Capture

 

For the week that’s in it.

Talking is good.

Each week in Ireland we have, on average, ten suicides, eight of which are men.

Owen Sharp, Movember Foundation CEO writes:

“We wanted to create a powerful piece of content that would ignite important conversation about suicide, the complex issues that surround it and what everyone can do to address it. Conversations that we hope will save lives and prevent the far-reaching and painful consequences for the families, friends and communities of the men tragically lost every day. It’s an uncomfortable conversation, but it’s one that needs to be had, here in Ireland and around the world.”

Movember Ireland

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The late American architect Phillip Johnson’s famous Glass House in Connecticut with 1200 polka dots added to form an ‘infinity room’ entitled ‘Dots Obsession – Alive, Seeking for Eternal Hope’ by Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama. To wit:

My desire is to measure and to make order of the infinite, unbounded universe from my own position within it, with polka dots. – In exploring this, the single dot is my own life, and I am a single particle amongst billions. – I work with the principal themes of infinity, self-image, and compulsive repetition in objects and forms, such as the steel spheres of Narcissus Garden and the mirrored walls I have created.

Now for yeh.

streetartnews

augustwells

mike

From top: Ken Griffin (left), with bandmate John Rauchenberger); Mike McGrath Bryan

Ken Griffin, guitarist, singer and songwriter, has had somewhat of a renaissance in recent years, with new project August Wells recording and touring regularly.

He had a long shadow to escape, as one of the members of Dublin dream-poppers Rollerskate Skinny, subsequently decamping to New York to form bands like Kid Silver.

With new album Madness is the Mercy out now via FIFA Records, and ahead of the usual host of touring engagements this autumn/winter, Ken has a chat with Mike McGrath-Bryan, who mans the ‘sheet music desk.

Mike McGrath-Bryan: “So, the new album is out now. Give us some insight into writing/assembling the songs, and the recording/other processes of the record.”

Ken Griffin: “I usually have about 30 or 40 songs at different stages of completion at any given time. John and I will work a few days a week on the ones I feel are closest. Then I take them home, complete the lyrics and structures, and write some simple brass and string lines. Half this album was recorded live in a studio called Strange Weather in Brooklyn. The other half was recorded in our own home studio. The live songs were recorded with an eight-piece band, more often than not using the first take.”

Mike: “You’ve worked very closely with Cork-based label FIFA (Frank and Walters, Fight Like Apes, Whipping Boy) since the project’s emergence, how have Eddie (Kiely, label boss) and crew have been to work with?”

Ken: “They have been fantastic. When you work with people like Eddie, who has a great love of our music, it makes you want to work harder in turn for them. It’s been maybe the best experience I have had with someone in the music business in my 25 years of recording.”

Mike: “Your emergence is of particular interest to Irish music followers considering your past endeavours – Rollerskate Skinny, and more. How has the reaction been from longtime fans, gig-goers, press, etc.?”

Ken: “I have been surprised at how many of the people who liked Rollerskate Skinny love August Wells. But it seems like August Wells is stepping out of that shadow, and developing its own audience. In fact I remember at a gig in Cork, a guy had come to see August Wells and really liked it, then I met him at another of our gigs and he said, “Hey, I listened to your old band Rollerskate Skinny, god, I thought it was awful” (laughs). So I suppose if you like August Wells and have not heard Rollerskate Skinny, it might not be to your liking. I don’t know, i am an artist who moves forward, its not for me to judge.”

Mike: “What are your recollections of the time, and what say you to how Rollerskate Skinny is remembered, the all-time Irish lists, reissues, etc.?”

Ken: “It’s nice that people still talk about an album I made 20 years ago. I have no nostalgia about the nineties. As an artist, by the time something comes out, you have usually moved on to the next thing, and the next thing is often somewhat of a reaction to the last thing I have done. It’s always about the excitement of the latest ideas, they are the ones going around and around in my head, being altered and considered and worked on. I am very grateful and moved when anybody anywhere likes my work.”

Mike: “You are now based in New York, where Kid Silver and later August Wells were started. How did the initial change of scenery from Ireland and the UK, to New York change your mindset and creative process to begin with, and does it have an effect now?”

Ken: “It’s hard to quantify, I have lived half my life in New York, and I have now made five albums here. I write as directly from my life as I can, so I suppose my environment then effects the work greatly. When I got here first, I got stolen by the New York night. In a way it was so stimulating, I needed to disappear for a while. Actually maybe I didn’t need to, i just did. I think Rollerskate Skinny’s songs were more fantastical, and the type of writing i wanted to do required more living, more experience, and on a deep level I knew that.”

