Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Hauntology. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Hauntology. Mostrar todas as mensagens

17.12.25

feld - magazine - #1 - 2025 - by Jörg Follert - tem compilação para download


 

feld 


magazine com compilação digital ou vice-versa

2025

nº 1




With Aki Tsuyuko... Andi Lemke... Anja Sackarendt... Catherine Norris

David Yates... Didda Jonsdottir... Dolly Dolly & Fogroom... Frieda Luczak

Jeannette Priolli... João Paulo Daniel... Knistern... Listening Center

Michael Hoepfel... Nobukazu Takemura... Paul Bareham... Plastic Moonrise

Raffael Dörig... Retep Folo... Simon Bridgestock... Sukhdev Sandhu

The Heartwood Institute... Volker Pantenburg


Aki Tsuyuko & Mole G Mussoco - Mole

Andi Lemke - Séance der Steine

Dolly Dolly & Fogroom - Geometric Shapes

Knistern - Zwischen rot und morgen

Listening Center - Uncertain Slopes

01 Saturn Aspect

02 Uncertain Slopes A

03 Uncertain Slopes B

04 Uncertain Slopes C

05 Uncertain Slopes D

06 Uncertain Slopes D

07 Uncertain Slopes E

Paul Bereham - Islander

01 Blackwater Composites

02 Clattering Halyards

03 St. Peter-on-the-Wall

04 Doomsday Across The Water

Plastic Moonrise 01 Islands of the Blessed

02 Lovesong (fortune)

03 Maggie

Retep Folo - Cell I

Simon Bridgestock - Another Threshold (Diptych)

The Heartwood Institute - Your Chances Of Survival


The music can be found here: https://bit.ly/Feld_music_2025


I am just a hint

When I had the idea for Feld, I wasn't thinking about something coherent and styllistically

homogeneous. There was just an urge to give expression to something still formless. A state

of entanglement, of connectedness and of apparent contradictions, perhaps. All I realized

quite quickly that I wanted to involve people who I value, who interests me or who has been

with me for a long time. Direct and indirect. With the inspiration that I owe them and because

 of their idiosyncrasies and the happy and surprised moments that they or their actions have

revealed to me. And because they were prepared to entrust me with their works, I can´t

 emphasize enough how happy that makes me. So the release of this magazine may seem a

rather loose mixture to some, but I suspect that it is more than that, I hope it´s an inspiration

and a place of possible associations. A blurring and a bit more clarity at the same time.

In any case, it is a search for a hidden structure that seems to work through the world and

how I sometimes sense it.


Jörg Follert (06/2025)


mail@joergfollert.de joergfollert.de


34 páginas A4 papel grosso - 100grs, tipo cartolina, não brilhante a cores. 











10.2.25

Moolakii Club Audio Interface - Singles Club - MCSC014 Jan 25


 

continua a coleção | da subscrição










3.2.25

Livros sobre música que vale a pena ler - Cromo #114: Phil Smith - Albion's Eco-Eerie - TV and Movies of the Haunted Generation


autor: Phil Smith
título: Albion's Eco-Eerie - TV and Movies of the Haunted Generation
editora: Temporal Boundary Press
nº de páginas: 134
isbn: N/A
data: 2024
1ª Edição
TV e FILMES #1


 





Temporal Boundary Press

Na capa:

“The perfect companion to Mark Fisher’s The Weird and The Eerie”

MAXINE PEAKE

Published by Temporal Boundary Press

Shrewsbury, 2024

Em Inglês

© Phil Smith 2024


Contents:

Introductrion – 1

The Material Demons – 9

A Quick Word About Demons – Night of the Demon – The Maze –

The Company of Wolves;

The Vegetable Demons – 35

The Quatermass Xperiment – Quatermass 2 – The Strange World of

Planet X – Fireball XL5: ‘Plant Man from Space’ – Quatermass and 

the Pit;

The Eco-Eerie Margins of Albion – 79

O Lucky Man! – The Changes and Children of the Strones –

 Enchantment and Possession;

Matter Questing – 101

Whistle and I’ll Come to You and A Warning to the Curious – The

Lovecraft Investigations – At Two with Nature – Hellraiser and

 Hellbound: Hellraiser II – The Girl with All the Gifts;

Conclusion – 123

Beech and Book – 131

Bibliography - 133


A vermelho: Os Filmes e Séries de TV que interessam... comprar... a

maioria há em DVD e/ou Blu-Ray, alguns com legendas em pt.


Na contracapa:

In Albion's Eco-eerie: TV and Movies of the Haunted Generation Phil

Smith takes us through a selection of weird films and TV shows and 

uncovers a wholly unexpected ecological and political message.

Unlike most approaches to folk horror or hauntology, we are

interested here in an alternative reading; one that attends to the

unhuman characters, the materials and the edgeland spaces.

A hobgoblinology.



"It is a bold book that takes the weaving path or blood, trauma and

sensuality away from Folk Horror and fashionable 'hauntology' into

new, enchanted spaces. Digging up and doubling down on messy

ideas and demon lovers that exist not to elevate us to

transcendence but to immerse us in the mud of grotty instinct".


Stephen Volk, author of Ghostwatch



"Albion's Eco-eerie is a fantastic exploration into culture's obsession

with 'the other'. Dissecting some of our most regarded folk horror

creations to present us with the political and theoretical heart that

beats inside. How our desire for escape through paralell worlds

holds the key for a deeper future. The perfect companion to Mark

Fisher's The Weird and the Eerie."

Maxine Peake, actor and political activist



Phil Smith is the author of many books including Goblin Queens and

Qualia Knights and Mythogeography: On Walking.

He is an Associate Professor at University of Plymouth.



