A nice visit, a new car and the semi spontaneous road trip to Norway.

Last weekend we had the pleasure of getting a visit from Matthew, Ali and Daisy Grey. I got introduced to Matthew (aka Tig) via Simon Waterfall 5 years ago as they were starting up their fashion label Social Suicide; lovely suits done by lovely people. The Greys came over with a campervan with the intention of driving around Scandinavia for 2 weeks.

The same weekend as they were here we bought a new car. A red Fiat Bravo 1.9 JTD from ‘07. So when we sat down looking at where Tig, Ali and Daisy were to go next, we kind of got coerced into following along.

Unfortunately Willow already had other engagements, and I was planing to fly down to Italy the following weekend. But as the days passed I just felt so reluctant to once again take the buss to the airport and once again fly (would be something like the 15th flight in the last couple of months), so, as the weekend grew closer, we decided to throw the tent and sleeping bag in the back of the car and catch up with the Grey family in Norway! We left Thursday at 7pm and passed the border before midnight the same day.


Above is a screen grab of the route we ended up driving. see map here, or here: http://bit.ly/16O74u.

The car was a pleasure to drive, so we covered the first stint with ease and met up with the Greys in Åndalsnes already for lunch on Friday. Besides the Greys, I also ran into a few distant relatives to me, Mr and Mrs Troll.

The day after, we drove Trollstigen together. Trollstigen is not far of being a car version of the Milford Sound Track in New Zealand.

After Trollstigen Willow and I left the Greys to continue south while we headed north to do the Atlantic Road before dropping on our way to meet up with our friend Maria Berge in Trondheim.

All in all. Lovely to meet up with the Tig, Ali and Daisy. I loved to drive the new car. We enjoyed being after the late season, and we will definitely visit Norway again very soon to do some walking.

And, next time the Greys are here on a visit, we decided to spend a few days kayaking around the Stockholm archipelago.

Willow was in charge of the camera, so befriend her on flickr to be notified of when more photos are available.

Leave comment  Twitter  Facebook

London – Milan – Stockholm – Milan – Paris – London

Following up on my Social Suicide post, Tig, (Matthew Grey) had two fashion trade shows on the agenda — White Homme in Milan, and Tranoï in Paris — and his business partner and friend, Simon Waterfall, was tied up with presidential D&AD duties. So, having nothing better planned i decided to follow along and help Tig set up and host two trade shows.

The whole week ended up a bit mental.

We left London for Milan on Friday morning, 4am. On Saturday we set up the stand. On Sunday evening I left Tig and flew up to Stockholm to do 5 interviews over two days. Tuesday evening I flew back to Milan to drive up to Paris on Wednesday morning and set up the stand the same evening. On Thursday evening I took the Eurostar train back to London to enjoy a well deserved and relaxed Friday.

The photograph leading this post is of an umbrella that was part of the White Homme stand. Next year’s spring summer collection from Social Suicide is about the weather and the Beaufort scale — a scale to measure weather and wind based mainly on observation. So as an small installation piece for the stand we had an umbrella hanging from the ceiling with a looping video projected on it’s inside of white clouds moving across a beautiful blue (most probably non-english) summer sky. We also handed out free umbrellas to interested parties. These umbrellas started to play the sound of rain when they were opened (most probably english summer rain).

Leave comment  Twitter  Facebook

Social Suicide

I’m a bit surprised over the fact that I have maintained this blog since May 2006 and have hardly mentioned the fashion brand Social Suicide. Guess it’s one of those constantly ongoing things that you just don’t think to talk about.

Social Suicide is a fashion brand founded by two very good friends — Simon Waterfall and Matthew Grey. They started up the brand about the same time that I joined POKE back in 2003.

My final project at Hyper Island was to develop the brand online, build a website and develop the graphic profile. It was a well-received project and was even recognised and featured in Creative Review.


Photograph of the Creative Review piece featuring my final project on Social Suicide.


Photograph of the book that was part of the documentation of the project.

Since then i’ve been helping the boys out with everything from business cards, websites, online shop, suits, delivery etc and so on.

The best way to get an idea of what the brand is about is to visit socialsucide.co.uk and have a look at this video presentation.

