Topic: bono

Oscar Wilde tribute on RTE1

RTE1 (Ireland) will be airing a Happy Birthday Oscar Wilde tribute that Gavin contributed to together with Bono this Monday 27th at 10.30 pm.
150 renowned public figures were filmed by director Bill Hughes, speaking 150 of Wilde’s finest lines, epigrams and verses. Proceeds will go to Amnesty International. A DVD release is expected.

‘Take Me Back To ’72…’

Gavin Friday remembers the Virgin Prunes
From The Independent, October 7, 2004

Virgin Prunes – A Terrible Beauty Re-released
Blame it on the Prods and the Plymouth Brethren…
Blame it on the Christian Brothers and the GAA…
Blame it on Georgie Best and the cider drinking Boot Boys….
Blame it on Sister Nora, my career guidance officer at St. Kevin’s C.B.S.
Blame it on Oscar Wilde and David Bowie…
Blame it on the Northside and Cederwood Rd…

“Take me back to ’72, my Cooca Choo“ Caruso/Shag Tabacco
The year was 1972 when I, Fionan Martin Hanvey, first befriended Derek Karl Rowen and Paul David Hewson…..we all lived on Cedarwood Rd. ….we loved music, we had a similar surreal sense of humour, we liked painting, ….we had no time at all for football… we looked and dressed differently … we didn’t want to be cowboys we wanted to be Indians. We didn’t fit in and we didn’t want to.

“Is there life on Mars?“ asked David Bowie We knew there was… so we went there, and all of a sudden.. Fionan became Gavin, Derek became Guggi, Paul became Bono….and the dull and grey streets of Ballymun became the glittering boulevards of Lypton Village.

“ From baptism to alcohol, in a land suffocatingly green. Hey ! the myth is magic…Do you know what I mean?“ My 20th Century / Shag Tabacco.

Music was always the driving force. For me personally it was Religion…a Godsend. And then in 1976 / `77 Punk Rock spat into our faces and whispered into our ears “U2 can be a Virgin Prune” ……… and a Terrible Beauty was born.

The first actual performance of the Virgin Prunes took place in a Methodist Hall in Sutton, Northside Dublin late 1977. Myself and Guggi on lead vocals and an incognito backing band … “ Adam“, “Edge“, “Larry“ and “Dik“…Lambs dressed as Mutton. At the time I worked in a Dublin meatpackers slaughter house, so myself and Guggi dressed the band “ head to toe“ in gauze usually used for covering meat for exportation. The backing band looked like four sides of beef playing bass, drums and guitars awaiting delivery to Saudi Arabia. We played one song – a 15 minute slow motion version of, “I Can Get No Satisfaction”. After the gig Dik left U2 and joined Virgin Prunes this was closely followed by Guggi’s brother Strongman joining on bass, Dave-Id Busaras on narration and Pod on drums. Pod was replaced briefly by Haa-Lacka Binttii…then permanently by Mary d`Nellon…

Ladies and Gentleman to whom it may concern … Virgin Prunes.
We hadn’t a clue what we were doing but knew exactly … It was like a planned accident. We were making it up as we went along “ We’re so pretty, oh so pretty vacant and we don’t care“ snarled Sex Pistol Johnny Rotten. We did care… we cared so much we were fearless and yes anger was most definitely an energy. The Ireland of the late 70s was a very, very different place to the Ireland of today…

“I haven’t fucked much with the past but I’ll fuck plenty with the future“ ranted the Punk poet Patti Smith, and man did I take her seriously…

“Should I talk the way you want me to talk, say the things the way you want to hear them? I know a lot of people like that…Why should I Be like you? Be like you?“ Theme For Thought – … If I Die I Die.
October 2004 sees the re-release of the Virgin Prunes back catalogue on Mute Records through EMI worldwide, most of the recordings released for the first time ever on CD. It’s very difficult for me to be objective about the Virgin Prunes… They were my baby. I was their Daddy-Mammy Prune who in 1984 / ’85 put this beautiful angry child into a retirement home for the musically and artistically disturbed. And now 20 years later it re appears screaming at my hall door … dressed in black, a pig’s head hanging from it’s groin, face painted white, vomit dripping lips kissing me passionately on the mouth. The Prodigal Son in Drag. Welcome home Frankenstein! Come on! Come to Daddy!

