Disco Underworld Issue #7

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  • Words: 5,552
  • Pages: 35
disco under world

issue #7 may 2009





www.discounderworld.com. issue #7 contents. page

3

issue #7 features inspiration: where

do you

age p e l c i get al art i r o t i Ed yours

from?

54

e e L e n

e k o o C -

n i r Co

julie broberg page 8

page 44

page 60

Mike’s Space Page 36

uraeus page 26

nathaniel fl nathaniel flic nathaniel flick nathaniel fl nathaniel flic nathaniel flick nathaniel fl nathaniel flick nathaniel flick nathaniel fl nathaniel flick





direct address disco underworld, may 2009

“I shut my eyes in order to see.” -- Paul Gaugin

If we all knew we only had one more painting/photo/building/ song/film/article left in us, what would be the inspiration behind it. What would your piece de resistance be about?

To those of you who replied, thank you for your thoughts, they helped shape the article

Hi Stacey, I wanted to thank you for your recent link to Dr. Randy Pausch’s last lecture. That was very moving. I have been thinking about this for a week and I can’t say what my last expression would be, but I know I would want my family around. I am both a serious and lighthearted man, but it seems to me there should be some meaning or message behind every image I produce. I also believe many photographers/ artists say and express more about themselves when they create.

Randy Pausch’s last lecture on Oprah in 2007 (watch it on YouTube here), inspired in me a desire to know what each of us would do as a final creative act.

Like every month, I asked my lovely newsletter subscribers the theme’s question (subscribe here if you don’t already) and the answers I received back were lovely, and thoughtful and expressive of your different personalities and quirks. I love hearing your ideas and feedback, so please keep them coming.

www.discounderworld.com. direct address. page

on page 54. I also wanted to share the inspirational emails on the other page with you. Thank you to everybody who emails in with lovely thoughts about disco underworld, it truly means so much. I hope you enjoy this issue as much as I enjoyed creating it, Stacey

If we knew the time or close to the day we were going to leave this world, I am sure our work would be much more dramatic for many of us. It’s great food-for-thought Stacey and I thank you again for the inspirational link for reflecting on this idea. Coming up in the next few pages: Websites to watch Julie Broberg

btw... I mentioned you on my blog and Flickr page for the impetus and inspiration behind my recent image :) slimefaceimages.blogspot.com Take (Good) care, Paul Tarin www.slimeface.com

Dear disco underworld, I have just stumbled across your site, and I love it. The format you use is awesome, I have never seen this used before. Even better the content is great. I love being able to learn about all these different people from all over the world. Keep up the great work! Nicole Sargent, NYC disco underworld is published by Online Insight Limited © copyright 2008. By reading and interacting with our magazine and website, you agree to the terms laid out under the ‘terms of use’ on the site www.discounderworld.com Editor: Stacey Childs [email protected] Sub-Editor: Tessa Prebble

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NAME YOUR PRICE

NAME YOUR PRICE

we can help you with anything from a simple website for your business, to writing advice, professional marketing collateral or digital publishing solutions. You tell us what you would like us to do for you, and how much you’d like to pay for it. bringing back the barter in business



Need help with: Writing? Designing? Creating? digital publishing? marketing?

www.discounderworld.com. websites to watch. page

websites to watch

www.turningturning.com

www.online-insight.com

Contact us to find out more, obligation free!

Mal’s been working as a nationally certified art therapist for about five years now. She created turning*turning from her desire to comment on, create a community around, and explore, the creative process and its impact on everyday life. She has aligned the site with her core values and beliefs: that art and

creativity have power in our personal lives and that this power can be harnessed for good. The site is great for those of you looking for artistic inspiration and sharing, recent posts have shared processes and reasoning behind work and creativity.

7





julie broberg

www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. knachti. page

9 5



J

ulie Broberg is an American living in Denmark.

“I followed a nice Danish boy home more than a decade ago from the Balkans and have never really looked back.” She works full-time as the editor of a shipping magazine, along with being a mother to eight-year-old Sabin, and it is a love of exploring and discovery that bring a sense of colour, fun and ultimately, uniqueness, to her artwork.



www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. page

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www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. page

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“I find that I am constantly seeking inspiration. Through an increasing interest in photography and a vow to carry my camera with me wherever I go, I have found that it’s all around me. My camera has helped me to notice things more... how the light falls, shadows, buds unfurling on the trees, tiny mushrooms in the moss on the forest floor.” Julie says she finds the path from inspiration to actual creative output to be an interesting and mysterious one, and over the last year has been making an effort to tune in to what, why and when things have inspired her. “I've noticed lately that I'm inspired by things that I came across years ago. A collage a friend did with cut-out eyeballs nearly 20 years ago, recently came out in felt on a pillow for our bedroom.”

