We all need a little sunshine in our lives. Just a ray of hope. A touch of brightness.
Light at the end of the tunnel. A mood enhancer. And when it returns, so will the smiles...
The life and times of a fully fledged South East Londoner, originally from Birmingham. Music in my soul Villa in my blood.
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Thursday, 6 February 2014
Head Space Daily Image...
What can be achieved with a little bit of sunshine. A rainbow on the way to London Bridge the other day...
Head Space Daily Tune...
Broken Bells - Holding On For Life
My youngest son hates this track but I think it's a real grower. There is a lot going on and the Bee Gees-esque chorus sticks in your brain. Broken Bells is the producer Dangermouse's latest collaboration and I received a copy of the album today, so will be having a listen soon…
My youngest son hates this track but I think it's a real grower. There is a lot going on and the Bee Gees-esque chorus sticks in your brain. Broken Bells is the producer Dangermouse's latest collaboration and I received a copy of the album today, so will be having a listen soon…
Tuesday, 4 February 2014
Head Space Daily Words...
I went to
the cinema today to watch Gravity in 3-D and what a great experience it was too
– an incredible film - but I had to travel to the Ritzy in Brixton to see it.
Don’t get me wrong, I love the Ritzy and everything it stands for, I’ve got a
soft spot for Brixton too having lived there for a few years but I am a resident
of the London Borough of Lewisham, which has the exact number of ZERO cinemas
within its boundaries. A friend shared a link at the weekend entitled Lewisham's Lost Cinemas (click title for link)which reveals that over twenty cinemas have existed at one time or another in
Lewisham since the early 1900s. The article features photographs of the sites
of these cinemas as they are today and when you hover your cursor over the
pictures, seamlessly superimposed images of the original cinema buildings
appear. One of the locations is now
a car wash, which is a terrible waste. The effect is to make you feel sad for
the loss of the buildings, as well as nostalgic for what was once there and
what we are missing today. It made me wonder why they were shut down and there
are probably a variety of reasons. Could it have been that so many cinemas, all
after a piece of the pie, were left feeding off crumbs and not financially
viable? Perhaps the time that many of them were closed down reflect the political
and economic situations of the era. There was apparently a cinema on London
Road in Forest Hill, which doesn’t seem to feature in the article, called the
Capitol – picture below – which appears to have been absolutely huge.
When was
the last time you went to the cinema with a thousand strong audience? Maybe the
sheer size of these cinemas made them unsustainable. Today, there were six
other people watching Gravity with me
on the Ritzy’s main screen. Admittedly it was an 11.15AM screening but there
are over 350 seats in there. This is why cinemas today have to be more than simply
places to screen films and must be one of the reasons why many of these
fabulous art deco buildings became bingo halls. I imagine as cinemas they would
have spent all week sitting empty but throw in the chance to win a few bob and
the ‘glamour’ of the bingo hall and hey presto, packed houses and a revenue.
The former Capitol Cinema, which I mention above is now a Wetherspoon’s pub.
Seeing all those black and white and faded pictures of old movie houses in the
article does make you long for a golden age of cinema, which may or may not
have existed but to have the equivalent of the Ritzy, in Lewisham, would not
only be a great place to watch films but would also lift the area. Cinemas like
the Ritzy are centres in the community, for all ages, to be entertained,
educated and inspired – a venue to hang out, socialise and communicate. They
are genuine focal points, which bring people together and a Ritzy type cinema certainly
wouldn’t go amiss in Lewisham. Having watched Gravity, I feel like I have just
been on an exhilarating roller-coaster ride but it would have been nice to have experienced it on my own manor...
Head Space Daily Tune...
As well as going through my MasterCuts compilations at the moment, I am also delving into my old Strange Games And Funky Things and related albums. This is a corker from Minnie Ripperton…
Saturday, 1 February 2014
Head Space Daily Words...
At football training, where I coach my youngest sons Under 9s team, I use the the name of the well known experimental jazz artist Sun Ra's album - Space Is The Place - to encourage the practice of creating and finding space on the pitch, to enable movement and progression of the football towards the opposition goal. "What is the place?" I ask and they answer, "space." Hell yeah. We are working on passing, control and movement - the necessary essentials - and team work, the vital ingredient. Following my eldest son's birthday party this afternoon, with a few mates, ice skating at canary Wharf, he is having a sleep over tonight. They are all downstairs listening to Sam Smith and playing FIFA 14. Oh to be young. Pancakes await them in the morning. Just heard tomorrow's U9s game is off due to waterlogged pitch, which is no surprise as the rain has been almost biblical of late. Instead of training for football we should maybe build an Ark. As they listen to Sam Smith, I have taken refuge in my upstairs space, where I have Classic Jazz Funk Mastercuts Volume 3 going through my headphones - check HSD Tune...
Head Space Daily Tune...
Donald Byrd - Love Has Come Around
A terrific uplifting slice of vocal jazz-funk from the master that is Donald Byrd...
A terrific uplifting slice of vocal jazz-funk from the master that is Donald Byrd...
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