Have loved this song forever, and have played it many times live. Currently rehearsing it with a couple of friends to play live at the end of January.
Saturday, December 12, 2015
Bit of a Brick
Have loved this song forever, and have played it many times live. Currently rehearsing it with a couple of friends to play live at the end of January.
Thursday, August 06, 2015
Gurrumul
There was a moment at Womadelaide a few years ago when
Gurrumul silenced a crowd of several thousand mostly white Australians with
songs sung in ‘language’. We had no idea what he was singing about, but we knew
somewhere it was about things like hills, stories from the Dreamtime, ancestors
– things of antiquity. He was the voice of ancient Australia and he had us in
the palm of his hand. It was one of the most profound cultural moments I’ve
ever experienced. And this concert was another night of magic with this
remarkable singer. Billed as the gospel songs tour, it featured several songs
from Gurrumul’s past on Elcho Island that are more like hymns than the gospel
sounds one associates with black America.
The show began with safe territory – two of Gurrumul’s
better known songs – Wiyathul, and Bapa,
a dedication to fathers everywhere, and they set the inspirational tone for the
rest of the evening. When long time Gurrumul collaborator Michael Hohnen
announced that they were now going to play the religious tunes it seemed a
little superfluous, as these songs are deeply spiritual in the effect they can have
on an audience.
Nevertheless, local Adelaide choir Women with Latitude
joined the band for the religious/gospel part of the set and it’s a match made
in heaven. They provided a beautiful soft backdrop to Gurrumul’s timeless
vocals, embellishing every note with a restrained ethereal presence. When they
did crank up the volume later in the show on a Gurrumul original, while singing
in his native Yolngu tongue, the whole effect was
superb. It was quite noticeable too that as soon as multiple voices are added
to Gurrumul’s songs you can hear the link with the islander music of the
Pacific.
There is something intangibly primal about Gurrumul’s
ability to cut across Australian cultures with the voice of a songbird that soothes
and caresses and delivers you to a place of immense joy and deep satisfaction.
He is an extraordinary gift to this land.
Another original song, The Crow, was richly textured and
again showed Gurrumul’s ability to portray simple symbols from the world of nature
in a way that all Australians can appreciate. A catchy reggae tune closed out
the evening. Just the standing ovation was left, which of course Gurrumul can’t
see. I hope someone tells him about it. But my guess is he can probably sense
it.
Also published on The Clothesline
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Boomers' Legacy
OK. I’m going to write this rather than talk it. In truth, I
wasn’t a big fan of Stairway to Heaven. In fact the song drove me nuts. As a
guitarist and busker I was asked hundreds of times if I knew how to play it but
I never learned it. But the version of this song in this concert is a stunner. Nor
was I a great fan of Led Zeppelin after their early years. Like many bands
their best came early on and they never quite reproduced the edge of their
early stuff. So the reference to Led Zeppelin being the ‘wind beneath the wings
of a generation’ was really using them as a metaphor for all the music that
served that function. It could have been The Who, Stones, Beatles, Animals, Hendrix,
etc – it was the collective impact of new rock that sustained the cultural
change.
What of that change? Yes there were early utopian claims that
the Age of Aquarius would herald the age of peace and equality, but it clearly
didn’t happen. So what did change? It definitely drove a wedge between mine and
my parents’ generation. By the time I was 20 I was living a life that was eons
apart from theirs. The outward expression of this gulf was our appearance. We
let our hair grow, wore daggy or weird clothes, stopped going to church and
moved in to shared houses. Youth embraced a new freedom that was missing in
previous decades, and the stifling tyranny of the family unit was broken. And
rock music was our music, our mouthpiece. It’s not just the music that did it –
it was a mix of many things – but the music was the outward expression of
liberty that youth had discovered.
The legacy of this time can still be seen in a myriad of
things:
·
It is now for example quite OK to go to a fancy
theatre in jeans and a t-shirt. Or the CBD. Or anywhere. This breaking down of a
strict uniformity of dress code for all began in the late 60s.
·
It began a globalisation of the world. People
like Dylan helped people realise that struggles were the same the world over.
·
Young people started to travel – roaming far
away countries for months on end.
·
People began to live together out of wedlock en
masse and eventually wore down the importance of the institution of marriage.
·
Mainstream religion suffered a massive downturn
in appeal. People began to look elsewhere – Buddhism, meditation, Eastern
religions generally – for spiritual sustenance.
·
Communities based on very different values like
Nimbin and others on the northern coast of NSW began to spring up all over the
world. Many dropped out of a mainstream society that no longer met their needs.
·
Many more people began to take drugs and had
their consciousness altered. There were plenty of casualties but no one who takes
mind altering drugs can ever look at the world the same way again.
·
It did liberate women to some extent. Divorce
became socially acceptable and single parents received social security to
enable them to live a life free of abusive partners.
None of these things are final. They are processes of
cultural change that are still evolving. It’s interesting to think about
whether the Boomers created these changes, or whether they happened to them. It’s
probably both. Things were changing rapidly, and they were the agents of
change.
The fact is that between 1965 and 1975 the Western world changed
dramatically. And behind it was this music, these anthems advertising and extolling
another life and other values. The music you listen to in your teens and
twenties is typically the music that stays with you forever. It is the music
that was playing when you were becoming adult and working out who you were and
what you believed, and it is woven into your DNA. It provokes deep emotion whenever
you hear it. So I understand too well what Robert Plant was feeling as he listened
to his song in that concert. Quite frequently, without warning, I’ll be
listening to music of that time and tears will come. Tears for the memories,
the intense emotions of love and love lost and youth and freedom and good
times, for the people who have gone or who got lost along the way. And because
these people who inspired us with their anthems of an incredibly exciting time
are dying. Every time I see a musician from that time I am acutely aware that
it is probably the last time I’ll see them.
We’re still left with a world of wonder and turmoil.
Perhaps the part of the legacy of the 60s and 70s I value above
all else is the fact that I am friends with my adult children in a way that was
impossible when I was 20. The world had changed too much and too fast for me
and my parents to be anything but polite strangers. They simply had no clue who
their children were anymore. So I, and many of my generation (Leigh’s going to
tell me something different!) made sure as parents that we would never be
strangers to our children; that we would never impose on them values that were
not theirs. I am friends with my children, and the generation/cultural gap is small.
