About dc

Director of Photography at z360.com

In Support of temail

temail

A temail is a text email. An email in Plain Text. It is what an email should be. Emails were not intended to be gaudy headlines but purveyors of information. That is fast, quick, personal and practical: they are quite simply the mail –  as in a letter – version of the internet. The idea that it could call in other content from another continent is anathema to a considered and personal form of communication. Email should not be trying to emulate the internet browser experience. Never mind also including hidden trackers, that is just plain abusive. Just so you know, most commercial emails contain trackers, and yes it should be banned, and yes we are being abused.

One way of stopping this is to stop “Loading Remote Content”. There is probably an option to do this in your Email Preferences, hidden away somewhere. On OSX Mojave go to Mail/Preferences/Viewing and halfway down the page switch off “Load remote content in messages”. You will then have a button so you can view the remote content if and when you wish. This should be how email works, and in effect it once was – there was no “rich content”. Our internet overlords have allowed email to become a pipeline for spam, random advertising, tracking and malware.

remote

Another problem, which you can cure to some extent, is the false or no-reply address email. To me, any email where you cannot reply to the actual sender should be banned, it is just plain rude. Many spam emails also have a false sender, so make sure the return path of the email is visible in the Header. If it does not match the sender press Delete asap. Edit the “Show Message Headers” option in your email preferences to show the Return-Path. Again this is not usually the default, when it should be.

Emails are of course wonderful things containing the world of letters, discourses and eventually lives. It is still an open medium (although Google and Apple etc. wish it wasn’t) and as a photographer I do use it sometimes to send small photographs. These photographs are not remote content, they are part of the original email. But if it was just temail, a text only medium, I would not object. You would know just what you signed up for, something effective and utilitarian. Nothing hidden.

In more general terms, if you do not have access to a discrete mailbox with your own domain, I usually recommend gmail. Although it has not always played well with OSX, it is still free, deletes spam and is usually reliable. Just remember Google is reading, tracking and in effect censoring your emails. Also remember that with any IMAP email system that most of your email is being stored in the cloud, not locally, unless you specify otherwise. Old emails are likely to be “pruned” (that is deleted) at some point. There are always limits, Google currently allows 15GB of storage which sounds like a lot, but may not be enough after many years usage.

Meanwhile always log out of everything you can, while logged in they are tracking you, ‘cos you invited them! The worst offenders in this regard are Facebook, Google and Amazon. If you don’t believe me, feel free to spend half your life reading Terms and Conditions, Cookie Settings and GDPR documents.

 Support temail !

PS. I made up the term temail, I hope you know what I mean.

Three Million Brexit Coins Recycled

50p

This says it all about the mis-management of the last three years.

50re

Out of the many skits on the Brexit 50p, this was my favourite, just set your own date.

50brex

This is the design that has been withdrawn, but featuring the ‘rather die in a ditch’ date of 31st October 2019. Yes let’s not forget there were another 10,000 ‘collector’ coins recycled last March. A Treasury spokesman said: “We will still produce a coin to mark our departure from the EU.” Pure hubris.

The Get Ready for Brexit on 31 October ad campaign has already cost £100 million.

 

Do Not Install MacOS Catalina

macOS-Catalina

Warning ! Do Not Install Catalina, the new system software from Apple. Go to System Preferences / Software Update (if using Mojave, other systems may differ) and switch updates off, especially macOS updates.

• The new macOS Catalina (10.15) will break old 32 bit software, which you are using now.
• It is very hard, if not impossible, to go back to an older system.
• If you use iTunes it’s gone, the newer version called Music will be different and designed to promote Apple Music. Most DJ software no longer works.
• Old format videos will no longer play.
• If you sync your phone to your computer, prepare for everything to change – again.
• Your MacOS will now be on a Read-Only system partition. A lot of non Apple apps will have problems because of this.

There are many other changes, the only current benefit will be full compatibility with iOS 13.2 (already patched twice in a week) and new apps like Sidecar.

If you only ever use Apple Apps or have a new computer, think about upgrading to Catalina in a month or two, when it has settled down. Otherwise do not update until you are fully aware of all the changes.

The current system Mojave 10.14.6 works well on most computers made since 2013.

Catalina beta testers said:
• I continue to be stunned by Apple’s failure to significantly announce to its millions of users that lots of their software will simply stop working if/when they “upgrade” to Catalina.
• The new security features are incredibly annoying. Apps are constantly asking for permission to see various folders.
• This is the first OS X version I won’t upgrade until I’m forced to.
• Apple’s documentation says “Beginning in macOS 10.15, notarization is required by default for all software.”
• Ars Technica says give Apple a couple of months to patch Catalina before you install it.

FYI – just my opinion !

Update 12 November 2019
Following lengthy discussions on MacInTouch due to Apple Installers now having out of date security certificates and the disappearance of important software, this is where you can find the hidden Mojave installer on the App Store:

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/macos-mojave/id1398502828?mt=12

If you find an Apple software installer giving you the misleading information that it is “damaged and can’t be used”, try this solution: Reset the date on your computer to 2016 after quitting all apps. Install the software as usual and reset the date back to normal as soon as possible.

The version linked to above is now working, but last week it was not. Apple have not changed either the version number 14.6.06 or the creation date 19 September 2019, yet I now have 2 apparently identical Apple installers for Mojave of different sizes (the slightly larger one at 6,051,048,165 bytes is the new one). One of them works, the other is “damaged and can’t be used to install macOS”. Shameful – and not even true!

Update 29th May 2020
With the latest Security Update 2020-003 Apple is making it harder not to update to Catalina. I now recommend turning off all updates in System Preferences / Software Update. If you are running Mojave 10.14.6 do not keep your Mac up to date!

If you are careful you can apply security and other updates manually. However a safer way of doing this is to use SilentKnight or LockRattler.

This is making life much tougher for Mac Administrators, since it is easy to upgrade accidentally. Apple must be getting desperate, as we have to put up with more nagware without any opt-out. We are losing control of our computers and I find their attitude unnecessary and abusive. This is Apple being hostile to their own users, never a good strategy.

In addition, the latest update to Catalina has a nasty bug which prevents making a bootable backup disk. Remember you cannot easily revert to a previous system, or even update, yet updates with bugs are being forced upon us..

For more information and a list of installers try this Diskmaker X page.
Meanwhile here is a revised list of previous system installers, now hidden in the App Store:

Get macOS Mojave 10.14

Get macOS High Sierra 10.13

Get macOS Sierra 10.12

PS Download installers with Safari browser. These installers are still not reliable and often spawn random errors. Keep trying!

Update 27th October 2020
Well I hope you followed my advice, since Apple are now issuing rogue MRT files which are supposed to protect your computer. These are “invisible” files and are not supposed to affect your own usage, just protect you. However MRT 1.68 has caused serious damage and has been withdrawn, but you cannot replace it.

In addition the last security update 2020-005 caused serious issues for many users, it was also withdrawn and replaced with an update with the same name, so who knows where you are! Apple as usual refuses to comment on any of these issues.

Meanwhile to quote Ric Ford of MacInTouch:
Apple is now secretly hiding its phone-home connections from firewall software, which is completely and totally unacceptable and will cause some customers and partners to abandon the Mac platform.

David Dudok de Wit says starting with macOS Big Sur, users can’t:

  1. View a full, uncensored list of apps trying to access the Internet on their Mac — as Apple is hiding 56 of its own apps.
  2. Know how much data these Apple apps upload or download.
  3. Know which domains or IP adresses these Apple apps interact with.
  4. Block or allow traffic from these Apple apps.

Security by obscurity is not a thing, never has been.

