World Tour 1962 from Anonymous Photograph Album

Franca 'C' our Cruise Ship Mar 3 to 17 in 1962

Then the party began Dot Scott Laura all mixed up

Laura & Cath - Laura still on her feet

Leaving the Harbour Dot Cath Scott top of Laura's head

Cath -Scott & Laura

Our 4- chairs on the lounge deck

Scott forms the centre of the picture taken to show one of the many groups of 14 story huble housing in Caracas Venezuela

Caracas, Venezuela our guide educated in Trinidad lived in this huble housing 14 stories each box a 5 room apt rest 37 amo

Bartering for baskets, hats, mahogany etc at Haiti until our ship pulled out of the habour for Port Everglades

The Dining Room on the Franca 'C'

Monday 9-17-62 Unloading at Shannon

9-16-62 Shannon Ireland- Henry Monihan met us with his Princess and managed to get all the baggage 13 pieces on or in the car

9-16-62 Near Cork - A flat- state tropper helps- the man with the jack finally got the car lifted & a new tire was put on the car

9-16-62 Cathering stayed in the car-Henry had a flat tire had to get help Henry was embarrassed and we were delayed

Montmartre Paris - A group of paintings for sale- We bought a Genelli- Upper Right- for Lucia

Lucerne Oct 7 62 Sunday Switzerland we drove over the mountains to Grundenwald

Mist over the perpetual ice 10.7.62 Switzerland Hazy & too much for the camera Rivers of ice on the mountains in the background

San Marco Cathedral 10-08-62 Basilica of San Marco Little shops all around the square- both way chairs for open air dining & concerts in the evening

St Peters Square 10-16-62 Pictures taken the day we got into the church

Cath Laura Dot putting on an act at Mussolino's Stadium Rome 1962

Laura Cath Paul Dot St Peters Square 10.14.1962 Waiting for the Pope to appear at the window & talk to the 50,000 who were assembled on the square

Marian, Cath & Annie

Scott laps it up- 6 pictures taken in Maria & Bobs home- June 22 1963 Elmwood Park

Half the crowd was out in the back yard some where in the house

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Blighty Summer Extra

Blighty Summer Special 1954 Unknown Ephemera bought from ebay

I have been immersed in my day job a lot lately and I look sadly at my huge keyboard that takes up most of my room and the electric guitar which isn’t even mine, gathering dust.  Never have I not picked up my instruments even vaguely so I don’t know whether it is because I’m working longer hours (which is true), I am more social (not sure) or simply because I have been concentrating on other things (maybe- I have been doing a a few videos for other people lately and the process takes a lot longer now I have a more powerful video camera).   However, I am at a wall at the moment.  A very kind person who has been able to help me all through my life has offered to provide mixing and mastering money for Good Fortune, Bad Weather which is great news for me and my writing partner David Baron.  I have a number of songs I just want to get out there.  I was intrigued to watch Guy Chambers on ‘Secrets of a Pop Song’ on BBC 2 trying to write something poppy with Rufus Wainwright.

How do I write a hit song Guy, please?

I am prepared to work as hard as I can so I can chug forward like a wheezy old train that cannot resign, with no obvious passengers or takers for the ride.  But you know what, it’s never that obvious but if you brake and take the train off the tracks you know it’s never going to get going again.  But in the comedian Stewart Lee’s words and I paraphrase ’It was never that great but never THAT bad to give it all up…’ to the imaginary estate agent “I think it was worth persisting with, some people really like it”.  Here he is talking about living in the countryside…

I have spent some of my time this month seeing and hearing some incredible things.  The first of which was this.  I managed to grab the last show of ‘Pina’ by Wim Wenders a documentary on Pina Bausch in the cinema on my own. I knew I would never be able to see it in 3D without grabbing the opportunity. I have never been to the cinema on my own but it was really worth it.  Here is a clip of my favourite scene:

Musically I saw a fantastic violinist/ singer/ artist Bobby Valentino who I loved at the 12 Bar and The Dogbones at the Lexington were amazing.  I also caught up with Jeremy Bernstein from Woodstock who was over for a couple of days.  He did a fantastic gig at the Windmill in Brixton.  Many thanks to Tim for having us.