“I have been a bit obsessed with eyes of late. I’m quite literally seeing them everywhere.”



www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. page

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www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. page

“Very often objects inspire me. Stones, a quilt made by my great grandma, a piece of driftwood, the bark of a tree that looks like an eye. I am a bit of an obsessive collector of such things. They inspire in me a desire to tell a story, to weave words into them, to assign meaning to them, or coax to the surface the meaning that lurks within.” Along with photography, Julie dabbles in a wide range of creative mediums in her specially built studio, “which is my great love at the moment”.

“I am a bit of an obsessive collector of such things.” Coming up in the next few pages: Julie continued URAEUS

Teatowel by Heather Moore www.skinnylaminx.com

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“It has four sets of double doors that open wide for those summery days. It has a cosy wood-burning stove for those days when it rains and is so grey and chilly you think the sun will never shine again.” “The supplies are there. The books are there. There are projects in various stages of completion on the coffee table and the sideboard. The drawers are filled to bursting with pretty paper and fabrics. Music spills forth from the i-pod. There are inspiration books on the shelf, beckoning to be taken down when one feels like drawing or quilting or making clay figures. Paints and pencils and canvases beckon. Embroidery threads, rolls of felt and rubber stamps whisper ideas.”

“It’s also where we keep the liquor, as you can tell from that blue cupboard”.



www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. page

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www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. page

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“But what do we do with all of this inspiration that's around us? I find that I use it to make my home more my own, more unique. And sometimes I forget, living in the middle of it as I do, that we have created something unique with the things we collect and the memories that are strewn about our house on shelves, on the walls, on the floor. So ultimately all of the inspiration I gather finds its way into our home and makes it the home that it is. I don't always see that except through the eyes of someone new who comes to visit – seeing them look around delightedly means all the inspiration was, well, indeed inspired.”

“Ultimately all of the inspiration I gather finds its way into our home.”



five random things about Julie:



1. I have one tattoo, an inch-long flower on the second toe of my left foot. 2. I’ve been told I’m really un-huggable, but perfect strangers feel really comfortable with me and tell me all kinds of wildly personal things. 3. Whenever we have people over for dinner, I go to great lengths to cook a great meal, but there’s always one dish or essential item that I forget to put on the table.

Coming up in the next few pages: URAEUS Mike’s Space

4. My first passport was green. A border guard on the Turkish-Greek border once told me that was “very bad, very bad,” and made a cutting motion across his throat. He didn’t go on to explain this alarming piece of information. 5. I really hate making phone calls.

www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. page

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www.discounderworld.com. julie broberg. page

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F irst, make a sugar syrup by bringing 3 cups of water and 1 cup of sugar to boil.. Allow the syrup to cool.. Then stir together the following in small, flat dish (I used a flat 1.5 inch tall by A4-sized Tupperware container with a lid) that will fit in your freezer: - 1 cup of the sugar syrup - 1 half litre bottle of Schweppes Indian Tonic (do not be cheap about your tonic, only Schweppes will do) - the juice of 2 limes - 1/2 cup of gin (I used g’vine, a posh French small batch gin)

julie’s gin and tonic sorbet If you would like to vote for Julie, enter your email here and hit vote. Your vote will count once your email has been verified. Only one vote will count per email and person.

Named Blogger Blog of Note in April! Check out Julie’s awesome blog here: www.julochka.blogspot.com

I let mine freeze overnight, but it likely would have been ready sooner – the gin keeps it from freezing into ice cube-like consistency. Then, you take a fork and rake it across until it’s a lovely slushy consistency, Put it in a glass with a slice of lime and serve in the sun. It’s heavenly. I promise.





www.discounderworld.com. uraeus. page

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uraeus





www.discounderworld.com. uraeus. page

29

R

ichard Tyler II, whose media name is URAEUS, is a full-time designer and the creative brain behind the comic book series and franchise of JAYCEN WISE. “I have a passion for developing cutting edge material that pushes the boundaries of the imagination.” URAEUS concentrates his time on creating a new mythology with JAYCEN WISE, much like George Lucas did with Star Wars, or J. R. R. Tolkien did with The Lord of the Rings. He finds his biggest inspiration in doing this comes from travelling the world. Coming up in the next few pages: URAEUS continued Mike’s Space





www.discounderworld.com. uraeus. page

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“I f properly insp ired man can ach i eve any goal”

