Tag Archives: Bread and Puppet

The Floor Holds

Somewhere in my post-viral fuzziness, I lose all my keys to all the doors I need to open. Later, I make so many trips up and down the stairs because I forget one thing after another. I am not fastidious enough when plugging cables into boxes and discover later that I have recorded one channel of audio and one channel of silence. I tell myself to be careful with the marker while doing measurements around the pictures, a purple line glaringly appears unwelcome in a margin. I download some footage I captured to make a video, I manage to lose it all in the process, and only realised after I had deleted from my photo. Argh!

That’s how a week starts. Small and inconsequential irks when held in comparison to the big issues of the day.  In a doubtful moment, I ask, “What is this for?” “What does my art add in the scheme of things?” In a world of fear, anxiety, murder and massacre art can seem like a folly, a luxury, a something that’s “nice-to-have” as one politician recently spewed.

It makes me ask of myself:

  • What ways should I think about what Im doing?
  • Am I making escapism? 
  • Am I making something that helps me/we/us step outside of the pressures of the practical issues of today? 
  • Is my thinking captured or critical? 
  • Am I making something in context or am I decontexturalizing? 
  • Am I making a brand? 
  • Am I making something meaningful or grandiose? 
  • What do I think now that that gatekeeping position has shifted?
  • What in my work addresses the bread and butter issues of the day?

Big naval gazing questions. In fact sometimes the only response to questions such as these is a big ‘Fuck it and Fuck Off’. They have a time and a place. But if it’s inertia they create then it’s not welcome. A reflective pause is different from the dead air of being inert.

The last post contained a photo of the Bread and Puppets manifesto. I hadn’t really thought too hard about why I added it other than I think the words are good. Today, I think differently. It states ‘Art soothes pain, Art fights against War & Stupidity, Art is like good bread, Art is like green trees’.

Art is like Green Trees. It makes something that makes it easier to breathe. 

It amazes me how easily something so ephemeral can remind us that we CAN imagine something different, sweeter, better, and fully welcoming. Everything constructed we see starts in the imagination. If it can be thought of, then it can be done. The algorithm of feeds, the corralling of ‘If-it-bleeds-it-leads’ news reporting, the shouting of opinionated anybodys online sucking up airspace, and the limitations of the corporate storytellers shut down the notion that the world remains full of options, opportunities and alternatives. Here we say, “Fuck it and Fuck off!”

Dunedin, 1988

I think of my own experience. Music has always made sense to me, captured and captivated me. It ‘spoke’ to me before I could speak for myself or even figure myself out. It gave me a hand up when I needed help. If you knew the young adolescent me you would have known I was trouble, or trouble was on its was to find me. But music gave me an option. In fact, I think music gave me my first real confidence. When my own mental world was at it’s bleakest, most slippery, I could always find some purchase in some musical expression to grasp. 

And I would never meet the makers of these sounds. Or in some random rare and precious moment I might. But on the whole they would never, ever, know the tiny but deeply meaningful impact they installed in this small life. And the way we obsess about things like bands, books, and such, I’m feeling confident that it happens all over the place, all the time. Small individual acts of making things better. That’s a gift to give. So massive thanks, love, applause and appreciation to all those, everywhere, who give without expectation of return.

If you’re a maker, keep making! 

Soundbites:

  1. Clocks! I hear clocks. The kind with hands and mechanisms making noise. Big ones. Ticking away in seconds. They sound close, overhead, omnipresent, inside my head. Your poor house has no clocks like these. There’s a timekeeper on the oven only. I am being haunted by time, hallucinating time, imaging time as if it were there. It’s just the solvent talking.
  2. Listen back to recording, time wobbles. A snare hit’s untidy. Out of Time. I demand the snare’s attention! To human time. Timed time. My Time. But here’s the But. What did I hear that threw my strike? Distracted tight time? Mmpatient time? Glide time. I listen to something in its Own time. Can I be brave and accept organic time? Messy time? Not My-time.
  3. Sounds like the ocean. The wet is beer and sweat. I am driftwood on a wave in a moshpit. Together it’s both dangerous and safe. I look for the band. I’ve lost the song. I cannot tell where we are or what comes next. Beats flails after beats. The bass is a weighted blanket. The guitar is the Cheshire Cat’s grin. The music holds me. It is ferocious and full of smiles.
  4. She listens small. There’s something inside it. A fragment of action, a shout from friction. If she can find the start, that doesn’t exist, and the end, that doesn’t exist, she will have made something that does exist. And repeat. Turn fractal into pattern, turn figment into rhythm. Something that was not there. But she could hear it, she just needed to find it. Here it is.
  5. I fell in love with Foley through Star Wars. I saw a demonstration of how the sounds of stormtrooper blasters was made. Somewhere in a desert, large pylons were anchored with cables, securing them to the earth. Hit the wound steal, cymbals made of metal strings. Zap! The ordinary everydayness of things became the sounds of the future.
Modular synth, Peace Lily and drum kit set up for recording.
V.M.A recording set up with swinging mic.

