Martin Joiner’s Blog Confessions of a binge thinker

1Mar/110

Lady Gaga is a Vindaloovian! (from Red Dwarf yeah?)

I want you to watch a short clip from two YouTube videos.  One is a classic clip from Red Dwarf, a BBC comedy first shown in the 90's (skip to the 54 second point on this video).  The second is the new musical release from bipedal greyhound, Lady Gaga, which was released earlier today (skip to the 20 second point). I think you'll see what I'm getting at, enjoy...

And now watch this.

To learn more about Lady Gaga click here.

To learn more about Red Dwarf click here.

Filed under: art, music No Comments
17Jan/110

First scene of a new animation

This is a little snippet from a new animation which I started work on today.  I have failed to complete projects in the past because they contained a scene with a close-up face shot.  Capturing the right mood in a face scene is absolutely key to the narrative of a short film so if your animation skills happen to let you down at that point it can be a real kick in the guts and put a stop to the whole project.

But I've done the face scene for this new animated short film so you can imagine I am feeling pretty chuffed.  This simple "Bemused stare with blink" scene will be the opening shot of my lead character, setting the mood for the story.

The sound, in case you're wondering, was produced by Oliver Owen.  I haven't worked with Ollie in over a year but we had plenty of sound files left over from when we last bumped shoulders on a project and I occasionally dip back into that resource when working on projects.  This probably won't be the score I use in the final edit but it certainly represents the mood.

Filed under: art, music No Comments
19Nov/101

A call to musicians and producers

In the wake of the success of my last performance poetry gig I am moving on to my next idea.  This new project is going to be an audio monologue with a musical score.  Sort of an audio play but not.  We'll call it a show.  It will be about 6 minutes long.  When this piece is finished I hope to get it broadcast and I will also do live performances of it.

Please let me lead you through some examples so you can guage the scope and mood of the project.

The structure will be similar to Blue Jam by Chris Morris http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ct_bcmG8Tkc I am a massive fan of Chris Morris and this piece could be considered my tribute to his work.

A successful example of me working with a musician was back in 2007 when I worked with Ollie Owen to produce a short clip from a longer script called Battery Class http://butterscotchworld.co.uk/martin/batteryClass.php Together we sampled noises and then Ollie took them away and processed them.  We came together again a few weeks later and combined images and sound.  Some worked, some didn't.  Another few weeks of improvement and we had it.  I gave Ollie free raine of production style, instructing only on the mood and timing i.e. It needs to take longer in building to tension or it needs to lighten suddenly at this point.  It's more important how it feels that what it is.

I reckon the people who scored The Green Wing are the same people who did Blue Jam.  See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQk9excAowY

Please comment now if you think you can help put an original score to a monologue like I am suggesting and I will email you.  It doesn't matter where you are based because I travel all over the place for my art and we can also work remotely using Skype and similar.

Filed under: art, music, Uncategorized 1 Comment
4Oct/102

Prodigy – Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned is very good running music

This is a simple blog. No frills. I just wanted to share my opinion with the world that Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned by the Prodigy is superb selection of tracks to run to. With relentless heavy pounding beats throughout the entire album and imposing male vocals coupled with airy female melodies there is no point when the mood drops.  Which is totally what you need when running!  I normally listen to ambient electronica with the soft thump of a house beat and some delicate keys but that genre often drops into thoughtful, calm floaty moments which really doesn't inspire you to push through the painful bits.

There's a lamppost on my regular running route that taunts me. I first stopped there for a breather a few runs ago and have done every run since. But today as track 5 kicked in to replace the minuscule gap of silence since the previous I was pushed to keep going all the way home.  I past the lamppost pretending I hadn't seen it like an ex girlfriend in a nightclub.  For a moment I thought about her and had trouble forgetting, but my cardio induced teflon-brain soon saw to it.  Thoughts come and go like rain drops on a windscreen when you run, part of the reason I enjoy it.

Ladies and gentlemen I present to you the grotesquely anti social Hot Ride by The Prodigy...

Filed under: music, Running 2 Comments
27Jun/100

My DJ set of 2010

Yesterday afternoon, at a friend's annual garden party, I played my 1 and only DJ set of the year.  Mostly consisting of new music from the last year it's 1 hour and 5 minutes of chilled-out sunny garden afternoon tunes.  Starting with down tempo world music, then into minimal dubstep wrapping up with a section of acoustic loveliness and then cherry-topped with the very soul healing New Days Dawn by Slacker.  Here's the set list, I've provided links to YouTube videos where available.  Hopefully every track will be new to you and you will love every one as much as I do.  If not, I will try harder next year.

