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January 15th, 2008, Discussion, General, 1 Comment

I’ve just been for a swim at a pool I haven’t visited for quite a while. As I walked through the doors I was suddenly struck by the feeling of being in a foreign country. I don’t consciously experience this a lot while in Copenhagen these days, but for a while I was back in an alien society and everything seemed slightly quirky and off kilter: the lighting, the ticket clerk, the supremely relaxed attitudes about nudity while changing, the uptight staff-monitored showering before swimming and the packed pool at 8pm on a winter’s evening.

As I swam lengths I began contrasting my life now with how it was a few years back and what I’ve done inbetween. For about fifteen minutes I could see everything with an old pair of eyes and I was quite dumbfounded at the paths I’d taken and what I’d achieved. This started me thinking about how it was all possible and eventually came back to my much touted belief in the destructiveness of routines and safety.

In the same same way that one rarely takes a random left turn during a monotonous daily commute, it’s near impossible to make radical changes to your life when burdened with expectations and status. I tried to track how I’d managed to build up my own company here in Denmark and what would have been different in the UK. I believe the primary reason was my ability to live in a tiny room on a pittance with minimal possessions for so long. This allowed me the freedom to work hard and learn hard without having to worry about income too much. It actually wasn’t that difficult to do and even now that we are a team of five all earning enough to live, I still don’t feel the need to “raise my stakes” too much.

This prolonged low-risk battle (also shared to some degree by my cohorts) is why I think the company survived the dark days long enough to eventually attain the relative success it has, but it doesn’t answer how I managed to do it. I was previously on a reasonable wage living in a nice, well-furnished apartment and although my life was far from lavish (student debts were enough to neutralise a lot of my earnings), I arguably lived in a much more comfortable style with more freedom to do what I want.

Most of this sneaked up on me over the years and by the time I realised I was actually desperately unhappy with it all, it was almost too late. I had reached an unavoidable expectation level both from myself and of others. You can change a routine and broaden outlooks by moving to a new town, but you still can’t escape YOU; your culture, your society, your career path, your achievements and your failures.

There were lots of parts of me I didn’t want to escape from, but whatever I thought about doing next was fronted with impossibilities and obvious, logical reasons why I would fail. Selling all my things, quitting my job and moving to a different house around the corner seemed both attention seeking and destructive. I reached a point of panic and wanted out of everything. With hindsight this is what fuelled my move to Denmark. Once I arrived I felt free from many aspects of my old lifestyle, but more importantly I felt free from cultural expectations.

No matter how much you believe you can shun the typical trappings of a society, they are always with you: how to queue, how to greet people, how to address a cashier in the bank, where to look when sat opposite someone on public transport, what to wear, when to go to bed. These things are so small, yet so plentiful that in many ways they place unseen chains around every action you take. As time went on I became increasingly aware of the release my move abroad had created and, coupled with literally not knowing what was possible, I decided to try out a lot of things. Everything is a breeze when being from a different culture can be used as an internal excuse and force of reasoning. You can be an outsider and still accepted in a way that transcends social norms, solely because you’re not expected to fit in(*). It becomes a positive and inclusive experience rather than an exclusive and lonely role.

After 2 and a half years, a lot of these feelings are gone from my every day experiences, but I generally feel that they have become integrated into who I am rather than lost by the wayside.

However as I left the building I realised that actually I’d instinctively bought my ticket in Danish, showered and scrubbed all required areas, swum in the regimented lane systems and then paraded around the locker area without a towel to be seen. I even popped a couple of lakrids sweets in my pic’n'mix on the way home. I guess I’ve just accepted a whole new set of norms.

(*) Of course I realise that the pairing of a British person and Denmark’s society is generally quite fortunate in this respect and that many cultural migrations are tarred with enough prejudice to make my writing seem awkward and naive. Sorry.

DJ superteam to play Kalaset

January 1st, 2008, Events, Comments Off

Normally DJ superteams consist of talented people working together to make music intended to enhance nights out of the house with intriguing rhythms, samples and beeps. Birds of Paradise are a little different because they play other people’s music and some of it is sad. However, they do try to play it in a nice order and include songs to clap along to.

Lucy and Russell’s first joint performance will be this Friday, the 4th of January, from 22:00 to 02:00 at Kalaset.

Kalaset [info (in Danish)]
Vendersgade 16, 1363 København K [map]

Birds of Paradise

The Botanists (day two)

December 16th, 2007, Good things, The Botanists, Comments Off

On day two we discovered some more instruments in the potting shed and decided to give the vocals a rest while we try to perfect the music. We’ll be gargling eucalyptus tea throughout the festive season. God Jul.

