Creative adventures

These days I’m seeking them out which I admit is why I have been a little scattered across media. For a while, yes, I was posting on here morre frequently, which I know I really should be doing even more frequently. Started doing morning pages again. Hopefully I keep that up too.

Creativity is something that I really think doesn’t just belong to the Sting’s, Beyonce’s and…I don’t know, Peter Jackson’s of the world. It is a place of exploration that anyone can and everyone should explore, even if you can’t devote hours a day to it (and who can?). I know it’s asking a lot up front but I’ll make my argument. And no, no berets, long cigarettes on that stick thing or copies of Faust are needed…dahlings.

It is an adventure to tackle any of the arts like painting, writing or playing an instrument. You are immediately joining in a long established guild of explorers and not only is there plenty to get stuck into but there are plenty of references out there, especially now with Google and YouTube only tabs away (see my other post on “Library Firepower” if you want to go old school).

In doing this, and I can’t claim immortality, but there is a sort of fountain of youth-ish thing going on where you are never really retired and there is plenty of energy and life you can tap into in the process. You can check out new music with your headphones while you try a paint-in at a local community center. You can get a guitar and start jamming with friends. With writing being the most portable art form you can (did this) go to every Cafe in town to find your favorite, and in the process, meet lots of people. And these are just three. And then there’s the art itself which is like opening the mechanism to a steam clock so I won’t go into that but the best thing is there is usually people you can ask. See a band you like locally and want to play like that? Talk to them after the show. Sounds crazy? I can think of three off the top that got inspired by my band and actually got going from that and so many times we’ve had folks talk after. I’ve done it too. Artists love to talk shop. If your asking it’s hardly because you thought we sucked lol!

What would you like to try? PS. We all fumbled n bumbled at first.

Ready for your adventure?

😊

Tom

Library Firepower

It was once stated that no place is as dangerous on earth as that local place in town, that one with the books. I like that, but I can see the reasoning. It’s the same reason barista’s were once thrown into rivers in sacks to drown. The last thing the powers that be want you to be is sober and learning.

There is so much you can get out of your local that it’s not even funny! In this age when the best thing you can have is a “side hustle” the place to fire up your ideas is in a place just down the road. Unlike this overwhelming thing the library is a single task environment. Your eyes scan over shelves and see things, dropping you in ideas and stories that you would never have thought of. Here’s the kicker…your not alone in this endeavour!

Exactly the environment those powers that be would hate! Then you add music, media, online cataloging and more things than I could describe and well, the revolutionaries of Les Miserables or Che Guevara’s would envy you.

Start the Revolution today.

šŸ˜Ž

Cheers,

Tom

Tip jar is out! šŸ˜‰ Find me on Patreon

Had fun this morning setting up my page which includes a video clip about what I’m attempting. Yeah it’s one of those long shots but it was still fun to set up and it’s also cool setting goals like how I want to develop my home studio towards my first solo music release.

Even if you can’t spend (or if you can and want to be that level of amazing 😊) please visit the page and check it out!

http://www.patreon.com/tompogson

Hey over there…Sincerely, over here.

I’ve never used this site for its actual blog purpose so I thought I would crack on to it.  I also dont know if I’ll use this same time as I am on my break at work.  I’ve been working primarily on music lately, so since that stuff isnt hear and I have some weird cough thing, right now is momentarily fine.


In the style of Dwight…ground rules.

I will try, i promise, to swerve from the political.  I address this plenty elsewhere but, as still a fan of things like the tv shows Early Edition and Vicar of Dibley and other remnants of the nineties when things were simpler and I still actually didnt know the difference between and American democrat and a republican (yes…i know), I would like this to stay primarily in that world.  Suffice to say, much of my other social media gets involved there.  I also am to write sans any close-proximity-politics, more commonly known as gossip.  I have learned only too well how that bites you on the ass, especially considering (and this is a lesson I continue to learn and more should) nothing is simple and you really dont know that much about people around you.  You only have your perspective which is flawed at best so why present the idea that your and expert.

The other thing I like the idea of is creating a space which I actually dont use in a marketing way.  Now it is very tricky not to be disingenuous here as all social media is about connections but what I mean is my goal isnt to meet you at the store front where I’m doing everything with a morning dj voice and the happiest emoji I could find.