A New Form of Beauty
After releasing two 7 inch EPs in late 1980 Rough Trade Records approached us with the offer of recording an album. We instead came up with a New Form of Beauty. A seven part multi media project. A 7 inch single Sandpaper Lullaby followed by a 10 inch EP “Come to Daddy“ followed by a 12 inch EP “Beast“ followed by a live cassette “Din Glorious“ followed by a 2 day exhibition / performance / installation at the Douglas Hyde Gallery followed by a book followed by a film. Ambitious to say the least. The book was never finished, the film was never released. The film will most likely see the light of day in the next year or so, it documents the 2 day Douglas Hyde exhibition.

Heresie
Originally released as a double 10 inch boxed set in a limited edition of 75,000. The “studio“ album was a totally improvised recording, the “live“ album was extracts from the band’s first live performance in Paris, France. Using the themes of “Insanity“ and “Religion“ the concept was to push ourselves to the edge of…well … Insanity. All the music was written during the day and recorded during the night a process that saw the band go without sleep for three days.

.. If I Die I Die
1982 and the band decided to employ a producer Colin Newman of Wire. This album whilst less experimental and perverse than previous recordings, still showed the band’s obtuse approach to instrumentation. If I Die I Die saw the band dabble in a dark post punk sound alongside a more mystical Celtic feel and surreal pop. It became the band’s first big selling album.

The Moon Looked Down and Laughed
Produced by David Ball of Soft Cell. The Band’s most lush and melodic of all it’s recordings yet still quite twisted in essence. With the release of if … I Die I Die, the band toured Europe extensively which opened them up to a whole new world of musical influences, a radical more musical direction was planned… despite the band’s huge popularity in Europe the band members started to pull in different directions. This one could call “the Divorce album“.

Over the Rainbow
A compilation of rarities from 1980 – 1984. Over the rainbow includes all the band’s early singles / EPs / 12 inch mixes and Album outtakes, most of which have never seen the light of day. This album shows how varied and diverse the band’s musical approach was from Glam to Industrial to Punk to Pop to Krautrock to the more experimental…

The Boys Who Tried Wolf

Peter and the Wolf auction, Christie’s New York, November 21, 2003
Ruth Barohn and Christopher Conroy
It was a Friday night. And not just literally.
Three years to the day after musician and artist Gavin Friday narrated the Prokofiev classic Peter and the Wolf” at Dublin Castle, with the orchestra from the Royal Irish Academy of Music, to benefit the Irish Hospice Foundation (IHF), sixteen original paintings that were done for a companion book to Friday’s new musical version were auctioned to benefit the charity. On this spring-like November evening (Nov. 21), bidders and friends filled an intimate room at Christie’s New York in Rockefeller Center. They came to support the IHF as well as the hard work of the project’s engine.

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{picture © Chris Conroy, do not copy.}

Friday arrived with Maurice Seezer, and explained his dedication to the IHF, an organization for which he has done several projects: “Well, I just think it’s a great charity, number one, because it accepts kids, adults dying of AIDS, and older people. As a charity, they tend to do creative things — so it’s making money, but it’s also contributing something artistically and musically. When you give the twenty bucks for the CD and the book, you’re getting something as well as helping a charity, so I find that quite interesting and quite innovative.”
It was that sort of innovation that inspired Friday. “The inspiration was really just to help Hospice. Three years ago we did it live and we said one day, it went so well that we should record our own interpretation of it,” explained Friday. “I was sick about a year and a half ago, and rather than moan, we sat and did our own arrangement of it.”

patwny.2112003.gavin

picture © Chris Conroy, do not copy.}

The ensemble for the project is quite impressive, as Seezer explained: “Michael Blair is a wonderful percussion player; he played with Tom Waits. Renaud Pion has played with us for fifteen years now or so. Julia Palmer played on our very first album together. (Julia Palmer played on Gavin and Maurice’s first tour, not the album. Ed. ) Des Moore [is] a great bango player from Dublin.” Electric guitar and double bass player Gareth Hughes and flutist Catriona Ryan completed the eclectic group of musicians.

