Monthly Archives: June 2012

Wavelength – Andrew Greaves

Digital animation artist Andrew Greaves talks about “Unnatural Order” a 14 minute movie made in collaboration with Brian Marley. The film was screened for the first time at the Whitechapel Art Gallery; London Art Book Fair, as part of Oblique Texts/Visual Dialects film programme selected by William English. Andrew talks candidly about his past and the making of this film and soundworks. Andrew Greaves:

Technical Difficulties 3:14 (Kieran Strange – Autism + Punk)

This week we talk to Kieran Strange, born in Selsey, West Sussex and living in Vancouver with life experience of autism and cancer and a powerful voice and message.

Full details on www.kieranstrange.com (And Twitter, Instagram and Facebook)

Electric Sheep podcast: Modern Hauntings

Electric Sheep podcast: Modern Hauntings

Alex Fitch talks to a pair of directors who made their first films on very low budgets and deal with subjects of hauntings that are to do as much with memory as anything supernatural. Eduardo Sánchez discusses his debut film The Blair Witch Project and his latest movie, Lovely Molly, which follows a young woman’s mental breakdown while being tormented by the ghosts of her past. Also, in an interview recorded at SCI-FI-LONDON, Shawn Holmes talks about his micro-budget feature Memory Lane which sees an Afghanistan veteran cheating death repeatedly to revisit his memories of a dead girlfriend and solve the riddle of her death.

Posters for Memory Lane and Lovely Molly

Posters for Memory Lane and Lovely Molly

Visit www.archive.org, for more info and formats you can stream / download.

Links: Memory Lane and Lovely Molly websites
Info about the Memory Lane screening at SCI-FI-LONDON
Interview with Eduardo Sánchez about his previous film, Seventh Moon Continue reading

Free Lab Radio – Egyptian Sa’aidi Hardcore/ Baladi Breakbeat

11pm Saturday – a special one hour mix for Resonance104.4fm: “After This” by Mutamassik, made on 2 turntables, a CD walkman for original tracks, and a broken mixer. Featuring tracks from the upcoming 2012, vinyl-only release “Rekkez” on ini.itu records.

Follow Free Lab Radio’s blog or more regular posts on Facebook

“After revolutions, what do you put in place?I completely lost the illusion that metropolis like New York, London and Tokyo are the ultimate hubs of activity, power points on maps, the epicenters of life.  The irony and truth is that their very breath depends on an enormous, rhizomatic, artificial life-support system that trucks,ships, flies in provisions from all kinds of unfashionable places to sustain it’s millions.  A city cannot produce enough food for even a fraction of its population.  If people do not eat, they die…
Wishik “your face”.  My mother sings an old Egyptian song, “Min ellak teskoun fe Haretna“, the words of which were intended as a love song, but double paradoxically well as a resistance poem:
“How dare you come and live in our street
You are occupying us and you’re cramping our style
We don’t have any more comfort.
Find a solution for our situation,
Otherwise leave this place
And go somewhere else.”

Six Pillars – Jameel Prize, V&A Museum

The Jameel Prize is awarded to artist Rachid Koraïchi. We discuss the history and aims of the Jameel prize with one of its curators Salma Tuqan, and the winning work with Koraïchi himself (via a translator).

Sufi-born Koraïchi is influenced by an interest in life’s signs – real and imaginary, and his work contains glyphs and ciphers drawn from other cultures, mainly Arabic calligraphic scripts. Koraïchi’s sculptures and installations explore a wide range of media such as ceramics, textiles, various metals and paint on silk, paper and canvas. His winning works were large cloth hangings, hung around the Jameel Gallery inside the V&A museum, where this interview took place.

Panel Borders: Brockley (co)Max

Panel Borders: Brockley (co)Max

In the last of our series of shows about comic book communities around the UK, Alex Fitch talks to Kieron Gillen (Uncanny X-Men), Sarah Gordon (The Peckham House for Invalids), Howard Hardiman (The Lengths), Simone Lia (Please God, find me a husband!), Gary Northfield (Derek the Sheep), Woodrow Phoenix (Nelson) and Julia Scheele (69 love songs, illustrated) about living and working in Brockley, South East London. Recorded live at the Brockley Max festival, June 2012.

Originally broadcast 24/06/12 on Resonance 104.4 FM
N.B./ The next episode of Panel Borders will be broadcast / podcast on Sunday 8th July…

Sarah Gordon, Howard Hardiman, Simone Lia, Gary Northfield, Julia Scheele, Kieron Gillen, Woodrow Phoenix and Alex Fitch at Brockley Max, photo by Annie Kwan

Sarah Gordon, Howard Hardiman, Simone Lia, Gary Northfield, Julia Scheele, Kieron Gillen, Woodrow Phoenix and Alex Fitch at Brockley Max

Visit www.archive.org, for more info and formats you can stream / download.
Continue reading

Wavelength – Destruction in Art part 8 with Ed Baxter

Auto-destruction in Art and Art in destruction: Ed Baxter remembers Art in Ruins and his own contemporary installations incorporating human hair gathered from barbers’ shops and a vast mound of used tea bags. “The cosiness of the war-years’ subway… of the mattress… of the priesthole… of the flophouse… of the bamboo cage. Of the public house. In the mausoleum of kitsch that shelters you from the storming sky hangs a photo of the now bearded Prince and the now blond Minister of Defence, his hair blowing like industrial scum in the Goose Green breeze, subliminally announcing the recovery of equilibrium.” Extract from ‘Filth’ by Ed Baxter 1985. To be continued…

Hello GoodBye Show 9 June 2012: The Telescopes and Brockley Guitar Circle

Hello GoodBye presents The Telescopes and Brockley Guitar Circle performing live in session on Resonance FM this afternoon.

