Sunday 6 March 2011

Soft Drugs in Antwerp

I did a Saturday/Sunday trip to Antwerp to visit the Livelooping Festival, the 3rd one organized by Sjaak Overgaauw. Except for the bad traffic jams that I got into on the highway, I found that Antwerp is not really far from here - less than 3 hours.


I had booked a hotel that looked cheap and good on the website. Well let us say I will look for another hotel should I come back to the next loop festival. But the area was interesting - it was a Jewish quarter of town, and I saw lots of Jewish couples walking around the place wearing very traditional cloths and very strange cylindrical fur hats that I haven't seen before anywhere.

Living in Germany, I'm not used to seeing traditional Jews because understandably, very few of them live here. I saw lots of people from many countries in Antwerp, and I heard many languages. A young man talked loudly into his mobile, in a language that I didn't recognize, while taking a leak standing beside me in the toilet of some cafe. Antwerp somehow reminded me a little bit of Manhattan - even the relatively small city park with its ponds and bridges reminded me of Central Park. I liked that a lot.


Lots of interesting shops, some of them selling things that I didn't recognize. And the chocolateries - oh my god. Soft drugs (I am clearly addicted to chocolate), and beautifully set up. And expensive.


I visited the bank of the Scheldt, a broad river flowing by the city into the nearby Atlantic.


A ponton made loud and deep water noises. I recorded a few minutes using my little digital recorder (this time it was wearing its new wind protection, and looked like a muppet with a wild hairdo) - click the arrow to hear water, seagulls, church bells, and traffic noises of Antwerp.





Hungry from walking. Apple pancake and coffee. Good. Then back into the city roads and early evening. Time to walk to the venue.


I first met with Kirstin, Facebook friend, synth player, and fan of Sjaak's music. It was nice to talk face to face instead of using facebook (we hardly knew each other in real life). Then to the venue together for a couple of hours with ambient music, drones, and loops.


Some of the livelooping music was quite amazing. Sjaak's ambient synthscapes were deep and hauntingly beautiful. Welsh guitarist Simeon Harris also created sounds and textures that were very beautiful, shimmering and complex - I wish I knew his trade secrets ... but I think gear is involved that I cannot afford at the moment. Flute and sax player Theo Travis used relatively modest gear, but his playing technique and compositional skill was outstanding. A very enjoyable and inspiring evening.

I walked home to my less-than-convincing hotel, slept for a few hours, and got up early. I drove through the Schelde tunnel and visited St. Anna, a popular recreation area for Antwerp citizens. You can see the city from there. If you walk around a bit, there are also views of, er, modern architecture and chemical industry areas, maybe not quite as beautiful as the Antwerp skyline, but in the early Sunday sunshine, everything looked shiny and fresh.


After a croissant or two for breakfast, I drove to Sjaak's and Ingrid's place for coffee. The boys had just gotten up and were busy transferring video files to portable hard disks. I also met Coco again, the cheese loving red tomcat that can make funny faces.

Thursday 3 March 2011

Walk The Dog

We took a long walk near Lindlar with my old friend Thomas and Chikai, his friendly Akita Inu dog, past the quarry where I had recorded a few midwife toads a while ago, and beyond it into a very beautiful open landscape of large fields and hills that I wasn't familiar with although it is just half an hour away from here.





The sky was amazingly blue. Sabine couldn't stop exclaiming how beautiful it was everywhere around. I had to agree.


What a beautiful walk. We came home happy and very hungry and ate lots of chocolate.


Bonus track:
This looks like a Porsche covered in red, and fast asleep. It was parked near a house that we walked by during our walk. I thought you might like it too, so here it is.