I also so Seb Roachford drumming with Pamelia Kurstin playing Thermin after the band Snorkel at Cafe Oto in Dalston.  Never have I witnessed such an intriguing amalgamation of sounds and what I thought was how musical it was.  There was so much variation in the soft and light dark and hard and I never hear that much at the moment.  I would love to lace my songs with the atmosphere I heard that night.  I just don’t know how. I am looking into some unusual old gear that is cheap and idiosyncratic and seeing what I can find. With my limited budget, it is in some ways a blessing and other ways a handicap.  I wish I was an engineer and had all my days free to experiment. I have been reading up on Laurie Anderson again who invented a lot of her own instruments.  However, I appreciate it so much when I hear it.  Frank Byng and his label Slowfoot really are really out there pushing the boundaries.

I met Zac Alford that night for the first time. I am so honoured he plays on my record. He came after his show where he is drumming for Glee.  He only caught Seb Roachford and Pamelia Kurstin’s set and we talked a bit to them after the show.  They really are fantastic artists and truly talented people.

I am very excited as I am going to Latitude Festival this week end. Near to home so don’t have to camp and a guest list pass, wow I can’t believe my luck.  I know kind of know or have a mutual friend of two bands performing The Duke & The King and Crystal Fighters and last week I met a dancer performing in something called Electric Hotel so I’m excited.

Bloemen-expositie- Flower exhibition- Blumen Ausstellung (Holland)

I went for a job once at News Corp.  I didn’t get the job – it was to be PA for the Editor of the Sunday Times Review.  It was an interesting interview. I never forgot it.  I came from the Guardian which was a lovely friendly place and kind of messy in a good way.  Here there was a fountain in the office building.  It was far more corporate.  I was interviewed by an American who implied that celebrity had crept into journalism and it was who you were rather than how good you were that got you the job(which is exactly the time I decided against trying any further to get into this industry).  She also said no journalists were in house really so all I could see were sub editors.  Anyway she said that the News of the World would go to extreme measures to get a story and that despite being owned by Murdoch they were all in competition.  Anyway, the printing press is on site and she said they would get the pulp from the Sunday Times and try and piece together and find out what story the Sunday Times were leading with. Isn’t that amazing.  They told me all this in an interview.

Ariel View of Houses of Parliament Big Ben Westminster Abbey and Whitehall London

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The Psychology of Winning

I have become obsessed with finding Photo booths in London.  There are hardly any left these days and there’s even an 0845 number to find your nearest one.  I did not use this number but rather I tried to google because I needed to find one for someone else.  In the end I started investigating.  Here are photographs that are not acceptable pictures.

I ended up in Victoria station at 11pm at night losing my temper with the ‘Photo Me’ booth.  I was trying to apply my make up and the really annoying automated voice would not stop.  She would not stop.  When I eventually got my change out it kept coming out of the machine and in the end I started shouting at her and left in a huff.  I eventually came across one on my travels back from work one day in Hammersmith.  I finally got some pictures which my friend remarked doesn’t really look anything like me which is kind of ironic and rather defeating the purpose.  A memento to a disappearing ‘thing’!

Bob Dylan is seventy.  I got quite overwhelmed on his Birthday.  I looked back at old footage and for me he is still my favourite artist.  My ipod has barely anything else on it and he has travelled with me throughout my life and his words have rippled through me.  He deserves every accolade because he is simply great.  I remember hiding outside the SECC for an hour just to get a glimpse of him.  I know he hates this kind of behaviour from fans but I plead guilty although I am not quite so obsessed to meet him as I was.

I went to see Terry Reid at the Jazz Café which was a great evening even if the venue is not one of my favourites.  I was kindly on BJ Cole’s list which was quite an honour.  I didn’t meet BJ but I am sure I will one day.  The gig was fantastic, Terry’s stories were great (he famously turned down singing for Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple) and his voice reminded me of Tim Rose who very few people know about.  BJ Cole is a fantastic steel guitar player and has played with everyone from Elton John to John Cale as well as creating beautiful music in his own right.  Recently he has been working with Scott Walker which will be very interesting to hear.  The band was great and it was completely rammed to the rafters.  We all enjoyed it immensely.

So I was at the Chelsea Arts Club and talking about these tapes that have changed my life ‘The Psychology of Winning’ by Denis E Waitley which I found at a local car boot sale.  I liked the cover and wasn’t going to listen to them but I got hooked.  I guess it’s a bit like the ‘Secret’ that everyone goes on about but for me this is my secret.  It literally helped me to look so much more positively at things.

Denis E Waitley Cover of 'The Psychology of Winning' Tape set

Denis E Waitley inside of 'Psychology of Winning'

A Liverpool music rock writer Mike Evans was there and a huge pigeon pooed on me not once but two or was it three times.  I couldn’t believe it.  He was miles up but managed to hit me head on.  I was then told that in fact this was a very lucky sign.  So I feel that could be the reason that our song  ‘Lucky’ has been chosen to go on a film but I’m keeping it under my wing because I never have full details and I’m afraid I will get it wrong.

