From the category archives:

Culture

Can We Talk | New Music

by Amber on March 13, 2010

Last night I saw Wellington band Can We Talk play; they had won a competition to support The Mint Chicks with their cover of ‘Crazy? Yes! Dumb? No!. While the Mint Chicks’ performance went somewhat astray, Can We Talk were really good. Like, super good. At the end of their set they kindly handed out copies of their EP to people in the crowd. This morning, faced with a 1.5 hour drive into the countryside, I popped it on in the car and listened to it.

Their sound is soothing folk-pop; made with keys, guitar, drums and a mandolin. I really like the girl-boy vocal play – especially on the song ‘New Season‘. It reminds me a little of early Los Campesinos! and Architecture in Helsinki. All in all, a fun, uplifting, toe-tappy sound that’s worth checking out. I’m looking forward to hearing more from Can We Talk.

Can We Talk playing at Bacco (picture swiped off their myspace).

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Viewfinder: Koneko Monogatari/Milo & Otis

by Amber on March 6, 2010

Hello friends! I have just finished watching the Adventures of Milo and Otis and am high on cute.

It’s the tale of a pug, a kitten and the adventures they have. It starts on the farm… but Milo never listens to his mother. Here’s two of my favourite scenes:

Crab Attack

Otis Meets The Fox

Did you know that Milo and Otis is a Japanese made film and was released in English 4 years after the original release? Me neither! Did you know Dudley Moore was the vivacious and hilarious narrator? Not I!

DVD

While there has been some controversy over the use of animal actors in the movie, I still love this romp (and have done since I was 5). It’s a good film to watch from bed while hanging out in your pyjamas. Nostalgia rules.

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Bird Seed

by Amber on March 3, 2010

‘Box Of Birds’ is the name of Seed Gallery’s latest exhibition. They’re releasing a new range of greeting cards featuring prints by some of their favourite artists and to celebrate they’re dedicating the gallery to both the cards and the originals.

The gorgeous work below is by artists John Pusateri (I have some of his birdy etchings hanging in my home), Annie Sandano and Aroha Lewin.

The gallery show is on till March 28, 2010, but the cards will be available to snap up beyond that. I can’t wait to go buy some… one can never have too many beautiful blank cards.

My pick of the lot? Annie Sandano’s Wise Owl. Naturally.

Seed Gallery, 23A Crowhurst Street, Newmarket, Auckland.

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A Letter | Bookish Gods

by Amber on February 26, 2010

A little while ago I was lying in bed, having a nice daydream (probably about having a pet narwhal), when I abruptly remembered that somewhere in my boxes of ephemera I had a letter from Keri Hulme. I dug it out.

Hulme is the author of the bone people – winner of the Booker Prize in 1985. It tells the story of 3 characters, shifting perspectives and weaving their dreams, aspirations and fears together. From Amazon: “[It] explores the potential within families for both destruction and healing, as well as the great personal costs of the disintegration of individual connections to traditional communities and cultures – in this case, the indigenous Maori culture of New Zealand.”

the bone people has been a a bit of a contentious book over the years, garnering both good and bad reviews. I recently reexamined it and found while the non-traditional shape of the book is deliberate decision, it would have perhaps benefited from a thorough edit. Positively, I found the exploration of Maori spirituality and language to be absurdly refreshing. (That said, it shouldn’t be, why isn’t this expression more common in the literature of this country?)

In any case, the letter my younger self received is so nice and generous I thought I’d share (and yes, I love the astrology references):

My request was for a barely remembered school project – an illustrated calendar with a different literary figure for each month.  I also found it hilarious that I had clearly said to her “I want to be a writer”. Funny how things turn out.

My mother is a big fan of ‘reaching out’ to people, so as a kid I also had correspondence with British poets, a builder based in Antarctica and other amazing people. Have you ever connected with someone you admire?

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Splore 2010 Review

by Amber on February 23, 2010

Take 7000 revelers of all ages, set them loose over the pristine fields, beaches and bush of Tapapakanga Regional Park; then throw in numerous musical delights, stimulating art and provocative performances. Spread this mix over 3 days of nonstop glorious sunshine and what do you get? Splore 2010, that’s what.

Splore bills itself as a family friendly outdoor music and arts festival, and for the eighth time it went off swimmingly. The joy of the event is to be found in its diversity and sharing the time with your friends and family.

On arrival (there was no queuing because we carpooled like good little greenies) we had our vehicle thoroughly searched for liquor and other naughties, such as glass; and had a forgotten ticket promptly replaced by the friendly crew. Blue armbands for everyone over 18, yellow bands for any one underage, even babies who were just starting to toddle along.

