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<channel>
	<title>tim-hill &amp;laquo; WordPress.com Tag Feed</title>
	<link>http://wordpress.com/tag/tim-hill/</link>
	<description>Feed of posts on WordPress.com tagged "tim-hill"</description>
	<pubDate>Fri, 05 Sep 2008 23:09:24 +0000</pubDate>

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<title><![CDATA[Alvin e os Esquilos]]></title>
<link>http://serakipresta.wordpress.com/?p=114</link>
<pubDate>Tue, 20 May 2008 01:59:33 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Lucas</dc:creator>
<guid>http://serakipresta.wordpress.com/?p=114</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Alvin and the chipmunks - 2007
Direção: Tim Hill   
Roteiro: Jon Vitti, Will McRobb, Chris Viscard]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align:left;"><a href="http://www.mininova.org/tor/1298746" target="_blank"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-116 alignleft" style="float:left;" src="http://serakipresta.wordpress.com/files/2008/05/alvin1.jpg?w=209" alt="" width="73" height="104" /></a><strong><a href="http://www.mininova.org/tor/1298746" target="_blank">Alvin and the chipmunks</a> - 2007</strong></p>
<p style="text-align:left;"><strong>Direção: </strong><strong>Tim Hill</strong><strong></strong><strong><strong> </strong><strong> </strong><strong> </strong></strong></p>
<p style="text-align:left;"><strong><strong>Roteiro:</strong><strong> </strong></strong><strong>Jon Vitti, Will McRobb, Chris Viscardi</strong><strong></strong></p>
<p><strong><strong>Elenco: </strong></strong><strong>Jason Lee, David Cross, Cameron Richardson</strong></p>
<p><!--more--></p>
<p>Sabe quando você pega para assistir um filme e passa boa parte dele em um momento "oooooooooooo"? Posi é, esse é o caso de <em>"Alvin e os Esquilos"</em>, já que a animação e a vozinha dos esquilos cantores é muito bonitinha e muito bem feita por sinal. Esse filme é uma homenagem aos 50 anos da criação de Ross Bagdasarian, que como diz nos próprios créditos, foi louco o suficiente para criar uma história de esquilos cantores na década de 1950.</p>
<p>O roteiro é bem basicão e é um prato cheio pra molecada e um alivio para os pais, pois as referências ao mundo adulto são bem pequenas, mas mesmo assim tem muito marmanjo e marmanja (se é possível isso) se derretendo pelas gracinhas de Alvin, Simon e Theodore.</p>
<p>Os três simpáticos esquilinhos moram em uma árvore e levam sossegados e cantando suas vidas de roedores. Até que na época de Natal, a árvore é cortada e os três são transportados juntos com ela para o edifício da poderosa gravadora Jett. Lá eles fogem do agora decorado enfeite natalino e caem na cesta do aspirante a músico Dave Seville (interpretado <span style="text-decoration:line-through;">pelo Earl</span> por Jason Lee). Dave concilia seu trabalho com o sonho de se tornar um compositor famoso, mas suas musicas não são comerciais o bastante a após mais uma tentativa fracassada, ele se depara com três esquilos com um talento muito grande para cantar. Após acolher os bichinhos, Dave grava uma música de Natal e no dia seguinte volta a gravadora Jett com os esquilos, mas o resultado é desastroso. Desapontado, Dave retorna ao seu trabalho, mas depois de uma péssima apresentação de um projeto é demitido. Vendo o amigo com a moral lá em baixo, so esquilos decidem ir na casa do produtor da Jett, Ian Hawke  e dão um showzinho que agrada em cheio. A partir dai, o grupo Alvin and the Chipmunks se torna o maior sucesso comercial, aparecendo em programas de TV, fazendo shows e conquistando cada vez mais o público.</p>
<p>Os problemas começam quando Ian vê que Dave pode estragar seus planos de faturar muito em cima dos esquilos. Fazendo muita intriga e "comprando" os esquilos com brinquedos e o glamour da fama, Ian consegue com que eles abandonem Dave e sigam o que ele mandar. Feito isso, Ian começa a aproveitar ao máximo o trio, marca um show atrás do outro, gravações de comerciais, aparições públicas e em programas de TV e cansativas gravações em estúdio de novas canções. Com esse ritmo frenético os esquilos vão dando sinal de exaustão, mas Ian não quer saber de outra coisa a não ser faturar e cabe a Dave resgatar os seus "filhos" esquilos, dos olhos gananciosos de Ian.</p>
<p>A atuação de Jason Lee é um pouco controversa, gosto muito do cara, mas ele faz o papel do Earl nesse filme, um pouco dosado, mas é o Earl e esse estereótipo pode ser ruim para a carreira dele. Uma curiosidade é que o número da casa onde Dave mora é 1958, que foi o ano em que Ross Bagdasarian criou a animação.</p>
<p><span style='text-align:center; display: block;'><object width='425' height='350'><param name='movie' value='http://www.youtube.com/v/K0S2S9Ru2SY'></param><param name='wmode' value='transparent'></param><embed src='http://www.youtube.com/v/K0S2S9Ru2SY&rel=0' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' wmode='transparent' width='425' height='350'></embed></object></span></p>
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<title><![CDATA[The Three Duds]]></title>
<link>http://mystrangetheories.wordpress.com/?p=50</link>
<pubDate>Wed, 16 Apr 2008 00:21:36 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>whiteymcwheatbread</dc:creator>
<guid>http://mystrangetheories.wordpress.com/?p=50</guid>
<description><![CDATA[A recent comment of mine (on another blogger&#8217;s page) made me decided to put the three movies]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A recent comment of mine (on another blogger's page) made me decided to put the three movies I saw this last week into one review, or more so what to title it. I think <em>The Three Duds</em> about sums it up. Hey, hey, that is not to say "do not read my post" because I do not write for myself.. I saw the movies. I write for YOU!</p>
<p>Ok so let me start with...</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><strong><img class="aligncenter" src="http://www.cinemaretro.com/uploads/therewillbeblood.JPG" alt="" /></strong></p>
<p>It was supposed to be an AWESOME movie.... It won 2 Oscars with another 46 wins &#38; 40 nominations. Am I crazy for not liking it? Maybe I am, or maybe the critics are on something. Give me some of what they have! I am VERY glad I did not see this movie in the theater (I had thought about it). I am a bit disappointed I rented it from Blockbuster and not Redbox because it would have been cheaper.</p>
<p>The movie was very slow. It jumped forward in time without making note of it. At times it had me scratching my head and WORST of all I thought the ending was so stupid.  The cinematography was good I will give the critics that but everything else pretty much blew. I liked the acting. I HATED the score (background music, sounds, etc). The movie gave me a headache.</p>
<p>Speaking of this movie. My husband came home yesterday and told me his co-worker bought There Will Be Blood. He then told me of the conversation that transpired.</p>
<p> My husband: "did you open it yet?"</p>
<p>His co-worker "No... WHY?</p>
<p>My husband "DON'T, rent it first and then decide if you want to own it".</p>
<p>So it is not just me people. I give the movie <strong>2 stars</strong> with a reminder to myself not to watch anymore Academy Award Winners before hearing a review from someone who has seen it first.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Next let's go with...</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><strong><img class="aligncenter" src="http://z.about.com/d/movies/1/0/f/1/Q/reservationroadposter.jpg" alt="" /></strong></p>
<p>I saw the cover of this movie and thought "why have I not heard anything about this movie before". Usually that is a bad sign... though I have found a couple of good movies that way. The movie had some really good actors in it. One being Jennifer Connelly, who happens to be one of my husband's favorites because he thinks she is hot, not because of her acting skills (even though he will tell you otherwise). I do not think she is hot but I do like her acting.</p>
<p>The acting was pretty good. The story was ok nothing out of the ordinary. Everything else was alright. This movie was very depressing. After the movie ended I seriously was crying and I was feeling horrible. I was like WTF.  (read: I had no idea why I was crying). I do not know if I would have liked this movie more if I had not been a parent but since I am one I guess I will never know.</p>
<p>Note: I do hope I never have to find out what the parents were going through. I give the movie <strong>3 stars</strong>. If you like depressing movies then watch this one.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Usually one saves the best for last but not me...</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><strong></strong></p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img class="alignnone" src="http://imagecache2.allposters.com/images/pic/MMPO/505592~Alvin-and-the-Chipmunks-Posters.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>I was ALWAYS a fan of this T.V. show. I was very excited when I heard the movie was being made and even more so when it came out. I wanted to see it in the theater but never got a chance to, so when it came out on DVD I just HAD rent it. I wanted to buy it but my husband would not "let me" because he was did not have a much faith in the movie as I did. I am very glad he did not "allow" me to purchase it.</p>
<p>I was EXTREMELY disappointed in this movie. I did not like the acting (even though I like the actors), the music was way to trendy (I am not even that old), and a lot of the movie seemed forced (read: they were trying too hard). I think the movie was directed at the tween and teen age groups. I should have paid more attention to the movie poster. The movie was so bad my two children were not even interested in it... Let me take that back and instead say the only parts my kids liked were the singing ones.</p>
<p>I have one friend who LOVED this movie (she happens to be just outside of a teenager).  I think true Alvin and the Chipmunk fans will be just as disappointed as I was. This movie gets <strong>1 star</strong>.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[Alvin And The Chipmunks (2007)]]></title>
