Saturday, 14 January 2012

James Bond Pictograms

(Click to enlarge)
Bryan Lenning
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Smoking # 120 (Bloody tabac/bloody advertising!)


Why don't you make your own film?
http://www.cutfilms.org/badstuff.aspx
Download supporting activity and teacher resources at
http://www.cutfilms.org/resources.aspx

♪♫ Chris Carter - Convicting People

Talking Heads - Once In A Lifetime (Rune Lindbæk Master Tape Dub)

(Thanx Chris!)

Moonrise Kingdom (Trailer)

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The last Kodak moment?

Bernie Sizzey: Music For Shock Treament Lounges

Donal Conaty 
Haven't looked at the Indo in a while. They want to know if I have the rear to pull off the Pippa dress. Hmm.
A few words in The New Yorker about some friends of ours...

Unfortunate headline o' the day

Marines inch toward charges over desecration video

Federico Gutiérrez: Burrow

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The Real Secret to Figuring Out How Long You Have Left to Live

The only published interview with Nick Drake in his lifetime

Nick Drake is a shy, introverted folk singer, who is not usually known to speak unless it is absolutely necessary. But Nick is not the kind of folk singer who will drift into your friendly neighbourhood folk club; in fact, if you've seen him perform, the chances are that it was on the bill of a sell-out Festival Hall concert.
Last week I spoke to Nick, and eventually discovered that it has been precisely these kind of gigs that had hung him up - the reason why he has shied away from public performances almost without exception.
"I think the problem was with the material, which I wrote rather for records than performing. There were only two or three concerts that felt right, and there was something wrong with all the others. I did play Cousins and one or two folk clubs in the north, but the gigs just sort of petered out," Nick explained.
Nick pointed out that he was not happy with the way the gigs were working out and he couldn't get into them properly. Why, then, was he performing at such esteemed venues as the Festival Hall?
"I was under some obligation to them, but it wasn't the end of the world when I stopped. If I was enjoying the gigs it would have made much more sense."
Don't, however, gain the impression that Nick is not a superb artist. Placed in the right context, his songs produce quite a stunning effect over a period of time. He has worked on two albums with Witchseason producer Joe Boyd, the latter having been released only only last week. Entitled "Bryter Layter", it features some of the musicians who contributed to the success of the John and Beverly Martyn albums, notably Paul Harris; and Robert Kirby's arrangements are just as important as Nick Drake's songs.
Says Nick: "I had something in mind when I wrote the songs, knowing that they weren't just for me. The album took a long time to do, in fact, we started it almost a year ago. But I'm not altogether clear about this album - I haven't got to terms with the whole presentation."
What's the next step for Nick? "I think there'll be another album and I have some material for it, but I'll be looking around now to see if the album leads anywhere naturally. For the next one I had the idea of just doing something with John Wood, the engineer at Sound Techniques."
Would there be any gigs to promote the album? "I don't think that would help - unless they were done in the right way. I'm just not very sure at the moment, it's hard to tell what will turn up. If I could find making music a fairly natural connection with something else, then I might move on to something else."
(Jerry Gilbert: Sounds, March 13, 1971)
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Art of the Luggage Label



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Field Music - (I Keep Thinking About) A New Thing