Hi Greta Thunberg

greta55Hi Greta Thunberg
Every time you speak
I am very moved
Your simplicity and directness
Speak truth to power

Look to the bigger picture
Relatively speaking
There are too many people
Our power and demands are deadly
It’s not just carbon it’s people
Our planet earth is a dynamic place
Islands form and Islands die
Icecaps grow and recede
Extinction happens
We are not immune
We adapt
We will change
We are missionaries
With a new leader
Speak carefully
Stay Happy

“All of our environmental problems become easier to solve with fewer people, and harder – and ultimately impossible – to solve with ever more people.”
Sir David Attenborough, patron of Population Matters
When David Attenborough was born in 1926 there were 2 billion people in the world, now there are over 8 billion. That is some elephant in the room.
*

Losing control of our computers

How do you delete a corrupted prefs file in Mojave?

corrupt

With a vast and previously unnecessary amount of difficulty.
This is when security combined with nannying the user becomes abusive.

  • You cannot find the file using Spotlight
  • You cannot rename it
  • You cannot change permissions
  • You cannot drag it to the Trash
  • You cannot replace it
  • You cannot compress it
  • You cannot delete it using Secure Delete in Cocktail or Onyx
  • You cannot even delete it when started up in Target Disk Mode on another computer
  • You cannot delete it using Terminal in the standard manner
  • It is not visible in Time Machine

 What do you do? Apple say nothing on the subject.
First of all you should make the hidden Library folder visible.
Find the corrupt file using Find Any File, not Spotlight.
It was identified in this case because of a bad creation date.

Then I used the dangerous rm -f function in Terminal. When I dragged the recalcitrant file dated 1 January 1970 into the Terminal window it gave the name Library/Preferences/com.apple.ResourceFork, which was wrong. Naturally the reply from Terminal was No such file or directory. This was an OS error, perhaps related to APFS.

Only when I manually typed in the actual file name Library/Preferences/com.phaseone.mediapro.settings did Terminal finally manage to delete the file, and I got back to normal working. Many hours wasted.

Bargain Pro Cameras

FX Lenses on DX Cameras

Article featured in Nikon Rumors June 15th 2019
Comments included:
– That’s a very good article. If a D5xxx works for you, that’s great. 
– This is a good article for enthusiasts to read and feel confident they are justified in buying and enjoying a DX system.

_1D82785

I am often asked for camera recommendations and my standard reply is the Nikon D5500. The later D5600 is basically the same camera with Snapbridge (an app for phones), which I never use. To make this into a “Pro“ camera I suggest attaching some some full frame FX lenses, which will give you startling sharpness, very little vignetting and no corner fuzziness. You are just using the best part of the lens, which is basically over-engineered for usage on DX crop sensor cameras. Take a look at nearly all MTF charts and you are avoiding the wavy (not as sharp) part of the graph on the right hand side, which is the edge of the sensor.

50mm-f18-g-mtfDX

Here is the Nikon MTF Chart for their AF-S Nikkor 50mm f/1.8G full frame lens.
On a DX camera you are only using the lens up to the vertical dotted line.

A note about terminology. 
A DX or APS-C camera is a so called crop sensor camera, meaning the the sensor is 1.5x smaller than a full frame FX camera. The sensor in a full frame camera is 24x36mm, the same as classic 35mm film. Thus on a crop DX camera the standard 50mm lens becomes a 75mm lens (50×1.5=75), a short telephoto. DX lenses cannot normally be used on full frame FX cameras, the image does not cover the whole sensor. On a DX camera a standard lens would be a 35mm, giving roughly the same angle of view as a 50mm lens on full frame. The Nikon 18-55mm DX kit lens is equivalent to a 27-82mm full frame lens.
The sensor in the D5500 is 24.2 mega-pixels, which is the same resolution as many full frame cameras such as the Nikon Z6 or D750 and the Sony A7.

Starsha Lee at Flaxon Ptootch

Starsha Lee at Flaxon Ptootch, Kentish Town
AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8G – 1/250sec, f2.0, ISO3200

My favourite lens combination in this regard is the AF-S Nikkor 50mm f/1.8G. You might think a full frame lens would be too big on a DX camera, but it fits perfectly in the hand and weighs less (185g) than the 35mm DX f1.8 lens (200g), specifically made for crop sensor cameras. Best of all it does not look like a telephoto lens, has well recessed glass and focuses down to to 0.45m, very good for a 75mm lens. It is no wonder Nikon do not make a DX 50mm lens, it would be pointless to try and improve on this. In crowded social situations this focal length is ideal for picking out faces in the melee, and is several centimetres shorter than the kit zoom lens which is only f5.6 at 50mm. Indoors with average room lighting that will never be fast enough even at ISO 3200, and of course you lose the the 3D effect of an f1.8 lens.

_DC53300

Spizz Energi at iKlektik, Lambeth
AF-S NIKKOR 85mm f/1.8G – 1/250sec, f2.0, ISO3200

At events when I am a bit further away I use the AF-S Nikkor 85mm f/1.8G, which becomes a very fast 130mm lens on DX. This extremely sharp lens sits well on the D5500 and only weighs 350g. Another FX lens I have used extensively is the tiny Fisheye Nikkor 16mm f2.8, which requires manual focusing, but does give a unique picture angle of over 100 degrees. For general travel and video usage the AF-S Nikkor 24-120mm f/4G VR lens is much heavier, but still quite manageable and becomes a powerful 36-180 lens without any FX corner fuzziness.

John Landor Music in Motion

John Landor Music in Motion at Conway Hall, Holborn
AF-S NIKKOR 24-120mm f/4G – 1/125sec, f4.0, ISO3200

To put all this in perspective the D5500 is a remarkably light camera (470g) with an excellent grip. While lacking a few bells and whistles, in particularly a discrete aperture dial, you soon get used to this and I have yet to find something the camera can’t do once you are familiar with the menus. The touch screen is also remarkably useful and can be used to set focus. It competes well with mirrorless cameras, being smaller and much lighter than a Nikon Z6 or Sony A7, and while the Fujifilm X-T30 may be a little smaller it does not have a proper grip and is at least twice the price. I prefer to handhold my camera and do not use a strap, which inevitably gets in the way and makes shooting less flexible. If you really want a light camera choose a Nikon D3500 which only weighs 365g, the lightest DSLR ever. It is the same basic design as the D5500 with the same sensor, but has only 11 AF points, as opposed to 39 on the D5500. I would not recommend it for video since it has no flip out screen or headphone/microphone port. It does represent excellent value, the results for stills should be as good as cameras costing four times as much.

Irene Serra

Irene Serra at Royal Festival Hall, Waterloo
AF-S VR NIKKOR 70-200mm f/2.8G – 1/200sec, f2.8, ISO2500

So to conclude my bargain camera would be a Nikon D5500 with 18-55 kit lens, currently available for £450. If you never use video and want to save more money try a Nikon D3500 with kit lens, about £315. The kit lens is usually heavily subsidised, you might as well purchase it since it is the only way to get a cheap wide angle on DX cameras, and they perform well enough these days. Next stop is the 50mm lens, which you can find for £150, or less second hand. If buying older lenses remember only the post 2000 G or E lenses with no aperture ring will autofocus on these cameras.