Thw below photograph is one of many great stories surrounding Social Suicide. Simon Waterfall was invited to meet the Queen. For the occasion we designed a special suite.

The Pearly Kings and Queens are an East London tradition as old as the bricks and mortar of Bow Bells. They are the aristocracy of the working classes.

We used the tailoring traditions of the working class to make a suit for the monarch. 400 hand sewn mother of pearl buttons form an image of HRH as seen on British coinage and postage stamps. Simon was invited to the Palace and he went in the suit: “We were very kind your Majesty – we used a postage stamp from the 1970s”.

Since 2003 the brand and it’s products have matured a lot. The bold statements have become more subtle and have been fine tuned with a more sophisticated edge. The cut of the suite and material have been refined. Matthew, who’s working on Social Suicide full time, has built contacts with sellers as well as manufactures and prepared the whole concept with great success.

3 comments  Twitter  Facebook

Marilyn Manson and Turbonegro at Wembley Arena, London, 5th December 2007

manson-1.jpg
I didn’t really know what to expect on my first Marilyn Manson gig. I’ve seen a few live videos and heard about his amazing theatrical stage performances and stage set, for instance, the Hitler-esk podium act during Antichrist Superstar, but for the last few years I haven’t been tuned in to the world of Marilyn Manson.

I attended the concert with Richard Dee and Simon Waterfall. Richard was a Manson Virgin, as I, while Simon was an experienced manson-ite.

On our arrival to Wembley I was a bit disappointed. I thought the concert was in the new Wembley Stadium, built in 2007 and seating 90,000; not Wembley Arena, built in 1934 and seating 12,300. But since the Arena turned out to be about 1 third empty — the entire back section of the arena — I can see why they chose the Arena and not the Stadium. Obviously I thought an artist of Marilyn Manson’s caliber would attract a larger audience. So, even before I entered the venue, I had to re-adjust my expectations; turn the dial down a few levels. One positive outcome of the smaller venue was that our otherwise poor seating was closer to the stage.

Similar to a check-in queue in airports; it’s fairly easy to guess what has brought the gathering of people together. In an airport it’s the destination, at a concert it’s the artist. An audience is an artist’s reflection. So, on a Marilyn Manson concert… well, I can’t say it’s a pretty sight. Freakshow is not the right word but the first that comes to mind. Confused. Lost. No. One thing is certain — I didn’t blend in. So, to be honest, I was the freak.

Supporting Marilyn Manson was the Norwegian deathpunk band, Turbonegro. They are absolutely wicked. Unfortunately not that many people were there to see Turbonegro, and Turbojugend, their famous fan club, didn’t seem to have many representatives present. When Turbonegro tried to get the audience to sing along to the song “I got Erection”, hardly anyone joined in. So Hank Von Helvete, the lead singer, abandoned the attempt and tried get the audience to sing “I’m a Londoner, so I can’t get an erection” instead. Brilliant.

Photograph captured by Andrew Kendall
Photograph captured by Andrew Kendall

And then came Manson. From start to finish the performance just grew and and grew and got better and better and better and better. Looking back on it, I don’t think he could have failed even if he tried too. With songs like Disposable Teen, mOBSCENE, The Irresponsible Hate Anthem, Sweet Dreams, The Fight Song, Rock Is Dead, The Dope Show, Antichrist Superstar and The Beautiful People, I can’t see how a failure would have been possible.

One thing that I wouldn’t have minded more of is dialogue between the songs. I see dialogue between songs as bonus material that you don’t get on albums, and it’s something I treasure quite highly when I go to a concert. A front figure like Zack de la Rocha of Rage Against the Machine can get away with not uttering a single word during a concert, but he belongs to the exceptions and not the norm. An artist like Marilyn Manson is the kind of artist you’d expect and want to speak his mind between songs.

As the concert kept going, I began to get very jealous of the job of my fellow Swede and guitarist, Tim Sköld. I would have loved to be on that stage and play those tunes. So much energy. So easy and yet so damn good. However, I have learned that Tim’s role in the band extends way beyond just playing guitar live — he’s producing, editing, doing artwork, electronics, drum programming and beats, playing guitar, keyboards, accordion, synthesizer bass and backup vocals — which I can’t say I envy. But to stand on a stage and deliver the energy of those songs through a guitar — priceless.

