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'Six From The Hip' Beat 2 Pulse interview
- Feb 27th 2009
[B2P] After an outstanding review and completely amazing experience
listening to his album, George of Alien Skin was kind enough to participate
in Our 'Six From The Hip' interview. So, for those who checked out George's
music and want to know more about him and Alien Skin, this should please
you!
1. [B2P] After listening to your album, 'Don't Open Till Doomsday'
we get the picture that you are a man capable of deep thoughts and ideas.
What inspirations or outlets do you draw from to create your music?
[ALIEN SKIN] Thank you, Jackson, for your kind assessment.
I think most of us are capable of deep thoughts and ideas if we broaden
our social, cultural and historical terms of reference; by analysis
and questioning, rather than easily submitting to what is packaged as
absolutes and presented to us as unchallengeable received wisdom.
In answer to your question, my primary inspiration to create music,
frankly, is my love of song writing dating back to adolescence. The
allure of expressing emotions by means of music, specifically within
concise, disciplined song structures, is what drives me most to create.
The electronic approach, which has become my preference since the early
80s, married to what loosely can be described as '‘traditional'
writing – done so well by Martin Gore and Depeche Mode - continues
to motivate and inspire me.
I describe 'Don't Open Till Doomsday' as 'a kaleidoscope of electronic
melancholia'. A number of life experiences that framed my outlook over
the past decade are expressed in the flow of songs and sombre mood of
the album. I'm more of a melancholic personality than one bubbling with
exuberance, so I guess that comes through in the music and has deeply
inspired the work.
2. [B2P] In the creation of 'Don't Open Till Doomsday', what
did you find to be the most challenging task and why?
[ALIEN SKIN] I have to say that the most challenging component,
while working alone and in virtual isolation, is remaining objective
about my work. Relying solely on my own musical instincts can be frustrating;
the judgements and opinions of one day can turn into their opposites
the next… and back again. Slowly, I had to work through the songs
and eventually trust that I made the correct decisions about song choices,
arrangements, sounds, vocals, production, engineering etc. At the end
of the day though I'm satisfied with the overall results and am pleased
with the feedback I've received from fans.
3. [B2P] Life after 'Doomsday?' Do you have plans for a new
album, if so, any thoughts on what we can expect? And when?
[ALIEN SKIN] 'Don't Open Till Doomsday' is my debut album release
as Alien Skin and I'm planning a follow up, hopefully, later in 2009.
I'm currently in the process of writing and draft recording new tracks.
I don't wish to gravitate too far from DOTD as I still have those song
types and moods in my system and I believe I can do a lot more exploring
within a similar musical framework and still maintain interest for myself
and for the audience.
Further, I haven't established Alien Skin well enough as yet, so I believe
it's important for me to consolidate what defines 'that sound'. I would
like to think that the people who discovered my music on this debut
will still recognise Alien Skin on its follow up. As an anecdote, it
was suggested by my label, pre release, that we commission a number
of remixers to add alternate versions on a bonus free disc with DOTD,
but I rejected this on the premise that it may confuse people as to
what the Alien Skin sound is.
4. [B2P] I grew up with so much 80's music in my youth. From
Men Without Hats to Falco to Thompson Twins. And I find even today I
gravitate towards it every so often. I find it amazing that 80's music
is the only decade to actually be made into a genre. What are your thoughts
on this?
[ALIEN SKIN] I grew up during an earlier generation so the 80s were
more of an ongoing development to me than a starting point. The early
part of the decade was the most influential for me as it twisted my
musical head away from conventional bands, and music in general, to
electronic outfits such as the Human League, Depeche Mode, Cabaret Voltaire
etc. For me these were the early 'glory' years and I guess I also go
back to explore that exciting part of history every so often as well.
I don't agree that the 80s can be musically reduced to a genre. Like
any decade it had great diversity. There are ample examples to be found,
even from a cursory look at the output from the era internationally.
I think the retrospective marketing and repackaging of the period, such
as in fashion, Hollywood movies and commercial radio, has a lot to do
with it being considered in such a homogenous manner.
5. [B2P] Are you currently, or do you have any plans to perform
'Don't Open Till Doomsday' material live?
[ALIEN SKIN] I spent quite a number of years, up to 2005, touring
with Real Life (Send Me an Angel), playing the US, Europe and at home
in Australia but at present I don't have any specific plans with regards
to live performance of DOTD. Financial hurdles are always the most insurmountable,
especially considering that most interest in Alien Skin comes from the
northern hemisphere, far, far from home. It would require substantial
audience demand to contemplate it. But of course I'd love to.
6. [B2P] I'd like to thank you very much for participating in
our 'Six From The Hip' segment George. Do you have any final words for
the fans?
[ALIEN SKIN] Firstly, I'd like to thank you Mr Jackson Presley
- what a fine name - for being so attentive to detail in listening to
and then reviewing 'Don't Open Till Doomsday'.
For all the fans who have supported Alien Skin by buying the album and
returning such positive feedback, I am hoping that my future and past
work will continue to resonate with you. Your support in virally spreading
the word about Alien Skin online, through social networks, blogs etc.
would be gratefully appreciated and I am always open to communication
via my websites. Thank you!
[B2P] I'd like to thank George (Alien Skin) once again for participating
in this interview. For all you Alien Skin fans, I hope this interview
has gotten you one step closer to the musician that has brought us the
wonderful treat 'Don't Open Till Doomsday'. And if you still haven't
checked out Alien Skin and their debut release 'Don’t Open Till
Doomsday' do yourself a favor and head over to www.alienskinmusic.com
and take a listen. Your ears will thank you!
-- interviewed by Jackson Presley
http://www.beat2pulse.com/?p=89
< Back
Chain D.L.K. Web-zine
- May 29th 2008
Chain D.L.K.: When you joined Real Life the band already
had their huge success with "Send Me An Angel". Were you already
one of their fans during the 80's? What brought you to become their
new keyboard player?
Alien Skin: Real Life in the early 80s was one of the
few bands on the local Melbourne live scene, where I live, playing predominantly
British synthesizer music with a contemporary and modern attitude. The
majority of bands gigging were very much guitar and rock oriented still.
I first saw them in concert supporting another major Australian synth
band, Icehouse. It was from this moment I became a fan and began catching
them at their many gigs over the next year or so before international
success with 'Send Me An Angel' took the band overseas. Real Life performed,
looked and sounded very much the way I envisaged myself developing musically
and as a performer. They were very educational for me during that formative
period.
Chain D.L.K.: Before then, what kind of musical experience
did you have?
Alien Skin: I had been performing on the local Melbourne
scene with a number of electronic outfits as a keyboardist and songwriter
throughout the 80s and beyond. This gave me important grounding for
my later work with Real Life and Alien Skin. None of my previous bands
and duos achieved the success I would have liked but with the experience
came learning and the honing of my musical and technical skills and
capabilities.
Chain D.L.K.: In your opinion, what have been the highlights
of your experience with Real Life?
Alien Skin: Well, definitely touring, not only at home
but also on a number of trips to the US and Germany, and being warmly
and at times feverishly received by fans. We also played with Orchestral
Manoeuvrers in the Dark, together with Claudia Brucken (from Propaganda)
at Synthstock 2000 in the US, that was a huge outdoor show! The other
highlight of course has been co-writing with David Sterry, Real Life
vocalist and guitarist, which resulted in two Real Life original albums
and a remix album. Our most recent release in 2004, Imperfection, was
the combined effort of David and myself. This latter album was the one
I had the greatest influence over, producing and engineering it as well.
Chain D.L.K.: In 2004 you felt the urge to compose
your own songs and for this reason Alien Skin started to take form.
What have been the steps of this process?
Alien Skin: After our US 'Imperfection' tour of 2004,
I felt that I had done as much as I could within the confines of the
band. I have always been a songwriter and I began feeling that the time
was right for me to release something of my own, envisaged and performed
in a way that best reflected what I was about, as a writer, singer and
artist. I had never seriously done that before. I had some songs already
drafted and I began consciously writing more specifically for this new
solo project. 'Alien Skin' had not been born yet, that came much later.
I simply commenced work on writing and collecting a number of songs
from which I would eventually shape an album. After a few compositions,
written for the most part on acoustic guitar, I decided the mood of
the album. I had already written quite a number of upbeat tracks for
Real Life, now I wanted the opposite, darker, slower, more ambient,
melancholic and ethereal. This stylistic approach also best suits my
voice.
Chain D.L.K.: In the meantime Real Life released a
couple of albums for 'A Different Drum' label. How did you deal with
the fact that you were doing your own stuff and also composing with
David Sterry for the band?
Alien Skin: Actually, 'Imperfection' was the last album
we did together, so when I began writing songs that would eventually
belong to Alien Skin, David and I were not working on any music together.
During my career with Real Life I wrote a tremendous amount of music,
only some ended up as Real Life, a lot just didn't fit or was oversupply,
so I have always written music that was more for me than the band, it
was never an issue.
Chain D.L.K.: On my review I called 'Don't Open Till
Doomsday' a 'night album'. What's your own definition of it?