But that is my life….. J
Saturday, June 20, 2015
"This Music Won't Last"
Sometime during my teen years I was watching rock/pop
music on TV and my mother, a classically trained singer and pianist, assured me
this music would never last. It was her way of telling me that she thought the
music of little value and that I’d be better off spending my leisure time on
other things. We often debated this question. I remember another day when I
again was watching TV in the lounge and she came through from the kitchen
asking ‘who is that with the beautiful speaking voice’? She was shocked to see
a long haired, bearded and bizarre character speaking. It was in fact Ian
Anderson of Jethro Tull.
I don’t remember really having any sense of belief at the
time that the music I loved would last. As I grew
older I learned that the pop/rock music of the 60s and 70s represented a radical
change from what had gone before, both in terms of sound – they’re had been
nothing like it – and the cultural values held by many of its exponents. Long
hair and outrageous appearance and on and off stage behaviour was par for the
course. As a teenager and early 20 something I was proud that I was part of a
new generation that had at least in some sense changed the world. And it
satisfied my natural tendency towards rebellion and rejection of my parents’
and mainstream values.
Last night a Facebook friend (who is incidentally also a
good friend in ‘real’ life) posted a link to a video from a memorial concert in honour of the pioneer rock band, Led Zeppelin. The video featured a live performance of
Stairway to Heaven by Ann and Nancy Wilson. Complete with choir and orchestra I
really enjoyed this superb version of ‘Stairway’. But what moved me more was watching
the reaction of three of the original members of Led Zeppelin – Robert Plant,
Jimmy Page, and John Paul Jones. Once wild men of rock they were seated in the
audience dressed in suits and had it seemed turned into thoroughly respectable
old men.
Robert Plant seemed stunned at what he was witnessing. His
eyes welled up with tears, and he stared at the performance happening on stage
with a kind of ‘what have I done? what did I do?’ expression. But in a positive
sense. It was as if he was realising for the first time the beauty and the
power of the song he and Jimmy Page had created 44 years earlier. So Stairway
to Heaven has lasted and has been enriched and transformed by a new generation
of musicians. (John Bonham’s son played drums in this performance.)
My own eyes began to well up as I watched and listened to
this wonderful rendition of ‘Stairway’ until I was finally quite simply crying.
Crying In support of Robert Plant. As my wife commented I just want to give him
a hug. Crying too because I remembered that comment of my mother’s all those
years ago and I realised, if I hadn’t before, that the music of my generation
has been validated. We weren’t just listening to a passing fad or an aberration
in the history of music. We had been part of huge and powerful cultural change that
has left an indelible stamp on the world. It did have value.
You could scoff and bemoan the fact I guess that the Led Zap
boys are now respectable senior members of the community and wear suits – Robert
Plant often performed bare chested for heaven’s sake – but they are no longer
wild and provocative young men. They don’t need to be. They, and many of their
peers, created music that was the wind beneath the wings of a generation and it
is clear now that much of it will outlast them and the generation that is
growing old with them.
I felt proud watching this performance that I had made the
choices I had, that I had listened to this ‘devil music’ from an early age and I
want to believe now that I knew instinctively all those years ago that
something huge was happening, and that our music had value. It’s a big call but
it felt like it validated much of my life and who I am.
For another example of how another wild man of rock has
become part of the musical establishment watch Ian Anderson singing Wondering Aloud with a chamber orchestra.
You were wrong Mum.
ADDENDUM (3/2/24)
I have been reading Bob Spitz’s account of the Led Zeppelin story, and I have read things there that make me question everything I ever felt about them, and what I wrote above. We all know that the groupie phenomenon was part of the rock star lifestyle, and we have all heard tales of exploitation of women that don’t sit comfortably with more recent standards. But the disgusting depravity and debauchery of Led Zeppelin was beyond the pale. And the bullying methods employed by their manager against journalists, other bands, musicians, promoters, and bootleggers was nothing short of underworld thuggery. Violence and intimidation were his standard tools.
A very very seedy tale - there were seeds of evil within the
Led Zeppelin camp – and right now I’m feeling they did not deserve their success.
Saturday, June 13, 2015
Frisky and Mannish - Adelaide Cabaret Festival
Taken by Rosie Collins |
What a ride! Roaming spotlights playing over audience and
stage at the start of the show suggested we were in for something big! Looking
positively glamorous in gold, Frisky and Mannish enter the stage to form a
beautiful tableau, and that was about their only serious moment. Everything
about this show is over the top. I’m tempted to tag them the greatest hams in
the history of show business. But this is a good thing.
Promoting themselves as a bridge between pop and cabaret
they set about demolishing everything you may hold dear about either genre in a
fast paced, tightly scripted and hilarious send up of a long list of songs and
their performers. We learn that most pop singers (except for Katy Perry and her
paean to plastic bags) don’t write their own material, and in fact 81% of all
popular songs are written by the Bee Gees!! We learn too that Sinead O’Connor
wrote way more letters of advice than just the famous one to Miley Cyrus.
There are so many really funny moments. A medley of songs
revised for the Internet age inserts Google, tweets, and Facebook into the
lyrics of famous songs. “I still haven’t found what I’m googling for.” (U2) A
collection of Australian songs reveals their take on the Australian psyche, and
a fast and furious trawl through candidates for a feminist anthem is priceless.
And just in case you might think they take themselves
seriously, once they’ve finished taking aim at everyone else they turn the
blowtorch on themselves.
This superb dismantling of popular culture is all done via
bits of well-known songs with altered lyrics, and some of the funniest singing
I’ve ever heard. They can make the most beautiful song sound ridiculous, and
the most inane pieces sound like works of high art.
Outstanding performers; great writers. They try towards the end to take things seriously again for a minute but it lasts about 30 seconds before their wonderfully weird and demonic selves resume control. They close with a love song to us and all humanity but we know they don’t believe a word of it! Sensational.
Outstanding performers; great writers. They try towards the end to take things seriously again for a minute but it lasts about 30 seconds before their wonderfully weird and demonic selves resume control. They close with a love song to us and all humanity but we know they don’t believe a word of it! Sensational.
(Also published on The Clothesline.)
Sunday, May 31, 2015
WHAT TO DO WITH BIRTHDAYS ON FACEBOOK?