_1D82796

All pictures were taken as Raw files and processed in Adobe Lightroom.
Here are some more examples of full frame lenses on the D5500:

Trevor Watts, Peter Knight, Veryan Weston at Cafe Oto

Trevor Watts at Cafe Oto, Dalston
AF-S NIKKOR 85mm f/1.8G – 1/2sec, f4.0, ISO200

John Landor Bach Recital

John Landor Bach Recital at St Martin-in-the-Fields, Charing Cross
AF-S NIKKOR 24-120mm f/4G – 1/125sec, f4.0, ISO3200

Iain Sinclair

Iain Sinclair at Cafe Oto, Dalston
AF-S NIKKOR 85mm f/1.8G – 1/200sec, f2.0, ISO3200

Marc Ribot at Cafe Oto

Marc Ribot at Cafe Oto, Dalston
AF-S NIKKOR 85mm f/1.8G – 1/160sec, f1.8, ISO3200

Starsha Lee at Flaxon Ptootch

Starsha Lee at Flaxon Ptootch, Kentish Town
AF Fisheye-Nikkor 16mm f2.8D – 1/125sec, f2.8, ISO3200

The Gulps Guitar

The Gulps at Flaxon Ptootch, Kentish Town
AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8G – 1/200sec, f2.0, ISO3200

All Photographs ©Douglas Cape z360.com

 

There Wasn’t Another One

The Jimi Hendrix Experience ‎– Voodoo Chile EP

jimi-hendrix-voodoo-chile-7-single-2095-001

In October 1970, at the age of 15, I bought my first 45rpm single, Voodoo Chile by Jimi Hendrix. It was exceptional in many different ways. Firstly it only cost six shillings – from 1971 onwards post decimalisation that would be 30p. A normal single cost 10 shillings in those days which represented at least 2 weeks of pocket money. In addition this was an EP (Extended Play) single with three tracks, lasting over 12 minutes. It was cheap because it was regarded as a tribute single, using old tracks recorded in 1966 and 1968. Jimi Hendrix had died the previous month aged 27 in Notting Hill, London, after an overdose of sleeping pills. This single was his only UK Chart No 1.

JIMI_HENDRIX_EXPERIENCE_VOODOO_CHILE_7

I had suffered a frustrating few years because my father had refused to buy a record player. He did have an amazing Truvox reel to reel tape recorder, but I was not supposed to touch it. I did play with it of course, but when he was out. Still one day, after I had saved up just enough money, I insisted, saying all my friends had a record player. I had ended up buying records just to play on their record players, it felt ridiculous. We went to a tiny back street lean-to where we purchased the necessary second hand bits to make our own record player, I could not afford a Dansette. We bought a sturdy 1950s portable player with a bakelite tonearm and proceeded to make our own balsa wood headshell for a ceramic cartridge. This high output piezoelectric cartridge meant we could use a cheap amplifier without pre-amp, and quickly destroy records with the heavy tonearm. However, with the addition of another speaker, it was stereo, so better and in fact much louder than a mono Dansette. I also painted it electric blue, so it looked both ridiculous and cool, and I used it for many years.

Electric Ladyland _ The Making Of Electric Ladyland

Back to Jimi and the exceptional single. Voodoo Chile was recorded in Electric Ladyland Studios in New York, with the classic Experience line up, Noel Redding on bass and Mitch Mitchell on drums. The day before Jimi had recorded the 15 minute jam version found on the double Electric Ladyland album with Jack Casady on bass and Stevie Winwood on organ. On the album, where both versions appeared, the shorter single version was named Voodoo Chile (Slight Return). The song was based on an old recording from the 1930s, Catfish Blues by Robert Petway, which had also been recorded by John Lee Hooker in the late 40s. The Experience had even played the Muddy Waters version of Catfish Blues live earlier in their career, and there you can already hear the roots of Voodoo Chile. However come 1968, Hendrix was at the peak of his powers, and he had completely rewritten the lyrics and honed the arrangement to make the dynamic blockbuster that we know today. In one sense the song became a poetic description of his own dynamic and visceral playing, his guitar is indeed chopping down mountains and then picking up grains of sand. In this five minutes there is nearly every guitar trope known to man, frottage followed by talking wah-wah descending into huge searing power chords in the first 40 seconds, then a phased solo swoops across the speakers taking us up into space. There are huge dynamics in every move he makes, he is too quick to be bombastic, the music veers between solo, chords and glissandi in an epic tour de force. Jimi is indeed demonstrating, via his guitar, that he is the voodoo child.

the-jimi-hendrix-experience-voodoo-chile-1970-15

While his guitar could do plenty of talking, here his vocal prowess is a match with it. The casual belief in his own boasting is delivered with complete authority and an infectious enthusiasm. Whispering asides, even apologies, are made before he ascends into the next world, screaming with dramatic urgency “Don’t be late”. The bare lyrics, while suggesting he has god like powers, also contain genuine concern, with lines from a love song worried that he will “take up all your sweet time”. Still before long he is an alien again, there is another world out there, the counterculture, and out there he’s a voodoo child. Noel Redding claims the song was basically improvised live since they were being filmed at the time, which may well explain the unique dynamism.

the-jimi-hendrix-experience-voodoo-chile-1970-16

The other side of the EP starts with Hey Joe, recorded in 1966 during the early sessions for his first album Are You Experienced. I was later to purchase this album in WH Smith for just £1, since it was re-released in a budget ‘backtrack’ series in a plain brown sleeve. My bakelite record player was soon to wear out the grooves on that one. The origins of the song Hey Joe are hazy, it was credited to an obscure Californian folk singer in 1962, known as Billy Roberts, but there are several other antecedents. However the version which inspired Jimi was undoubtedly by the West Coast band Love, since Jimi and the lead singer of Love, Arthur Lee, had recorded together the previous year in LA. Chas Chandler, former bass player for the Animals, saw Jimi performing the song in New York’s Cafe Wha?, and it became the first single when Chas brought Jimi over to England and signed him to Track Records. This single set the template for the Jimi Hendrix Experience, already you can hear the unique guitar style in his solo, while his conversational singing breaks into anguish as the song builds to it’s climax. It reached number 6 in the UK charts. No surprise that it is featured on his memorial single, this was the first hit record.

R-4820952-153753351.jpeg

And finally the apocalypse. Huge urgency drives Jimi’s version of the Bob Dylan song All Along the Watchtower. It has been named as the greatest cover version of all time. Despite appearing on Electric Ladyland, it was recorded at Olympic Studios in London with guests Brian Jones and Dave Mason, and Jimi himself played bass after a dispute with Noel Redding. The original song, which featured on Bob Dylan’s acoustic John Wesley Harding album, could not sound more different. There is still a sense of urgency in Dylan’s version, but the instrumentation is sparse with a plaintive harmonica, all the drama comes from the vocal line, as befits a folk album recorded in Nashville. Jimi had long been a fan of Dylan’s, and covered several of his songs in concert, the terse yet convoluted lyrics seemed to suit his own singing style. Here though, Jimi makes the song his own to the extent that Dylan has said “when I sing it, I always feel it’s a tribute to him in some kind of way.” The reason being that Dylan now sings the Hendrix arrangement, as heard on his 1974 live album with The Band, Before the Flood.

R-4051887-1451056996-4874.jpeg

The religious based imagery of the song, suggested by the Book of Isiah, does indeed summon up an archaic, end of days atmosphere. The stinging guitar lines suggest the horsemen of the apocalypse, the movement is palpable, horses are galloping through a slashing, distant storm. Dylan claims he wrote the song in reverse, we never seem to know whether we are fleeing confusion or bringing chaos to the gates of the watchtower. Only at the end of the song do we realise that the two horsemen must be the joker and the thief. Nevertheless the sense of desperation is ever present, the hour is getting late, the whirling howling guitar suggesting cataclysm is upon us. It is at once a comment on the failing vision of the counterculture, as it faded into drug addiction and Vietnam war protest, and simultaneously a call to arms for the outsiders, the jokers and the thieves. It was Hendrix who transformed this song from an elegy into a song of protest, welcoming the future conflagration of corrupt establishment values, defined by the gradually building guitar line ending in a blistering shower of repeated high notes. Now the music matches and reinforces the lyrical intentions of the song.