This was the lesson URAEUS learnt firsthand in his travels throughout the Nile Valley in East Africa. It also taught him the importance of history. “I am a firm believer that one cannot navigate the tumultuous sea that the future represents, without arming oneself with the knowledge and wisdom of ages past, and the inspiration gleaned from the trials, tribulations and triumphs of our forefathers and ancestors.” He says witnessing the magnificence and splendour of the ancient civilizations of Egypt and Kush inspired in him the knowledge that anything can be achieved with the proper inspiration.





With this, and a desire to create media which children can draw inspiration from in mind, URAEUS created JAYCEN WISE.

“anyth ing

can b e ach i eved with th e proper insp irati on”

JAYCEN is the type of iconic hero that children can hold up as a role model and learn from. “A hero who uses mind first in all situations, is an avid student, and who believes he can achieve anything he sets his mind to. His motto is, ‘if you can conceive it, you can achieve it, if you believe it.”

www.discounderworld.com. uraeus. page

33





www.discounderworld.com. uraeus. page

35

JAYCEN’s travels and adventures provide a platform for entertainment and education as he moves through time, meeting important figures, visiting important places, and experiencing important events and lessons of the past. “But always with the perspective of examining how history affects the present, and most importantly, the future.” URAEUS has certainly created the basis of an epic adventure with JAYCEN WISE, and where they both go in the future, only time will tell. Check out more of URAEUS’ work here: www.jaycenwise.deviantart.com If you would like to vote for URAEUS, enter your email here and hit vote. Your vote will count once your email has been verified. Only one vote will count per email and person. Coming up in the next few pages: Mike’s Space Corinne Lee-Cooke



www.discounderworld.com. mike’s space. page

“That’s right.” “Where you from man?” “Kentucky” Mike Woodruff lives in Los Angeles. When not writing, he enjoys playing basketball and eating Flamin’ Hot Cheetos. You can find him on the internet at www.mutinouswombats.blogspot.com.

Read last month’s Mike’s Space here.

words and images by Mike Woodruff

W

hen I stepped out of my car, my bones cracked like dried liquorice. Inside, it smelled like sweaty faux leather and peppery trail mix. Outside, it smelled like things that were new to me: ten lane freeways, palm trees, chaparral, and a man with ashy hands and a black wool fedora.

“Hey man,” he said to me. “That’s a nice car.” “Thanks.” “You new in the building man?”

“Well, if you need anything, let me know Kentucky. My name’s Supreme.” Supreme then walked to the elevator, his hand wrapped tightly around a woman’s leopard skinned waist so that the edges of his fingers fell right on the swell of her hips. He called her baby. The whole next day, I just laughed to myself about the odd encounter. I have a knack for these sorts of things. Somehow, after three days of the most memorable road trip I’d ever done, I found it perfectly fitting that the first person I met when I arrived in California was a pimp named Supreme, who lived in my apartment complex. So let’s backtrack a little, because even though this was the beginning of a new chapter, it was also the end of a previous one. I moved to Los Angeles in the fall of 2003 to attend school.

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From my house in Kentucky, it was over 2,500 miles (4,000 km) across nine states to the west coast. That’s three solid days of driving. I packed my little Dodge Stealth full of suitcases and televisions and Harry Potter books crammed up underneath the seats. Inside, there wasn’t much room for me and my travelling buddy.

We started off smoothly, breezing across the rolling hills of Indiana, Illinois and Missouri before hitting into the flat plains of Kansas. Things went normally. We talked and did our best to pass the time. We memorized the state rankings for size and population according to a Rand McNally atlas. Even now, I still remember that Missouri is ranked 17th in population according to the 2000 census. That was all on the first day.

www.discounderworld.com. mike’s space. page

On the second day, we took off through Kansas and Colorado. It was a study of contrast in terrains. Sprawling horizons followed by ragged mountain peaks. The one common ingredient was the size, the vastness of places that stretch your eyes. I hadn’t seen anything like it. The eastern seaboard isn’t like that. It’s scrunchy and surrounded by hills that don’t add anything to the view except blocking it.