<link>http://electjeff.wordpress.com/?p=203</link>
<pubDate>Sun, 02 Mar 2008 23:48:39 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Jeff Lloyd</dc:creator>
<guid>http://electjeff.wordpress.com/?p=203</guid>
<description><![CDATA[I love my daughter. And it&#8217;s this love and nothing more that allowed me to finish watching thi]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" style="float:left;" src="http://i29.tinypic.com/rhv12f.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="285" />I love my daughter. And it's this love and nothing more that allowed me to finish watching this movie. If my daughter had not been so engrossed in this horrible film I would have easily turned it off after a half hour. Alvin and the Chipmunks ranks as one of the worst movies of 2007.</p>
<p>David Seville (Jason Lee) is a single guy struggling in the zany world of commercial jingles. After a bad meeting with his boss, played obnoxiously by David Cross, David heads home to mope. Once there he makes a shocking discovery to see three little stowaway chipmunks. These wacky rodents not only talk, but they can dance and sing harmony as good as any backstreet boy.</p>
<p>That night, while trying to sleep off the incredible events of the day, Dave keeps hearing a melody one of the chipmunks were singing earlier. He has a stroke of inspiration and stays up working on a song based on it. The next morning, Dave tells this new house mates the song and wants them to sing it. With no practice, they all start singing the song perfectly. Dave knows he just wrote a hit, and the chipmunks are going to be mega stars!</p>
<p>The film gets increasing worse minute by minute. Now I came into this knowing I wasn't going to see a movie like "No Country for Old Men" or "Se7en." However I expected better then the work of a middle school english student. </p>
<p>If you don't turn the movie off fast enough you'll see the chipmunks put on a concert with funky dancers and back up singers. You'll also witness a crazy custody fight over the rats. Let's not forget a sappy love story between Dave and his ex-girlfriend he still secretly longs to be with.</p>
<p>The movie is bad, bad, bad! My little girl loves it, God bless her. I'll let it slip and chalk it up to the colorful CGI animals (the singing doesn't hurt). The screen writers Jon Vitti, Will McRobb and Chris Viscardi should have their WGA membership's revoked for producing this script. With so many other quality children' movies out there, pass on this one. Alvin and the Chipmunks receives a half of star (and that is generous). </p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img class="aligncenter" src="http://i29.tinypic.com/34q93pu.png" alt="" width="153" height="48" /></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Alvin Superstar - 1/2 marzo 2008]]></title>
<link>http://cinemasuasa.wordpress.com/?p=31</link>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Mar 2008 08:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>cinemasuasa</dc:creator>
<guid>http://cinemasuasa.wordpress.com/?p=31</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Alvin Superstar
Date e orari delle proiezioni:

sabato 1 marzo 2008, ore 21:00
domenica 2 marzo 2008]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Alvin Superstar</b></p>
<p>Date e orari delle proiezioni:</p>
<ul>
<li>sabato 1 marzo 2008, ore 21:00</li>
<li>domenica 2 marzo 2008, ore 16:30 e 21:00</li>
</ul>
<p><b>Scheda:</b></p>
<ul>
<li> Paese: USA</li>
<li> Durata: 1h e 30'</li>
<li> Genere: Fantastico</li>
<li> Regia: Tim Hill</li>
<li> Anno: 2007</li>
<li> Distributore: 20th Century Fox</li>
</ul>
<div style="text-align:center;"><img src="http://cinemasuasa.wordpress.com/files/2008/02/alvin-superstar.jpg" alt="Alvin superstar" /></div>
<p><b>Trama</b></p>
<p>David Seville, musicista in ribasso tanto nella vita privata quanto in quella professionale, si vede invadere casa da tre scoiattolini affamati, pasticcioni e innamorati del Natale. Quando però scopre che i piccoli roditori, Alvin, Simon e Theodore, non solo sono in grado di parlare, ma hanno la musica nel sangue, sente che la svolta è vicina. Scrive una canzone per loro e organizza un minispettacolo che porta alla Jett Records, casa discografica che lo ha da poco scaricato. Ma lì gli scoiattoli si rifiutano di esibirsi, generando l'ennesima sconfitta per David.<br />
Quando oramai per lui sembra tutto perduto, Alvin, Simon e Theodore vanno a far visita a Ian Hawk, responsabile dalla Jett, mostrandogli il loro show. Da quel momento arriva il successo e il denaro per tutti. Sedotti dal perfido Ian e dalla notorietà, le tre ministar lasciano David e partono per una tournee sfiancante, della quale ben presto hanno piene le scatole.</p>
<p><b>Sito ufficiale:</b> <a href="http://www.alvinandthechipmunksmovie.com/" title="sito ufficiale del film" target="_blank">http://www.alvinandthechipmunksmovie.com/</a></p>
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<title><![CDATA[ALVIN SUPERSTAR]]></title>
<link>http://tuttialcinema.wordpress.com/2008/01/16/alvin-superstar/</link>
<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jan 2008 21:26:40 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>tuttialcinema</dc:creator>
<guid>http://tuttialcinema.wordpress.com/2008/01/16/alvin-superstar/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[servizio di DARIA CIOTTI 
(tratto da Nuovo Civitavecchia Oggi di giovedì 17 gennaio 2008) - Altezz]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="justify">servizio di DARIA CIOTTI </p>
<p align="justify"><u><font color="#000080"><img border="0" align="left" width="150" src="http://www.mymovies.it/filmclub/2007/09/122/imm.jpg" height="214" />(tratto da Nuovo Civitavecchia Oggi di giovedì 17 gennaio 2008)</font></u> - Altezza: 22 cm circa. Pelliccia: bruna. Segni particolari: sono scoiattoli parlanti. Si tratta di Alvin, Simon e Theodore, i tre dolcissimi e talentuosi scoiattoli partoriti dalla mente di Ross Bagdasarian Sr. esattamente cinquant’anni fa. Il "fenomeno Chipmunk" ha spopolato negli Stati Uniti fin dalla fine degli Anni Cinquanta, grazie alle canzoni cantate dal terzetto peloso, ed è sfociato nel debutto della serie animata, nel 1961, "The Alvin Show", alla quale sono seguiti numerosi "aggiornamenti" delle avventure dei tre piccoli scoiattoli e del loro papà putativo Dave Seville.<br />
L’ultima in ordine di tempo è "Alvin Superstar", la pellicola realizzata in Computer Grafica e Live Action distribuita dalla 20th Century Fox che sarà nelle sale italiane a partire da venerdì 18 gennaio. All’inizio della storia troviamo i tre piccoli scoiattoli che, sfrattati dalla loro "casa" (un albero destinato a diventare un albero natalizio), si intrufolano in quella di Dave Seville, autore musicale a dir poco sfortunato la cui vita viene letteralmente sconvolta dall’arrivo dei tre piccolini. Ma questo incontro segna i destini di tutti e quattro. Da un lato Dave riesce finalmente a realizzare il suo sogno di scrivere canzoni, che i tre piccoli scoiattoli cantano diventando famosi in tutto il mondo. Dall’altro Alvin e fratelli conoscono sia la fama e il successo ma, cosa ancora più importante, scoprono cosa voglia dire avere una famiglia.<br />
Sebbene a prima vista sembrerebbe di trovarsi di fronte al classico film per bambini, divertente ma privo di spessore, "Alvin Superstar" dimostra invece di possedere una profondità che stupisce positivamente. Le avventure delle tre giovani star si collocano in una storia "di famiglia", in cui un ragazzo si ritrova suo malgrado a capo di una famiglia, per quanto sui generis, e si rende conto di provare un affetto verso i tre cuccioli molto simile a quello che un padre prova per i suoi figli.<br />
Nei panni di Dave Seville troviamo Jason Lee, conosciuto dai più per la sua interpretazione della serie televisiva "My name is Earl", dove impersona un furfantello che, vinta una piccola somma alla lotteria, si mette in viaggio attraverso gli Stati Uniti alla ricerca di tutte le persone alle quali, in passato, ha fatto un torto. Non è stato facile per Lee interpretare questo ruolo non tanto per la complessità emotiva quanto per un fattore puramente tecnico. Le scene in cui compaiono gli scoiattoli (praticamente tutte) sono state girate infatti senza che gli animaletti fossero effettivamente presenti, e non è stato facile per Jason Lee rivolgersi al nulla come se effettivamente ci fosse qualcuno davanti a lui. «Dovermi ricordare dove gli scoiattoli stavano saltellando e in quale ordine è stata la maggiore difficoltà - ha affermato Lee - Alvin va da una parte, Simon dall’altra, Theodore sta qui…no, è là…e ora ancora più in là». Nel ruolo del "cattivo" è stato scelto David Cross, che ha impersonato perfettamente l’arrivista produttore musicale Ian, al quale ha dato uno spessore atipico per un personaggio semplicemente cattivo. «David non somiglia al classico cattivo e questo ci ha divertiti moltissimo – ha spiegato Chris Viscardi, uno degli sceneggiatori – Nelle prime bozze della sceneggiatura, Ian somigliava di più al prototipo del discografico furbo. Ma David ha fatto emergere i lati più impacciati e intimi del personaggio, perciò il suo Ian è un ragazzo che cerca di essere diverso da ciò che è, assumendo gli atteggiamenti di un uomo potente e brillante. Ma dentro… resta un tipo goffo».<br />
Chiude il cerchio la semi esordiente Cameron Richards, che interpreta Claire, l’ex fidanzata di Dave, con la quale forse il ragazzo ha una possibilità di recupero. Un recupero al quale contribuiscono, con effetti decisamente disastrosi, Alvin, Simon e Theodore.<br />
Tra le canzoni rielaborate in "scoiattolesco", troviamo la cover di "Bad Day", di Daniel Poster, "Only You", che i tre scoiattoli interpretano durante una scena a metà tra il commovente e l’esilarante, e l’originalissima "The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don’t Be Late), scritta da Ross Bagdasarian, con la quale il trio inizia la sua avventura canora ottenendo uno strepitoso successo.<br />