An equally eclectic group of artists and orchestras have recorded the symphony with impressive narrators including David Bowie, Sting, Sir John Gielgud, Andre Previn, Jack Lemmon, Boris Karloff, Dudley Moore, Patrick Stewart, Melissa Joan Hart, Dave Van Ronk and Leonard Bernstein. But Friday is more of a Bond man: “Personally, my favorite version is Sean Connery’s version. He did it in the 60s.”

Friday’s version is sure to become the favorite of many fans of the classic and new listeners alike. Along with the fresh musical interpretation by the Friday-Seezer ensemble, the CD is coupled with a book whose drawings were done by singer and activist Bono, who can now add “painter” to his list of credits. Bono’s original paintings for the book, done with daughters Jordan and Eve, were minutes away from being put on the auction block when he arrived at Christie’s with his wife, Ali Hewson, and their close friend, artist Guggi.

Pausing to speak about his appearance at the event, Bono said, “You know, usually when you see me at these kind of events, I’m talking about really serious things like third world debt and the Africa AIDS emergency, but tonight it’s much more fun. I’m here to talk about my dead father. My father — I loved him very much — I am actually here to talk about him. He’s the reason that I did these paintings. He died of cancer a couple years ago. Hospice offered to look after him. They’re angels, really. And I did this for my kids. It was fun to do. I wanted to do something that would make me laugh but also make me cry a little bit.”
Of course, Bono was especially excited to once again collaborate with his long-time friend, Gavin Friday. “He’s a complete pain in the arse. He’s trouble from morning till night. He never shuts up, he’s in your ear, and he’s a genius,” said Bono with an exasperated grin. (We feel his pain. Ed.)

Friday’s genius was about to pay off in a big way. As video footage played of the recording of the “Peter and the Wolf” audio and the painting of the book’s illustrations on a screen in a room of Christie’s, the bidders took their seats. Among the guests showing their support were Principle Management’s Paul McGuinness and Keryn Kaplan, Elvis Costello and Diana Krall, Moby, and artist Darien Loeb.

Before bidding began, Friday took to the stage to applause. “The Irish are very good at telling stories, so I’m going to tell you a story,” said Friday. His theatrical monologue began: “Once upon a time in an ancient and old land called Hibernia, in a dirty little town called Dublin, there lived a man whose name was Bono. This man was very talented and much loved. So loved, it was rumored by some, ‘Could he be God?!’”

Friday’s introduction drew laughter and applause from the guests, for which he paused and then continued with a grin: “There is always some truth in rumors. Now, Mr. Bono had a friend, a dark and mysterious man named Mr. Friday. So dark and so mysterious was this man, it was rumored [Friday's voice lowered to a whisper] ‘Could he be the devil?!’”

When the laughter died down, Friday went on. “Mr. Friday had a friend, a musical giant, Mr. Seezer — so tall, like a big oak tree, he had much problems with dogs. Together, these three people — Bono, myself, and Maurice — believed that through music and through art, you can make a difference. This is the story of Peter and the Wolf. Ladies and gentlemen, I’d like to introduce you to…” said Friday, pausing dramatically, “…God.”
And, in case anyone was unsure, Friday added, “Bono.”

As Bono stepped to the auction podium, to the side of the stage, he stamped the auction gavel down three times and said, “I always wanted to do that.”

In response to Friday’s introduction, Bono quipped, “Well, Gavin is the devil. God and the devil are getting on.”
And although Bono was proud to explore new artistic directions for this project, he seemed to have no delusions about his ability with a paintbrush — or did he?

“My name is Bono and I’m a rock star. And where would we be without rock stars and their delusions? Rock stars who think they can sing — it’s okay. Rock stars who think they can dance — I’m not sure. Rock stars who think they can act — oh, dear Lord! Rock stars who think they can drink the Hudson and stay out later than anyone else — possibly. Rock stars who think they can save the world — spare me that one! But right at the top of the list of rock star delusions has got to be the rock star who thinks he can paint. And I came here to say that I am too much of a fan of art and artists to ever claim that these are more than marks on paper. In the room with real artists I came here to say that,” said Bono humbly.

