The “About me” posts…

about-me-copyThose of us who blog spend a lot of time talking about ourselves and the things we think and do. Thats not about to change anytime soon!

There are a list of things on my “about” page which are recurring themes around the blog and also in my general day to day existence. Saying they are “themes” is a little inaccurate though and it may be best that i go through them one at a time and say a little more…

You may have never looked at the list and at a glance some of it may be obvious, or maybe not? Well, we shall see

Stay tuned …..

The first thing to explain is : Jesus

March 9, 2010

Behind the houses

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from my Blipfoto

March 8, 2010

40 Days of……..

Our Church are embarking on “40 Days of Community” soon so that means promo material like posters & banners etc. This one rolled out of the printer and bounced onto the walls yesterday…

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Find out what “40 Days of Community” is here

March 8, 2010

from the bass files…

I am not sure there are any pictures of me playing bass where i am not blurred…
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Cant keep still if im playing!

I was playing along with Who’s Next by The Who at lunch time, just to relax for a bit but really, who can relax with a John Entwistle bass line?

He was one of my favourites, a legend

March 5, 2010

How Great Thou Art

Aside from my parents i don’t think anyone else ever talked to me as much about Jesus when i was a child. I squirmed out of answers most of the time & used to dread her company but now that i am older and marginally wiser, i am grateful for “Auntie Gladys.” She was special!

To Jan, she was Nana……..this is her memories of her Nana

My Nana was a big lady. Her shoes could barely contain her. When she walked, little bits of her feet leaked out the sides. As a small child I plodded across her kitchen tiles and took laps of Great Nana’s bedroom, wearing her blood red heels and patent blacks, all the time wondering why they were almost as wide as long.

My Nana was a big lady. Ballymena could barely contain her. She burnt up and down the streets in a series of small cars- a mini-metro with a CB radio hidden under the dashboard, a silver grey bullet of unspecific origin, the passenger seat of which I gnawed to foam and nonsense on the daily school run home and the infamous, “I’m so sexy Saxo,” of her final driving days. As she lapped the town delivering shortbread, apple tarts and margarine tubs of home made vegetable broth to the sick, the shut in and the recently bereaved, she kept her stereo cranked to superhuman levels. Aside from a solitary Jim Reeves cassette, and two tapes of our second cousins singing gospel songs, most all of Nana’s music was of the male voice variety.

My Nana played piano like it was going out of fashion.

Upon arriving at the door of 10 Rockgrove Valley- having negotiated the ornamental rabbits and bird feeders, the potted plants and two tons of rabid Dalmatian wrecking havoc on your nylons- the surreptitious visitor (circa 1991,) might have been greeted by one of three sights. 1. My grandfather, watching endless episodes of Last of the Summer Wine, volume pumped to earthquake inducing levels, fully reclined in his reclining chair whilst shrapnel leaked from his trouser pockets, (a fact the Small Brother and I soon grew wise to, excavating for spare change, every time he vacated his chair.) 2. My Nana, fully reclined in her matching reclining chair, Take A Break firmly mounted to a red clipboard while she went at the puzzles with a mechanical pencil. 3. My Nana, installed at the upright piano, playing Jesus songs learnt by ear from the Believer’s Hymnbook. This by far was my favorite scene to stumble into.

As a very little child, (in the days before the Dalmatians, when the carpets of Rockgrove were still relatively hair free, and safe for lounging,) I remember lying on the floor, arranging my felt tips in rainbow order, as I was wont to do in those days, whilst I watched her feet pump the pedals; slowly, rhythmically like pistons clapping out some solitary dance. And while her voice was of the old-fashioned type, better suited to the revival tent than the concert hall, it was also an open-door of a voice, well accustomed to beckoning the stranger and the stumble-tongued into the song. As I sat under the piano stool listening and learning the ups and downs of the Old Rugged Cross, How Great Thou Art and Because He Lives I felt like a stowaway; a small, little light, privy to a much bigger secret.

