Tag: music

  • Poet Gaia Holmes on connection between Sounds and Writing

    Halifax poet, Gaia Holmes was the poet in charge of our ‘Pulse of Bradford project’, encouraging young people aged 16+ to write about their experiences, hopes and thoughts about Bradford. The poems were later made into VR films thanks to The Space Arts and filmmakers Neon8 and will be touring our libraries as part of National Storytelling Week next month (Feb 2-8). The theme of National Storytelling Week is ‘Soundtrack Your Story’. Here, Gaia, who will be running a poetry workshop on Saturday Feb 7 and later hosting our Open Mic featuring The Pulse of Bradford, shares her thoughts on the connections between sound and writing.

    I remember listening to David Gray’s song ‘Babylon’, again and again and again, for a week after I split up with a long-term partner. I stayed in the double bed in the attic with the skylight window and a plague of moths and bald patches in the Turkish rug. My friend brought me mugs of tea and toast loaded with salted tomatoes cut into the shapes of stars. I didn’t want to eat but I forced myself to do so (but left the toast crusts), and after a few days there were fruit flies as well as moths. I remember watching tragic French films on a tiny black and white tv that had a fork for an arial.

    Run rabbit run. Gaudette. My Boomerang Won’t Come Back. I Want To Hold Your Hand: these were me and my brother’s records- our little 45s. These were our only records. My father had more and they were bigger and stranger. There was Finnegans Wake and Oldfield’s Tubular Bells, Schubert’s Trout Quintet, Allegri’s Miserere and Dylan Thomas. There was African Sanctus and Einstein On The Beach. On Sundays, after a can of barley wine or two, my father opened the window of his bedroom and played The Doors at full volume. It was very loud, but no one ever complained because he was the village’s only handy man and there was always an old lady that needed a drain unblocking or a lightbulb replacing.

    Nirvana’s ‘Smells like teen spirit’. reminds me of me and my friends as teenagers in the early 1990s dancing at The Zoo Bar in Halifax with its bad lighting and its sticky lino. We hopped and thudded on the dance floor trying to break our Docs in. We drank too much 20/20 and our vomit was often blue. I usually stunk of oranges because I doused my wrists with Neroli oil. Once, a young blonde pixie of a man sung “I’m in love with a girl who smells of oranges” into my ear.

    As I sit writing this up in my top floor flat on a grey winter afternoon, the wood pigeons in the garden are crooning and booming out their bassy five note tune. This sound has been an almost constant soundtrack to my life since I moved here 10 years ago. And I know that, if I ever move away, the sound of woodpigeons will bring back strong memories of this place- not just the noises it hosts but its scents and atmospheres and some of the particular emotions I have experienced whilst living here.

    The sound of rain on a skylight windows always reminds me of holidays on the East Coast in an ancient caravan. And with the sound comes it’s smell of damp crocheted blankets, Calor gas, tangy ocean air and seaweed.

    After my father died, I found it very difficult to listen to classical music for several years because the sense of grief that the tunes rekindled was almost unbearable.

    Music (and particular sounds) can do that. Music can be a time machine that takes you back to an era and a place you had forgotten. Music can be a spark plug that fires up dormant memories and makes stories.

    ‘Music evoked autobiographical memories’ is the way this sensation is described in psychology and what an excellent tool it is for writers!

    During my ‘Soundtrack Your Story’ workshop on the 7th of February, from 2pm at City Library, we’ll employ this ‘tool’, use sounds and music as a doorway into our real or imagined stories and think about the individual ‘soundtracks’ that run through our lives.

    And on that same evening, if you’re free, you can come along and see (and hear) the outcome of ‘The Pulse Of Bradford’, project. During workshops for the project, me and the participants explored the concepts of sound and silence. We imagined spending time in the world’s quietest room. We read poems about deafness and wind phones and anthems. We considered what the constant ‘pulse’ of the city sounded like to us, as individuals. We asked ourselves, ‘What is the soundtrack to my life’? You can hear some of the answers to those questions at our celebration event called ‘Speak or Sing Your Story’, which I will be hosting. The event will feature some of the ‘Pulse of Bradford’ writers and musicians and will take place on Saturday 7th February, 6pm at City Library (Bradford). There will also be an open mic. For more information, please follow the link below:

    https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/bradfordlibraries/speak-or-sing-your-story-open-mic-and-celebration-the-pulse-of-bradford/2026-02-07/18:00/t-jxzmjvn

  • A word from our Digital Poet, Pavan Singh

    Pav is another of our digital creators whose poems will be featured in a series of VR films touring our libraries next month.

    Here is what he had to say about the fantastic project at Bradford Libraries which saw him commissioned by The Space Arts.

    My name is Pavan Singh , I am 22 years old and I’m studying architecture at Leeds Beckett University, I have a five-year- old Belgian Malinois Shepherd called Hunter whom like I taking on walks to my local park and playing outside. In my spare time I like drawing and watching Anime shows and horror movies. 

    Why I took part in the project:

    I feel as if a lot people overlook Bradford for being a quiet town or unpleasant area. However, as a resident of Bradford I think that it is a really nice area with nice green spaces and many opportunities for young people like me and wanted to help change people’s minds about Bradford as a place and to aid in letting people’s voices be heard.

    Why I like poetry & music :

     I’ve always like writing and telling stories from a young age and like listening to Hip-Hop & rap music from artists such as Juice World, Tupac Shakur, Ice Cube. I also enjoy Punjabi songs from time to time as the artists are very passionate about their topics which often include lyrics about their hometowns , the ones they love and their upbringings which I believe is a great to express oneself as nothing can stand in your way when you put pen to paper, besides your imagination.