For the last 2 years I have faithfully responded to each and
every Facebook birthday greeting received. This year I decided I wouldn’t. I like
one friend’s somewhat cynical approach to this issue. The day before their
birthday they posted: “To all my FB friends who will inevitably wish me happy
birthday tomorrow – thanks in advance!” I contemplated changing my settings so
my birthday wasn’t visible but of course I forgot.
On the other side of this FB birthday greeting equation I am unequivocal. I resent FB telling me that some friend or
colleague is having a birthday. There’s a momentary pang of guilt as I choose
to ignore that person’s birthday ie not send them a greeting. And what about
all those I do know quite well, and care about, but if it weren’t for FB’s auto
notifications, I would never know it was their birthday - what do I do on their birthdays? I usually ignore them
too. And there are those who are really close and whose birthdays I probably know
without FB’s help. (My mother used to keep a book for such information – it contained
nothing more than a list of people’s birthdays that she wanted to acknowledge.)
I might contact some of these close friends/family on their birthdays, or if I
only remembered because of FB write something like, “FB tells me it’s your
birthday…..” I’m just not comfortable claiming credit for remembering someone’s
birthday when I actually didn’t! I know – I should probably get over it. Many
others obviously have.
And the thing is I love receiving these greetings from
around the world for that 24 hour period once a year. It’s a real buzz, even if
most of those greetings would not have been sent if FB hadn’t displayed my
birthday in your morning newsfeed. So to all those who did send me birthday greetings
- thank you! I appreciate it. However, I have 400 + friends on FB apparently,
and received about 70 birthday greetings. So what’s with you other 300?? Don’t
care enough about me? Too lazy? Or maybe you’re a bit like me and you resent
being prodded like a Pavlovian dog and decide you can handle the guilt of ignoring
me, or some distant colleague, or long lost family member. You never needed to
know my birthday before (nor I yours), and we all got on fine. And there’s the
rub with FB. Where’s the limit? We know so much now about other people’s lives
that in times past we never knew. And it was fine that we never knew. Wasn’t
it?
Anyway, come May 26th 2016 I hope many of you
ignore my reservations about all this and wish me well. And happy birthday to
you for whenever yours may be :)
Monday, March 23, 2015
River - Fringe Review
Bakehouse Theatre’s Studio, Mon Feb 23
River is a loner, but she has crafted a busy enough life for herself. She frequents a quiet caféteria where she can be alone unnoticed. She has become something of a Google expert, specialising in writing “googlet’ poems based on what Google’s auto-complete function provides when you search for things. She sells self-made aluminium shapes at a weekend market. Her job doesn’t require her to talk to anyone, but she gets some joy from the human contact shared with her colleagues over packets of Arnotts cream biscuits. She relates the minutiae of her daily life in a way that is both touching and tedious.
Her luck begins to turn when she makes the acquaintance of Harry, an aged widower who frequents the same caféteria and is looking for company.
Claire Lovering, the writer and performer of this one person show, has obviously spent a lot of time observing the old and lonely. There is a pathos in the details that her character shares with us, as we slowly learn that her whole life is based on masking the fact that she is alone. And Lovering does an excellent job of portraying this not quite sad and quirky character who is self-conscious, unsure, and excited by little things like chip sandwiches. Her friendship with Harry is short lived but he is the link in a chain that ultimately provides her with a new life where her warmth and care for others can be put to good use.
There’s a simplicity and a charm to this production that grows on you. It’s a poignant reminder that there are many who find it difficult to fit in. They want to be with people but they just don’t know how to do it. Happily in this case a lucky break helps a loner find their niche.
Left unsaid is the fact that many who are alone are not so lucky….
Quite moving in the end. It may well bring a tear of joy and/or sadness.
(also published on The Clothesline)
Saturday, March 21, 2015
Meow Meow - Superb Cabaret
Royal Croquet Club’s Menagerie, Sun Feb 22
Meow Meow was a late entry into this year’s Fringe so you won’t find mention of her in the printed program. But do yourself a favour and find you way to The Menagerie at the Royal Croquet Club to see this superstar of cabaret.
I don’t normally borrow catch phrases from the reviews of others but ‘kamikaze cabaret’ is such an apt description of what she does. From the moment she involves the audience in making her opening entrance more spectacular you know you’re in for something different. Nothing is straightforward. Arranging the show as she goes – telling the tech crew to change the lighting, suggesting wardrobe changes for her accompanying pianist and drummer, getting the audience involved in ways you’ve never imagined – contributes to an edge of anticipation that keeps everyone on their toes.
Having played in some of the more prestigious venues around the planet she has a lot of fun making a mockery of ending up ‘in a tent on a roundabout’, and “having to do everything herself”. Like bringing her own dry ice blower! And her stand-in for when she needs a break is pretty impressive too. In short, Meow Meow is hilarious.
And if that isn’t enough she can sing like a bird, like a diva, like a child or a saddened lover… in multiple languages! To boot, most of her songs are her own original material. And she looked fantastic. Meow Meow is the complete package.
Superb comic timing, brilliant audience engagement, wonderful singer – a gifted performer who exemplifies the best of what cabaret can offer.
(also online on The Clothesline)
(also online on The Clothesline)
Monday, March 16, 2015
Dave Hughes at the Adelaide Fringe
The Garden Of Unearthly Delights’ Vagabond, Fri Feb 20
It seems a bit superfluous reviewing a Dave Hughes gig. He’s been around the Australian comedy scene a long time and just about everyone knows him. He’s looking good, and even though he has children in kindergarten there are a few grey hairs – something we learn his wife isn’t too rapt about!
He wasted no time tapping into the lives of people in the front row, and a steady stream of latecomers gave him plenty to work with for the first 20 minutes. All those who came late were offered the opportunity to say why they were late and who they blamed! And with the skill of a seasoned veteran he turned episodes of his last few weeks into funny stories that took pot shots at airlines, One Direction fans, and casual meetings with people around Adelaide.
The predictable blokey segment featured cricket tales, the rivalry between the local AFL football teams, his beloved Carlton, and drug-taking swimmers. Lots of jokes about being a dad and his relationship with his wife came next. Anyone who’s had kids can relate to the difficulties of finding time for ‘amorous action’. Clearly the Hughes household, with three children aged five and under (who Hughes refers to as the fun police) is a busy place and adult time is hard to come by, but it’s also a great source of comic material.
