My schedule leading up to the end of the ‘world’ as we know it

m4-schedule-daily-wkldf2-2

The title of this blog has been paraphrased. What it should read is, ‘My schedule leading up to the end of the go out into the world and do great things as we know it’ which is kind of a portmanteau of that song by REM (1987) and the title of our studio.

For me, the song symbolises a certain sadness that I will no doubt feel when we complete the year but at the same time, a drive and tenacity to live up to the studio’s namesake and endeavour to make the world better.

The intention of this blog is to present to the world with a spreadsheet of my schedule, now, I understand that many may find spreadsheets dry… or maybe not! I don’t know… either way, I thought I’d add this video to add life, flavour and hopefully an evocation of where the world is today 30 years on from REM’s seminal track.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgxFh-6uNyo

 

Bread and Circuses

http://s3521907.wixsite.com/breadandcircuses

My Project Brief 3, Bread and Circuses aims to elucidate how music and creativity can help to maintain wellbeing. It is a website that showcases a selection of short linear documentaries produced either by myself or members of a community that I will be exploring.

The project’s title, Bread and Circuses, is a term adapted from the Roman era, it was coined by the ruling class as a means to appease the ‘commoners’. Those in power would offer incentives like free food and entertainment in the hope that it would circumvent rebellion.

This is a notion that relates to my documentary as the participants have broken away from the social dominant system to become independent and self sufficient. NEVER THE LESS…  food and entertainment are still necessities but by contrast, these participants acquire food by providing their own circus, it is their music that is the foundation for their happiness and survival.

Please visit!

http://s3521907.wixsite.com/breadandcircuses 

Dave

Dave

screen-shot-2016-09-08-at-11-25-18-am

Georgia

Georgia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Duncan

Duncan

Rollercoaster with a thatched roof

I’ve just began piecing together my footage for the next assignment. It’s raw and random but occasional reveals moments of beauty, rhythm, sadness and courage.

I’m so excited to see what comes of this participatory documentary as I start laying down the dominos of a narrative that will seemingly not conform to a linear pathway.

The journey so far has been this up/down mercurial rollercoaster with a thatched roof. I try to hold the thing together but it just keeps blowing apart… structurally, emotionally, ethically. I feel safe, but at the same time saddened,  that the premise of this story as a deep and untenable foundation that may never be understood while intolerance and greed rule these streets.

Stealth Bomber

Stealth Bomber

Dave

Dave

Georgia

Georgia

Duncan

Duncan

Algae on the Alley

So here it is! The beginning of my new project…

Meet Duncan. A dedicated bluesman living on the streets of Melbourne. He busks for money but also relies on the generosity of passersby.

He teaches guitar… on the street, in the open amid the flood of Chapel St revellers.

I caught up with him yesterday while he was giving a lesson to a newcomer, he claimed that, if a person can learn in front of strangers, they are capable of pretty much anything!

The linked song Algae, is something that I wrote in 2001! It’s about how we have derived from very little yet we’re capably of so much… good and alas bad.

It was such a spinout to hear this song played with such skill and maturity.

Post disenchantment

I’m running with my new/previous idea. I’ll be off tonight to mingle with the likes of Dave, who entertains the Chapel Street revellers with his insightful yet crude serenade.

Standby… who knows what will come out of this!

 

Dave

10 Hours of Placement Somewhere Near Purgatory

She woke up at 10am which would mean her next nap is at 12:30, she will need proper food before the next nap and a bottle when she wakes up. She has caught the sun… no, she is sunburnt! And we feel dreadful but she always pulls her daggy sun cap off. Who wouldn’t? We can’t pick her up from childcare until after 4pm so this will be a long day for her, we will need to be contacted if she is inconsolable but only I can be called as my partner as she is in an important interview. There is extra baby formula should she need it but we suspect that we’d have arrived by this stage.

She is now crying loudly but I have to walk away and make a beeline for the Docuverse Seminar to be a techie!

My food is packed for the shoot with lots of water, gluten free snacks, gluten free bread sans lettuce… I don ’t want to be bloated or contract Salmonella.

Which tech office do I meet the crew at? There are two!

I’m presuming the one in the Communications building however, I’ve been caught out by this before, waiting for Godot at the sterile desk only to put 2 and 2 together and realise that I need to be at the other side of campus.