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The Botanists (day two)

The Botanists (day one)

December 14th, 2007, Good things, The Botanists, 1 Comment

The Botanists are a young and naïve band. They know little about musical structure or narrative storytelling; preferring to spend their time watering their beloved Amorphophallus Titanums. This song was the result of a rare 60 minutes outside of the polytunnel. Captured directly to YouTube in only the second run through, any lapse in talent can immediately be substituted for honest intentions and a strong will. Their next plans are to practise.

Focus, clothing and Aldi

December 5th, 2007, General, 6 Comments

While on a recent trip to visit Lucy in Glasgow, I suggested that she ease the daily workload that her current blog requires, by starting a new blog. I then stipulated that all blogs have to have a focus and pushed her for one. After being made to realise the hypocrisy of my demand, I declared my own blog’s agenda to be “a low commitment read on the basis of highly infrequent posting”. This of course was some linguistic trickery to save face, when the stark reality is that my online output is nothing more than a sham of strung-together nonsense.

Clothing as a visual marker

If I’m known for anything then it’s probably for spending the majority of my time wearing the same baby blue hoody. As I’ve previously discussed, it’s a good match with my bike and goes somewhat with my company’s scheme. I figure it’s good to build up a characteristic image, so people can quickly recognise you in an emergency situation, when you’re passing on a speeding bus, or to locate their position in an audience when returning from a toilet break.

Despite the years I’ve invested in locking myself into this visual association, I’ve recently become aware that due to a lack of fabric conditioner, it’s becoming quite course and rough on my skin. There are also several signs of discolouration on the back area. Not wanting to become a walking parody of happier times, I decided to take the plunge and update to the latest version today.

Hoody

Notice the slightly richer and more saturated shade, the duotone effect inside the hood and the increased zipper height offering more neck protection during winter cycling

Aldi as everything

Everyone knows Aldi is great for things like tomatoes, rubbery cheese and bags of microwavable popcorn, but it’s also becoming increasingly great in other areas. One of these areas is art supplies and the other week I bought this astonishingly large pack of paper for around 30 DKK (under £3). My duvet-top photo doesn’t do it justice as I simply didn’t have time to fan out each of the different colours, textures and sizes. There’s everything from thick corrugated to tissue to glossy gradients. Standard weight paper is also very well represented with most of the electromagnetic spectrum included. I have lots of fun projects planned with this.

Aldi paper

I’ve also received a tip that they have full-size, professional-level keyboards for sale at less than 1.000 DKK (£100), which is fantastic news as I am beginning piano lessons (or resuming if you count a childhood attempt more than eighteen years ago) and my current range of instruments can manage no more than three octaves.

Keyboards

Tak for sidst

November 24th, 2007, Events, Comments Off

dj.jpg

Friday

November 22nd, 2007, Events, Comments Off

See you on Friday!

Politics

November 4th, 2007, Discussion, Comments Off

Denmark has an interesting political structure.

Firstly it’s a multi-party system, so most bills are only approved after negotiation and compromise between opposing parties who form a ruling government coalition. Secondly general elections are not decided by physical votes from the population, but rather by counting the number of placards erected around the city minus the number that have been vandalised. No wonder they have turnouts of over 85%.

OK, so one of those isn’t true, but on a serious note, Enhedslisten (the Red-Green Alliance) are the only ones to have highly innovative campaign designs. One of their comrades even gave me a free cup of coffee this morning as I cycled past her. It’s a shame it was wasted as I’m only allowed to vote in local elections.

Elections

Piracy = progressive taxation

November 3rd, 2007, Discussion, Comments Off

While the world continues to struggle with how to update copyright laws, this article from Tim O’Reilly in 2002 provides an interesting angle with which to view the situation:

“Piracy is progressive taxation”

For all of these creative artists, most laboring in obscurity, being well-enough known to be pirated would be a crowning achievement. Piracy is a kind of progressive taxation, which may shave a few percentage points off the sales of well-known artists (and I say “may” because even that point is not proven), in exchange for massive benefits to the far greater number for whom exposure may lead to increased revenues.”

Full article to put the quote in context.

DJ set at Kalaset

November 3rd, 2007, Events, 1 Comment

My next DJ set will be at Kalaset in Copenhagen on Friday 23rd November from 22:00 until 02:00.

Kalaset [info (in Danish)]
Vendersgade 16, 1363 København K [map]

Kalaset
Photo by Angermann