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Albums Out Today: Tame Impala, Justin Bieber, Tennis, Cindy Lee

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In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on February 14th, 2020:

Image result for tame impala the slow rushTame Impala, The Slow Rush: Australian psych rock group Tame Impala are back with their fourth studio album, The Slow Rush. The follow-up to 2015’s acclaimed Currents was first teased back in October, when the band posted a mysterious teaser showing frontman Kevin Parker in a recording studio, while a longer teaser including the album’s title and release year appeared later. “Part of the thing about me starting an album is that I have to feel kind of worthless again to want to make music,” Parker stated back in July of 2019. The album includes the singles ‘Patience’ and ‘Borderline’.

Image result for justin bieber changes album coverJustin Bieber, Changes: The pop megastar has released his fifth studio album and follow-up to 2015’s Purpose, titled Changes. Bieber has been teasing the release of the record since last year’s Coachella, where he announced the new album while on stage with Ariana Grande. In a teaser he released on Christmas eve, he described the album as “the music that I’ve loved the most out of anything I’ve done.” Earlier this month, he premiered the single ‘Yummy’ as well as a YouTube docuseries that previewed some tracks and album details. Changes has 17 tracks and features collaborations with Kehlani, Post Malone, Travis Scott, Quavo, and Lil Dicky.

Image result for tennis swimmerTennis, Swimmer: Patrick Riley and Alaina Moore, aka indie duo Tennis, return with their fifth studio album and their first LP since 2017’s Yours Unconditionally. The album was written in the couple’s home studio in Denver as well as during a four-month sailing trip in the Sea of Cortez, Mexico. It was produced by the duo and mixed by four-time Grammy Award-nominee Claudius Mittendorfer (Panic! At The Disco, Parquet Courts). Along with the release of the lead single ‘Runner’, Moore explained: “The only instruments we had on board were an acoustic guitar and a drum sequencer, but the limitations seemed to work in our favor. Until that point we had no clear vision for our writing. The demo Patrick recorded that day outlined our future, the first contours of our next record.”

Image result for cindy lee what's tonight to eternityCindy Lee, What’s Tonight to Eternity: Cindy Lee is the drag queen moniker of Patrick Flegel, formerly known as the lead singer of the Calgary art-rock band Women. Today Lee has released their fifth LP, What’s Tonight to Eternity, via W.25TH. The album is partly inspired by the life of Karen Carpenter. “I found a deep interest and comfort in her story, which is a cautionary tale about the monstrosity of show business, stardom at a young age, and being a misfit looking for connection,” Flegel explained in a press release. “What I relate to in her mainly has a lot to do with her output and what is unknown about her, how much she kept hidden to herself while having this public profile.”

Other albums out today: Katie Gately, Loom; Nathaniel Rateliff, And It’s Alright; Summer Camp, Romantic Comedy; Anvil, Legal At Last.

What ‘Sex Education’ Teaches Us About Adolescence

There are almost too many things to love about Sex Education, the Netflix coming-of-age show that stormed its way into our hearts early last year and recently returned for an equally hilarious and heartfelt second season. Its imaginatively colourful setting – a fictional British village infused with elements of late-twentieth-century American culture; its refreshingly progressive attitudes on sex; its deliriously modern sense of humour; and, perhaps most of all, the way it combines the characteristically raunchy, biting style of comedy that one might find on other Netflix shows like Big Mouth and The End of the F*cking World with a genuine heart that’s pretty much unparalleled in the genre.

Ultimately, though, what makes this show so binge-worthy and delightful to watch is its diverse cast of compelling characters. A lot of teen shows, even when they do their best to approach adolescence with honesty and realism, end up neglecting another important ingredient of good storytelling: compassion. The creator of Sex Education, Laurie Nunn, captures the joys and frustrations of these characters without looking down on them or having to compromise on the invigorating ambition and zaniness of the show, because she clearly comes from a place of empathy – a paradoxically challenging perspective for a writer, given that having been a teenager is pretty much the one thing all adults have in common. Nunn also wrote the show in part to make up for the lack of discussion around sex she witnessed growing up, and so it’s no surprise that the characters’ almost surreal openness about sex feels liberating rather than tactless or parodic.