The scene is absurd!

We are running around like headless chickens, it’s now 10 minutes until the conference is scheduled to begin and the audio isn’t syncing with the camera, it to me looks like an internal system issue as opposed to a hardware one. But having very little experience with this particular video cam, the misconnection is as obvious as Waldo at a nudest camp.

What to do??

Extract the Zoom F8 from the equation and run the audio directly into the camera, it’s working!

After delaying the talks by 10 minutes, academic John Hughes gets up and blows our minds with his thoughts on the Vertical Cinema experience, which is essentially a video played within the aspect ratio of a tall column. It was a model taken from the first depictions of human figures carved into a rock wall somewhere near he Top End of Australia, what I didn’t realise was that I had been involved in this highly imaginative subversion of the cinematic execution as an actor a year prior in a short film that was produced by Matt Richards of the VCA. I had surmised that the premise of this film was about purgatory but I could be wrong, it was all quite esoteric, disturbing and had sunk to the deepest depths of my 2015 memory.

But what a freak out!

Here I am, filming an event that explains what I was doing back in 2015 and, if I could have engaged more with John Hughes’ speech, I could have learnt so much more. But, I was the techie, and having worked as  techie in the past, I have come to understand that we are to avoid contact with the ‘talent’ and position our existence on the floor as a faceless Purot and the long chain of wheels and cogs.

…And that’s fine by me.

By Matt Richards 2015.

Purgot By Matt Richards 2015.

Death Has Wings – Brief Four

DEATH HAS WINGS 

We, the living, have adapted to the thought of death and have evolved to better ourselves. This piece looks at the ways that people have dealt with the thought of their own mortality.

This radiophonic production focusses on mortality and the impact that facing death can have on people’s lives. As the topic is so broad, and the interviews conducted were so lengthy, this production takes the format of a taster or preview that could be used for a longer documentary about the participants’ stories.

The concept stemmed from my own experience of being informed that I may have a shortened life span due to a nerve condition. This piece conveys the denial that was the dominant coping mechanism that I experienced. Moreover, this piece highlights the phenomenon that facing our mortality can be the impetus for personal improvement; spiritual, physical or emotional (Ma-Kellams, C., Blascovich, J., Smith, E R., 2012).

The first participant is my 83 year old Grandmother Stella, an ex-WW2 service woman who after battling with a myriad of aliments had her last rights read which, in the Catholic faith, is sacrament for the terminally ill, signalling that she believed that she was nearing ‘the end’. As a way to circumvent the terror of death, she began knitting pullovers for pollution-affected penguins at Phillip Island. This activity has contributed to a remarkable improvement in her wellbeing and is a testament to her drive to serve nature and humanity.

The second participant is my uncle Greg, a painter and decorator who was diagnosed with cancer at the age of 37 despite being a fitness fanatic. After vehemently opposing alternative treatments, his wife Margaret convinced him to start meditation. As a last resort, Greg obliged and discovered a new sense of spiritual enlightenment that he would have otherwise never experienced had he not contracted the illness.

My fiancee Juliette was a key figure in helping me cope with the thought of my own mortality after a neurologist revealed that I may only live to 40 should my nerve disease accelerate. Juliette is the third voice present in the piece, and her reference to “counting your blessings” is symbolic of the positive attitude that I assumed in the face of this personal challenge. My outlook on life changed dramatically for the better and this is at the centre of my research and practical application for this project.

I have experimented with my own voiceover. The piece begins with a narration that is akin to the inanimate ‘voice of God’ which initially functions purely as a conveyer of action and story. However, this gradually morphs into my own personal story blurring the lines between the participant’s voice and the insensate narrator. In so doing, the standard narrative convention is subverted (Tim Key 2012).

The participants are people that I know well, however my relationship with them is only revealed gradually throughout the piece. Each participant is sonically woven into the piece, and different  sound fields have been applied in order to differentiate between them. For example, Stella’s voice is recorded in a cold, confined space that reflects her nursing home, and Juliette’s is close, warm and intimate. By means of exhibiting this piece as a radio feature, I am able to apply sounds that are representative of the participants’ situations as well as being able to splice, edit and manipulate timelines and timbres.