I’m still writing, and adding stuff to the songs. I finished a song today after my meeting with an advertising music company.  Peter Murphy sang it with me originally but the idea of trying to get that track off Mike is just not a possibility and really not worth the agony.

I have found two fantastic bookshops.  Firstly Worlds End Bookshop I have known for many years but it has been taken over by somebody new, and we talked about music, a little chit chat.  In the window was a beautiful 1915 children’s book but I didn’t ask how much it was cause I knew it was a lot.  Anyway, I got this lovely publication about Elizabeth Taylor and what’s amazing about it is she hasn’t even met Richard Burton yet!!

Cover of 'Elizabeth Taylor The Inside Story of her Life and Loves' published by J B Publishing Corp 157 W 57th St N Y Copyright 1957 J B Publishing Corp

It’s that old.  Elizabeth Taylor-the girl with the violet eyes!

Back of 'Elizabeth Taylor The Inside Story of her Life and Loves' published by J B Publishing Corp 157 W 57th St N Y Copyright 1957 J B Publishing Corp

The second shop Hurlingham Books is at Putney.  I had always walked passed it but it was never open.  Anyway, I eventually saw two books I really wanted in the window.  I entered the shop thinking I must go in and browse to which a man inside said ‘you here to browse?’ and I realised this was quite a joke.  You can’t really ‘browse’ cause the shop is just piled high with books that are barely accessible.  Anyway I thought the technique was great.  I stand outside the shop point my finger on the windowpane which he can just about see then he goes into the shop finds my finger, shouts, and lo and behold he manages to pull it from the pile without toppling all the hundreds of others, plugs in his card machine and I got two lovely books for hardly anything.  I am so pleased I am back in the habit of reading.

Real Photograph Gorleston-on- Sea August 1932 bought at Portobello Market May 2011

I am very excited on the musical front for my friend Roger O’Donnell who is going back on tour with the Cure.  A far cry from our little pub gig in Stockwell I’m sure.  I also had a lovely catch up with my friend Daisy and her husband Chris who’s been playing with Imogen Heap.  I would love Daisy to play cello on a song of mine but it hasn’t happened yet. In the meantime, I’m concentrating on my little plan, keeping my head down, working hard and fitting in the music when I can.   I am hoping to go to America to do a video with someone who really loves this song and would like to do it for love which is quite something in this hard day and age.  It would be an offer I couldn’t refuse.  I am very happy.  Here is my inspiration ‘Lucky Number’.  I can’t compare it to this fantastic song but it is the most amazing video from a unique and brilliant artist Lene Lovich….

Brian Kavanagh has finished my website which I am very pleased about.  It is nice and simple and I can update my blog which is incorporated into it, in the News page.  So we are going to release ‘Good Fortune Bad Weather’ in the Autumn probably on the day of the Equinox like last time.

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Huey and Dewey and Louie

Here are a few random postcards I picked up on the way to the Queen exhibition off Brick Lane which I really enjoyed.  Lots of things I didn’t know about Freddie such as how good he was as an illustrator and the band.  I have always known a bit about Brian May as I hear he visits my local guitar shop cause they name drop him (they said he had been on a diet cause he had put on weight studying for his PHD).  Anyway, he is now a doctor in astronomy which is very interesting and worth the weight in gold I reckon.

P & O Chusan J Arthur Dixon

Time has moved fast and now we are at the Royal Wedding.  I can’t really think of anything to say about it except I wonder whether Philip has said anything untoward as we DO know he does say some pretty ODD things- anyway I will be toasting K & W .

Ever since I read Alan Bennett’s ‘Uncommon Reader’ I keep imagining the Queen is always trying to steal away to try to read another book rather than do the done duties of a Queen (and I hear she is stealing away at half time perhaps to do just that!)

Soiree at Maxim's Paris 1949 by Gilberte Brassai

The album is still getting there.  David and I wrote two more additional songs last few weeks which was really an exercise to try and get some more direct snappy songs.  I really like these tracks and they are quite personal and are definitely some of the strongest songs we have written. I am very happy with them.  Some songs like the video footage I posted some months ago have been abandoned.  We are being much more discerning with this album.  Both David and I write very quickly so it’s a great chance to keep running with it.

Anonymous Photograph

I have to say the Bank Holiday has been a bit of a financial nightmare and I have had to cancel my trip out of London to see a friend as a result.  I feel totally hopeless at the moment- stuck in every area of my life.