La direzione del film è stata affidata a Tim Hill, che già aveva familiarità con il tipo di pellicola realizzata avendo diretto "Garfield 2", mentre la sceneggiatura è stata affidata a Jon Vitti, per anni autore delle storie de "I Simpson" e coautore della sceneggiatura del film "I Simpson", ed alla coppia Will McRobb e Chris Viscardi.</p>
<p align="center"><img border="0" align="absBottom" width="442" src="http://eur.i1.yimg.com/eur.yimg.com/ng/xp/yahoo_manual/20071220/09/4263375596.jpg" height="310" /></p>
<p align="center"><span style="font-size:14pt;font-family:Verdana;"><strong>Trailer Ufficiale del film</strong></span></p>
<p align="center"><span style="font-size:14pt;font-family:Verdana;"><span style='text-align:center; display: block;'><object width='425' height='350'><param name='movie' value='http://www.youtube.com/v/GvflG21qaOE'></param><param name='wmode' value='transparent'></param><embed src='http://www.youtube.com/v/GvflG21qaOE&rel=0' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' wmode='transparent' width='425' height='350'></embed></object></span></span></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Alvin and the Chipmunks]]></title>
<link>http://cinephile.wordpress.com/2008/01/03/alvin-and-the-chipmunks/</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jan 2008 23:19:52 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Canadian Cinephile</dc:creator>
<guid>http://cinephile.wordpress.com/2008/01/03/alvin-and-the-chipmunks/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[
Here comes trouble. Released on December 14, 2007 in most North American markets, Alvin and the Chi]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal"><img src="http://cinephile.wordpress.com/files/2008/02/01-08-alvin-and-the-chipmunks.jpg" alt="Alvin and the Chipmunks" /></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Here comes trouble. Released on December 14, 2007 in most North American markets, <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i> was lambasted by critics and grossed almost double its expected box office, selling out most showings on its opening weekend. At the time of this post, <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i> is a solid second at the box office, right behind <i>National Treasure: Book of Secrets</i> and ahead of <i>I Am Legend</i>. That shouldn’t really be too surprising, as the nostalgia factor makes this family film a must-see for fans of <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i>.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Tim Hill directed <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i>. Hill is probably best known for being a writer on <i>SpongeBob SquarePants</i>, but he also directed <i>Muppets From Space</i> and <i>Garfield: A Tale of Two Kitties</i>. It’s apparent that Hill has a resume involving talking animals and creatures, so he was likely a wise choice to handle the talking chipmunks.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Look, let’s be honest here. <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i> is about as middle of the road as a movie gets. It’s not really particularly good, although there were some funny moments and the nostalgia factor worked for me. It’s also not really bad and is a significantly better film that many 2007 offerings. I’d rather watch <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i> thirty times in a row before sitting through <i>Good Luck Chuck</i> again. <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i>, much like the musical group and animated series, isn’t meant to be taken seriously. Many critics must have missed the memo, as the critiques towards the film range from the “implausibility of the story” to the “annoyance of the characters’ voices.” Fair enough, I guess, but critiquing a movie about talking and singing chipmunks requires a certain context, in my opinion.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i> stars Jason Lee as Dave Seville, the struggling songwriter. One day, Dave discovers three talking chipmunks in his muffin basket (long story) and learns, soon enough, that they can sing. The chipmunks are, of course, Alvin (voiced by Justin Long), Simon (voiced by Matthew Gray Gubler), and Theodore (Jesse McCartney). Theodore was always my favourite and in the film, it’s no different. Basically, Dave thinks he finally has the act that will help him out, so he takes the chipmunks to his boss (David Cross) and shows them off. After a sequence of comical events, Dave’s boss eventually takes over and works the poor chipmunks to the bone in show biz, just in time for Dave to save them in the final act.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It’s a pretty straightforward, yet entirely relatable and applicable plot. Elements of the film include the idea of a family, as there likely is no more non-traditional family than a guy and a bunch of singing chipmunks. The idea of the glitz and allure of the music industry is cleverly lampooned in a few spots, with David Cross being a more than competent villain to the little tale. The story is simple enough to resonate with the large number of kids in the audience, that’s for sure. Let’s not be foolish, either: this movie’s for kids.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><i>A</i><i>lvin and the Chipmunks</i> owes a lot of its simple-minded humour to Hill’s time as a writer on <i>SpongeBob SquarePants</i>, that’s for sure. The humour, often referred to by critics as “potty humour”, is kind of clever in some instances with a whole lot less actual “potty humour” than expected. I think there may be a chipmunk fart joke and, let’s be honest, it’s pretty funny when a chipmunk farts. Also, the idea of the music industry serving as a cruel villain is funny enough.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The CGI on the chipmunks is a little grating at times, as they are cute but a little bit strange looking. It’s not a very good job, but it is a passable one. <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i> uses the CGI to the limit, though, creating a zillion snazzy dance numbers for the trio of critters in one pop-dance sequence after another. In terms of the non-CGI stuff, a lot of the acting is a little bit wooden. Jason Lee could have used an infusion of personality, as his “Alvin!” yell never seems to reach proper levels of childish glee. Cross is actually the best part in the film, for the adults at least, as his character is just the right combination of pseudo-sincerity and sleaze.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Overall, <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i> isn’t a bad little film. I can recommend it to those that know what they’re getting into. It’s a fair shade better than a lot of 2007 films and it won’t step on any toes. Hill directs a simple film with a dedication to charm and laughter, making it idyllic for a Saturday afternoon matinée with the kids. <i>Alvin and the Chipmunks</i> is an acquired taste, but their comeback is a lot less painful than it looks.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">5.5/10</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Trailer:</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style='text-align:center; display: block;'><object width='425' height='350'><param name='movie' value='http://www.youtube.com/v/VGk8LwJoLIQ'></param><param name='wmode' value='transparent'></param><embed src='http://www.youtube.com/v/VGk8LwJoLIQ&rel=0' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' wmode='transparent' width='425' height='350'></embed></object></span></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Crítica: Alvin y las ardillas]]></title>
<link>http://zinema.wordpress.com/2007/12/25/critica-alvin-y-las-ardillas/</link>
<pubDate>Tue, 25 Dec 2007 20:18:04 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Joseba Iñaki Gauna</dc:creator>
<guid>http://zinema.wordpress.com/2007/12/25/critica-alvin-y-las-ardillas/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[

Título original: Alvin and the Chipmunks
Título: Alvin y las ardillas
País: EE.UU
Año: 2007
Du]]></description>
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<div style="text-align:center;"><img src="http://zinema.wordpress.com/files/2008/01/alvinylasardillas.jpg" alt="AlvinYLasArdillasCartel" /></div>
<p><fieldset><b>Título original</b>: Alvin and the Chipmunks<br />
<b>Título</b>: Alvin y las ardillas<br />
<b>País</b>: EE.UU<br />
<b>Año</b>: 2007<br />
<b>Duración</b>: 91 min.<br />
<b>Género:</b> <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/Animacion">Animación</a><br />
<b>Director:</b> <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/Tim-Hill">Tim Hill</a><br />
<b>Intérpretes:</b> <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/Jason-Lee">Jason Lee</a>, <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/David-Cross">David Cross</a>, <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/Cameron-Richardson">Cameron Richardson</a>, <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/Jane-Lynch">Jane Lynch</a><br />
<b>Guión:</b> Chris Viscardi, <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/Jon-Vitti">Jon Vitti</a>, Will McRobb<br />
<b>Música:</b> <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/Christopher-Lennertz">Christopher Lennertz</a><br />
<b>Fotografía:</b> Peter Lyons Collister<br />
<b>Montaje:</b> Peter E. Berger<br />
<b>Dirección artística</b>: <a href="http://www.zinema.wordpress.com/tag/Charles-Daboub">Charles Daboub</a> Jr.<br />
<b>Fecha de estreno (España)</b>: 21/12/2007<br />
<b>Web oficial</b>: <a href="http://www.alvinylasardillas.es">http://www.alvinylasardillas.es</a></fieldset><a href="http://www.notasdecine.es/738/criticas/critica-alvin-y-las-ardillas/"><b><br />
Crítica de Alvin y las ardillas</b></a> publicada en el blog notasdecine.es<br />
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<title><![CDATA[G P Hall ...Sculptor of Sound...]]></title>
<link>http://gphall.wordpress.com/2007/12/10/gphall/</link>
<pubDate>Mon, 10 Dec 2007 17:16:24 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>gphall</dc:creator>
