Words vs Music

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What is it about melodised words that get us going? That gets me going? That triggers a strong emotional reaction that the same words, unmarried to a set of notes, may in certain cases leave me, well not indifferent entirely depending on content, but with such a watered down version of the same feeling.

Number one: for sure it’s the Words. The Words create lines of verse in our heads, prose or poetry, other peoples’ thoughts and concerns that form a story every time, that are somewhat open to interpretation within the boundaries the Words themselves set.

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Trainspotted

2Last night I dreamed of trains; of the past and of the present. No, my subconscious was not preoccupied by the ones of the future and that is not without meaning.
Steam locomotive hauled cargo-bourn squealers and bogies, passenger carrying luxury carriages with all the long-gone glitz and glamour of another era.
Then the Metropolitan tube-type ones that converge and disperse forming underground labyrinths that connect the bustling city above, the grande vitesse ones travelling at phenomenal speeds from one end of the country to the other.

“Life is a train of moods like a string of beads; and as we pass through them they prove to be many colored lenses, which paint the world their own hue, and each shows us only what lies in its own focus.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson.

I remember enjoying the scenery whilst sipping on mint tea in the velvet-dressed dining car of the Orient Express (not to be confused with the Venice Simplon OE that continues to run).

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The Waiting, The Waking, The Calling…

Tense as if your muscles are on constant strain
Blank as if your mind is empty
Numb as if your soul has been decanted

And you wait, in the waking
Perched on your seat,
Grabbing the armrests with all your fingers’ might

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The Disadvantages of a Multi-Cultural Nature

Dear Gray

10 years ago, if I would have thought about it consciously, I would have concluded that I should consider myself amongst the lucky ones of my generation.
Born in dual nationality, that meant I was bilingual before I went to primary school. Attending a British school, I was exposed to students from a multitude of nationalities and cultures. This made me tolerant, seeing the endearing charm of personalities from different backgrounds, however this also cultivated a thirst within me to learn more and more. I guess this is the backbone of why I enjoy travelling as much as I do, when the means allow.

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Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door…Marvin Gaye

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My monthly article, “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door”, published in Burst Magazine.

Issue 21, October 2014 features Marvin Gaye.

See full issue here: http://afternoiz.com/burst/item/7517-october-2014

Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door… Frank Zappa

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My monthly article, “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door”, published in Burst Magazine.

Issue 22, November 2014 features Frank Zappa.

See full issue here: http://afternoiz.com/burst/item/7586-november-2014

The House on the Hill (Chapter two)

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Voltaire – To the living we owe respect, but to the dead we owe only the truth.

Her hands dug deep into the moist and dense soil. It had only just stopped raining, and the ground was so wet, she could feel the water drench her clothes at her knees as she sat on all fours at the base of the hill. The great tree that she had taken refuge under, to sit out yet another Electric Storm, had wept; its old bark had cracked and tears of resin had trickled down to its base. She had an awkward sense that it was tears of resentment, and rushed to her feet. She touched its resentful resin, and it burned to her touch. Sucking on her sore finger she thought she heard a voice: a child’s voice, coming from the base of the tree, no, from beneath the roots, rising up and reverberating through the bark’s cracks and resin pus.

“Hurry”.

The old voices had stopped since she had crossed the river. This voice was of a new order, sounding innocent yet compelling enough for her to pay serious heed. She knew she had no place there, amidst the strange nature, the twisted nature of past, of longing, of yearning, there, deep in the Forest of Forever. She knew it even before she decided to cross beyond the silver river and penetrate the unknown North, but the Gray Wolf left her little choice. He had seized her thoughts, entering her mind at his will, during the dead of the night, and she often could see through his auric eyes, images of frustration, of chase, of want, of desire. She would wake each time thirsty and hungry to venture into the Forest to seek the questions, to which she already knew the answers.

“Hurry, follow the Moon”.

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The Forest of Forever (Chapter one)

7So she walked a whisper like walk, weightless and wistful, as her white gown trailed behind her frail footsteps. Her head hung low and the usual sea of thoughts filled her mind. It was no wonder she could not hear the sound of her feet or the rustling of leaves; voices muffled and reverberant, a multitude of shrieks and woes, of secrets and confessions. For the all of eternity this would be her price to pay, in the conscious awake part of her being, in penitence, in restlessness, in the prison of her mind for the crime she had been condemned of. According to her impious fate, now, as it was written in the Scrolls of the Stars, she roamed the Forest of Forever, searching for questions she only knew the answers to. ‘Balance’. She sought the equilibrium of Balance.

The voices were never discernible. The voices were always there. Day in, day out. Her dreams were her only haven. She solaced in the revelry of her subconscious escapades where she would be free from fear, free from frustration. ‘In Somnii, Veritas. Per Somnii, Libertas.’ She had no other place to go than to retreat to her core at nightfall, in the midst of the Forest and seek redemption for her scarred soul.

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Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door … Jim Morisson

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My monthly article, “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door”, published in Burst Magazine.

Double Issue 20, September 2014 features Jim Morisson, pg. 14-16.

See full issue here: http://afternoiz.com/burst/item/7451-september-2014

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Τα παιδιά της γειτονιάς παίζουν στο προαύλιο. Ήταν μία από αυτές τις πολύ ζεστές μέρες του Αυγούστου, όπου όλα λειτουργούσαν σε βασανιστικά αργούς ρυθμούς. Ένα λεπτό φαντάζει σαν μία ώρα και νιώθω όλο και πιο ανήσυχη.

Προσπαθώντας να ξεγελάσω τις σκέψεις μου, συγκεντρώνομαι στις φωνές των παιδιών. Καιρό τώρα προσπαθώ… Προσπαθώ να ξεχάσω τι συνέβη γιατί όσο τριγυρνούν οι αναμνήσεις στο μυαλό μου, βρίσκομαι σε σύγχυση και νιώθω εγκλωβισμένη, και μέσα μου φουντώνει μια ανάγκη να γυρίσω τον χρόνο πίσω, και να βρίσκομαι εκεί, τότε, πριν συμβούν όλα αυτά, πριν την κατάρρευση, πριν την λεγόμενη «Αναγέννηση», πριν χαθούν οι αξίες, πριν βρομίσουν οι ψυχές των ανθρώπων από απληστία, πριν ποτισθούν τα μυαλά τους από εξουσία. Με πλημμυρίζει νοσταλγία για την εποχή όταν η ζωές μας ήταν πλούσιες μέσα από την απλότητα τους.

Τα παιδιά της γειτονιάς παίζουν στο προαύλιο. Οι κραυγές τους τώρα, πιο κοντά από πριν, καλύπτουν τον χτύπο του ρολογιού που είναι κρεμασμένο στον τοίχο. Οι φωνές τους εισχωρούν στο δωμάτιο σαν μία πολύχρωμη συρροή από νότες που σχηματίζουν μια εκστατική μελωδία, οδηγούμενη από έναν επίμονο ρυθμό. Έναν ρυθμό που τον έμαθα καλά, και πού ακόμα και τώρα, μετά από τόσο καιρό, μου προκαλούσε ρίγος.

Έκλεισα τα μάτια μου.

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