Unlike many interstate comedians who seem to deem it mandatory to bag Adelaide, he went the other way and kept telling us how much he liked it. An inside account of what it was like to work on Channel 10’s The Project was entertaining, as were his reasons for leaving the show.
Dave Hughes is a fine comedian. Refreshingly self-deprecating, much of his humour stems from his honesty about his shortcomings, and he appears to genuinely enjoy his work. He told us of course that we were the best audience he’d ever had. We liked hearing it, though we didn’t believe him for a minute. It was a good crowd though. The Vagabond was packed, and most of us were laughing most of the time.
Really enjoyable.
(Also published on The Clothesline)
Tuesday, March 03, 2015
Philip Escoffey - Mentalist
Six Impossible Things Before Dinner
The Garden Of Unearthly Delights’ Umbrella Revolution, Tue Feb 17
The art of mentalism continues to be a regular feature on
the Adelaide Fringe program, and Phillip Escoffey is back again after a hugely
successful run at the 2011 Fringe. And if tonight’s show is any indication
he’ll repeat the success this time around. And he deserves nothing less.
Escoffey is a consummate performer. Not only he dazzle his audience with an astounding array of mentalist ‘tricks’, but he also provides a humorous running commentary that is the equal of many A-list comedians. It all adds up to an immensely enjoyable experience.
As these kinds of shows dictate, the audience is a key part of the action. The appeal of a mentalist performance is watching them work out what the chosen members of the audience are thinking – what numbers they choose, which card, which seat, which page of a dictionary – all quite trivial details in the overall scheme of things. But what is far from trivial is how mentalists seem able to either guess what we’re thinking, or use some process of thought transfer to influence our choices.
At regular intervals Escoffey decries the notion that he’s psychic. So how can he know which card you’d pick from a closed deck of cards? Can he read minds? Put thoughts into your head? Or he is simply a clever and manipulative cheat? Or is it a combination of all of these?
A hilarious send up of Tarot card readers is priceless, and then is nonchantly followed up with a stunt where it appears that he is indeed able to predict the future!
So how can he so accurately predict what we are thinking? And do we need to know? Quoting Douglas Adams Escoffey asks: “Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful……?” For me it is. For others, this show will be the start of long conversation about whether he is indeed psychic or just a conman. The answer is far from clear.
It’s wonderful to have your preconceptions about reality profoundly challenged on your average night out ;) Escoffey is an extraordinary talent. You will have a ball. Fantastic entertainment. World class.
(also published on The Clothesline)
Stuart Bowden – Before Us
Tuxedo
Cat’s Perske Pavilion, Sun Feb 16
Just
about everything Stuart Bowden does in Before
Us is inappropriate. Not in any shocking way, or in any way that is
embarrassing. Quite the opposite – it’s actually quite endearing. His costume, his
dancing, a lot of his singing, the almost stream of consciousness monologue –
all inappropriate. And the interesting thing is that when you string together a
series of inappropriate activities you kind of get a new genre that is unlike
anything you’ve ever seen.
Bowden
enjoys talking about death, and this show is loosely built around the story of his
father’s death, and our own mortality. Using live looped audio as a backdrop to
his strange tales Bowden speaks for all those who have ever felt insecure or
vulnerable; for all those who’ve contemplated the big questions about being
alive. And dead. Like who were my parents? Why I am here?
He
has a charming knack of using apparent nonsense to get us thinking and feeling
more deeply about life. It was interesting to notice how the audience moved
from behaving like they were at just another comedy show laughing and giggling
at every weird quirk or throwaway line, to realising that that there was
something deeper going on that was more enjoyable and more meaningful than just
cheap laughs.
By
then his naive charm and sense of magic had the audience under his spell and
you felt the connection between the absurd and the profound, the beautiful and the
mysterious - to the point where we were all quite prepared to join in the
marvellous final scene and celebrate being alive!
Do
something completely different this Fringe and surrender to Stuart Bowden’s
spell of weirdness. You will laugh. You may even cry. But you will leave
feeling better about life. This play is just a joy.
Star
Rating: 4.5
(also published on The Clothesline)
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Mush and Me
Mush and Me – Karla Chrome
Holden St Theatres’ The Arch, Sat Feb 14
Holden St Theatres’ The Arch, Sat Feb 14
Mush and Me was handpicked by Holden St Theatres to be part of their 2015 Fringe program, and it’s easy to see why. Gabby and Mush(taq) meet on neutral ground in an English call centre. The company’s star performers in telephone sales are drawn to each other as they observe each other in action. Their good natured competitive relationship quickly becomes social and despite the cultural and religious gap between them they find themselves falling love.
Provoking and challenging each other about the foolishness of their respective beliefs just brings them closer, and the time arrives when they have to confront whether to announce their romance with their families. The scene that has both of them coming out to their families simultaneously is beautifully crafted.
The difficulties of their cross-cultural relationship are a microcosm of what divides Arabic and Jewish culture. No matter how great their affection for each other layers of past hurt and suspicion complicate their present. ‘Enough of the past” Mush cries out to his mother - desperate for her to understand that not all Jews are wicked.
The obvious attraction between to the two protagonists is beautifully played by Daniella Isaacs and Jaz Deol, and moments of passionate disagreement and anger typical of Middle Eastern discourse about ‘the problem’ are equally powerful.
A simple and effective set of white shelves displaying icons of both Muslim and Jewish culture are manoeuvred around the stage to accommodate the call centre, a bar, a hospital and lounge room, and at times has both actors pushing shelves together in the dark during scene changes that is neatly symbolic of them growing closer together.
Given the state of the world and the role of their respective cultures in global politics, this is a timely offering. We can enjoy the fact that at least two people have decided to ditch the hatred and pain of the past between their peoples and focus on their mutual love in the present. But we are left with no illusion that it will be an easy road for them.
A great play – excellent writing, well-paced, striking delivery and smart direction.
(Also published on The Clothesline)
Saturday, February 14, 2015
The Searchers
The Searchers
Her Majesty’s Theatre, Fri Feb 6
Her Majesty’s Theatre, Fri Feb 6
The Searchers’ concert was always going to be a walk down
memory lane. First formed in 1959 and responsible for a half dozen or so mega
hits in the Sixties, The Searchers are still performing to packed houses around
the world fifty-five years on. The two remaining original Searchers, Frank
Allen and John McNally are in their 70’s. That puts them in the elite category
of veteran pop/rock stars who are still performing in the same band decades
after they began. Another band that comes to mind in the same category and who also
graced Australia’s shores recently are of course the Rolling Stones. But that’s
about where the similarity ends.