Ill meet you at the back of the store by the garbage lock up where I use to smoke.  Been two months now so I don’t do that but you can if you want.  It’s weird but someone else smoking really doesn’t trigger me.  Being adhd and missing those near-meditative breaks does that, amongst other physical things.

So that’s about it.  I’m Tom.  I work, I make music and write off and on.  I’ll be back in a bit.  

Ghost City

Ordos

It was the first time I felt I could relax, even for a moment.Ā  I knew that it couldn’t last.Ā  After the three-hour hike down the alien streets where the grass was beginning to push through the cracks, I was back at the building.Ā  The silence permeated every cell of my being but I knew I couldn’t turn the music on.Ā  The fact that I had turned the multi-module in my arm off was the only thing probably keeping me out of harms way.Ā  Still it would have been great to listen to something.Ā  The only solace I had as I came up the leaf strewn parking lot was the sound of birds.Ā  Those crows that always gathered like a gang of spies that had never given up.

The door was left open, which I kind of expected, but at least it wasn’t smashed down in the final riots before we were all shipped east to the fence-line.Ā  It was a little silly being here.Ā  It was hardly like I could take the elevator up, let alone go in, throw my keys down and grab a beer from the fridge.Ā  It would be probably white walls.Ā  Nothing but white walls and dust stains from the scraping of the furniture.

I began my ascent up the stairwell, shafts of light coming in the windows, their frames high above where anyone could reach them.Ā  The walls looked grimier and more battered that I remember.Ā  Minette and I lived on the 5th floor which was I was sort of half thankful for at the moment.Ā  I wasn’t in bad shape but I definitely began to feel it by the third.Ā  I sat on the fading carpet and looked out the window across from the black-railed stairwell.Ā  The orange yolk of the sun was broken by shafts of cloud, the afternoon sky a slightĀ cedar that we always called the Curtain.Ā  The Curtain never lifted where I had spent the last fifteen years since we were gathered.Ā  Out here the effect of the great processors seemed slightly thinned, like when you add more water to a teabag.

I was also looking for movement in the city.Ā  The skyline was grey and quiet like you would expect, but more unkept, with bramble and grasses turning everything into a strange sort of greenhouse solarium with the orange white roof above.Ā  There was so many of us back in the camp that I suspected it would take some time before anyone noticed I was not around, but then all it would take was one idiot to say ā€œHey, where’s Yun?ā€ and then the reports of a lost worker would set out the whole barrage of Shepherds into their roles as the people’s trackers.Ā  I knew just how invisible I wasn’t, with how my heat register made it’s imprints on everything around me, sticking me out in Westwood like a beacon.Ā  I almost considered staying exactly where I was.Ā  Partly due to the fact that what I was after would have already have been stripped from the room to crush any thoughts of doing exactly this and partially because I didn’t even want to see our home like this.Ā  It was one way to sleep in section twelve.Ā  I mean, I had free Wifix at call and I was really careful about my credit points but that was just the crap they wanted us to see.Ā  If I wasn’t reading what few pdfs were still out of their reach I would think back to when we had our last job, our last day of work, our last meal.Ā  I can even remember my last employer on his knees crying, with his sister Satiyo beside him rubbing his shoulders and cooing to him like a child.Ā  He wasn’t the nicest guy on the planet back then but of the four bosses I had, he was the last and to his credit he had tried to build the company from the ground up.Ā  Now he was just a balding man in a dirty white shirt on the floor, his shoulders shaking with his hand to his face.Ā  I remember I didn’t know what to say.Ā  I just sort of stood there.

Back on my feet I continued up to fifth.

The inside of the room could have been anywhere, in any room all up the coast.Ā  It was better than most I had passed in the halls.Ā  No one had attempted to squat in it before the gatherings.Ā  The walls were still mostly white.Ā  Minette smoked back then, which was the only illegal thing either of us ever did, but we were excruciatingly careful about it.Ā  A friend at the university had given us some Linethen, that blueish grey composite that cleans the air of cigarette smoke almost instantly.Ā  We kept in buried behind the back of the fridge and even now I could see the trails up the wall, fanning out like so many spiders.