    Working with Gaia was a great experience as it allowed me to learn and grow as a writer and to fully explore my emotions and to put them through my poems as listening to different poets allowed me to see what poem verses can sound like without being so literal and can be really vivid and meaningful.

    I also enjoyed filming as it helped me gain confidence in doing something I haven’t done a lot of, when working with cameras and lighting visuals and which angles and poses are best.

    Bradford is one of the nine library services in England selected to participate in the groundbreaking Digital Spaces program. This innovative initiative in collaboration with Arts Council England, BFI, with National Lottery Funding, and The Space, is delivering an array of digital experiences in libraries throughout 2025, ranging from awe-inspiring VR showcases and hands-on workshops to funding opportunities for creating new digital content.

    To book our celebratory Open Mic where we will be showing Pav’s work on our VR headsets, click here and email Andrea. Hardaker@Bradford.gov.uk for a slot. https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/bradfordlibraries/t-jxzmjvn

    Pav and the Pulse Team’s films can be viewed at the following dates and venues

  • A word from our Digital Musician, Anesu M, aged 16

    Writing a piece of music at just 16 is quite a feat. But Bradford’s Anesu M took it all in his stride!

    Anesu was one of our digital creators from The Pulse of Bradford whose work will feature in a Virtual Reality Film touring Bradford Libraries next month. We asked three young poets and two musicians to create some original work reflecting the ‘sound of their city’.

    Here is what Anesu had to say about the project;

    I’m Anesu M and I’m 16 years old.

    My piece, Outstretched Hand, was inspired by the beck near where I live and my church, SRM Church. I used the lydian mode to evoke the feeling of uncertain hope, woven into a 5/4 time signature.The work draws musical inspiration primarily from Mammal Hands’ Kandaiki along with jazz elements.

    I took part in this project because it was an unexpected opportunity for me to compose something creative for others to hear. It allowed me to be free on how I express through music on how I felt about living where I live.

    The creative process was both fun and frustrating at times, but definitely satisfying once completed. Apart from the nerves of being filmed solo, it was impressive seeing the gear being set up and learning how it worked.

    The films will be shown at the following libraries.

    Friday, Jan 30 – Tues Feb 3 – Manningham Library

    Wednesday Feb 4 – Keighley Library

    Thursday Feb 5 – Ilkley Library

    Friday Feb 6 – Shipley Library

    Saturday Feb 7 – City Library Celebratory Open Mic 6pm – all welcome. Email Andrea.Hardaker@Bradford.gov.uk for a slot.

    Bradford is one of the nine library services in England selected to participate in the groundbreaking Digital Spaces program. This innovative initiative in collaboration with Arts Council England, BFI, with National Lottery Funding, and The Space, is delivering an array of digital experiences in libraries throughout 2025, ranging from awe-inspiring VR showcases and hands-on workshops to funding opportunities for creating new digital content.

    The poems, which were written over a number of weeks, speak to the thousand voices of Bradford’ as well as the delights of Lister Park and the isolation of modern-day life. They feature alongside a live piano performance and a specially composed electronic music piece, which also respond to the theme.

  • Meet our digital musicians and poets…

    We have been working with some incredible young poets and musicians over the past six months who, with the help of partner organisations The Space and filmmakers Neon8, have transformed their art into a series virtual reality films. The group, known as ‘The Pulse of Bradford’ are now ready to debut their creations. Here is a little more information about the project…

    The Pulse of Bradford have captured the past, present and future in a collection of poems and music.

    Three young poets and two musicians aged 16-24, produced original work around the theme of ‘the sounds of the city.’

    The group, known as The Pulse of Bradford, worked alongside Halifax poet Gaia Holmes to share their thoughts and feelings about the city with the aim of inviting audiences to see the city through their eyes and give voice to the future of the district.

    Their work has now been captured on camera by Virtual Reality filmmakers Neon8 and will feature in a Virtual Reality Tour due to be held at Bradford Libraries from January 30-February 8.

    Bradford is one of the nine library services in England selected to participate in the groundbreaking Digital Spaces program.  This innovative initiative in collaboration with Arts Council England, BFI, with National Lottery Funding, and The Space, is delivering an array of digital experiences in libraries throughout 2025, ranging from awe-inspiring VR showcases and hands-on workshops to funding opportunities for creating new digital content.  

    The poems, which were written over a number of weeks, speak to the ‘thousand voices of Bradford’ as well as the delights of Lister Park and the isolation of modern-day life. They feature alongside a live piano performance and a specially composed electronic music piece, which also respond to the theme.

    Each artist was asked to choose their favourite spot to be filmed in, creating a virtual map of the district.

    Among the venues chosen were Lister Park, Cliffe Castle, Sunbridge Road Mission Church, Sunbridge Road and Pied Piper Pianos in Haworth.

    Poet Alfie Wilson said: “It has been amazing to work with like-minded people. Gaia has been incredible in mentoring us and helping us develop our own style. Everyone’s work is so unique and explores all the different things that make Bradford the place that it is. I’ve really enjoyed the whole experience and can’t wait to see the films.”

    The films will be shown at the following libraries.

    Friday, Jan 30 – Tues Feb 3 – Manningham Library

    Wednesday Feb 4 – Keighley Library

    Thursday Feb 5 – Ilkley Library

    Friday Feb 6 – Shipley Library

    Saturday Feb 7 – City Library

    They will also feature in a celebration and Open Mic due to be held at City Library on Saturday Feb 7 at 6pm. Poets and musicians, eager to perform are asked to email Andrea.Hardaker@bradford.gov.uk to book a slot.

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