Nurburgring Eifel International Reen Und Touristenstrecke

I did have one good bit of luck which was with a lottery ticket I found on the underground.  Someone had paid £14 for four lines on the Saturday and Wednesday lottery a couple of weeks ago.  Can you believe it but I got three matching numbers, sent it off and got £20 back.  I also won a Thunderball £3 so I am hoping this run of good luck will continue.

I managed to avoid paying the train fare back to Suffolk and diesel is expensive.  I did go on a detour to a secluded beach in Suffolk which I won’t name because it’s a secret and went swimming on my way back from Ipswich.  It was like a dream; the day was so hot the heat quivered above the shingle and the light was beautiful, misty hazy, a lone bouy bounced away in the far distance and the beach was mostly deserted.  I love this place. It brought back a flood of memories.  I then whirled back with the only tape I have in the car the Tindersticks.  I must have listened to it about 500 times.  I love this band so much.

Pony Trekking Silloth

Talking of bands I went to see another the other week which kind of assaulted my senses in a very memorable way but blew my ears away.  They are called the Dogbones and I have to say I have not seen two drummers on stage since seeing P J Harvey a few years ago and I have to say when I mean loud, they put Peter Murphy in the shade.  My ears were ringing.  Seeing them took me on a journey back to Queen Adreena and Daisy Chainsaw and really watching such accomplished musicians evoking such a disturbing nightmare unlike anything else I have seen, was worth it.  I have been listening to their album which I am really enjoying and I can’t really explain it but they have much more resonating than any other band I have seen of recent times.  They seem totally out of time in a strange way and yet totally in it.  Like a post grunge metal vision that could really be captured in some kind of Japanese horror film.  I can’t compare them to Queen Adreena or Daisy Chainsaw as Katie Jane Garside is not in this new outfit and I never saw them. I have to say though watching old footage of her I can see she was a very compelling performer but then so is Nomi.

Butlins Pwllheli Inside Gaiety Theatre

So apart from watching the brilliant Eddie Izzard (I got the whole boxset for £3 gave it to my bro and watched it with him all over Easter) I got to see the Hunger and Peter Murphy, is amazing, beautiful dark and very dangerous here he is below, which got me reading  “The Hollywood Book of Death: The Bizarre, Often Sordid, Passings of More than 125 American Movie and TV Idols” and the bizarre life and death of Bela Lugosi

Finally got my camera working and did a video for ‘Aliminium Man’ the first song we recorded for the new record.  It really is great creating videos that cost nothing.  The toys were bought from the Viktor Wynd’s Little Shop of Horrors unfortunately one didn’t move but that didn’t matter. He looked cool and that was the main thing.

I am also excited that Sarah Fimm ‘Near Infinite Possibility’ is releasing her album on May 5th and David’s band Media is now available to buy by clicking on the previous link.

I watched a film called ‘Silent Running’ and its brilliant.

Silient Running from STARLOG Photo Guidebook Robots 1980

I haven’t cried at the end of a film in ages but I burst into tears.  It just took me over the edge.  It was the robots you see.

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Summer Time Time

I wrote another blog a while ago which I never posted and now it’s the past so I have decided to start again!  I just wanted to say once again thank you to my writing partner, David Baron who has spent so much time working on this new album, ‘Good Fortune, Bad Weather’ and has recently been in the studio with ‘Media’ his band consisting of Zac Alford on drums and Danny Blume on guitar (who also play on our record) David himself on Keyboards, and Gail Ann Dorsey on Bass.

Letraset - Studio of Crosby Fletcher Forbes London Photography by John Bantin Printed in England by Gothic Press Limited

The gig with Roger O’Donnell (The Cure amongst others) and recently I have been returning to the album ‘Disintegration’, was great.  Here’s Roger talking about Moog…

(Roger O’Donnell talking about Moog)

It’s a quirky electronic night, the only one we know of in London, hosted by Dean Ford called Synthetic at a little pub off the main drag in Stockwell called the Cavendish Arms.

Letraset in Action from Letraset published by Gothic Press Limited

I managed to do my set without any backing tracks and, on the whole, the looping came out really well.  I don’t use a computer I do it all through my boss pedal. I was so happy.  I spent hours and hours rehearsing, concentrating not only on trying to get the first loop spot on but also the vocals.  I also now know which sounds on the Casio I can tolerate and which beats are the best.  My choice is restricted which makes it a lot easier. It was also my first gig without Mike for ages and it was very good for my confidence.  It is a lot easier doing it on my own because I only have to keep in time with myself and I can rehearse without making expensive journeys or even hiring a rehearsal room.  Anyway David was very impressed that I had managed to even try to perform my album which uses a whole band all on my own with the Casio.  Obviously things would be better with a band but I have given up for now finding anyone.  The songs sound very different from the album but in a really good way I think.  I will continue to develop and change them so no two performances are the same.

