Wednesday, 11 April 2018

top ten albums - no. 2


Dear Sheddists,

my  second 'Top Ten' album is 'Here's The Tender Coming' by the utterly fantastic Unthanks. Their music goes well beyond the modern folk idiom into ethereal realms that have to be heard to be believed. 

In addition to re-imagining traditional folk songs and writing their own the Unthanks repertoire includes interpretations of music by King Crimson, Antony & the Johnsons and Robert Wyatt. Their most recent album features the work of Molly Drake, mother of the late Nick Drake and a fine musician in her own right.

I could have chosen any of their albums - they're all astonishingly brilliant - but I picked this one because it contains 'Annachie Gordon' a truly sublime take on a song of loss and unrequited love which dates back to the start of the nineteenth century. 

Folk music in its purest form is anything but anodyne.  It speaks of love, death, longing, separation, pain and suffering at the very deepest level. Here, the intertwined voices of Rachel and Becky Unthank float above a lovingly sensitive arrangement by Adrian McNally, Rachel's husband. I've heard this song so many, many different times, both on record and live, and it never ceases to reduce me to tears.

We've seen this band perform more than any other and each time we see them we come away enriched and reflective. Here are some photos from last year's Home Gathering, an annual Festival organised by the Unthanks in their native north-east.



top ten albums - no. 1

Dear Sheddists,

one of my friends has issued a challenge, via Facebook, to post the top ten albums that have influenced me most.  I thought I would post my replies here as well so I can go back to them at a later date and see if my tastes change with the passing years.

First up, I find it very difficult to choose just ten albums!  I've been exploring music for over forty five years, during which time a significant part of my children's inheritance has been invested prudently in the accumulation of sundry records, cassettes (remember them!) and CDs.  No MP3s here, thank you very much!

So where to start?  Should it be a hard-hitting collection of popular top-ranked albums or a more gentle meander down a path less traveled?  I've sought to take a middle-line between the two in the hope you may encounter something unfamiliar in these ten postings you might want to explore further yourself.

Let's kick things off with the self-titled debut from The Doors, one of my favourite bands of all time. I first became aware of them from the film, 'Apocalypse Now!' The soundtrack featured 'The End', the legendary tour de force which brings their extraordinary debut album to a tumultuous climax. If you're unfamiliar with the song it's an acid-tinged exploration of the Oedipus myth.

Censored for its initial release, catch the unexpurgated version in more recent remasterings to hear Jim Morrison in all his majestic foul-mouthed pomp!

The band created six very different studio albums during their brief existence, each of which has something to offer. They had it all - blistering blues, funky jazz chops, existential poetry and, in Jim Morrison, a front man who on a good night could take the music anywhere he wanted. A plethora of live albums have been released since his sad, premature death. Some are badly recorded cash-ins, but the best match anything the band did in the studio.

The Doors played an important part in the soundtrack to my wife and I falling in love as teenagers. The regular DJ at the University discos we attended was a huge fan of their music and winding back the years I still have very, very fond memories of embracing on the dance-floor to classics like, 'Light my Fire', 'Roadhouse Blues', 'LA Woman' and 'Riders on the Storm'.

So let me close my eyes for one moment and let the music carry me back ..



 'There are things known and things unknown and in between are the doors'.

James Douglas Morrison


Monday, 9 April 2018

dreams and nightmares - no. 80


the attempted annihilation of id - immolation



At long last the nightmare is at an end.  Freed from the primal instincts that shackle us to our mortal coil we can sleep safe in the knowledge id has been slain.

Or can we .... ?




dreams and nightmares - no. 79


the attempted annihilation of id - hung out to dry



The original image of id has become progressively degraded during the process of annihilation. Thankfully we're approaching the end now.








dreams and nightmares - no. 78


the attempted annihilation of id - monochrome drowning




In many ways I prefer these studies to the colour versions. What do you think?







dreams and nightmares - no. 77


the attempted annihilation of id - the drowned man



Having survived cremation and hanging, the id is now immersed in water.

The photo above is the last of a series of shots I took, by which time the image printed on the paper had taken on a suitably necrotic appearance. I love the swirl of water in the top right hand corner and the bubbles that mark the last gasps of air.

The photos below show the remainder of the process and the steady leaching of colour as the image slowly degrades.