I have drawn my sounds from the FreeSounds website and produced foley recorded on location, the rhythm of the editing oscillates between fast and slow in relation to the poignancy of each speaker’s story. The recording of each participant was done in a Protools studio setting and on location using an H6 Zoom, which gives me both control over the sound quality and a comfortable environment for the participants to tell their story with fewer reservations. The musical pieces are my own compositions.

The style of this piece has been modelled on the ABC’s production of Russell Guys’, What’s Rangoon to You is Grafton to Me. Originally telecast on Double J in 1977, this piece was narrated by the news radio announcer James Dibble, whose professorial delivery and intonation served as a genre juxtaposition. The sounds were primarily organic recordings, meaning they were virtually untreated foley, which was accompanied by music to drive the rhythm of the editing and emotional tone. Similarly, I have incorporated these tropes in my piece with the addition of counterpoint editing, for example the layering of the doom sound with the Tuvan throat chanting at the beginning; one represents death and the other life.

Another influence has been Tim Key and Gogol’s Overcoat, which is a radio feature documentary produced by Steven Rajam and written by Tim Key in 2013. This piece played with ambiguity in narration and creatively explored Tim Key’s fascination with the work of Russian writer Nikolai Gogol. I have applied a similar reflexive narrative style to Death Has Wings. Exhibiting this as an audio piece has allowed me to orchestrate an equivocal hierarchy of knowledge artfully, disconnecting stereotypical conventions of radio narrative.

In my piece, the rawness of the off-mic questioning is a deliberate move to experiment with Werner Herzog’s style heard in much of his work, specifically in his 2005 documentary Grizzly Man. Herzog has an etherial off-mic presence that is raw and crude yet salient for the story’s advancement. He also challenges ethical rules by intervening and influencing the participant’s story. Herzog employs layers of implicit meaning to his work, and I have also aimed to do this in Death Has Wings. As I am loathed to explicitly announce my personal situation, I have simply implied it at the end of the piece (Bordwell, D & Thompson, K., 2012, pg.58).

Stella’s recording was compromised by sonic interference from a portable bar fridge in the room where we recorded her. All I could do was position the mic in a way that would pick up as little of the interference as possible. Aside from this, the main challenge that I faced during the production of Death Has Wings was the difficulty of having participants open up about the grim subject of mortality. It is a hard subject for people to revisit, let alone expand on, and consequently I feel that the information gathered in the interviews does not include the nuanced and highly personal range of emotions that each participant must have felt. Overall, the segments that I used for the final piece express the common thread that in the face of death it is possible to find a new lease of life.

BIBLIOGRAPHY ————————————————————————————————

1) Bolton, G. (2005) Reflective practice writing and professional development, Sage, London, pg.7.

2) Bordwell, D & Thompson, K., (2012) Film Art: An Introduction, McGraw Hill, NewYork USA, pg.58

3) Hesthamar, K., (2014) Tim Key and Gogol’s Overcoat: Review 2, RadioDoc Review, 1(1), March 2014. Available at:http://ro.uow.edu.au/rdr/vol1/iss1/13

4) Ma-Kellams, C., Blascovich, J., Smith, E R., (2012) Enjoying life in the face of death: Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, (2012), Vol.103(5), pp.773-786 [Peer Reviewed Journal] Available at: http://search.proquest.com.ezproxy.lib.rmit.edu.au/docview/1027832144?OpenUrlRefId=info:xri/sid:primo&accountid=13552

5) Rayner, M., (2014) Tim Key and Gogol’s Overcoat: Review 1, RadioDoc Review, 1(1), March 2014. Available at:http://ro.uow.edu.au/rdr/vol1/iss1/12

6) Rubin, H J., Rubin, I S., (2012) Qualitative Interviewing: The Art if Hearing Data (third edition), SAGE Publications, USA, pg.6-8.

7) Tim Key and Gogol’s Overcoat, (2012) radio program, Tim Key of BBC, UK, December 26th 2012.

8) What’s Rangoon to you is Grafton to me, (1977) radio program, Russell Guy of Double J, ABC, Australia.

Death Has Wings can also be found at: http://s3521907.wix.com/audioorganica#!death-has-wings/p4b8e