£9.99

Temporal Boundary Press

"The boundary is undefined"




18.12.24

Livros sobre música que vale a pena ler - Cromo #112: Stephen Prince - "A Year In The Country: Cathode Ray And Celluloid Hinterlands"


 

autor: Stephen Prince
título: A Year In The Country: Cathode Ray And Celluloid Hinterlands - The Rural Dreamscapes, Reimagined Mythical Folklore and Shadowed Undergrowth of Film and Television
editora: lulu
nº de páginas: 340
isbn: 978 -1-9160952-5-0
data: 2022
1ª Edição





capa

A YEAR IN THE COUNTRY

CATHODE RAY AND CELLULOID HINTERLANDS

 

Stephen Prince

 

contracapa

The rural dreamscapes, reimagined mythical folklore and shadowed undergrowth of film and television

 

A Year In The Country: Cathode Ray And Celluloid Hinterlands undertakes in-depth studies of films, television programmes and documentaries and wanders amongst depictions of rural areas where normality, reality and conventions fall away and the landscape becomes deeply imbued with hidden, layered and at times dreamlike stories, taking in modern-day reinterpretations of traditional myth and folklore and work that has become semi-obscured from view through being unifficialyly available or otherwise having become partly hidden away.

It explores film and documentary hinterlands including, amongst others, the embracing of the ‘old ways’ in The Wicker Man; John Boorman’s creation of an otherworldly Arthurian dreamscape in Excalibur; the alternate retelling of folk legend in Robin and Marian; the unreally vivid seeming snapshots of folk rituals in Oss Oss Wee Oss; the slipstream explorations of The Creeping Garden and stories from the ‘haunted borderlands’ in Gone to Earth and The Wild Heart.

The book also investigates the hauntological spectral and ‘wyrd’ undergrowth of television, including, alongside other programmes, the unearthing of mystical buried powers in Raven; the utopian meeting of starships, pedlars and morris dancers in Stargazy on Zummerdown; teatime Cold War intrigues amongst bucolic isolation in Codename Icarus; Frankenstein-like meddling away from the mainland in The Nightmare Man; the magical activation of stone circles’ ancient defence mechanisms in The Mind Beyond episode ‘Stones’; and the ‘Albion in the overgrowth’ recalibrating of mainstream television in McKenzie Crook’s Worzel Gummidge.

 

 

 

A YEAR IN THE COUNTRY

CATHODE RAY AND CELLULOID HINTERLANDS

The Rural Dreamscapes, Reimagined Mythical Folklore and Shadowed Undergrowth of Film and Television

 

Published by: A Year In The Country, 2022

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without permission from the publishers.

www.ayearinthecountry.co.uk

 

ISBN: 978-1-9160952-5-0

 

Copyright © Stephen Prince, 2022

Edited by Suzy Prince

Cover image and typesetting by A Year In The Country / Stephen Prince

 

Other books by Stephen Prince:

A Year In The Country: The Marks Upon The Land

A Year In The Country: Wandering Through Spectral Fields

A Year In The Country: Straying From The Pathways

The Corner Mother

The Shildam Hall Tapes

 

Albums by Stephen Prince:

The Corn Mother: Night Wraiths

The Shildam Hall Tapes: The Falling Reverse

 

Albums by Stephen Prince (working as A Year In The Country):

Airwaves: Songs From The Sentinels

No More Unto Dance

Undercurrents

 

 

Contents:

Introduction – 9

Notes on the Text – 20

Preface: A Definition of Hauntology, its Recurring Themes and Intertwining with Otherly Folk and the Creation of a Rural and Urban Wyrd Cultural Landscape – 21

1. The Wicker Man: Casting Aside Convention on Summerisle – 28

2. Paul Wright’s Arcadia: Views from a Not Always Arcadian Idyll – 48

3. Excalibur: John Boorman’s Creation of an Otherwordly Arthurian Dream – 55

4. Play for Today and Rainy Day Women: Village Mob Rule and the Spectres of Archivel Television – 73

5. Bagpuss: Portal Views Into a Magical Never-Never Land – 82

6. Takashi Doscher’s Still: Explorations of Southern Gothic, Wyrd Americana and Eternal Cycles – 90

7. Gone to Earth, The Wild Heart and Talking Pictures TV: Stories from the Haunted Borderlands, Conflicts Between the Old Ways and the New and Preserving the Fading Shadows of Film and Television History – 103

8. Strange Invaders, Robert Fuest’s Wuthering Heights, Kate Bush, Oklahoma Crude and Twilight Time: A Time Warp Small Town Invasion, Passion Amongst a Downbeat Landscape, Untamed Frontiers and a Media Sunset - 121

9. The Mind Beyond and ‘Stones’: Activating Ancient Pretenatural Defence Mechanisms and a Sidestep into the Pioneering Work of Irene Shubik, Verity Lambert and Delia Derbyshire – 134

10. Oss Oss Wee Oss: Joining the Dance Far Away from the City – 150

11. The Straight Story: Road Movie Quests and a Gently Lynchian View of Journeying Through a Near Mythical Landscape – 162

12. Shadows: The Layering of Time, Folklore and Myth – 173

13. Codename Icarus: Teatime Cold War Intrigues Hidden Amongst the Bucolia – 191

14. The Creeping Garden: The Slipstream Explorations of a Science/Science Fiction Fantasia – 207

15. E4’s ‘Wicker Man’ Ident: An Edge of the Field View of a World Unto Itself – 214

16. Raven: Unearthing Hidden Buried Power and Battles to Safeguard the Future – 219

17. – Andrei Tarkovsky’s Stalker: Seeking Answers in the Forbidden Zone – 231

18. Radio On and Fords on Water: Escape and Exploring the State of the Nation in British Road Movies – 257

19. Whistle Down the Wind: Adventures in a Time Capsule Landscape – 273

20. Hell Drivers and The Bargee: Searching for Freedom and Autonomy in an Overlooked Corner of the Landscape and During the End of an Era – 284

21. Stargazy on Zummerdown: Starships, Pedlars and Morris Dancers Meet in Utopia - 289

22. Robin and Marian: The Return and Reimagining of a Living Legend – 313

23. The Nightmare Man: Frankenstein-Like Meddling Away from the Mainland – 319

24. Worzel Gummidge: MacKenzie Crook’s ‘Albion in the Overgrowth’ Recalibrating of Mainstream Family Television – 326

Appendix: The ‘Good Housekeeping’ Wiping Television Archives – 339

 

Introduction

The word ‘hinterland’ in this book’s title refers to the term’s meaning and use to describe an area that lies beyond what is visible or known, and this in turn connects with the three main interwoven strands and characteristics of film and television which are referred to in the book’s subtitle and that are the central themes of the book:

1. Rural dreamscapes: the depiction of rural areas where normality, reality and conventions fall away and/or are able to be sidestepped, and of the landscape as being deeply imbued with hidden, layered and at times dreamlike or otherworldly stories.