Are You Experienced _ The Making Of

When Jimi Hendrix died I had been saddened, but thought there would be another great guitar player along in a minute, there seemed to be plenty around. In vain I waited, maybe Jeff Beck would take up the mantle, or perhaps Robin Trower. Buddy Guy, Albert Collins and Albert King took on some of his stylings (or vice versa), but they were playing firmly in the Blues tradition. Much later I discovered Bill Frisell, whose work with Naked City and Power Tools seemed to echo some of Jimi’s more esoteric musical concerns. There was one reason that nobody sounds quite like Jimi, he played right-handed guitars that were turned upside down and restrung for left-hand playing. Nobody would be crazy enough to do that nowadays. In addition, he was right place right time for the new Vox-Wah pedal and associated phasing effects, the electric guitar had come of age. The best Jimi guitar impersonator was undoubtedly Stevie Ray Vaughn, who recorded an 11 minute version of Voodoo Chile, which while played with great power and elan, is simply a remake. Finally I did see a great live version of Voodoo Chile, unexpectedly played by Vini Reilly, guitarist for Morrissey and Factory Records, but of course he couldn’t sing, which would explain why he made instrumental records. There is no-one since Hendrix who has managed to make such a unique synthesis of blues, rock, funk and space music in the way that he did. Despite his foreshortened career, after fifty years he stands alone, a revolutionary artist just as powerful as Picasso, Beckett or Beethoven.

Electric Ladyland 13 The Jimi Hendrix Experience

Jimi Hendrix 
Born November 27 1942 in Seattle, Washington, USA
Died September 18 1970 in Kensington, London, UK

Mitch Mitchell
Born 9 July 1946 in Ealing, Middlesex, UK
Died 12 November 2008 in Portland, Oregon, USA

Noel Redding
Born 25 December 1945 in Folkestone, Kent, UK
Died 11 May 2003 in Clonakilty, County Cork, Ireland

*

 Update 10 June 2020

This article was extensively quoted in the Guardian Readers Favourite UK No 1s

*

 

We think we know everything

quant_009

Every generation believes it is at the cutting edge, that we know everything we need to. It appears the society we live in could be made no other way, that progress has been made to get us to this apogee of civilisation. Both the Greeks and the Aztecs appear to have believed they had found the answers, as do most “civilised” societies, wherever they may be. No doubt Christians in the middle ages were glad to have resolved the mysteries of creation and to have a book of God’s laws they could believe in. Pity the poor pagans making pointless sacrifices, or the barely civilised natives of South America, they would not be going to Heaven. For in that moment God had given us all the answers. Come the industrial revolution and modern science, huge progress was made and the daily grind became steadily more distant. There were sewers, machines that milled and a better form of transport than the horse. We finally knew the shape of the world and could communicate across it, what more did we need? All we could eat was in a shop nearby.

Now we are in a new era of instant communication, we have atomic power and have visited the moon. We understand our own recipe, DNA, and can scan our own brains. The Universe started with the Big Bang and has been mapped. We even have the power to destroy our own planet. What more do we need to know?

That is the hubris of the human condition. We only see what we know and look back in pity and despair on our deluded forebears. Yet the world moves on dynamically outside our ken, at it’s own glacial speed, in ways we have yet to fathom. While we are proud to have split the atom and discovered the Higgs boson, we already sense this this is just the tip of the quantum iceberg. When we discovered the power of splitting the atom we thought we had solved our energy needs and in the rush of that discovery huge mistakes were made. Many lives were lost. Controlling nuclear fission turned out to be much more complicated than we had ever dreamed, while the cost of nuclear waste disposal turns out to be higher than the cost of nuclear reactor construction.

079_pfrcaveprint

Dounreay Prototype Fast Reactor (PFR) ©z360.com 1999

There is a universe of quantum effects which defeats our senses and understanding. Our logical and classical consciousness cannot comprehend matter which has properties of both waves and particles. Put simply, the quantum world is invisible, antithetical and incomprehensible to us. Einstein himself, a founder of quantum physics, had a great deal of difficulty with Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle, believing that “He (god) does not play dice”, and this conundrum has yet to be fully resolved. Nevertheless the existence of quantum entanglement or as Einstein called it ”spooky action at a distance” has not been disproven. Thus instead of becoming more comprehensible our sense of the world is slipping away into multiverses, live or dead cats and the flapping of a butterflies wing which can change everything. There are no longer truths, only possibilities. Maybe space itself has an atomic structure, currently unknown to us. We are moving into a world we cannot see, our senses blind to the machinations of the quantum world. Until recently we did not need to know this information to survive, the evolution of our senses has failed to keep up with our theoretical knowledge. In this situation mistakes are easily made.

Now we are aware of it, the effects of Quantum Mechanics, discovered in 1900 by Max Planck, appear all around us. Your USB stick uses quantum tunnelling, as does in effect the light switch, never mind the laser, transistor and LED bulb. That all seems quite sensible, but a new field is opening up called Quantum Biology, telling us that quantum effects are an integral part of living phenomena. So we think we know everything, but cannot explain the sense of smell. There are quantum effects at work here, and the harder you look, the more they start cropping up everywhere. It is a matter of asking the right questions. The tennis player can hit a ball that theoretically he has not had time to react to. A dog can smell things that aren’t there. A human eye can detect a single photon. Animals can navigate using the inclination of the magnetic field of the earth. These phenomena are believed to be caused by quantum effects. Indeed, quantum wave function collapse might be the root of our consciousness. Most vitally of all photosynthesis (used by all plants) appears to use quantum coherence. In other words, we really know nothing about how the world really works down at the atomic level. We may have an inkling, but there is a whole new science here to be discovered, which will in turn make what we believe now into a vaguely ridiculous approximation. Yes our descendants will laugh at our naivety, and so it will continue.

quant_005

Update 09/05/21

Our profound lack of self-knowledge is explained in the book The Idea of the Brain by Matthew Cobb (2020). We have no idea how the panoply of medicinal drugs (Librium, Vallium, SSRi’s) actually work. We do know the mind invents what we perceive, just one example being the invisible blind spot where the optic nerve enters the eye. Put simply, if we do not know how the brain works, how can we really know anything.
Despite a solid bedrock of understanding, we have no clear comprehension about how billions, or millions, or thousands, or even tens of neutrons work together to produce the brain’s activity.
Or as Olaf Sporns has put it:
Neuroscience still largely lacks organising principles or a theoretical framework for converting brain data into fundamental knowledge and understanding.

Matthew Cobb finishes his Introduction with this sentence:
The four most important words in science are “We do not know”.

The Disaster of Brexit

EU original 2

Firstly let’s be sure what a no-deal Brexit means. Apart from the disastrous economic consequences it means the dissolution of the United Kingdom. We will break the Good Friday agreement in Ireland, and Scotland will justifiably vote for independence. Neither Scotland or Northern Ireland voted for Brexit and they will not accept it. The negotiated Brexit deal on offer from Theresa May leaves us in a worse position than our current membership, with no voice in Europe. We can see both Ireland and France from our own shores, yet now we are setting up trade barriers with them. Let us not forget that nearly half of our trade is with the EU. I have lived through a time when I could travel to the end of a continent through many, many countries, with no encumbrance. There has been the longest peacetime ever recorded in Western Europe, for which the EU received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2012. Historically that is glorious and unprecedented, and now we are about to throw it away. I personally regard this as a betrayal of all that my parents and grandparents fought for in the 20th Century, through two World Wars. Not surprisingly there is no support for Brexit in parliament, and ministers are leaving the government in droves as a result. Indeed, as Joe Johnson phrased it in his resignation speech, the present choice is “vassalage or chaos”. There will either be a general election or another referendum.