Letraset in Action from Letraset published by Gothic Press Limited

I did a duet with Roger at the end of the night and was really impressed by his set on the moog which has such a unique sound.  I particularly loved his track which he began on his telephone.  It was beautiful.  We hope to do another gig together in the future. I am really grateful for everyone who came down which on the whole was all my friends and family.  Thank you to all of them.

(Anthony Phillips playing at home 1996)

I have also been doing quite a few library tracks with Anthony Phillips who used to be in Genesis but is a fantastic artist in his own right.  He came down to my gig which was fantastic!   I am a little concerned that my voice will be saturating the library music market but so far, this doesn’t seem to be a major concern!  I do think, though, it’s a phase which is why I am hoping Anthony will give me some of his beautiful instrumental tracks to write on so I can continue to write with him in the future.  In the past library was always instrumental but recently there has been more demand for songs.

Garamond from Letraset published by Gothic Press date unknown

I have used what little money I have to create a new website and Brian Kavanagh who has been instrumental in helping me with photographs and advice.  Considering how busy he is, I am really so grateful and I don’t know what I would do without such lovely friends around me having lost what I thought were some good ones last year, forever.

I have been watching the news non stop for weeks and I have to say, the world is tilting and changing beyond all recognition.  These aren’t repeated patterns there is a shift.  I don’t want to be too pessimistic but I write my blog not unaware of what is going on around me and these infiltrate my stories found in the songs.  I performed ‘Atmosphere’ last week simply because I found it strange that I should write what I did and speak of Tokyo (a place I have never been to) and do a video of Sizewell B Power Station in Suffolk two years ago for that song.  My thoughts are with the victims of all of this from the Middle East to Japan to the Ivory Coast…

(‘Atmosphere’ by Lettie produced by David Baron ‘Age of Solo’ 2008)

Someone after the gig said she felt like she had been cleansed.  I found that very complimentary.  All I want to do is make sure that I continue to perform the very best I can and be relevant.

The album ‘Good Fortune, Bad Weather’ is very nearly there and I was listening to some more mixes when unfortunately someone stole my ipod at Victoria station which was engraved from David and Jinhi  ‘To Lettie from the Baron Clan’ so I’m in silence again.  If anyone sees it please give it back.

Aside from that I have joined the local library and been watching probably too many films and accruing library fines but I want to support my local library desperately I don’t really watch TV except for the odd sporadic (had to check the spelling on THAT word!)program like the wonderful documentary on Ron Sexsmith or the history of Stiff Records.  The films I have been watching are obscure to say the least the sort of films that you NEVER see in Blockbusters or on TV (where does the library find them I wonder!)- one of the most memorable has to be ‘Last Night‘ typically dry and Canadian.  Nelly who is from Canada (aka Norelle French)  said the funniest thing I had heard all week at the Synthetic night; she asked me if I felt like I was floating in a bowl of Cheerios- as the glitter ball created strange rings on the floor……it took me about ten minutes to cotton on to what the hell she meant!

I have also been trying to read again and my highlights have been reading Alan Bennett’s ‘The Uncommon Reader’ and Steve Martin’s Autobiography ‘Born Standing Up’ which I read in about a day and loved.

(Steve Martin brilliant comedian, actor, magician and banjo player to boot!)

On the music front I went to see Crystal Fighters and hung backstage because my friend Louise who’s in a band called The Bellinis boyfriend is their drummer Andrea Marongiu and I have to say he’s one of the best drummers I  have heard in ages.  It was great to meet some of the band, some of the fans, and remember how much fun it was touring with Peter Murphy – who is presently on tour in the USA.  His new album ‘Ninth’ out soon will be fantastic.

(My favourite song by Crystal Fighters – At Home)

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Good Fortune, Bad Weather

The album is nearly there.  David Baron has done an amazing job of finishing off the music which we started in November.  I am really excited about the next few months.  We have more than enough tracks – It’s going to be called ‘Good Fortune, Bad Weather’.

Anonymous Photograph

Both David and I have created some films for the new songs and will post on youtube in the next few weeks.  I am planning to do some kind of music video shortly with a young filmmaker.  The next stage is to revamp my website.  I have two at the moment simply because I wanted to update my news and didn’t know how to, on my original website so I will try and create one which will avoid the use of flash and be up to date and more to the point.