2. Reimagined mythical folklore: the differing ways that traditional myth and folklore have been explored, reimagined and reinterpreted.

3. The shadowed undergrowth of film and television: work which is semi-obscured from view through one or more of a number of factors such as no complete versions being known to still exist, having had only a very limited cinema release, no longer being available to officially easily view at home due to DVDs etc. going out of print and becoming rare and/or high in price and/or never having been officially released digitally, work that since its initial broadcast decades ago has only been available via unofficially distributed degraded quality versions and so on.

The book is released as part of the A Year In The Country project which has a broad reach, but at its core is an exploration of what could be called ‘otherly pastoral’ or ‘wyrd’ culture, that incorporates the undercurrents and further reaches of rural and folk-orientated music and culture, and where these meet and intertwine with what has come to be known as hauntology, which is a loosely interconnected area of culture that is part characterized by its creation of parallel worlds which contain reimagined spectral echoes of the past and a yearning for lost progressive futures.1

A Year In The Country began in 2014, and as part of the project since then there have been more than 30 book and music releases alongside over 1,100 posts on the website which (among other things) consist of artwork and written pieces inspired by, and relating to, that otherly pastoral/spectral hauntological intertwining.

Along the way the project has explored and connected multilayered and often hidden pathways and signposts that have sometimes become buried inn the cultural undergrowth over time: from explorations of the eerie landscape to tales of hidden histories via the shape of the future’s past that can be found in Brutalist architecture, alongside acid and underground folk, ‘edgelands’, electronic music innovators, older British public information films, rural progressive or utopian settlements and associated temporary autonomous zones and photographic countercultural festival archives, early canonic and modern folk horror film and television work, the unsettled times and atmospheres of the Cold War, folkloric film and photography, the faded modernity and future ruins of road travel, imaginary film soundtracks, the ‘ghosts’ and forgotten far-reaching projects of the former Soviet Union, contemporary hauntological-esque music releases and hazily misremembered televisual tales and transmissions and an accompanying strand of later 1960s through to early 1980s young adult-orientated British television series which had surprisingly complex and/or dark themes.

On the A Year In The Country website and in the books published as part of the project the resulting work has included writing on the likes of, amongst many others: the films and television programmes The Owl Service (1969-1970), The Changes (1975), Children of the Stones (1977), Nigel Kneale’s work such as The Stone Tape (1973) and Quatermass (1979), Bagpuss (1974), The Moon and the Sledgehammer (1971), The Wicker Man (1973) and Kill List (2011); music by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, Howlround, Vashti Bunyan, Anne Briggs, Jane Weaver and Kate Bush and released by the labels Folklore Tapes, Trunk Records and Ghost Box Records; and the photography books Memory of a Free Festival (2017), Homer Sykes’ Once a Year: Some Traditional British Customs (1977), Sarah Hannant’s Mummers, Maypoles and Milkmaids: A Journey Through the English Ritual Year (2011) and Rebecca Litchfield’s Soviet Ghosts (2014).

The albums released by A Year In The Country have included a number of themed compilations that, via work created specifically for them, explored interconnected areas of culture, history and memory, including (again amongst others): abandoned villages, the flashpoints of history and conflict in the landscape, derelict Cold War infrastructure, ancient trees and their passage through time, the faded dreams of the space race, deserted industry and echoes of tales from woodland folklore. Alongside work by myself, they have featured contributions by, alongside other contributors: Pulselovers, Sproatly Smith, The Séance, Widow’s Weeds, The Heartwood Institute, Depatterning, Howlround, Field Lines Cartographer, Dom Cooper, Keith Seatman, Grey Frequency, Time Attendant, The Rowan Amber Mill, Listening Center and Vic Mars.

I have written about some of the roots and inspiration for A Year In The Country in previous books released as part of the project and on its website, but in order to provide a background for this book, and also as some reading it will not have read the earlier work, I discuss and at times revisit some of the inspirations and pathways that lead to A Year In The Country below.

In part the roots of A Year In The Country probably stretch back to decades before it began, when at a young age for a while I lived in a small rural village and spent much of my time living a bucolic existence bike riding, climbing hills, damming rivers and so forth. But at the same time, this was to a background of becoming aware of the threats, worries and paranoia of the Cold War and also discovering exploratory, dystopic and catastrophic science fiction in books and television that while thoroughly intriguing me may also in part have been a little too old for me to fully understand and/or that had at times decidedly unsettling themes and atmospheres. These included intriguing glimpses of the dystopic young adult orientated television drama series Noah’s Castle (1979), which I did not see in full at the time but saw just enough of for its depiction of societal collapse and hyperinflation lo linger in an intriguingly unexplained and half-known way in my imagination. Around a similar time, I also saw and read the aforementioned final 1979 series and the accompanying novelization of Nigel Kneale’s Quatermass and their stories of the extraterrestrial harvesting of the world’s youth amongst ancient rural stone circles, John Wyndham’s post-apocalyptic Day of the Triffids (1951) and its terrifying-at-times 1981 television adaptation and also Wyndham’s The Midwich Cuckoos (1957), in which a village is invaded by a preternatural hive mind group of children. The latter of these I never knew the ending to until many years later, as the copy I read had the last page or so missing and so I did not know if the village was saved or not.

I state in A Year In The Country: Wandering Through Spectral Fields (2018):

“This mixture of a pastoral playground, a world on the edge and fantastic fictions proved to be a heady mix for the dreamscapes of a young mind, all of which would be some of the initial seedlings [that] would lead one day to the creation and ongoing themes of A Year In The Country.”

If I look back to before my time living in that village, my interest in rural areas begin depicted in fictional work as containing a sense of being ‘otherly’ or ‘wyrd’, alongside an accompanying and intertwined interest in hidden half-known stories, may also have some of its roots in a time when one of my teachers would only read the first few chapters of a book to the class I was in, hoping that it would encourage her pupils to read more, wanting to know how the stories ended.

