Posted on Leave a comment

The Tomorrow People Intro: Audio Visual Transmission Guide #2/52a

The Tomorrow People-credits-intro-1970s

In amongst the intros for such things and a mini-genre of “children’s television from the late 1960s to late 1970s that was slightly odd and possibly a bit eerie considering it’s intended audience”, the intro to The Tomorrow People is probably still the one that gives me the heebie jeebies the most.

The Tomorrow People-4 intro credits stills-1970s

Not the series itself so much, more just the actual intro and its accompanying music.

Elsewhere at A Year In The Country I describe it as seeming like a mixture of…

“…the commencement sequence to The Owl Service, The Modern Poets book covers from back when, Mr Julian House’s work tumbling backwards and forwards through time and the audiologica of The Radiophonic Workshop… but all filtered somehow through an almost Woolworths-esque take on such things.”

Despite that Woolworths-esque filter and the the inclusion of a somewhat incongruous sliced pepper in amongst the other more overtly unsettling imagery, I still find it unsettling now. Maybe it is the connection to seeing it back when.

(File Under: Cathode Ray & Cinematic Explorations, Radiowave Resonations & Audiological Investigations)

AVT Guide listing: The intro to The Tomorrow People.

 

Posted on Leave a comment

Delia Derbyshire Handmade Diorama: Ether Signposts #2/52a

Delia Derbyshire Diorama-HeyKidsRocknRoll

Well, who wouldn’t want one of these?

A Delia Derbyshire diorama, subtitled “Radiophonic Workshop Doctor Who theme Electronic Pioneer”, that takes it’s inspiration from one of the classic Delia Derbyshire at work photographs.

Handmade and available from HeyKidsRocknRoll.

Every household in the land should have one.

Maybe there should be a grant you can apply for to make that a reality?

(File under: Other Pathway Pointers And Markers)

Destinations and directions: Delia Derbyshire handmade diorama

 

Posted on Leave a comment

Transmissions From The Quietened Bunker: Artifact Report #2/52a

The Quietened Bunker-Night and Dawn Editions-release date-A Year In The Country-2

There have been a few new Quietened Bunker related transmissions and the like…

both-bars-on-the-quietened-bunker-a-year-in-the-country

There’s a fine review by Pete Collins at Both Bars On, which can be found here.

…it also made Both Bars On’s Top Thirty Records Of 2016, where it can be found in some rather esteemed company. Peruse that here.

“Nothing quite says 2016 like a compilation album on the theme of abandoned cold war structures and bunkers… Unsettling drone, snatched samples, glitched beats and claustrophobic synths; it’s all here.”

And talking of esteemed company…

the-gated-canal-community-radio-the-quietened-bunker-a-year-in-the-country

Gated Canal Community Radio (hosted by Front & Follow and The Geography Trip) included a couple of tracks from the album in a new broadcast. Listen to that here.

terrascope-playlist-11-the-quietened-bunker-a-year-in-the-countryPlus a track from the album can be found as part of Terrascope’s Playlist 11, one of their quarterly samplers. Listen to that here.

 

Intertwined wanderings around these parts:
transmissions-sent-the-quietened-bunker-a-year-in-the-country-9b-with-stroke
The Quietened Bunker – A Gathering Of Transmissions

all-hallows-quietened-bunker-transmission-sheet-rue-morgue-a-closer-listen-include-me-out-ytnatm-a-year-in-the-country-stroke
The Quietened Bunker – A Timely Gathering Of Transmissions

Visit The Quietened Bunker here.

A tip of the hat to all concerned.

 

(File Under: Encasments / Artifacts – Audiological Transmission Artifact #4)

 

Posted on Leave a comment

The intro to The Owl Service: Audio Visual Transmission Guide #1/52a

The Owl Service-Radio And TV Times listingsPart of a further recalibration of this year of A Year In The Country…

This strand of posts takes inspiration from the listings of old copies of television and radio guides such as The Radio Times and TV Times from back when.

Despite having sold in large quantities, because they were only intended to be used for the week that they provided broadcast schedules for they are often now quite rare, more so than many newspaper and magazines from the same time and so they are difficult things to come by, apart from the occasional scan that can be found online.

At the time I expect they did not seem to be overly of historic or cultural importance in comparison to newspapers and some magazines, which may well have featured coverage of momentous occasions, people’s favourite bands etc and so they were more likely to have been kept and stored away.

They often seem to capture and reflect something of the spirit of the time they were published in a subtly unique and individual way, something that may be enhanced by their scarcity and being semi-lost to history.

The-Owl-Service-TV-program-A-Year-In-The-Country-3b

Anyways, the Audio Visual Transmission Guides strand of posts are intended as pointers to particular videos, music, radio broadcasts etc online, accompanied by brief (or brief-ish or possible not all that brief) text, in a hazily filtered mirroring of the listings in those magazines of old.