Alien Skin: 'Night album' describes 'Don't Open Till
Doomsday' well! The songs when listened to as a whole, I believe, create
a mental and sonic environment of night, of darkness. There is a melancholic
thread running through them. I find it difficult to imagine the album
listened to on a bright summer's day – although someone just wrote
to me to say she loves hearing it driving down a sunny highway with
the car roof up. Personally I find this difficult to comprehend as it
has the opposite affect on me. I've described the album elsewhere as
a 'kaleidoscope of electronic melancholia' and as 'music for aliens,
astronauts and other marginal beings at the frontiers'. I think this
visual impression helps create in the mind what I set out to achieve.
Chain D.L.K.: As you've already admitted Martin Gore's
song writing affected your way of composing. Is this because you both
have a similar musical background that has lead you towards the same
"ground" or have you been so impressed by Depeche Mode that
you've been therefore influenced?
Alien Skin: Martin Gore has been a significant influence
on my writing since the early 80s when he took over the role from Vince
Clarke. His ability to craft superb and gorgeous lyrical melodies, and
the structure of those often poignant tunes against dark chord sequences
and the way they were delivered both by Dave Gahan and himself, left
an indelible impression upon me from the first time I heard Depeche
Mode - Martin Gore version. DM has been an important component in my
musical development as an electronic artist since that very early period
especially during the Alan Wilder era. If anything, we share a similar
background in the sense we both value traditional song writing, especially
influences from the 60s, and a love of Kraftwerk. The marriage of creative
electronics to the predominance and significance of 'the song' is a
perspective I would like to think we have in common.
Chain D.L.K.: Behind a melancholic but also romantic
atmosphere there are dark lyrics like the one for 'For Always' (I fear
the silence a morgue of silence - I will remember you for always) or
'Razor Arms' (When I crash into your razor arms - when I crawl into
your bed of blades - when I'm torn and no blood remains). Here, the
main feeling is of someone who's overwhelmed by life with no chance
of escape. What made you write these lyrics?
Alien Skin: 'For Always' is dedicated to our (Iryna
and I) beloved Bozette, our very intelligent, loving and affectionate
pet cat who had to be put to sleep last year, suffering with terminal
cancer. She had honestly been our best friend for 12 years. This is
a song that was written soon after her death, and is very close to me.
'Razor Arms', was first drafted a few years ago, it's a mixture of many
feelings and ideas, some were inspired by the September 11 attacks,
I think that's what subliminally motivated the idea behind the first
verse. When I write lyrics they're not always meant to be read at face
value, often they are created to convey a mood, an atmosphere, so I
juxtapose imagery that will best establish, at least I hope so, this
intent. Having said that, the period in which these songs were written
were definitely influenced by my own personal disposition.
Chain D.L.K.: In my opinion 'Don't Open Till Doomsday'
is a balanced album with the right dose of rhythm and melody and a lot
of different moods. I'm curious to know how it sounded before deciding
the definitive track list or before deciding what kind of production
to be given to it. Can you talk about this process?
Alien Skin: Thank you for seeing it that way! From
the start I purposely wanted to make an album bereft of the hard beats
I created in Real Life. I wanted a certain mood and atmosphere - a theme
- to permeate throughout the set of songs. Even those that do have more
strident beats, I believe, do not diverge from this overall sonic, emotional
and atmospheric theme. I was fortunate at the time, and this was over
a long period, that I continued writing songs from a similar perspective
so the majority of songs automatically turned out ready made to fit
the overall concept of the album. Altogether I wrote quite a few tracks
and those I finally chose worked best together as a concise and consistent
album.
Of the songs you mentioned earlier for instance, I could have had more
'For Always' or more 'Razor Arms' clones, or more of any one of the
rest, but this would have unbalanced the set. From the overall collection
I chose the 10 that best represented my ideas at the time. Production
and arrangement wise: the direction was set when I decided what type
of album I wished to make. That also meant that some songs that were
already written in a previous period, such as 'Razor Arms' and 'The
Spirit is Willing' were dramatically reworked to fit into this format.
Essentially, they were stripped down and made far more atmospheric and
minimal.
Chain D.L.K.: Are you thinking of doing any gigs and
generally what are your future plans for Alien Skin?
Alien Skin: Alien Skin was always meant as a vehicle
to express the musical ideas I've not been able to make public otherwise.
Song writing is the favourite aspect of what I do and this has been
quite a challenging exercise, doing it alone, but I have thoroughly
enjoyed the experience. 'Don't Open Till Doomsday' as an album establishes
who and what Alien Skin is in 2008 and I certainly wish to follow it
up with another. I don't think I would deviate too far from what I have
begun, but who knows! As for touring, although I would love the opportunity,
the costs and logistics of doing so, especially considering most of
the interest in Alien Skin is from overseas – US and Europe –
makes this very difficult to do, but again, who knows?
-- interviewed by Maurizio Pustianaz, Italy
Read
original article here
< Back
Grave Concerns Web-zine
Print Friendly Version

- 09 June 2008
George Pappas is Alien Skin, residing in the idyllic country
of Melbourne, Australia. He is well known for being the keyboardist
and composer of the fabulous (and one of my favorite) 80s bands Real
Life. George's talent has complimented Real Life for many years, and
now his debut album, "Don't Open Till Doomsday", will demonstrate even
more of his artistic brilliance. "Don't Open Till Doomsday", is exceptional,
in all the ways that reflect the beauty and joy, the love of mysteriousness
and darkness, and the allure of creating music from which those, and
other emotions stem from. George is an amazing artist, but an even more
amazing person. For me, this was apparent with the very first time we
had corresponded, until, most recently, with my letting him know his
album will soon be reviewed for Grave Concerns E-zing. He's a gentleman,
a wonderful man of respectfulness, warmth, and generosity within his
words. And it's an honor to call him a friend. Once you read of George's
interview, you'll know why he's such a special person---blessed with
humour, intelligence, and kindness, and where his artistic soul shinned
throughout. Thank you again George, for the interview you did with me
for Grave Concerns E-zing---it's truly an honor for us all, and especially
for me. (;
Grave Concerns: Beautifully dark greetings George, it's truly
an honor to have you here at the grave---I'm floored by this opportunity
of interviewing you. Since I first heard the song "Send me an Angel"
by Real Life, it has stayed within my heart. There is something so magical
and haunting about that song. And still do this day, when I hear it
on the radio I get filled with such fond memories---truly a classic
for me.
Hi Lynda, Ms Grave, and thank you for having me here at the 'grave'-
a place of angels and demons - this is as good a segue as any into Send
me an Angel. Yes, the song certainly has achieved timeless status. Blissed
out faces always greeted the tune with excited enthusiasm each and every
time we, as Real Life, performed it. It has such a strong appeal for
so many people, with its haunting as you put it, minor key melancholia
and yearning. To me, the magical female siren in the chorus is the piéce
de résistance. Ms Grave, Angel follows me on the radio everywhere
I go too, by choice or not, whether while choosing the best dishwashing
liquid on the supermarket shelf, or finding myself lost in a giant shiny
shopping mall!
Grave Concerns: Now I like that…I really like that; what
a lovely way to start the interview George…thank you sir! (: "Send
me an Angel", as you probably already know, but I have to say it anyway,
was in the 80s movie "Teen Wolf Too", with Jason Bateman, the sequel
to Teen Wolf, which starred Michael J. Fox. I taped the scene in which,
"Send me an Angel", was playing in the background. (;
Grave Concerns: In 2003 you underwent major surgery---and the night
before you went into surgery, you were inspired, thus, creating a draft
of your song "Alien Skin"---isn't it amazing how life speaks to us in
some of our most difficult times? How are you my friend, doing presently?
Presently I am doing just fine, and thank you for asking may I add.
People suffering from Crohns disease, which is what I have, will understand
the situation. I feel the most helpful thing to do with any disease,
especially a chronic one, is to talk about it, because it's the best
way to not feel isolated and victimised by it. To share the experience
with others who may be going through similar issues is important. I'll
spare you the details in this instance, but you're always welcome to
look it up.
My main concern during that period, just before being admitted to hospital,
was to complete 'Imperfection', the most recent Real Life album. Surprisingly,
the timing was perfect and even allowed me enough breathing space to
wallow in uncertainty as one does before impending surgery and create
the basis of the song Alien Skin, which closes my new album 'Don't Open
Till Doomsday'. The song name came first, then the band name!
Grave Concerns: I'm happy that you're doing better---and you're
very welcome. I am so sorry though, that you have to go through such
a disease. I know a bit about it…my dad actually had a bout with
colitis, not as serve as Crohns, but I can emphasize with how you must
feel at times. Yes, talking or even writing about it is very therapeutic.
I'm glad that you were able to constructively use that time before surgery
to bring creativity to life…that is a gift.
Grave Concerns: I read that you've been with Real Life since the 90s---was
it a difficult time in the beginning, or did you feel at ease? And did
you stick to the formula of the band in the musical sense, or did you
want to add your own personality as well…when a fair amount of
time passed?
Firstly, before I joined the band I had known Danny - Real Life drummer
– for quite a number of years already as we had shared the same
girlfriend, umm, but not simultaneously let me add before your mind
races ahead J In the mid 90s, the band was seeking a new keyboardist
for live work and I was conscripted. This led to my involvement in the
co-writing and recording of the album Happy and a tour of Australia,
the US, and Germany followed soon after.