One of these books, which I did not subsequentlty finish reading myself, has stayed lodged in my imagination ever since, although I still do not know the name of it and I am not sure if I want to as I seem to prefer it existing in a half-known state in my mind. All I can remember is it being set rurally and a few hazily recalled characters and plot points, which included a benign witch-like older woman with knowledge of the ‘old ways’ and it featuring some form of ancient stone with possibly less benign mystical qualities which she guides two children, or possibly teenagers, to neutralize in a both magical and prosaic seeming manner.

The way that this story remained part known, open-ended and a thing of mystery, alongside only seeing glimpses of Noah’s Castle and not knowing the ending of The Midwich Cuckoos are part of what semi-consciously inspired the “shadowed undergrowth” theme of this book.

In more recent times, several years before I started A Year In The Country, I listened to a friend’s copy of the compilation album Gather in the Mushrooms: The British Acid Folk Underground 1968-1974, which was released in 2004 and curated by Bob Stanley of Saint Etienne. The reimagining and pushing back of the boundaries of folk music on the album seemed to open up something in my mind, and this was a notable influence on the creation and themes of A Year In The Country.

Around the same time and in the period that followed hearing that album I listened to The Advisory Circle track ‘And The Cuckoo Comes’ from the Mind How Go album that was originally released in 2005 by the aforementioned Ghost Box Records: a label that explores a hauntological-esque parallel world, and I also watched the videos which accompanied the album by Broadcast and The Focus Group: Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age (2009), which featured collaborative work between Broadcast and Julian House, the latter of whom is one of Ghost Box Records’ founders. This track and the videos have a woozy, hazy dreamlike and at times unsettling rural atmosphere, and in the case of the videos also implies that the rural areas they take place in contain hidden, unexplained and layered stories.

Accompanying this, around a similar period I read Allan Brown’s book Inside The Wicker Man (2000), which in part explored the also hidden and layered stories around the now-iconic 1973 folk horror film The Wicker Mans’ production, and I also semi-consciously became intrigued by the 1998 red vinyl edition of the film’s soundtrack released by Trunk Records. The latter of these contained a location map from the film, which through its hand-drawn and photocopy-like character seemed to imply that you were looking at something only semi-known or an unearthed secret.

The Wicker Man became one of the recurring touchstones and reference points for A Year In The Country, as did the sense of no complete version of it still being known to exist and how watching it can be like being given an extended glimpse of the ghost of the full film. Viewing it can also be not dissimilar to watching an almost fever dream-like documentary about the way of life and events on its isolated island location, and it creates and depicts a world unto itself where wider societal norms and conventions have been cast aside. Alongside which its story and world are deeply imbued with myth and folklore that seems to draw from, refract and reimagine traditional folk culture and ancient stories, rituals and beliefs, and to connect with hazily distant half-known memories of them.

The sense of reimagining mythology, folklore and folk culture and the landscape being layered with dreamlike, semihidden stories and secrets in work such as that referred to above, alongside a loosely interconnected landscape of other work that explores interrelated areas, and my discovering and investigating it combined and intertwined to become part of the inspiration for the themes, atmospheres and explorations of A Year In The Country and subsequently the three central themes of this book.

As referred to previously, part of the “shadowed undergrowth”, semi-obscured or semi-hidden aspect of those themes refers to the way in which there is a large subsection of film and television that is lost or obscured in plain sight, at times perhaps forever, which includes the just mentioned complete version of The Wicker Man.

Despite the vast range of older film and television productions that have been released as DVDs, Blu-rays and/or digitally, there are still large gaps in what is available to view at home, or at least view more easily, in reasonable quality and/or officially. Sometimes this is because, in part, as mentioned previously, official physical releases may be out of print and have become scarce or relatively expensive to buy or were only released via now obsolete formats, films and programmes never having been officially released in any for for home viewing after their initial cinema release/television broadcast, them only ever having been released on Blu-ray and/or DVD that are ‘locked’ for viewing in particular areas of the globe, them only having been distributed unofficially online in degraded quality form etc., or in the case of The Wicker Man it is because the complete version or the ability to recreate it is probably not possible due to the footage being Thought to have been disposed of, some versions of the film becoming lost and so on.2

Also, the gaps in what is available to view easily, officially and/or at all is partly due to how in previous decades television programmes were not always archived; this was for a number of reasons: sometimes they were performed and broadcast live and not recorded or often the recordings, or at least parts of series, were later wiped in order that tapes could be reused both because their relatively large physical size meant that they required a large amount of storage space which in turn resulted in archiving them being costly and also the high cost at the time of such recordable media meant that being able to reuse it could cut production cists. Alongside this was not always realized that programmes would be of interest in future years, possibly in part because in previous decades ‘repeats’ of programmes were seen as something to complaint about.3

Accompanying these factors a number of television and film programmes from previous decades do still exist but are only available for official viewing at particular locations via private viewings, as is the case with a number of British films and programmes that are stored at the BFI National Archive.

Curiously some of the ‘obscured from view’ television programmes that have never had official home releases in any format since their initial broadcasts, including some ‘wyrd’ rural culture-related ones that are discussed in this book, do surface online, often uploaded unofficially by, presumably, the general public to high profile open-access video streaming sites such as YouTube, but it is not always clear what the origin of the videos are. They may be from television broadcasts that were recorded by the public on home video cassette recorders and later digitized, but some contain timecodes or studio countdown intro sequences, which imply that at some point they were copied from master tapes and/or internal production copies.

These unofficially distributed versions are often, if not generally, poor quality and it is quite likely that they are multi-generational copies; watching them can be akin to viewing an impressionistic interpretation of the original recordings, where the world as depicted in them, the stories they tell and the atmospheres they create are murky, smeared and seen through a haze of degraded media. Because of this they are a distinctive and curious anomaly in the current media landscape where films etc. are often released for home viewing in ever-higher resolution and once prepared for release utilise the generally-precise replication processes of digital distribution. Also, at the same time, the low quality of such unofficially distributed versions of programmes etc. becomes almost an inherent part of their character and lends to them a sense of being hauntological spectral versions of themselves.