Moat of Rest

Quietly, we go into the week. a lot of sound waves were generated last week, in studio and at shows. Some calm is welcome. There are some practical tasks to complete.

I have been invited to contribute a set of posters for an exhibition, opening in December. The gallery is called Te Atamira, a purpose-built ‘community arts and cultural space’ in Queenstown. I spend Monday figuring out the logistics of hanging when I am unable to assist with the physical installation. I want the posters to have some movement as they hang out from the wall. Hanging/floating parallel to the wall, I want the space between the paper and the surface to contract and expand, but not twist.

Adding structural integrity to the paper

The drawing project developed as an accidental pastime during the DCR residency, November 2023. It was never intended to become a thing. I had just planned to take some paper and paints to doodle in the downtime. I haven’t had the inclination to write big songs like we sung in sterile, committing 3-4-5 words to a piece of paper seemed satisfying enough.

It was a pastime without expectation. I enjoyed scratching out the blockiness of the letters. Abstracted shapes presented themselves when I wrote the second text over the first, I’ve always had a thing for negative space.  I like the vagueness and flexibility of context and interpretation when punctuation is removed. And the chance to just play with colour brought it’s own pleasure.

Many of the phrases came from text that I was reading, descriptors that had extra possibilities tucked inside when lived out of the original context, multiple meanings presenting from a very economic sentence.

This will be the third time I have been able to display publicly this year, not bad for an accident.

And then I became inhabited. The last week or so has been more social than usual. Maybe someone from a bus ride, a cafe, or an audience was feely poorly, perhaps, or maybe not, was harboring a virus that has made me home. Nothing too bad, not CoVID, according to the RAT, but it’s bad enough for me to isolate at home for a few days.

It’s made some space to catch up on the accumulated recordings so far. Re-listening is a time-intensive task that requires a distant objectivity, not always easy to maintain. If listening back is too close to the recording session, then the excitement of the experience can get in the way of discernment. Things that were called mistakes at the time of recording may still sound like errors. With some distance, though, those ‘errors’ may blur into something more inspired, an accident of greater interest. Errors may be hypercritical reflections from a fragile ego. Inspired accidents may be discovered when the ego is belted down firmly in the backseat. These unexpected musical deviations can often be the thing that captures and maintains interest over multiple listens.

Also, ideas start to swirl in relation to the exhibition to be installed in June 2025 at Toi Pōneke. First ideas are not final ideas, but I’m often in a much more comfortable space once I have something to edit. 

DSLB v.m.a setup

Patience for admin has never been a strong streak. When the motivation is brewing, all i want to do is just get on with the doing. However, this unplanned pause from the studio has actually been pretty helpful. For example, I was listening to the collaborated recordings with Chrissie and her DSLB project today. To be honest, I was uncertain about them directly after, I didn’t think my playing was as interesting as it could have been. But on listening today, with a good few weeks in between, I hear new patterns, textures, bursts of interest, and surprise. I have a few more sessions planned to add to this collaboration project. It’s off to a great start.

However,  all that said, I’m over the calm, I’m ready to get back the studio.

Soundbites

  1. Trees roil like kelp in a sea of wind. Birds swim in currents. I wonder, do fish hear the bull-kelp roar? It’s night’s middle, listen to the norwester, crest first, then bear down. Whipping all tall growth that stands above scrub. Every leaf and branch a wood/wind reed. Everything that rattles will. I feel pressure change from an ocean of air inside ears.
  2. Chest Sounds: wheeze, stridor, crackles, rhonchi. rasp, pleural rub. Auscultation – play the skin of drum, hear the resonance and density from percussion. An ear to a wall, listen for the In’s, the out’s, the rate and delay, for wet sounds, other sounds, no sound. Pay attention when Cheyne-Stokes sings, the song of the lungs soon end.
  3. Susurration is a burble in rainfall. It shimmer in choir as puddles, rivers, Oceans return. The chatter of uncountable billions when surface tension meets matter. The blurred accents of drops on wood, earth, tin, skin, wing, and kin. Wet squall murmurate, shift, accommodate the fluid response to gust, current, and eddy. Sleep well inside weathers lullaby.
  4. Guns at the front door of the farmhouse, none in the new home in town. I make a replica of wood. Find a single bullet in the garage. “That’ll look cool”! Make it fit, hit with hammer.                      !Silence!              Mum calling, runs to me, eyes up, I hear Nothing. Absolute Quiet. Did hearing return? Yes. In time to be berated, rightly so, as she digs pellets from skin with a pin.
  5. The night wind has hands, it lifts liberated cans, and throws down the road. Notes are released, tuned into the tin dents from kicks and wheels. Hear patterns: settled, gusts, roll… duk duk duk..duk….duk! Long, flat streets are best. On main drags, like Dee or Don, you could hear extended canned music. If lucky, it echoes. If extra lucky, power poles wire add their voice in unison.