Last week for the first time: I hosted a Pop Quiz
All has been quiet on the blog front for the past few weeks. But, despite appearances, I am still wholly committed to my endeavour of indulging in a new experience on a weekly basis. The difficult task is finding enough hours in the day to put pen to paper and share my exploits with you good people who invest your time in this nonsense.
I threw myself into January with gusto and determination and probably developed a few more wrinkles and grey hairs in the process, but all in the name of adventure and good fun. Over the past month, I have dined at an exquisite restaurant where I had my first ever five-course meal, seen a live gig featuring a hurdgy-gurdy and started my very first band, as well as viewing some great films such as Black Swan, Westworld and, my new favourite Rogers and Hammerstein number, Flower Drum Shop. I am short of breath just thinking about it.
The most time-consuming task at hand was, without doubt, the Pop Quiz that I volunteered to organise for my colleagues at the Thursday evening office bar. After witnessing a previous general knowledge quiz event, which had more in common with a history test than an alcohol-fuelled battle of wits, I decided that myself and collegaue Rebecca had what it takes to provide a night of entertainment for the hard-working, high-flying types that hang out in our building (ie nobody from my department turned up).
There were two difficulties: setting the appropriate atmosphere and pitching the questions correctly. I have been to hundreds of pop quizzes over the years, demanding varying degrees of expertise and levels of competitiveness. If you ever attend a pop quiz in Belgium, you will witness first hand a laid-back ambience where shameless cheating is totally acceptable, if not encouraged, and teams vary in size from 2 to 25 players. On the other hand, at a recent event in Holland, after arriving late, we were banished from the quizzing area as contestants fought it out in deathly silence under exam-like conditions. As most of my colleagues are from the UK, and with lessons learned from the previous office quiz, I decided to keep it light-hearted but with the healthy competitive spirit that the Brits seem to enjoy. I kept it fun but challenging, whilst bearing in mind that not everybody is as big a music nerd as I am.
My lengthy train journeys and precious iPod proved invaluable in the preparation of the 6 rounds of 20 questions that I cobbled together, which, I hasten to point out, do not in any way reflect my musical tastes:
Pictures
Simply name the artist pictured. Images of a wide variety of pop stars from Puff Daddy to Crosby Stills and Nash via Bryan Ferry wearing a very strange hat and looking nothing like Bryan Ferry. My favourite answer was from the team who mistook Kraftwerk for Los Lobos and then went on to actually try to explain the logic behind their thinking. ("We knew it was a German band...")
General Pop
2 rounds' worth of music excerpts covering all eras and genres from lame "we're not a boy band" Maroon 5 to 70s Dad rock ELO via Katy Fucking Perry.
Covers
Name the song, the artist and the original recording artist.
Contestants scored highly on this round despite my feeling that I had raised the level of difficulty. Surprisingly, nobody recognised Ian Brown's Mancunian mumblings on Billie Jean and I would really love to hear the original version of Nothing Compares to U by Dolly Parton.
Film and TV
Popular theme tunes from both the big and small screen, that people didn't spot as easily as I anticipated. A shame Spandau Ballet didn't do the Ghostbusters theme.
Don't Give Up Your Day Job
Songs recorded - or in many cases, slaughtered - by celebrities who achieved stardom via a route other than music, including classic gems from Samantha Fox (Double D for effort), William Shatner and the velvet-throated David Hasselhoff. Alas, the dulcet tones of Russell Crowe and Ricky Gervais in their respective bands The Ordinary Fear of God and Seona Dancing passed everybody by. The final few questions focussed on the previous occupations of international superstars before they picked up their first microphone. Most people know that Sting was a teacher, but who would've guessed that Cyndi Lauper once cleaned out dog kennels for a living? (although I do prefer the idea of her being a jockey as one team suggested).
With the additional bonus of Belgian special beers at the bargain price of €1,50, the evening was a resounding success. Knowledge was impressive and scores were really close with the competitive element present right until the very end. A good time was had by all, including myself and glamorous assistant Rebecca and I learned a very important lesson that I am sure will serve me well in future quizzes and perhaps if I ever enter the European Commission Concours; if all else fails, write down Tom Jones.
Will I try this again?: Round 2 in May. Maybe.
"Variety's the very spice of life, That gives it all its flavour" - William Cowper.
About Me
- Clairvoyant
- Every week I will try something new: this can range from the mundane, to the sensational via the downright pointless, but it must be a totally new experience for me. All ideas are welcome, within reason.
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Now That's What I Call....a Pop Quiz!
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