Although, as referred to above, these are not officially sanctioned releases, the copyright holders seem to not know of or overlook them, or at least they do not appear to rigorously seek them being removed. Perhaps they do not have the resources to do this, or do not focus on preventing the unauthorised distribution of these sometimes semi-forgotten programmes but rather direct their attention and resources toards controlling the unauthorised distribution of higher profile and more indemand content. Whatever the reason, this overlooking could be considered to make their distribution not so much a form of forbidden samizdat-like publication but rather a form of archival folk preserving and distribution of culture that, while unsanctioned, acts as a substitute for official releases.

This book focuses in part on such unofficially distributed television programmes, including Stargazy on Zummerdown (1978), Rainy Day Women (1984) and The Mind Beyond  episode ‘Stones’ (1976) but I am aware that by the time it is published and read some of the programmes which are written about may have become officially available or some may no longer be ‘unofficially’ available. Alongside which, some of the films and television programmes discussed in the book that at the time of writing were not always as easily available for home viewing due to one or more of the previously mentioned factors such as DVDs going out of print and becoming rare, high in price etc., may have been reissued in one form or another in the UK and/or elsewhere. With this in mind, the book is a snapshot of a particular point in cultural time and place and also of the spectral ‘lost in plain sight’ character of these films and television programmes.

In part, the book reflects and documents a form of personal detective story during which trying to discover, for example, what official versions have been released of certain films and television programmes, if any, and in what forms, countries etc.; if unofficially distributed programmes etc. are available for official viewing in archival collections; if a programme was only broadcast once; tracking down writing that is long out of print and/or has never been put online which focused on a particular film or programme that had also not been written about extensively and so on became a type of intriguing and engrossing puzzle.

Accompanying which, it may be the semi-hidden nature of such film and television programmes and the work required in seeking out and connecting information about them that is an element of what drew me to them, particularly due to it contrasting with the wider contemporary cultural landscape where much of culture is easily available via the click of a mouse, tap of a remote etc.

Interconnecting with this, and to a degree also contrasting with it, the book does not overly focus on licensing, copyright ownership issues etc. which may have resulted in films and television programmes not being available. Rather it approaches their release (or non-release etc.) from a standpoint that, in these days of potential ease of cultural distribution and access via digital networks, it is interesting and curious that there is still often a notably piecemeal and patchwork availability of much of film and television, whether in terms of it being officially available at all, which countries it has been released in, the varying costs of releases, what platforms and/or formats it is available on etc. Such aspects of film and television distribution seem to be distinctively disparate to the contemporary digital release and distribution of music, which is, generally much more internationally standardized and widely available across a variety of platforms. This disparity remains notable even with an awareness that the film and television-related copyright and licensing issues, production costs, the creation of digital transfers etc. are potentially more expensive and complicated than with music.

With this in mind, to a degree, the book has something of an underlying, and until had finished it probably largely unconscious, theme of being intrigued and surprised that the distribution and ease of access to film, television etc., has not ‘settled down’ into a largely more standardized widespread digitally-available model as has occurred with music.4

The Wicker Man contains and reflects many of the central themes of the book through, as discussed above, its depiction of an isolated rural world unto itself where normality and conventions have fallen away, its refracting of traditional myth and folklore and there being no complete version of it being known to still exist. Also much of contemporary ‘otherly pastoral’ or ‘wyrd’ rural culture and the flowering of interest in such things, including my own, has been inspired by and flows from the film, and because of these various characteristics and factors the chapter which focuses on The Wicker Man ids the first in the book.

I hope you enjoy the ‘wanderings’ through rural dreamscapes, reimagined mythical folklore and the shadowed undergrowth of film and television in this book, and that it helps to inspire explorations and journeys through your own cathode ray and celluloid hinterlands.

 

Stephen Prince (19th July 2021)

1. Hauntology, otherly pastoral and wyrd culture are discussed further in the Preface.

2. I discuss related themes with regards to The Wicker Man in Chapter 1.

3. The background to such ‘wiping’ practices and related themes are discussed further in the Appendix.

4. Related themes are discussed further in Chapter 4.






25.3.24

Moonbuilding - Back To School - Issue 4 - 2023 (fanzines actuais)


 

Moonbuilding

bAck to SchooL

MOONBUILDING

Issue Four: Autumn 2023 






HEAR | HERE

P6-23 New and upcoming releases

Reviews galore, including Maria Uzor, Belbury Poly, Veryan, The Mistys, Polypores, Field Lines Cartographer, Melenas, Lone Bison, Almost Nothing, Twilight Sequence, Natacha Barrett, There Is Another System, Giants Of Discovery + release round up and quiet details label profile

CLOSE | ENCOUNTER

P24-31 One great big interview

We meet cover star Maria Uzor in a quiet-ish corner of a coffeee shop in her home town of Norwich where we talk about debut album, “Soft Cuts”, why art really is magic, her mom’s legendary parties, writing rap lyrics aged six, Ed Sheeran and why it’s a good idea to jump and let the universe catch you.

DRIPFEED

P32-48 All The Other Stuff

Captain Star creator Steven Appleby, Girls Twidding Knobs podcast, new books on The Chemical Brothers and Radiophonic Workshop, Lol Tolhurst’s ‘Goth: A History’, Will Sergeant’s ‘Echoes’, plus Ghost Box’s Jim Jupp, Captain Star, Alex Paterson and probably more…

 

MOONBUILDING

Issue Four: Autumn 2023

Almost everything: Neil Mason

@moonbuildingmag – moonbuildingmag@gmail.com

Everything else: Colin Morrison

@castlesinspace – hello@castlesinspace.com

Cover illustration: Nick Taylor

@nicktee_art spectral-studio.co.uk

100 thank yous… Spencer Robinson (premier-printers.co.uk), Finlay Milligan, Zoe Miller (Zopf PR), David Blatner (63p.com), Ambulance 3-13

Typeset in Chaparra Pro, Sunflower and assorted printing sets

A Castles In Space publication

ISSN 2976-9264 (print) / ISSN 2976-9274 (digital)

© Moonbuilding 2023





13.9.23

Livros sobre música que vale a pena ler - Cromo #101: Stephen Prince - "A Year In The Country - Straying From The Pathways"



autor: Stephen Prince
título: A Year In The Country - Straying From The Pathways
editora: A Year In The Country
nº de páginas: 244
isbn: 978-1-9160952-0-5
data: 2019
1ª Edição / 1st Edition





Stephen Prince

A Year In The Country

Straying From The Pathways

Hidden Histories, Echoes of the Future’s Past and the Unsettled Landscape

Published by: A Year In The Country, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-9160952-0-5

Copyright © Stephen Prince, 2019

Edited and typeset by Ian Lowey, Bobcap Book Services, Manchester.

