08/06/2013

Almost A Musical Study: Rodney Mullen

Life is tough. It grinds you down, and chips away at your soul. The trick is keeping happy.

Until recently I had forgotten that skateboarding makes me happy. Without realising the impact of my actions, I had been neglecting a core part of my identity, and I was feeling worse for it. To try and make amends for this, I thought I'd go back to my roots, and remember why I first fell in love with skateboarding. Then it struck me.

 I didn't fall in love with skateboarding alone, I fell for an entire philosophy.

Skateboarding is many things to many people. For some, skateboarding is nothing more than wheels on wood, for others, it is the heart and soul of everything they do. Rodney Mullen is one of the latter kind of people. He isn't the reason that I started skating, but he is the reason that I am still doing it. 

Rodney isn't the easiest of character to introduce either, but one thing is clear - his love of skateboarding is pure. Any non-skaterboarders reading this are probably now thinking 'Rodney who'? Essentially, he is perhaps the most influential skater since skateboardings initial inception. 

Skateboarding is what he breathes in, and progression is what he breathes out. 

Mullen pretty much invented every fundamental trick all contemporary skaters use to express themselves, and he speaks about everything he does (and has done) with an inspirational passion. In short, Rodney Mullen is the humble pioneer responsible for cementing skateboardings' foundations. Without him we would not have the tricks that now bind individual skateboarders together with a collective sense of identity. 



Even though his most athletic days might be behind him, Rodney now spends the time he is not skating campaigning; spreading the word about the benefits of skateboarding. Skateboarding by its very nature is an individual's pursuit, and there are a multitude of approaches to it - but as Rodney explains, skateboarding has become a global 'open source community'. A community grounded in reinvention, redefinition, and innovation. A community of creative thinkers. Of course, there are good skaters and bad skaters (in both style and outlook) within this community, but that is not what is important. 

What is important is that all skateboarders can call themselves skateboarders. 

Skateboarding might be nothing more than an earthly distraction, but for many it is the only purpose they have in their lives, and for others, it is the purpose their lives are missing. 

I count myself amongst the lucky. I have the time, the opportunity, and the resources, to explore many interests that give me a sense of purpose, fulfilment, belonging and identity. So, last weekend I decided to combine a few of these interests. The result is the below musical sketch.


Almost A Musical Study: Rodney Mullen





To make this track I scoured the internet and found two interviews with Rodney Mullen: one recent, and one from the start of his career. I also recorded the sound of myself doing a kickflip, a trick Mullen invented, and added the sound to the musical sketch I created. Finally, I added an old clip and a recent photo of myself skating to the mix. 

The track I produced feels individual, and a lot of people won't understand it, but I enjoyed the time I invested into it. Whats more, I am happy I did spend my time in this way. Interestingly, this is usually how I feel when I've been for a skate. 

So, by now you've probably also guessed that Rodney Mullen is a hero of mine. Though I might not ever meet him, or see him skate with my own eyes, I am happy in the knowledge that I don't need to...

Rodney Mullen has made a positive impression on me: he kept me a skateboarder - but one with a sense of perspective about, and a positive outlook on, why I skate. Hopefully he'll impress these beneficial sentiments upon many more people to come.

Right, time to go skate.

07/06/2013

'Music is All' and The Sonic Self-portrait: One 8tracks Playlist a Month, for a Year

One day, back in early 2012, a friend introduced me to an unassumingly cool little website called 8tracks.com. Personally, I have always taken great pleasure from recommending songs to friends and family - as well as trying to get ahead of the popular music curve. I will happily spend valuable hours discussing musical trends and movements with likeminded, sonically engaged, individuals. It has always been apparent to me that music just has some inherently fulfilling quality about it.

When a talented artist invests some semblance of themselves into a track, music becomes something more than organised sounds. Music becomes a pure art form; supremely expressive and exploratory. Just a few seconds of music can cheat the rules of time, and transport you to different eras and memories.

Music is power.

The more you listen to life, the more you realise music is everywhere, and it is always playing a role. Its no wonder that I started to ask myself questions like; what effect has music had on me? Has the music I listen to defined me? And if so, why and how?

These are difficult questions to answer.

It seems music is now perhaps the most outwardly obvious foundation of my own identity. I latch onto ideas and world views embedded and vested into lyrics; and I score my own life to the interplay between the bass drums and chord changes that I find resonate. Essentially; music paints the landscape in which I walk, whilst also defining the pace at which I observe and enjoy it.

To better understand the impact music has had (and is continuing to have) on me, I decided to paint an audible self-portrait. A self-portrait painted by using of the works of others.

Every month I made a playlist, took a photograph, and wrote a small amount of text inspired by the time and place within which I then existed. The results of these efforts you see below. So, without furthermore ado, I present to you a year of my life (June 2012 to June 2013), time-locked into 12 playlists.

The Sonic Self-portrait


1.




4 new tracks from Newcastle (Toon) bands + 4 songs on repeat in June = Joon.

2.





A lacivious mix to get your pulse racing this greyest of summers..

3.





A bright soundtrack to a golden summer...

4.





A mix to reflect the bright end to summer, beckon cold crisp air, and celebrate transient autumnal light.

5.





A cascade of sound to enjoy as the leaves fall and clocks change...

6.





I skipped my monthly 8tracks mix for November because apparently November's purpose is advertising December. The songs in this mix aren't Christmas-y. We're celebrating November in December. Pow! Take that logic / world.

7.





A mere month after the Mayan time keeping device was defeated by people doing absolutely nothing, we usher in yet another new year. We reclaim our liberty and freedom to once again listen peacefully to the sounds of life. Here is a celebratory mix for 2013.

8.





The fab-best of Feburary 2013. Or at worst, the best of a killer month. Dance-y and chilled all at once. Saaaay what?

9.






Time marches, and we find ourselves in the month of March already. How did we make it this far so quickly?
This mix attempts to mimic the march of time by treading both slowly and quickly from Electro vibrations to Rock music - with the mix's final denouement cheating death and time itself.

10.






Spring returns, and brings with it our most primal compulsions. This mix explores the variety of emotions we feel when awaking from a prolonged winter hibernation; celebrating our optimism and hopes for a joyous summer.

11.





Watch out, April's vibe is getting remixed.

12.






May the rain fall,
and the tunes pour,
May the sun shine,
and the music become something more...



A hipster's guide to the 'Sonic Self Portrait'


The sonic portrait above spans a year, and in this time the sitter has changed, not just in pose and stance, but in character. The portrait is dynamic.

Though the portrait will perhaps change more, and mean more, for the subject than for any other viewer, it is drawn from, and draws on the works of others. It will hold countless other meanings for a myriad of anonymous souls, and in turn, these meanings will continue to change as the years pass. This portrait is the embodiment of an endless year.

Despite the portraits dynamism, and its ability to transcend time and audiovisual contexts, there is one constant truth present:

Music is all.