For a show whose comedic premise rests on teenagers intimating their most embarrassing sexual vulnerabilities, including “I’m really freaked out by bumholes”, it’s a relief that none of them are ever the butt of the joke. On Sex Education, the boggling perplexity of sex is something to poke fun at. That of adolescence is not. Now, one might argue that the show is by no means the only comedy that takes its teenage characters seriously; and indeed, in recent years there has been an increasing amount of sweet, intimately-drawn coming-of-age stories that have graced the big screen, from The Edge of Seventeen to Eighth Grade to Booksmart. But Sex Education takes that refreshingly modern attitude and applies it to the TV series format in a way that no other show has done as successfully. The medium allows the creators the necessary space to paint compelling, dynamic portraits not just of its protagonists, but also of the entire, remarkably diverse cast of characters – thus encouraging viewers to sympathize with perspectives other than that of the straight white nerdy kid at its center.

Extra Large Movie Poster Image for Sex Education (#2 of 12)

Of course, Sex Education takes plenty of cues from other cultural touchstones. John Hughes’ films were obviously a big influence, so much so that there’s even an episode that directly borrows from The Breakfast Club where all the girls must stay in detention until they find one thing they have in common (“Other than unsolicited penises, not much,” they conclude.) And the show shares a lot with its natural predecessor and edgier alter ego, Skins – a British dramedy that offered an uncompromisingly sobering look into the dark sides of adolescence, oscillating between realism and escapism. While both shows can be seen as revolutionary in their truthful yet creatively audacious depiction of the lives of a distinct set of troubled young adults, where characters on Skins sometimes felt distant in their outrageous recklessness, the ones on Sex Education always feel close to us, even at their most extreme. And they certainly don’t feel as derivative or overdramatized as, say, the ones on the last season of 13 Reasons Why.

What’s perhaps most remarkable about Sex Education is the fact that it stands out as a refreshing and rare achievement while very much adopting familiar character archetypes: from the socially awkward white protagonist, to the gay best friend, to the rebellious girl, to the popular sports kid. But rather than blindly embracing them, the show manages to transcend these tropes, either by subverting them or enriching them through unique, compelling character arcs. Take the show’s protagonist, for example: on the surface, Otis (Asa Butterfield) seems like the kind of instantly likable good guy – “non-threatening like a Care Bear”, as one of his ‘patients’ describes him. But the creators make it painfully clear that he’s very much a flawed character who’s not incapable of doing wrong, especially on season two, where you get pretty close to hating him. But you don’t, because it doesn’t feel like the writers are purposefully exploiting the character for the sake of drama – rather, it’s a natural progression of the narrative, a narrative that delves into difficult internal conflicts and growing familiar frustrations that fester without being resolved. And let’s not forget that his whole schtick revolves around giving sex advice to pretty much everyone in the school – not exactly something that fits his archetype.

Asa Butterfield and Emma Mackey in Sex Education (2019)

Then you have Maeve Wiley (Emma Mackey, echoing Effy from Skins), Otis’ partner in crime, who represents the ubiquitous cool bad girl archetype. Though Maeve is characteristically tough and badass, that’s not what defines her character, and neither is her bookishness or independence, which is as far as most shows would be willing to go. What makes Maeve one of the most captivating teenage characters in recent memory is the incredible nuance that makes up who she is as well as the vulnerability and kind-heartedness that lie behind her façade, which surpasses even that of supposed empathy expert Otis. Mackey wonderfully captures the deep-rooted sensitivity of her character, which manifests itself affectingly on season two, whether she’s confronting her relationship with Otis, her mom, or the all-consuming “depth of her aloneness”. There’s a unique complexity to Maeve that easily overcomes the perceived superficiality of the archetype she embodies.

Then there’s Eric (played superbly by newcomer Ncuti Gatwa), Otis’ shamelessly outgoing best friend, who has one of the most heart-wrenching arcs on the show. For a character who ostensibly fits a lot of the stereotypes of a gay TV character, his intensely riveting storyline reveals the multi-dimensional nature of his personality. At no point does the conflict he faces in season two, where he’s caught between the promise of a seemingly ideal relationship and the complicated sexual dynamic that arises when his ex-bully comes back in town, come off as carelessly exploitative or melodramatic – rather, it feels genuinely thoughtful and ground-breaking in its boldness. And the considerable amount of screen time afforded to his ex-bully, Adam (Connor Swindells), serves to humanize the character without blindly redeeming him or excusing his actions.

