Opher’s new book – Opher’s Art and Outpourings. pt 9

work
work

Work – 1973

I called this piece work with rather a tongue in cheek attitude. I have never minded work. I like working hard. What I resent is the time it takes. There are always a thousand more pressing things to be doing with my life than work. Work gets in the way.

On those days when there were poems to write, books to get out of my head and paintings clogging up the arteries, it was hard to become motivated by work.

On those days when you have been up to three in the morning getting into the flow of a novel it is incredibly frustrating when the alarm goes off at seven and you have a whole day of work ahead of you before you can get back to doing what seems overpoweringly important.

Work is prostitution. You sell your body and brain for a sum of money.

You were stuck within the confines of the workplace. Outside the universe raged. You were not free to experience it.

In 1976 I discovered teaching. I’d saved up my PGCE training as a year at college to escape work. I had no intention of going into teaching. I merely needed a year off. I found that teaching gave me a creative outlet. It allowed me to give vent to my passions. If I had to work at least I had found something I could be happy with. I was part of building a better, fairer, just world.

When you are doing something you enjoy it is not work.

The alarm clock still frustrating went off at seven and there were five days a week that were set in stone.

Opher’s new book – Opher’s Art and outpourings. pt8

IMG_6527Opher in Green – 1974

I have always been green. It is the only way to be.

I am a great believer in science and technology. I believe science will dispel superstition and technology will develop the tools we need to make a better world. There is nothing wrong with science and technology.

The problems around the world have been created by politicians, businessmen and religious fanatics. They have guided us along the path to environmental destruction in pursuit of power and wealth. We always seem to fall for the same thing. We elect or follow tyrants, sociopaths and psychopaths because they appear to offer clear, unambiguous, strong leadership. Pol Pot, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Thatcher, Mussolini, Saddam Hussein, Gaddafi, Tony Abbott – It’s about time we elected people who cared.

In Australia, Brazil, Borneo, Tasmania, Burma, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Africa and a hundred other places they are chopping down the forests for short term gain. What is lost will be gone forever.

Tony Abbott with his strip mining and selling of gum trees to be pulped for paper and exported to China is destroying the planet for a quick buck.

Outside Lima they are dumping refuse and toxic waste on the shore to pollute the oceans rather than spend money on disposing of it properly.

In the Gulf war they used uranium tipped shells as armour piercingĀ  weapons without a thought for the long term effects of fissionable material.

In Africa and India they are hunting the elephant, tiger and rhino to extinction for ivory and bone for quack Chinese medicine. Rhino horn is made of keratin – the same substance as hair and nails. Chewing your own nails would be every bit as ineffective.

In South Africa near Capetown they are dumping raw sewage from the vast townships directly into the sea.

Our population is out of control – seven billion and heading for catastrophe. Yet still the average number of children in many third world countries such as the Yemen is seven! It is unsustainable!

I am green because I believe it is in our ability to deal with these problems and build a world based on intelligence and logic, with room for wilderness, wild animals and unpolluted land, sea and air. All we have to do is to get the greedy, selfish lunatics out of power.

Extract from Opher’s new book – Opher’s Art and outpourings – pt3

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Facing up to the past – 1976

There are lots of lessons to be learnt from the past. We repeat all the same mistakes. It is time we took note. My mate Rod had a poster on his wall which said something to the effect that we should teach history in the morning before anything else happens.

Here are some lessons we should take on board:

No-one knows the answers. Those who say they have answers are after something.

Violence always creates more violence.

Never trust a politician, banker or industrialist. Leaders steal your mind and sanity.

Anyone who seeks power should automatically be banned from office.

When someone says they want to serve the public it is best to enquire whether it is with arsenic or cyanide.

Money does not bring happiness. Money brings death in many forms.

Inequality creates misery. We do not have to have inequality.

The winners are often the biggest losers.

War, torture and cruelty are always wrong even if they temporarily make you feel good.