If I had the power to create an other parallel world many of these AVT Guides would I expect appear in the television and radio listings magazines of back when or today and be broadcast over the airwaves to the nation and beyond but that’s a little beyond my reach (!)…

So, in a reflection of the modern world and the dissemination of such things online, these posts will generally be pointers to particular corners of the internet.

They will include some “classic” A Year In The Country touchstones, those that I have found myself returning to and/or inspired by ongingly (no complaints about these particular kinds of repeats I expect would be found around these parts), revisitations of old favourites and some new findings and points of interest.

So, without further ado…

The Owl Service-TV series titles-Alan Garner-A Year In The Country-1200

Time of broadcast: 1969 to today to whenever (hopefully).
Channel: BBC 1, BBC 2, ITV (and any others we can find although at the time those three were all the broadcast television channels available in the UK. My, how the world has changed etc etc.)

In a parallel world on some nights this should be on a loop on at least one television channel, so that conversations in households across the land would go something like this:

“What’s on the box tonight?”

“The Owl Service.”

“Ah, which episode.”

“Not an episode, just the Intro looped throughout the evening.”

“Ah, good, brew up a pot of tea and open a packet of biscuits. This is a night for staying in with your feet up.”

The-Owl-Service-TV-series-titles-Alan-Garner-A-Year-In-The-Country-b

“Three teenagers discover a mysterious set of owl and flower-patterned dinner plates in the attic and the magical ancient legend of the “Mabinogion. The introduction graphics are a forebear or tumbling backwards and forwards through time to the likes of Julian House’s work for Ghost Box Records and various other strands of the flipside and undercurrents of Albion.”

(File Under: Cathode Ray & Cinematic Explorations, Radiowave Resonations & Audiological Investigations)

AVT Guide listing: The intro to The Owl Service.

 

Posted on Leave a comment

Peter Mitchell’s Some Thing means Everything to Somebody: Ether Signposts #1/52a

Peter Mitchell-RRB Photo books-postcards 2-scarecrows-Some Thing means Everything to Somebody
The first in something of a recalibration of this particular year of A Year In The Country…

This strand of AYITC posts takes inspiration from the signs and signposts that you might see on country walks along for example what were once railway tracks: signs that may say something along the lines of “This way towards…” and point you in the direction of a particular feature or place of interest.

Or the signs you may find at the places themselves, which are often accompanied by a brief description or history of the destination and sometimes accompanied by a photograph or two.

(Sometimes those signs have quite extensive history and information on them and I expect knowing myself as I do, this stand of posts may sometimes be little or a fair bit more than brief and have a photograph or few…)

Another reference point and inspiration for this strand of posts would be the sometimes whitewashed, naturally shaped or rough hewn stone markers that you still occasionally see at the side of a road or path out in the country, ones that have something along the lines of “London – 145 miles” hand painted and/or carved into them.

Peter Mitchell-RRB Photo books-scarecrows-Some Thing means Everything to Somebody

So, without further do, Peter Mitchell’s Some Thing means Everything to Somebody book, published by RRB Photobooks Publishing.

Peter Mitchell-RRB Photo books-postcards-1-scarecrows-Some Thing means Everything to Somebody

“…an autobiography told through inanimate objects silently observed by scarecrows. Some Thing means Everything to Somebody boldly marks the passing of time by weaving images of these surreal totems in the landscape amongst those of objects with sentimental value.”

If the folkloric costumed creatures in Charles Fréger’s Wilder Mann book had fallen through a folk-horror portal or arrived via a lost episode of 1970s Doctor Who to become creatures that were both alive and inanimate in the British countryside, well, they may well look like the scarecrows in Peter Mitchell’s photographs.

A Year In The Country-ether signposts

(File under: Other Pathway Pointers And Markers)

Destinations and directions:
The Some Things means Everything To Somebody book.

The Some Things means Everything To Somebody postcard book.

 

Posted on Leave a comment

Ocular Signals #1/52a: Image A/1a / A New Spin-Around-The Sun

image-a5-a-year-in-the-country
File under: A Year In The Country Ocular Explorations
Subsection: Beginnings

Well, what can I say? A fine New Year to one and all.

The bells have barely stopped peeling and it would appear that it is time to begin another spin-around-the-sun.

As you may well be able to see, we’re returning to something of a more traditional (for around these parts) calendar…

365 days of wanderings, artifacts, artwork, ether signposting and so on which may well take in a stroll or two through an otherly pastoralism and the spectral edgelands of culture.

(And talking of tradition, if you should look closely, this particular work that we’re beginning the year with is something of a nod and rounding of the circle back to almost the very beginning of A Year In The Country… Ah, curious coincidences and all that. ‘Twas not planned but a pleasant discovery which tumbled forth.)

And so, here goes…