Asa Butterfield and Ncuti Gatwa in Sex Education (2019)

But where the second season of Sex Education truly excels is in giving its secondary characters not just time in the spotlight but also equal consideration, further broadening the representational diversity of the show – not just in its inclusion of underrepresented voices, but also in the way it allows them to grow. Ola (Patricia Allison) is a prime example of this, as she goes from being a kind of characterless obstacle standing in the way of Maeve and Otis’ relationship to someone who not only claims her own agency but also comes to explore her own queerness – a process which, up until this point, had only been explored through the familiar lens of someone feeling deeply ashamed rather than liberated by that discovery. The colourful animated segment accompanying Ola’s newfound sense of sexual freedom wonderfully demonstrates that there’s more than one way of coming to terms with one’s sexuality, and the fact that it’s more a consequence of her overall character arc rather than the only thing that defines it speaks to the strength of the writing. On the other end of the spectrum, one might argue that the mention of asexuality in one episode, however unexpected, feels grossly underdeveloped – almost implying that there’s more exciting narrative potential in writing about pansexuality than asexuality – but, in the writers’ defense, there’s only so much that can fit into one season.

Patricia Allison and Tanya Reynolds in Sex Education (2019)

The themes explored on the show aren’t limited to romance or sexuality, either. Jackson’s (Kedar Williams) mental health struggles as he attempts to grow out of the role assigned to him by his parents and reinforced by his peers, for instance, is one of the most harrowing storylines of season two, while the introduction of Viv (Chinenye Ezeudu), his new tutor, acts as an opportunity to explore newfound friendships in an inspiringly heartfelt manner (let’s just hope the creators don’t force them into coupledom in the future). Maeve and Aimee’s (Aimee Lou Wood) relationship is another example of the show placing emphasis on the value of teenage friendships, as Maeve bravely stands by her side and guides her through the process of reporting a sexual assault incident. Aimee’s arc speaks to wider societal issues around sexual misconduct without coming off as pandering or preachy; instead, the creators remain true to the specificity of the character, resulting in what is perhaps the most empowering and resonant storyline of the season – one that concludes beautifully with an 80s-inspired scene set to the magnificent tune of Sharon Van Etten’s ‘Seventeen’.

Sharon Duncan-Brewster, Hannah Waddingham, and Kedar Williams-Stirling in Sex Education (2019)

Notably, it’s not just teenagers who have compelling storylines – where other teen shows either demonize or satirize adults (if they acknowledge their existence at all), Sex Education is particularly inventive on that front. Otis’ mom, Jean (Gillian Anderson), is not just a comically overprotective mother who is obsessed with observing and controlling the sexual life of her son, which initially seemed to be the premise of her character. Rather, she becomes a fully-fleshed character who must eventually challenge her own ideas about sex and relationships when Jakob (Mikael Persbrandt) enters her life, and season two reveals the intricacy of her character in ways that are excellently conveyed by Anderson. She also helps another character, Adam Groff’s mother (Samantha Spiro), in reclaiming her sexual autonomy, thus suggesting that discovering one’s sexuality isn’t something that’s limited to the age of young adulthood, but a lifelong process.

And indeed, what’s funny about season two is that the adults act a lot more like stereotypical teenagers than the teenagers themselves do; from Jean’s fits of anguish to, most tellingly, Principal Groff’s (Alistair Petrie) perpetual stubbornness and increasingly erratic emotional outbursts. Adolescence here refers less to a specific developmental stage than a made-up cultural signifier. And ultimately, what Sex Education teaches us through its varied storylines and heterogeneous perspectives is that adolescence is not some sort of fixed process that’s experienced by everyone in exactly the same ways – rather, it’s a fluid construct that’s continuously and reflexively redefined by the individual. Once stripped of our ideas about adolescence as shaped by decades of bad – but also good – cultural representations, we see those characters in a completely new light, which is precisely why the show feels like such a breath of fresh air. It’s not that these characters don’t go through the familiar struggles of adolescence; but any sense of a common lived experience is only a consequence of their unique individual stories, not the other way around. By creating nuanced, honest portraits of its characters, Sex Education dispels myths around adolescence and allows them to shine for what they truly are – and it’s only through this acknowledgment of difference that they can find what unites them. And it’s more than just unsolicited penises.