<guid>http://gphall.wordpress.com/2007/12/10/gphall/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[WELCOME&#8230;
G P Hall is an original &#8216;Guitarist&#8217;, world renowned for playing his own o]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>WELCOME...</b></p>
<p>G P Hall is an original <b>'Guitarist'</b>, world renowned for playing his own <b>original compositions</b>.<br />
He has been credited with inventing the genre known as <b>"Industrial Sound-Sculptures".</b><br />
He is a <b>skilled Flamenco improvisor</b>, who prefers the 'Manitas school of playing free' and has been touring for many years.<br />
G  P Hall has a firmly established background in the <b>'British Blues Boom'</b> and has had the pleasure of playing alongside <b>John Lee Hooker, Sonny Boy Williamson and John Ellis</b> (The Stranglers), and has released works with<b> Frank Zappa, Robert Frip, Bill Frisell</b> and<b> John Zorn</b> to name but a few.<br />
Most recently G P Hall has released works entitled<b> 'Gothic Flamenco'</b>, through the world famous <b>'Bronze' record label</b>.<br />
His current project has the title <b>'<a href="http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=kTIB8ZKC_UM" title="Pyroclastic Flow by G P Hall" target="_blank"> Pyroclastic Flow</a> '</b>.</p>
<p>!!!<!--Slide.com error: provide id, w, h--></p>
<p><b>G P Hall Past Reviews </b></p>
<p><b>  Chris Parker (latest review 04/05/06)</b></p>
<p>'Anyone who's ever been fortunate enough to catch one of <b>guitarist extraordinaire G. P. Hall</b>'s live shows will know what to expect from the man: an <b>utterly bewitching combination of acoustic pieces</b> (drawing on styles ranging from <b>flamenco </b>and <b>finger-picking </b>to the blues) and electric excursions, many of them <b>semi-abstract 'industrial sound sculptures</b>', others more straightforwardly rock- or blues-based.</p>
<p>The division of these two DVDs into<b> 'Guitarist' </b>(an all-acoustic set) and 'Electric' (filmed by <b>Peter Remke at London's Hope and Anchor</b>) is therefore entirely appropriate.</p>
<p>The former shows the guitarist playing material such as <b>'Love Lies Bleeding'</b> (a meditation on unrequited love involving an affecting motif of descending notes), the appropriately sparkling<b> 'Guitar of Diamonds'</b> and <b>'Gnat Bite Blues' (</b>involving a buzzing sound produced by the application of a nail instead of the finger pad to the guitar neck); the latter is less of a set and more explanatory, demonstrating just how Hall produces the<b> plethora of sounds</b> and effects that make up his solo live electric performances: <b>wind-up toys, battery shavers, modified violin bows, mechanical crickets, 'female' velcro strips</b> etc. etc. are all utilised to produce an astonishing variety of textures and timbres, from <b>insect-swarm noises to background rumbles and roars to eldritch shrieks and steelmill-style pounding.</b></p>
<p>If this makes Hall's live performances sound forbiddingly esoteric, however, it's misleading; <b>live, he's utterly mesmerising,</b> his appeal extending far beyond the <b>odd guitar-technique/effects<br />
</b> aficionado to embrace anyone who's ever thrilled to a head-banging rock solo, <b>flamenco duende</b> or a slide/bottleneck-guitar <b>blues</b> piece, and these DVDs form a useful introduction to the work of a genuine original who should be much better known.'<br />
<a href="http://www.vortexjazz.co.uk" title="Vortex Jazz">www.vortexjazz.co.uk</a></p>
<p><b>Chris Parker, The Times</b><br />
<b>Steel Storms &#38; Tender Spirits</b></p>
<p>"This double CD, divided between the <b>"steel storms"</b> of guitarist GP Hall's <b>electronic soundscapes</b> or jazz-rock  group work and the <b>"tender spirits"</b> conjured up by his (generally solo) more contemplative music, provides the best exposition yet of his <b>multifaceted talent</b>.</p>
<p>His ability to move easily between fearsome<b> industrial noise abstraction</b>, thundering beats driven by drummer <b>Sam Brown</b>, haunting jazz (often featuring the plangent trumpet of either <b>David Ford or Andy Hague</b>) and the most delicate of solo acoustic meditations influenced by<b> flamenco</b> would suffice to mark him out as a genuine original; his incorporation of a variety of additional textures and sounds makes him <b>unique</b>."</p>
<p><b>Chris Parker, The Times,<br />
January 16th 1998</b></p>
<p><b> "A live performance by guitarist G. P. Hall is something of a spectacle</b>, since he conjures an <b>extraordinary variety of sounds and textures</b> not only from a selection of guitars, processors and programmers, but from less likely sources such as <b>battery fans, mechanical crickets and electric shavers</b>. His music, however,     has a great deal more to recommend it than mere novelty value."</p>
<p>"Although with clearly discernible roots in blues and flamenco, it is an entirely individual, <b>consistently exhilarating mix</b> of electronic sound sculpture (ranging from insect-swarm to industrial-machinery effects),<br />
cosmic noise,<b> filigree acoustic delicacy </b>and straightforward <b>screaming electric guitar</b>.</p>
<p>All this is harnessed to produce everything from hymnic meditations on natural beauty to what Hall calls '<b>industrial blues'</b>. Recorded at <b>London's Spitz and Wiltshire's Phantom Theatre</b>, this album should be investigated by anyone interested in the outer limits of electric music."</p>
<p><b> G P Hall Performing Live @ The Jaqueline Du Pre Building Oxford...<br />
</b></p>
<p><span style='text-align:center; display: block;'><object width='425' height='350'><param name='movie' value='http://www.youtube.com/v/yIBQZkB2Fgw'></param><param name='wmode' value='transparent'></param><embed src='http://www.youtube.com/v/yIBQZkB2Fgw&rel=0' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' wmode='transparent' width='425' height='350'></embed></object></span><br />
<b> G P Hall YouTube Video... Uncharted Territory ... Guitar, Battery Shaver, Toy Car...</b></p>
<p><b>Mark Prendergast - Sunday Observer:  IMAGINARY SEASONS</b></p>
<p>"His latest recording, <b>Imaginary Seasons</b>, a <b>retake of Vivaldi's famous opus</b>, certainly does not follow orthodox lines. Each season is rewritten with didgeridoos, whistles, bicycle spokes and selective 'noises' augmenting <b>guitar adagios, flute sections, brass and percussion</b>. Underpinning all this are the 'industrial sound sculptures' "</p>
<p><b>The Modern Dance Magazine</b><br />
<b>A Man For All Seasons</b><br />
<b>The Albums Of GP Hall</b></p>
<p><b>There are rhythm guitarists, and there are lead guitarists, and there's G.P.Hall</b>. Most use it as an instrument, Hall uses it as a medium, an interface, a series of expressions so vivid they burn.</p>
<p>Serving a very impressive apprenticeship via styles such as blues, hard rock and jazz, Hall played in a variety of bands, and played with such artists as <b>John Lee Hooker </b>and <b>Sonny Boy Williamson</b>, so <b>he's no stranger to the guitar</b>.</p>
<p>The man can obviously play! However, like<b> Eno </b>with the keyboard, and Hassle with the trumpet, Hall uses the instrument as an extension, using (sometimes) a variety of objects as far removed from the plectrum as water in the Sahara. Like<b> Fred Frith</b> on his terribly undervalued Guitar Solos album, and Fripp with his soundscapes, <b>Hall creates some of the most remarkable music you could possibly hear from the humble guitar.</b></p>
<p><b>Marks On The Air<br />
(Esoteric Binaural Label EBL 025)</b> is, unbelievably, a live album that underlines the above with such accuracy. The album itself has fourteen<br />
tracks, the first and last are novelties (a dialogue taking us in and out of the theatre). Many of the tracks were recorded at the <b>Spitz Venue in London, and the Phantom Theatre in Wiltshire</b>. Hall's notes on each track make fascinating reading as he describes what instruments he used, as well as what he played them with, such as <b>Velcro, crocodile clips,</b> and what the effects are he uses. <b>Figments Of The Imagination</b> sets the scene as the six minute plus track explores the more <b>ambient and moodier side</b>. <b>The Lonely Road</b> is a cracking, subtle piece that is just so, well, beautiful.<br />
The title track of the album is pretty impressive, as is<br />
<b> City Signals</b>, <b>Docklands </b>and <b>New England Woods</b>.</p>
<p>There's just so much colour and inspired, at times<b> visionary music </b>on here it's just too much to take in. I have found that with all of Hall's albums, they just go from strength to strength with repeated playings. A superb introduction to his music.</p>
<p><b>Mar-Del-Plata (FMR CD46)</b> carries on the <b>ambiences and soundscapes</b> that were prominent on <b>Marks On The Air</b>.<br />
This time we're treated to <b>13 tracks</b>, and this time, there's no novelties. Each track is a gem, building visions and spurring on the imagination to places even NASA can only dream of! Deep Blue kicks off the album with some effective clustering on the piano, layered through with some<b> stunningly effective guitar</b>.<br />
As with most of his albums, the sleeve notes, especially for this track, give an insight into the thoughts and inspirations of said tracks. <b>Spirit Sky Montana</b>, as you can well imagine, is a beautifully relaxing<br />
and lush piece - it's just not long enough!<br />
<b> Charmouth Beach</b>, <b>Ionian Water</b>,<b> The Estates </b>and the lovely<br />
<b> Sierra Morena Dust Storm</b> are simply wonderful.<br />
Hall has set me a real task here as I will probably end up utilising all the words in the thesaurus under the 'brilliant' section!</p>
<p><b>Fahrenheit 451</b>, inspired either by the film (or the story) is a beauty. Indeed, a superb album, and it's just under <b>74 minutes</b>.</p>
<p><b>As a painter, Hall would have equalled Picasso on Imaginary Seasons (CDRFP11101)</b>. The colours and images he creates and uses are as vivid as anything I've heard in ages. To say he describes a lot of his work as <b>Industrial Sound Sculptures</b> may mislead, many of his sound sculptures are not strictly industrial, but rural, suburban, indeed, every walk of life! and often there's a sense of loneliness,<br />