Camp sunset

We camped in the Grasslands Camp – a giant meadow bordered by cicada laden bush and eucalyptus trees. High winds saw us have a hell of a time set up a borrowed gazebo. We settled in and cooked dinner, another hangi, with only a few minor mishaps (getting drunk, a minor grass fire). My friend Bridge also bought homemade Oreo cookies which went down a treat!

oreo

Speaking of food, over the course of the weekend I heard some positively orgasmic reviews of the jerk chicken, run by the same lovely people that were at Rhythm and Vines. Being a garden variety vegetarian I missed out on that BBQ treat, but did end up trying a warm ‘festival’. Festivals are best described as a traditional Jamaican fried dumpling, made out of slightly sweet cornmeal. They’re usually used to mop up gravies, but I found mine pretty tasty simply washed down with some homemade lemonade. There was also the standard hippie fare you’d expect to find- it’s not a real music festival in New Zealand without the One Love caravan and their pakoras.

Friday was musically the biggest day for me. (It’s also the evening where you still haven’t had a bad sleep in a horrifically hot tent, with girls pretending to be horses trotting down the walkway at 4.30am). We ate, got dressed and headed down the goat track to the beach. The Goat Track is notable as it was a narrow and steep pathway suitable only for the nimble. It was not recommended for ‘late night cavorting’ and indeed, I saw one intoxicated young man take a serious tumble through the scrub.

Splore by Hannah

International act Lupe Fiasco was skipped in favour of general wandering around the festival, enjoying the ambience. From what I did catch of his set, I ascertained the singles the crowd knew worked far more successfully than emotional ditties that he wrote ‘during a dark time in his life’. We headed to the Rum Shack for cold beer and energizing Train Wrecks… That’s Red Bull and Jagermeister folks.

Rum Shack

After New Zealand band Miniut performed (with vocalist Ruth Carr’s giant blonde nest of hair dominating the stage), it was time for electronic luminaries Basement Jaxx to bring the party. They did so with panache and booty shaking, care of their 2 of their back up vocalists who elevated the Basement Jaxx time slot from a DJ set to a banging live performance.

hippies

They performed a wide ranging set – from classics like Bohemian Rhapsody, their own hits Rendezvous and Where’s Your Head At, to heaters like Major Lazer’s Pon De Floor. After holding hands with a complete stranger while chanting for an encore, and wearing out the rubber soles of my shoes from all the prancing, it was time to head up the hill and collapse.

A 6.00am sharp sunrise on Saturday morning saw us rise earlier than was humanely acceptable. Within two hours, the heat was scorching and we were all resigned to hiding out under the gazebo. After a lazy breakfast and the best thing money could buy for the time – a trim flat white – we headed down the hill for a swim.

Me at the Lagoon - photo by Bridge

Swimming in the fresh water lagoon is one of the highlights of Splore for me.  The water is icy enough to chill your body right through to your bones, so once we’d finished lounging in the lagoon, we jumped into the sea, which felt like bathwater. I have never felt so refreshed in my life!

Lagoon by Bridge

Saturday night’s headline act was Los Angeles DJ The Gaslamp Killer. I admired Mr. Killer (real name William Benjamin Bensussen) for the energy he was putting into the performance; but in the end found him to be a show-pony more concerned with shaking his head of ringlets at the crowd than spitting good tunes out of the speakers. I left the boys to enjoy the ‘filth’ and headed over to the Living Lounge to see local band An Emerald City.

An Emerald City played wearing masks, surrounded by dancers wielding fire fans. They explored the space time continuum and soothed my by then weary soul with their mixture of east meets west gypsy psychedelia. They achieve this sound by mixing violin, Persian long-necked lute, sitar, flute; and traditional western instruments like guitar, piano, drums with panache.

2050 by Hannah

The Living Lounge was a straw strewn space that hosted workshops during the day (think drumming, permaculture and hula hooping), but at night transformed into a den of frivolity. On Saturday evening the Living Lounge hosted the Midsummer Night’s Dream 2050 party. Fauns, robots, fairies, demons and assorted creatures of the night swarmed in to watch burlesque, rope acts, acrobatic feats and general Shakespearean mayhem.

The art trail is always a highlight of Splore and this year was no exception. Best seen at night, the trail featured delights such as a robot with a disco in its chest, neon poems, a walkable harp, a giant xylophone for hours of collaborative fun, and Ride-In – a mini cinema with the projector powered by viewers cycling on rollers.