Selfie Project by Véronique Duplain

Véronique Duplain, a resident artist at Arsenal Contemporary Art Montreal, presented her seventh edition of the Selfie Project. The project is a month-long marathon of sharing a selfie a day on her social media accounts. Throughout the project, Duplain explores themes of fantasy and everyday challenges with a touch of subtle humour, underscoring the absurdity of daily routines and cast a critical eye on the idealized view of the modern woman.

You can find more work by Véronique Duplain via her website, Instagram, and Facebook.

 

Trailer for Wes Anderson’s ‘The French Dispatch’ Released

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Wes Anderson’s forthcoming film The French Dispatch is a love letter to reporters set in an outstation of an American newspaper in a fictional 20th-century French city that brings to life a collection of stories published in the magazine named, The French Dispatch.

The cast of the film includes Saoirse Ronan, Timothée Chalamet, Elisabeth Moss, Léa Seydoux, Bill Murray, Willem Dafoe — to name a few.

Fine Art Photography: How To Get Started

For many enthusiasts, photography quickly transitions from a fun hobby into a serious artform, with some of the world’s best photographers creating exhibitions that are both insightful portrayals of the world and the human condition, and gloriously beautiful all at the same time.

Today, there’s loads of gadgets out there to get even the most basic of smartphone cameras to produce stunning photos, but it takes a great deal of skill to create true works of photographic art.

For those who want to turn their beautiful photographs into art that will inspire and astound, check out these tips.

Hire A Professional To See How They Operate

The basics of art photography are linked to traditional photography, so hire a photographer to see how they work and get an idea of how to go about entering this market. Find top-rated and professional photographers in Australia using LinkU and watch how they work. You could hire several different photographers for a few basic photoshoots, so that you get a broad overview of how they structure their work and create beautiful images that resonate.

Study Different Styles Of Art Photography

Much like traditional art, there are many different types and styles of art photography. If you’re looking to get started in this diverse market, you’ll need to learn about the styles out there and find the one that you’d like to emulate.

Follow Photographers On Social Media

As part of your research into the fine art photography market, you should find a selection of artists whose work you admire and try to follow them on social media. This will allow you to see their work, gain inspiration and learn about the latest trends in this fast-paced industry.

Practice Using Your Phone Or An Old Camera

When you first start fine art photography, you need to start slowly and not invest too much money in expensive equipment. Instead, hone your skills by setting up small shoots using the cameras you have at your disposal already, such as an old one or even your smartphone. Learn about how to use lighting, positioning and other techniques to create different effects.

Invest In Quality Equipment As You Improve

After your first few shoots, if you decide that fine art photography is the vocation that you’d like to pursue, then you’ll need to invest in a quality professional camera and other equipment. You should try to set up a small indoor studio so that you can take photos in the perfect environment, as well as carrying portable gear that can be used to take images out in the open.

Ask For Feedback From Galleries And Fine Art Photography Experts

Once you start producing quality images, you can ask for feedback from the people who know the most about this medium: fine art photographers, consultants and galleries. Approach your favourite galleries and others in the industry and ask for their thoughts on your work to gain a professional opinion of how well you’ve done so far and what you could do to improve in the future.

M. Ward Announces U.K. Dates

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M.Ward, a well-regarded figure in the world of indie folk music, has announced the dates for his short U.K. tour in October, 2020. The tour comes after the release of his upcoming album Migration Stories, which is due to be released on the 3rd of April via Anti Records.

Talking about the album Ward stated: “Some time went by, the stories wove together and I remember them now closer to characters in a dream of how people could treat each other than any kind of front-page news realism. I think music subconsciously – whether writing or listening – is a filter for me. Helping to process all the bad news into something new to build from. Some records to me are like self-fulfilling prophecies – visualizing change to wish something into being. Those records inspired this one.” 

UK Tour Dates

October 27th – Caves, Edinburgh
October 27th  – District, Liverpool
October 27th – Islington Assembly Hall, London

Sound Selection 084: Imperial Daze Present ‘Monomania’

Cobey. Current Future

Opening with an excellent single is a newly found artist Cobey. In this piece named Current Future, Cobey., an impressive artist out of Chicago, showcases mellifluous vocals, magnificent production, and a vibe that will have you yearning for more. Cobey. as an artist has been writing music since 2007, but looks to make 2020 his most significant with the release of Current Future.