Meanwhile we have wasted two years of our political life squabbling, and the fifth (or ninth) largest economy in the world has made itself into a laughing stock. I said the day after the 2016 referendum that this is basically about the Tories fighting amongst themselves, they have torn their own party apart as they scrabble for power, and damn the consequences. Let us not forget it was the Tories who invented the referendum, believing it would solve their own internal problems. As of 16 November 2018 there are eighteen senior Conservatives who have resigned over Brexit in less than six months, including two Secretaries of State for Exiting the European Union. How can you run a government, never mind a country, in these circumstances? Our chief Brexit negotiator, Mr Rabb, has resigned since he cannot support the deal that he himself negotiated. A pretty pass, which I am sure will be paid for at the ballot box.

The 2016 referendum itself was a farce. It was essentially a protest vote, which was quite understandable in the circumstances. Yes, 37% of UK citizens voted against austerity, immigration and David Cameron, and for Brexit. The level of debate within the Remain campaign during the referendum was of a pathetic and hubristic nature, they thought they couldn’t lose. The ignominy of David Cameron wandering around Europe, looking for a better deal, followed by the betrayal of his self-serving lieutenant, Boris Johnson, were enough to swing the vote for Leave. The Electoral Reform Society described the campaign as “dire” with “glaring democratic deficiencies” which left voters bewildered. Let’s not forget, you could only vote for Tories!

A few days after the referendum I was in a minicab with an Irish driver. As we chatted, I asked about the vote in Northern Ireland and the potential problems with the Irish border. He sounded like a Brexiteer (naturally, as Brits, we didn’t actually say how voted), but he had no idea that the vote would have any effect on the border situation. I didn’t regard this as a reflection on my driver, but as a comment on the wholesale failure by the Remain campaign to raise the relevant issues. We now know how large their failure was, since this has proved to be an insoluble problem, yet at the time hardly anyone appeared to know about it. The pro leave Democratic Unionist Party of Ulster (who have kept Theresa May in power) didn’t appear to appear to realise a hard border would be created by Brexit. Now they have been hoist by their own petard.

My other major issue with the campaign and the media is a severe case of amnesia, if not dereliction of duty. We had already voted to stay in the European Community in 1975 by a huge majority. This verdict was given by a vote with a bigger majority than has been received by any Government in any general election, more than 2 to 1. Today all the politicians say they are fearful of a second referendum, no no no it will be the third referendum! We were asked in June 1975 “Do you think the United Kingdom should stay in the European Community (the Common Market)?”. There was a resounding Yes! Yet it’s like this event happened in some alternate universe – no-one ever mentions it, but the fact is the current score is one all. Maybe it’s time for a decider.

Drapeau-europŽen-MEF-VA-003

Since 1973 we have been European, you can’t turn back time. In the long run the past never defeats the future. We came from Europe and shall forever be part of it.

Postscript 13 January 2019
It may turn out that Brexit was a chimera, that is according to the OED a “A thing which is hoped for but is illusory or impossible to achieve”. The Tories held an advisory referendum on a supposition they could not deliver. The Good Friday Agreement prevents a hard border in Ireland and so precludes the possibility of Brexit. If only our politicians had been wise enough to know that. After 2 years the Tories have failed to square that circle, and I imagine no-one ever will. Still if parliament unexpectedly agrees to Theresa May’s deal, we can look forward to another two years of bloody negotiation on the final trade arrangements. She has only agreed the framework withdrawal agreement at present, the rights of businesses and citizens remain largely untouched between Brexit day on March 29 2019 and 1 July 2020, which may be extended to January 2021. That is the transition period. Yes, Brexit aka “To hell with the rest of the world” has paralysed British politics. It is destroying British industry, investment and our place in the world, and will continue to do so. That’s some legacy for our children and the 1.3 million British Citizens living in the EU.

16 January 2019
Quotes from European newspapers after the the greater ever government defeat
“Shipwrecked by Brexit”
“It’s great theatre – but tragic.”
“A politically hopelessly divided and lame Britain”
“No country has landed itself in such complete and utter chaos”
“It’s the sort of mess Greece would get itself into.”
Quotes from The Guardian

And hopefully in conclusion:
Brexit is an advisory illegal chimera constructed by the Conservative Party to solve their own problems. They have failed.
We voted 2-1 to stay in the European Community in 1975 and it’s 44 Years too late to undo all that. We are Europeans.

6 February 2019
A special place in hell? The Brexit promoters most likely to burn.

3 September 2019
Tory Party becomes the Brexit Party, as Boris sacks all the Tories who will not back a no-deal Brexit. Tory Party now attempting to run the country without a majority and with an unelected leader. No-one ever voted for any of this.

9 September 2019
Leo Varadkar, Irish Prime Minister says:
“The story of Brexit will not end if the United Kingdom leaves on 31 October or even 31 January – there is no such thing as a clean break. No such thing as just getting it done. Rather, we just enter a new phase.
If there is no deal, I believe that’s possible, it will cause severe disruption for British and Irish people alike. We will have to get back to the negotiating table. When we do, the first and only items on the agenda will be citizens’ rights, the financial settlement and the Irish border. All the issues we had resolved in the withdrawal agreement we made with your predecessor. An agreement made in good faith by 28 governments.”

Update 1 June 2023
Unfortunately Brexit did get done, thanks Boris. It is finally officially a Disaster:

It’s been a complete disaster. The reality is it’s been a lose-lose situation for us and Europe. …. And the reality of Brexit was, it was just was a bunch of complete and total lies.
– Guy Hands, City figure and Tory donor, 31 Jan 2023  Radio 4 Today

Brexit has been a fucking absolute unmitigated disaster.
– Noel Gallagher, Big Issue 12 May 2023

Brexit has failed.
– Nigel Farage, Newsnight 15 May

Immigration has gone up, not down, since we left the EU.
The Guardian, 19 May

British households have paid £7bn since Brexit to cover the extra cost of trade barriers on food imports from the EU.
– London School of Economics (LSE),
24 May  The Guardian

56% people in the UK would vote to rejoin the EU.
John Curtice, Poll of polls  May 2023

Historic economic error.
– Larry Summers, former US treasury secretary,  1 June  The Guardian

There Were No Countries

World_map_blank_without_borders1920

Without countries, the whole question of nationality dissolves. Nearly all countries have been invented in the last few hundred years. Germany and Italy only became nation states in 1871. The Act of Union creating the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland was passed by Parliament in 1800. The United States of America was named in 1776, but only became the country we know today in the mid 19th century. If you look at France it is even stranger. From a series of completely separate fiefdoms with different languages, after the revolution of 1789 they gradually became a unified country, with one language mandated by 1880. This unification and language normalisation all took a long time. In the 1940s, more than one million people in France still spoke Breton as their first language. Until you all speak the same language, you really shouldn’t really be called a country. So France was hardly what we would now call a country until maybe the 1950s. The same goes for many other countries, excluding Belgium of course, which has three official languages in various dialects. Canada also has two official languages, French and English, yet it has managed to remain a unified country. This is a complicated subject.

Does a language define a country? Well maybe it should, for how else can you do it? Obviously where someone is born no longer defines nationality. It is a matter of chance, we could be born anywhere, and often are. Place of birth does have a bearing on our cultural beliefs and behaviour, but not in a readily definable way – it all depends on our personal history. The fact is that language is a primary factor, since the structure of language already contains a hidden and unconscious stack of social rules and behaviours. You only have to look at the structure of a particular language to see it echoed in actual social behaviour –  84% of Dutch people do not believe you are Dutch unless you speak Dutch. Language has become the defining cultural factor of what we call nationality.

Following this reasoning, in a world where English is now the first or second language for most people, the so called English aka American language is about to take over. Soon we will all be “English”. Mandarin Chinese may be spoken by more people, but it is not a numbers game, it is an influence game. Many African countries are now adopting English as their first language, for economic reasons. In the light of this information the United Kingdom’s departure from any influence over the European Community seems like a betrayal of historic partnerships. We have already won the battle of language, now we retreat? However, slowly, with many bumps in the road, we are all coming together, becoming one, like it or not. News, sport, music and cinema are already global concerns.