In regards to music I have to say I am most excited by P J Harvey’s new album which I am waiting to get in the post and can’t believe she’s using the zither or autoharp on some of her songs.  I played around with mine for a couple of years and never got much further than the odd note!  I first came across the zither on a film called ‘Klute’

It is also in the film ‘The Third Man’.  I also very much enjoyed seeing the Pierces who I think are going to be very big this year.  They have great songs, fantastic voices and I know that they have struggled for many years so I can relate! They consist of two sisters and in their videos they are frequently try to kill each other or someone else!  I have to say their performance was very slick but that cool delivery was offset by the performance of one of the funniest guitarists I have seen in years.  On a tiny stage he really went for it-I thought he was going to try and stage dive, smash up his guitar or something!  I like the Pierces sense of humour.

The Bad Girl Of The Family by Fred Melville

My camera has now given up the ghost and I have prepared my keyboard for selling except I can’t take a picture of it at the moment.  I am also hoping to do a little gig in a flat in Paris in March and combine it with visiting my friend Alissa whom I met through David Baron (my writing partner) when he was at the Edison Studios in New York.  The Edison studios was the largest privately run studio left in New York and was hidden behind a lobby staircase in the Edison Hotel off Times Square.  It was like a dream.  Ella Fitzgerald had recorded there and I was very lucky to record a small part of my previous albums there.  My previous albums bridged a period of time which was not only tragic, for other reasons, but also lost.

Eiffel Tower, Paris

Here’s David playing an EMS Putney on one of our tracks:

I have been playing the tracks on my friend’s acoustic guitar (which I am looking after) and love the idea of simplifying things.  I love the loop pedal but it’s become so omnipresent at the moment on the live circuit I really feel like taking a break from it.  I will continue to use it but I am experimenting with other things.  I’ve become super geeky looking at hundreds of keyboards on youtube and still cannot decide on one.  I think a visit to Warner Chappels in Bond Street is a good idea.  I have my eye on one in particular but could only afford it if I could get some kind of credit/ payment scheme!

EMS Putney at David Baron's studio in Catskill Mountains

Lettie with David Baron's EMS Putney

I am lucky as I have more work coming my way in my day job and have been working hard to get myself above the water.

I have been exploring London and have come across Victor Wynd and Suzette Field’s The Last Tuesday Society.  I visited the shop ‘Little Shop of Horrors’ on Mare Street, Hackney and if you have never been there I suggest you take a look unless you get upset at seeing stuffed lions, cats and even dogs hanging above your head!  They give lectures, gallery openings where you get served gin in a tea cup and put on parties every few months where everyone seems to dress up.

My friend Christopher Battye has an exhibition at the Reading Room 65-66 Frith Street until March 11th.  It’s kind of ironic that the exhibition was put on by a leading digital communications company and Chris doesn’t have a computer! I do find it easier to promote other people rather than myself and I am still largely reticent on facebook but I will have to change this if I am to ‘get out there’.

'The Birthday Lunch' by Christopher Battye

The truth is I don’t have much time as I am working nearly every day now therefore I would prefer to put my free time into creating music, recording vocals, writing lyrics, and from this week, rehearsing once again.  It is vital that I keep this going if I am to perform again.  I am getting to grips with cubase and recording at home again and created an a cappella that I have posted on myspace.  I like it as it was completely improvised.  I haven’t actually truthfully worked out how to record midi so I had to use my voice! It’s called ‘Don’t You Leave Me’.  Here’s a little video:

I love creating these small tracks like the one I did in the launderette.  I hope I never stop writing ever.

The Big Pineapple Near Nambour Queensland

 

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Happy New Year!

It is hard sometimes to keep focused on music when so much of my time is spent not doing it.  The year has begun as an electrical nightmare.  Everything electrical I touch seems to break.  This includes my speakers for my computer making hearing mixes very difficult, my freeview box, my interface which was broken disabling me from doing any singing at home and my computer which I have replaced with an Apple on a monthly fee!  The last thing I am hoping is to move away from the Casio (since they do not want to endorse me despite repeated requests!!) onto a lighter more portable keyboard that I can at least carry.  My camera is broken as well ever since I went into the Butterfly Pavillion at Jimmy’s Farm which caused the lens to fog up.  Every so often the image goes pink and then freezes. This is all the stuff I have in the world.  I honestly believe my electricity from my body just blew them all up.

Postcard Radiator Arts in Hastings, Arts Council England

As I watch the big white cat prowl across the adjacent wall opposite my attic window creating a huge tiger like shadow, I wonder what this year will bring but I am fairly hopeful that as a rabbit, this year will be good.