One of my main tasks at the beginning was to program, mostly from scratch,
the entire live show, and as Real Life was heavily reliant on electronics
it was now my job to laboriously recreate every synth sound used and
computer-sequenced performance information of every song. I had a couple
of weeks to put together a 90-minute show, learn the back catalogue
and to fit in! It was a difficult and exhausting time but the result
worked well, and there was genuine chemistry within the band.
David Sterry (Real Life vocalist/guitarist) encouraged my creative input,
there were no rules to be obeyed and we consciously wanted to break
away from the 80s typecast, so yes I did bring much of my own musical
personality into the new songs. The darker, harder soundscapes of Happy
were a move away from what the band was doing in the 80s. And it all
sounded so good live as well.
Grave Concerns: Heh, heh, heh…wow, George, I, for a split
second, thought we were about to get a backstage pass… into the
past, for some wild stories. (: Sounds like you have had some extremely
creative and wonderful times with Real Life---that's so awesome to know.
That's what makes a band so soiled as individuals, and as a team.
Grave Concerns: Please share with us how you got started on your debut
album "Don't Open Till Doomsday"---IT IS an INCREDIBLE album, sir. Your
vocals are mesmerizing…beautiful, uplifting and pure. I'm so looking
forward to reviewing it. (:
Well thank YOU! After so many years co writing with David and also feeling
the frustration of the 80s media typecast of Real Life, I decided to
release my own body of work. Returning home after our 2004 US tour on
a high, I thought this is the time to do it! I began writing a number
of songs in preparation, this was going to be quick and fast. Alas,
it didn't quite unfold as I thought. A number of health and personal
issues saw the project delayed by years.
Ms Grave, I shall happily cut and paste your testimonial that my vocals
are 'mesmerizing, beautiful, uplifting and pure' where ever I can J
It has been compared to Martin Gore of Depeche Mode, which I take as
a compliment! Thank you for the kind words, I am very pleased with the
way the album has turned out and been received.
Grave Concerns: You're VERY welcome…and yes, copy and
paste away! You are in such fantastic company as Martin Gore. Depeche
Mode is one of my favourite bands.
Grave Concerns: Which songs are you most proud of on "Don't Open Till
Doomsday", and why?
Hmmm, always a hard one, similar to asking a parent which of their children
they are most proud of and why? If I have to be brutally selective and
please don't tell the other children this, and if you twist my arm in
an unfriendly way, I may say Razor Arms because despite the fact that
it had the greatest number of reworks, I still love the deep melancholic
feel of that song. The chorus is, I think is emotionally strong and
one of my most satisfying.
Saviour is another of my faves. It's minimal, the melody possibly the
most contagious on the album, and I think the vocals work well as they
drift almost endlessly in delay effects. The chorus release is like
opening up the drapes to welcome the sun in.
Gloomy Sunday is one more I will mention. To me it best typifies the
theme of "Don't Open Till Doomsday". It's very sparse, mostly post human
effected vocals. It was inspired by voyeurism: people going past my
window, back and forth all day long as I sat inside looking out; wondering
about their journey and their lives, and also about being stuck inside
on that gloomy Sunday with nothing else to do but wait for night to
fall.
Grave Concerns: What comes first in your creative process of
song making? Do you hear the melodies or feel the lyrics? Or do you
go back and forth?
The music always comes first. My current method of writing is to sketch
out a song with my acoustic guitar, get about 90% of a melody nailed
and at least a verse and chorus of lyrics. I will then quickly record
this and leave it for another day. If on coming back to it I still retain
an interest I begin working seriously on arranging it electronically.
If I hadn't already finished the lyrics, I finish them then.
Grave Concerns: How do you differentiate a real good song, from
a classic? In other words, what really makes a song stand out and last?
And with your music, which song or songs do you feel have met that challenge,
have come close to it, or are you currently just enjoying the creative
bliss?
For me a classic song is often readily identified by the fact that so
many people choose to record and perform it over many years and not
simply because they may think that if it's been a hit once it will be
a no-brainer to redo it. Perhaps a classic also really needs the test
of time to consolidate itself as such. Sometimes a song may become a
classic due to the strength of its original performance and the uniqueness
of its recording and become so identified with the original artist and
their specific rendering of it that it becomes the final word on it.
For me a song like The Beatles A Day in the Life, is such a song.
A real good song is always going to be more subjective, depending on
taste. To me it's where all the elements, the melody and lyric, the
sounds and the arrangement all work as a whole, the sum greater than
the parts. A real good song will remain in my head nagging me to want
to hear it again as I drift away with my conviction of the potency of
music and the brilliance of great songwriters reinforced.
I find it difficult to judge my own work against the above criteria,
it's for others to judge its merits and I wouldn't be so presumptuous
as to include myself amongst the masters and mistresses. So I would
simply say that I am currently enjoying the creative bliss.
Grave Concerns: What do think makes your music stand out among
other artists in your field?
I have eclectic musical references going back many decades. These include
the pioneering works of the early forebears of electronic music like
Leon Theremin, Clara Rockmore and Karlheinz Stockhausen. Add to that,
the explosive revolutionary works of the 60s; the minimalism of early
70s European electro; the brazen punk and post punk period of uninhibited
self expression in the late 70s and its sideways evolution into electronic
modernism in the early 80s and tie this all up with the educational
influence of so many inspirational songwriters throughout the this whole
period. From all this I have been spoilt for choice as to where to draw
my influences from.
I don't believe anything can be totally original, that's an exercise
in self deception; we all must bow to previous teachers, but my own
personal mix of all the above influences, and the weight I give one
vis-a-vis another at any given time and my own subjective outlook, ensures
that what I create is uniquely Alien Skin.
Grave Concerns: Awesome music influences---if you were to cover
one of your favorite artists, which song would it be, and why?
Well, that's an easy one to answer. The Model by the seminal and most
influential electronic unit ever, Kraftwerk. Aside from the fact that
it's a gorgeous slice of electronic minimalist pop - which made No.1
in the UK by the way - and aside from my love of its very cold 70s euro
minimalist melancholia, I am actually recording it at this very moment.
It doesn't sound like Kraftwerk it is identifiably Alien Skin.
Grave Concerns: My curiosity has been peaked---can't wait to
hear how it will turn out. Although, I have no doubts, that it will
be a piece that will showcase your talent and respect for Kraftwerk.
Grave Concerns: On your homepage, there is a link called "Electro History"
which takes the reader to a section called "Electronic Music: an Alien
Import?" WOW! You wrote that with such depth, clarity…I must say
how super-impressed I am. How long did it take you to research and then,
complete it? Is there more you'd like to add? You should have this published---have
you?
Firstly thank You for reading it, and also for the sweet compliment!
When I was considering the content of my website www.alienskinmusic.com
(plug, why not) I wanted something unique that would add more value
to peoples' visits. I needed a related subject that I had a passion
for. I decided on writing an article on electronic music in general;
its history, which most people would be unaware of, and how this obscure
musical form and method of creating music rose to become accepted as
the music of the masses over a protracted period of years.
Most of the history I had been aware of, so let's say I already had
the scaffolding for what I intended to write, from there it was a matter
of fine tuning the details, like dates and finding the photos which
were a lot of fun actually. On and off it must have taken a couple of
weeks.
The history as told by Alien Skin, as I state at the beginning of it,
is only a brief study. I don't think most people coming to my site would
wish to spend the summer there, reading. Sure there is plenty more that
can be added but my intention was solely to penetrate the readers interest
in order for them to research the subject in more depth. There are already
published books out there dealing with the issues I cover, I think I'm
better at writing music.
Grave Concerns: Happy to have, sir. And you're VERY welcome.
Plug away my friend…this is your platform. And I do hope that
prole will check it out…go and check it out people! (: Seriously
though, it's good stuff. And as I stated above, I'm very impressed by
it.
Grave Concerns: Will you come to the U.S. for a tour---Boston, MA? I'd
LOVE THAT! Please, if you can. (:
Of course I would simply love that! I last played in Boston with Real
Life, in 1998, in the same venue Gary Numan had just performed at. I
loved Boston. As far as revisiting, well if 'Don't Open Till Doomsday'
sells a million, expect me at your front door. But I think that may
not really happen in a hurry.
Grave Concerns: I hope it does! So would that mean I get front
row seats? (; It would be so cool though, if a bunch of 80s GREATS came
to Boston, and put on a day-long concert…it would be a HIT! I
know it would, Boston would LOVE it! I'd LOVE it!
Grave Concerns: Other than musical influences, who else in the artistic
world inspires you?
I have to say that music consumes much of my time, thoughts, energy
and creativity…leaving little of me for anything else. I am artistically
myopic in that, I am stimulated by sound, structured sound, and visuals
have never had the same impact, aside from a shapely woman of course,
but that's another story.
Grave Concerns: I bet it is…and a good one too! Another
time then, my friend.
Grave Concerns: As a musician, how does the music in movies affect you?
And if you were asked to compose a song for a soundtrack, which genera
would that be in? Now let me take that question even further---actually
backward; if you were to go back to the past, with your current music
in hand, and were asked that same question, would any of your songs
stand out as a good fit? If so, which song and movie would it have been?