The evident craziness of the country concept becomes obvious at the level of sport. Now the passport of the sportsman is up for grabs, following rules which can change, and are different for each sport. Many English sport-stars were born in another country, became naturalised here, and became English. I’m referring to Johanna Konta from Australia, Mo Farah from Somalia, Linford Christie from Jamaica, for example. My mother was born in Indonesia and my uncle in Peking; they both represented Scotland at university level athletics. But of course now they could represent China, Scotland, Indonesia, United Kingdom, Borneo, England or nearly any other country in the world, depending on their residency history. Neither ancestors nor place of birth define your sporting nationality, there are choices to be made. So in the recent European Championships, Israel is represented by Lonah Chemtai Salpeter, a Kenyan runner who has lived in Israel for eight years, Turkey is represented by Jak Ali Harvey from Jamaica, who previously had run for Jamaica at high school level. Of course in football, with so much money running around, the rules are even more byzantine. That is presuming a footballer worth £10 million can get a visa.

Of course if you are rich enough, the world is your oyster. Indeed for the super rich there are still no countries, nationality is just another commodity. Citizenship can be bought in over 20 countries round the world. Even in the USA, so mindful of immigration, residence is awarded to foreign nationals who invest $1m in the economy and create 10 full-time jobs for US citizens within two years of arrival. If you want to live in Europe you can buy an EU passport in Malta for only 650,000 euros. In the UK may I suggest joining the Tier 1 Investor Programme with £2,000,000 in your pocket. Come on down, join our country!

The entire concept of nationality is built on a colonialist concept of the world. Borders were invented by Victorians drawing lines on a map, now we have to live with these arbitrary lines as if they were god-given. Of course they slice through many tribes and communities, which the Victorian map-makers often had no notion of. Only 70 years ago a line was drawn partitioning India into two countries, along religious lines, and over 14 million people were displaced. The most nefarious effects have been in Africa, leading to ongoing conflicts, most recently in Sudan, but their blight can also be vividly seen in the Middle East.

Cornell University – PJ Mode Collection of Persuasive Cartography.

We have to get over the idea of nationalism, it is meaningless. The recent DNA investigations of our genetic origins make a joke out of our petty racist behaviour. Apparently most English people came from first Northern Portugal, then Middle Europe,  Germany and Denmark. We have only been here for 6000 years and the Welsh have more right to be called English, if you follow the law of the soil argument,  than most people in Kent, who arrived from Europe more recently. Genetically speaking, Israelis and Palestinians cannot be separated, so why build a wall? We should look at nationality like supporting a football team, a completely arbitrary decision based on random cultural associations and proximity to the ground where the football is played.

It might seem as if I’m saying where you come from does not matter. It absolutely does, it defines our cultural and social identity – you might rise above it, so to speak, but you will never escape it. We are who we are, our identity cannot be subsumed. In our new modern world, our global village, the possibilities seem endless, but they are a chimera. We can’t all just go and live where we want, in our rapid transit world that is a recipe for chaos. Realistically, residency has to be a managed process, however hard that might be. We have yet to come to terms with this new reality, now that you can cross continents in a few hours. The situation where the best educated Asians and Africans came to live in the UK, to work in our National Health Service for example, should be coming to an end. They are needed in their own countries, where they can accomplish so much more. We should no longer be encouraging them to emigrate, but training them so they can return home and improve their own societies. We should all be encouraged to visit, just don’t miss the last bus home.

World government already exists, it’s called the UN, for better or worse. Since 1948 it subscribes to The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which is a cool document in over five hundred languages and it should be taught in all of our schools. The United Nations might still be structured in terms of countries, but the decisions they make are world decisions. That is the only way forward.

Originally stardust
Then bilateral
Now I am Human
I live on Earth, I am an Earthling
I came from Africa
I am a member of the United Nations
I am a European
I am at present a member of the European Union
I am a member of the currently privileged Western Elite
I am a Scotsman
I am a UK citizen
I have the right of abode in the United Kingdom
I was born in Romford, Essex
I may be Scenglish
I do not identify as English, except when England play football

My father was born in Dunfermline, Fife
My mother was born in Sumatra, Indonesia
My brother is a Kiwi
My sons are Jewish UK citizens, soon to become Germans

I am roughly 4% Neanderthal
Some Asians are a bit Denisovan
We are the sole survivors of the genus Homo
We are all Homo Sapiens

Forget Countries
We are the World

O

20 Years of Nils Petter Molvær

khmer-all

1998 July 6th Jazz Cafe, London

Nils Petter Molvær – Trumpet
Eivind Aarset – Guitar
Audun Erlien – Bass
Rune Arnesen – Drums
Per Lindvall – Drums
DJ Stangefruit – Vinyl
Sven Persson – Sound Design

It all started with a strange rumour, ECM, the chamber jazz label, had signed a hot new Norwegian trumpeter in the Miles Davis mould. He was playing electric gigs with two drummers and a DJ, unheard of for this staid acoustic label. The electric Miles from the early 70s was my signature music, so this definitely merited investigation. I headed to the Jazz Cafe for the first ever UK gig by Nils Petter Molvær.

In the sweaty dark confines of the club the first thing to hit was the rhythmic volume, totally unlike any other ECM experience.This was modern soundscape taking Miles into the house – he’d been there with work like Jack Johnson and Bitches Brew, but nobody had really picked up the baton, until now. The twin drummers laid down a loud, steady, intoxicating rhythm, scrabbled scratching overlaid it, a lone muted trumpet rose above it all. There was plangency pouring over a rich stew of funk, reaching an apotheosis with Khmer which took us further East into a killer dystopian beat; total surrender.

After this first ecstatic gig, as we left, ECM gave away a promo EP called Khmer : The Remixes. I played it to death. I still play it now. It is a Desert Island Disc.

As they said “For the first time ever ECM enter the world of remixes” – it was to be their best try, only to go downhill from there, but at least they had the guts to try properly. They were not founded to be an on-trend label, nor should they be. Nevertheless the respect that Nils Petter Molvær is held in by ECM and their Producer Manfred Eicher can be demonstrated by the inclusion of nearly their whole first album Khmer on the ECM retrospective Selected Signs Vol. VI, A Cultural Archeology. Nils only stayed with ECM for one more album, Solid Ether, but the template had been set.

The next time I saw him was in 2002 at The O2 Academy in Islington, then operating as a replacement Marquee Club. He played a blistering house jazz set, climaxing with the semi-rave anthem Nebulizer. In between the frenzy there were moments of solo beauty, like Little Indian. Several tracks from this great gig appeared on his live album Streamer. A slew of remix albums followed and when I saw him at Cargo in 2004, this appeared to have mellowed his slimmed down band. They played a more nuanced and atmospheric set, despite being in a club venue.

Streamer 2

As Nils finally distanced himself from Khmer, he collaborated with many different artists including Jah Wobble and Bill Laswell on Radioaxiom : A Dub Transmission, a subject we will return to. In 2010 he played with a dystopian metal trio at Queen Elizabeth Hall, with dry ice and black cut-out projections. Once again he was forceful and lyrical, wrestling with guitarist Stian Westerhus and drummer Audun Kleive, providing a warning to the world. During his residency at Kings Place in 2013 he appeared to be more involved in the spirit of collaboration, rarely stretching his somewhat ambient playing, happy to take a back seat. The highpoint was a series of live improvisations to Buster Keaton films.

In 2016 he made another great album, Bouyancy, with Geir Sundstøl on pedal steel guitar which beautifully matched his own sliding, muted style of playing. The concert at Ronnie Scott’s, framed by large nautical bells, took us into a magical aquatic seascape. Often submerged, we surfaced at intervals as we flowed with the current taking us to different climates, both hot and cold.

