The last year and more

It’s been 18 months since I wrote on this blog. Its been a very busy and productive period and I’m still in the middle of it. But time to stop briefly, take a breath and look around.

Helen in the Indian Ocean with a driftwood keyboard made by Lorna Rees

Six years ago I was about to embark on a trip to Sri Lanka to take part in the Sura Medura artists residency. While there I started sketching ideas for a requiem, prompted by the death of my mother earlier in the year. I was sponsored by Activate Performing Arts who have continued to support my work towards the requiem. This year the work comes to fruition at Activate’s festival Inside Out Dorset.

Saeflod, a walking requiem has become about more than the loss of one person or even many people in my life. We are suffering environmental losses as well. We live on an island, we see cliff falls and coastal erosion and, in Sri Lanka, I was in a place that was very badly affected by the Indian Ocean Tsunami. The photos taken by Lorna Rees (see above) of me in the ocean, with a driftwood keyboard she had made, illustrate my feeling at the time and often since, of being ‘all at sea’.

I have been working with poet Rosie Jackson for over a year now. The word seaflood, Saeflod in old English, was arrived at together. Rosie has been writing and collecting text and stories and combining words and syllables to create new words and phrases. This echoes the way that Alastair Goolden and I have often created installations – mixing and arranging composed and found material to create ever new combinations and meanings.

Saeflod is a ‘walking requiem’. Artmusic’s work has increasingly been created for and presented outdoors as music and image for the environment. The work will be installed in Moors Valley Country Park (Forestry England) as one of a series of thought provoking and enchanting installations. There will be opportunities to interact with the work and occassional choir performances.

For anyone who hasn’t experienced Artmusic’s oldest installation, Lachrymae, this will also be installed in the woods.

Collaborators include singer Melanie Pappenheim and sound designer Alastair Goolden who I have worked with over many years. I’ve admired Rosie Jackson’s poetry, but this is the first time we’ve worked together. Activate and Inside Out Dorset have close ties with the Arts University Bournemouth. We are lucky to have Anya Hobson and Maise Perkins, with other student helpers, working on the design elements of the piece.

The idea of the requiem has always been to create a work that can be reimagined and adapted for many different venues and spaces. The presentation of the work at Inside Out Dorset is a first step – a work in progress – a toe in the water. Members of the Orchestra for the Earth will be recorded for the installation this year. I look forward to future iterations of the requiem where they may perform live.

I am eternally grateful to Activate Performing Arts for their support. As well as commissioning the work they have been beside me through all the stages of development. I am also thrilled to have received a grant from the PRS Foundation’s Open Fund.

The Path is Made by Walking

the path to chapel coppice, Ashley Chase, near Abbotsbury, Dorset

Artmusic’s Lachrymae was created by Alastair Goolden (sound designer), Rowena Pearce and Tim Millar (artists) and me (composer) and was installed in Chapel Coppice in Ashley Chase near Abbotsbury for Ridgeway Responses, a walking strand of the Inside Out Dorset festival in 2014.

In 2015 Alastair Goolden and I collaborated with Satsymph to create a geo-located version of this work, resulting in a perpetual ghost of Lachrymae residing in the woods to this day. You can visit the virtual version of Lachrymae by downloading Satsymph’s Land Bone and Stone App no.1 here and following the map to Chapel Coppice with your smart phone. N.B. At present LBS1 is only available for Google Android.

Around this time, and because of this introduction into geo-located sound walking. I became aware of The Museum of Walking and Sound Walk Sunday. Lachrymae and many of Satsymph’s other geo-located sound walks were included in the Sound Walk Sunday directory – an amazing collection of sound walks from all over the world.

Last year I was invited by Black Swan Arts in Frome to curate LISTEN, a summer season of sound art. Along with presenting music and art in different combinations and settings I wanted to work with Satsymph again and also to involve The Museum of Walking in LISTEN. We invited Satsymph to create a new local geo-located sound walk based on the aural histories recorded by Home in Frome in their Working Memories project. This new walk entitled ‘Walking Memories’ explores the centre of Frome through the voices and memories of those who worked in the town in years gone by. You can find the map and a link to the bespoke app on satsymph’s website here. This app is available for both Google Android and iPhone.

The final day of LISTEN coincided with Sound Walk Sunday and we invited co-founders Geert Vermeire and Andrew Stuck to join us for a one day symposium on sound walking. So for 2019 Sound Walk Sunday came to Frome.

I have continued to be associated with the Museum of Walking – now renamed walk – listen – create and as I type we are in the middle of the new month-long festival, Sound Walk September. As always the website lists sound walks that you can experience actually or virtually from all over the world and this year there are a host of other initiatives and activities available too.

One of this year’s projects is 30 Days of Walking, an opportunity for anyone to select a day and time and record their own soundwalk. 25 days of walking have passed so far with over 60 individual walks recorded and uploaded. There are 5 days left so why not record a walk of your own. I recorded my walk on 7th September in Glastonbury. In my Redstone diary for 2020 opposite the first complete week of September is a poem by Antonio Machado, Canto XXIV from Proverbs and Songs 29. The last line of the extract reads ‘The path is made by walking’. I decided to take this poem about walking as my starting point and wander where the poetry led me. I chose Glastonbury as that may have been where I started life. You can listen to my short autobigraphical soundwalk here.

It’s impossible to know where life will take you next. During lockdown I have had new encounters with Literature, and walking which has led me to think more about these two in combination. Poems about walking, thoughts and stories experienced while walking……..definitely fertile ground for new work.

At the invitation of walk – listen – create, on Monday 28th September at 7.00 pm, I will be co-hosting a discussion about the role of movement in the participation in and appreciation of art. I will describe my creative career in terms of movement from performing Music Walk with John Cage in the 1980s and creating animated installation art with 3 or 4 Composers in the 1990s to making movement-generated work and processional performances in the 2000s and discovering nature and new ideas through walking and networking with Inside Out Dorset in the 2010s. Everyone is welcome to join in the discusion – more info and tickets here.