39

We coasted through Denver during early evening, and then into the Rockies. A storm rolled in, and we rocketed through the interstate passes, cracking up peaks and diving into valleys. I felt like I was driving a roller coaster, or riding along the back of a dragon. We passed through the Eisenhower tunnel. When we came out the other side, the radio crackled nervously. There was a sizzle, and then the whole sky turned white. For a second, I couldn’t see a thing.



“Dude,” my friend said. “Was that lightning?” “Yeah,” I said. “I think we were inside a cloud.” And then we got stuck in a tiny town called Eagle, Colorado. There was a mudslide up ahead and no way the road could be cleared until morning. Okay, we said. It was good a place to stop as any. There were plenty of hotels around. Except there were no rooms. That’s because the tiny town of Eagle, Colorado, usually just a tiny town in the mountains, happened to be the same tiny town where Kobe Bryant allegedly raped a girl earlier that summer. And so, it happens to be the same tiny town where a media swarm had descended to cover the ongoing trial. Hence, no rooms. Coming up in the next few pages: Corinne Lee-Cooke Inspiration: where do you get yours from?

www.discounderworld.com. mike’s space. page

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We slept in the car, and started out in the morning. We stopped by the Hoover Dam and Las Vegas. We rolled into Caesar’s Palace through the back entrance, back where the old ladies with fat rolls over their elbows stare vacantly at slot machines and hope for their lucky 7s. I dropped a quarter, lost a game, and then got back on the road.

It was six hours before we got into Pasadena and met Supreme. I was tired and fatigued from driving for nearly 16 hours, yet my friend and I decided to walk around town. We were amazed by the sight of palm trees. Neither one of us had ever seen the tall kind that pocket Los Angeles. They looked like something out of a Dr. Seuss book. They couldn’t be real. It couldn’t be real… Did I really meet a pimp?

www.discounderworld.com. mike’s space. page

Did I really travel thousands of miles across the country? There was something strange, yet familiar, about the whole thing. California was completely different than Kentucky, yet connected in a way I couldn’t quite place. Even though everything looked completely alien, there was something intimate about stepping into my car at home and then stepping out of the same car so many miles away.

It left me inspired. So inspired, that about two years later, I started working on a book that draws directly from those three days. The vastness of the countryside, the openness of the road, and the weirdness of the people you meet on it. It’s not every day you meet a pimp. Especially on your first day in California.

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n i r Co

e e L ne

e k o o -C





www.discounderworld.com. corinne lee-cooke. page

C

orinne Lee-Cooke lives in a small town outside of Derby, England with her husband and pets. Since graduating in 2003 with a BA in illustration she has worked a variety of very uncreative office jobs, which has meant she has never really been satisfied with her working life. Being made redundant recently, despite the obvious pitfalls, has meant that she has been shocked into following her creative passions. She has recently made the decision to go freelancing, and swears she will never go back to working an office job.

“It is all very scary. I really hope it works out as I'm not going back!”

“Lola in the midst of sorting out her haberdashery box”.

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Now Corinne is working as part of a design agency in Nottingham, which creates greetings cards for the North American market. “This isn't really art for me, but it’s a hell of an illustration job.”



www.discounderworld.com. corinne lee-cooke. page

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“Everything is how it should be and nothing is coincidence.”

Corinne believes that “art is an expression of the artist and their life experiences, which makes the subject so exciting and diverse.” In regards to her artwork, she says “everything is how it should be and nothing is coincidence”, and her personal work is driven by a love for animals and the unseen world around us. “I am a spiritualist medium, (which means she believes that a person’s spirit survives physical death and can communicate with certain gifted people, called mediums) which dominates my life and filters through to my work. I try not to make it too obvious though, because I would hate to offend or alienate people who don’t carry the same beliefs.”

“Happy the cloud. She goes about her business in a most cheery manner. She has no heady career aspirations or hankering to know what the latest fashion is: Happy is just glad to be, which is most lovely. Also she is a very loyal friend and likes to drink tea made in a pot.”



“We are capable of great things and I try to remember that often.” The everyday objects she uses in her work also represent her fascination with the idea of transition, but in a different way. “I love to use old or antique paper and material as it has its own personality. The idea that inanimate objects have had a life before I met them, and are therefore never really mine, fascinates me.”



www.discounderworld.com. corinne lee-cooke. page

“I couldn't use new paper for a long while because it just didn't work with what I was doing. About the same time I saw Oliver Jeffer’s work and it totally reinforced my love for utilising old paper.” Corinne is also inspired by different facets of human relationships and the dynamics of friendship. “We are capable of great things and I try to remember that often. I love to laugh and am very lucky to know people that are blessed with a sense of humour, fun is very important to me.”

