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Thursday 29 January 2015

Head Space Daily Words...

Last week I took a break from work and went to a nearby café for a cup of tea. The music spewing out of the speakers was dismal and downright irritating. A wind instrument of some description was being played badly over some mild percussion. Why does music like this exist? I don’t understand it. Do café owners go to a shop and specifically ask or search on line for the blandest, most generic and annoying, tuneless dirge. I would go insane if I had to work there. In fact, the waitress who served me looked thoroughly pissed off. Luckily, I had brought my I pod with me and Sharon Van Etten’s Tramp album was soon bringing back my sanity, although that bloody oboe, clarinet – or whatever it was – occasionally battled Sharon for a piece of the action. From one New York songstress to another. I had come out to finish the book I was currently reading, Patti Smith’s autobiography, Just Kids.  What a majestically beautiful book it is. My Patti Smith knowledge doesn’t go beyond her fabulous reworking of Van Morrison’s Gloria, so I had no expectations. The book leads the reader through Patti’s creative development from a little girl, up to today, taking in her move to New York, her influences, her friendship and love for Robert Mapplethorpe - who was her creative soulmate - and the evolution of her art and practice. She never wanted to be a singer. Singing happened to her. Through writing, reading, photography, theatre and music; through meeting and crossing paths with singers, performers, cultural icons, authors, poets, and hangers on, her views and self-belief were gradually formed and guided. Having the guts to leave home, to survive the sordid, the unnerving, the unglamorous and the grit and to be in the right place at the right time are key factors in how she became the artist she is today and New York in the ‘70s was a creative magnet. It is incredible how all these artists and performers were mixing and sharing their work at this time, particularly out of the Chelsea Hotel. When so many people are sharing work and ideas, it is electric. Patti and Robert Mapplethorpe were two kindred souls, their beings entwined through a wonderful story, full of waifs and strays, music, polaroids and adventure. This is how anyone should become an artist or performer – by putting in the graft and living the life. Shame on the X factor nobodies. A key character in the story is New York itself, a place which, like London, nurtures creativity and allows people to develop. A photographer friend of mine, in the same way as Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe nurtured their skills, has also been cultivating his craft over many years, heading in new directions and presenting his work in different ways. His Linked In page describes himself as having been a contemporary British photographer for 28 years and one month. This is it. Being an artist is not a job, it is an evolution and an obsession throughout your life. His latest project is a book entitled New York Posts (see HSD Image), which came about from a five-day trip to the city and a determination for something tangible to come out of it. It is a book, which reflects the madness of modern life in a modern city. Taking headlines from the New York Post newspaper, which were published during his stay, he presents them amongst the images that he photographed, giving a genuine feel of modern day madness. Amongst the headlines ranging from the sensational, to the shocking, mundane and bizarre, live people struggling to exist. They leave their mark by spraying paint on walls and doors, they garner hope from compassionate looking statues of Jesus, flower stalls bring colour, whilst the singer Beck makes a personal appearance. As the day to day happens, people get shot as if in a Western, Bieber and Bloom fight like spoilt brats over Miranda Kerr and Spiderman is arrested in Times Square. It is a great portrayal of everyday life, captured over five days in New York and could be applied to any city or town, the world over. No matter what happens, however peculiar, life goes on.

What my friend Dan has done, in the same way as Patti Smith, or Sharon Van Etten, is show the bravery and passion to get up and do it.

My break from work finished as We Are Fine by Sharon VE came to an end and that oboe, or kazoo, or whatever it is, like an annoying wasp, once again invaded my space and it was time to head back to work


If you have appreciated these words in any way, you may want to get yourself copies of Just Kids by Patti Smith, New York Posts by Dan Boulton, link below:


And I would recommend reading the books whilst listening to Sharon Van Etten (see HSD Tune.) Art and artists must be supported...




Head Space Daily Image...

Here is a copy of Dan Boultons New York Posts book, sitting on a dusty shelf. Go check it out...




Head Space Daily Tune...