isolation and a certain sombreness that underpins it all.</p>
<p>There are<b> 27 tracks</b> in all, split into blocks under the heading of <b>Spring, Summer, Autumn</b> and <b>Winter</b>.<br />
This album is perhaps more diverse, and recalls to mind Hall's previous <b>flamenco, blues and jazz</b> experiences.<br />
Almost all the tracks are relatively short, and as such, this is perhaps a better album to familiarise the novice to this incredible man's talents. Just feast your imagination on these titles:<br />
<b> Storm At Sea</b>,<br />
<b> Arctic Lights</b>,<br />
<b> Dawn Chorus</b>,<br />
<b> Bluebell Woods</b>,<br />
<b> Moonlit Plains</b>, and a welcome return (and an amazingly different version) to Figments Of The Imagination -perhaps the best on the album.</p>
<p>The sleeve notes aren't as detailed as previous albums due to the amount of tracks, but they nevertheless make interesting reading.<br />
<b> Figments Of Imagination (FMR CD31-VO796)</b> features perhaps one of my favourite Hall tracks, yes, it's the title track. I've heard, now, three versions of this absolute classic, and all three are stunning.<br />
This album leans more towards the jazzier side of Hall's influences. It features a plethora of 'guest' musicians such as <b>Lol Coxhill</b>, <b>Paul Rutherford</b>, <b>Lyn Dobson</b>,<b> Tim Hill</b>, <b>Matt Lewis</b> and <b>Sam Brown</b> to name but a few.<br />
<b> Glider</b> kicks off the album and it's a thirteen minute plus free fall. Musically it suits the title well as it soars, dips and floats around in a variety of musical thermals. Improvisation seems to be the main key,<br />
here, as Hall sets the foundations with a <b>6 string bass</b>, as <b>Coxhill</b> weaves his <b>sax</b> in and out of the tapestry like some ethereal needle. <b>Spanish influences</b> run through <b>Rio Magdalena</b>, with Hall solo<br />
on the acoustic guitar - a really beautiful piece, and full of imagery - feel that sun!.</p>
<p><b>New Town Suite </b>, a commissioned piece, features <b>Lyn Dobson</b> on <b>flute</b> and <b>Jeff Clyne</b> on <b>double</b><br />
<b> bass</b> with Hall <b>creating more magic on the acoustic</b>. This piece is very reminiscent of <b>King Crims on circa Islands period</b>, especially <b>Formentera Lady</b>. The third version of the title track makes an<br />
appearance and it's yet another cracker. <b>Mevva Coast</b>, again, features Hall solo with the acoustic, with a Mediterranean feel to it (as you'd expect with a title like that).</p>
<p><b>His skill and musical ability is second to none</b>, and whilst this album is very different (mainly featuring <b>jazz</b> and <b>Spanish influences</b>) it shows yet more diversity. <b>Full Moon Over Madrid</b>, at just under <b>12 minutes</b>, seems to combine the above two major styles.</p>
<p>A mélange of improv jazz and Spanish which combines into a very busy piece - Coxhill, again,<br />
on the sax. <b>Heat On The Horizon</b> is again, acoustic, mainly, and is <b>dripping in mood and ambience</b>.<br />
The final track, <b>Saw Mill Adagio</b> is a slow, relaxed <b>ten minute sojourn</b>. This mood of Sunday afternoon in the backwoods is helped, no doubt, by <b>Rutherford's sleepy trombone</b>.As Hall states in the track notes, this was <b>one of his first developments into his industrial sound sculptures</b> - and it's not hard to hear why.</p>
<p>Hall's final album in this overview is a double, and is probably, without doubt, his best yet. To be fair, though, to single out any particular album would be wrong as they all have their merits and each one caters for different moods and the music does grow with each play. It would probably take up the rest of the magazine to go through the tracks on this album as the majority are in decent sized lengths.<br />
<b> Sixteen tracks on Steel Storms</b>, with true stand-outs being <b>City Signals (the live version of this is on Marks On The Air),<br />
Industrial Sights, Barbed Wire Bop, River Flow, Tsunami</b> and<b> Docklands</b>.<br />
<b> Tender Spirits, the 2nd cd, has 16 tracks</b> as well, the gems on this are <b>Sandstorm</b>,<br />
<b> The Lonely Road (which is also live on Marks On The Air), Slipstreams, Spirit Sky Montana</b><br />
(another version of this is on Mar-Del-Plata), and <b>Sea Sorrow</b> (another commissioned piece).<br />
Hall's sleeve notes, again, are superbly interesting, detailing each track with <b>instruments used, techniques</b> and in some cases the <b>history</b>. Looking back on this article, it does seem a bit much, but I wouldn't know GP Hall if I tripped over him (he'd probably have a guitar in his hand), so I don't owe him anything, and I don't have to like his music. But <b>I do like his music, very much</b>.</p>
<p>I suggest you try it. As to which album...Like I said earlier, that's just impossible to say.</p>
<p>!!!<!--Slide.com error: provide id, w, h--></p>
<p><b>The Scotsman  22.3.99  Centre for Contemporary Art</b></p>
<p><b>G P Hall<br />
CCA, Glasgow<br />
Kenny Mathieson</b></p>
<p>G P Hall is not the average guitar player. He describes himself as a <b>"sculptor of sound"</b>, and the improvised nature of his <b>layered creations</b> has placed him in the <b>avantgarde jazz</b> camp, but that is really only by default.</p>
<p>He <b>fits most comfortably into his own self-defining mould</b>, and while he draws on identifiable elements -  <b>blues, flamenco, gypsy music, minimalism and hard rock</b> - it is only to subject them to a highly idiosyncratic transformation.</p>
<p>His "sculptures" are triggered by the combination of his instruments - <b>electric </b>and <b>acoustic</b><b> guitar</b> and a <b>modified six-string bass</b> - with a <b>digital delay controlled in real time</b> by <b>two foot-pedals</b>.</p>
<p>He is notorious for the <b>bizarre variety</b> of accessories he incorporates into the sound production process, from a <b>small wind-up toy car </b>to a <b>strip of Velcro </b>or a <b>palette knife</b>.</p>
<p>One of the great advantages in catching him in live performance is that it is possible to see these physical processes at work.<br />
The <b>industrial noise</b> aspects were <b>great fun</b>, and his unconventional aids produced some <b>startling effects</b> - I particularly liked the shimmering waves generated by a <b>crocodile clip on the strings </b>- as well as being inherently<b> theatrical</b>.</p>
<p>The focus on those aspects of his work tends to make his music sound weirder in prospect than it is in reality.<br />
At heart, he is a <b>thoroughly melodic player</b>, and even the most abstract of his creations tended to coalesce around <b>attractive melodic fragments</b>, while others were unambiguously tuneful.</p>
<p>He opened both sets on <b>acoustic guitar</b>, and his <b>fingerpicking</b> proved that his conventional <b>guitar techniques are sound</b>, whatever other<b> technical hybrids</b> he has developed.</p>
<p>On <b>electric</b>, the plaintive open-air melody and sumptuous swells of <b>Spirit Sky Montana</b><br />
and <b>New England Woods</b> recalled a cross between <b>Aaron Copland</b> and <b>Pat Metheny</b>.</p>
<p><b>Feature in Avant Magazine:</b></p>
<p><b>GUITARIST/COMPOSER   GP HALL<br />
October 1997</b></p>
<p><b>Headline: The Lonely Road</b></p>
<p><b>Soundtrack: Mar-Del-Plata (2.59)</b></p>
<p><b>HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOUR MUSIC?</b><br />
"I don't think there is an easy answer to that one. I don't play just one type of music. I seem to be only able to play my own music, some of which are <b>Industrial Sound Sculptures</b>. Industrial, because I use<br />
<b> household items</b> such as<b> crocodile clips, Braun battery shaver</b>, pieces of<b> Velcro</b>, <b>metal spatulas</b> and anything which will <b>vibrate the strings</b> or create the desired effect. <b>Sound sculptures</b>, because by<br />
using <b>digital sound layers</b> on top of each other they create a <b>multi orchestral sound!</b> In fact that is another aspect of my music; a <b>Wide-Screen stereo orchestral sonic classical<br />
sound</b> as in my recording of' <b>Spirit Sky Montana</b>' on CD called <b>'Mar-Del-Plata'</b>. It is a composition<br />
<b> influenced by Aaron Copland's music</b> and it has those big broad digital sound spreads that pictures one standing on the plains looking at wall to wall stars. I also mix industrial with Spanish sounds,<br />
<b> Avant Garde noises</b> and <b>violent over-driven motorised air sounds</b>, as in <b>'City Signals'</b> (sounds from an open window). '<b>Imaginary Music'</b> maybe sums it up better."</p>
<p><b>TELL US ABOUT THE EQUIPMENT YOU USE?</b><br />
"I use <b>four amplification systems </b>in two sets of stereo (900 watts output). The amplifiers are keyboard<br />
combo's and as I tend to use a wide range of sounds by putting<b> bass guitar, electric and acoustic<br />
guitars</b>, with at times <b>electric percussion</b> through them, they need to with-stand punishment; the volume<br />
and aggression in my music. The amps also reproduce <b>soft delicate sounds that follow a loud passage...</b><br />
With this I don't have to rely on a mixing desk or sound engineer and all the problems that come with a P.A. It's loud enough for me to be able to express myself fully. I also have to make several sound<br />
adjustments to each composition, so I like to be fully in control."</p>
<p><b>G P Hall &#38; His Sound Objects</b><br />
<span style='text-align:center; display: block;'><object width='425' height='350'><param name='movie' value='http://www.youtube.com/v/Y8o2Mihm06s'></param><param name='wmode' value='transparent'></param><embed src='http://www.youtube.com/v/Y8o2Mihm06s&rel=0' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' wmode='transparent' width='425' height='350'></embed></object></span><br />
<b>YouTube Video of Implements Used To Make Sound Sculptures... By G P Hall.</b></p>
<p><b>HOW DO YOU MIX YOUR SOUND ON STAGE?</b><br />
"I use two foot volume pedals; one to give a stereo sound with digital effects out of the bottom left and<br />
