Friday, April 1, 2011

The Forty Part Motet by Janet Cardiff - Fabrica, Duke Street, Brighton until 30 may 2011

The Forty Part Motet by Janet Cardiff at Fabrica Brighton involves forty speakers pointing inwards as an oval, each speaker being a separate voice of the whole choir.

The piece subtly starts as if you were attending a Classical concert with the choir murmuring between themselves before focussed by the Conductor to sing ‘Spem in Alium’ (1573) a renaissance choral piece by Thomas Tallis.

It is an extraordinary experience as you first try and focus on sub-groups of B&W speakers that ‘sing’ the parts Tallis requires.

When the whole choir of forty sings for the first time in unison one could not help but feel a cold shudder of emotion and the rising fighting need to not be too emotional.

During the fifteen-minute performance a few things happen. First you forget you are listening to a recorded piece for the singers fill and transform the Fabrica space then the magic begins for you are in effect being surrounded by forty singers singing at you breaking the division of stage/audience – you are in some ways part of the choir.

Once you understand this, an urge may come about to walk about and listen to each individual singer’s contribution to the whole. For me there was a childlike joy walking about the ‘choir’ as one chooses, with no one from the gathered audience balking ‘that you can’t do that’ - I chose to walk around the inside of the whole oval.

And that’s what Janet Cardiff wants to share, the spatial nature of music, wanting you to ‘climb inside’ and you can until the end of May.

The Forty Part Motet by Janet Cardiff opens to the public tomorrow, 2 April and runs until 30 May at Fabrica, Duke Street, Brighton.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Increasing meat shelf life with Vitamin E

I heard on 'Farming Today, This Week' on Saturday's radio 4 that one of the ways of ensuring there's enough food for everyone is to feed Vitamin E to animals before they are sent to slaughter which increases the shelf life of the meat.

Bizarre...

How I saved my iPod from the click of death

My HP Apple (4th generation?) 20Gb iPod has survived a few 'deaths' where ultimately the iPod screen refers you to the technical section of Apple's website with a sad face.

Searching on Google for further tips seems to only regurgitate what Apple already says.
Although useful for some of the deaths my iPod has suffered, I really thought that after two and a half years this was it for my iPod. I simply couldn't get it to reset or work despite trying the various resets options on numerous occasions.

All it did was boot up and the whirr and click, whirr and click.

I thought I would have one final look online before I ebayed my iPod as a dead spare and came across a post that advocates 'dropping' your iPod. With nothing to lose I 'dropped' my iPod from table head onto my carpeted floor.

I cannot tell you the delight to find that it WORKED! No kidding. That's why I started this blog to write this tip and share my delight. I can't say it will work for you but if all else has failed then why not? You've nothing really to lose after you've tried everything else.

http://www.macgeekery.com/hacks/hardware/fix_your_dead_ipod_for_free