Then I heard it, noise from far away like the mewing of a small cat.Ā 

Scrambling onto the counter-top next to the gaping hole where our old stove had been, I opened the cupboard.Ā  The sound outside grew just slightly.Ā  They knew where I was, and they knew that I knew.Ā  I looked for the slight edge upside down in the cupboard, my eyes squinting as bits of old wood unsettled all over my hands and face.Ā  With the other hand I began to punch the top of the stained cupboard wood.Ā 

The sound grew louder, coming from the living room.Ā  In the giant square empty room, the windows remained open with just one frayed curtain remaining, it’s flag swaying just slightly in the wind.Ā  Across the way was the other block of flats, patio rails like bleached bones.

I punched harder and the sound grew.Ā  Finally, the roof of the cupboard cracked and dust and particles spewed out, causing me to look away again.Ā  In the living-room the curtain began to flap more in earnest.Ā  They were very near.Ā  I found what I came for and stashed it into the pocket in my leg where a hole turned the rest of the pants into an accidental deep pocket.Ā  I dropped from the counter just as the sound of the chopper blades became obvious.Ā  The rag by the window flapped violently as the giant glass globe of the Shephard’s vehicle rose with the blades roaring invisibly above their heads.Ā  I walked towards them, looking straight at them in their black silk uniforms and red helmets.Ā  What was there to say or do at the time?Ā  I simply waited with my arms out so they wouldn’t strip the flesh from my bones.

There was noise behind me which I expected.Ā  My leg was kicked out and I fell into darkness.

7 Bass Books every bassist needs

No introduction needed really.Ā  Got your metronome and your axe?Ā  Let’s do this.

7. Joel Di Bartolo – Serious Electric Bass

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I love how full this one is.Ā  Joel does an amazing job of going over every nuance of playing in detail with attention for those playing five or six stringed instruments.Ā  This one I keep coming back to, in fact, I pretty much had to take it off the music stand to take the shot.Ā  You can’t go wrong with the guy who played for Johnny Carson!

6. Rufus ReidĀ  – The Evolving Bassist

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I had this recommended to me by my former bass teacher Joey Smith.Ā  Fantastic book for upright and electric players alike going into rhythm, chord structure and how to approach jazz basslines.Ā  Really helped me in getting my theory down along with…(drumroll)

5 Jaco Pastorius – Modern Electric Bass

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If you haven’t heard of Jaco, bassist or not, go to youtube immediately.Ā  He’s pretty much our Hendrix!Ā  But anyways, this book goes over the video which is excellent and genuinely teaches you things as opposed to just making you go “Wow, he’s good!”Ā  It does that, and you do feel like the least educated chimp when you try playing afterĀ  but the book also has some great little bits on theory that helped me finally piece it all together.Ā  Worth it!

4 Simandl

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Yeah, what do you follow Jaco with?Ā  This is pretty much the book, which Jaco actually mentioned himself, for studying classical bass.Ā  Even if classical isn’t your thing it is the tried and true study of the rhythm section.

3. Slap it! – Tony Oppenheim

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We want the funk!Ā  Get your groove established by this great little book for woodshedding the basics of funk.Ā  Not a really thick book but it gets straight down to it with exercises you can start straight away with and give you a foundation of sound that is not only cool, percussive and funky, but also clean!

2.Teach yourself Advanced Bass – Clive Harrison

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And I can hear the “whhaaa?” from here.

Despite how this one looks this little guy has been my straight, no nonsense foundation to so much of my playing and bass philosophy that I don’t know where to start.Ā  Formerly with the Little River Band, Clive takes you through all the things you need to get your chops sailing as well as gives you great directions in things you might not of thought of like his section of Chops versus Performance or on Shifting.

  1. Chuck Rainey – The Method, sadly not pictured

This might be anti climactic but my copy has disappeared in a recent move, which is annoying because not only did I use to come back to that book again and again but literally it is where I started actually practicing.Ā  Chuck is such a great book to start with as he goes into great detail exactly what kind of strings to use and proper right hand form and technique as well as getting your from that shaky first C scale and onwards.