right stack, the other out of the top left and right stack with different set of digital effects. <b>I mix the sounds</b> by layering one sound down first, listening to it and then adding a <b>chord structure</b> or<b> solo</b> on<br />
top of the sound I have created. The amount of volume in each layer depends on how much I put my foot down on the volume pedals."</p>
<p><b>HOW LONG HAVE YOU BEEN DEVELOPING INDUSTRIAL SOUND SCULPTURES?</b><br />
"About <b>22 years</b>. It's not just about mixing sound with industrial noise; it only seems to work well with a<b> sonorous backing</b> plus I use <b>strong melodies</b>. There are some 1981 recordings made at <b>Pathway<br />
Studios in London</b>, where the owner, <b>Mike Finesilver produced a lot of my earlier works</b>. Five years later <b>'Manifestations'</b> and <b>'Harbinger'</b> were on a CD called <b>'Colors - Movements'</b>. The CD went to <b>America</b> and<b> Japan</b> and is hard to obtain in this country. I still receive royalties from Japan where it is played on a radio station from time to time.<br />
Before that in 1973 I was <b>commissioned by South Hill Park in Bracknell</b> to write a piece called '<b>The Estates'.</b><br />
It was a large and <b>complex percussive work</b> which was centred around <b>two specially built piano frames</b>. One was double decked (one frame on top of the other): the lower one having a wooden<br />
shuttered frame built around the metal frame and the one on top had the metal frame bolted over the top of the wooden shuttered frame. This gave a different <b>soft tintinnabulation</b> sound to it, where<br />
as the other one, a single decked shuttered piano frame, was tuned with mainly <b>percussive chords</b>.<br />
These two would be <b>struck</b> with <b>wooden mallets</b>,<b> metal hooped wires, steel chains and tympani<br />
beaters.</b><br />
The frames were <b>built by myself</b> and they lay at 45` off the ground. To distinguish what section had to be hit, I took out some of the strings and then made them into <b>banks of tuned chords</b>.<br />
It was also scored for <b>guitar, bass, clarinet, glockenspiel, hammer dulcimer </b>and<b> percussions</b>.<br />
<b> 'The Estates'</b> was written to depict the breakdown of established communities to make way for the New Town of Bracknell. I still have one of the <b>earliest formats of video</b>, shot in 1974, on a Sony reel to<br />
reel of the  two performances I did at <b>South Hill Park Arts Centre</b>. The 1975 <b>live sound recording</b> performance, was edited at Pathway Studios in London, by Mike Finesilver from one hour down to 25 minutes.</p>
<p><b>THIS PIECE HAS NOW BEEN RE-MASTERED AND IS AVAILABLE ON CD CALLED 'MAR-DEL-PLATA'</b> along with other tracks of more recent recordings."</p>
<p>!!!<!--Slide.com error: provide id, w, h--></p>
<p><b>TELL US A BIT ABOUT YOUR 6-STRING BASS GUITAR, THE BOWING, THE TECHNIQUES YOU USE AND DO YOU PLAY ANY OTHER INSTRUMENTS OTHER THAN GUITAR?</b><br />
"It is a<b> Shergold custom built</b>, converted by me so that I have frets up to the 7th fret and from there on it's fretless so I have a <b>funky and fretless sound</b> instantly at my disposal. It is <b>dark cherry</b> with<br />
<b> aluminium fitting</b>s, I have had it about 18 years and it's the only one of its kind as far as I know.<br />
I sometimes play<b> flamenco</b> on this, e.g. '<b>Flying Ants'</b> where I play a <b>soleares flamenco rhythm</b>, put<br />
through a chorus and a <b>ME-6 guitar processor</b> with a <b>distorted over-drive</b>, add to that a programmed<b> hip hop anarchic shuffle beat</b> - all this put through my powerful back line and as someone once<br />
commented; <b>it sounds like a B-52 bomber hitting an express train with insects buzzing around...</b><br />
I use a <b>psaltry bow</b> on the first and sixth E-strings of the bass which gives it a<b> sawing effect</b> and put that through delays to give me a <b>bass cello orchestral sound</b>, as in <b>'White Wilderness</b>'; first I have an untreated sound, then one top set of stereo delays are pumping out the music (by pumping I mean strike first then swell up on the volume pedal), then by moving the foot quickly to the other volume pedal the other set of speakers are producing a different sound. Other instruments...most <b>stringed instruments, piano, keyboards</b> and <b>soprano sax</b> when needed."</p>
<p><b>DO ALL YOUR COMPOSITIONS HAVE EFFECTS?</b><br />
"No! I was <b>trained in classical, blues, rock and flamenco </b>(my <b>favourite section was always the adagio, Samuel Barber's OP 11a, which still moves me</b>). I studied these techniques, then went my<br />
own sweet way. Some <b>techniques I invented myself</b>. I have <b>composed acoustic/flamenco pieces</b> where I use the thumb on the left hand as an added finger on the fret-board by balancing the<br />
guitar on the knee, pressing with the right arm-elbow and counter balancing the four fingers and thumb that is on the fret board. It was painful at first and took some time to perfect."</p>
<p><b>WHO IS YOUR FAVOURITE GUITARIST?</b><br />
<b> "Manitas de Plata, Hubert Sumlin and John Ellis</b> the guitarist and composer has a nice CD out called <b>"Acrylic"</b>, that I like very much, I never seem to tire of <b>"Wide Asleep" by Michael Manrig</b>.<br />
I was impressed by <b>Hans Reichells</b> and <b>Uwe Kropinski's</b> live performances. These days I don't get much opportunity to listen to a lot of music as I have a new large family, which takes up most of my money and a young daughter of nearly three, who takes up all my excess energy.<br />
I have to spend so much time on my own music that some days I want to switch off...<b>natures imagination is where I get my inspiration</b>."</p>
<p><b>TELL US ABOUT YOUR EARLY YEARS?</b><br />
"In my teens I was in a band called '<b>The Odd Lot</b>'. We ran a blues club, where beside us, we had really well known bands appearing there and I often got to play with them. In my twenties I was playing at <b>The 100 Club, The Middle Earth and The Round House </b>and I toured around <b>Europe</b> with Liverpool band <b>'The Governors</b>'. <b>I was in demand and I had a future</b>. Then my career was cut dramatically short... I was traumatised by a situation of events beyond my control... I was in the wrong place at the wrong time and the experience left me mentally, physically and spiritually bankrupt. As the trauma took hold, it took my confidence and self worth. I took comfort and solitude in alcohol and other escape mechanisms that took me to places<br />
I didn't want to go. I was lost in what I call <b>the wilderness years</b>. I became homeless and penniless three times and eventually after 15 years of hell, I ended up in a recovery programme.<br />
At first it was just years of depression and incongruous redemption and trying to obtain a reconciliation with the past. Then I started to communicate back into the real world via my music and at first it was a real hard slog. But as if to compensate, I had extraordinary insights.<br />
I am sober today and lead a relatively ordinary life and I really value that.<b> I could not perform my music in any other way other than with a clear head</b>, because it requires so much concentration.<br />
It was an <b>isolated and lonely road</b>, but I do appreciate the people who helped me in financial and<b> supportive </b>ways and gave me <b>encouragement</b> when I had many setbacks."</p>
<p><b>WHAT DOES THE FUTURE HOLD FOR YOU?</b><br />
"I will never be able to make up for my missing years and that is something that has been hard for me to come to terms with over the years. I would like to play more <b>festivals </b>and<b> clubs</b> as a <b>solo guitarist</b>. <b>I never feel more alive than when I am on stage playing</b>. I hope to get three more CD's out in the future. I have made four library CD's for the film, <b>TV and advertising industries</b>.<br />
One of them is called <b>'Rich Mans World' </b>which is funny as for 15 years I lay gazing at the heavens through the holes in my tennis shoes... In September -97 I am going to the <b>Isle of Skye</b> and <b>Lewis</b><br />
to play two concerts and perform a commissioned work called <b>'Sea Sorrow'</b> and in December -97 I am hoping to perform solo at some concerts in aid of the homeless with a lot of established artists - possibly at the <b>Barbican in London or at Wembley</b> plus three or four other cities."</p>
<p><b>"Don't go into punishment park be in the fun park". GP</b></p>
<p><b>Sound on Sound Magazine   G.P HALL  April 1989<br />
by Mark Prendergast</b></p>
<p>If it's probable that anyone reading this article will never have heard of <b>Graham Peter Hall</b>.<br />
it's probable too that anyone interested in the music I've discussed here would appreciate his <b>substantial work and vision</b>.</p>
<p>Born during the Second World War in London, Hall was involved with the <b>rhythm and blues</b> <b>scene of Graham Bond</b>, graduated through the great English blues revival of the mid 1960s straight into the<b> psychedelic blooming</b> that surrounded such clubs as the <b>Roundhouse</b> and <b>Middle Earth</b>.</p>
<p>His interest was then and still is<b> mechanical sculptures in music</b>.</p>
<p>Gigs were played where<b> pianos were dismembered </b>and the debris attacked with a hammer.<br />
Conversely,<b> Hall studied the classics</b> and <b>lived with a band of gypsies in the South of France for years improving his guitar style</b>.</p>
<p>As long ago as the early 70s Hall reeling from the excesses of the 60s involved himself with the authentic side of new age awareness by writing /producing and performing regularly at the<b> East/West Centre in London.</b></p>
<p>Despite this interest don't imagine that his music consists of long-winded, mellifluous instrumental waffling.<br />
In fact, it's quite distinctly different, as Hall explains: "I'm not interested in long repetitive cycles.<br />
<b> Sound passages, adagios on guitar/synthesizers</b> and <b>mechanical sculptures</b> are all utilised to give a <b>total inner and outer experience</b>. Someone once described my music as <b>like listening<br />
