Friday, November 27, 2009

Clarks : An institution

No British high street is complete without a Clarks shoe shop. They might not be high fashion, but their footwear is perennially popular. Almost everyone in the country has probably worn, at some time in their lives, a pair of Clarks shoes.
In this age of global brands most of us don't realise that Clarks has its roots in the west country of England. It began all began in the appropriately named village of Street, in Somerset. It was 1825 and Quaker Cyrus Clark owned a tannery his brother James worked alongside him, making sheepskin rugs. The process inevitably led to waste sheep skin piling up in the workshop.







With a flash of inspiration James decided to experiment with making a pair of slippers from these leftovers. The result was practical, affordable footwear - which is has been the hallmark of Clarks ever since.

The brothers called the slipper the 'Brown Petersburg' and it became incredibly popular. By 1840 they were producing a thousand pairs each month, which was a huge amount in an age before mass production. The whole village had become involved in the process of making shoes.
In 1851 the brothers won two awards at Prince Albert's Great Exhibition in London. They represented success in British innovation and manufacturing. But by the 1860's the business of C&J Clark Limited was struggling due to a recession. Money was tight and they needed to borrow from fellow Quakers, but it came with strings attached.

The founders of the company were asked to step back to allow William, the youngest son of James, to take over. He took the bold decision to invest in new technology, the Singer sewing machine. Clarks began factory production, repaid the loan, and erected an industrial complex in Street.




As fashions changed, Clarks continued to create new designs and capture new customers. In the 1930's they began to advertise their products for the first time. They also purchased a chain of shoe shops and launched their own retail brand, Peter Lord.




The Second World War saw a temporary change of focus, with the Street factories producing torpedoes, not shoes. But once the fighting was over production continued. The Desert Boot, a design classic, was developed in the 1950's. In 1957 a flagship store was opened on Regent Street in London's fashionable West End. Increasing production meant new factories were opened elsewhere in the country.



The end of the twentieth century brought new challenges. Increasing competitiveness meant that production costs had to be cut and, unfortunately, this meant moving the process to the Far East. Keen to maintain their heritage in Street, Clarks converted their former works into the first outlet shopping centre.
Another challenge was internet shopping. At first Clarks were reluctant to permit their products to be sold this way, concerned that the quality of service would dimish because there was no interaction between the customer and the training sales assistant. However, these concerns were overcome.









C&J Clark Ltd remains a private company, despite some plans to go public in the recent past. It is a British success story and occupies a proud place in our industrial history.








Saturday, November 21, 2009

Trance in November

Prayag & Rishab - Ashna (Opus Tertio Intro Mix) - Black Hole
Dakota - Mr. Cappuccino - (Original Mix) - Coldharbour Recordings Red
Tritonal – Primosphere - (Proff Remix) - Dissident Music
Anhken & Adrian - Intuition - (Original Mix) - Fraction Records
Robbie Nelson - Aviator - (Dan Stone Remix) - Crashing Waves
Solace & Solitude - Rhode Island (Original Mix) - Upbeat Music
ID - ID - (ID Remix) - CDR
Sunset - Cities - (Christian Geest Remix) - Crystal Source
Digitalis - Memento - (Suncatcher Remix) - Monster
Sun State - Fight For The Future - (SoundLift Remix) - Emphase
Estigma & Marcelo Fratini – Leiden - Istmo Music
Sean Truby & Niklas Grosswald - The Motive (Tim Air Remix) - Finity Global
Vicky Devine - War Of Souls - (Dereck Recay Remix) - Flux Delux
Simon O Shine & Sergey Nevone - Road to Paradise - (TranceEye Remix) - Eyereflex Records
Dave & Oliver – Reality - (Magesky Remix) - National Sound Records

An essential Mix

From Simon Patterson on Radio 1. Enjoyed listening to this earlier today, BOSH!