Art Trail by Dre

My lover

My favourite installation, the Tree Of Life, overlooked the main stage. It’s a giant Pohutukawa with bright leis wrapped around every bough. At night, a black light illuminated the tree, giving the leis an acid coloured glow.

Tree Of Life

Under The Tree Of Life

Sunday saw us relax, pack down the tents, have a swim and ponder how good the universe was to us. Simply – we came, we saw, we Splored.

Campers by Bridge

Splore Crew - photo by Hannah

Mark February 2012 down in your diary as an excellent time to be in the vicinity of the South Pacific -  then make your way to the Coromandel. It’s such an uplifting, horizon broadening, friendly event – I doubt you would ever regret making the time to go to Splore.

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6 Albums Recently On Repeat

by Amber on February 14, 2010

These are a few of the recently released albums that have been punctuating my days of late. Design observation: it’s funny how many of them (and other new releases) feature head shots… of sorts. The profile pic is back.

OneLifeStand

Hot Chip: One Life Stand. My favourite electro-pop band from London has finally released a fourth album! A fun fact I recently learnt – the boys from Hot Chip went to the same  school in Wandsworth that produced Burial and newcomers The Xx. Favourite songs thus far include Thieves In The Night, Alley Cats and the title track One Life Stand. Pleasingly the vocal quality has drastically improved since the days of Over and Over in 2006. Not that they were bad then, but Alexis and Joe now seem to have a lot more control over their chords.

ExquisiteCorpse

Warpaint: Exquisite Corpse. I do love an all girl experimental-art-rock band! Hailing from Los Angeles, Warpaint ticks most of these boxes; with Jenny Lindberg on bass and vocals, Emily Kokal on vocals and guitar, Theresa Wayman rocking the vocals, guitar and keys, and Josh “Jocelyn” Klinghoffer on drums.  There’s only 5 songs on the Exquisite Corpse EP and they are all stellar, but my favourite is Billie Holiday. It’s a sweet, quiet song and the name of our heroine is chanted letter by letter.

Contra

Vampire Weekend: Contra. NYMag cleverly suggested “Now your little cousins may very well be rocking “Horchata” while they’re tacking up their Taylor Lautner posters” – indeed Vampire Weekend are doing well for themselves in the ‘mainstream’. They deserve it. Contra is a slick album, with more calypso and sharper lyrics. My picks: Horchata, Cousins and California English: “Blasted from a disconnected light switch / Through the condo that they’ll never finish
Bounced across a Saudi satellite dish / And through your brain to California English”.

DeadMansBones

Dead Man’s Bones: Dead Man’s Bones. We know Ryan Gosling is a hot piece. Turns out he is an accomplished musician as well. With his best friend Zach Shields, they have released a concept album under the name Dead Man’s Bones. The single Pa-Pa-Power seems to be permanently playing in my house. Often I see children’s choirs as gimmicky but on this record, it really works with the spooky pseudo “Halloween soundtrack” theme.

IRM

Charlotte Gainsbourg: IRM. IRM is Charlotte’s third studio album. The daughter of Serge and Jane Birkin released her first album in 1986 and the second in 2006 – a long time between records. 2010’s IRM was produced by Beck, and he duets on a couple of songs, including the lovely  Heaven Can Wait. My other favourites are Master’s Hands and Time Of The Assassins – but the whole album is rather nice – you can imagine it as the soundtrack to a bildungsroman film set in the outskirts of Paris shot in cracked, flaking 16mm. Or something.

Odd Blood

Yeasayer: Odd Blood. Yeasayer’s sophomore offering is a gem. Could this be another Merriweather Post Pavilion – the best album of the year, released at the first breath of the calendar? ALL THE SONGS ARE BRILLIANT. I’m looking forward to sampling a few remixes – so far enjoying Ambling Alp (The Very Best ‘Mulomo’ Remix).

dot

What have you guys been cranking on the stereo of late? Feed me new noises please!

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Our Grandparents’ Playhouses

by Amber on February 9, 2010

Nicolas Henry is a filmmaker, photographer and artist. Usually based in Paris/Marseilles, he is currently working on a major photographic series – Les Cabanes de nos Grands Parents. This has seen him traverse the world from Marrakech to Moscow, meeting and engaging with all sorts of grandparents.

Pangamic Ame Haji

Henry travels to the home of each of his subjects (he says a friendship is sealed when you visit a home) and invites them to make a hut or play-space with their personal belongings. Inspired by their childhoods, the resulting huts are intimate glimpses into their strikingly rich and diverse lives.

