Featured

The Netherlands VS France

Comparing my home country to the one I currently live in…

“Differences simply act as a yarn of curiosity unraveling until we get to the other side”

— Ciore Taylor

Essentially, we need to let ourselves be guided by our curiosity.

Once we notice that we could be different from other people, we tend to feel strange or even defensive. Or maybe, we wonder about what the meaning behind it all really is, and then feel the need to follow that curiosity.

In my experience, I’ve always grown up knowing that I had one foot in each of 2 different countries. One that beholds my roots and identity. And the other, that has nurtured me and has made me the person I am today.

So, in a way, these two different cultures have nurtured my identity and my personality, completing what makes me, me. I have always felt slightly different and at the same time not at all. When I would be in the Netherlands, people who wouldn’t know me would assume that I’m Dutch. And when living my everyday life in France, people assume that I’m a regular French person.

Being raised by Dutch parents in a French society has made me analytical about little things whenever I would travel.

So on a more lighthearted note, I would like to share these little things that you might feel, but not notice for yourself if you ever travel to these 2 countries.

For starters, you might feel like the Dutch city streets are less chaotic or emptier than in France. Which doesn’t necessarily make sense because the streets are just as crowded with tourists. And in cities like Amsterdam, people practically live on top of each other. So what I’ve noticed, is that there are no beggars. Yep, no people sitting on the sidewalk with their things. If we take the city of Amsterdam as an example, the city offers personal advice, social assistance, a temporary place to sleep, food, long-term housing and support, etc. This means that most people who stay homeless just prefer to live on the street, and they find ways to make it work without having to beg. And if you’ve ever been to France, you would know that it is regular to be called out a few times by beggars if you walk on the streets.

Another thing that could make the streets feels roomier, is the fact that people use their bikes to get everywhere in the Netherlands. The bike paths are broad, separated from the sidewalk which makes them safe. In France, bike paths are still a work in progress and people always wear a helmet because the paths often blend into car tracks. And for this surprising reason, I barely saw anyone wearing a biking helmet in the Netherlands.

Speaking of transportation, I learned that Dutch students don’t have to pay public transportation if they get their diploma in the 10 upcoming years. It is safe to assume that that is not the case in France. Although, we do get many student discounts and free passes to museums and other patrimonial structures. This could be linked to the fact that the French have a strong heritage of which they are proud, and so they should be. Which is also why anybody in France can walk into a church or religious structure wether or not they just visiting or coming for a service.

Sadly, in the Netherlands, most religious buildings are either closed or paying. That is because faith is no longer practiced as much and making visitors pay is the only way to keep the structure preserved.

To state a few other minor differences, the Dutch use Whatsapp before any other social media, they will drink coffee (mostly lattes) at any time of the day, and the traffic lights react to the approaching of the cars. Whereas in France, texting and messenger are pretty dominant, coffee (mostly espressos) is for waking yourself up and to be drank after dessert as a digestive, and traffic lights are timed. Meaning that you could spend up to 5 minutes waiting for the light to turn green when there’s no one around. Frustrating ? I’ll let you decide.

But I love both of these countries and their differences, which make for their charm. And it wouldn’t be any fun if the world was all the same. I hope you enjoyed getting to know my vision and my experience of these countries. In the future, I might go a little further geographically speaking and tell you about my experience living the USA or traveling to South Korea for 2 weeks… Either way, stay tune for next time !

The music industry against modern plagiarism

Has it ever happened to you that you would get a familiar song in your head and then start mistakenly singing another song because it sounds just as similar? Or maybe there is only a part of the song that sounds similar.

Well, today, those sounds and songs are currently the subject of many plagiarism lawsuits. Mostly of smaller creators claiming more famous creators stole their composed melodies or sounds. People will usually stand up for the smaller creators because they are a minority. 

Katy Perry’s “dark horse” is one of the songs currently under fire for supposedly stealing a melody from a song made 10 years before her song came out. 

Why does this happen and can it really happen ? Of course. All you need is for another person find a similar combination of music chords as you. According to the way they could play rhythmically with these chords, there is a chance for songs to end up sounding similar

But this is a known fact. There have been many people on YouTube who have made videos where they chose 4 chords and played them for about 20 songs that the chords fit to. It proved that according to the key the song is played in, you can make a mashup of many songs because they all have the same base chords

So, the real issue is not whether or not songs are entirely original and unique but whether a person can own a combination of chords if they came up with it.

People are saying that this form of plagiarism cannot be considered as such because no one can own a combination of chords. If it was so, then the deceased great musicians of our time could suethe musicians of today for using their chord bases. Music has no time and it is hard to know where and when music and certain melodies started.

But back to the subject. The law states that anything that has a “minimal spark” of creativity and originality can be copyrightable. Meaning that the melody, the chord progression, the rhythm and the lyrics can be copyrighted. So in the Katy Perry case, the question was whether or not a progression of synthetic notes from her song where stolen from a less known creator who had brought out a song with the same progression of notes and slightly different melody.

This sparked a lot of interest and the people started picking sides and musicians on YouTube tried to prove who was right and who could be wrong about the situation.

It is fascinating and a complicated process to understand. 

So as said, music plagiarism lawsuits in the music industry generate a lot of press, and seem to be more common in the digital era, where sampling, snipping and outright stealing parts of songs has never been easier.

To put it in a nutshell, plagiarism has many forms. Whether it is stealing an article on line, stealing someone’s design or way of doing,

even the music industry suffers from it. 

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started