The Searchers represent the state of pop/rock music before
the likes of The Beatles and The Rolling Stones turned it and the rest of the
world on its head. Neat, suited, and conservative, they stand and deliver that
same engaging brand of poppy tune that catapulted them to pop fame, and in
pretty much the same way. Not much rocking or wild cavorting around the stage
here – just standing and delivering. And that is entirely appropriate for their
style of music.
They play all their hits – the biggest of which arguably
were Love Potion No 9 and Needles and Pins – and they still sound brilliant.
There was also Walk in the Room, an
acknowledged classic originally written and recorded by Jackie DeShannon but
driven to international fame via The Searchers’ version. A curious thing about
The Searchers is they didn’t write any of these songs. Occasionally songs were
written for them, but most of their success came from songs written or recorded
by others before The Searchers turned them into hits. And as good as these
songs are there are probably around 6-8 gems all up. So the playlist for their
two hour concert includes many cover tunes. Del Shannon’s Runaway, Buddy Holly’s (apparently spontaneous) Peggy Sue were obvious choices from
their era. A kind of reverse acknowledgment of The Byrds and the role they
played in preserving The Searchers’ legacy for another decade or so was the
reason for the inclusion of Mr Tambourine
Man. (The now famous signature ‘jingle jangle’ guitar tone of The Byrds was
first created by John McNally, and The Byrds always acknowledged their debt to The
Searchers as their own fame grew.)
A few numbers were clearly included to highlight and exploit
the lovely voice of Spencer James – Roy Orbison’s Runnin’ Scared, Neil Sedaka’s Solitaire,
and Bette Midler’s The Rose. But the
inclusion of Young Girl, originally recorded
by Gary Puckett and The Union Gap had me puzzled. I loved it when I was a
child, but these days it has a few unfortunate undertones.
The voices of the two original Searchers are still in fine
fettle. Sadly though there was a muddy tone to the mix much of the evening with
the vocals too far down in the mix and for a band whose songs depend on
multiple vocal parts this was really disappointing. Ironically the time when
the three singers could be heard most clearly was not on a Searchers song –
they sounded clear and pitch perfect as they sang The Rose.
Bass player Frank Allen chatted to the audience throughout
the show, filling in bits and pieces of the band’s history, and explaining why
each song was chosen. Audiences really appreciate this thoughtful kind of
communication. But I found the constant jokes about aging, illness, dementia,
etc a bit tiresome. As I’m a way short of 70 maybe it’s something I need to
grow into (!) but I’d be pretty sure the Stones weren’t cracking jokes about
nursing homes and dementia on their recent tour.
Still, it was great to see, be present, and hear live The
Searchers’ contribution to the legacy of pop music. It’s a phenomenal achievement
to be still doing live shows after 50 years. Testament to their importance in
the history of pop is the fact that several Searchers songs will be remembered
long after they finally hang up their guitars. An enjoyable night.
Also published at The Clothesline
Monday, December 15, 2014
Life After Work
About 7 months ago
I left the organisation I had worked with for 25 years. I turned
60 two months later. Until late last year (2013) I had assumed I would continue
working in that job until around 65. But things moved rapidly and 6 months
later I was unemployed. I chose to leave. I did not retire. Between jobs as
they say. And I learnt a great deal very quickly about myself and life.
Initially, for a brief time, the freedom of being unattached was intoxicating. The intoxication was slowly replaced with a far more sober reality that took me a few months to work through. What follows is in no sense of regret. I'm glad I left my job. But realisation #1 was I MISSED THAT JOB! In truth this was no great surprise. I had often told people I had one of the best jobs of anyone I knew. But it had reached a point where I could no longer work for my employer with a clear conscience.
Realisation #2 - my world shrunk. I had a reasonably high profile job that meant that I was in contact with a lot of people in the average week - via email, phone, or face to face conversations or meetings. I'd guess around 50-80 people each week. When I stopped working I had contact with less than 10 people a week. My job was also quite mobile. I would routinely visit several locations a week across the whole city. In the weeks after I quit my job this often was reduced to 'the shops' , and nothing else. Many many fewer people and many fewer locations. My world had shrunk quite drastically.
Realisation #3 - hobbies were no longer hobbies! I have never had a problem filling in my time. Throughout my working life I had to squeeze in music, gardening, travelling, sport, theatre, writing, walking, photography, technology. ....Mostly I did manage to fit these extra-curricular activities into a busy and full life. Now subtract the job. You'd think I'd be rapt to have all this extra time to enjoy these other pastimes. And initially I did. But you see, like I said, I hadn't retired. I wanted to keep working - I just wasn't sure what it was I wanted to do. So something unexpected happened to my hobbies. They stopped being something I did in my spare time, and became the things I did! And, consequently I began to see each one of them as a potential job, or at least a money earning activity. So... I should practice this guitar piece more, or I should take this more seriously, or I spend so much time doing this I need to work out how to turn it into a part time job, etc. Nothing was purely for pleasure anymore. Things I had enjoyed doing for decades whenever I could fit them in had become weighed down with a sense of responsibility. Quite sad, and all in my own head I realise, but that's what happened.
Realisation #4 (and perhaps the most important of them all) - I had become a creature governed by the recurring rhythms of terms and semesters and holidays - all with their own annual reliability. Always a few weeks holidays at the same times each year. But one always worked in May. I worked in education, and really had no idea how much I had become a creature of its annual cycles. I have always worked hard. But there was always a break just 10 weeks away even if you didn't take it. But psychologically it was there and you could take it if you wanted or needed it. Go away for a couple of weeks at the end of September if you wanted. And you knew when these breaks were years ahead so you could plan to travel at a set time. Or again, if you felt like making a snap last minute decision to go somewhere there was no stressing about when you might go - that was already decided for you by the pre-ordained holiday dates. But now you're between jobs. What if you decided to take a week off or book a flight to somewhere and someone offers you work at that time?
The longest break you get in the education world is 5, maybe 6 weeks. (Yes I know much longer than most get but that's another story...). So about 6-8 weeks after I left my job I was ready to work again. 25 years of conditioning had unknowingly turned me into this creature who needed to work because I'd had a 6 week break.
