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Comments
For the headache? Worth a try I guess.
Twinned with: Promiscuity. What happens in Totnes, stays in Totnes.
Social goals around town moving forward I think....
‘The grave of the Russian composer Alfred Schnittke in Novodevichye Cemetery in Moscow is surmounted by a stone on which is engraved a rest beneath a fermata with a triple forte noted at the bottom: A very, very loud extended silence.’
Very special.
Very true. Art, and particularly music have been a bit of a refuge for me over the difficult last year or so.
Such a paradox, or can be. During difficult days art is indeed a refuge or can be (as can brown powder or bottomless whisky bottles), but during difficult days art (or the making of it) can also seem so impossible amongst the chaos and noise and upset....
Yep. When things have been bad here recently I’d love to have got lost in music or art making, but my brain just isn’t in the right space to do it. However it helps to realign things into a happier space shortly after, and even thinking about potential creative projects can be very uplifting.
Indeed, I've felt this acutely in recent weeks. As stress at work rises, I seek refuge in creative pursuits. But there are days when the challenges of the creative pursuit feel overwhelming whereas on other days they feel like a welcome part of the creative process. This is why I try to start with some "mind clearing" exercise before diving in on creative stuff in stressful times.
Sometimes I wish I were still out
on the back porch, drinking jet fuel
with the boys, getting louder and louder
as the empty cans drop out of our paws
like booster rockets falling back to Earth
RIP Tony Hoagland
I relate to this.
Best poster on any forum ever.
Put it into practice again, after getting booted out of the band I was in a couple of weeks ago. Apparently not wanting to do one free half hour gig, which for me involved a four hour round trip over the mountains, in December, made my position untenable. The fact the gig was on their doorstep, like all the other free gigs we do, never seemed to be an issue for everyone else. Fuck em.
So I’ve been making a whole bunch of plans in my head to improve the quality of my solo stuff, and knuckled down to learn the new kit I’ve got inside out.
I’ve made a few bits, but the learning, and the planning helps propel things forwards, rather than looking back and dwelling on the past.
Music heals, especially the stuff you make in your head.
Fuck em indeed.
If they don't know what they're missing, they don't deserve you.
Onwards and upwards.
Keep repeating that last line and press onward.
Oh my, that is just lovely. Gonna look up his work.
Thank you! It’s a bit weird to be honest, I was told I was the ‘best bassist’ any of them had played with (and they’re all getting on a bit), was bringing a whole load of extra synth stuff and recording expertise in, and I run a small web/design/promo business which would give them all that stuff for nowt. And I thought we all got on really well, or so I thought. At the end of the day it seems to be down to tribalism - I’m not ‘one of them’ down there. Sign of the times I guess.
I think there’s also an element of ‘I’ll show em’, which helps.
Also, simply practically, if they're going to piss in your pocket, better to be aware of that propensity sooner rather than later. There are lots of other unexploded bombs on the beach, and probably closer to home at that. Moving forward however I would certainly make a point of saying thank you every time you learn something new or create a little slice of something you probably wouldn't have done if you were still driving back and forth to be the best unappreciated bass player they know etc...
Yeah definitely, better now than after putting in another years worth of work into it. I think bassists and drummers tend to be a bit lower down the pecking order, than guitarists and singers anyway.
Interesting experience though, being in a band again after 20 years. Think that’s me done now though, the benefits of being a solo twiddler means you avoid tedious band politics, and I’m unlikely to kick myself out, unless I really piss myself off.
Don't discount the possibility... If you treat yourself well (fine spirits, the occasional cigar, etc), you can reduce the probability.
The Former Steel Town of Consett: Couple Crossing Railway Lines. Consett, England. 1975.
"In the 1960s and '70s, Northern England faced great hardships of poverty and unemployment, as manufacturing and production businesses began to shutter, in a landscape that had become desolate and polluted. The dapper style of this young couple contrasts with their surroundings. Arm in arm, they stand resilient even in this brutal landscape. I had somewhat overlooked this picture since I took it, but reacquainting myself with it recently in the darkroom, I found it really striking, and, on a recent journey of rediscovery to this part of England, I tried to find the couple depicted. Sadly, I learned the man in the picture is now dead. But I was encouraged by the regeneration of the region and the social developments that have taken place. I aim to capture my subjects with honesty and compassion. My pictures are dark in order to communicate a social conscience."
-Don McCullin
Me too. 2018 has, in a lot of ways been a real crap year. Thank the Gorns for music.
I often catch myself not listening to music and it's really dumb. So I decided I would start walking to and from work with headphones listening to music. 80 mins a day of quality listening.
I make sure I am listening to something new I have not heard before at least for half an hour and then I listen to what has inspired me to produce and dj in the first place (Derrick May, Scan7, Juan Atkins, Ken Ishii etc.)
I listen to new music exclusively while walking the dog for an hour each day. Even so it takes a while to catch up with everything that's going on.
I want to say 'I wish I had an hour to put aside to try new things every day' but I also know that's a matter of making the time/arranging the priorities etc. The dog here is nodding in agreement.
I'll make you a playlist, both you and the dog will enjoy it.