Nicolas Henry

If you can read French (or use a translation tool) you should visit Henry’s site and read why each space is a a reflection of their imagination. I always appreciate it when older people have the chance to share their stories, their loves, their dreams.

Marie-Hélène

Delightfully, Henry had the good fortune to meet and photograph my wonderful grandmother in New Zealand. As I understand it they met while she was volunteering at the local visitors centre of her seaside village.

Betty

Here she is in her much beloved but wild sub-tropical garden – click for a larger view.  The picture above Betty’s head is one of her crocheted woolen blankets and a portrait of her as a young girl. Note the teaspoon collection in the back! I love this photograph so much.

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Hi, How Are You. Let’s Play A Game.

by Amber on February 7, 2010

Daniel Johnston’s recent outing at the fantastic Laneway festival reminded me of a little something I saw at the end of last year.

Hi, How Are You

It’s hard to believe at first, but in our iPhone obsessed world there is even an app dedicated to the music and art of Johnston. It’s entitled, ‘Hi, How Are You‘; and suprisingly is not just a vanity project, but a well thought out puzzle game that is pretty fun to play!

Swirl

Hi, How Are You the game features classic Johnston characters like  Joe Boxer and Jeremiah the Innocent; the stalk-eyed-froggy-creature who is famously depicted on a mural in Austin, Texas, Johnston’s adopted home. The game focuses on a couple of motifs common to Johnston’s work – fighting the evils of the outside world, and searching for the girl of  his dreams through that quagmire.

The game itself was created by two Austin based developers and costs around US$0.99 (or a more splashy NZ$4.50)  – it’s an affordable, fun experience for any technologically endowed Daniel Johnston fan.

See also: Daniel Johnston’s official site | App Advice’s full review of the game

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Viewfinder: Dinner With Murakami

by Amber on February 5, 2010

Murakami

Dinner with Murakami is a 2007 documentary directed by Yan Ting Yuen about the life and work of legendary Japanese author Haruki Murakami.

“Largely structured round Murakami’s enigmatic absence, the film dramatizes Murakami’s impact on his readers and takes the camera into the hinterland to determine what is “Murakamian” in the Japanese landscape. The resulting film has a beautiful sense of form and poetic structure.” [Indie Flick Pick]

In the film everybody from groupies who hang outside Murakami’s old jazz club to schoolchildren, share their piece on the publicity shy writer. Norwegian Wood has been likened to the Nippon equivalent of J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye; so it is unsurprising most Japanese people have a story to tell about their relationship with Murakami’s work.

See also: Imagine, a BBC documentary series. Alan Yentob goes on A Wild Sheep Chase: In Search Of Haruki Murakami.

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The Laneway Festival and The Ana{b}log

by Amber on February 4, 2010

The event:

The first Auckland Laneway Festival (an offshoot of the St. Jerome’s tour) was held on Monday. Acts like Dear Times Waste, The 3D’s, Cut Off Your Hands, Daniel Johnston and Sarah Blasko took to alternating stages in the heart of the city, and performed their little hearts out.

Crowd

Acts of the day? The Xx – never seen a skivvy look that sexy … and that Florence woman. She was amazing, yelling about the weather, shimmying and throwing out such a powerful voice from her tiny frame. I think 5000 people fell in love with her at the same moment..

Rayban count 36% down this year

The blog:

The Ana{b}log was a public blog created on site on a large-scale blackboard. We (2 writers, 2 scribes) updated it constantly through the 12 hour day. There was a lot of chalk snapping and laughter. Content was of the highest quality – reviews, interviews, news and gossip.

Using the chalk dust to do the Melbourne Shuffle

The Ana{b}log is a spectacle, an antidote to the same-same expectations of Web 2.0 – a genuine conversation with kids on the street. That was my favourite part of the day (aside from the bands) – watching people engage with the board, pick up a stubby piece of chalk in their hands and add to it. Or if they weren’t sure of it, they’d come have a chat!

The Ana{b}log is but a fleeting moment in time… a record that is subject to the elements – the wind, the rain and 15-year-old boys writing naughty words about their anatomy.

ana{b}log

Above is a picture I snapped of Tana and Brock hard at work, to the left is the “Twitter” feed. Below is what we deemed as quote of the day – a truly wide ranging vox pop on how people were finding the day thus far garnered this answer:

"Good"

It was a great day and topics spanned from a review of the waffle caravan to festival tips (plastic bags make a good poncho) and Fashion Pit – our hourly fashion assessment. Florals reached saturation point, Raybans were 36% down.