I am rather selective about the music I like in movies. There have been
some brilliant scores written over the decades and the music that probably
has had the most affect on me would be the works of old masters like
Bernard Hermann who penned a number of memorable Alfred Hitchcock movies,
including the perennial favourite, Psycho. From a similar period I love
the brooding, dark and often menacing soundtracks to film noir movies
of the 40s and 50s and early 50s matinee sci fi, like the theremin soaked
Hermann score to the Day the Earth Stood Still.
If I were asked to compose a song for a soundtrack, it would have to
be for something of an introspective nature and theme, not bombastic,
or frivolous, definitely not a comedy. Not that I don't enjoy humour
or the lighter side of living, but I'm no good at writing that type
of music. I'd love to do psychological sci fi and mystery, where you
don't need to see the monster or the gore, but you can sense and can
feel it's there, in the dark, waiting…waiting for you to fall
asleep!
A favourite and seminal sci fi from the 50s, which I write about on
my website in 'History of Electronic Music', is the film 'Forbidden
Planet'. This is very much a psychological science fiction thriller
of the period. The closing song from 'Don't Open Till Doomsday' is the
eponymous Alien Skin and I can definitely hear this dark song fitting
in well.
Grave Concerns: You've been asked to create a new word defining
your style of music. What is that word?
Electro melancholic.
Grave Concerns: How did you meet your wife Iryna, and how long
have you been together now? She lent her vocal talents to a few of your
songs, designed the album artwork and website, as well as, being a writer
of poetry and short stories---I'd love to read her work, does she have
a website?
Iryna and I met through mutual acquaintances over 16 years ago. She's
very talented in her own right, her preferred medium being poetry. She
did indeed design the album artwork and website and some of her poetry
can be found on MySpace at 'myspace.com/irynski'. She hates her recorded
voice but I nevertheless gingerly asked her for its use on a few tracks
to add a further dimension to those particular songs, especially Alien
Skin.
Grave Concerns: Thanks George! I'm VERY much looking forward
to learing more about her, and her poetry. (:
Grave Concerns: What if, in the year 3309 trees had human skin, and
we had bark…how do you think we'd be able to cope? What if we
had a choice…would you want to try it out? Why or why not?
Firstly, I would have to imagine that dogs evolved accordingly, dismissing
therefore, their need to urinate on us. That is an essential pre-condition
to this whole mental scenario J I don't quite know whether we'd cope
as well as trees, after all many still live good lives after hundreds
of years with bark skin and perhaps even more if we didn't kill them
off unnecessarily, but I'll assume we would.
I think humans would have a hard time though as our own flesh is so
sensual and it's an important part of our existence as feeling, sensitive,
tactile and loving creatures who enjoy being touched and touching back.
So, if I had a choice would I wish to try it out? Well sure, if I could
easily return back to original skin then all experience is of value.
Would cannibals change their diet to trees, do you think?
Grave Concerns: Hmmm, would they be called treeibals? As long
as it didn't hurt the trees, that is.
Grave Concerns: Did you ever stare into the flame of a candle and felt
you could move the flames with your mind?
I find it very mesmerising to stare into a candle's flame. The aroma
of burning wax is so alluring as well. The only moving of the flame
I have done is to place my palm between it and my mouth and blow. The
flame is drawn towards me rather than away. I always found that fascinating
as a kid!
Grave Concerns: What's your favorite Australian magazine?
If I believe the TV ads, I should be reading the Australian Women's
Weekly everyday. Apparently I can't live a day without it but somehow
I think I can. If Grave Concerns was Australian, then I would certainly
say it was my fave! Aside from that I don't really have a special Australian
one.
Grave Concerns: Oh, you are a charmer--- WE love that! Thank
you George. (;
Grave Concerns: You were born with eyes that weren't human---what do
they look like?
Astute octopus eyes!
Grave Concerns: Very cool!
Grave Concerns: If your were to write a short story or a novel based
on one of your songs, which one would it be? And if it was to be adapted
to the silver screen, who would be your leading actor and actress?
Dust to Ashes 1945 is the most narrative song on the album and would
be the one I would choose for a novel. It tells the story of a contemporary
day man looking back to the atomic bombing in 1945 of his city, Hiroshima,
Japan. He recalls the day, Monday, August 6, vividly. It was an otherwise
ordinary sunny morning around 9 am, when suddenly it became Black Monday
– as I name it, the first detonation of a nuclear device over
a populated city. He constantly wakes from nightmares of ghostly and
contorted carbon shadows upon walls, being the imprints of vaporised
bodies. He remembers his lover and the mangled, tortured crater of humanity
that simply disappeared in a flash.
Now, if adapted to the silver screen I confess I would have trouble
casting it myself as I don't really know many Japanese actors. I'd leave
that to the discretion of the casting agent.
Grave Concerns: Do you wash the dishes? How about making the
bed?
Dishes: everyday; very therapeutic. Bed: everyday, unless the bedding
needs changing, then apparently I have no idea!
Grave Concerns: If you had the chance to have any dream within
your lifetime come true, what dream would that be? And this is actually
a dream---you know the one that comes to you in your sleep. (:
A sleep 'dream' as opposed to an 'ideal'? I can honestly say the best
dream I have ever had, and I can only recall it two or three times in
my life, is flying like superman over green fields and hills. A sensation
of gliding peacefully, securely and blissfully in the air. The silent
beauty of feeling absolutely free, that is the dream I would like to
come true.
Grave Concerns: What are some of your hobbies?
At a pre-teen age my hobbies included philately and phillumeny. I gave
up on those when I was about 13 because I became overwhelmed with the
adulation of pop and rock stars of the period and I made up my mind
at that point that music was the life direction I would pursue. Ever
since then, writing and performing has pre occupied my time and efforts.
It hasn't left much opportunity to develop other interests into real
hobbies as the creative process is so demanding.
Grave Concerns: You got me on both of them---I had to look them
up. Fancy words used to describe those hobbies. (: I won't say what
they are, for those, like me, who didn't know, you'll just have to look
it up. (: That's cool though. Do you still have them?
Grave Concerns: If you were to create your own memory time capsule,
to be buried in four days, and dug up twenty-five years later…what
would you be putting in there right now?
Funny you should ask the question at this point. We are currently about
to begin renovating our home and have to move into a smaller unit for
a few months. All our belongings are being packed up and stored elsewhere,
so this has been the perfect time to start clearing out items that have
been stored away for years. It's been difficult for me to part with
some as they do indeed go back twenty-five years, but we can't afford
to retain the clutter. The only reason I held on to these items was
as you mention, as a time capsule, from my early youth. Now you want
to open the sentimental wound and have me consider recluttering?
In answering your question though, from a contemporary perspective,
I guess at this point in my life I've lived too many years to be overly
sentimental about anything that I own currently, as opposed to belongings
from my pre teenage years. But if I'm pressed for an answer…umm…let
me think…how about a set of well fitting clothes so I can have
evidence that I was once slim enough to fit in them; recordings of every
song I've ever created since a teenager; a good photo of myself with
my immediate and extended family still living and a recording of their
individual voices. I think I'd probably be quite happy with that.
Grave Concerns: (: Sorry…I'm a clutter bug too, I understand.
Those choices though, sound like good ones. I like the idea of the individual
voices being recorded…very lovely, very moving.
Grave Concerns: You're in the recording studio laying out a track to
an animated film---which Movie Company is it; what's the song called;
and what's the movie about?
'Another Stupid Movie' showcases 'Get Baby' from the animated film of
the same name.
The movie is about four bumbling secret agent babies who try to solve
very important mysteries in the baby world. They always come up against
their own Professor Moriarty - their nemesis - a baby dressed in a black
cotton jumpsuit at the end of the street with a wicked dark smirk, jet
black hair with a long fringe to one side, his mouth always full of
fresh worms. Somehow, against all logic they succeed of course.
Grave Concerns: LOL! That's awesome! Hey, maybe you got something
there for a series of children's books.
Grave Concerns: Since nature is very precious to me, I tend to be drawn
more toward the Earth element. Although each one has its own special
attributes, together they are priceless. Which element do you see yourself
more drawn toward?
I have to concur with you Ms Grave, therefore I'd say the Earth element.
I too am drawn to nature and the older I get the more so. At an earlier
stage of my life I could not imagine living beyond the urban throng.
The action is in the city. Now I enjoy getting away – still very
occasionally though - and possibly even living amongst nature, clear
air, and pitch black nights and the call of native animals.
Grave Concerns: What time is it right now? What did you do four
hrs. and 9 minutes and 3 seconds ago?
Current Melbourne time is 10:19pm. If you must know what I did 4 hours
9 minutes and 3 seconds ago I was masticating. Ha! You thought I was
going to say something else! No, I was actually chewing on my dinner.
I cannot be absolutely sure whether at that specific moment I was chewing
on a seasoned, oven baked potato, steamed green minted peas, Greek black
olives, blue vein cheese or continental Hungarian bread, but it was
one of those, unless at that precise second I stopped to breathe.
Grave Concerns: OMG… you are so fresh! And that dinner
of yours sounded yummy!
Grave Concerns: Besides the obvious necessities of life, what are six
things that you can't be without?
My computer (which I use to write, record and playback music with)
The Internet (which is essential for research and communication)
My full collection of music in MP3 format (not just desert island tracks)
Hair products (without which I become totally limp)
My electronic pocket organiser (without which I have dementia)
And of course my gorgeous wife who would do me harm if she wasn't on
this list!