Down tempo world music

Minimal dupsteppy slash electronica type stuff

Acoustic loveliness

If you only have time to click on one of these videos I thoroughly recommend looking at Various Productions - Hater.

5May/100

Cover of Class Actions

Earlier today Aslan Ak posted his latest political rap piece on my Facebook wall.  The anti-conservative parody is typical content for the extreme leftist act Click here to view David Cameron by Class Actions. Spouting hatred for thatcherism and set to a 90s synthpop house instrumental it was familier territory for the group.

Which lead me to thinking...  your typical tory-boy is not going to listen to a thumping house beat with aggressive vocals.  If Aslan's goal is to convert beliefs, then using a style established in an already lefty society is ineffective.  A more subversive way to sway votes would be to present your leftist reasoning in a form that is familier to a rightist voter.  Of course this is all speculation - I don't know if Aslan is wanting to sway votes - and actually digresses from the topic of this post.

I started considering how many styles one set of lyrics could be presented in.  Regular open mic'ers Andy and Chris did an acoustic cover of Do You Feel Safe, the original of which is quite different.

With the instrumental stripped down to a minimalist acoustic riff, Andy's added in his own lyrics and used his Glaswegian dontgivafuck style vocal to make the song his own.  It went down very well at open mic amongst those who got the reference.  Andy writes his own poems and his usual reading style has a relaxed but confident drive behind it.  Click here to view Andy reading in his own style. However, on this cover he sounds a little unsettled, a result that I put down to the fact that he's mimicking Aslan's shoutrap style.

So what if the lyrics were hardly modified at all but the rhythm and reading style was altered.  I visited the band's website at www.classactionsuk.com/, got hold of the lyrics and decided to have a go at doing my own interpretation in the style I would read my own poetry...

(embedded video may not be visible if reading this post via Facebook.  Click here to view original post.)

I make a fair few cock ups and the recording is technically not that great but I enjoyed doing it.  I found it refreshing to hear Aslan's words outside the context of a shouty rap song and it was a good opportunity to get my acting skills out.  I tried to visualise the image behind each lyric and feel the emotion.  It took me 6 attempts before I recorded the version that eventually made it's way to YouTube.

Comment and let me know what you think  (Facebook users click "View original post" before commenting)

16Apr/101

Snare Drum

10 Great songs with beats that inspire me to learn...

  1. Sade - Soldier of Love (View on YouTube)
  2. Gorillaz - Bill Murray (View on YouTube)
  3. The Streets - Such a Tw*t (View on YouTube)
  4. David Holmes - Lets Get Killed
  5. Mr Oizo - Monday Massacre (View on YouTube)
  6. Redneck Manifesto - Dillon Family Dancers
  7. Blur - Essex Dogs (View on YouTube)
  8. The Prodigy - The Narcotic Suite- 3 Kilos (View on YouTube) ...and yes I know this beat and bassline is a sample from an old funk song and not actually by the Prodigy but I can't remember the name of the original.  DJ Funky P would be able to tell me but I don't have his contact details.
  9. Dr Dre - Some L.A. Niggaz (View on YouTube)
  10. Jamie T - Dry Off Your Cheeks  or  Alicia Quays (View on YouTube)

In preparation for the forthcoming poetry stage I am learning to play my snare drum.  A simple beat with the odd bit of flare is all that's needed for poetry and as I understand it, if you first perfect your skills and timing on a snare drum, other percussion comes easy.  So with a metronome in my ear and a list of educational videos I am putting in at least an hour a day for the next 2 months.

Filed under: music, performances 1 Comment
15Apr/100

Black and White Towns

Thanks to Joel for texting me the very enigmatically coded message "Radio 4 now!".  I tuned in to find an inspiring and insightful look at the origins of modern Britian's evocative poets and lyricists.

I recommend you "listen again" using BBC iPlayer at http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00rykzz

6Feb/10Off

Dishonesty Themed Open Mic Night Coming Tomorrow

Tomorrow will be a themed Open Mic Night.  And the theme is Dishonesty.  I have written this little nugget of inspiration to get performer's mojo's working...

Make your performance about lieing, cheating, deceiving, skulduggery, rapscallionism, unholy scoundrelous and villainous behaviour. Dedicate your whole performance to the subject or just include a token reference, it's up to you. This is the week before valentines day, a time when filthy blagharts and harlots start sweating in their britches with guilt. New years resolutions have long faded and Christmas cheer is firmly buried under a thick layer of post-indulgence dust.