Realisation #5 - my identity was intimately connected with my job. I began to feel like I didn't matter so much; that I was less significant than before. I wanted to work and couldn't. I looked longingly at people who had jobs - any job - and thought how lucky they were! I wasn't as important to myself anymore either because I was getting no validation from others that I was doing something worthwhile for them. No pats on the back; no requests to help out with various tasks; to address a meeting; to join a team for a temporary project. Very few people were asking me to do anything. There was no expectation that I would do anything. So all the motivation to keep abreast of current practice, look for work, maintain contacts with your persona l learning network had to come from within. Only intrinsic motivation was left to keep you moving. All those people you saw in the average week of your working life had moved on and no longer required your assistance.
Realisation #6 - I was not as self-contained as I thought I was. I needed the company and recognition of others to keep me performing. I'd had it for so long I had ceased to recognise its importance in my life. I thought I was driving myself along kind of under my own steam and that was far from the whole story!
Realisation #7 -no matter what you say people will consider you 'retired.' And assume you are loving all the extra spare time and having a ball. But (back to realisation #5) I only enjoy spare time if I've worked really hard and feel like I've earned it. But it won't a matter a toss to others - they will consider you retired.
Realisation #8. Actually this is more of an assumption than a realisation, and it may not be entirely accurate. I assume that people who plan to retire, and who have known for some time when they will stop working, would not go through all the angst that I have experienced these last 7 months. They would be planning what they were going to do and anticipating with great pleasure a time when they can realise their post work dreams. When post work life is upon you suddenly it is an entirely different ball game. I now have a greater appreciation for what those who are suddenly made unemployed must feel.
Today
I have found bits and pieces of part time work that I am enjoying and this has helped me establish a new rhythm of life. I accept that I have to make things happen on my own, and that I can't rely on the inbuilt supports (people, activities, projects) that a long term job provides. And I am now feeling like I'm ready to take on something new - whatever it may be.
Friday, December 12, 2014
Joan Armatrading in Adelaide
Apologies for the blur. I was interrupted by 'security' as I was taking the shot (no pix allowed) and was not allowed to reshoot. |
Joan Armatrading
The
Gov, Sun Dec 7
Joan
Armatrading burst on to the music scene in the mid seventies as a black woman who
didn't sound like a typical black singer. She had a unique sense of melody and
phrasing that was all her own. Born in the West Indies, she moved to Birmingham
in the UK at the age of 7. I, like millions of others, was smitten by her self-titled
breakthrough album in 1976, and after her performance at The Gov here in
Adelaide, I'm still smitten.
Her
music crosses an extraordinary range of styles - folk, pop, rock, blues, jazz -
and while she is equally at home in all of them, she doesn't actually belong in
any of them. Joan Armatrading is one of those rare artists who simply sounds
like herself. Whatever style she is experimenting with, she dances on the edges
of it. So you get her interpretation
of blues; her interpretation of jazz.
Except perhaps for rock. When she veers down the rock path she, surprisingly, is
a classic rocker. A couple of guitar solos sounded quite Hendrix-esque. And
then she's just as likely to follow that up with a soft melodic ballad on piano.
Armatrading
took us through a representative sample of a musical canon that spans four
decades. There were plenty of her best known numbers - Me Myself I, Drop the Pilot,
Love and Affection, All the Way from America - and a selection
of songs from her more recent forays into jazz and blues influenced offerings.
From
the outset she was gracious and witty. I loved the way she paused at the
conclusion of each song long enough to allow us to show our appreciation, and for
us to see her smile warmly in enjoyment of the moment. Quite endearing.
Midway
through her performance we were treated to a slide show of her career
highlights - musical and personal. It felt like we were in her lounge room at
home sharing precious memories. It was a nice touch.
Several
songs featured pre-recorded parts to fill out the sound. At times this worked
really well. It allowed her to play nifty jazz lead parts on songs like Stepping Out, and have us enjoy the
brass embellishment on the classic Love
and Affection. She told us she's played this song in every concert she's
ever played, and you can see why. It is indeed a classic. ("Sing me
another love song but this time with a little dedication.") On other songs
like the reggae influenced Rosie I
found the extra overlay intrusive.
Drop the Pilot was very funky, and Me Myself I once again revealed Joan the
rocker. She finished with the gentle Willow,
and invited the audience to join in. We all sent ourselves home singing in
unison as Joan sat, smiling again, at the keyboard.
It
was a privilege to finally see Joan Armatrading in person. She's still pushing
boundaries and her voice still sounds as rich and mellifluous as it ever did. Like
'massage for the brain' someone commented. Swapping seamlessly between electric
guitar, piano and her trademark 12 string Ovation, she generously shared forty
years of original music and few were disappointed. Most in fact were rapt.
(Also published on The Clothesline)
(Also published on The Clothesline)
Footnote:
7 years later I was rapt to find this review featured on Joan Armatrading's own website!
Wednesday, December 03, 2014
Susan Greenfield Rings The Alarm Bells Again
Baroness Susan Greenfield has been giving talks on the
dangers associated with Internet technology for some years now. I have worked
in the field of educational technology for the last 15 years and often read her
reports on her research and subsequent disparaging grand conclusions about technology
so I admit that I probably went to hear her recent address at the University of
South Australia with a degree of bias. Nevertheless I wanted to hear her for
myself and make up my own mind.
In broad sweep I actually agree with much of what she had to day. Like her, I am concerned about how mobile and Internet technologies may be rewiring our brains, and redefining us as a species. I get no joy, and a degree of angst, when I see a 20 something person buried in the screen of their phone and not once look up to see what might be happening outside the train window during a 45 minute journey through superb scenery.
My problem is how she reaches her conclusions. There was fleeting reference to articles and research whose titles contain words like 'brain', 'technology', 'growth', etc but zero discussion about these works. Instead, in the talk I attended, she was openly dismissive about whatever gains new technology may have brought us. Pandering to the prejudice of the crowd, she went for cheap shots: Twitter - "why would anyone want to know about what your cat is doing?" I have never seen that kind of trite message on my Twitter feed because my feed is cultivated. I carefully select who I follow. She would know that thousands use Twitter as an intelligent means of exchange but she chose to ignore that fact for the sake of her sensationalist and simplistic argument. Another chestnut - how could anyone think that social media connections could be as rich as face to face contact in the same room? Here she is being ignorant or devious, and I suspect it's the latter. I suspect she, like me and countless others, has enjoyed a degree of freedom as a result of being a disembodied entity on the Net. Very early in my days on the Net I became aware of a liberation I felt to express ideas when no one knew if I was young or old, academic or truck driver, physically disabled or deliciously attractive. I was a brain without all the clutter that physical presence brings and my ideas were judged as just that - ideas. Not a product of the casing they came in.