Grave Concerns: Amen to the last one George! (:
Grave Concerns: You have five balloons you got at a carnival...orange,
green, purple, red, and black. Two of them slipped through your fingers…which
ones?
Purple and black. It's sad to see them go but they look so good together!
Grave Concerns: They do look good together. But just know that
they'll be happy...because they have each other. Geez, what kind of
carnival did we just go to? "Sappy Land" carnival! (;
Grave Concerns: A map is pretty big, has lots of pretty colors and a
bunch of lines in all sorts of crazy, loopy patterns…do you know
how to read one?
I'm a terrible navigator and very easily lose orientation. I do love
my new GPS in the car. If push comes to shove though, I can read one
but it's much more pleasant to have someone else decipher it.
Grave Concerns: I hear yah, loud and clear on that one!
Grave Concerns: Look out the window closest to your left---what do you
see?
A black cat walking on the rooftop. It pauses to gauge distance then
leaps ahead onto a thin ledge, stops, sits and looks back at me through
the window. Cats have such acute senses and so agile, you can watch
them as performance art!
Grave Concerns: That's really so neat that you just saw that.
I love cats! They sure are. I have one…well, she's my brother's;
I brought her home for him. Her name is Ashes.
Grave Concerns: I prefer my toilet paper to hang over, not under…how
about you?
Definitely over, does that make me a girl?
Grave Concerns: No, silly. That just makes you right…like
the girl. (;
Grave Concerns: Have you broken or lost anything recently?
Lost my cool, my mind, my way. Always losing things. Actually, I lose
things and then find them most of the time, meaning I'm very absent
minded.
Grave Concerns: Well, you do have lots going on. And you are
human…well, human/alien. We're filled with so many emotions, and
sometimes they just get the best of us. And that shows how strong we
really are about things in life that matter. It may no be pretty, but
it shows our passions. It shows we care.
Grave Concerns: I love the smell of rain, especially at night, during
the warm months when the windows are open, and there's a soft breeze
along with it. The sound of it touching the ground, and landing on the
leaves is very calming. How about you?
Oh yes I do as well. For most of my life I've lived under a roof immediately
exposed to the skies, the rain, the wind. I've always enjoyed the pitter-patter
of raindrops above me. Home is now a ground floor apartment with another
level above so I miss all that. But the smell of rain on soil and concrete
is still close and intimate. The autumn leaves swim in a river of rainwater
down the garden.
Grave Concerns: Do you like to garden, or go for nature walks?
It's a thought! It's on the To Do list. The garden around the apartment
property is maintained by a proper gardener and I dare not tell him
his job . I would love to get involved with dirt and plants some day
though. I don't often leave the city to go on nature walks, again on
the To Do list.
Grave Concerns: What's your favorite room in your house---what
color most stands out in it?
The bedroom, it's the cosiest and has an open fireplace. I often do
a lot of my song writing in there. We are about to have the whole place
painted, haven't decided on the colors yet, but there will be a feature
wall with its own unique color called 'enchantress'.
Grave Concerns: Ooh, I like that. Makes me envision what it
may look like.
Grave Concerns: When you go to the movies where do you like to sit?
And have you ever left because the movie was just awful?
I'm not an extremist. I don't like sitting too far up the back nor too
close towards the screen. The comfortable middle section I should think
is my fave seating area. I don't often go to the cinema and the movies
I do choose to go to, I sit right through. I guess I learn or know enough
about them to want to be there in the first place.
Grave Concerns: If you drink coffee and/or tea, how do you take
it?
Black coffee no sugar, black tea and three sugars please!
Grave Concerns: I take my coffee now black, no sugar. I used
to take it with lots and lots of sweet cream and sugar…WAY TOO
MANY calories...and fat! Black tea too now. But I will splurge here
and there (not often though) on a fancy coffee.
Grave Concerns: OK. You're not allowed to say no. Would you rather walk
over a rackety 209-year-old icy wooden bridge, in the middle of a snowstorm,
127 feet above a frozen river that in 37 minutes will collapse…or
would you rather lose your creative ability to be a musician for 3.9
years?
Well a 3.9 year hiatus will allow my ringing ears to recover a little
from the din of making noise for so long…hmmm, and I loathe heights
and old icy wooden bridges over 200 years old especially in snowstorms….
tough one. I bet you'd wish me to be the romantic hero and risk life
and limb, but I may just choose to live and create another day!
Grave Concerns: (; Well, I guess that would give you some time
to garden then.
Grave Concerns: Do you like to make pancakes? I do. But not the old
fashioned way--- I make my pancakes in a muffin tin, then poke a hole
in the top when done, and pour the syrup in. I don't have the patience
to wait for all of the bubbles to form in the batter, plus, it kind
of creeps me out, all those bubbles popping out so quickly, like a bad
case of the chicken pox.
I have to say I don't eat pancakes, they make me queasy but I did have
chicken pox as a five year old. I recall it quite vividly and I do remember
it was a little like what I felt after eating pancakes.
Grave Concerns: Oh, that's such a bummer. Sorry. I can understand
why though.
Grave Concerns: What is something about the human race that really gets
you down…makes you wonder…how could that person do that,
act that way…say that?
I believe the individual's personal and intellectual development is
a product of their social, economic and cultural environment and ultimately
I don't judge people divorced from this understanding. I am not an existentialist
and as far as I'm concerned everything can be understood by seriously
tracing the historical logic behind a person's behaviour or action.
Grave Concerns: What then, on the other hand, does the human
race do to make you feel simply proud and amazed by?
It has become standard fare and 'trendy' by some to devalue humanity
as being greedy, violent, insolent and obsessed with self gain and I
do agree that our social organization can encourage that. The mere fact
though that we have come this far into the future, our present, is a
testament to the courageous and worthy resilience of humanity and in
spite of all our differences (many that have been fomented for political
and other reasons) we still have much more in common with each other
than we may consciously understand.
Grave Concerns: How do you define love and friendships?
Unconditional commitment to another person is essential whether in love
or genuine friendship, it can't be any other way. You become the second
entity before the one you love. With friendships also, the connection
with that other person cannot be dependant on any conditions.
Grave Concerns: If you were able to put on a concert for charity,
which one/s would you be supporting, and which artists would you like
to headline?
If I had to arrange a charity concert, I would have to immediately say
it would be for the world's saddest victims, young children in crises.
Young children do not have the opportunity to contribute to the world,
whether positively or negatively, and thus can become its most unwarranted
of victims. Most are found in impoverished countries, homeless, hungry,
violated and diseased, but many are also in the world's largest economies
including the US and Australia. I would have my favourite artists on
the bill: Depeche Mode, Underworld, Kraftwerk, Goldfrapp and the Cure.
Umm, not forgetting Alien Skin!
Grave Concerns: Children are extremely close to my heart. I
think your charity concert would prevail…with warmth. And of course,
you'd be performing... you're putting the charity concert on…you'd
better be performing! (:
Grave Concerns: If you had the chance to travel back to the past, where
would you go, and what would you want to leave as a reminder of time
spent, as well as, something to take back with you?
I saw a documentary where I discovered that at one point in our collective
history (I think it may have been during the Ice Age, I need to research
that again) there were no more than about 1,000 homo sapiens on earth.
We are all descendants of these people - Ms Grave we possibly had similar
forebears! I would like to time travel to this period, a bridge between
possible extinction of the species and the present. It fascinates me.
What would even be more fascinating is to be there and in, say a one
real time week, actually see and experience the earth's early development
like watching film sped up - from one major era to the next. To watch
the growth of trees and other vegetation and flora which eventually
created enough oxygen to sustain primitive and then intelligent life
forms. I would leave behind a copy of my new CD (plug) 'Don't Open Till
Doomsday' to be found by a future generation, to confound and entertain
them at the same time. From the period, I would of course take lots
of photos and videos to similarly affect my contemporaries!
Grave Concerns: Maybe so George…maybe so. (: I do think
it would be incredible to actually see how life was way back when. The
simplicity of the world. The purity of it. And your CD "Don't Open Till
Doomsday", would fit in there nicely with the beauty and wonderment
of nature. (:
Grave Concerns: You've been asked to design two masks; one to represent
your greatest fear… the other your greatest joy. What do they
look like?
If we talk about the physical world, I have a deep fear of heights and
depths; my first mask would look like Munch's 'Scream'. To be flippant,
my greatest joy is having no conflict issues or any other problems with
my overused PC, peripherals and software. This mask would just have
the small but much used 'smiley face'.
Grave Concerns: Are you an organ donor? How about giving blood---ever
done that? Oh, and here's a goodie---I LOVE getting my blood taken at
doctor appointments! I actually look forward to it. I have my sleeve
rolled up before I even sit down. Love watching the needle prick my
skin, then, watching as the blood sucks up inside the needle. I should
have been a Phlebotomist. (;
No I am not currently registered as a donor. Having blood removed from
my veins is not the most promising thought to start a day with. When
I was in hospital a few years back, I was having blood tests four times
a day for about two weeks straight. I was black, purple and yellow with
bruising. Dare I say I hate having blood extracted from me!
Grave Concerns: I can totally understand why…):
Grave Concerns: You're in the supermarket---what isles do your frequent,
which do you avoid?