Photograph captured by David Herranz
Photograph captured by David Herranz

One thing that struck me during ‘The Fight Song’, while the words FIGHT were flashing up in big red letters behind the stage, and the main part of the standing audience were raising their fists and screaming along “FIGHT! FIGHT! FIGHT! FIGHT!”, was how provocative Marilyn Manson really is. We liberal Europeans shouldn’t forget that Manson’s main audience is based in America, where about 80% of the population are christians. As Simon Price on the Independent said:

Context, of course, is everything. A recent USA Today /CNN /Gallup poll revealed that 88 per cent of the American population believe that God had at least some hand in the creation of life on Earth. And so, when Marilyn Manson ascends a lectern for a mock-Nazi rally during “Antichrist Superstar” and sets fire to a copy of the Bible, one has to remember where he comes from.

If Manson’s shock tactics appear a little blunt to us urbane Europeans, one has to remember that this – the land of the religious right, the Intelligent Designers and the pro-lifers – is the battleground where he fights.

Photograph captured by James Harber
Photograph captured by James Harber

As the lighters during a ballad have been replaced with the light of a camera-phone, youtube seems to be the replacement for photography, reviews and set lists. I had to spend quite a while online to locate the set list of the night, I finally managed to find it on lyingonthecovers.net, but way before I managed to do that, my search query had found basically the whole concert through the eyes of a camera-phone lens on youtube.

  1. If I Was Your Vampire (See it on YouTube)
  2. Disposable Teens (See it on YouTube)
  3. mOBSCENE (See it on YouTube)
  4. Tourniquet (See it on YouTube)
  5. The Irresponsible Hate Anthem (See it on YouTube)
  6. Are You The Rabbit? (See it on YouTube)
  7. Sweet Dreams (See it on YouTube)
  8. Lunchbox (See it on YouTube)
  9. The Fight Song (See it on YouTube)
  10. Putting Holes In Happiness (See it on YouTube)
  11. Heart Shapped Glasses (See it on YouTube)
  12. Rock Is Dead (See it on YouTube)
  13. The Dope Show (See it on YouTube)
  14. The Reflecting God (See it on YouTube)
  15. Antichrist Superstar (See it on YouTube)
  16. The Beautiful People (See it on YouTube)

Enjoy.

1 comment  Twitter  Facebook

Mothers brilliant piece on London Ink

London InkLondon InkLondon InkLondon InkLondon InkLondon InkLondon InkLondon Ink

Last week Simon Waterfall and I bumped into Laurence Thomson (aka Lolly) from Mother in the lunch queue. During lunch, Lolly told us about a sculpture they’d created to promote the tattoo TV program called “London Ink” (a UK version of the US show, “Miami Ink”) on The Discovery Channel. He had spent the previous night mounting the first, out of two sculptures, down by the Thames. When he explained the concept and idea during lunch it sounded a bit interesting, but when i saw the photos of the sculptures later on in the week the ‘a bit interesting’ turned into ‘very very nice!’.

The photos in the slideshow above was taken by Alastair Strong and Laurence Thomson.

The “Swimming Man” was placed down by London Bridge.
The “Girlfriend” was placed inside Victoria Station.

Leave comment  Twitter  Facebook

My english is getting bader and bader

Every post on the blog hear are full off mistake. Grammar mostly, but also spealing. And it’s not looking to become less. I knew this because must posts are getting corrected by willow the day after or so they been posted.

My speaking isn’t getting any better either. My good friend and colleague Simon Waterfall can vouch for that.

So I have come to the conclusion that Mr language and me aren’t best friends.

Either,
because I’m raised in one country, have a father from another and live in a third, where non of the three share language or currency.

Or,
my right brain hemisphere has got a bigger and better engine then my left – my dominant hemisphere is the right one. The frontal lobe of the dominant hemisphere controls language, speech and writing. The left hemisphere is important for all forms of communication, while the right specialises in receiving and analysing information from the outside world. The only thing that doesn’t fit into this equation is that normally if you are right handed, your left hemisphere is the dominant one.

I wasn’t “build” to speak three languages – just something that happened, and therefore – I speak three (and understand 6) but master none.

Leave comment  Twitter  Facebook