Yes Internet and mobile technology is changing us - no one disputes this. It does rewire our brains. But by the same token, as Greenfield would agree, the moment we decide for example to go off the Net and learn a new language or play a new instrument our brain changes again. Brain changes are not permanent. Our brain will happily accommodate whatever we choose to pursue - right though to old age.
Another writer who has bridged this same territory is Nicholas Carr in his book, The Shallows - What the Internet is Doing to our Brains. Carr also came in for plenty of flack from the technology community for his provocative questioning of the value of technology, but at least Carr was not sensationalising his case, or demeaning those who lived by the Internet. All Carr was suggesting is that we need to debate this issue of what's happening to us as a result of our (near) addiction to the new technologies. No argument from me there, and I think really that is all Greenfield ultimately wants to see happen as well. But her pandering to ignorant prejudice is unhelpful and merely reinforces the opinions of those who don't understand the advantages of new technology.
To be fair though Greenfield in the main was talking about children. Baby Boomers like myself can delve deeply into the new world of technology, then stand back and compare the process with other previous means of processing and distributing knowledge - books, writing on paper, face to face discussions. We can evaluate the benefit of the new against the old. Children don't have this affordance. Very young children only know the world of screens and multiple distraction. And older children may not have known a time when reflection, time alone, thinking absent-mindedly, daydreaming, and reading silently for long periods were normal occurrences, and crucial determinants of our mental and emotional health.
I keep thinking that educators need to have these discussions with their students - children and adults - as part of a digital literacy program. Have them compare reading print text with screen text and evaluate the difference. Have them multitask as they research a topic and then try reading one or two books or articles on the same topic and compare the two experiences. (I have referred to this elsewhere as horizontal versus vertical learning.) We are the first generation in human history that can actually observe the changes that are happening to us as we adopt new technology. Neuroscience has advanced to the point that we can almost measure these changes in real time. So rather than sound the clarion calls of alarm as Susan Greenfield likes to do, let's collectively engage in an exploration of how we're changing, and be aware and mindful about it.
Greenfield's style earned her a near thunderous ovation from
the non-believers, but she was preaching to the choir. And it isn't very
helpful in encouraging dialogue between opposing factions of this new technology
dilemma. She seems more interested in polarising opinion and selling books. If
you want to read a book asking intelligent questions about how technology may
be changing us, read Nicholas Carr's The Shallows instead.
Monday, November 24, 2014
A Dramatic Look at China-Australia Relations
State
Theatre Company - Kryptonite
Space
Theatre, Fri Oct 24
In the space of my lifetime China has changed from a being
pariah state to one that Australia relies on heavily for its economic
well-being. The recent death of Gough Whitlam reminded us all that the change
began in the seventies when he had the wisdom to open relations with China.
China itself has changed a great deal and Beijing has become a modern
metropolis. Outwardly it has become much like any other modern city. But as Kryptonite
reveals, what goes on behind the scenes or under the surface of the apparent
changes in China can still leave the rest of the world mystified about what
really drives this vast nation.
Lian, played by Ursula Mills, was one of the very first
Chinese students to grace our shores in the 1980s. She meets Dylan (Tim Walter),
a fellow student on campus and they are immediately intrigued by each other.
What follows is a series of meetings over the years as their lives change
radically and they attempt to reconcile the feelings they have for each other.
These meetings are set against a backdrop of changing relations between China
and Australia.
The infamous events of Tiananmen Square are a watershed for
their own relationship and that of their respective countries, and is the first
in a series of hiccups that both draws them together and pushes them apart.
This tension is central to the play. No matter how much they are attracted to
each other cultural differences always manage to render an ongoing relationship
difficult.
The scenes early in the play where the young students make
fun of each other as they explore their different backgrounds are quite
endearing, and more importantly, this mutual fascination is authentic and
believable. We want them to be
together. Mills' accent is cute and
fetching and contributes to an air of naivete about her new land, and Walter is
appropriately awkward as the young student. Lian makes fun of Dylan's lack of
ideals and he tries to get her to lighten up. But try as she might her ties
with family back in China work against that. Dylan however, inspired by Lian's
search for meaning and blessed with the freedom of being Australian plunges
into a life where he strives to realise his ideals about the environment and he
enters politics.
In time he finds that politics is a grubby world of
self-interest and muck-raking that drags up innocent details of your past to
make you look unfit for office. Did Lian (China) engineer the sharing of
confidential information for her own gain? Has Dylan (Australia) been caught in
a honey trap? Kryptonite is a complex work, and it feels important. It could easily
be used as a text book for an entire course on intercultural relations or
international politics. It is rich with cultural nuance and political intrigue.
Both Mills' and
Walters' performances are quite wonderful. They quickly had the audience on
side, feeling their pain, and caring about what happens to them. By the time we
reach the present day Dylan's future is squarely in Lian's hands. Her destiny
however is constrained by loyalty to a set of traditional values that conflict
with those that might bring them and their two countries closer together. Sadly,
after decades of close contact they and their countries are still dancing
around the cultural chasm that yawns between them, and are no closer to knowing
what values really drive their respective cultures.
Well written, great set, and clever direction. Instructive,
enlightening, entertaining, important, and also quite funny in parts.
(also published at The Clothesline)
Saturday, October 18, 2014
Sleeping at Dubai Airport
On a recent return trip from Australia to Europe via Dubai I
discovered quite a bit about sleeping options in Dubai airport. On the way over I decided
to try a Snoozecube. It was a reasonably long trek to gate C22 in terminal 1
but I found the Snoozecube people friendly and efficient. The room and bed were
clean and within minutes I was out like a light. I got 4 hours solid sleep
(@$36/hr), then made my way back to the lounge feeling quite refreshed and
ready for my next flight.