History is not always a good judge. A lot of the good things are never recorded.

The winners write the history.

Punishment does not change people; love changes people.

Quick solutions always take longer.

Sometimes we have to look back to see where we’ve been so that we can sort a better way forward.

Your memory lets you down. It is reinvented as we go along.

 

Opher 17.12.2014

Nick Harper – Nix review

If there was any justice Nick would be a superstar!! He not only is the best acoustic guitarist I have ever seen but has a great voice and writes incredible songs.

There are many reasons why Nick is not a massive commercial success. The main reason is that he is simply too good for the mindless music business and vacuous audience that supports it. He does not play that game.

This then is Nick’s ninth album aptly titled Nix. (If you haven’t fathomed out the reason for the title then this is probably not the album for you).

If you like your Nick Harper raw and unadorned then this might be just up your street. This is Nick with his guitar and a batch of great new songs. They are, as usual, full of intelligence, insight, lyrical ingenuity and melodic beauty.

The album contains a range of styles but all are adorned with the distinctive crispness of that wonderful guitar-work. Nobody can play a guitar like that! The voice soars. The stories unfold. The melodies unfurl.

The mind becomes engaged on many levels as the appreciation of such talent mesmerises you. This is Nick unencumbered by production.Ā His imagination continues to invent on a level rarely achieved by others.

Nick is one of England’s gems. Support him and buy this great album. you won’t regret it! This is another wonderful album!

If you like this you might be interested in my books:

Woody Guthrie – Opher’s World pays tribute to a genius!

Woody Guthrie was the first singer/songwriter to use music as a vehicle for his social and political stances. He set out to use his music to bring about progressive change and in so doing inspired generations of other singers.

Woody opened up a world of possibility, aĀ lodestone of gems to be mined by all who came after.

Whenever there were singers harnessing poetic honestyĀ with heartfelt convictions one could follow a line that harked back to Woody.

Woody stood for equality and justice and put his body where his mouth was. He lived the life, made the friends, stood on the picket lines and fought for what he believed. He put his heart and soul into supporting the unions, racial harmony and social justice. In so doing he set himself against the capitalist system that produce the small number of winners and large bulk of losers. He was for the oppressed, downtrodden, destitute and disenfranchised.

Woody Guthrie

The hundreds of songs that Woody wrote in the 1940s and 1950s still echo down the decades with undiminished power to inspire.

Without Woody there would have been no Dylan and my mind would have been all the poorer.

Where are the people of Woody’s stature, passion and talent to stand up against the monolithic establishment that is presently destroying the planet?

It is not beyond the wit of man to create a fair system whereby we do not have the terrible deprivation in the third world, the poverty, disease and pollution. We have the Technology, Science and Economic power to create a world of greater equality without such overpopulation, environmental destruction and ravaging of wild-life.

If Woody was alive today his songs would be full of the greed and selfishness that is leading to our demise. He would not have sat quietly by while the bankers, businessmenĀ and politicians sell our future for a quick buck. He would have been singing it from the rooftops!

Help produce a positive zeitgeist! Build on Woody’s legacy and let’s start putting it right!

Bob Dylan – Opher’s World plays tribute to a genius

There has to be more to Rock Music than trite Pop anthems about teenage love. There is. It is because Bob Dylan single-handedly propelled Rock towards a mature phase with intellectual integrity.

In the early years of Rock ‘n’ Roll in the fifties we had a visceral rebellion driven by the raucous swaggering performances of such as Little Richard, Bo Diddley, the Elvis of Sun Records and Chuck Berry. It was fast loud and explosive. It was the sound of a new post-war generation who wanted something different to the bland lives of their parents. Those early Rock ‘n’ Rollers belted out their brash new philosophy to blow the cobwebs out of the establishment.