Cover Image: A Year In The Country

 

Contents:

Introduction – 9

Notes on the Text – 13

Preface: A Loose Definition and the Recurring Themes of Hauntology and its Confluence and Intertwining with Otherly Folk

 

1. Explorations of an Eerie Landscape: - 19

Texte und Töne – The disruption, The Changes, The Edge is Where the Centre is: David Rudkin and Penda’s Fen: An Archaeology, The Twilight Language of Nigel Kneale, The Stink Still Here – the miner’s strike 1984-85 – Robert Macfarlane – Benjamin Myers’ Under the Rock: The Poetry of a Place.

2. Fractured Dream Transmissions and a Collapsing into Ghosts: - 40

John Carpenter – Prince of Darkness, Halloween III: Season of The Witch, Village of the Damned, Christine – Nigel Kneale – Martin Quatermass – John Wyndham’s The Midwich Cuckoos

3. Hinterland Tales of Hidden Histories and Unobserved Edgeland Transgressions: - 62

Adrian McKinty’s In The Morning I’ll Be Gone – Clare Carson’s Orkney Twilight – David Peace’s GB84 – Tony White’s The Fountain in the Forest.

4. Countercultural Archives and Experiments in Temporary Autonomous Zones: - 72

Jeremy Sandford and Ron Reid’s Tomorrow’s People – Richard Barnes’ The Sun in the East: Norfolk & Suffolk Fairs – Sam Knee’s Memory of a Free Festival: The Golden Era of the British Underground Festival Scene – Gavin Watson’s Raving ’89 – Molly Macindoe’s Out of Order: The Underground Rave Scene 1997-2006.

5. The Village and Seaside Idyll Gone Rogue: - 83

Hot Fuzz – The Avengers’ “Murdersville” – The Prisoner – In My Mind – Malcolm Pryce’s Aberystwyth Mon Amour.

6. Albion in the Overgrowth and Timeslip Echoes: - 104

Requiem – The Living and the Dead – Britannia – Detectorists

7. In Cars – Building a Better Future, Perculiarly Subversive Enchantments and Faded Futuristic Glamour: - 121

In the Company of Ghosts: The Poetics of the Motorway – Joe Moran’s On Roads: A Hidden History – Chris Petit’s Radio On – Autophoto – Martin Parr’s Abandoned Morris Minors of the West of the Ireland – The Friends of Eddie Coyle – Killing Them Softly – Langdom Clay’s Cars: New York City 1974-76

8. Brutalism, Reaching for the Sky and Bugs in Utopia: - 137

Peter Chadwick’s This Brutal World – Bladerunner – J.G. Ballard – Ben Wheatley – High-Rise – Perter Mitchell’s Memento Mori – Brick High-Rise.

9. Battles with the Old Guard nad the Continuing sparking of Vivid Undercurrents: - 159

A Very Peculiar Practice – Edge of Darkness

10. Lycanthropes, Dark Fairy Tales and the Dangers of Wandering off the Path: - 169

The Company of Wolves – Danielle Dax – Red Riding Hood – Wolfen – Hansel & Gretel: Witchhunters – The Keep.

11. The Empty City Film nad Other Visions of the End of Days – Survival and Shopping in the Post-Apocalypse: - 187

Day of the Triffids – Into the Forest – Night of the Comet – The Quiet Earth.

12. Universe Creation, Spectral Lines in the Cultural Landscape and Reimagined Echoes from the Past: - 206

Hauntology – Hypnagogic Pop – Synthwave – D.A.L.I.’s When Haro Met Sally – Nocturne’s Dark Seed – Beyond the Black Rainbow – Mo’Wax, UNKLE, Tricky, Massive Attack, Potishead, DJ Shadow, Andrea Parker – Ghost Box Records, The Focus Group, Belbury Poly – The Memory Band – The Delaware Road – Rowan : Morrison – Howlround – Mark Fisher – the BBC Radiophonic Workshop – Adrian Younge’s Electronique Void – DJ Food – Grey Frequency – Keith Seatman – Douglas Powell – Akiha Den Den – The Ghosty in the MP3 – Black Channels – The Quietened Village – The Corn Mother.

 

INTRODUCTION

A Year In The Country is a project which has a broad reach, but at its core is an exploration of what could be called “otherly pastoralism”, where the further reaches of folk music and culture meet and intertwine with the parallel worlds of what has come to be known as “hauntology”;1 a cultural subgenre characterized by spectral echoes of the past and a yearning for lost progressive futures.

The project has produced book and music releases alongside over 1,000 posts on its website, consisting both of artwork and written pieces inspired by, and relating to, that otherly pastoral/spectral hauntological intertwining.

It travels along, and connects, multilayered and often hidden pathways and signposts that have sometimes become buried in the cultural undergrowth of time; from explorations of the eerie landscape to hinterland tales of hidden histories via Brutalist architecture, acid folk, “edgelands”, electronic music innovators, folkloric film and photography, hazily misremembered televisual tales and transmissions, folk horror, the faded modernity and future ruins of road travel, apocalyptic “empty city” films, dark fairy tales, imaginary film soundtracks, dreams of lost futures, photographic countercultural festival archives and experiments in temporary autonomous zones.

I began A Year In The Country in 2014, but the roots of it probably stretch back to several years before to a time when I was living in a city and just out of curiosity I listened to a friend’s copy of the compilation album Gather in the Mushrooms: The British Acid Folk Underground 1968-1974, which was released in 2004 and curated by Bob Stanley of Saint Etienne. The musical explorations on the album and its general pushing back of the boundaries of folk music seemed to open up something in my mind.