Kasablanca Hold Me Close

Switching to electronic music, we are presented with Hold Me Close by Kasablanca. In this piece, Kasablanca explores the mixture of the 80s and modern tech-house, reminding us of artists like Justice and Nero. Hold Me Close is not just a superb song for the car, but a song that reminds us of different mediums, more specifically films such as Drive or video games like OutDrive. It is a beautiful track, full of activity and movement, deserving every bit of praise it gets.

Loneborn Loosen Up

With honey-like vocals and a smooth production, Loneborn, a duo out of Miami, US, showcase their marvellous style in their latest single Loosen Up. Loneborn have a subtle touch in their music, helping the music flow smoothly to the ears of the listener. It is their first single of the year, giving them a brilliant start to the year.

Imperial Daze Monomania

Imperial Daze, the psych-pop band from London, has returned with a fresh single Monomania. If you’re a fan of their previous work, Monomania won’t be a let down. Building on their impressive discography, Monomania delivers on their top-notch production quality and stand out energy that has become aligned with the name Imperial Daze.

Celeste Stop This Flame

After a brilliant year in 2019, the amazing Celeste return with a radio-ready hit Stop This Flame. This energetic and catchy tune is a must for any quality playlist. Celeste wrapped up 2019 by winning BBC’s Introducing Artist of the Year and Sound of 2020 after the success of her single Strange.

Albums Out Today: Green Day, Stone Temple Pilots, Nada Surf, Ásgeir

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In this segment, we showcase the most notable albums out each week. Here are the albums out on February 7th, 2020:

Image result for green day father of allGreen Day, Father of All Motherfuckers: Green Day are back with their thirteen studio album, also known by its censored version Father of All…, out now via Reprise RecordsIt is the pop punk band’s shortest album at just 25 minutes and 53 seconds with 10 tracks, including singles ‘Fire, Ready, Aim’ and ‘Oh Yeah’. In an Instagram post, Billie Joe Armstrong described the album as “The New! soul, Motown, glam and manic anthemic. Punks, freaks and punishers! The Dirty messy. The Stink.” He continues: “The lyrics are like a party and lifestyle of not giving a fuck. The life AND death of the party. Not political. Surviving in chaos. The real shit.” He ends by proclaiming: “Our motto?? ‘Nothing says fuck you like a unicorn’.”

Image result for stone temple pilots perdida album coverStone Temple Pilots, Perdida: The alternative rock band has returned with their eighth studio album following their 2018 self-titled release. It marks their second album with vocalist Jeff Gutt, and also finds them shifting from their classic alt-rock sound to a more acoustic approach, one which, according to bassist Robert DeLeo, the band had wanted to delve into for a while. The title, which translates to “loss” in Spanish, indicates one of the key emotional themes of the album – one of the songs, ‘I Didn’t Know the Time’, is about the loss of two of the band’s previous singers — original frontman Scott Weiland, who passed away in 2015, and Linkin Park’s Chester Bennington, who had replaced him. “I was trying to be vulnerable and that’s a scary thing to do, but it’s also kind of comfortable,” Gutt explained.

Image result for nada surf never not togetherNada Surf, Never Not Together: Yet another 90s alternative rock band returns with their ninth studio album, titled Never Not Together and out now via City Sland. Nada Surf reportedly changed their creative outlook after celebrating the 15th anniversary of Let Go in 2017, recording a lot of demos before narrowing it down to the ones that made it into the album. The main theme of the record, as evidenced by the title as well as the lead single, ‘Something I Should Do’, is communal unity: “Empathy is good, lack of empathy is bad, holy math says we’re never not together,” Matthew Caws declares at the end of the track.

Image result for asgeir bury the moonÁsgeir, Bury the Moon: Icelandic singer-songwriter Ásgeir has released his third full-length album, Bury the Moon. Following 2017’s Afterglow, the record was inspired by the artist’s stay at an Icelandic summerhouse with just a guitar and a small keyboard, ruminating in solitude during a period of heartbreak a la Justin Vernon. “I’ve always had this longing to go somewhere on my own,” Ásgeir said in a press release. “I think it was really good to go there and just think about music, and have no distractions whatsoever.”

