If you needed any more convincing that the world we live in is a bloody amazing place, take a gander at the Macropinna microstoma (big ear small mouth?) fish. It has cunningly adapted to the murky depths where it lives by developing a transparent head with eyeballs which can rotate within it, so that it can, literally, look out the top of its head. Now all I need is a genetic modification which replaces my shiny pate with a transparent one...
Wednesday, 25 February 2009
Tuesday, 24 February 2009
Various Voices - What's It All About?
1. It is a gay and lesbian festival.
In case you missed it somehow, Various Voices is a gay and lesbian festival. There will be about 2,000 LGBT delegates taking over the Southbank Centre and the city for a long weekend. What's not to like? More importantly though, it is a chance for people to be proud of who they are, and perform in a very public space. And this is not a one off performance, it is one in a series. I went to my first Various Voices in Paris four years ago, but there have been many before that. Philip R puts is best in his brief history of the Pink Singers when he says:
The Pinkies have forged close links with other European lesbian and gay choirs, taking part in the third European Lesbian and Gay Festival of Song in Stockholm (1987), and the fourth in Berlin (1988). In May 1989 we hosted 14 European choirs in London for the 5th European Festival of Song (now known as Various Voices) at the Hackney Empire.
This concluded with a big benefit concert for the Terrence Higgins Trust at Sadler's Wells at which Michael Cashman first announced the formation of a gay lobbying group called Stonewall - whatever happened to them? My favourite memories of that night are the massed choir of 500 voices singing We'll Meet Again and special guest Sheila Steafel singing Send in the Clones! Also appearing that night was Barry Cryer (of Radio 4's "I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue") and Gordon Kaye of TV's "'Allo 'Allo" making his first public appearance after being outed by the Sunday newspapers.
We have since sung at the Various Voices festivals in Hamburg (1991), Zurich (1993), Groningen (1995), Munich (1997), Berlin again (2001) and a very successful appearance in Paris in 2005 (where we received a standing ovation). This was our second appearance in Paris.
2. It is a festival which appeals to everyone.
One of the wonders of Various Voices is that it is a singing festival, and song is something which touches everyone. This time round we are making a deliberate effort to get as many members of the public, straight and gay, involved. The Pink Singers' recent success at Voicelab really drove home the point to me that singing moves many people at a fundamental level. Now just scale that experience up from one choir performing two songs to sixty choirs performing four hundred songs, and you will have an idea of how exciting it will be.
3. You make loads of overseas friends.
Anyone who has been on an overseas trip with the Pink Singers knows that one of the real pleasures is getting to know our host choir: sharing their food, sharing their city and sharing a song or two. This time we are the hosts, and not just of one choir, but sixty! It is a real opportunity to make friends and build bridges, and who knows? We may be invited to sing with a couple of choirs from Germany, or Switzerland, or Sweden, or even further afield next year.
4. It's not just about the concert.
This kinda goes with the above point, but it is almost traditional that visiting choirs organize parties of their own over the course of the festival. They usually take over a pub, preferably with a piano or karaoke system, and invite everyone else to come along for an informal drink and sing song.
5. It's a chance to strut your stuff.
Although choral singing isn't really about competition, it is a chance for us to really "show off our wares". We don't usually see many other choirs for a long time, even the ones in our own country, and this is a great chance to catch them all in action at once. Of course it works both ways too, and the Pink Singers are working on a repertoire to really glitter.
6. The singing doesn't stop when the curtains come down.
My one abiding memory or Various Voices Paris is finishing out choir block and streaming into the foyer of the Trianon theatre. All the other choirs were there as were most of the audience. Then one of the choirs started singing, and this was followed by another, and another, and the Pink Singers! The bar was open, the sun had set but the large french windows were open, and it turned into a merry evening of carousing. Memories truly are made of this.
Monday, 23 February 2009
Summer 2009 With The Pinkies
Symphonik Sounds In Malta
Teardrop
We rehearsed it for the first time yesterday and what can I say? I think Andy's arrangement goes beyond the original. His arrangement emphasises its wistfulness and seems to heighten the tinge of sadness even further. I love it!
Saturday, 14 February 2009
The New Tottenham Court Road Underground Station
Monday, 2 February 2009
And So It Begins!
It being the first week of rehearsals we also had a number of potential new members coming along. I imagine it is all somewhat overwhelming entering an enclosed room full of noisy, boistrous Pink Singers (not to mention the odour of nearly 80 bodies in a space with too little ventilation), but I hope they enjoyed themselves. People get really worried about the voice checking, but it is as informative to the newbies, as it is to the Mladen and Michael, and being at a rehearsal is as much an opportunity for the newbie to get a feel for the choir as it is for us to see how they fit in with us. Several of them came along to the pub afterwards, and it was fun hearing their stories of why they wanted to join and how they heard about us. Judging by yesterday's potential Pinkies, it looks like a good season ahead!
The First Gay Prime Minister
This is all the more relevant, considering how I just ranted about the importance of being out after having seen the film Milk. Now we are not just your workmates, your teachers, your friends... we are also your prime ministers.
In context though, Iceland is an extremely progressive society where being gay is like being blue-eyed. Something you are aware of, but which makes hardly any difference in the grand scheme of things. A quote from the Beeb's article on the appointment:
What is really historic about this new cabinet, says Skuli Helgeson, the general secretary of Ms Sigurardottir's Social Democratic Alliance, is not the fact that its leader is a lesbian, but that for the first time in Icelandic history it boasts an equal number of men and women.
"I don't think her sexual orientation matters. Our voters are pretty liberal, they don't care about any of that," he told BBC News.
You go girl!
Land Of Milk And Honey
I first heard about the film from one of the episodes of the Totally Rad Show, and I guess it is a mark of progress that what is essentially a video podcast about video games, gadgets and cartoons, i.e. boys toys, can rate any film about a gay man so highly. I loved this film too.
For me it was a perfectly presented window into life in 'Frisco in the late 70s, bell bottoms, hippies, and all, but especially into the life of gay men and women at the time. Gay people had gathered in the Castro for the safety of a community, but it was far from safe, with violence and queer bashing a sadly frequent occurence because of a strongly homophobic and bigoted society.
The main source of conflict in the film is the attempted passage of a law in California banning all gay men and women from teaching. It is interesting how the argument then (as now) is that being gay is somehow being 'anti-family'. What does that even mean? Anyway, Milk is tries to lead a political campaign to turn down this amendment, called Proposition 6.
At one point members of his team argue that it is important to let people have their privacy. But Milk's answer is that it is this privacy which is the problem. If people are secretive about being gay, it means that gay people can be seen as 'the other' i.e. not like me and therefore an easy target for discrimination. It is only when you come out that people realise that gay people are your brothers and sisters, your children, your colleagues, and sometimes even your parents and grandparents. So gay is 'us' not 'them'.
I'm not generally the activist sort, but coming out of that film with tears in my eyes I felt really proud to be gay, and proud to be out. But I also know that three decades down the line there are many people who still live in fear, and kids for whom coming out is still not an option. It is for them that Pride is so important.
"If a bullet should enter my brain, let the bullet destroy every closet door."
- Harvey Milk