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Saturday 21 March 2020

Music For Healing


During the last couple of days I've been wondering whether music blogging in the current circumstances is a bit inadequate, an inconsequential thing in the face of the both the virus and the shutdown of everyday life. Yesterday our Year 11 students, who on Wednesday were still preparing for exams in May and June, left school. This should have been the end point of a process that involved the closure and release they would have got from sitting and completing all their exams, preparing for leaving school, getting ready for their prom and all those things which were some months away. Instead it was dropped on them with a day's notice. This was absolutely necessary- we have to close down the social contact we are having with each other- but it still came as a massive shock to them. Year 13 are in the same boat, suddenly set adrift without finishing the courses and sitting the exams that would take them to work or university. I was suddenly in charge of giving Year 11 a final leavers assembly, rummaging through digital files for photographs of them when they first arrived with us five years ago and pictures of them taken during their time at school, working out how to give them the send off that they deserved. There were tears (mine and other staffs as well as the kids- and let me tell you, until you've welled up and shed tears in front of a hall of nearly two hundred sixteen year olds, you haven't lived). Now we are where we- a society shut down. Our eldest, Isaac, is officially a vulnerable person. We have been recommended to place ourselves in self- isolation for twelve weeks. So every now and then in the last forty eight hours it felt like writing about pop songs daily and sharing them with you seemed like it was becoming a pointless activity. On Thursday night I went to Echorich's blog and his most recent post, a post called A New Reality- Songs For This Moment In Time... , containing among others the urgency of Killing Joke's Requiem, Joy Division's beautiful and bleak Isolation, the sheer heft of Protection by Massive Attack and The The's always wondrous This Is The Day and it convinced me that music blogging still has a place. The next day he left a comment on my post, The Third Sound's shoegaze psychedelia of For A While, saying 'That was a nice escape!'. Which it is. Then Richard Norris posted a new twenty minute long ambient track from his Group Mind project called Music For Healing 1. To go with the music Richard wrote this...

'Music For Healing 1 is the first a series of long form tracks to aid stress and anxiety relief in these challenging times. All profits go to mental health charity MIND. Please help donate to this cause if you can.
I first started writing ambient tracks on a weekly basis about two years ago, as a personal aid to stress and anxiety relief. People mentioned these tracks, the Abstractions series, had helped their mental health issues. The Music For Healing series is being written in response to these challenging times, and hopefully will have a similar anxiety relieving effect. This is the first of regular 20 minute tracks in this series. Use them as background ambience, as immersive deep listening, in combination with meditation or any other practice. Music For Healing tracks are crafted and recorded in real time with no Artificial Intelligence involved'. 


So I have come to the conclusion that the sharing of songs still has a place and that while it may seem a little inadequate in the face of the gravity of the situation outside it might make someone's day a little better for a few minutes. Just as Richard and Echorich did mine.

Look after yourselves and each other.



15 comments:

Michael Doherty said...

I'd even argue that it has an even more important place than before. Keep it up please, Adam.

PS That Richard Norris track is a beauty!

Nick L said...

First time I've posted but I've long been a reader. Please keep posting, I've learned about so many new artists or bits of music, and a little continuity of the best bits of culture is just what the world needs right now! Thanks for all you share.

drew said...

It is essential that you continue SA. I have to admit that I am having trouble focusing on anything but clicking on here and other friends sites and noticing that some things are continuing semi normally.

Stay safe everybody

C said...

Very moved by this post, perfectly pitched. Totally agree about continuing as normally as is possible, this is the one place where we don't have to distance ourselves socially after all and I'm v thankful for it. Very soothing track too.
Stay well and special wishes to Isaac.

Echorich said...

I agree. Our music blogging gives the society we inhabit a means to interact, a means of escape and even a means to process the myriad changes to our daily life that these circumstances have brought on.
C is correct. We can truly come together and share in this space we inhabit with safety and empathy.

Swiss Adam said...

Yep, thanks all. And you're all correct. This is the only place where we don't need to be socially distant.

Jake Sniper said...

Don't you dare stop, you've introduced me to so much music over the years. Which I in turn pass on to my friends. I look forward to what you write just as much.

TheRobster said...

All I can offer is this - as you know, I had many existential crises during my blog's operational years. Eventually I ended it as I could no longer muster up the enthusiasm for it. My brief return last December merely confirmed that I no longer wanted to do it as I had nothing much to say, and not an iota of interest in saying any old shite. So there it is.

If you still have something to say, and you want to say it, then do so. If you need a break to recharge your batteries and see if there is still an urge to carry on, then take one. If you want to stop, then stop for your own sake. That's honestly the best advice I can offer.

You have a lot of friends through this place, you've kept us entertained and I can understand everyone's encouragement. But you must do it for you. Wishing you well, I hope you keep going but it's OK to not be OK.

Walter said...

I agree to all the words said before and I hope you continue posting and I think it is necessary to break the social distance in the way we do. Keep on Adam and all the best to you and your family.

Anonymous said...

What would Weatherall do? 'Sail you must' in whatever direction you choose.
-SRC

Swiss Adam said...

Yep, that's right. Sail we must.

Someone posted on FB they got their tattoo wrong- 'sail we may, fail we must'

Anonymous said...

Ha, I guess if you aim to fail, there is a chance you may succeed.
-SRC

Rol said...

I think we have to carry on, whenever possible, for all the reasons above.

Stay safe.

Tom W said...

Please keep going. it helps.

Anonymous said...

Please keep on keeping on with he blog. It's always a pleasure to read and listen.