Good Luck 1932 Postcard

The mixes from America sound amazing and this is definitely the best work I have done.  The songs are upbeat and the production really interesting thanks to David Baron.  There are a lot of live instruments, great players whom I have mentioned before, and I have additional vocals to do to keep up with it all hence the set up of David’s beautiful microphone once again with the interface which I will be working on tomorrow and the coming days.

Barron Knights postcard

Musically I was really excited to see Viv Albertine again who writes wicked songs last week and a huge pleasure to see my friend Jude again and members of The Dogbones.  I have also been listening to Dresden Dolls, Robert Plant, Bob Dylan again and again and again and again.  I never tire of Bob and of course Jarvis Cockers show on BBC6 still my highlight of the week on the radio in between KCRW sessions which sees David Lynch on Morning Comes Electric this week.  I will definitely be tuning into that, I also saw my friend Anthony Phillips who is a great inspiration.

A poem for someone I never gave them from the box under my bed (Memories from the past)

I managed to sneak off on my morning off to see the Diaghilev- The Golden Age of The Ballet Russes 1909- 1929 exhibition at the V& A.  Unfortunately no live film footage exists of this great man but there were photographs of him with Nijinksy but it was fantastic to see the costumes, artefacts and reworks of Ballets Russes from such an extraordinary period of history and even his accounts were on display as he largely spent his time in hotel rooms and had few personal belongings himself.  He managed to tour and make money!!  I particularly liked a rework of a 1960s party based on some ballet I did not know. It was so funny and it was so 60s; the clothes and the moves, the haircuts, and the architecture! And the footage and pieces from ‘The Blue Train’ the huge Picasso set piece in the final room.

From V & A Exhibition Diaghilev and The Golden Age of the Ballets Russes 1909-1929

I also went to see an exhibition entitled ‘Analog’ at the Riflemaker.  It depicted the photographs of Richard Nicholson who decided to shoot the 204 remaining dark rooms that existed in London in the Summer of 2007.  When he completed the project three years later only 4 existed.  The end of one age and the beginning of the other; I heard Jack White on the radio this morning.  He has recorded Wanda Jackson recently and he doesn’t even have a mobile phone.  He only records tape to tape and insists the digital recording process cannot record like tape can.

Richard Nicholson, Riflemaker Gallery, Beak Street, 'Analog' 11 January to 31 March 2011

Unfortunately, it is very expensive to record on tape these days, but I am hoping, with the new record, that the fusion of analogue and digital will be balanced.

From old promotion 'Tape in a Hurry'

I think it is succeeding.

Lettie with dog Lettie in Andulucia, Spain from my box under my bed (Memories from the past)

I am feeling nostalgic this January.  I have been through my old letters and things I hold onto in a box in Suffolk this Christmas and try to decipher some clues.

Picture of me by anonymous artist in Seville from my box under the bed (Memories from the past)

Also I can’t help but look at old photographs from years ago and I try and remember the smell of those days and hear the conversations.  I can’t quite remember.  I suppose we are not supposed to get back there.

Old postcard from Llanduno, Wales

I imagine, when I walk down the street in Shepherds Bush how I can hardly remember now what it was like at Shepherd’s Bush before WESTFIELD. The shopping mall from some kind of hell full of shops I hate.  I have admittedly been in there but only briefly.  I went for sushi once.  Anyway, there were all these strange looking dishes swirling round and round and round a conveyor belt, dry and tasteless under dome like plastic bowls. A futurist vision that might have been drawn up in Tomorrow’s World, a reality but already retro. Up and down the escalators I go trying to find the exit, slipping on the floors, invisible.

From my box of ephemera

Anyway, I am all for change, I just have to change myself; I guess that’s what it’s all about.  You can’t stay the same, we never do and it can’t stay the same, it never does.

The album will be finished very soon.  I am thinking what to call it at the moment . I think the album will find light of day and hopefully an audience. The songs are what counts and at the end of the day that’s all I’m really interested in, with David Baron, my writing partner.

Old reply card for F.M Taylor Tree Expert Co PO Box 116 Larchmont, NY

Reply card from F.M Taylor Tree Expert Co

I am very sad to hear the loss of so many in January.

Mick Karn and Peter Muprhy 'Dali's Car' from unknown publication

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Happy Christmas!

Since my return from America, my time has largely been spent working in my day job as a secretary/ assistant hence my reticence.  I am also still sad over the state of myspace which was a platform once where I met many interesting musicians and of course David Baron, my writing partner.

