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Tuesday, 30 September 2014

Head Space Daily Words...

Sitting in my garden this morning, there was washing to my right, hanging dutifully on the line, eager to dry; the soothing sound of distant aeroplanes rumbled smoothly overhead and to my left, the sun poured gently through the long, tall, upright foliage of an enormous, nearby bedding plant (see HSD Images.) This was a blissfully sunny, end of September morning, there to be savoured, if you were able to do so. As birdsong filled the air and a robin, with its red throat and chest bounced from branch to branch on our plum tree, it was as if I was someplace else, rather than my back garden and almost enough to make me forget that I am once again on the lookout for work, or that the osteopath has performed a near miracle on my back, or that the washing machine is nearing the end of another cycle. The BBC weather forecast had predicted light rain from 10 until midday and exactly on cue, at 09:55, clouds rushed to cover the sun; the t-shirt warmth replaced by a nagging need to put on a hoody, as the backs of my arms felt the miniscule drop in temperature.


With the grey blanket now overhead, a breeze starting to rattle the leaves and a subtle patter of rain, thoughts returned to the day ahead. In Britain we are conditioned to never rest on our laurels, to dutifully go the extra mile, to forgo our lunch hour, to fight the good fight and to believe that there is no time like the present. If we don’t adhere to the stiff upper lip, a guilty conscience takes over. So, farewell garden for now; although the weather forecast also predicts that the sun will return for the afternoon, so we could still become reacquainted later today. Until then, onwards and upwards...

Head Space Daily Image...


A shadowy selfie cast on the back of my son's P.E shirt, drying on the clothes line...



Sunlight filters through plants in our garden...





Washing dutifully drying in our back garden this morning...

Head Space Daily Tune...

Having a bit of time between jobs allows me to trawl through my record collection and it has been a huge pleasure to rediscover Cafe Bleu by The Style Council. The album was released exactly thirty years ago and is a gem. Weller certainly knows how to shift musical shapes...


The Style Council - My Ever Changing Moods





Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Head Space Daily Words...

As I walked along the road that passes between the Houses Of Parliament and Westminster Abbey this morning, a man in a white van pulled over, alongside the pavement, blocking a side road. A nearby policeman walked over and calmly but firmly said to the driver, maintaining a totally straight face at all times, “you can’t park here sir, this is the entrance to Parliament.” Classic. I was on my way to Tate Britain. After twenty years of living in London, I went for the first time in August and needed to go back to finish the job. I hope to return many times in the future. What I like about the place is that the museum – particularly compared to Tate Modern – is fairly quiet. You get the headspace to feel completely taken away and can immerse yourself in some pretty cool works of art. Photography, sculpture, painting, installations – it is all good stuff. There is a photo called ‘A Line Made By Walking’ by Richard Long. This guy would take a train to the countryside, find a field and repeatedly walk back and forth, along the same trajectory, to create a perfect line of flattened down grass, which he would then capture on film, as a frozen moment in time. It feels like he was doing it to prove his existence, that he had actually done something. There were plenty of people in Tate Britain who, in a way, were performing a similar task, to prove they were there, by recording on their phones the video installations within the collection; although their particular recordings are made that bit more special and unique by me walking into shot. Ha, ha!!

It has been a good few weeks since I have added to the hallowed HSD pages. Life is busy. Looking for work, doing work, looking for more work. The kids going back to school. Not enough hours in the day. During that time, we went camping with friends in a farmer’s field in Oxfordshire. Living in the city, I am unaware of the British countryside. Apparently, only 9% of Britain is urban but being a Londoner, it feels as if the whole nation must be city dwellers. Arriving not quite early enough to pitch up on the flat field as you immediately enter, we were directed to set up camp on the slope of a gentle hill. This was great, because being raised up gave us a view across the fields of Oxfordshire – an endless noughts and crosses board of varying shades of green and brown, crisscrossing as far as the eye could see. The kids had freedom and space to run wild. After walking past a herd of cows, picking sloe berries from which you can apparently make gin and passing close to an ancient hillside mosaic of a white horse, a campfire and a couple of bottles of wine saw us through to the end of the day, leading to a night of being unable to defy gravity and finding ourselves halfway down the tent, as we slipped steadily down the hill.

In other events, the missus and myself celebrated six years of wedded bliss by seeing Omar at the Jazz Café (see HSD Daily Tune) and we also clocked up twenty years of living in London together. It is incredible to think that it is twenty years since we finished our time as students in Sheffield. I almost feel like a grown up!!

The football season has been underway for several weeks now, in case you hadn’t noticed and it is a joy for Aston Villa not to be already battling relegation but basking in the glory of the top three of the Premier League. I feel quite dizzy. It obviously won’t last but I know where I would rather be and not having to stress about my football club has been very welcome. I took my boys up to the home game against Hull, where Villa shockingly had more possession than the opposition in the first half and won convincingly. Things are certainly looking up!!

My own managerial career has also continued, with the season starting for the Under 10s team that I manage and for which my youngest son plays. We got off to a winning start last Sunday with a 3-1 victory away from home. Happy days.

Last Wednesday provided another soulful night as I saw Gregory Porter’s iTunes Festival performance at the Roundhouse in Camden (see HSD Daily Tune.) He started with a cover of Someday We’ll All Be Free by Donny Hathaway before running through his Liquid Spirit album, including a duet with Laura Mvula on Water Under Bridges and a quick fire version of 1960 What? It was a privilege to see such a wonderful singer and performer and an experience to hopefully be repeated one day...



Head Space Daily Image...

Several images actually...



Pillars of Tate Britain...



The great outdoors of Oxfordshire...



An Oxfordshire sunset and our old banger...



Mr. Gregory Porter at the Roundhouse in Camden last Thursday...

Head Space Daily Tune...

Omar - Nothing Like This

There was indeed nothing like waving your arms in the air to this tune at Omar's recent Jazz Cafe gig…



Gregory Porter - Free

I am glad to be acquainted with Gregory Porter, a soul jazz star…