I am producing 2 pieces of performance for the event; 1 serious and 1 funny.  The serious one is set to music (not my own) which will be a first for me.  I've tried to avoid going to "Scroobius Pip" in my style but it seems I am just learning the lessons that he has and thus arriving at the same conclusions.  I experimented last week reading my poetry to Joel's flamenco guitar backing and found that the slight and subtle rhythmic ambience was enough to hold the audiences attention in those pauses and moments when poetry often loses them.  The words I was reading were not as good as my usual poetry but the applause I got reflected otherwise.  As if an audience clap a performer's ability to distract them more than their ability to educate them.  Woah!  That was a fresh tasting blast of inspiration.

So I hope to see you down at the Perfect 5th, Taunton from 7 o'clock tomorrow (Sunday).

P.S.  I will not be hosting open mic on Sunday Feb 14th Feb.  The Perfect 5th are putting on a special valentines event with live band the Night Owls.  This will continue until 10 o'clock and then it's a miniature open mic from 10 til midnight which will be hosted by P5th manager, Jo Quartly.

18Jan/100

Class Actions

I first met Class Actions through an email asking me if it was alright for them to perform at my Open Mic night.  I don't require artists to pre-book but these guys were travelling from Manchester and wanted to double check their trip would not be wasted.  Their performance was like nothing I had ever seen at Open Mic before.  Shouty, loud, aggressive, hard, difficult to understand but most foreign of all was the fact that they were genuinely political.  My reaction was amazement and joy.  I couldn't help but smile and laugh.  The audience were equally thrown off by this occurrence.  Some sat, stoney-faced and unimpressed.  Others raised a pint in the air and hollar'd words of support in drunken celebration.

They continued to perform every few weeks, occasionally bringing out new material but mostly doing their core set of songs.  I begun hearing lots of audience feedback and as the weeks went by, got to know them by talking about their music and reading their blogs.  Consequently I started to understand the political reasoning behind their music.  The subject matter that is at the fore of their mind when they perform are genuine and serious global issues.  So no wonder they have the confidence to act so outrageous.  The opinions of a few hundred people in a county town in England pale into insignificance when compared to the racial hatred and corporate corruption that they care about.

So having concluded how Aslan feels when he performs I began to think of how the audience react.  Many people take them as a joke, laughing AT them and for a moment I felt sorry for them, thinking their political message was being lost.  But then I realised that they do always get the full attention of the crowd and they regularly get girls up dancing with them while they perform.  This is a massively important achievement for any performer.  Dancing (or indeed any type of body movement including clapping, fist shaking, head-bopping) is so expressive that to make people do it means you've succeeded in intoxicating them with your energy.  So although the words in the lyrics may not be getting interpreted and remembered, I think there is a deeper kind of communication going on.  The girls (and most of the guys) instinctively pick up on the energy and sense of faith that oozes from Aslan's performance.  Although that energy does come across as anger and aggression, which are things most people would choose to leave out of their life, it seems to push all the right buttons to make people want to follow their movements.  They literally demand attention with their performance and they get it!  Look at all the other examples of performers who are often (but not always) angry and aggressive but still get lavished with attention: Eminem, Bill Hicks, Scroobius Pip.

So as disseminaters for a cause they are half-way towards functional success.  They have the pied piper's magic and that is for most performers the bit that comes last (or sometimes not at all).  I don't see Class Actions as being a complete package but I admire elements of them.  If I was producing them I would make bridging the gap of understanding a priority.  I would introduce calm, pensive moments to the performances, maybe by bringing in extra writers or producers.  And whether it be with imagery, quotations from published writers, well scripted between-song skits or any other kind of on-stage communication the next step would be to help the audience understand what I came to know through reading their blogs and chatting to them.  If they can cause that switch of consciousness from thinking locally to thinking globally to happen on the night then they are onto a winner and like the 3 I mentioned earlier, strike a balance of being listened to and loved by people who though they were just going to be entertained.

P.S.  Aslan assures me that his performances go down very differently in the working men's clubs of Manchester and the North.  He freely admits to loving observing how the audiences react in the South compared to back home.  And maybe this backs up my theories.  Audiences in the North are generally already thinking on those bigger issues because the Thatcherite changes to industry affected them much more deeply.  They don't need the knowledge gap bridging.  I think I am going to have to travel up to Manchester and attend an Open Mic in Salford to listen to normal people and see Class Actions perform there.

Filed under: music, open mic No Comments