To this day I have little time for the fall and rise of contemporary worship music- the Jesus is my boyfriend ballads, the stars and planets cosmology of the last five years and the endless repetition of monosyllabic sentiments- the old hymns are another thing entirely. The old hymns are grounded in a weighty, well-worn lyricism I’ve struggled to crawl away from. They puncture my stories like bullet points from my Presbyterian youth. They draw me deeply into literature; a love affair with library books which shows no sign of stopping. They make me tear up when Sufjan tackles Come Thou Fount Of Every Blessing and hanker after Christian era Dylan. Though I’ve wondered my whole life what, “thine eye diffused a quickening ray,” might actually mean, (imagining- until teenage times turned me serious and sensible- Jesus Christ with laser beam eyes baring down on the ill-prepared world,) I still recognize a deep, holy gravity and a perfect literary turn behind And Can It Be That I Should Gain, which rolls out like God himself, wonderful and warm and simultaneously inscrutable.

Not to say the male voice choirs didn’t haunt my teenage years. I clearly remember the horror of exiting the school gates to spy my Nana, standing in the car park, Saxo doors flung open to the wide world, whilst the Ballymena Male Voice Choir roared their way through Power in the Blood. Though fully outed as a Mannifest attendee and a regular member of the rather diminutive Cambridge House Girls Grammar School, CU, I was not yet comfortable enough with my Christianity to endure the awkward rides home with new friends from school. My Nana firmly implanted in the School Car Park would stop girls coming out of school and ask them if they needed a lift home. It would matter not one jot to Nana whether I knew these girls or not. Clearly unaware of the potential danger of riding in cars with strange old ladies, many of these girls would accept the invitation. Over the course of the car journey to Ballykeel or Dunclug, or the front doors of the Tower Centre, my Nana would pass out the polo mints, crank up the Male Voice Choirs and ask mortifying questions like, “Do you know Jesus as your personal saviour, love?” I would sit in the back seat, chewing on the strap of my school bag, mortified and too young to realize that many of these girls adored my Nana for all the very same things that made me squirm. As I progressed through Grammar school I would make a point of getting out the front door before the bell had even stopped ringing, hoping to limit the devastating potential of my Nana’s kindness.

(My Nana, blessed with the kind of universal humanity which would lead her to ask my Grandfather why the Word Cup Final couldn’t be called a draw, just to save disappointing anyone, was wont to take pity on every needy case which stumbled across her path. In her early seventies we had to gently ask her to stop picking up strangers who looked like they might be a wee bit tired walking home from the town centre. Once at the age of eight I recall my grandfather bringing home three German backpackers who had, rather naively, stopped him to ask where the campsite was in Ballymena. By the time I arrived at Rockgrove Valley the Germans were pitching their tents in the pocket-sized front garden of my grandparents’ bungalow whilst Nana cooked them all an Ulster Fry. There was no Earthly point in trying to explain stranger danger to my Nana. She was clearly more of the, a stranger’s just a friend I haven’t met yet, ilk.)

Alzheimer’s stole the last five years of my Nana’s life. It was devastating to watch her shrink into herself. She stopped playing the piano. Her fingers turned into thumbs and ached. The knitting went first and then the piano. I held her hand as she died, feeling the songs slide out of her in small raspy breaths. I read Revelation over her deathbed and for the very first time caught a small drift of those elemental things she’d been coaxing out of the Believer’s Hymnbook.

I held her hand as she died. She was a small shadow of my baby days. Her hair was a cotton cloud halo, her face lost and birdlike and her feet barely big enough to hold a shoe together. My Nana was still a big lady. It took half the town to lay her to rest.

Read Jan’s blog here

February 26, 2010

5 years of supersimbo…

birthdayI’ve been blogging for 5 years!

This month saw me reach a 5 year milestone with my endless moaning and complaining and occasional words of wisdom! I say ‘milestone’ because if i’m honest, i never expected i would still be blogging after 5 years.

Every so often the traffic dips into a valley and my pride tells me to quit!

