years since the reunification. In order to celebrate a free festival was put on in front of the Brandenburg gate, in which performers including singers, dancers and an orchestra entertained an audience of thousands.

  • 快樂中國新年 Happy Chinese New Year

    綿羊或山羊的一年 Year of the sheep (ram or goat)

    Ranking the eighth position of all the animals in Chinese zodiac, Sheep (Ram or Goat) represents solidarity, harmony and calmness. People born in the year of the Sheep are polite, mild mannered, shy, imaginative, determined and have good taste. On the negative side, they are sometimes pessimistic, unrealistic, short-sighted and slow in behavior.

    Chinese new year 2015

    Chinese New Year is the longest and most important celebration in the Chinese calendar.  The Chinese year 4713 begins on Feb. 19, 2015.

    Chinese months are reckoned by the lunar calendar, with each month beginning on the darkest day. New Year festivities traditionally start on the first day of the month and continue until the fifteenth, when the moon is brightest. In China, people may take weeks of holiday from work to prepare for and celebrate the New Year.

    A Charming New Year

    Legend has it that in ancient times, Buddha asked all the animals to meet him on Chinese New Year. Twelve came, and Buddha named a year after each one. He announced that the people born in each animal’s year would have some of that animal’s personality. Those born in sheep years are often artistic, charming, sensitive, and sweet. It is known as the most creative sign in the Chinese zodiac.

    Fireworks and Family Feasts

    At Chinese New Year celebrations people wear red clothes, decorate with poems on red paper, and give children “lucky money” in red envelopes. Red symbolizes fire, which according to legend can drive away bad luck. The fireworks that shower the festivities are rooted in a similar ancient custom. Long ago, people in China lit bamboo stalks, believing that the crackling flames would frighten evil spirits.

    The Lantern Festival

    In China, the New Year is a time of family reunion. Family members gather at each other’s homes for visits and shared meals, most significantly a feast on New Year’s Eve. In the United States, however, many early Chinese immigrants arrived without their families, and found a sense of community through neighborhood associations instead. Today, many Chinese-American neighborhood associations host banquets and other New Year events.

    The lantern festival is held on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month. Some of the lanterns may be works of art, painted with birds, animals, flowers, zodiac signs, and scenes from legend and history. People hang glowing lanterns in temples, and carry lanterns to an evening parade under the light of the full moon.

    In many areas the highlight of the lantern festival is the dragon dance. The dragon—which might stretch a hundred feet long—is typically made of silk, paper, and bamboo. Traditionally the dragon is held aloft by young men who dance as they guide the colorful beast through the streets. In the United States, where the New Year is celebrated with a shortened schedule, the dragon dance always takes place on a weekend. In addition, many Chinese-American communities have added American parade elements such as marching bands and floats.

    New Year Markets

    In the course of the New Year’s days, a temporary market will be setup to mainly selling New Year goods, such as clothing, fireworks, decorations, food, and small arts. The market is usually decorated with a large amount of lanterns.

    Small Year

    Small year is the 23th or 24th of the last month of the year. It is said that this is the day the food god will leave the family in order to go to heaven and report the activity of family to the Emperor of the heaven. People will follow religious ceremony to say farewell to the food god, including taking down and burning the paint of the food god. After the New Year’s Day, people will buy new paint of the food god and display it in the kitchen.

    Cleaning

    A few days before the Chinese New Year, people will do a complete cleaning of the house and house wares which signifies to remove the old and welcome the new. Historically, when bathing did not occur often, people would normally take one to welcome the New Year.

    Decoration

    After the cleaning, people will decorate the house to welcome the New Year. Most of the decorations are red in color. The most popular New Year decorations are upside down fu, dui lian, lanterns, year paint, papercutting, door gods, etc.

    Chinese door god