A knife came down and cut off the connection. A whole generation was adrift from its roots with a new home-grown philosophy summed up by the Lee Marvin line in response to the question:
‘What are you rebelling against?’
‘What you got?’
That post-war generation wanted excitement, fun and adventure. The idea of following their parents into the blandness of suburbia with its neatly trimmed lawns and the American Dream was death by boredom. They wanted life in the fast lane with all its sex, fast cars and violence. The risk gave it an alluring edge. The colours were brighter; the feelings stronger and the pace full of adrenaline.

It was a revolution for a new age and though short-lived provided the basis for the Beatles and Stones to carry it forward.

There it would probably have been incorporated into the capitalist ethos of the Music Industry and decayed into Pop trivia if Bob Dylan hadn’t crashed into the scene with the force of an H-Bomb. The debris was flung into the air to be imbued with his poetic imagery, social and political content and a world of possibility. Bob had taken the song structure by the scruff and shaken it to pieces. The two and a half minute Rock song, with it’s theme of love and standard middle eight, was blown to bits. Anything was possible. You could tell stories. It could be twenty minutes long. You could have real meaning, real passion and something beyond mere teenage love and angst. It could deal with real issues.

Bob Dylan revived and transformed the rebellious impetus of the youth rebellion and provided it with substance.

Rock Music gained complexity, scope and social importance. It was no longer confined to teenage angst and sexuality. Bob had married its energy to a cerebral dimension that was allied to social and political sensibilities. Grown-up issues such as Civil Rights and the anti-war movement were central to the themes of Rock Music. The words were now of greater importance and value. There was a poetic eloquence that demanded to be taken seriously.

The awareness and sensibilities of an entire generation were stimulated and that led to the birth of an idealistic counter-culture that was to dominate the latter part of the sixties and give rise to a wealth of liberalising elements in the Women’s Movement, Peace groups, Environmental groups and Civil Rights Movements.

The establishment called him ‘The Voice of a Generation’. It was a label and pressure that Bob despised. He was not the voice of a generation. He was much more than that. He did not mirror the thoughts and ideals of sixties youth so much as awaken them and propagate their growth. He planted the seeds into the grey fertile soil of the cortex and fed them with the nutrients of wisdom so that they exploded to illuminate the skulls of a receptive generation. He gave them all freedom beyond his own dreams.

A million minds were awakened and imbued with the freedom of all possibility.

I wonder where the world would now be without him? Would we have had those years of protest through which so many of our civil liberties and liberalised society were wrested from the establishment’s reactionary grasp? For Bob not only reinvigorated Rock Music and propelled it to new dimensions he also fundamentally changed the society we all live in.

Thanks Bob – you were always so much more than a ‘Song and Dance’ man. You opened my mind and horizons.

If you enjoyed reading this why not purchase my books on Rock Music – you might enjoy them.

Or check out all my other books on Amazon

Beat Generation, Rock Music to Sci-fi via Alternative Novels, Education, the Environment and Antitheism! There’s a book for everyone!

Many to choose from!!

Solstice is coming.

Take a chance on something different and extraordinary!

Encourage our young girls to be rocket scientists not damned stupid princesses!!

I sometimes wonder what on earth has become of women’s liberation. Was it all about having the freedom to drink and have sex as freely as the lads? Or was there a deeper sense of equality?

Back in the 1970s they were rightly picketing the ‘Miss World’ contest for treating women as meat. Now they are supporting ‘Victoria’s Secrets’ lingerie catwalk.

Doesn’t this seem strange to you?

Stiff Little Fingers – Brilliant gig at Welly Hull – Photos

Stiff Little Fingers with the original line-up, played a storming set at the Welly in Hull. The power and intensity of their songs was spot on.
The lyrics are the most powerful of any punk band!!
The guys were great – really friendly!!
Loved it! They haven’t lost anything in all those years!
Here’s a few photos:-IMG_9372

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Some more in Blog!!

Ebola in Eden – new Sci-Fi book now completed.

I started writing this book in 1996. I have now completed it and am looking for a publisher! Anybody know a good publisher?