Archive for the ‘Photography’ Category

Mini-Redemptions # 3

Sunday, October 4th, 2009
Photo by Edgar Arredondo, Christmas Day 1995

New Year's Day 1996: Photo courtesy of Edgar Arredondo

When I finished my degree I stayed on at Lancaster for a year in the picturesque little village of Galgate. It was a year of transition – I had met a very sexy Portuguese girl, fallen in love, and we decided to stay in Lancaster for another year to see how things would go. She opted to do a Master’s Degree in Environmental Philosophy, I started to work writing and defining songs. The arrival of Edgar Arredondo in our lives was a profound event. He had come from Mexico to do the Master’s and he ended up sharing a house with my girlfriend, Tess. Beautiful, and athletic, philosopher and poet, and with a magnetism that draws everyone who meets him deep inside, we were blessed to count him as a close friend. We used to visit the Lake District regularly, and this photo was taken there on the first day of 1996. That same winter we ecstatically built a snowman. Here’s a text I wrote about that night:

A Snowman to The Bird-Howling Seas

In Galgate, drawn from our coal-fire in the wee small hours, half-stoned and drunk, we stumbled through the narrow streets and over fences to the primary school playground. And we all started in our ways, each in our own excitement, kindling our own memories of childhood, rolling up these massive balls of snow. The night was gentle, and hazy pink, the kind of cold that’s perfect if you wrap up warmly, the kind of night that lingers into dreams. We rolled and tripped and tumbled, hollered and laughed and then, with renewed seriousness, built the biggest snowman I have ever seen. Four great balls and then the sculpting began – arms, feet and then a carrot for his nose, coal for his eyes, a scarf and a wooly hat. Refreshed with such a magical taste of life and friendship at its most joyful, we parted ways and went off to sleep for a while.

The children must have been amazed when they arrived  a few hours later. When we passed, anonymously, later on, we saw that the teachers had protected the snowman with traffic cones. And as we wondered what stories were going on in these young minds about this mysterious apparition – how did he get there? did he walk? was it a spaceship that brought him? was it magic? – we went walking up past the old graveyard to the  campus. I was lost in my own daydream trying to imagine the first ever snowman, and every other snowman that’s ever been made. I saw them melting down, drifting, drifting down into the water, into the rivulets and streams that would lead them to teeming rivers, and, finally, to rest in the wild, bird-howling seas.

The Monastery of Tibães

Thursday, September 24th, 2009
The Monastery of Tibães 14th July 2009: photo courtesy of Eduardo Brito

The Monastery of Tibães 14th July 2009: photo courtesy of Eduardo Brito

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In July 2009 I was very fortunate to start an Artistic Residency in the Monastery of Tibães. I will be there until Spring 2010 at least, working steadily on my new album, and several other ideas that orbit around the album itself. This will include photography and film, performance and art installation – all kinds of stuff.

I will be having a lot of friends around helping out with recording, and playing instruments, taking the photos and filming and stuff. So this blog will serve as a document of all things monastic – my reflections and thoughts about the residency, and the work in general. It may include ruminations about creativity itself – but all of this is meant to be a conversation really. So please come around, read, praise, cajole me, and get involved in this magical wee (virtual) world I’m creating. You never know, it might lead to tea in the (real) cloisters one day.