Then humility faltered. “But I came into Christie’s today — and the Christie’s people are kind of really amazing — and I walked in the door and I saw all the paintings, hung up, and I thought, ‘Did I really do that? They’re really great!’” said Bono. “I was trying to explain why I did this and I wrote this. It’s called Rage Is Not A Great Reason To Do Anything But It’ll Do. So I’m going to read it if that’s okay.

“Rage Is Not A Great Reason To Do Anything But It’ll Do: I have a list of the usual frustrations with God and God with me. Right up there at the top of the list of things that motivate me is the distance between where I am as a songwriter and where I want to be. The difference between the note and the fret, I suppose.
I had a few difficulties on my way to being a musician, if that’s what I am — sometimes I’m not sure it is — but I remember standing with my head just below the level of the black and tobacco keys of my Granny’s piano and I could reach them but I couldn’t see them. Literally, my head was right beneath it. And I could hear the hammer hit the string and bone machine, but I didn’t know after choosing one ivory I could hear a sort of rhyme for it in my head, leading me through the ding and clangor of the choices to a melody. A composition. Song writing by accident. And if you stood on the sustain pedal on the piano, the room would change shape into a cathedral.

I knew then that music is a playground, that for the rest of my life, I will be chasing it. Reverb, echo, the sound of your own voice. The only problem was they sold the piano; there was no room. The two up, two down, outside toilet ,red brick for music. I lost the argument to bring it to our house in Ballymun. I wanted to learn how to play the melodies I heard in my head. Poor Bono. No, poor YOU. Megalomania for me started at a very early age, probably this age. Everyone’s going to have to pay for this.

“Everyone’s going to have to listen to me. Revenge like this takes a lifetime. Revenge on my father, a beautiful tenor who conducted our stereo with knitting needles and a man who never imagined that music might be handed down through the DNA, like his bad back or his bad temper, and never bothered to bother us about learning an instrument. Revenge on music education, which teaches children to imitate rather than create. It’s good to know the voice of the masters, but not to have your own voice drowned out,” said Bono, ending his essay.

“So anyway, ‘Peter and the Wolf’ is a lesson in how to teach,” continued Bono. “This is a new version of the Prokofiev classic by two of my favorite people, two of my favorite musicians, Gavin Friday and Maurice Seezer. And it was in aid of the Irish Hospice Foundation, but actually for the Hospice Foundation worldwide, people who were so ready to look after my father in his losing fight with cancer. These angels asked me to illustrate the book that accompanies the music. Ciaran O’Goara was the art director and guide. I asked my little girls, Jordan and Eve, to help me with details, the filigree of flowers.”

Bono shared his inspiration for some of the characters in the book, as he went to work. “And in Mary Donnelly and Joe Donnelly’s art house looking over Killiney Bay, in one day, I painted myself into the corner as Peter. Age thirteen, I had a head like a baked bean, a formless ellipse until a nose appeared. I was frightened. The boy who lived in a can used to eat the baked beans cold.

Anyway, my father we made the Grandfather, as he was to Jordan and Eve, my two daughters who loved and were loved by him. And his golf club — a working class Dublin guy who loved opera and played golf. His golf club, as it happens, was called Forest Little. So the forest is Forest Little Golf Club. I cast my darling wife, Ali, as Pussy — mischief in her eyes and a curly tail. And the Wolf was ambition for things just out of reach,” Bono concluded to great applause.

Several variations of these characters, as created by Bono, then became open to bid. As the auctioneer took the podium, and the gavel struck, Lot 1 (“Peter & the Wolf VI”) was displayed on the stage. Bidding was intense for each of the sixteen lots, but the mood was certainly light and humorous.
After Lot 6 (“Peter & the Wolf II”) sold for $24,000, Friday appeared at the large desk to the side of the podium and commented, “It’s all a bit laid back. Let’s see something exciting happening here. And then maybe I’ll sing a song.”

After enthusiastic applause, bidding on Lot 7 (“Peter & the Wolf III”) began. When it concluded, the lucky high-bidding woman got a promise from Friday: “This lady, I will personally sing in her ear in about half an hour!”