There is some stuff in the archives which i no longer agree with or would adhere to but from time to time i like to look back at the past 5 years and see the growth and change that has taken place.

When i started to blog, i knew of nobody else locally or in my circle of friends who blogged. For a while i was ‘that guy who rattles on about blogging…….or bogging or something?’ Most people had no idea what or why or how!

Some of you followed though, copycats! I take no responsibility for your blabbering! Some of you should just quit! (kidding)

And here we are…..

I’ve changed jobs a couple of times, got married, flirted with graphic design, made friends, lost friends, caused some of you to ‘think,’ offended some of you, groomed my beard and quit doing ‘Christian music events’ – amongst other things…..

And so it goes on, this thing of ours!

February 24, 2010

How to feel miserable as an artist

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February 22, 2010

Consumers…

“Because our culture thrives primarily on commercialism, we are predisposed to feel a strong desire to buy unnecessary things on a regular basis. We have been conditioned to “need” the things we want. Critics and magazines fill their space with “must-see/read/play” lists that imply relevance hinges on whether or not we end up seeing the new Harry Potter film or playing a new video game. To miss the last episode of Lost, thereby damaging our pop culture identity and credibility, seems to us like self-sabotage, so we do everything we can to be there. We do our duty as consumers—we make the time, we spend the money, and we look forward to the next thing.”

Excerpt from ‘The Problem with ChoicesCollide Magazine

February 9, 2010

Navyblur

Basic RGBA few weeks ago i blogged about navyblur here

And now the moment has arrived to tell you that the website is live!

Fantastic photographers they are, and great people they also are…..

It was a joy to work on the designs for their website

See what you think……………… www.navyblur.co.uk

February 7, 2010

Help Haiti…….

Help Haiti Live is going to be a six hour event to raise money & awareness for the people of Haiti, their website is coming soon……or for updates on the progress of this event & the thoughts of Shaun Groves, go here

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The Church we attend is hosting a concert this Friday to try and raise money for Haiti. Read about that here and if you can come along to that, please do……….

Pretty much every day in my busyness i forget about Haiti but then i go online or switch to a news channel on the TV and there it is! Watching the support for the people of Haiti is pretty amazing but we probably can still do a little more…….

Click the image to help Compassion to help Haiti

January 23, 2010

Music you need to hear Pt 6

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January 22, 2010

Music you need to hear Pt5

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January 16, 2010

Sandwich

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You cannot beat a good sandwich….

Simple: a thin spread of mustard, some ham, tomato, cucumber, cheese and some pickled onions

What’s in your favourite sandwich?

January 14, 2010

Navyblur……

_MG_7542Collectively these two bozos have a photography business called navyblur.

Ok, they aren’t bozos! They are in fact very cool, creative and lovely people.

He is Xander, she is Christine and they take amazing photographs.

The name navyblur has been splishing and splashing around my flickr, my twitter and blog pages for a while now. Why you ask?

I’ve been having a fun time designing their ’soon to be launched’ navyblur website and can’t wait to see it online now. They are also two of the louder members of our small group! (joke, you knew that)

In 2009 these guys were part of a group of creative kids in our Church who have inspired me considerably. Ok, we are not all kids, some of us are over 30, yikes!

The increase in photography related blog posts is also a little bit their fault, we are planning a business of our own called ‘Redhaze’ and then further down the line, we will merge with them and call ourselves ‘rainbow explosion.’ You know, i am being silly here so this post isn’t too soppy………

Seriously though, these guys are amazingly talented and like i said, i cannot wait to blog more about them, learn about Jesus with them and become a better photographer because of them in 2010

January 13, 2010

Blogging, social media? what?

social-media-peopleIf i published books i would love to have a team of people with blogs and a good online presence to send a few titles to & have them blog about them. If i produced multiple musicians, bands & artists, you know? Like a record label? It would be great to send out a few cds a month and then see the effects of people’s honest opinions……….actually, sending cds is so last year, they could just provide an online source where the music could be downloaded?