We Are Fine - Sharon Van Etten

This is my favourite track of the Tramp album by Sharon Van Etten and what a marvellous song it is...


Thursday 8 January 2015

Head Space Daily Words...

With an unwanted Christmas present to be refunded, Patti Smith's autobiography, Just Kids, accompanied me to Shoreditch this morning. Life is getting back to normal this week. Random Christmas trees lie on pavements. Festive obstacles to be dodged. The jagged glass of an Islamic Centre's smashed window. A reminder of murder in Paris. Shame about the window I say to the Muslim man with a ginger beard, stood next to me. It doesn't matter, he replies. We go our separate ways. It matters to me but it won't stop us living side by side, in our city. Flashback Records has the CD of Horse by Patti Smith for four pounds. I'd like the vinyl I think and don't buy it. Brick Lane Beigel Bakery. Tuna, mayo and sweetcorn. Can of pop. On to Rough Trade. Tramp by Sharon Van Etten, in the bag. Need to get with it before I see her at Shepherd's Bush Empire on April 29th. Lovely sunshine, cutting low across rooftops. Train home. Curtis in my ears. A few more pages of Patti...

Head Space Daily Image...

Some images from today...





A smashed window of an Islamic centre in Shoreditch, following yesterday's shootings in Paris...




The Truman Brewery chimney on Brick Lane looks on majestically...




A lonely Christmas tree in someone's front garden patiently waiting to be dumped...

Head Space Daily Tune...

Buddy Rich - The Beat Goes On

Regardless of whatever cards life deals, the beat goes on...




Wednesday 7 January 2015

Head Space Daily Words...

Throughout the Christmas period, time freezes, life pauses and we live in a merry little bubble of getting up at noon, watching nostalgia on the telly and making time for friends and family. Very nice. Then, time restarts and the face fill is done for another year – apart from the stray chocolates, an unfinished box of biscuits and half a jar of cranberry sauce. The best leftovers are the happy memories and we stumble back into life’s routine. If someone had told me at the start of 2014 that I would be walking across the ridge of a razor sharp hill (or mountain, according to the kids,) known as The Cat’s Back, in the deepest Herefordshire countryside, on the second day of 2015, I would have questioned their sanity. I always see myself in a hungover fug, barely moving from the settee in the early days of a new year. This windswept trek was undertaken in a pair of oversized, borrowed, wellington boots. I take size 10, so god knows what sort of giant owns this huge footwear. Like the disheveled bunch of townies that we are, we proudly conquered the Cat’s Back summit, passing a farmer herding his sheep on the way and followed this with a chip butty and cheeky pint in a local pub, which was the perfect way to become acquainted with 2015.

Christmas Day was a gathering, with both sets of parents rocking up for a perfect roast, with our log fire glowing throughout the afternoon and into the evening. The night before had been our traditional Christmas Eve family film. Having exhausted most Christmas movies, we saw Elf again in Greenwich, a movie you can’t beat at Christmas, no matter how many times you’ve seen it. Within a week of buying our Christmas tree, it was as bald as Kojak, with its needles forming a green carpet around its base. And, as I write this, the velvet tones of Gregory Porter ooze from the speakers as Water, my Christmas vinyl, flows into the room, conjuring up images in my mind of Snoopy and Charlie Brown...

Snap back to reality. A bleary eyed return to work. Politicians with their playground squabbles. Patients turned away from hospitals. Rubbish team, sack the manager. Money tight and getting tighter. It is what it is. When the year gets underway, 365 days seem like a long haul, with the impending ups and downs, tears and laughter, victories and defeats but we pull ourselves through - we always do – to be rewarded with another two weeks of time freeze and face fill, when it once more grinds and winds to a temporary halt...



Head Space Daily Image...

Pictures from a New Year adventure...



Looking out from the Cat's Back, Herefordshire...




Slim shady...




Approach of the killer sheep...

Head Space Daily Tune...

Gregory Porter - Black Nile


An amazing voice and an amazing track from my Christmas album...