Friday continued to encourage and entertain the guests, such as during the auction of Lot 9 (“Peter & the Wolf V”). When bidding stalled, he offered, “I will put my tongue in your ear for $30,000.” The auctioneer turned and asked Friday over the surprised laughter, “Do you think that’s a lot of incentive?” Getting a big smile in return, the auctioneer turned back to the audience and accepted an increased bid of $22,000. Friday encouraged, “I have a big tongue.”

The high bidder on Lot 10 (“Study of Wolf II”) was none other than Paul McGuinness. As he bid, Friday inquired, “Does Paul want my tongue in his ear?” to which the auctioneer replied, “He’s paying not to have your tongue in his ear.” McGuinness later said of his choosing to buy this piece (for $20,000): “I liked it. I thought it was the best of the wolves, and I’m looking forward to seeing it on my wall.”
One big supporter of the IHF paid $60,000 — the highest bid of the evening — to see one of these paintings on his wall. Bidding was fierce for Lot 11 (“Study ‘Peter’ I, Study of ‘Peter’ II on reverse”). This close-up painting of the “baked-bean boy” is essentially a self-portrait of age thirteen by Bono, and Friday shared, “I knew him when he looked like that, without the sunglasses. Working-class lads that did well.”
beanboy.jpg These working-class lads did do well, raising $368,000 for an important charity in little more than an hour. And, although, the IHF was certainly the focus of the evening, Friday discussed other projects in which he is currently involved.

Friday did the score to the film “In America,” which opens on Thanksgiving in the United States. This is his third collaboration with director Jim Sheridan (“In The Name of the Father” and “The Boxer”). When asked what attracted him to Sheridan’s film making, Friday replied, “He captures something called humanity and reality between actors more than anyone I know. He’s got what you’d call a cinematic genius but he’s a theatrical genius; he just gets a rapport that’s mind-blowing.” He paused and added, with complete sincerity, “Go see the movie. You’ll cry.”

Bono, who was sworn to secrecy about U2′s new album, did reveal one secret. A burning question whose answer an evening of “Peter and the Wolf” could not be complete without: Who’s the duck? Bono is Peter, Gavin’s the Wolf, Ali is the Puassy. But who’s the duck? Bono laughed at the question and then put his hand up to his grin, as if he were happily revealing this secret and whispered, “Guggi.”

So Peter, the Wolf, the Pussy, and, as is now known, the Duck were all present at Christie’s for the conclusion of this impressive and, thanks to the many collaborating artists, successful project. And we cannot forget Grandfather, whose spirit was present in the wonderful work of the Irish Hospice Foundation.
All photos by Ruth Barohn and Christopher Conroy for U2log.com and GavinFriday.com. Please do not use the photos that appear here on your website or forum without our explicit permission.

Related links:

Peter and the Wolf at Christie’s

On Friday, Bono’s Peter and the Wolf paintings will be on view at Christie’s in New York.
Details of Auction and Viewing:
Public Viewing: One day only, Friday November 21, 2003
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Where: Christie’s, 20 Rockefeller Plaza
Tel. 212-636-2000
Cost: Free and open to the public.

An Evening at Christie’s

U2 fan describes the invitation only Peter and the Wolf reception at Christie’s in L.A (October 14, 2003): An Evening at Christie’s.
“After a while, a lovely Irishwoman was introduced. It turns out she’s the President of the Irish Hospice Foundation. She gave a lovely speech telling the story of how Gavin got involved with the project. Then she told of how Bono came over to her house with the girls one Saturday, and did all the drawings that day! He had some studies prepared (which were hung at Christie’s also), but he did most of the actual illustrating that single Saturday. She said this was filmed, and it’s on the CD. Then she introduced Gavin. He came to the mic and charmed the daylights out of everyone in the room! He told a story about a loved man; a man so loved that everyone thinks he’s God. That man is called Bono. Then he told of a man so dark and dangerous that everyone thinks he’s the devil; that man is called Gavin. He talked about his involvement with the project, and how the money will be distributed from the sales of the booklet and CD. The money from the sales of the CD and booklet set will go to hospice care in the country where the CD was purchased.”
Pictures (thumbnails) at Wire Images.