to Vivaldi walking across a building site!</b><br />
I use things like a <b>Braun shaver</b>, <b>Velcro </b>and <b>crocodile clips</b> on my guitars to create <b>unusual sonic results</b>.<br />
The sound of say a <b>hair dryer</b> being put through pickups and out through loudspeakers is <b>immensely interesting to me</b>."</p>
<p>Yet Hall's use of appliances has got nothing to do with the industrial noise of say<b> Einsturzende Neubauten or Test Dept</b>, but is made an integral part of <b>satisfying emotional compositions</b> that take<br />
the listener on a journey through different<b> phases</b>, <b>mental locations</b>, and<b> states of feeling</b>.</p>
<p>Of his many albums <b>Movements (Colors 1986)</b> serves as diverse introduction to his <b>complex but beautiful world</b>.</p>
<p>A more recent recording featuring a <b>fascinating array of orchestral sounds produced electronically</b>, entitled <b>Borrowed Time</b>, will be released some time in the near future.</p>
<p>One very good compilation of new instrumental music on which G.P Hall appears is <b>Colors: The Collection (Kenwest '86)</b>.</p>
<p><b>Margen Magazine Spain       Rafa Dorado<br />
Date: 08 April 1999</b></p>
<p>GP Hall <b>Steel Storms &#38; Tender Spirits (2CD's) (66:32-66:08) FMR Records.</b></p>
<p>GP Hall is a very <b>original guitar player</b>. His list of influences includes <b>blues, flamenco, jazz </b>and <b>hard</b><b> rock</b>; and to that we can add <b>ambient music and electronics</b>.</p>
<p>He's supported<b> Deep Purple</b>, <b>The Hollies</b> and <b>Chris Farlowe</b> among others, and<b> lived with gypsies to assimilate the "duende" of the flamenco guitar</b>.</p>
<p>This is his fifth album to date - he's previously released <b>"Imaginary Seasons", "Marks On The Air",<br />
"Mar-Del-Plata" and "Figments Of The Imagination"</b>, and appeared on the <b>"Eclectic Guitars"<br />
</b> compilation <b>traveling alongside Frank Zappa, Robert Fripp, Bill Frisell and John Zorn.</b></p>
<p>Critics relate that he "is at the conjunction of the styles of<b> Robert Fripp</b> and <b>Derek Bailey</b>, the place where <b>John Falls </b>courts<b> David Torn </b>and where <b>Thurston</b> Moore deconstructs<b> Vaughan Williams</b>".<br />
We know that this seems exaggerated but, having had our turn at listening to his back catalogue and listening to his new work, we are beginning to<b> give credit </b>to such opinions.</p>
<p>This <b>musician</b> mixes the <b>most wonderful melodies</b> and the <b>most beautiful chaos</b> in his music.<br />
Hall seems to be always close to the edge; that abyss that the great instrumentalists alone are able to avoid. His albums (and this latest is no exception) provide a heyday for eclecticism, as a flamenco guitar suddenly winches itself into jazz, then straightaway becomes transparent and enters the textural terrains of contemporary ambience. Only God - and, probably, Hall - knows the secret to <b>mastering so many music styles and not sounding pretentious</b>: I, my friends, recognize that I don't know it. But still, at least I'm in the position to recommend you this work as <b>an imaginative and varied sample of all type of sounds passed through the filter of<br />
contemporary music.</b></p>
<p>If you can imagine a broken mirror as a bundle of light passes over it and strews light rays in many<br />
directions, you'll have an approximate vision of the music of G.P. Hall. It may not always please you, but we are sure that you will never be bored with this <b>amazing work</b>.</p>
<p><b>Dann Chinn - Misfit City                                                                                                                                              Marks on the Air  &#38;  Mar Del Plata</b></p>
<p>Another guy who knows how to <b>create an atmosphere </b>is G.P. Hall, whom <b>"Misfit City" </b>first came<br />
across at the Unknown Public Holiday back in 1996. A whole days worth of <b>experimental musicians</b> with jammed CD players, mutant MIDI-ed trombones making weird slidey noises and not much else, <b>astringent orchestras mixing it with art-rock drummers</b>, all-in jazz wrestling with pop standards from the brilliantly perverse<b> Billy Jenkins</b>, and a rare steroid-laden synthpop<br />
performance from<b> Dave Stewart &#38; Barbara Gaskin</b>.</p>
<p>One of those things you just have to go for, risking an absolute barrage of pretentious hellwhackery for the possible glances of wonderment.</p>
<p>So, into all of this high art ambles a bloke in a fedora, playing a <b>Stratocaster</b> with a<b> pocket fan</b> and <b>Velcro</b>. Sounds like a joke. Nope.</p>
<p><b>He stole the show with the most natural, communicative and affectionate performance of the whole day</b>. And some of the most accessible music. One of those times when a gamble pays off.</p>
<p><b>G.P. HALL    "Mar-Del-Plata"<br />
Future Music Records<br />
FMR CD46-V0997<br />
"Marks On The Air"<br />
Esoteric Binaural Label<br />
EBL 025<br />
(both CD-only albums)</b></p>
<p>Still clearing out the accumulated tapes of an inexplicably neglected career, Graham Peter Hall is continuing to come up with the goods. He's had thirty years of uneasy development on the rocky, unrewarding terrain between the <b>simplistic sureties</b> of the rock<br />
instrumentalist and the equally complacent indulgences of the full-on <b>avant-garde</b> blower.<br />
And it's brought him - if not financial reward, or a brittle and precious reputation among the pseudo-intelligentsia - a stock of <b>lovely, emotive music</b>.</p>
<p>Certainly he's managed to remain one of <b>Britain's most individual and complete guitarists</b> over that time. He's immersed himself in <b>experimentation via technology</b> (multiple speakers and pedal processors; vast, slow delay loops), <b>bizarre techniques</b> and plectrum substitutes (<b>battery fans, tiny psaltery bows, electric razors, toy cars and Velcro</b>, among others: <b>Thurston Moore</b>, eat yer heart out), and through the textural suggestions of his<b> "industrial sound sculptures"</b> (light industry, that is - Hall's <b>mimicry</b> is closer to a handsaw or governor motor rather than Reznor-ish car-crushers or stamping presses).<br />
Yet he's somehow never lost the <b>ability to embrace expressive tunes</b> or to <b>weave a handrail of familiarity</b> into his sonic constructions: perhaps that's why "Wire" types don't seem to go for him. He can get in your face with the best of them, but it's generally in order to <b>touch your sympathies</b>.</p>
<p><b>"Mar-Del-Plata" </b>is by far the most accessible and diverse of Hall's compiled-work albums this decade. It's a tour across a loose-but-affecting <b>composing and performing imagination</b> that ranges with restless compassion across a wide field - sometimes skittering,<b> willful flamenco performance</b>; sometimes sounding like <b>Cocteau Twins</b> doing home improvements in the Mediterranean; sometimes the sort of individual, humanistic New Music improv you'd expect from someone like <b>Simon H. Fell or Fred Frith</b>.</p>
<p>But though the record's full of<b> experimentalism</b>, Hall's sense of melody is at the forefront, and the <b>predominant voice</b> on <b>"Mar-Del-Plata"</b> is his <b>masterfully expressive Spanish guitar playing</b>.</p>
<p>This can usually be found angling over long aching stretches of so called <b>choral electronic humming, plangent violin and eerie ambient soundsd up from the industrial processors</b>: like a half-unplugged take on a <b>Robert Fripp Soundscape</b> where guitar textures span out into infinity.</p>
<p>At other times, it's taking on the simple directness of a folk tune: <b>"Ionian Waters"</b> dance of <b>sparkling acoustic lights</b>, staccato accented Latin melodies<b>"Mar-Del-Platas" </b> underpinned<br />
by a <b>geological murmur of bass</b>, or the final hot gusting of <b>"Sierra Morena Dust Storm"</b> where the gut strings spit and scatter in rich melody, reaching new heights of sinewy passion, Hall bowing winnowing textures from the electric guitar accompaniment with serrated <b>steel bars</b> from his box of implements.</p>
<p>Where technology does play a more direct role, <b>Hall's humanity doesn't falter or go under</b>.</p>
<p>The hymnal swells of billowing electric warmth on <b>"Spirit Sky Montana"</b> are the most beautiful and enveloping sound on the record (somewhere between <b>Bill Frisell's</b> cinematic<br />
romance and <b>David Torn</b>'s eccentric stringwarps) and tap deeply into church music and Romantic composing.<br />
<b> "Humidity Despair"</b>'s trickle of <b>wind chimes, languorous piano</b>, and enveloping sighs provides a gusting, <b>luxurious impression</b> of a sultry night, and is lush enough to lean right back into.</p>
<p>Some tracks, fleshed out by sound-loops and D.I.Y. treatments, are detailed,<b> impressionistic oil-paintings in music and tone</b>.</p>
<p><b>"Deep Blue"</b> sounds like someone chain sawing up a frozen Alpine lake, its jangling piano chords and thumping bass a mass of irregularities; and <b>"Plutonium Alert"</b> (in which Hall wholly abandons guitar for <b>soprano sax</b> and the ring of <b>auto-harps</b>) goes for an all-out <b>sensory mix of apocalyptic after tones</b>, tangles of bell-sounds<br />
and<b> aggressive Grappelli violins</b> entangling with a spasmodically awkward funk rhythm, like an outtake from <b>"Starless And Bible Black"</b>.</p>
<p><b>"Charmouth Beach</b>'s" smear of bright spring-loaded colour flow rings beautiful alarm bells, and the <b>menacing bass growl</b> of <b>"Enigmatic" around in your dreams</b> feels like a cave-bear thumping; squeaks and rattles from fingerboard and autoharp moving around in slow disquiet, enclosed by knocking metal.</p>
<p>Weirdest and most satisfying of all is <b>"Fahrenheit 451"</b> where <b>juddering guitar</b>,<b> saw sounds</b>, the shriek of a <b>whistling kettle</b>, and treble-y scratching all mix like <b>toxic vapours<br />
under heavy pressure</b> and plaster your neck hairs back against your rising hackles. <b>Horribly enjoyable</b>.<br />