Emerging from the same psychedelic guitar scene of the early 1990s that yielded Spacemen 3 and My Bloody Valentine, The Telescopes have always deen dedicated to the physical force of music played at high volume. Their early records showed their deft ability as songwriters, albeit shrouded in noise and feedback. In recent years they have also employed an abstract route, releasing albums of tape noise and their most recent single which is an almost ambient cover of Nick Drake’s Black Eyed Dog.

The Brockley Guitar Circle are a 7 piece guitar group playing largely improvised, generative music. They are influenced by Steve Reich, Terry Riley and Glenn Branca among others and aim to make music that is interesting, at times challenging and that sounds nice.

Our Website * On Facebook * Richard’s Twitter * Michael’s Twitter

Track List:
Smack Miranda ft: Spinmaster Plantpot – Hello Spinmaster
The Telescopes – Black Eyed Dog (LIVE SESSION)
The Telescopes – We See Magic And We Are Neutral, Unnecessary (LIVE SESSION)
Nick Drake – Black Eyed Dog
The Telescopes – ‘Interview’
Three Beards – Usta Usta
Haruko Seki – Tocatta Op. 111
Shoeb Ahmad – Coronation
Leverton Fox – Mole Man
Brockley Guitar Circle – Efegy (LIVE SESSION)
Brockley Guitar Circle – Harmonics (LIVE SESSION)
Shrag – Tendons In The Night
Spin Spin the Dogs – Digging And Driving
Brockley Guitar Circle – ’Interview’
Sexton Ming – Evil David Bowie

Live sound engineers: Kacper Ziemianin, Leanne Bower & Joe Oldfield

Technical Difficulties 3:13 (News roundup with Disability News Service)

After a health maintenance break, Tim Abbott is back to recap the news in the disabled community since the mid-series break in April.

Disability News Service is here and Kieran Strange is here

Outsider In – Frank Bangay

Frank Bangay and Tunde Busari

Frank Bangay was born in Wandsworth South London in 1951. He left school at the age of 15 to a variety of different work experiences. He started writing poetry in 1972. Back in the early 1970s, Frank found that expressing himself through poetry helped him to disperse the gloom of his anxiety and depression. He discovered the Troubadour Poets who held Monday night poetry evenings at the Troubadour Coffee House in Earl’s Court, and he began reciting his poetry there. One of his earliest poems, “Fear”, was published by Troubadour Poets in late August 1974. It is deeply personal and vulnerable: “You tell me that I frighten you, well I never intended to… I’m not a tough man… there are many times when I am afraid… afraid of isolation … afraid of my superiors… afraid of love… And sometimes I’m frightened of you my friend.” Frank first had experience of the mental health services in the 1970s when he started suffering from severe depression and anxiety. These experiences have played a part in his life since then. He would like to feel that one day these experiences will be things we can talk about without fear of hostility or discrimination , as is so often the case in this world. Creativity has always been a lifeline for him. In the 1980s he became involved with the Survivor Movement both campaigning and organizing many fundraising benefits of poetry and music. he also collaborated with others on publishing pamphlets and magazines of poetry written by people who had shared psychiatric experiences. In late 1991 Frank was a founder member of Survivors Poetry.Here in a voluntary capacity he organized many performances and creative writing workshops in day centers and sheltered housing and other community settings around London. In 1996 he left Survivor’s Poetry and set up a creative writing workshop at CORE Arts in Hackney. An place that promotes creativity by people who have had mental health problems. between 200 and 2004 he facilitated a creative writing workshop at St John at Hackney Community Space Centre with homeless people. In 1999 he published a collection of his poetry and drawings Naked Songs and Rhythms of Hope. He has recorded three CD’s of his poetry with musical backings. A True Voice Singing in 2001, This Topsy Turvy Life in 2004, and Jewels In The Poundshop in 2006. For the past few years he has been helping to put together a tribute album to the late Kevin Coyne. Frank being a long time fan of Kevin’s music. The album Whispers From The Offing was released in March 2007. See the Life and Living website at www.lifeandliving.net for details. He also contributes a gardening colomn called Rambling Garden Blues for an internet magazine called the Big Untidy. Their website is well worth checking out. Frank continues to write and perform. Sometimes with guitarist Tunde Busari, or the Topsy Turvy Band, Sometimes as a solo poet, sometimes with Gospel Singer Sophie Mirel, His work is sometimes of a spiritual nature, and is written from life experience.

2007 Frank compiled an album “Whispers From The Offing – A Tribute to Kevin Coyne”

CDs
Songs, Poems and Prayers
Jewels in the Poundshop
AB Normal

http://www.lifeandlivingrecords.com/shop/fb/frankbangay.html

His book, Naked Songs and Rhythms of Hope is an illustrated collection of poems by Frank Bangay. Co-published by Spare Change Books.
You can order a copy from:
Southwark MIND, Cambridge House,
131 Camberwell Road, London SE5 0HF United Kingdom
Price is £7.95 plus £1 p&p (£2.00 overseas)
or contact Frank at frankbangay@yahoo.co.uk

Bangay, F. Summer 1988 “Pieces of Ourselves – A Tribute To Eric” [Irwin], Asylum – a magazine for democratic psychiatry volume three, number 1.

Frank Plays live on Saturday 23rd June at St. Johns Church
Hackney at 3:00PM