Irish Hospice Foundation presents ‘Peter and the Wolf’

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The Irish Hospice Foundation is delighted to announce the publication of ‘Peter & The Wolf’ on 1st October 2003.

Described as “A modern take on the classic Prokofiev children’s tale”, Peter & The Wolf was adapted for the Friday-Seezer ensemble by Gavin Friday and Maurice Seezer. Using instruments such as the accordion, the banjo and the mandolin, Gavin and Maurice have produced a clever and humorous take on the much-loved original. The enhanced CD is presented with a 64-page cloth-bound book illustrated by U2′s Bono, with help from his daughters Jordan and Eve.

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Peter and the Wolf is an original composition, not a book set to music. The Russian composer Prokoviev wrote the story of Peter and the Wolf when in 1935 he was asked to compose a work for The Moscow Theatre for Children.

Gavin Friday first performed the piece with the RIAM orchestra in November 2000. Gavin Friday and the Irish Hospice Foundation developed an idea to rework the old classic in order to raise funds to aid hospice care both at home and abroad. The Friday-Seezer Ensemble recorded the music for the Irish Hospice Foundation in May 2002, after which Bono was asked to illustrate the accompanying book.

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The Friday-Seezer Ensemble consists of multi-wind instrumentalist Renaud Pion (Hector Zazou, Dead Can Dance), drummer Michael Blair (Lou Reed, Tom Waits), cellist Julia Palmer, guitarist Des Moore (Secret Garden, Sinead O’Connor, Riverdance), bass player Gareth Hughes and flutist Catriona Ryan.
A not-for-profit organisation, The Irish Hospice Foundation promotes the hospice philosophy and supports the development of hospice and palliative care for the seriously ill.

The Peter & The Wolf book/CD is the first Irish Hospice Foundation project to be published outside Ireland. The 16 original illustrations by U2′s Bono and his two daughters Jordan and Eve will form a touring exhibition to coincide with the book’s publication. The exhibition dates are:

  • Ireland: 1-3 October at City Hall, Dublin
  • The UK: 6-8 October at Christie’s, King Street, London
  • The US: 13-15 October at Christie’s, Los Angeles and 20-21 November at
  • Christie’s, Rockefeller Plaza, New York.

Maurice Roycroft

The original artworks will be auctioned by Christies, New York, on 20-21 November 2003. All funds raised from the project will be administered by the Irish Hospice Foundation to aid hospice care in Ireland and internationally.

Friday/Seezer ensemble photographed by Neil Gavin.
Bono photographed by Perry Ogden.

Sunday Times interviews Gavin, Guggi and Bono

Guggi, Gavin Friday and Bono have been interviewed by Michael Ross, culture editor of the Sunday Times (Irish edition). The article’s focus will be on the oddity of their very different personalities retaining a friendship for the better part of 30 years. The interviews were done separately, but a photo session was done with the three of them together. Whether the article will appear in the UK version of the Sunday Times is as yet unknown, as is the publishing date. An exhibition of Guggi’s paintings opens at the Solomon Gallery in Dublin on October 7.

‘All three of us are reactions to our fathers’

An excerpt from a September 2002 Sunday Times’ Culture Section interview with Gavin, Gavin and Bono – promoting Guggi’s art exhibition in the Solomon Galleries in Dublin:

“To a large extent, all three of us are reactions to our fathers” says Gavin. “Bono has always spoken highly of his father, but he had the easiest time of the three of us when it came to fathers. In Guggi’s case, you don’t have to be Freud to see that the man with probably the longest hair in Dublin, who paints bowls, just might be a reaction to the father who inflicted the bowl haircut on him as a child. His upbringing and his partner, Sibylle have been his biggest influences.”

“The most important thing about his painting is its religious quality, which can be traced back to his upbringing” says Bono. “There’s a religious intensity to it, a monastic quietness, even in the canvases that look the least religious: a bowl is never just a bowl with Guggi-it’s the most intense bowl you’ll ever see.”

Gavin regards Guggi’s bowls as the equivalent of pop singles and can see him moving into more abstract work. “The bowls are immediate, they’re easily digested. Guggi has done the pop thing: the concepts album awaits.”