However, though the inspiration to create A Year In The Country can be directly attributed to listening to that album, in truth I can probably trace the lineage of its creation back to a childhood spent, at one point, living in a small rural village where I enjoyed bike-riding, climbing hills, damming rivers and so forth. But it was not all bucolic high jinks as around the same time I became increasingly aware of the dark clouds of the threat of the Cold War. Indeed, the surrounding country side was littered with signs of previous conflicts such as old military fortifications; from time-to-time unexploded weapons would be found and airforce jets would regularly fly overhead at levels so low it almost seemed as though you could reach up and touch them as they practiced their radar evasion techniques.

In later childhood years, I would live on the edge of the country side and one of my playground haunts was a semi-developed camp site which had formerly been some form of military base and which contained derelict, rubbish-filled, submerged air raid shelters that friends and I would convince each other were haunted. When visiting relatives, we would play on another “edgeland” site under buzzing electricity pylons in an area that it now quite lush and verdant but which at the time was full of discarded household appliances. We would tumble down the hill, past these old fridges and washing machines – which we were warned not to play in, in case we became trapped – towards a river that would change colour to orange, blue, green and so on, in accordance with which chemicals were being emptied into it from the dye factory upstream.

This was all accompanied by a growing appreciation of exploratory, dystopic and catastrophic science fiction in books and via television that, at times, was probably too advanced for me; from the hyperinflation and societal collapse of Noah’s Castle (1979) to the final series and book of Nigel Kneale’s Quatermass (1979) and its extraterrestrial harvesting of youth tribes, via John Wyndham’s post-apocalyptic Day of the Triffids (1951) and its sometimes terrifying 1981 television adaptation as well as the invaded village threat of his The Midwich Cuckoos (1957).

It also took in amongst other tales the likes of the resource-depleted future of Soylent Green (1973) and the mysterious incarceration of Patrick McGoohan’s character in the picturesque but subtly unsettling Village in The Prisoner (1967-68). In addition to this, there was the sense of being confused but intrigued by the sometimes fringe and more exploratory areas of science fiction; the alternative historical timelines and sometimes hallucinogenic nature in some of Michael Moorcock’s and Philip K. Dick’s fiction from the 1960s and 1970s, and the darkly dystopian, post-apocalyptic near future world of Alan Moore and David Lloyd’s V for Vendetta (1982-89) – episodes of which I originally read as they were published in the early-to-mid 1980s, in the Warrior comic anthology.

All of this seemed to somehow subconsciously percolate and impart a sense of the countryside as both a place of beauty and respite as well as somewhere which might possess hidden undercurrents and a dark flipside, and this alongside an interest in imagined parallel worlds would eventually provide fertile ground for the roots of A Year In The Country.

When I formally instigated the project in 2014 I knew little of work that explored the flipside of the pastoral, but coincidentally and quite by accident I seemed stumble upon and become fascinated by it, just as it truly flowered and began increasingly to share territory with hauntology, to the extent that there now seems to be an abundance of work available in both these related areas.

At the core of such work there area number of common cultural reference points, inspirations and touchstones often from the 1970s and the later 1960s, such as the towering trio of films The Wicker Man (1973), The Blood on Satan’s Claw (1971) and Witchfinder General (1968), which have since become labeled – and to a degree define – folk horror; the unsettling and challenging British children´s fantasy television that was possibly a bit too odd for its intended audience such as The Changes (1975), The Owl Service (1969-70) and Children of the Stones (1977), alongside the darkly anti-pastoral Penda’s Fen (1974); as well as old public information films and TV idents, and the electronic music innovations of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop and so on.

Many of these, and related works, are present and referred to in this book, but much as the music collected on Gather in the Mushrooms… did with my perceptions of what constitutes folk, I also wanted to push the boundaries back a little to consider work which, directly or indirectly, takes that canonic core as its inspiration for the creation of new work; explores the undercurrents and flipsides of the 1980s; digs down further and allows us glimpses of Albion in the overgrowth within the context of contemporary television; and points us towards where hitherto unexplored otherly pastoral hinterlands, hauntological-esque specters, lost futures and reimagined echoes of the past might be found.

I hope you enjoy this book as much as I have enjoyed discovering these “patterns under the plough” (or under the tower block, motorway and amongst the flickers of the cathode ray), and that it helps inspire you to set off on your own voyages of discovery and wanderings through bountiful spectral fields.

Stephen Prince (2nd March 2019)

1. For a further definition of hauntology, see A Definition of Hauntology; its Recurring Themes and its Confluence and Intertwining with Otherly Folk on page 14.

 

Preface: A Definition of Hauntology; its Recurring Themes and its Confluence and Intertwining with Otherly Folk

One of the recurring themes of this book and the A Year In The Country project as a whole, is a consideration of hauntology. This is a relatively niche cultural phrase/genre name that not all readers will necessarily know of, and so, below is a definition or overview of hauntology.

Though it is hard to precisely define what hauntology is, it has come to be used as a way of identifying particular strands of music and cultural tendencies. As a cultural category it is fluid and not strictly delineated, but below are some of the recurring themes and characteristics of hauntological work:

1) Music and culture that draws from and examines a sense of loss, yearning or nostalgia for a post-war utopian, progressive, modernist future that was never quite reached.

2) a tendency to see some kind of unsettledness and hidden layers of meaning in previous decades’ public information films and TV idents and “a bit too scary and odd for children, though that is who they were aimed at “television drama programmes from the late 1960s to about 1980, which as mentioned in the Introduction include the likes of The Owl Service (1968), Children of the Stones (1977) and The Changes (1975)

3) Graphic design as well as a particular kind of more-often-than not electronic, often analogue synthesizer-based and/or previous period-orientated music that references and reinterprets some forms of older culture and related artifacts, often focusing on the period from approximately the mid-1960s to 1979’ and generally of British origin.

