
1 in 10 people actually own lucky pants, with the festivals theme of 'Superstition' the quest was set; to find the luckiest of them all!
Relax on a big bed, recall a vivid dream and have the renowned maestro, Malcolm Atkins, turn it into a song with his range of classical and electronic instruments (looped for a rich soundscape), all to the accompaniment of VJ dream visuals by video artist Peter Jones.
Also on the same themed night the idea is to take songs back to their dream origin. Some songs have famously been inspired by dreams, in some cases almost fully formed. The trick is being able to remember them clearly enough and if you’re after the purity of a dream song, keeping them close to their original form. I'm hoping to encourage performers to imagine how a song may have appeared in the dream and perform it that way or to perform one of their songs that have been inspired by a dream. The reasoning is to create an unusual and relatable performing space. Please dress for the occasion.
Video footage from 1999 and 2000. A personal portray of Glastonbury before the wall was effective, sometimes edgy and chaotic but with its own internal logic of love and acceptance.
Suspendisse odio dolor, condimentum vel rutrum eget, pharetra ut nunc. Duis quis placerat erat. Fusce adipiscing, tellus in ullamcorper vestibulum, ligula nisi sagittis risus, ut viverra ipsum urna quis odio. Cras vitae urna ac velit commodo porttitor. Cras et leo sed sapien aliquam imperdiet vitae sit amet neque. Mauris dictum arcu ut lorem pharetra rutrum. Praesent hendrerit arcu in libero pulvinar sed pellentesque orci mattis. Vivamus volutpat scelerisque consectetur. Mauris laoreet, mauris id venenatis auctor, erat erat imperdiet arcu, eu viverra orci augue at est. Ut sit amet justo ante, vitae tempor urna. Duis velit sem, malesuada vitae semper ac, semper ac lacus. Cras diam magna, ultricies nec mollis in, eleifend id diam. Aenean non tortor est, ut convallis leo. Etiam dolor erat, iaculis ac semper mattis, pellentesque ullamcorper purus.
Suspendisse odio dolor, condimentum vel rutrum eget, pharetra ut nunc. Duis quis placerat erat. Fusce adipiscing, tellus in ullamcorper vestibulum, ligula nisi sagittis risus, ut viverra ipsum urna quis odio. Cras vitae urna ac velit commodo porttitor. Cras et leo sed sapien aliquam imperdiet vitae sit amet neque. Mauris dictum arcu ut lorem pharetra rutrum. Praesent hendrerit arcu in libero pulvinar sed pellentesque orci mattis. Vivamus volutpat scelerisque consectetur. Mauris laoreet, mauris id venenatis auctor, erat erat imperdiet arcu, eu viverra orci augue at est. Ut sit amet justo ante, vitae tempor urna. Duis velit sem, malesuada vitae semper ac, semper ac lacus. Cras diam magna, ultricies nec mollis in, eleifend id diam. Aenean non tortor est, ut convallis leo. Etiam dolor erat, iaculis ac semper mattis, pellentesque ullamcorper purus.
Suspendisse odio dolor, condimentum vel rutrum eget, pharetra ut nunc. Duis quis placerat erat. Fusce adipiscing, tellus in ullamcorper vestibulum, ligula nisi sagittis risus, ut viverra ipsum urna quis odio. Cras vitae urna ac velit commodo porttitor. Cras et leo sed sapien aliquam imperdiet vitae sit amet neque. Mauris dictum arcu ut lorem pharetra rutrum. Praesent hendrerit arcu in libero pulvinar sed pellentesque orci mattis. Vivamus volutpat scelerisque consectetur. Mauris laoreet, mauris id venenatis auctor, erat erat imperdiet arcu, eu viverra orci augue at est. Ut sit amet justo ante, vitae tempor urna. Duis velit sem, malesuada vitae semper ac, semper ac lacus. Cras diam magna, ultricies nec mollis in, eleifend id diam. Aenean non tortor est, ut convallis leo. Etiam dolor erat, iaculis ac semper mattis, pellentesque ullamcorper purus.
Timemorph was a name thought up by my long-time friend Tim Stewart (Photographer). Not one to pass up a good thing I have ran with the web name since Feb 2000. Initially it was the name I used to describe a strange video technique. Now it stands for experimentation and creativity and is yet to have its finest hour...