Guggi is not so sure. “Bowls are my language,” he says. They are no more important to me than they are to anybody else. They’re just shapes. But I’ve no plans to move out of bowls. I’d change tomorrow if I felt I should. But I see endless possibilities for the bowl.”

Artists play cards for Irish Hospice Foundation

Gavin, Bono and Guggi have contributed to Art:pack, a deck of playing cards in aid of the Irish Hospice Foundation with each card designed by a contemporary artist. Bono and Gavin designed the jokers.
Other people involved in the project include Glen Dimplex winning artist Matthew Barney, Clea van der Grijn, Sean Hillen and Sibylle Ungers.
The Irish Hospice foundation was founded by Dr Mary Redmond in 1986. Recognising the need to improve care services available to people suffering from terminal illness in Ireland, the IHF launched a special appeal with the aim of raising £1 million in one year.
Last year, Gavin performed ‘Peter and the Wolf’ with the orchestra of the Royal Irish Academy of Music, to support the Hospice foundation. In 2000 Gavin and Bono contributed to the IHF’s Whoseday Book, a diary for the year 2000 bringing together special contributions from 366 of Ireland’s foremost writers, painters, poets, philosophers and personalities.
www.artpack.ie

Gavin Friday covers T-Rex for Moulin Rouge soundtrack

One of the most anticipated films and soundtracks this year is “Moulin Rouge”, director Baz Luhrmann’s new musical extravaganza starring Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor. Though apparently the film isn’t completely finished yet, it debuted at the Cannes Film festival last week.

For the soundtrack, Luhrmann asked Bono, Gavin and Maurice Seezer specifically to do T Rex’s “Children of the Revolution”. It is the theme tune of the ‘Bohemians’ in the film. A song that is “a pre punk pop anthem, full of pure ‘I DON’T WANNA GROW UP’ teenage angst… with one of the best guitar/string riffs of all time,” says Gavin, speaking to us from the studio in Dublin.

Gavin and Maurice, who are currently working on their fourth studio album, took time out to record the song in their own “HORSE studios”, after seeing “a snippet or two” of the movie, which according to Gavin, “looks amazing, like Fritz Lang in the 21st century”.

“T Rex/Bolan have always been a love/interest to me… “take me back to ’72″…”The Slider”, “Rex Mortuus Est”, “Life’s a Gas”, “King of Trash” (all songs Gavin and Maurice played or recorded). Over the years myself and Maurice have tipped our hat to Bolan many a time. The music of T Rex will always be close to my heart, it’s a ‘you never forget your first kiss’ type of thing.”

When we ask Gavin how roles in the studio were divided, he says: “We are one but not the same… Bono took the role of Bolan and I took on the role of Flo & Eddie (backing singers on the original) at the request of the director. The recordings were very free form, just the three of us dossin’. It was chaos ‘n’ fun, mad jams, very uncontrived with our tongues firmly in our cheeks.”

Two versions of the track were mixed by ‘Biffco’ at Windmill Lane. The mix used in the film is different from the one on the soundtrack: “It’s a demented camp/handbag/heavy metal/pop kind of thing.”
Will it be released?

“Maybe?”

Friday and Bono have known each other since they were kids, growing up on the same street in Northside Dublin. As teenagers they formed ‘Lypton Village’, a group of individuals who ‘saw the world differently’. For musicians who have known each other and remained friends for that long a time, they have recorded remarkably little together. Yet when they do team up the results can be potent. Take 1993′s “In the Name of the Father”, arguably some of the best work either have done.

When two strong characters get together, we wonder who’s the boss in the studio: “The old Lypton Village roles still come into practice, I am in charge of being in charge, and Bono is judge & jury, some things don’t change.”

Any chance of more collaborations in the future?

“You never know,” Gavin answers, “perhaps when we’re in our fifties.”

Now, we don’t know about you, but we’d like to hear this done live. We suggest a session at Slane Castle.

Gavin: “You must be joking… I have a fear of large fields and castles.”
Yes, we were joking.

Finally, some T Rex advice… if we want to hear more, what should we get? “”Electric Warrior”, every home should have one.”