“Edward hates parties. He thought the hat to be completely unnecessary but he wore it so as not to seem ungrateful.”

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www.discounderworld.com. corinne lee-cooke. page

Five random things about Corinne:

1. I love Tea 2. Blue Violet Lake is my favourite Prisma-Color pencil (hence my blog name) 3. I'm a trained makeup artist and obsessed with skin care 4. I have a three-year old Pomeranian dog called Scrappy 5. I'm absolutely rubbish at mathematics Check out more of Corinne’s work here: www.violet-lake.blogspot.com If you would like to vote for Corinne, enter your email here and hit vote. Your vote will count once your email has been verified. Only one vote will count per email and person.

Coming up in the next few pages: Inspiration: where do you get yours from? Nathaniel Flick

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inspiration: where

do you

get

yours

from? Words by Stacey Childs. Inspiration from the readers of disco underworld

www.discounderworld.com. editorial article: inspiration. page

V

55

iewing Randy Pausch’s last lecture for the first time recently, set off a thousand thoughts in my head. Being faced with your own mortality must do wonders for a person. I mean, you wouldn’t have time for bitchiness, complaining, whining, people holding you back, people putting you down. Imagine if you knew you were going to die tomorrow and someone told you that they thought you were fat. Would you care? No, you’d get on with it. Bigger and better things to do than worry about that.

Things would be relegated to necessary, optional and a complete waste of time. I can almost bet that most of the necessary things would revolve around family and friends, the optional would include things like work, eating and cleaning (I mean, well, you are going to die tomorrow!) and the complete waste of time would revolve around material things like “I always wanted to buy a Mercedes or an i-phone”. Too late now buddy.



“I put out an email, asking the readers of disco underworld, what their final creative project would be if they knew they had only one left in them.”



Most people’s last actions would revolve around family and friends, food and fun, and I was curious to find out what their last creative act would be. The daddy of all work you have ever done. If you are a painter and you had one last work to leave as your legacy, what would you paint? A builder, what would you build? Whatever your talent, if you had one last chance to create something, what would it be, and what would be the inspiration behind it? I put out an email, asking the readers of disco underworld, what their final creative project

www.discounderworld.com. editorial article: inspiration. page

would be if they knew they had only one left in them. Here are some of the answers: “I’ve been thinking about it, and I think my last lecture would be about passion. I know that no great designer ever came out of a semi-interested person, so that’d be my last lecture. But then I started thinking what would be my last ‘lecture’ to my seven year old son and this is just way too big...” (Agnieszka Parr, graphic design tutor and mother)

57

“It would probably be a game that somehow joined up all my contradictory aspects - my love of nature with explosions, fabulous locations and beautiful people juxtaposed with my desire to reveal the hypocrisies of the rich and the suffering of ordinary people. It would have stunts and helicopters and a massive chase scene. Music would be by the Emerald City. Something larger than the project itself would happen. I'd like to make something that was exciting and wonderful to encounter.” (Joe Citizen, filmmaker)





www.discounderworld.com. editorial article: inspiration. page

inspiration: where

do you

get

yours

from?

“Truthfully if I had one day to live I would release a short statement: ‘I'll keep this brief! I apologise for not sharing all of the considerable knowledge I have amassed and not passing on all the brilliant ideas I have conceived and not imparting the wonders of wisdom that I have learnt. As it is my last day I regret to inform you that it is too late to remedy any of this meaningfully - even on YouTube. My one piece of advice would be to impart knowledge, be wise and do everything you can, every day of your life to avoid any unfinished business piling up at the end and getting in the way of valuable time with your loved ones. P.S I'm in the pub, if you can make it by last orders for a wonderfully futile celebration of my life...it’s your round!’” (Neil Buddle, DJ and printmaker)