Supermarket visits are always pre organised so as to avoid wasting time
and getting lost amongst mental wish lists. I have a pre written shopping
list as most civilised civilians would have. So I only visit the isles
I have to. If it's scorching day outside though, the refrigerated area
suddenly becomes a favourite.
Grave Concerns: Have you bought or sold something on eBay before?
No I haven't. Don't even really know how it works. Am I alone here?
Grave Concerns: Hmmm, maybe. Hey George, if my dad can buy and
sell on eBay…you can handle it too. (:
Grave Concerns: Where are some of the most beautiful places to see the
ocean, hike, or to just enjoy the sight of nature in your country? How
about some local hotspots?
I live in the southern most state on the Australian mainland; we have
a beautiful bay south of Melbourne. I love looking out into it. Even
though I have a phobia about depths and the sea in general I still find
it calming and mesmerising looking out onto the ocean from a high vantage
point. Australia is a continent full of charming flora and fauna, way
too much to list.
Observing a ship come into port and berth, the physical enormity of
such a construct navigating slowly towards land, is something I personally
find fascinating to watch, so my local hotspot attraction would be Port
Melbourne pier.
Grave Concerns: I do love the sea…the water, in general.
I have to take swimming lesion soon. I swam when I was a kid…but
for some reason I can't seem to remember how to do it now. Such lovely
images---like a painting.
Grave Concerns: You've been asked to be immortalized in Madame Tussauds'
Wax Museum in New York; do you accept?
As long as I am displayed next to the wax figures of the hushed Roswell
aliens, then of course I would accept!
Grave Concerns: (;
Grave Concerns: If it were possible to have trees and flowers which
only bloom in the springtime, be able to bloom once every other year
in complete safety, for three extra weeks, which trees and flowers would
you like to see, and what season would they bloom in for you?
Actually quite a number of native plants and trees in Australia bloom
at various times other than spring. So I will twist the question 90
degrees using winter as the blooming month. I think the endangered White
Spider Orchid is a charmingly unique, tall and proud flower from the
mountainous region of southern Australia, it can be seen from quite
a distance. Ordinarily blooming in winter rains, I would like to see
it covered by sunny summer skies for a unique aesthetic experience.
Grave Concerns: That is truly lovely.
Grave Concerns: Same question as above, although this time it's in regard
to birds. I'd love to see the Hummingbirds…in winter. It would
look amazing to see snowflakes and a thin glaze of ice on their wings,
and iridescent bodies.
The Australian white native cockatoo is one that I would love to see
and hear in winter and all year round actually. The cocky is a bird
with great humour and you can't have enough of that. They will often
demonstrate this sense of humour in silly acts like trying to balance
on thin branches when their feet are too big and their body weight is
clearly too much. They drop upside down trying to stay up there. I think
they challenge each other as to who will last on branch the longest.
They look so immaculately elegant yet have the most cacophonous screech!
Grave Concerns: Do you have any regrets?
The lyrics of the song My Way, as written by Paul Anka, answers this
best, so I'll leave it to the man to say: "Regrets, I've had a few,
but then again too few to mention. I did what I had to do, and saw it
through without exemption".
Grave Concerns: Are you missing someone right now? If you were,
what would you like to say to that person? And the beautiful thing about,
is, that I truly believe our love ones do hear us…wherever they
are.
Actually all the people I care for are still around me. My mother has
been suffering from dementia for a few years and in a poor state. If
I miss someone right now it is her former self, when she knew who she
was and who I was, when she was able to communicate, when she was able
to walk and live normally. I would let her know while she was still
cognitive that I will always be there for her, and even though the dementia
is taking over rapidly to the degree that she will not mentally comprehend
any concepts, I'll be there, nonetheless.
Grave Concerns: I'm so sorry George. Having to see your mother
like that is so painful. As wonderful and beautiful and full of miracles
life is…such sad things happen too. Things I just don't understand
why. But I do believe there is a better place after here. You are there
for her…and that's a gift. It shows that you are a caring and
strong person. And when faced with such darkness, you have found it
in your heart to see the goodness.
Grave Concerns: If you could live without one of the following for one-year,
without any kinds of side effects, consequences, worries---how ever
you like to look at it as, which would you choose and why?
1. Sleeping.
2. Food.
3. Air.
Definitely sleeping. It's the only one of the three that if I could
do without I could extend my conscious life. I spend about 8 hours sleeping
per day; I could only imagine how much more I could accomplish if I
could dispense with this time demanding need.
Grave Concerns: You've been asked to create your own signature
sandwich at your favorite hometown eatery. What's your sandwich going
to be called, and what's in it?
Capsicum Red. Well I love grilled red capsicum and eggplant, together
with cooked mushrooms, feta cheese, pine-nut pesto and fresh basil,
all in a toasted big pane di casa roll (not sandwich)!
Grave Concerns: If I ever make it to Australia (don't know,
I'm afraid to fly) I'll sure know how to eat well…and healthy!
(: You're making me hungry!
Grave Concerns: You've been given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame---whose
name are you next to?
Definitely Humphrey Bogart.
Grave Concerns: Would you perform on SNL if asked? If so, which
two songs would you perform? Would you also like to perform in a skit?
Saturday Night Live? I don't know if we get that here in Australia perhaps
on cable TV. But hell yes, I'm waiting on the invite as we speak! If
I perform two songs from my album 'Don't Open Till Doomsday' the set
would have to be darkly lit with a hint of nothingness surrounding Alien
Skin. Performed would be: 'Saviour' and 'It Doesn't Matter (I Want You).
I am hopeless with something like a skit, so I will refrain from that
before I embarrass myself.
Grave Concerns: I hope Lorne Michaels is reading this…you'd
be so awesome there George! And I'd go to New York…it would make
for a great weekend. And I get my "boss lady", Julie Johnson to go too.
Hey, this sounds like so much fun! (:
Grave Concerns: Do you have any food allergies?
Not that I'm aware of, although I can't stand milk, it can make me sick.
I've had the test for lactose intolerance, but I came through with flying
colours. I just don't like milk!
Grave Concerns: That's OK. (:
Grave Concerns: OK. After reading below, see what you can come up with.
Grab a dictionary. Close your eyes---keep them closed until the end.
Open the dictionary. Spin your left index finger around 14 times, counter
clockwise, then, reverse, and spin 12 times, drop your finger on a word.
Now write a phrase, question, poem, whatever you like with that word.
BUT…you only have 10 minutes to do this. Seriously 10 minutes.
Get cracking! (;
Never mind the pain it's only life (the word was 'only')
Grave Concerns: It's rings of dark humor. Nicely done!
Grave Concerns: You're in the process of designing your own night club…what's
it called, where is it located, and how does it look on the inside?
The Purple Dress. It's below street level, down winding steps, not too
winding though, which can play with your footing after some intoxication.
The walls will be exposed bluestone with crushed purple velvet drapes
of course, the bar staff in umm…purple. Occasionally you will
see facades of vintage electronic equipment mounted on the walls and
ceiling, and a purple lit corner inhabited by showroom dummies. Will
I see you there? The drinks are cheap!
Grave Concerns: You know you will! And I'll wear purple. (Purple
was my grandmother's (on my father's side) favourite color. She loved
Donny Osmond's purple socks! (: I even have a reversible cape; purple
and black. I have vintage earrings that are purple and silver…my
outfit is almost complete---yeah! (;
Grave Concerns: What movie character's name do you think is cool? And
if you were to be cast in a movie, what cool name would you go by?
Napoleon Solo, from 'The Man from U.N.C.L.E' being an early 60s secret
agent TV series staring Robert Vaughn, and David McCallum as Ilya Kuriakin.
You can call me 'Philip Wubber', playboy and philanthropist (it says
so on my card), at your service ma'am!
Grave Concerns: When is your birthday?
Will I get a special present if I tell you? I was born on a Wednesday
morning in April, I remember it well.
Grave Concerns: (: One day you'll tell me…and when you
do, I won't tell anyone else, if you don't want me to. Well, other than
my family and friends…animals, nature. But I won't mention it
to anyone else. I really am good at keeping secrets…I really am.
Seriously.
Grave Concerns: You've discovered a new planet--- how far away is it
from Earth? What did you name it? And what are the pros and cons of
humans being able to live on it?
186,000 light years away from Earth. I love the name 'litmus' from my
old chemistry set days as a youth, so I will call it 'Litmus'. Humans
will travel at the speed of light through a time warp to get there and
back in moments meaning we have achieved the impossible, with that in
mind the pros are certainly endless. Civilisation on Litmus knows no
boundaries, the cons are that Earth now becomes 'the old country' and
there will definitely be a melancholia for the way things were back
in the old country by those of us who grew up there. But I am definitely
looking forward to 'Litmus'.
Grave Concerns: Sounds like the start of a short story…or
novel. Hmmm. (:
Grave Concerns: If you had the ability to change the color of the sky
during the daylight hours to a color of your choice…once every
3 months, what four colors would you choose, and why?
Red, green, yellow, tangerine. Just because I like those colors. Tangerine
because I've always loved the sound of the word ever since I first heard
it in the Beatles' Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds. The same source from
which the electro pioneers, 'Tangerine Dream', was named.
Grave Concerns: Tangerine; it just has such a crisp and refreshing
sound throughout. I think the rest of the colors would be lovely to
look at…especially when the elements of nature are added into
it. Striking, I think it would be to see.