01. Freigeist – Genesis (Dennis Sheperd Edit) [Spinnin]
02. M.I.K.E. – Sunrise In Palamos (Gareth Emery Remix) [Garuda]
03. Adam Nickey — Callista (Stoneface & Terminal Remix) [Anjunabeats]
04. Filo And Peri Feat. Aruna – Ashley (Alex MORPH Remix) [Vandit]
05. Matt Hardwick vs. Gulf – Impossible (John O’Callaghan Remix) [Kill The Lights]
06. Markus Schulz – The New World (Giuseppe Ottaviani Remix) [Coldharbour]
07. Simon Patterson – Taxi (Original Mix) [Spinnin]
08. Simon Patterson – Miss You (Original Mix) [Spinnin]
09. Dogzilla – Without You (Simon’s Dead Dog Remix) [Maelstrom]
10. John O’Callaghan – Don’t Look Back (John Askew Remix) [Captivating Sounds]
11. Simon Patterson – Always (Original Mix) [Spinnin]
12. Simon Patterson – New Life (Original Mix) [Reset]
13. Simon Patterson – Backstab [Reset]
14. Gary Maguire – Standing Still (Original Mix) [Discover White Label]
15. John O’Callaghan & Giuseppe Ottaviani – Liquid Fire (Original Mix) [Armada]
16. Nick Sentience — Electrify [Reset]
17. Vascotia – Verano (Sean Tyas Remix) [Spectrum Sounds CDR]
18. Melle Baker — Lost Sun (Matt Skyer Remix) [Infrasonic]
19. Activa – Transmission (Original Mix) [Discover]
20. Sentience & Rowland – Meridian (Orignal Mix) [Reset]
21. Jam X & De Leon – Can You Dig It? (Paul Webster Remix) [Electropolis CDR]

Monday, November 16, 2009

This months dose

Of mix action.

James Brown - The Payback - Polydor / Umgd
Aitor Ronda & Raul Mezcolanza - Mai Tek - Drakos
Bob D - Your Liver Can Rot - Antiritmo
Franssen Vs Lowdown - Dead Man Talking - Intec
Claudio Ponticelli - Fire Island (Axel Karakasis Remix) - Audio Family
Thermo - Neutron - Unaffected Records
Dj Stay - Way of fire - Timecode Spain
Iago De La Vega - Let there be drums - Relatives
C4 - Let's Go Blimey! - C Series
Slave - Lizi (Darkrow Remix) - Adult Records
Daniel D - Sayohh - Cobra Records
Veztax - Village - Keep On Techno
Raul Mezcolanza - Laura - Patterns
Luky RDU - Tribal Fréquencies - Propeller
Ignition Technician - Crash - Drakos
Kali - Filter Funk - Subcult
Rantan - Jughead - Unaffected
Goncalo M - BlaBlaBla - Soul Affected Records
Miche & Mirzinho - New way of life - Propeller
Ganez - Always - Naked Lunch
Audioklinik Feat. Mark Ankh - Rock The Dance Hall - Toyfriend Music
Len Faki - The B-East Roller (Ben Sims Hardgroove Edit) - Figure
DJ Cristiao - Drums Are Back - Work Hard Play Hard
Gary Maguire - True Colours - Discover Dark
Daisychain - Shut up - Special Series



Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Photography, Me?

Upon my travels around the north east I've recently been capturing some on camera, fuck knows why like, but why not?



I'll keep updating these as I cover more acres!













































































































































The greatest Live CD I have ever had the pleasure of listening too

Mr Soul himself!


James Brown Live at the Apollo (1963)




This document of brown's prowess onstage may be the greatest live album ever recorded. From the breathless buildup of the spoken intro through terse, sweat-soaked early hits such as "Try Me" and "Think" into eleven epic minutes of the raw ballad "Lost Someone," climaxing with a frenzied nine-song medley and ending with "Night Train," Live at the Apollo is pure, uncut soul. And it almost didn't happen. Brown defied King Records label boss Syd Nathan's opposition to a live album by arranging to record a show himself -- on October 24th, 1962, the last date in a run at Harlem's Apollo Theater. His intuition proved correct; Live at the Apollo -- the first of four albums Brown recorded there -- charted for sixty-six weeks.

1. Introduction By Fats Gonder/ Opening Fanfare
2. I'll Go Crazy
3. Try Me
4. Instrumental Bridge
5. Think
6. Instrumental Bridge
7. I Don't Mind8. Instrumental Bridge
9. Lost Someone
10. Medley: Please Please Please/You've Got The Power/I Found Someone/Why Do You Do Me Like You Do/I Want You So Bad/I Love You, Yes I Do/Strange Things Happen/Bewildered/Please Please Please
11. Night Train
Class!