Back at the Jazz Cafe in 2018 and back to the beats, now with serious air conditioning.  Sly and Robbie need no introduction, most people are probably here because of them, but Nils holds the centre and soon captivates as he emotes over the pounding dub rhythms. They have just recorded an album together, Nordub, and I am already thinking they should have held their fire until after the tour, since this live gig is a power level above that excellent work. We can hardly see Sly in his shades behind a huge black and silver drum kit, as masterful reggae rhythms shuffle and slide around us. Robbie is seated, looking happy with a brand new white Fender bass, so confident he often plays right hand only, rock steady. Later he comes to the fore, intoning sparse resonant dub lyrics. On the far left is Eivind Aaarset with a panoply of pedals and FX, as he was 20 years ago, sending out shards of noise, climaxing as the rhythm rivers. At the centre of the storm Nils does his looping laptop tricks, sings into his trumpet bell and plays into his large ribbon microphone with points of trumpet scintillation. The music flows and curbs, slowly building with all of rock, jazz and reggae in the mix, we are immersed, overcome.

Like the first concert, we climax before the end. There is a great variation on the encore scenario with Robbie Shakespeare – he leaves the stage while we sing his dub chant back at him. The band return as we chant and proceed to tell us musically why they are one of the most powerful and exotic bands in the world. They say nothing.

IMG_9396

2018 July 24th Jazz Cafe, London

Nils Petter Molvær – Trumpet
Eivind Aarset – Guitar
Robbie Shakespeare – Bass
Sly Dunbar – Drums
Vladislav Delay – Electronics

 

Apple Wins !

Back in the 90s, when Apple were in their dog-days, few people would have imagined it would become the worlds most valuable company. In 1997, just after the return of Steve Jobs, they were even subsidised by Microsoft to the tune of $150 million, just to prevent Microsoft becoming a de-facto monopoly.

At the time I was fighting for the adoption of Apple’s Quicktime, an amazingly powerful video and multimedia tool. The BBC spent millions trying to replicate it and failed. However most PC Windows users did not download it and many believed that the days of Apple were nearly over. Microsoft had over 90% of the market and had won the fight. It was not until 2001 with the advent of the iPod and iTunes (containing Quicktime) that Apple once again became visible in retail stores, selling the integrated bondi blue iMac and white plastic iBook. All of a sudden Quicktime was everywhere, Macintosh computers were back in the game. I am still using the best one ever made, the 2009 Mac Pro.

Of course the real reason for Apple’s dominance is the iPhone, which launched in 2007. The iPhone was revolutionary for more than just the amazing touch interface design. For the first time the data was bundled with the telecom fees, previously data was only available as very expensive add-ons. Control shifted from the telecom carriers to Apple, who provided a better OS, regular updates and an App store. At one stroke it went from just being a phone to an internet enabled multimedia communicator, the first real pocket computer; the rest is history.

As we now know, Apple became a haughty behemoth, forgetting about their computers – currently selling the 4 year old Mac Mini and 5 year old Mac Pro “as new”. They also forgot about the wonders of Quicktime and the utility of headphone sockets. They plough on into the future, allegedly developing augmented reality and self driving car systems, not forgetting headphones, loudspeakers, watches and iPads. Nevertheless you have to say they are a company with vision: the world is in their pocket as we continue to purchase their premium products, which define our technological age. The best product won.

R.I.P. New Musical Express

Morrissey NME 1985

This cover shoot in 1985 was the apotheosis of my burgeoning photographic career. From the early 70s I read the New Musical Express religiously every week and even completed the crossword. Meanwhile The Smiths had become my favourite indie group, so the combination was everything I had ever wished for, this was as good as it got.

Commissioned by Tony Stewart the deputy editor (who I later unfortunately followed to the ailing Sounds) I drove the journalist Danny Kelly up to The Hacienda in Manchester where the shoot took place. I had done a fair amount of preparation, constructing a halo from a fluorescent ring lamp and preparing some gory make-up. I had no assistant and did all the set-up and prosthetics myself. Morrissey was as sweet as pie and liked the idea of the stigmata. He only balked when I wanted to use the actual club for some background shots, saying that he’d already been photographed there. Still it all went very well, but I wasn’t allowed to attend his interview with Danny and spent several hours hanging around the gothic Midland Hotel.

The shot chosen for the cover was not my favourite, but I guess it fitted their layout best. They did use a classic black and white shot with the interview, later featured on the cover of Morrissey: Fandom, Representations and Identities.

Morrissey Book

Back in the 70s the New Musical Express was a wide church, encompassing all contemporary music including folk, jazz and even modern classical. I discovered Philip Glass, Jan Garbarek and the Art Ensemble of Chicago in their pages. They would feature campaigning articles about Red Wedge and occasional specials such as a Youth Suicide issue. The writing was varied, iconoclastic and opinionated, notable favourites being Richard Williams, Barney Hoskyns, Ian Penman, Nick Kent, Tony Parsons and even Charles Shaar Murray. By turns humorous and political the NME became the voice of alternative youth, there was no-one else with their finger on the pulse. In addition they produced a series of budget cassettes starting with C81, which championed their diverse musical influences.

The NME slowly headed into a dead end street of their own making, forgetting their history and the wilder shores of music practice. The writing lost all ambition and pretension, there was only so much you could say about guitar bands amid the narrow confines of Britpop. In the 70s you read the NME to discover new music and new attitudes, not to catch up on the gossip in the Sun’s Bizarre column. The world still needs a daring and authoritative music magazine, there is The Wire, but what do they know about pop music?
R.I.P. NME ‡

 

You cannot kill an ideology with a gun

Prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials Remembers

2006

97-year-old Sgt Benjamin Ferencz, originally from a Jewish family in Transylvania, helped liberate the death camps in Europe, became a chief US prosecutor in the Nuremberg Trials and was instrumental in establishing the International Criminal Court. He is the last surviving prosecutor from the 1947 Nazi Nuremberg Trials.

Following a chance encounter with this inspiring man on the BBC World Service radio programme Hardtalk I have assembled these quotations. He spoke with self effacing honesty, his direct words often laced with a bitter humour.

As he says think about it and act on it.

  • I served for three years in the United States Army, in every battle from the Battle of the Bulge to the beaches of Normandy, and I tell you there will never be a war without crimes – never – because warfare itself is the biggest crime of all.
  • We were trying to show people how horrible it is if you take a leader who’s very charismatic, and unquestionably follow him, even to murdering little children. These were educated people; one was a father of five children. They were not all wild beasts with horns.
  • These were patriots trying to do their duty to protect either their religion, their nationality or their economic security.
  • They wanted to brag about how many they killed.
  • War makes mass murderers out of otherwise decent people.
  • Hell would be paradise, compared to what I saw.
  • I never tried to do justice in the broad sense of holding every criminal accountable, it would have been a practical impossibility.
  •  Vengeance is not our goal.
  • We have not learnt the lessons of Nuremberg.
  • The most powerful nations of the world are not yet ready to surrender what they perceive as a sovereign right to use whatever means they perceive to be necessary in order to protect their own interests as they see them.
  • No politician appears without his flags flying.
  • For centuries we have glorified warmaking.
  • We have not learnt that you cannot kill an ideology with a gun.
  • Use of armed force to obtain a political goal should be condemned as an international and a national crime.
  • The world has changed, we’re not throwing rocks anymore, we’re gonna kill everybody.
  • Think of all the money we are wasting on preserving the outdated nuclear weapons, which nobody knows what to do with and which are obsolete.
  • My general reasoning is that the world is a small planet. We must share the resources on this planet, so that everyone can live in peace and human dignity, and it can be done. The recognition that we have to move as a unit gave us the EU, it gave us the US, 50 states with very differing opinions. Most wars are fought against another group, the ‘other’. When you are a part of the other, you’re less inclined to attack it.
  • Law is always better than war.
  • Law must apply equally to everyone.
  • The re-education of the human spirit on a worldwide basis is the task before us, and we are doing it.
  • Fundamental things such as colonialism and slavery, the rights of women, the emancipation of sex, landing on the moon, these were inconceivable not long ago. But miracles can be performed.