Grave Concerns: You've been asked to update the movie "Forbidden Planet",
as a director and composer. What would be the first scene you like to
take on, whom would you cast, and which bands would you like to have
contribute to the soundtrack?
The first scene I'd like to tackle is when the crew of the landed spacecraft
from Earth first encounters the unknown force that plagues them through
out their mission. In the movie up to this point, we don't actually
see any tangible entity, just a cacophony of sound and a formless shape
attempting to break through the ship's force field as the crew begin
to set up camp beneath the elevated craft. As the protagonist and commander
of the ship, I would cast George Clooney, an intelligent actor and his
second in command, Kevin Spacey another great thespian. I think they
would make a formidable team.
For the soundtrack I would invite Underworld, Depeche Mode, Kraftwerk,
Tangerine Dream, The Cure, NIN and from their gorgeously cinematic 'Felt
Mountain' period, Goldfrapp.
Grave Concerns: You should do it! Seriously. Kevin Spacey is
a remarkable actor. And the soundtrack…wicked awesome--- It would
be an amazing remake! (Yeah, I did say wicked awesome!) (;
Grave Concerns: Have you ever had to perform CPR?
Luckily I have never found myself in this situation!
Grave Concerns: Not on humans. But I did bring a spider back
to life…that's another story. (:
Grave Concerns: OK---we're going to play a card game---poker. Deal yourself
5 cards. The 9 of spades is wild. Discard what is not wanted, and pick
off of the deck, the card(s) needed to complete your final hand. What
did you get? I'll tell you my hand when I post your interview.
5 of clubs, 8 of clubs, 2 spades, king of clubs, 7 of diamonds, what
did you get?
Grave Concerns: A pair of 9s (clubs and hearts), queen of clubs,
4 of diamonds and a 3 of clubs. So I take it with a pair. That was fun!
Grave Concerns: Ever get a piece of a popcorn kernel stuck in your tooth,
then two days later…it fell out?
Actually, I don't like popcorn!
Grave Concerns: Have you seen any cool new movies or shows you'd
like to talk about?
I haven't seen a movie or show for quite a while even though I have
a cinema located adjacent to where I live. I'll always remember a few
years back, during the day as I was in the back garden, hearing Elvis
Presley crooning away behind the cinema walls. They must have just got
the reels in of a live performance show and were doing a check of the
film for the night's viewing. It was quite ethereal actually.
Grave Concerns: NICE! (:
Grave Concerns: What is your drink of choice? And what are some of your
favorite foods?
Cranberry juice is a favourite as is any thick fruit juice combo with
a dash of lime cordial for extra sensation. Alcoholically speaking,
I don't drink much, I like a Guinness stout every now and then. As a
kid I was given ouzo by my mum to help with an aching tooth, and I vividly
remember a Sunday afternoon when I was 5 getting drunk on less then
half a glass of beer at lunch. I stole someone's passport out of their
jacket, as I must have been attracted to the officialty of the document.
He never ever got it back, that was a bad me!
As for foods, I love a good pasta as well as fresh just baked bread
with seafood and salads, and crunchy baked potatoes too.
Grave Concerns: Cranberry juice is one of my favourites…sometimes
I'll add orange juice to it…I like the idea of the lime in it
though. Guinness is my favourite beer. Pasta and bread…man, that's
delicious! And with a crisp salad…I'm hungry again! (: And I can
see why you don't drink that much, George! Yikes! (:
Grave Concerns: Do you think evil is born or raised? How about the goodness
in people? Can people change…for the better, and for the worse?
I have a problem with the idea of 'evil'. One school of thought says
that acts of evil are inhuman; another school says that it is very much
human and we need to be delivered from evil by a 'saviour'. I personally
don't subscribe to either. In my perspective all human consciousness
is shaped by the immediate and broader environment we develop in.
To me, the social, economic, cultural and therefore overall political
landscape that influences the way we live and see the world and each
other, is the greatest influence upon our consciousness. To understand
the actions of 'evil' one must thoroughly and honestly study the impact
of all these factors on the life of a person from birth till his/her
present and also the recent history that lead to the creation of these
factors.
This analysis is rarely carried out by political and media pundits,
it's easier to splash the idea of 'evil' before the public, and the
public over time - in the absence of alternative explanations being
given the same weight and exposure - often regurgitates and accepts
these poisonous ideas as 'received wisdom'.
Flowing on from this, I do believe therefore, that people can change
for better or for worse, and I also suggest that if the world we live
in was of a higher social and economic organization - and that's certainly
not outside the realm of possibilities - with genuine social equality
much of the struggle to survive and a higher quality of life will be
ameliorated. Goodness, therefore, can definitely be learnt from our
early life experiences.
Grave Concerns: A fictitious record company (you can even name
it too, if you like) has the tough decision of choosing only one band
to sign, out of three possible ones. The bands are ALL fabulous, the
decision then---is to choose the band based on their name.
1. Liquid Eyelashes.
2. Questionable Logic.
3. Rashin-Blue.
'Sounds Purple Records' would definitely choose 'Liquid Eyelashes'
Grave Concerns: Very, very cool record company name…and
they seemed to know just what they wanted. Excellent creative business
skills, George!
Grave Concerns: Being a member of MySpace, how has it helped, or hindered
your musical endeavors? And which countries do you feel have embraced
your music the most?
I have only recently joined the MySpace network. To me it's an extension
of my website presence, a place where I actually communicate with people.
In days past, Guestbooks were more prevalent where fans could leave
messages. MySpace has taken it a lot further than this of course, and
far more interactive. I don't think it has hindered my endeavours, although
I don't really know how much it has helped either aside from cursory
meetings with people with who I may only have one encounter ever. I
prefer to direct people to my band website which is far more comprehensive
and has on it everything I wish to convey about Alien Skin, 'Don't Open
Till Doomsday' the album, and everything in between and sideways. The
US has been the main demographic followed by Germany, Russia and other
European countries.
Grave Concerns: Have you used an Ouija board, or had your fortune
read?
No. I must add that I have no belief in the occult.
Grave Concerns: Write whatever comes to your mind after reading
the following:
1. The darkness felt so inviting, and the misty air around me was…
clawing at my flesh.
2. She was so tired of everything that they have been doing
to him, so she took it upon herself to just let…
her frustration and anger take charge of her actions.
3. It was a small purple crystal that caught my eye. And inside
of it was something remarkable…
a pocket of air, trapped from the early days of the earth's birth.
4. Two stars dancing within a storm of…
a cloudy nebula.
5. Saying goodbye was not what I…
had in mind when I said 'see you'.
6. People must begin to realize that our world will not…
continue to support us if we do not support it.
7. The lights flashed in the colors of pink, green, silver and
black…they were coming from…
the belly of the small craft descending slowly above the moonlit water
1000 feet below our isolated cabin.
Grave Concerns: Well done, my friend! So great! And I have to
say that your response to #6 hits hard.
Grave Concerns: Thanks so much---we needed MORE kinds of greeting cards
with a dark flare to them. What's the name of your greeting card company,
and what are your three top selling cards?
'Disturbed Cards' - Our 3 top selling cards are: 1. Blue Birthday: the
death of another year of our existence; 2/ Mother's Doomsday; a thank
you for the pain she went through giving birth and trying to bring you
up as a human being; 3/ Black Wedding: the passing of the first significant
part of our lives, as 'single' individuals since leaving our parents
home.
Grave Concerns: I'll take a box of each! You're so good at these
questions…lovin' the creative responses. THANK YOU!
Grave Concerns: What are a few of your favorite local radio stations?
To be honest I don't listen much to radio, it bores me, rarely does
it play music I like, the older I get the more irrelevant it becomes.
Grave Concerns: You just opened your fortune cookie---what does
it read?
'Another day, more of the same; but here's your chance to do it better!'
Grave Concerns: Hey, that's really good! And it has hopefulness
attached to it. Very good, I like it!
Grave Concerns: I'm giving you 13 letters to choose from, in any order;
you only have to use 6 of them (you can use more if you want, but not
less than 6) and you have to tell me what the saying is, after deciphering
this code, that an alien sent me to give to you. But only with these
letters...NCBJGASLPUWTI.
'Nurture The Blue Planet We Can See U'
Grave Concerns: Yeah, this one is SO cool---LOVE it…awesome,
George! (:
Grave Concerns: What is one of the most beautiful flowers growing now
in Australia? What colors does it come in? How does it look? How does
it smell?
I would say, native Australian succulents. They rarely flower
but come in a multitude of amazing, vivid colors. They don't look like
they're from this planet and are incredibly pragmatic but bizarre looking
flowers. The succulents may range from having a negligible fragrance
to sometimes smelling putrid. But they have such an individual character.
Grave Concerns: They sound beautiful.
Grave Concerns: What are some of your favourite TV show themes?
The Persuaders, X-Files, Dr Who, Midsommer Murders, Star Trek, Lost
in Space, Adventures in Paradise, Twilight Zone.
Grave Concerns: Love the X-Files theme…and Doctor Who
is fantastic!
Grave Concerns: What sections of the newspaper do you read?
Generally the political sections, the main significant events of the
day, anything with history involved and some entertainment as long as
it's not of a crassly commercial content.
