Calm Waters casts Momo, but not adrift.

The bloke from Momo:tempo swaps musical duties for an on-screen role in a new art-house short.

 

As Timo Peach will tell you, sometimes it’s a lot easier to not have to turn up to somewhere with a lot of equipment. And sharing a couple of Momo pieces as spoken word performances at popular Bournemouth poetry night, Freeway Poets, lead to him landing another creative gig that would turn out to be a lot lighter on the gear luggage.

“I pop along to poetry nights from time to time,” says Mr Peach, “there’s a strong scene here in Bomo, and Freeway is like a pocket festival down at The Winchester every first Wednesday. You’ll always find creative surprises there. And I might have been one of those!” he laughs.

 

Performing Mighty Anonymity and Al Hamdu Li Lah as spoken pieces, Momo later found an email from an audience member, inviting him to audition for a role in her graduation short – written entirely in a freeform poetry.

“As busy as the Momo schedule often is, it’s also definitively ecclectic, so I figured this project sounded too interesting to ignore” says Momo. “And I could oddly picture myself in the role. Meeting Rebecca convinced me this might be a nice shoot to be on.”

Writer/director Rebecca Joy Howe and co-writer Lucy Cousins conceived the film as an experiment in using poetry in film for Becky’s final show piece at Bournemouth University’s BA Television Production course.

Calm Waters is a 10 minute drama all performed in spoken word poetry. It follows 18 year old Joe, fresh from leaving college, pondering his next steps into adulthood” Becky explains. “His mundane life working at a local supermarket takes an unfortunate and distressing turn when his Dad, Gary, is diagnosed with cancer. Through poetry, we watch their relationship become closer than ever as Gary decides now is the perfect time to pass on his passion for sailing to his son.”

For Timo Peach, it was the first screen acting work in years.

“There are various shorts from the college years, and videos of plays and skits in those youthful days” he nods, “but I guess Momo has taken me away from this kind of creative performance work. So I had to muster a little inquisitive fortitude to take the role and go help the team make Calm Waters. A team of young pros and a delightful fellow cast – I had a wonderful two days in a sublimely sunny Gosport. I was mainly just worried about wrecking Becky’s degree!” he says sheepishly.

“But their casting of Archie as Gary’s son was inspired” he adds. “Not only did he and I hit it off splendidly, trying not to wreck the set’s calmly professional tone by mucking about, he also had hair as bonkers as mine.”

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The bloke from Momo hosts the World Jazz Jamboree

Saturday April 23 2016, Mr Peach invites you to his especially flavoursome stage of the Bournemouth Jazz Festival – featuring indo-jazz composer, Arun Ghosh.

 

Yep, the Bomo Jazz Fest is back, and this year features an ecclectic line-up across nearly a dozen stages around town – including a cracking selection of global jazz creatives in the Dorchester Suite of the Norfolk Royale Hotel, hosted by Timo Peach.

Headlining is Indian clarinettist, composer and experimenter, and Jazz Instrumentalist of the Year 2014 in the APPJA / Parliamentary Jazz UK Awards, Arun Ghosh, with his unique live quintet. As his own bio describes it, his: “Indo-Jazz Sextet play original music of South Asian origin with a contemporary jazz attitude,rocking urban beats and the passion of punk. Sweet and timeless melodies give birth to soaring improvisations and raag explorations, driven by a heady mix of dub-reggae bass, tabla trickery and ferocious drum explosions.” An ambassador for fusing styles around the world, his is a creative live act not to miss.

Ahead of his show in the evening, is the South African township jazz of Dan Somogyi’s Son of Thokazile, and Tom Gwyther‘s continental flavoured soul jazz, all kicked off with Veronique Joly‘s Parisian swing at 12.30pm, before Musique a Trois turn the stage into a bistro to round off the night much later with “music from the late night Paris club scene”.

And all introduced by the bloke from Momo, Bournemouth music artist, producer, performer and creative, Timo Peach.

“When Gerry and the team asked me to join in, I fair jumped at the opportunity to discover such creative musical voices, and to support the return of their splendid jazz bash” he says. “So many great acts to catch all weekend, but I can’t wait to hear the talent on the World Jazz Jamboree stage for myself, run by Alex Praag, especially Arun and his band. It will no doubt get my own creative juices fizzing, especially without having to run off to perform myself this year – I can happly enjoy being a punter for this one.”

Doors open from 12.30pm Saturday 23rd April, in the Dorchester Suite of the Norfolk Royale Hotel, Richmond Hill, Bournemouth – and check the website for full ticket costs.

 

ZOMBIES

PRISONERS, VISITORS, MINDLESS GHOULS, CITY WALLS AND STEVE HOLLINGSHEAD’S LATEST UTTERLY CHARMING PORTRAITS OF A HUMAN CAPITAL.

Couple of days before Easter, I took a break from the studio and sauntered up to London on a laudably blatantly social pretext, and caught up with various chums from the wider family. All with one end destination in mind: the South Bank, The Oxo Gallery, and 1001 Days in London.

It lead to a later night, or perhaps an earlier subsequent morning, than I had planned for – when have you seen Waterloo’s concours empty? You need to be there for 5.30 in the morning, I have discovered – after a slightly showbiz round of chats in the pub in Gabriel’s Wharf and a final round of cheese and wine on the sofa back at Kath and Steve’s.

It also, somewhere along the line, lead to a vlog. About whether we’re prisoners of our own thinking, and about perspective. Or something. Plus I chat to a nice bloke at a private viewing. Which sounds more like me, doesn’t it.