(My writing partner David Baron at home studio in Catskills recording October 2010)

The new album is sounding amazing.  I am really proud of the new work.  David has been sending me mixes on a nearly daily basis and it has been transformed thanks to all the musicians who have been involved in it which include Danny Blume, Sara Lee and Zack Alford, Daniel Goodwin, Pete Caigan at Dreamland Recording Studios none of whom I met except Danny so it is a huge honour for me that they have wanted to play on it!  I am also very pleased that the tracks I recorded on the 16 track in London with Jude Rawlins are sounding ace and were a tiny part of the album I was doing in Oxford.  I can’t believe I have so little to show for all that.  However, a lot of the support from the BBC came from my initial two albums in 2008 and so I am not too despondent.

(The blooming good Danny Blume 2010)

I have done two tracks with Anthony Phillips for Universal Publishing Production Music. I think we have done four now and I am really proud of our work.  It’s also very nice to know that they seem to like my voice as Ben Cocks also writes for the same company bizarrely!  Library music was always instrumental but there has been a change in recent years.  I love doing this work as it’s very abstract and a good exercise and this time I’m writing and I notice there are hardly any female writers for library so I’m chuffed.  It is a huge honour to work with someone as talented as Anthony.

Meanwhile in London, I have been doing some photographs with a photographer and academic called Brian Kavanagh who I happen to come upon his website quite by accident. It has been a wonderful experience to meet Brian and spend several days in his company.  In his own words from his thesis titled ‘Analogue Signals and Digital Bits’.

“Recorded sound (digital and analogue recording are strictly identical here) is not a true representation of a specific ‘live’ sound created within particular environmental conditions. Something is lost in the recording process. Even the most advanced microphones fail to capture the true and complex nature of sound, even under the most controlled conditions; in this sense recorded sounds can never be ‘authentic’. ‘Authenticity’ is obviously a problematic term here but it is outside the brief of my current research to explore its ramifications.

For some, who grew up in the analogue world of vinyl records and magnetic tapes, it was difficult to adapt to the digital sound aesthetic that is CDs, when they became commercially available in the early 1980s. Many observed, for example that the sound was ‘cold’ and ‘sterile’, whilst others accused those who refused to surrender their attachment to vinyl of wallowing in nostalgia. In retrospect, however it would seem that at least some of those observations about CD sound quality were not simply born out of romantic, or nostalgic notions about the passing of vinyl. Perhaps some people simply yearned, consciously or unconsciously, for those frequencies that are removed during the process of converting continuous analogue sound signals to discrete digital data. Digital sound represents a very different sound aesthetic than analogue sound, not least because analogue signals are continuous in nature and digital sound is made up of samples, which are discrete.”  (Brian Kavanagh as quoted from his website www.briankavanagh.com)

It has been fascinating talking about the future of music, and his experience in performing all over Ireland on Classical guitar.   Not only is he an accomplished musician but he also makes films which has always been a huge passion of mine. However, his talent as a photographer is without doubt so it was in the bitter cold that he managed to take quite a few!  He invited me over to a party to watch ‘Fanny and Alexander’ which is a very long Ingmar Bergman film but well worth the watch although I did have to leave after nearly six hours and missed the Epilogue.

Amongst the various locations we chose, I took him to my new favourite shop in London ‘Marchpane‘ (missing Jarvis Cocker apparently by 5 minutes!!) which actually has an original Darlek from Dr Who right in the middle of it.  I have always been a visitor of the magic bookshop opposite Watkins but I was taken aback by the fantastic photographs of Vivienne Westwood as well as the antique childrens books of which I have my eye on one.  I wanted to show Brian these photographs which is also quite incongruous but make sense when we spoke to the owner, Kenneth.

(Marchpane, Cecil Court, December 2010 by Brian Kavanagh)

I am still trying to work out where to try and promote my music but I am hoping I will consolidate both my websites so I have one, and move over to Bandcamp as an alternative to myspace.

I am also collecting 16mm films which I am really excited about.  I have very inspired by the few things I have seen in London lately, in particular Philippe Parreno at the Serpentine Gallery.  I’ve been telling everyone to go I’ve been twice already and plan at least another couple of times.  It’s on till 13th February.

A very Happy Christmas and all the best for 2011!

(Getting into my Tardis by Brian Kavanagh December 2010)

(Old Russian Christmas postcard)

(Greeting card from USA)

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Lettie’s Blog starts here!

I’m finally moving off myspace to here where I feel comfortable that I can post my images and thoughts that I collect on my journey in music.  The visual side is so important to me so thanks wordpress!

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