And me? I’m not artistically a very creative person, but I guess writing is my form of creation. So if I was to assemble together one last set of words, I guess they would be about the importance of learning and challenges. What length they arranged themselves into would depend on how much I could be bothered writing, but the skeleton would be something based around sharing the knowledge I have learnt in my time regarding the importance of these two things. Through learning more about myself by searching for and locating what makes me happy, I have found that these two things, besides my family and friends are what inspire me. Learning and challenge could be one in the same, but they can be completely different separate. Learning does not always have to be a challenge, and challenges don’t always teach

you things. Sometimes things don’t have to have points, they can simply be there for joy and silliness. Thinking about this topic makes me wonder: What is stopping those of us who are ready from creating the best work of our lives? It’s not possible to live life from day to day thinking that you would die the next, but it is possible to think about it creatively. What a great standard to strive to in your work. If you are lucky it won’t be the last piece of work you do, which means that the next piece will be ever better. Your work will be the stuff masterpieces are made of. Coming up in the next few pages: Nathaniel Flick Last issue’s winner revealed

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www.discounderworld.com. nathaniel flick. page

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nathanie nathaniel f nathaniel flic nathanie nathaniel f nathaniel fli nathaniel nathaniel flick nathaniel fli nathaniel nathaniel flick By Dillie Baria











































www.discounderworld.com. nathaniel flick. page

N

athaniel Flick is a professional bass player, devoted husband and loving father, who never struggles for inspiration. He draws it from numerous sources, predominantly music and spirituality. He compares music to a conversation between two old friends, where words and thoughts flow easily and effortlessly. Nathaniel grew up in the Bay Area in the 1970s with a jazzfanatic mother whose friends were all musicians. They had jam sessions at his house, and when they tired, the turntable rang out with their favourite music. Funk and soul enveloped his early and teenage years. Home Sweet Home is a band whose music he held on to, whose “percolating busy bass underneath the drums and horn section got deep into my soul.”

Some of us disagree with our parents’ choice of music, especially if they were to play an album, or even a song, on repeat all day long, but in Nathaniel’s case, his mother playing “Kind of Blue” by Miles Davis on repeat is what still inspires him today, as well as albums by John Coltrane. “They taught me how to be calm even during sweet musical moments, as well as how to let loose and not be afraid to hit a clunker note or two on the way to those effortless musical moments.” He dreams “of waves of sound flowing and cascading around me, an electric symphony of sorts.” He finds inspiration and challenge in his dreams, as although he dreams of perfect symphonies, he finds it takes quite some effort to write music that's complete, while not being too busy at the same time. “It’s a delicate balance”.

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Spirituality also helps simplify this busy world for him. “Life is simple; we make it hard” is an idea he discovered at college. “College completely blew my mind and opened me up to new ideas. Things I'd never considered in my ideal little life in the Bay Area.” Raised a dedicated Mormon, college helped him decide to give up the church for good. These days, if he had to choose, he’d choose to be a Buddhist. “I'm interested in the philosophies rather than trying to influence anyone else's beliefs.” Having taught bass to around 20 students over the years, Nathaniel says that although guiding his students to “‘a ha!’ moments” has been pleasurable, he finds he has been the one to learn the most. He claims that teaching is a vocation that makes one think about why they are doing it, and what they are getting out of it, at the same time. His students have all been an inspiration to him, and that’s where his own learning stems from.



























www.discounderworld.com. nathaniel flick. page

65



















NAME YOUR PRICE

NAME NAME YOUR YOUR PRICE PRICE

we can help you with anything from a website for wesimple can help you with your business, to anything from a writing advice, simple website for professional your business, to marketing collateral quick writing advice, or digital publishing professional solutions. marketing collateral or digital publishing You tell us solutions. what you would like us to do for you,tell andushow much You what you you’d like to pay for it. would like us to do for bringing back how the much you, and













Need help with: Writing? Designing? Creating? digital publishing? marketing?













www.discounderworld.com. nathaniel flick. page

When asked if he had one last song or work to create, what he would make it about, Nathaniel says he would like to have one large jam session. “One huge symphony of sound is what it would be, but everyone in attendance could come in and out of the jam at will.” With a child of his own who can now say “Daddy playing bass”, he is set to provide another young mind with the nourishment music has given him over the years. Check out more of Nat’s work here: www.myspace.com/natflick If you would like to vote for Nat, enter your email here and hit vote. Your vote will count once your email has been verified. Only one vote will count per email and person. Coming up on the next page:

www.online-insight.com

Contact us to find out you’dinlike to pay for it. more, obligation free! barter business

Last issue’s winner of a place in the Gold Edition revealed.

67

Your favourite from last issue, and the person to be included in the Gold Edition at the end of the year is:

Elsa Mora She wins a spot in The Gold Edition 2009, a publication which follows up on your favourite people from the year before, and provides you with interviews and spreads of other cool cats from around the globe. You can visit her website here: www.elsita.typepad.com

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