Hope you enjoyed this little list!Ā  Please feel free to add your own recommendations to the messages below!

Cheers,

Tom

The time to explore

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I’ve mentioned before about my love of mornings which I know makes me weird straight away.Ā  I actually woke up far too early on this one even for myself but I had set myself this rule of getting out each morning to do some kind of exercise.Ā  I have been struggling with a digestion issues since last October so this is one of the many ways I’ve have found myself fighting back.Ā Ā  I honestly don’t know if it works or not, but I’m just not willing to find out what would happened if I stopped!

One of the great things about getting out there is the exploring side.Ā  This morning I finally, and this is nuts I am, but after going for about a half hour walk I finally took a route 1 bus out to its furthest end.Ā  Some more walking and a different route home and I am completely reading to get out there and start my regular work.Ā  If I hadn’t become so enthused by all this desire to be outside each morning I never would have done such a nonsensical thing.Ā  I admit I felt a bit too self conscious to get on the 1 route home, because I was fully expecting the driver would have looked at me funny.Ā 

I’ll work on that one.

Once home though I started planning out some really nice ideas for some other walks involving quieter bus routes I could do.Ā  A simple one (no pun meant) would be to take the same route to the cafĆ© at the end, walk the beach to Gonzales Park and then hop a quiet #3 home again.Ā  You can’t beat breakfast with a million dollar view can you?Ā  As someone who already has one of those bus passes the only thing that cost you was some time and maybe whatever you picked up at Delish.Ā  Not a bad deal!

In the theme of exploring, and this is weird too because not only was I thinking about this subject this morning but my friend Kevin Lintern wrote about the same thing so I hope I’m not borrowing that too much, but people should not be afraid to explore possibilities within their own worlds.Ā  This could be anything from boating to model making but naturally my focus is creativity.Ā 

There is a mentality out there which states that only really talented people should even think of walking into a music store…and art supply store……ok, writer’s don’t have the same thing (a pen store?!) but…setting up a blog, and I am here to tell you it’s just not true.Ā  Creativity is a place you can simply explore with whatever fascinates you.Ā  You don’t have to be serious and think you have to play guitar or paint at a certain level with so many hours a day in order to try it. Ā 

I just recently started doing more visual arts thanks to the spurring of a book called ā€œThe Trickster’s Hatā€ by writer Nick Bantock, which I definitely recommend.Ā  One of the ideas he comes up with is the idea of just setting out without big goals or expectations in mind and just freeing yourself to try and make mistakes.Ā  As far as I’m concerned, in creativity, there is no mistakes.Ā  Ready for this…?

There is no bad art.

Whoa huh?Ā  Now you might say I’ve crossed a line there as you can probably quote me a list of names of people who you think have no talent and should stop.Ā  I’ve been on some people’s list with that one!Ā  But I stay stand firm on this.Ā  The very doing of creating is wonderful in itself…the simple act of stepping out of the things you have to do to explore what could be and creating from nothing.Ā  The Artist’s Way series is also great for breaking through this.Ā  I still try (and fail sometimes but what the heck?) to do my morning pages first thing every morning along with my other routines.Ā  I’m at the point now where I actually can’t imagine my life without that or the morning exercise.Ā  Also started doing meditation with a great app for the meditationally challenged like myself called ā€œCalmā€.Ā  There’s other things I like doing first thing like practice and drinking lots of water but that’s more specific to me. Ā The process does take a while.Ā  Mornings work for me but whatever you find best for you, that’s the best time.

Thanks for reading!

Happy exploring J

Tom

Home

 

This is my refuge but it’s also my study, my factory.Ā  Here I build for better things to come.

Dreams are dreamed, coffee gets shared and things are at their softest and least diffused.

I work here with music on, seeking the truth, elusive as clouds and you can find me writing, playing, rewriting, waking up, cooking.

Memories find tin boxes, plastic containers with dusty lids and new ones get their little births.

Everything I’ve ever done sprouted from the walls of home.Ā  Sitting on the floor with a guitar and an old Panasonic tape deck.Ā  Silly thoughts pass here like fish in a stream.Ā  Some sparkle so bright you can reach out with your hands.