Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 July 2015

Creative Thinking



When you get that pristine white blank page out and ‘the fear’ takes you over – what will I draw or write? What if I make a mistake? OMG I’ve lost my creativity because I can’t think of anything I can do… Despair! These are a few of the things I think about when I push down the crease on a new sketch book or stare blankly at a fresh page… for so long that my eyes start to loose focus and I see black splodges wobbling around before me.

I’m sure this kind of thing has happened to many, many people even those not creatively active on a daily basis. If you have a speech to write for your best mate’s wedding or a presentation to do for a job interview. We all have the choice whether we make something bog standard or whether we push the boat out a little to make something really special for that friend or something that will make us stand out from the crowd for that job interview. This is where the creative process comes in. But this is also where ‘the fear’ sets in. Here are a few tips and ideas I use:

Firstly, you need to limber up, shake it out, get some energy flowing because you need a brain which is wide awake. Then you need to make a brainstorm – write down all your ideas, empty your mind onto the page, what you’d like to do, quotes, things that inspire you, pictures. If you get stuck, take a walk, make a cuppa or talk to a friend about it – they might have some of their own thoughts and although you might not like their ideas it could spark an idea in you. Most successful creativity comes from a long process which may start very generally or vaguely but which branches off and flourishes into something really amazing and engaging.

Gathering inspiration at a Hunterwasser exhibition
Stick to what you are good at, unless you have the time and/or money to invest in a new skill. Once I went to a wedding where the best man was a Philosophy teacher and his speech was actually a ‘lesson’ on the groom's life which included philosophical questions on the grooms choice of clothes/haircuts over the years and he really got the wedding guests actively involved in his lesson with some hands up style questions. It was the funniest and most brilliant best man’s speech I have ever heard and the guy really played o his strengths and showcased his passion for teaching (this would also be a great way to get head hunted!).

Don’t worry about the technicalities (at least not initially) – just get something down on paper because you can always neaten up and fix things at a later date. It’s easier to do something from the heart - think of a time of great emotion or a place or person that means a lot to you or even just the first word that pops into your head. It doesn’t have to be good – my friend Johnny is not an artist in the traditional sense of the word and he thinks he is terrible at drawing but he still does it. And when he does his drawings really give you a sense of honesty and caring. There is just something so special about them. So you don’t have to be the best of the best to do something creative because if you do it from the heart then your personality will shine through.

Drawing by Johnny

Relax. Put on a piece of music that inspires you and get comfortable. If it’s sunny go to the park or if it’s snowy get under a big warm fluffy blanket. Being comfortable let’s you be comfortable with your creative task. Clear all mundane thoughts from your mind (don’t think about doing the dishes or hoovering up that piece of dirt on the floor it will still be there when you’ve finished and for all of your life there will be dishes and dirt so take this time out to have a moment for yourself). If this doesn't work then do something fun - draw around your hand and then turn it into something different or make an Exquiste Corpse with a friend. 

An Exquiste Corpse

I drew a hand and then turned it into a bird
Practice. The more you do something the easier it gets and remember you don’t have to be amazingly good at something for it to mean something. Whether it’s a personal project or a thoughtful piece for a friend, taking the time to think creatively will change you and others for the better - if you let it.

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

Double Review! Northumberland Hussar Pub & Angel Olsen: Burn Your Fire For No Witness

I recently had a lovely evening out with my friend, noise musician, Dominic Dixon to the Northumberland Hussar for food and then to my first gig in a long long time!  

The Northumberland Hussar is offers a really good choice of pub grub including and array of amazing sounding pizzas and burgers and a really good selection for vegetarians which is really unusual for a pub. I had a pizza with egg, spinach, mozzerella and mushrooms. Dom had a falafel burger with chunky chips on the side. Everything was delicious and I was really please with the prices too. The staff were also friendly and I loved the ethos of this pub. It is not part of a chain and claims to never want to be. I just felt like I would really want to support this place in the future and go back as often as I can. I would so much rather go to an independent establishment than support the likes of Wetherspoons or Lloyds.
 
Pizza from Northumberland Hussar

Now for the gig...
 
The support act was Rodrigo Amarante who offered up a kind of sleepy lullaby music that you might fall adrift to, the perfect intro to Angel Olsen who bursts on stage and goes straight into a lively opening song. It’s a bit like eating a massive Sunday dinner, falling asleep in front of a blazing fire and then jumping out into biting winter cold air for a blustery bicycle ride.
 
Angel Olsen embodies the essence of a romantic burning soulful singer. She is sometimes so intensely looking at a faraway point that I feel like I might burst out laughing with the seriousness of it all. I guess Angel feels the same way herself as she sings,”I heard my mother thinking me right back into my birth/ I laughed so loud inside myself it all began to hurt” from ‘White Fire’

Angel’s music, lyrics and sound are spell bindingly poetic but quietly controlled, reminding me of a young Cat Power. He leaves me feeling like a heartbroken teen busily scratching away mine and his initials on the front of my dog eared math book. Angel sings with defiance and it is refreshing to see a strong woman who shows her weaknesses so freely, her voice often rising from a whimsy whisper to a stark shout.

One of the stand out songs was an interpretation of Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams” which Angel sang with rawness and vulnerability that only someone who has been through such loss and heartbreak can re-imagine with any authenticity