It's the centrepiece, <b>"The Estates"</b>, which pulls all of <b>"Mar-Del-Plata's"</b> elements together.</p>
<p>A version of a 1975 long-form composition, it blends the <b>chiming</b>, restless clatter of the<br />
improv ensemble with Hall's own <b>quiveringly angry solo acoustic guitar</b>.<br />
<b> Dulcimers, clarinets</b>, a huge array of <b>percussion</b>, and the ominous scrapes and clangs of two adapted <b>metal piano frames</b> (played like <b>harps</b> with assorted <b>chains</b>, wires, and implements) all seethe and pant over twenty-five minutes of <b>desperate musical invocation</b>.</p>
<p>The theme was the blight of communities and architecture by crappy British urban programming, and it comes across: pulses of frustration and alienation hurl themselves against the confines of the music, and Hall's panic-stricken playing conjures the nightmare of new roads and buildings swarming over beloved landscapes like a horde of locusts.</p>
<p>In the sleeve notes, Hall gives a blood'n'guts description of the struggle it took to get "The Estates" together. Some of the manufactured instruments, apparently, continue to drift through the art world with a life of their own.</p>
<p>The piano frames were last seen as part of a <b>"fire sculpture"</b>, still counter-invading the architecture.</p>
<p>The scattered effects of the attempt to capture all of Hall's ideas across a single<br />
CD does mean that <b>"Mar-Del-Plata"</b> narrowly misses the Thing of Wonderhood it's<br />
aiming for, but its a close-run thing.</p>
<p>Throughout, we get the sort of peek at Hall's open heart (warts, gooey patches and all) that most experimental musicians, wired into their own intellectual dryness, would never risk expressing.</p>
<p>On <b>"Marks On The Air"</b> (an album of live recordings from concerts in London and Wiltshire), it's even more pronounced.</p>
<p>Like "Mar-Del-Plata", "Marks On The Air" enthuses and expounds to the full capacity of a CD: and by this point the eccentricity is unashamed. To make the record, Hall teamed up with binaural recording whiz <b>Mike Skeet</b>, whose voice you can hear running up stairs and heading down in lifts, bookending the concert with the nattering enthusiasm of a "Playschool" presenter, and popping any remaining hopes of <b>arty<br />
detachment</b>. Still, it adds to the warmth of the atmosphere Hall's live playing induces, and Skeet's superb recording techniques (his miking technology directly mimicking the reception of ears on a human head) presents the music in the enveloping, directly tactile environment it requires.</p>
<p>Except for the oddly truncated applause and the removal of Hall's shy, uncontrived audience chat, it's as close to one of his concerts as you're going to get without leaving your home.</p>
<p>Compared to <b>"Mar-Del-Plata</b>'s" more assured sonic constructions, <b>"Marks On The Air"</b> is less sophisticated, more risky and equally ambitious: a one-man show relying on how much G.P. can get out of his hands and immediate loops and still keep an audience entertained. But with four big speakers and the usual collection of guitars, pedals and unorthodox guitar-abusing sundries, he's at least well-armed to do that. And the clean rattle of his drum machine lends the whole enterprise an endearing extra dimension of naivety.</p>
<p>Live, he can be tempted into more direct, rockist statements, as is shown in the <b>tremendous scrunch of flamencoid six-string bass</b> in <b>"Flying Ants"</b>' - <b>gypsy guitar</b><br />
with helicopter blades for fingernails - which flicks between tremendous chocolately gurgles of sound and impenetrable hedges of distorted overload.</p>
<p>Or in the impressionistic heavy metal of <b>"City Signals"</b> and <b>"Uncharted Territory"</b> - searing, swaggering, chromium-blues lead lines; rippling prolonged ambient humming and indistinct conversation recordings filling the gaps like smog pouring into a heat haze; the slow <b>rolling pummel</b> of drum-sounds.</p>
<p>There's a strong sense, again, of his pictorial approach to music. <b>"New England Woods" </b>is cut from the same lambent swelling cloth as <b>"Spirit Sky Montana"</b>, and <b>"Docklands"</b> attempts to recreate the brazenly lively colourfulness of a polluted industrial sunset, the shambling drums lopsided, whooshing saw-sounds and<br />
<b> lemon-sharp guitar echoes</b> pressing out the skyline. The hypnotic <b>"On Every Life"</b> goes further into the <b>wilderness</b>, nodding to <b>Native American rhythm patterns</b> and calling up the feel of a <b>parched Arizonan desert view</b>. The delicate whine and rush of the guitar patterns swop between <b>impressions</b> of the dry, red heat and dust and of the shocking whiteness and colours of the tasselled fragments<br />
of cloud: notes call and repeat, tranced out. Towards the end there's a moment when it all stops but for a <b>faint swirling echo</b>, as if the whole desert was looking upwards; before the mass of sound crams back in again, like a cloudburst.<br />
Best of all, perhaps, is the build-up of <b>"The Lonely Road"</b>. The coalescing of<b> sustained sorrowful coats of sound</b>, of small factory sounds and tinges of <b>ambient-blues </b>embracing a tired old worker's knotted muscles at the end of  the day.</p>
<p>The human focus comes in via the twanging, panging <b>Frisell </b>pluck of Hall's guitar, and especially from the endearingly rough burst of <b>busker's harmonica</b> that wafts over the floating sorrow, brave and defiant, answered in kind by the elephant-trumpet of a rotary-saw sound.</p>
<p>All in all, despite the odd bit of bluster, <b>"Marks On The Air" </b>goes further towards expressing Hall's <b>gently appealing emotional nakedness as player and creator</b>.</p>
<p>What he sometimes loses in the grace stakes, he gains back in honesty and sympathy.<br />
There are a couple of unselfconsciously winning little cameos of "tiny music" that could've come from a children's theatre: the clipped zithery melody of "Chinese Firecrackers", against which drum sounds pop and clatter, and the simple yet exquisite acoustic child- song patterns of <b>"Suvi's Little Crickets"</b> which regularly rests while a boxful of mechanical insects, chirping peacefully, are orbited around the mike.</p>
<p>And further hints into the private man are suggested by <b>"Alcharinga's"</b> deep pulsing chant (in which guitars are abandoned altogether in favour of throat- singing through an old answering machine mike) or <b>"Marks On The Air"</b> itself: a long, <b>mournful classical</b> study swept back and forth in eddies of echo, resigning itself beautifully to its own impermanence.</p>
<p>G.P. Hall manages to be the garage player among the avant-garde, the <b>warm- hearted soft touch</b> among the arthouse players, the naive wonderstruck kid in the crowd of post-adolescent posers, the transfigurer of the straight, and the benevolent ghost in the machinery.</p>
<p>Not a bad set of credentials, at that.</p>
<p>(DANN CHINN)</p>
<p><b>Review Quotes</b></p>
<p><b>"fearsome industrial noise abstraction, thundering beats and the most delicate of solo acoustic meditations ...a genuine original"</b><br />
<b> The Times</b></p>
<p><b>" A LIVE performance by guitarist G P Hall is something of a spectacle"<br />
Chris Parker The Times. 16/1/1998</b></p>
<p><b>"Steel Storms &#38; Tender Spirits provides the best exposition yet of his multi faceted talent." Chris Parker The Times. 11/12/1998</b></p>
<p><b>"I am really impressed with the originality"<br />
Billy Gray<br />
Beverly Hills International Film Inc.<br />
27/02/1998</b></p>
<p><b>..."It's a six-string kaleidoscope. Air turned into light. An orchestra in an amplifier and a drawerful of oddments. It's all this and more"<br />
Dann Chinn Avant Magazine. APRIL 1998</b></p>
<p><b>G P HALL.. manages to be the garage player among the avant-garde, the warm-hearted soft touch among the arthouse players, the naive wonderstruck kid in the crowd of post-adolescent posers, the transfigurer of the straight, and the benevolent ghost in the machinery. Not a bad set of credentials, at that..<br />
Dann Chinn Misfit City MARCH 1999</b></p>
<p><b>"Some of the sounds he gets out of his guitar are spooky"<br />
Mark Prendergast Altair 5<br />
www. internet. 16/04/1998</b></p>
<p><b>"I was at the Q.E.H. London and saw your wonderful performance, watching you play reminded me of why I started playing in the first place"<br />
John Ellis (Stranglers Guitarist). 30/09/1996</b></p>
<p><b>"Hall's music is, before anything else, a spiritual art. His well composed music dives deep into one's mind. Hall creates sound sculptures which he enriches  with his beautiful melodies"<br />
Volker Seimans Collossus Magazine Finland. www 1998</b></p>
<p><b>..."A music without any age on the edge of the infinite"<br />
Tangentes magazine France. 1999</b></p>
<p><b>"The sound was mixed instantly by Hall and digitally returned to the audience.<br />
The program is multifarious.<br />
The musicianship is admirable"<br />
Frank Rubolino Cadence USA.<br />
April 1998</b></p>
<p><b>"....But its his production, composition, and arranging, that have marked this disc as a organic fusion of Flamenco<br />
and jazz sensibilities....<br />
Dale Smoak Cadence USA. May 1997</b></p>
<p><b>...I particularly liked the shimmering waves generated by a crocodile clip on the strings...<br />
Kenny Mathieson  live review<br />
Centre for Contemporary Art<br />
Glasgow 22/03/99<br />
The Scotsman</b></p>
<p><b>...Meeting with Jimi Hendrix in The Roundhouse and playing with Graham Bond seemed to be everyday adventures to a young guitarist eager to make his name on the London scene..."<br />
Mark Prendergast Sunday Observer  11/10/92</b></p>
<p><b>"for me the high points included one straight acoustic evocation by G P HALL"<br />
Robert Maycock<br />
INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER  JAN 1996</b></p>
<p><b>"I particularly enjoyed SANDSTORM G P HALL'S acoustic impression of an African desert<br />
Adam Lively<br />
MAIL ON SUNDAY 17/03/1996</b></p>
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