Mike: “How did yourself and John (Rauchenberger, August Wells collaborator) meet, and how did the project come together?”

Ken: “Through mutual friends. I heard him playing piano, I was intrigued by his unconventional style. We began playing together, and our sound developed very quickly, and there was something unforced and believable about it that satisfied me.”

Mike: Returning to the Irish scene on the regular with the beginning of the August Wells project, how do you think things have changed in the past few decades, what’s stayed the same, and which artists do you like at present?

Ken: There’s so many more venues and festivals to play. You can spend three weeks touring Ireland now. It’s so different for me now, back then, everyone was just chasing after a record deal, and some idea of success. For me now it’s very simple, I really love to play live, I love writing songs, the recording process is and always will be a baffling chore. Nowadays you can do things on a smaller level, far easier than ever before. You can record and release albums without involving a whole army of people. Ireland seems a lot more comfortable with itself, and its been a joy to experience.

Mike: What’s up next for the band now that the record is out?

Ken: “We are planning to tour Italy, Germany and Denmark in October. We are doing a lot of shows around New York, playing a few with Declan O’Rourke, he’s my cousin. Hopefully a couple more tours of Ireland in the next six months. We already have a group of new songs for our next record. We try not to stop, we try to be living, daily working artists.”

August Wells’ new LP, Madness is the Mercy, is available now through the usual digital platforms, with Irish launch shows in the pipeline.

For more info on August Wells, go here.

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This afternoon.

Outside the Iranian embassy at Mount Merrion Avenue in Blackrock, Dublin.

A group of academics from Dublin’s major universities gather in full academic garb, to call for the release of anthropologist and Irish citizen Homa Hoodfar from prison in Tehran and to highlight what they claim is the Irish government’s lack of action.

Homa has been in prison in Tehran for the past three months and, a week ago, her family and friends received the news that she has been hospitalised.

In a piece recently published in The Guardian, Tariq Ramadan wrote:

As a Muslim scholar, I am deeply troubled by the unlawful and unjust detention of professor Homa Hoodfar, an Iranian-Canadian scholar who was detained in March while visiting friends and family in Iran. Members of the Revolutionary Guard raided her home, confiscated her personal belongings and passports, summoned her for interrogations, and finally imprisoned her in Tehran’s Evin prison without access to her family or a lawyer.

Her treatment violates principles of intellectual freedom, justice and fairness that are central to the Islamic system of morality.

Born in Iran and now a Canadian and Irish citizen, Hoodfar is a senior anthropologist who has devoted her academic career to studying the family as well as the duties and rights of women in various Muslim contexts.

A renowned scholar, she has taught at Concordia University in Montreal for the past three decades. Her research on Muslim women’s struggles – both in the Middle East and in the west – is balanced and characterised by respect for those about whom she writes.

Her extensive work on Muslim women living in the west and their veiling strategies has been a particularly important contribution to challenging colonial images of the Muslim veil, while at the same time helping to address Islamophobia in the west.

Since she is neither a political activist nor part of any political movement opposing the government of Iran, she never hesitated to visit the Islamic republic to see family or conduct historical research.

While Tehran’s prosecutor recently announced indictments against Hoodfar – along with several other dual nationals – the charges she faces remain unknown. Semi-official reports in newspapers with links to the Revolutionary Guard, however, accuse her of “dabbling in feminism” and fomenting a feminist “soft revolution” against the Islamic republic.

Hoodfar’s treatment demonstrates the extent to which her work has been misunderstood by the Iranian authorities. Her research poses no threat to Iran’s government or its people, and her arrest is deeply disturbing for anyone who values academic freedom and independent scholarship.

The detention of Homa Hoodfar is unjust and unIslamic. Iran should release her (The Guardian)

Pics: Emer O’Toole

21

Desperate for a house?

Don’t forget your shovel.

Niall Martin writes:

Homegrown Home Co-Operative is interested in hearing from anyone who would like to build their own home under expert tuition. You must:

1) Be on the Dun Laoghaire Rathdown Council housing list

2) Have the staying power to stick with a construction project that will take a year to complete.

3) Be available to work on a construction site from 8am – 4pm Mon- Fri , or have a family member(s) who can stand in for you when necessary

No experience necessary , social welfare payments not affected. Applications welcome from families with a member with a disability , or those from ethnic minorities .This is a not for profit project .

We are looking for five committed families who will work together to attain the goal of building five homes that they will own .For an information pack contact  myhomegrownhome@gmail.com

Above: drawings from architects Claire McManus and Dominic Stevens who are both working on the Homegrown project.

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