I totally forgot that 'You Can't Hum Your Way Out of This One' was originally inspired by David Cameron's resignation speech from the UK Government after the Brexit results. As he walks into 10 Downing Street, he hums a little tune.... very clearly ....
Monday, 30 November 2020
Friday, 27 November 2020
You Can't Hum Your Way Out of This One Video
This song came about after some home truth serum activity and Jeron messing around with his drum machine… We knew that it needed a guest vocalist and, ‘though this is the first time that we’ve worked with Jimmy, he has really meshed well with the band and done a superb job. Huge thanks to the puppet theatre for the loan of Jimmy.
It took me a while to bond with Jimmy, I had to mend his trousers and then we just had to get on with getting on. I remember Sal saying how she had to take up Nick Cave's trousers for a video shoot and that had a similar affect. Similar types of guy I guess, haha.A lot of practicing with lip sync and eye position, you can only move his eyes by moving his head. The mouth movement is a strange metal hook on a lever in Jimmy's back. The body is made of paper mache the head is plaster I think. He'd had a little accident with his face before we met.As you can hear, he's noisy, but I think he can impersonate my voice really well. When Mark came up with the idea of a ventriloquist dummy for this video, I said, what for.... knowing that I found them horribly creepy, but it was great fun and working with puppets, you learn stuff about yourself, sounds like a cliche, I know, but give it a go and then you'll see.
Friday, 18 September 2020
Being Heard
I have had a wonderful experience of being listened to. In one day the chairman of the Plantation Gardens contacted me to ask if it would be useful for the gardeners to take into account my possible show of musicians in trees to prune undergrowth over the winter. Norwich City Council got in touch to request I meet with their head of Strategy and Transformation to chat through my idea of city centre vertical farms finding a home in the ailing shopping centres and the plant science labs, John Innes contacted me saying I could talk with their vertical farm experts. It's a privilege to be heard and the energy it's given me to keep asking questions and seeing new ways forward is priceless. Thank you to things that keep us moving forward.
Monday, 14 September 2020
Vertical Farms and Musicians in Trees
Last night I popped to see Tully, a tree surgeon I know, to talk about putting musicians into trees. I'd like to orchestrate socially distanced gigs using the trees in the Plantation Gardens. Is it viable to strap musicians into trees and have them look like they have lived there for a while, that they are always in that tree? The musician would research the tree, write about the tree, build a friendship with the tree, write songs as if the tree were singing or creating the noise. The musician connects with the tree, learns about arboriculture, shares their learning and experience through online chats, blogging, a short film, live story telling. Over the weeks, you can drop into the plantation garden for a talk/story by one of the musicians, they share their process.
It culminates in a gig, a promenade show, musicians in the trees, low lights, sounds, individual songs and songs all together. A soundscape to move people, connect to the space, the here and now.
Friday, 28 August 2020
I have a question
In my research to understand more about climate issues for our next KlangHaus ventures, I came across the idea of vertical farms. Vertical farming is the practice of growing crops in vertically stacked layers inside a building in a controlled environment. Our shopping centres in my home city of Norwich, Castle Mall and Chapelfield Intu are not thriving, MY QUESTION IS, could they become vertical farms? Could we as citizens become connected to the food we eat through proximity to seeing it grow, maybe we could help grow the food we eat? One problem with vertical farming is proximity to market. Another problem is a good source of labour. I’m sure you could sit with a piece of paper and write a whole stack of positives for having an innovative city farm. Of course there are the whole plethora of reasons why not.
I have spoken to folks about this idea of having city centre vertical farms, where we the citizens can help grow food for ourselves, or at least connect with it, walk amongst it, watch it grow, learn about it. Get the schools in, the allotment champions, have socials, have gigs and art installations. Their eyes light up.
With failing harvests, impoverished soils why use swathes of landscape to grow our food? If the land wasn't used for farming, what would it look like? What do you see?
Then, second push, turn our decimated north city concrete shopping precinct into an Eden project for the east... again, having farming as well as tropical plants, socials, gigs, art, dance, cross generational events, celebrations of food seasons, group meals. If it had the investment to start, at least a quarter of the country would come and visit it.
What are the steps to realising such ventures, would they work? Do people want it? What are the blocks?
I'm going to make a radio documentary following this line of enquiry. I want to use sound, play with sound and conjure up a future I'd like to be part of.
http://vincent.callebaut.org french architects vision.