Other albums out today: Sepultura, Quadra; Envy, The Fallen Crimson; Richard Marx, Limitless.

Interview: NYNNE

Before the start of her AW20 presentation at the Copenhagen Fashion Week, NYNNE, a beloved fashion designer, joined us for an interview to talk about her latest collection and what it means to be presenting it in Copenhagen.

Hi, how are you?

I’m great thank you, we are currently on our way to the venue for the presentation and there is lots to do today but I’m excited about it

So, how did you get into fashion and how did the label come alive?

I have been working on fashion for quite a while now, when I was younger I decided to move to London to study womenswear design at the Istituto Marangoni. I have always been fascinated by the way women dress and what this represents, therefore when I had the chance to move to London to preside my dream in womenswear, I couldn’t have been more excited.

I was honoured to win the Istituto Marangoni X Luisa via Roma womenswear prize with my graduate collection, which saw me showcase the NYNNE SS20 collection at the Palazzo Serbelloni during Milan Fashion Week and this was really the start of the brand.

You are presenting your AW20 collection, can you tell us about the themes of the collection?

The underlying theme of NYNNE is celebrating female empowerment and champing women. The AW20 collection has been inspired by the abstract expressionist art movement within the 1940s and more importantly, the homage to works of art women created an era that was heavily male-dominated.

This season’s silhouettes and finer details are inspired by the elegant life of art enthusiast Peg¬gy Guggenheim. The collections luxurious weighted leather pieces stand in contrast to soft jerseys and silk satins. Whilst the burnt orange, brown, black and a touch of blue, are taken out of Joan Mitchell’s many paintings from this time, including ‘Two Sunflowers’ as part of her expression of freedom, she was one few female artists gaining critical acclaim. Rich textures with vibrant, lyrical colour enrich this NYNNE’s collection with luxurious silk satins, buttery leathers, sheer chiffon alongside the return of shearling from her first collection, which completes this sophisticated edit.

You are presenting your latest collection in Denmark at the Copenhagen Fashion Week, how do you feel about it and do you feel there is more pressure as it is your home country?

I’m so excited to be coming home to Denmark, as I haven’t really interactive with Danish fashion since moving to London in 2014. I’m intrigued to see how the Danish community react to my designs and the collection.

Of course, there is pressure as it’s my home city but I’m lucky to have the support of my friends and family here. Copenhagen Fashion Week has a very relaxed atmosphere in comparison to other fashion weeks and this will be my first time doing a presentation at a beautiful Gallery Bo Bjerregaard in the Meat Packing District.

With a lot of ups, 2020 looks like an exciting year for NYNNES, what do you hope to achieve in the coming year that will make you stand out in the world of fashion?

My goal has always been to design clothing that women want to wear and feel glamorous and confident in, so I hope to see women wearing the clothes out and about as the brand grows.

Also, I would love to see NYNNE being stocked within certain stores throughout the world, so that people can access the clothes even if this means feeling the fabrics, trying on new styles for them etc. Finally, I’m looking forward for us to find our brand’s pace, as we begin to grow and expand the collections, where NYNNE is available etc. I’m just looking forward to experiencing the journey of the brand, to be honest.

The topic of fast fashion is big talk in fashion at this moment of time, what is your opinion on fast fashion and its impact on society and the world?

Fast fashion has been accessible to a large market for so long because of the price tags, and by not educating the consumer on how these clothes were being made. Nowadays, the consumer wants to know more and demands transparency from the brands they are investing in, as well as caring more about their social impact on the environment. It’s an important topic to talk about and figure out how to make that section of the industry more sustainable and aware of their actions.

I feel the future of fashion is that consumers want better quality, better finishes to their clothes and know that the looks they are wearing now will last them a lifetime instead of going into landfill. It’s really about investing in yourself and your wardrobe, which we can see is currently creating a divide within the industry.

Our final question, what is your definition of culture?

I think it’s hard to define culture since it plays a role in several aspects of my daily life. Culture for me is establishing a community where creative forces can flourish and shear ideas between peers. Creatives can sometime get lost in their own minds and therefore it’s important to collaborate and embrace collective creativity.

Interview: Joep Beving “Our relationship to reality has been my main source of inspiration”

Joep Beving, a composer and pianist, will be touring the US in February for a short period of time. Before exploring the land of opportunity, Beving joined us for an interview to talk about his music and culture.

