Murmuration

I was put on to this video by my good friend Stephen Hiscox (who himself put up a great video I’ll post about about soon) and am most thankful for seeing it as it captures something incredible and fascinating. I remember in my early teens getting the bus home from school and seeing thousands of starlings doing this over Abbey Park in Leicester. Yep, in the middle of a city. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen anything like this in Leicester.

Enjoy.

Stamp of the week

Some more of the current-ish UK stamps – I suppose I could look at the Royal Mail site but that would take the fun of going to the post office and asking “for some first class stamps please, the nice ones with pictures on them”.

These are on a ‘postcard’ for an environmental scientist. Just need his address (hint).

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I’ve never been to Glastonbury but wanted to walk up to the Tor when I saw it once when travelling to Street in Somerset.

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shiny, shiny, new, new

Met up with a friend in Birmingham a few months ago and noticed he was using a Silvine notebook. This instantly took me back to my youth, where these little red books were staple features of a Post Office or corner shop’s stationary shelf and would always be longed for – the allure of fresh, new, unwritten upon pages.

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So my friend picked one up for me the next we met. But what shall I use it for?

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I went to the funeral of a friend….

Last week I went to the funeral of a friend. The service was where I grew up as a teenager. I had to catch a bus across town, arriving at this place so familiar yet strangely new. Like parallel worlds overlapping, the edges of dreams like a flicker book. I could remember individual trees, footpaths, sign posts. Each step another memory, another recognition of something gone but still felt.

I walked past the rows of headstones, passed slow moving cars, people in summer clothes tending flowers. I could just hear the birdsong above the roar of the roads that corner this spot and above the groundsman carefully driving around the plots on his motorised mower. Then I rounded the corner of the crematorium to shuffle amongst the small group of friends.

A hushed politeness and smiles, of dressing up, of looking around for the people we might recognise and the family we don’t. Do you remember me? We’re here to remember him.

Slowly the car arrives and we all take our places.

There’s that Robert Frost poem, a lovely Elizabeth Frye poem. Some songs. Words to make us remember. My mind contiually wanders then comes back to the point each time thinkng of the sorrow of loss and the poor children left behind.

We quietly, politely, slowly, gently file outside. I hug an old school friend, we share our stories. Then we ponder what to do next.

What we do next is sit in an old pub in town and share stories, remembering friends with friends. Then go off our separate ways. Me to pick up my children, others to remember the days spent with one another, being young, revisiting old haunts.

And each step another memory.

nojoined ep release available for download now. For free.

In July I posted about how a snapshot recording I’d made on the iPhone using the Soundcloud app (and posted to my Soundcloud profile) had been used by the artist nojoined ( David Priestley ) as pat of his composition ‘a lack of faith‘.

The track track now features on a 4 track ep called ‘the colour of monotony‘ that is avaialable to download from aReW recordings for free now. Go and hane a listen and/or download here –

http://www.archive.org/details/ArewRecordingsPresentsrw-056Nojoined-TheColourOfMonotony