For more photos check out the digital version of the Ana{b}log. Thanks to the shockingly talented Tana Mitchell and  Red Bull for making this happen!

Thanks RedBull!

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Viewfinder: Laneways Edition

by Amber on January 29, 2010

On Monday the inaugural Auckland Laneways festival is taking place in the city! Exciting! It might not be a sassy wee alley like St Jerome’s but Britomart will be rocking I’m sure. Here are a few videos I’ve pulled up in the last couple of days – bands I am gagging to hear live.

Black Lips – Bad Kids

The Black Lips live show is meant to be pretty badass – I’ve heard reports of band members pashing, vomiting and getting raucous on stage. Will they show Auckland a naughty time?

The xx – Crystalised

SEXY VOICES. Can they pull it off live? And will they duet with Florence?

Echo & The Bunnymen – The Killing Moon

Echo doesn’t want me to embed his 80’s gold, but here’s a link to the video anyway. The next video is very reminiscent of The Killing Moon aesthetic:

Florence and the Machine – You’ve Got The Love

Nearly a year ago I blogged about F&TM and now she’s playing here! Felicity commented on that post, and yay, you get to see her on Monday.

The Naked And FamousAll Of This

LOVE. All of this.

St. JeromeI’m working on the day as a writerly type person so say come say HI! - I’ll be lurking around a giant blackboard for Red Bull. (I would love to interview some people and get their thoughts on how the day is going!)

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Hot 1977 Style | Vogue Body and Beauty

by Amber on January 27, 2010

Vogue Body and Beauty by Bronwen Meredith is my new favourite old book. I finally took the time to read this beast, and it’s fabulous. “This sumptuous yet eminently practical handbook gives the facts and possibilities about health and beauty honestly and without feeding women’s dreams and illusions.”

vogue beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Vogue Body and Beauty

Great book, but I must say; seventies diets for health are outrageous… really, how many grapefruit can you eat in a week? There seems to be many copies of this floating round, so if you have the chance to get your elegant wee paws on it, do so. From the eating plans, to the DIY treatments, to the Vogue full-colour plates – it’s good in so many ways.

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Yayoi Kusama | We Are All Dots

by Amber on January 23, 2010

The number one reason for our Wellington visit (I use the word ‘our’ but in reality I was gatecrashing my friends’ holiday) was to go see the Yayoi Kusama: Mirrored Years exhibition at the City Gallery.

City Gallery

dotty

To celebrate the exhibition, they kitted the entire gallery exterior out in polka dots!

dot

Yayoi Kusama is an avant-garde Japanese sculptor, painter and novelist.; her work concerns many themes, but is usually expressed through the polka dot and infinity net motifs that are her trademarks. Kusama started painting dots at a young age, after suffering ‘hallucinations’.

Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama

In her twenties, Kusama moved to New York and nurtured her talents further, gaining recognition for her large scale works, working in the same sphere as Warhol and other notables. In 1973 she returned to Japan and produced several novels and anthologies while continuing to create art.

Yayoi Kusama

Today, Kusama’s trippy paintings, tentacle like sculptures, performance art and installations have attracted a cult following around the world, and she has found acclaim as one of the world’s most important living artists.

Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusuama. 'The Moment of Regeneration' 2004

dot

Yayoi Kusama

The Mirrored Years exhibition is on in Wellington till February 10, so if you’re anywhere in the region and you haven’t scoped it out yet, you simply must! It’s simply dotty, mind boggling and a lot of fun to be immersed in.

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Viewfinder: The Books

by Amber on January 22, 2010

I saw The Books play in Wellington on Tuesday night, as part of a double billing with Glaswegian heart breakers Camera Obscura. The Books are Nick Zammuto and Paul de Jong; and they make what they describe as “collage music” – a pastiche of found sounds and original folk melodies.

Books

Samples are sourced from thrift store cassettes, home videos, and things like “the voice recorder from Home Alone 2″.  They don’t use a drum kit for their percussion, preferring children’s toys and filing cabinets, which are sampled and looped.

“And the library keeps swelling, especially when Zammuto and de Jong are on the road. Trolling Salvation Army and Goodwill stores in the towns they encounter on tour, they’re particular about what they’ll buy; they’re partial to old instructional videos for products that don’t exist anymore.” [The Boston Globe]

I really enjoyed the gig, and while some may see the mash-up and looping approach as juvenile and too accessible, I found it quite fresh; especially when accompanied by the most glorious instrument of them all – the cello. Here are a few of The Book’s entwined songs and videos:

Be Good To Them Always:

An Owl With Knees:

Take Time:

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