Hi, how are you?

Great. Thank you. In the train on my way to Paris at the moment and the sun is just coming up. Could be worse. A coffee would be nice though.

So, when did your love for music start and how would you describe your music to someone who has not heard of you?

I think the love started when I was old enough to climb behind the piano that my parents had at home. But who knows, I might have been born with it. The music I make at this point in life falls in the category neo-classical music although that is a misleading label. It’s a crossover between pop, ambient and classical music I would prefer to say.

You shared your musical journey to the masses with your album Solipsism back in 2015, what impact has the album had on your life and how do you feel it ties in with the idea of solipsism itself?

A huge impact I should say. It has opened the doorway to the second chapter in my life. In which I am hopefully more connected to myself and the world around me. The idea of solipsism – reality only exists in one’s own mind – is a bizarre idea for most people. To me as well. But exposed to the grotesqueness of the news and the negativity we are bombarded with on a daily basis, it is not so strange to think that people are more and more retracting from the outside world and in to their own mind or bubble. Alienation is the result and this for me was the starting point when writing my debut album. My hope was to make something that would resonate with the people around me on a level that was oftentimes difficult to put into words. Reconnecting on a human level, in a way to find trust and comfort. When the music started to travel, this was often the response I got from people. It has taught me to trust.

In terms of success, you’ve had quite a bit of it over platforms such as Spotify, some people would consider you a star of the neo-classical genre. Do you feel this has had an impact over how you make your new pieces?

Much of the success I feel is in the accessibility of the music. Literally, since it is presented in this day and age in playlists that are easy to find and put on. And most of the music itself is simple and well, easy to digest. That is not to say it is without substance (although some people might disagree, haha). Up to this point I haven’t been influenced too much by what seems to be popular or well listened to, nor calculative about what I am about to make next. Although to be perfectly honest, for my last album Henosis I did think about including solo piano pieces along the more elaborate compositions as to take along all the listeners I had gained with my solo piano work. Although I feel strongly about just making what feels right at the moment and don’t be too much rationally involved in the creative process.

Henosis is your latest and longest album. What is the album about and how does it tie in with the two other albums, Prehension and Solipsism?

Our relationship to ‘reality’ has been my main source of inspiration when writing music. Between every album I have tried to zoom out. First unconsciously, later deliberately. For Henosis this meant I envisioned it as a journey into the cosmos, far away from the self where it had started. In search of what is fundamental in reality, beyond the immediate perceivable. Henosis means oneness or unity with the source of all that is. The outward journey reflects the inward journey, much as the build up of our inner workings reflects that of the macro-cosmos. Once that idea starts to dawn on you, the level of connection deepens beyond imagination. Everything is connected. Think about it. If you see the other as merely a physically alternate representation of yourself it will be very difficult not to feel some form of empathy. The same goes for any other life form. I realize it is not all that straightforward and I don’t want to postulate this as being the truth. However to me this realization has come closest to a somewhat hopeful and admirable version of it. It completes the circle that started with a growing sense of alienation from reality I dealt with at the time of Solipsism, to a growing sense of becoming one with it.

You’re doing a short but an exciting tour in the US, is there a specific place you are looking to play the most?

From my previous concerts in the US I do remember that NY and LA have been very good to me in terms of how the music was received and the general vibe during and after the show. Sadly I won’t play in NY this time around, but we already performed this show (with ACME) at the end of last year there. I hope to be back though! So I am looking forward to playing LA again, but the other cities just as much to be honest.

You have released four albums now and have had terrific success. What’s next for you?

I am working on a film score at the moment and this is something I see myself doing more in the future. Hopefully it is something I can do for the rest of my life. I don’t see myself traveling around the world forever and am looking to find ways to be able to continue a  life in music without having to fly this much. That said, I hope to be starting on a new album at some point this year and we’ll also be bringing my latest album with the bigger group (adding electronics and sometimes choir) to more cities. Most importantly I want to use the time I have in Amsterdam to be with my family and to learn new things. I have a lot to learn still and feel like I am just getting started in all this. It’s a new life, for which I am incredibly grateful.

My final question, what is your definition of culture?

Establishing meaningful connections in consonance with the spirit of truth. And a good excuse to go out for a beer.