4962

References

Ben Ferencz Website
Wikipedia
The Guardian Interview
BBC Hardtalk

 

Can’t Leave London : The Jazz Clubs

I am writing this In Memoriam to Jazz at The Oxford, my local jazz club in Kentish Town, London. It happened on a Monday (when nothing happens) upstairs at a local pub for 12 years and was like having Ronnie Scott’s just down the road, but much cheaper, more relaxed and more personal. It was run by George Crowley, an excellent saxophonist in his own right, often playing with the guests and of course when the guests couldn’t make it.

Crocodile pan

Crocodile playing at The Oxford, Kentish Town

While it started off as often too full of student alumni, it only cost £5 and every so often someone of the calibre of Shabaka Hutchings would turn up. Great nights included someone transporting a full size Hammond organ up the stairs, big bands such as Crocodile outnumbering the audience and of course musicians of the quality of Jeff Williams, Laura Jurd, Martyn Speake and Kit Downes. I will be missing this…on occasional Fridays some of these musicians may appear at the Con Cellar Bar aka The Constitution on the canal in Camden.

The Constitution

Blues Night at The Constitution

Meanwhile the amazing Cafe Oto in Dalston, now the UK home of Sun Ra, continues to plough its unique furrow through nearly any kind of modern music as inspired by Wire magazine. A staggering number of amazing concerts with the cream of British avant garde jazz as well as luminaries from many international genres.

Sun Ra Arkestra

Sun Ra Arkestra at Cafe Oto (in Infra Red)

The sackcloth backdrop which looks like a temporary rebuilding memento is still there as is the relaxed and concentrated vibe which draws in performers as varied as The Necks, Annette Peacock, Jimi Tenor, Marc Ribot and The Thing. There is no stage, we are one. Just so you know – I’m a Member!

Across the road is one of London’s most famous and established jazz clubs, The Vortex.

Carol0V

Carol Grimes at The Vortex with Giles Perring

While presenting an excellent cross section of soul and avant garde jazz, I have always found the room a little bit too concrete and dry after it moved from its original location, a funky, wooden and crazy place in Stoke Newington Church Street, which for a few years until 2004 was definitely the best jazz venue in London. Thank you Billy Jenkins for some great nights there. Also of note is the funky Servant Jazz Quarters round the corner. Meanwhile just south of the River, an important new improvised venue opened recently called iklectik, set in hidden arty gardens in Lambeth and I would recommend discovering the Horse Party. Just don’t tell the Archbishop.

jcafe

Bill Evans Band at The Jazz Cafe 9/8/16

This article is also inspired by a recent visit to the venerable Jazz Cafe, just off Camden High Street. After becoming one of the key venues for New British Jazz in the late 80s, the tiny L shaped wine bar in Stoke Newington Green expanded to a large venue in Camden and has recently been refurbished as a full on night club, featuring jazz. The main floor is open with a restaurant of sorts on the balcony and this works well for funkier outfits, such as Bill Evans who I saw there only this week. Seen some great gigs here such as the Paul Motion Trio (see above), Nils Petter Molvaer and Pharaoh Saunders.

IMG_0126

Alan Wilkinson fronting Ya Basta at Flim Flam, Ryans Bar

Talking of L shaped rooms the L in the Flim Flam venue at Ryans Bar, again in Stoke Newington Church Street, has been removed after refurbishment. This venue is run by Alan Wilkinson, a free sax improviser of long standing and on Wednesdays presents the best of improvised music with an eclectic lineup of the famous and crazy in nearly equal measures.

IMG_3823

Charles Hayward does his half hour snare drum roll

For more varied musical fare there is the Fiddlers Elbow just outside the Camden Market tourist trap area, presenting live music every night. The main pub room is kinda pentagonal, with a dance floor.

IMG_5077

Purdy at the 606 Club

A mention for a few others such as the 606 in Chelsea, allegedly a members supper club, but which presents British jazz and soul in an atmospheric candle-lit cellar. In Soho there is Pizza Express and of course the famous Ronnie Scott’s, both also a bit supper club these days. Ronnie’s does attract some outstanding acts, often American, due to being established over 50 years ago by a very funny and excellent saxophone player. Great nights here have included Art Pepper, Airto, Stacey Kent and of course Nina Simone. Also recommended in Central London is the celebrated 100 Club in Oxford Street, still surviving after many years. Vividly remember gurning at Slim Gaillard here for a couple of hours and grooving to the late Tommy Chase Quartet.

blues

Blues Spiders at Ain’t Nothin But..

A good standby in town is the Ain’t Nothin But Blues Bar in Kingly Street, which does what it says on the tin 7 nights a week. Further East is the Village Underground, a cavernous venue under huge railway arches for Shoreditch hipsters who don’t like sitting down. Primarily a dance/pop venue it occasionally features jazz acts such as Snarky Puppy. The nearby Rich Mix in Bethnal Green has a more varied World music programme, but I am pleased to see James Blood Ulmer is appearing there soon, last seen at Cafe Oto.

Boat-Ting 18/11/13

Alex Ward, Shabaka Hutchings, Steve Noble at Boat -Ting

Finally a big favourite is Boat-Ting, allegedly London’s hottest new music and poetry club, although after 14 years it’s not that new. Hosted by livewire Sybil Madrigal it regularly features NEW – with Britains best drummer, Steve Noble, powerhouse double bassist John Edwards and the virtuoso guitarist Alex Ward. Best of all this is a jazz club on a boat on the Thames, feel the waves like nowhere else..Bar-and-Co

So where else in the world could I stand 3 feet away from a world class musician on a regular basis? Answers on a postcard, maybe from New York.

Nearly all these places are dirty, cheap, relaxed, and half full some of the time.
You can find some more proper pics of some of these places at Z360 Live Music

Cafe Oto, Dalston

The Vortex, Dalston

Jazz Cafe, Camden

The iklektik, Lambeth

Flim Flam, Ryans Bar Stoke Newington

100 Club, 100 Oxford Street

Boat-Ting, Embankment The Thames

R.I.P. The Bull and Gate, Kentish Town. The Spitz, Spitalfields. The 12 Bar Club, Tin Pan Alley Denmark Street. The Red Rose, Finsbury Park. The Adelaide, Belsize Park. The Mean Fiddler, Harlesden. The original Marquee, Wardour Street Soho. The Moonlight aka Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead.

And don’t forget The Klinker wherever it is…

Update February 2019
Jazz is now back on upstairs at The Oxford, Kentish Town. George Crowley is no longer running the evening, but he was featured there recently and it was a great pleasure to see him destroying the “standard” he was requested to play.

The Destruction of the Tories

They split themselves
They insulted each other
They divided the Country
They fractured the Union
They tore the heart out of Europe
They followed a Farage

The Impoverishment continues
Oh Little England Shire
Adrift from The World
Who needs friends
With Boris as Captain
There will be more red faces

History will revile them
Black Friday until then

4am Friday 24 June 2016

 

Postscript
Barely 4 months later :

_91552987_mail

 

Postscript 2
04/12/18. Nigel Farage quits the UK Independence party, which has no Members of Parliament and received less than 2% of the popular vote at the 2017 election.

Postscript 3
23/07/19. After three years of futile and meaningless goverment Boris is finally the Captain as I predicted. His betrayal of David Cameron must all seem worth it.

See The Disaster of Brexit