Such reference points include previous decades’ library music (i.e. music created for industry use in films, television, adverts etc. rather than for public sale); the electronic music innovations of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop; educational materials and book cover artwork including period school text books; Pelican non-fiction titles which tended to have a distinctive aesthetic that combined functionality and a sense of idealism; and the stark sometimes seemingly almost accidentally darkly-hued designs of the Penguin Modern Poets books of the 1960s and 70s, which often featured minimalist, heavily-posterised images of nature.

4) a reimagining and misremembering of the above, and other, sources to create forms of music and culture that seem familiar, comforting and also often unsettling and not a little eerie; work that is accompanied by a sense of being haunted by specters of its, and our, cultural past, to loosely paraphrase philosopher Jacques Derrida who coined the phrase and created the original concept of hauntology.2

5) The use and foregrounding of recording medium noise and imperfections, such as the crackle and hiss of vinyl, tape wobble and so on that calls attention to the decaying nature of older analogue mediums and which can be used to create a sense of time out of joint and edge memories of previous eras.

6) The drawing together and utilizing of the above elements to conjure a sense of an often strange, parallel or imagined world, or “Midwichian”3 Britain.

Hauntology is often, but not exclusively, used to refer British culture and music, and it is thought to have been first used in relation to this by the writers Marks Fisher and Simon Reynolds to describe a loose cultural grouping of music and attendant culture which began to coalesce in the UK around the early mid-2000s.

As a loose genre, hauntology has retained a fair degree of cultural and aesthetic diversity that takes in the eldritch educationalism of Ghost Box Records, the playful psychedelic whimsy and break beats of Blank Workshop and the darkly humorous reinterpretations of period official warning posters of Scarfolk amongst others.

However, the term has also been used more widely to describe the likes of American hypnagogic pop and Italian Occult Psychedelia; musical subgenres which also reimagine and create spectral echoes of the past but which tend to utilize as their source material or inspiration, different areas and sometimes eras of culture.

A further recurring theme in this book and the A Year In The Country project as a whole is what may initially appear to be a curious and disparate occurrence and which it may be helpful to add some background and explanation to; the ways in which in an area or two of music and culture, folk music and folkloric-orientated work, of the underground, acid, psych, wyrd and otherly variety, has come to share common ground with synthesised work and in particular electronica of a leftfield and hauntological variety.

This is an area of culture where the use, appreciation and romance of often older electronic music technologies, reference points and inspirations segues and intertwines with the more bucolic wanderings and landscapes of exploratory, otherly pastoralism and folk culture. This has become a part of the cultural landscape which, in the words of author, artist, musician and curator Kristen Gallernaux, is:

“planted permanently somewhere between the history of the first transistor, the paranormal, and nature-driven worlds of the folkloric…”

On the surface such folkloric and spectral electronic musical and cultural forms are very disparate and yet both have come to explore and share similar landscapes. What may be one of the underlying linking points with both otherly folk etc., and hauntology, is a yearning for lost utopias. Thus, in more otherly folk-orientated culture this is possibly related to a yearning for lost Arcadian idylls, whilst in hauntological culture it may be connected to a yearning for lost progressive post-war futures that never fully came to fruition.

Both of these intertwined areas of music and culture have revered relics: for otherly folkloric work these may include those from that lost idyll which are spectrally imprinted with some form of loss, such as, in the words of Rob Young, “old buildings, texts, songs, etc., [which] are like talismans to be treasured, as a connective chain to the past.”4

Hauntological talismans may also include items from those referred to above: TV idents from previous decades, public information films and television series from the late 1960s to late 1970s which have gained unsettledness and hidden layers of meaning with the passing of time  - alongside the likes of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop and Brutalist architecture – and which also are considered to contain spectral echoes in reference to the aforementioned lost progressive futures.

These two strands of otherly folkloric and hauntological work and culture may appear at first to be cultural cuckoos in the same nest and / or strange bedfellows. However, they have come to be seen as fellow travellers who rather than being divided by differing surface aestethics are drawn together by a similarly exploratory and often visionary or utopian spirit, and who respectively shadow and inform one another’s journeys within an alternative cultural landscape.

The text in this section is a partly revised version of that which was originally published in the book A Year In The Country: Wandering Through Spectral Fields (20189. An alternative version is also included in Folk Horror Revival: Urban Wyrd – 1. Spirits of Time (2109).

 

1. This period of the mid-19602 to the later 170s may be chosen as significant for a hauntologically-related work for a number of reasons, such as during this time the optimism and, at times, utopian ideals of the immediate post-war years to the 1960s tipped over in Britain into a period of social, political, economic strife and conflict. The later 1970s, and 1979 in particular, when Margaret Thatcher’s right-leaning government was elected, is often considered to be a defining point when society began to move towards a more neoliberal, individualistic and monetarist stance. Also this period is when many of those creating, or interested in, hauntological work were born, or had their formative years. As such, culture from this era from which hauntological work often draws, has a pre-existing resonance. Aside from its sometimes inherent oddness, such culture may also be seen as being imbued with an antediluvian quality – broadcasts, remnants or echoes from an “other” time and the progressive lost futures which are referred to in the abovementioned recurring themes and characteristics of hauntology.

 

2. Hauntology is a portmanteau or blending of the meanings of two words; “haunt” and “ontology”. Ontology is the philosophical study of “being”, which focuses on abstract questions such as whether there is such a thing as objective reality and what kinds of things or entities exist in the universe. Ontology is sometimes associated with foundationalist thinkers who believe that: “to arrive at truth it is necessary to start with the most fundamental issues – to be sure about the foundations of philosophy – and then work our way up from there to more specific questions.” (Quoted from the Philosophy Terms website.)

 

3. “Midwichian” is used to imply a sense of a conventional, comfortable, sometimes bucolic place and society where something untoward, quietly unsettling and possibly unexplained has happened or lurks semi-hidden beneath the surface of things. It derives from John Wyndham’s book The Midwich Cuckoos (1957) and the subsequent film adaptation Village of the Damned (1960) in which a pleasant rural village is severely disrupted by a stealthy and surreptitious alien invasion. See chapter 3 for more on this.

 

4. Quoted from Electric Eden: Unearthing Britain’s Visionary Music by Rob Young, published in 2011.







Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...