As much as i have ranted about Christian Books and CCM in the past, this is the industry i work in and i enjoy it hugely. Sure i am not likely to be involved with events for a long time, if ever, but behind my opinions and sometimes rash comments lies a passion about books and music.

I think there is potential to change opinions and make things happen within the UK trade but anyone who knows the ‘Christian retail sector’ will know that 2009 ended with events that shook the industry to its core, so perhaps the “new-fangled” online stuff will yet again take a back-seat for now!

The thing i wanted to say though, is that the UK trade needs to waken up! It really does!

And before some of you say, “but we have a blog and we are on facebook & twitter.”

That may well be, but is it a priority of your business? Is it taken seriously at Board Level where the dinosaurs rule? Is someone actually paid to take care of your online presence or is it a task thrown in at the end of their days work?

In 2008 & 2009 i ran some ads on my blog for a ‘Christian music label’ who are a BIG concern. In order to do so, i had to go through the USA! I would also get regular pre-release music from them, all the way from across the Atlantic. I have nothing against the UK wing of this label, in every other way they do a great job but it is kind of odd that nobody on this side of the Atlantic wants to have the conversation about blogging, social media etc etc ….

There is an awareness of social media within some areas of the industry BUT not in many of the UK offices…………….

And i need to say, i am not trying to push myself into the limelight as some kind of guru, i am not an expert and i am also not trying to blag free products. I work in the industry, i get that anyway!

In fact, within the industry there is already enough activity going on for you to see what you need to do without listening to me!

Pick up the phone, send an email and speak to your associates in the USA instead of employing the old and tired methods which are starting to fail you!

Sadly i feel like i have said this all before but with the massive changes in the UK trade, perhaps there is a chance that someone will now step up and lead the way?

January 12, 2010

Facebook

Yesterday afternoon i logged back into facebook!

I de-activated my account at the beginning of December last year and between then and now had never set a date for a return.

Yesterdays return was not planned and has been like returning to a former place of employment or the “Church” i spent most of my teenage years attending. Full of familiar faces but the same old nonsense…….

It took me all of 10 minutes to feel like this. I removed a huge chunk of my “friends” for various reasons but in the midst of all that and changing privacy settings i stopped and asked myself why i was doing this……..why was i using facebook?

Well, the truth is i do not know. Sure there are some people in other countries who i really like and its a good way to snoop on what they are doing and for them to snoop on what i am doing without making any real effort to stay in touch. But, I have  my blog, i have twitter and i have email which for now anyway do a better job of meeting those needs with a little less snooping!

Having said that i am genuinely flattered that some people welcomed my return to facebook.

The conclusion i have come to is that facebook is on probation. Call it a last chance or whatever, but i have given it an undisclosed time for me to see how i feel. The invitations to groups and the applications and the stream of advertising that has eclipsed the original purpose for the whole thing weighs heavily against it right now but………

We shall see….

January 11, 2010

R2D2

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January 7, 2010

Recycle Bin Collection….

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Every monday, this weird and unstable looking “lorry/van/vehicle” arrives to collect our paper, plastic and whatever else is deemed as recyclable……..

Not very exciting but i knew i could possibly pull this effect off from our upstairs window when they zoomed in today…

I “think” it worked…

January 4, 2010

Blipfoto & my random images…

Whats Blipfoto you ask?

In a nutshell, each day you are allowed to upload a photo. The photo must be have been taken the same day that you post it!

If you want to make a competition out of it, check this out, but for me it will be a challenge to my limited photography ’skills’ but mostly, just fun.

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As i post images on my Blipfoto i will also blog them here & add them to my Flickr.

This is the latest image and a bit of an accident as i tried to get a good shot of the condensation on our bedroom window with the street light outside as a backdrop. You will find as we go along and,  as iv said before, that many of my images are an accident, but i won’t always tell you that!

Stay tuned for more……

January 1, 2010

2009 & the last patch of snow….

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Much like the snow, 2009 has gone in a flash!

See you all after the jump, Happy New Year!

December 31, 2009