Grave Concerns: Movies and The Arts section. Help Wanted. (;
Grave Concerns: Do you have endangered wildlife or plants/flowers? If
so, how is your country going about finding a solution for them?
Australia actually has the most extensive list of endangered
species of any continent. Some endangered animals for instance include
the numbat, Australian sea lions, black-footed wallabies, the dugong
and many more. One of the chief reasons for their status is externally
introduced animal species into the country over the past century or
more, like foxes and rabbits for example. Unfortunately, the culling
of these introduced species is necessary to protect some of our beleaguered
and threatened wildlife.
Grave Concerns: I'm thinking of a number from 0 to 5,109. What
it is? I'll tell you what mine is when I post your interview.
3,568.
Grave Concerns: Close…4,819.
Grave Concerns: If you were to plant a tree to symbolize something special
in your life, where would that tree be planted, and what kind is it?
As a kid at home, we had lemon trees in the back garden and
I remember planting seeds near our school yard on the last day of primary
school with a couple of friends. We returned to water them for a while
during the ensuing holidays. The school was adjacent to a main river,
the Yarra that flows through Melbourne. I guess at the time it was symbolic
to my friends and myself, of an era that had just ended and we were
now to be dispersed to different schools and lives.
Grave Concerns: If you had the power to live the life of any
character in a movie for one-week after the end credits rolled, who
would you choose and why?
It would probably be superman, the opportunity to fly is just too irresistible
to me to let pass, not to mention x-ray vision, which always comes in
handy. Not too sure about the cape, maybe a Count Dracula cape would
be an improvement.
Grave Concerns: X-ray vision---you're such a guy! (; Dracula's
cape will do VERY nicely!
Grave Concerns: Favorite holiday, color, number and symbol?
Christmas, purple, 86, peace!
Grave Concerns: Can you tell us something about yourself that
you think we might be surprised to know about?
You mean like, after surgery for Crohns some years back, I
spent a few months wearing a colostomy bag before a reversal operation,
now that's one hell of an experience. Luckily I wasn't gigging and jumping
about!
Grave Concerns: George, humor is a beautiful quality---and you
certainly possess it! (:
Grave Concerns: This time around you've created a beautiful and darkly
provocative "Virtual Sci-fi Game"---what's this one about? And can you
tell us two of the characters names, and one thing about each of them
that make them unique?
The game is about being intrepid and safely navigating through ultra
deep space and all its natural splendour, many light years from earth
to discover new life and befriend it. The more interesting and uniquely
unearthly the form of life and their social organization the higher
the score and if you, mind the pun, alienate it, you lose. Personally
I have little time for virtual games that make a virtue of destruction
and violence in order to win at all costs against an opponent.
Shona is the navigator and the one with skill, knowledge, motivation
and resolve to push the team further and further into the dark realms
of deep space and will always be there to support ideas and critical
decisions brought forward or to debate them when necessary. She is accompanied
by Bainbridge Carter, an expert on unearthly life forms. His background
is in the study of alien life in the outer cosmos and is always the
one to consult on the possible behaviour and actions of beings the enterprise
may meet.
Grave Concerns: WOW! I'm so impressed…again. You're a
creative mass, George! This is so cool.
Grave Concerns: What is your Australian zoo like? What kinds of animals
do you have there?
Well, I've only been to the Melbourne zoo, and come to think of it,
many years ago. I'm not sure these days what, if any, unique animals
we may have there. When I was young I appreciated it more, seeing the
range of animals all in one small area where I could simply walk past
and observe a world of fauna before me. Now, although I'd still find
it interesting, I don't think it would be as pleasant seeing these creatures
imprisoned in small enclosures when their natural habitat is the exact
opposite.
Grave Concerns: That is very interesting...and I agree. I can
see it for strong reasons like protecting animals from extinction, and
if they have been injured and sadly abused…but not for "show".
I can't stand to hear of animal abuse…it sickens me.
Grave Concerns: Did you ever meet Steve Irwin, "The Crocodile Hunter"
who was sadly taken away before his time?
No I never met the man. I guess he's one of the few Australians
whose name is quite big in the states. Dying the way he did, at his
age, was definitely a tragedy.
Grave Concerns: Yes. Especially when he was doing something
he loved. Another Australian, whom I felt a terrible loss over, is Michael
Hutchinson, of INXS.
Grave Concerns: If you could have a movie director direct your next
video, who would it be and why? And which song would it be?
I would like something totally bizarre and eclectic for the song Alien
Skin so I'd choose, if he were alive, Federico Fellini.
Grave Concerns: What kinds of shampoo/conditioner do you use?
And what about hand soap---bar or liquid…what kinds? I do like
the brand "Aussie". (;
Um, let me check…I shampoo and condition my hard to manage hair
daily so I use products that are appropriate for everyday use. As far
as hand soap and body soap, definitely liquid without soap. At the moment
the ones sitting on the shelf are L'Oreal Elvive. Aussie brand I don't
think I've used, actually I've never seen it, does it exist?
Grave Concerns: Oh, yes! Well, actually, it's made in the USA,
but uses Australian extracts.
Grave Concerns: What's in your CD player right now?
John Lennon's 'Plastic Ono Band' album from 1970, the very personal
and painful classic from his primal scream therapy period.
Grave Concerns: A favorite childhood memory?
Telling some neighbouring kids not to stamp on ants outside the rear
of our house in Athens Greece when I was about three. I think it's a
fave because I do still remember it, possibly my earliest memory of
myself.
Grave Concerns: Good for you! That bothers me so much---let
the ants be…people like to crush too many things, for no real
good reason. They do it, for kicks…so sad.
Grave Concerns: Are you into the creative art of illusions? If so, whom
do you admire?
Although I used to be when I was young, it's an interest that has faded.
I always used to love watching old movies based on the life of Houdini.
I believe someone at Grave Concerns recently attended a David Copperfield
performance that was so so.
Grave Concerns: I heard that story too---it was quite the disappointment,
for her, and her dad. It's one of those moments that leave a bad taste
in the mouth.
Grave Concerns: How many e-mails do you write each day? Did you ever
send one you forgot to spell check? I have. And it was to a previous
editor…oops. (; And for the record, that's not why he became my
previous editor…lol!
It varies of course, sometimes none, usually half a dozen, perhaps ten,
twelve. I try not to spend too much time on it as it can consume your
daily available time. Usually I reread them and run a spell check, but
if I'm in a real hurry I may skip this essential process and yes sometimes
some go through that I later reread and realise what a sloppy thinker
and typer the receiver must have thought I was!
Grave Concerns: Well, I can say that your e-mails are very coherent
and very well written. (:
Grave Concerns: Do you believe in ESP and ghosts or "other" unexplainable
occurrences?
I have to say that I don't. I am in agreement with the idea
that all things have a material i.e. scientific explanation, whether
we know the answers at the time or not. Inexplicable occurrences occur
only because the answers have not been arrived at as yet. For most of
human history, much of what we understand today was considered unexplainable.
I am open to be proven wrong but the onus is on the person trying to
prove with an empirical method that paranormal phenomena are real.
Grave Concerns: Do you like the sounds of squeaking sneakers
or chalk scraping down the board? What if it were pastel colored chalk?
I already have severe hearing damage from acoustic trauma; do you want
to exacerbate it? Um, the answer is a resounding no!
Grave Concerns: Hmmm, maybe I should have kept it simple---just
white chalk then? (: Yeah, I didn't think so.
Grave Concerns: What would you like to say to your fans right now?
Thanks to everyone who has made the effort to listen to my first release
as Alien Skin. 'Don't Open Till Doomsday' is my definitive work outside
Real Life and I will always appreciate people that take time to write
to me and comment on the music. Thank you of course to all those who
have purchased the album and spent some moments going through my official
band website, the content of which took quite a while to complete. I
find it rewarding when people do have a read, especially the History
of Electronic Music. And a big thank you to all the good people at Grave
Concerns and their fantastic support from day one!
Grave Concerns: We're VERY thrilled to support the music of
Alien Skin---and we hope George, that only good things come from all
the hard and beautifully creative work made by you, will continue to
bring you joy and success as an artist.
Grave Concerns: Anything else you care to share with us about yourself
and your beautiful and most impressive music?
I believe that anything shared is the best way to enjoy. I love writing
and performing songs, especially when I have control of the final result.
'Don't Open Till Doomsday' would be nothing more to me than another
bunch of songs I've written if it wasn't for people reacting to it in
the way they have. It gives me, as I guess it would any other artist,
splendid satisfaction to know I am reaching an audience that enjoys
a similar musical and mood perspective as I do. Sharing this music with
others is to me the ultimate buzz!
Grave Concerns: George, we here at Grave Concerns, wish you
so much incredible support, and hope you'll continue to thrive in your
artistic gifts and opportunities. You're such a gifted and kind man---a
true gentleman and fabulous person to know. May your debut album "Don't
Open Till Doomsday" be a smashing success! Please keep in touch! Cheers!
Thank you Grave Concerns, I honestly appreciate being here and the opportunity
to speak with such a delightful interviewing hostess.
Grave Concerns: It is OUR pleasure George, OUR honor to have
you here. Ahhh, you're so sweet---thank you George! (:
-- Written by Lynda Dale MacLean
Read
original article here
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