The return journey was not quite so smooth sailing. If you're flying with Qantas or Emirates and your wait time in Dubai between flights is more than 8 hours you are eligible for what is called 'Dubai Connect' on the Qantas site. This may depend on your frequent flyer status - I'm not sure - but as a Gold member this meant was I eligible for free accommodation in a hotel at the airport 'subject to availability.' No one at Qantas or Emirates seemed to know exactly what this 'subject to availability' meant in practice. On boarding the Dubai flight in Amsterdam I was given an accommodation voucher for a hotel outside the airport.
I landed in Dubai 90 minutes late partly because there was an abnormal amount of air traffic around the airport. That it, it was busy! Immigration queues in Dubai can be exceedingly long at the best of times and I figured I would lose at least 30 minutes getting through customs and getting to my 'Dubai connect' hotel outside the airport. Ditto in reverse. So with the late arrival and exiting and re-entering the airport my 8 hours was now down to 5 and a half. I explained all this to the staff at the Emirates lounge and they thought I'd probably be better off just finding a quiet corner of the lounge and sleeping on their kind of recliner seats but they were too high and slippery so I made myself comfortable on the floor and enjoyed another sound 4 hours sleep.
So next time round I'll either make use of Snoozecube or sleep in the lounge. And now I know that the 'Dubai Connect' option involves exiting the airport and immigration, etc I'll only use this if I have a layover for 10 hours or more.
Thursday, July 24, 2014
In the fields of eastern Ukraine......
When I see images of the recent Malaysia Airlines disaster I
cry. I felt even more moved today when I saw the cavalcade of hearses taking
the bodies to somewhere in Holland to be identified. I didn't know anyone on
this flight, nor am I connected or related to those who lost their lives in any
way. So why am I feeling like this?
Is it because I've been to Holland many times, have lived
there, have many friends there, my son lives there?
Is it because I'm a traveller and frequently use planes to
get around?
Is it because there were so many Australians among the dead?
Is it because I have flown Malaysia Airlines many times and
they fly into my home city of Adelaide?
It's probably all of these things on some sub-conscious
level, but from the outset of this disaster I have been quite frankly gob-smacked
at the stupidity and callousness of those who shot this plane down, and
patrolled the fields of death in eastern Ukraine like cowboys. Keeping those
with authority and expertise from properly investigating the site, picking through
the ruins, standing on the tail of the
downed plane, removing parts of the plane from the scene, displaying souvenirs
of the dead passengers, looting their belongings, and most offensively of all leaving
bodies out in the elements and then dragging them around when it finally occurred to them that they should do something about it.
I just find this whole litany of ignorant activity beyond
the pale for the 'civilised world' of 2014. This is Europe for heaven's sake.
Where is the respect for the dead? Where's the sorrow? Or an apology even? It
doesn't matter who did it - Russian backed separatists or other Ukrainians - no one involved
has expressed sorrow or regret for the death of 300 innocent people who had
nothing to do with this conflict. But I guess I'm not surprised at that. What
has amazed and shocked me is the fact that the guns weren't buried and
disagreements put aside immediately to take proper care of the dead. Instead both sides
maintained a stand-off, played the blame game, rifled through the possessions of those they'd killed, and left bodies to rot in the sun. The world watched (well I did anyway) in disbelief
and tears.
But today we saw a different story. Each survivor was taken off a plane in Eindhoven by people in uniform in dignified and solemn fashion,
and each of them rode alone in their own hearse through streets lined with people
marking their passing in silence, shedding tears, and strewing flowers on the
passing hearses. It didn't matter who they were or where they came from
- they could have been Dutch or Australian or Malaysian. What mattered is they were human; they were like us, and this is how the dead should be treated.
Holland showed its class today. On behalf of the civil side of humanity they enacted a ceremony of great respect that showed that human lives are valued in a way they were not as they were left lying in the fields of eastern Ukraine.
So, as I watched the cavalcade carrying the unknown dead through the streets of Holland, I cried for a different reason. I cried because at last someone had realised how important these last rites are for all of us, not just for the families involved, and acted on it with dignity and grace. Bedankt Nederland (thanks Holland) for restoring some dignity to the world today.
A Stunning Night of Strings
Adelaide International Guitar Festival
Gala - Australian String Quartet with Pepe Romero, Maximo Pujol Trio, and Slava
Grigoryan plus special guests: The Aurora Guitar Ensemble
Festival
Theatre, Sat Jul 19
This was a case of the support act nearly stealing the show.
The curtain opened on the glorious sight of 26 guitarists in brightly coloured
shirts seated and ready to play. Their composer and musical director, Paul
Svoboda, raised his arms for quiet, waited a few appropriate seconds, then
launched the Aurora Ensemble. What a beautiful sound. Svoboda himself is
mesmerising as he choreographs his players with precision and grace. If I
closed my eyes I could hear an orchestral string section. At times I heard wind
instruments, and a piano. But I'd open my eyes again and there were just
guitars. Beautifully played guitars and superb arrangements. Quite simply some
of the most uplifting music I've heard in years.
Enter the Australian String Quartet (ASQ) and Slava
Grigoryan to play a piece by Australian composer Shaun Rigney. Modern and
experimental, it took some getting used to. It seems a difficult piece to play,
and I imagine it might be one of those pieces that is more fun to play than to
listen to. ASQ were not so much playing together on this disjointed and
occasionally discordant piece as keeping out of each other's way. As violin one
swapped parts with violin two who handed over to cello who had its lines
completed by viola it bounced around quite frenetically at times, and in the
quieter moments or gaps there was the guitar holding it all together.
Fascinating to watch and enjoyable to listen to, but more music for the head
than the heart perhaps.
Spain's classical guitar superstar, Pepe Romero, joined ASQ next
and treated us to Luigi Boccherini's 'Fandango' from the late 18th century. In
contrast this was a much brighter and more harmonic interlude with the guitar
parts more integrated into the composition. There were also fine moments that
showcased the difference between bowed strings (violin, cello) and plucked
(guitar), and how deliciously complementary they are.
The Maximo Pujol Trio from Argentina were the final featured
act and delivered sensuous moments of tango. The interplay here between Pujol
on guitar and Eleonora Ferreyra on bandoneon, a type of concertina, was a joy
to behold and listen to. It was just like the instruments were talking to each
other. It also felt European, but it was actually music from the 'Paris of the
south' - Buenos Aires.
A wonderful evening's entertainment.
(also published on The Clothesline)
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