Friday 12 March 2010

Hugh Frost

Guest Posting 30 November - 4 December 2009

A graduate from the University of Brighton in 2006, Hugh spent a brief spell at American Apparel in LA before returning to London to focus on music under the name Sportsday Megaphone. Having released his debut album, So Many Colours/So Little Time in 2008, he went on to play across the UK as well as in Germany, Holland, France, Sweden and Japan. During the past year Hugh has concentrated more on the design side of things and is currently setting up LANDFILL, a publisher and MANYMONO, a colourful but cheap zine printing service.

What have you got planned this week?

Some fun freelance 3D design, printing some wrapping paper, working on an identity for an opera, a bit of writing for a new musical project, going home for dad’s birthday, reading some Sci-Fi and Ruscha at the Hayward.

What do your parents think you do?

My mum used to be a freelance textile designer and they’re both interested in art and design, so they get what I do.

Who do you look like?

Someone thought Rory McCartney and I were brothers. And Vincent Oliver was sure that Rusty Santos and I ‘had the same face’ but we didn’t think so.

What’s your favourite sense?

Probably Humour. I’m not a particularly witty person, but I do have a huge capacity for silliness.

Tell us something people don’t know about you…

I’m quarter Polish, I’ve never been to a wedding, I love gherkins, I can only type with my index fingers and I don’t know which notes are which on a piano but I’m good at catching grapes in my mouth.

Did your education count?

Yes, for sure, I loved every minute from foundation to graduation. Particularly during the time I spent in Minneapolis on exchange being taught by Santiago Piedrafita. His passion for exploring emerging technology and how it could be exploited as a platform for visual communication was infectious. Another teacher at MCAD had the tongue in cheek motto “If you can’t do it good do it big. If you can’t do it big do it red”.

I often wish I’d paid more attention to music, maths, science and languages whilst at school, but it’s hard to imagine being interested in that sort of thing by choice at that age. I don’t think the potential ‘WOAH!’ factor of a lot of the drier subjects sinks in.

What word can’t you spell?

Bourbegnon (Bourguignon)

Tell us a good fact

In pre sampler-based keyboard days the lush harmonies on 10cc’s “I’m Not In Love” were created by mixing down hours of sustained single note vocals to a 16 track desk and playing the sliders to create chords. FACT.

What’s Next?

Hopefully a mountain of diverse printing and publishing in the new year through LANDFILL / MANYMONO and seeing where this new musical project goes. 2010 sounds so futuristic, how could it fail to be anything less than totally rad?

What’’s your ‘Plan B’?

Back to school? Preferably not as a caretaker.

Guest Posts

  • Ghanavision

    Ghanavision

    Compiled and published by prolific Berlin studio Bongoût, this book offers an insight into a world of film posters as different from formulaic Hollywood Rom-Com campaigns as possible. Made to promote both African and Western films showing on mobile VCR / TV cinemas visiting villages across Ghana, the posters are hand painted on cloth sacks in gory detail. The styles vary depending on the artist but the levels of blood and decapitation remain terrifyingly consistent throughout.

    www.bongoût.com/…

  • Teenageengineering

    Teenage Engineering / OP-1

    I’ve got it bad – severe technolust for this beautiful device. Designed by Sweden’s Teenage Engineering (one of whom was behind the Little Sound DJ Gameboy music programme) the OP-1 acts as either a standalone synth with built in sequencer (and FM radio!) or as a controller for your favorite production software. Hopefully available in 2010, price TBC, but that OLED doesn’t look cheap.

    www.teenageengineering.com

  • Willsweeney

    Will Sweeney

    The creator of possibly the greatest ever comic book series to star a talking sandwich and a genocidal hot dog recently released some new extremely limited run screen prints. Made for a solo show in Japan, now available in his store along with this wonderful Black Lips 7”. Unbelievably Will’s work doesn’t seem to have been posted here before (computer says NO…), so there’s lots to see at either his Alakazam label or Big Active profile.

    www.alakazamlabel.com

  • Paulwackers

    Paul Wackers

    I don’t know much about Paul Wackers but his work feels like the output of a modern master in waiting. There’s a slim book of his paintings entitled ‘Giving in to Live the Experience’ available from the charming San Francisco based publisher Seems Books.

    www.paulwackers.com

  • Landfill

    LANDFILL

    LANDFILL is an arts and music publisher based in London, founded winter 2009. The first project is a fundraiser series intended to improve the facilities of MANYMONO – a Risograph based printing service for anyone who wants to make cheap but colourful zines, books and prints, launching Spring 2010. The series includes new work by Shoboshobo, Jim Stoten, Tommi Musturi, Sister Arrow, Colin Henderson, Steak Mtn, Micah Lidberg and others. 2 colour A3 prints / £10 each, just in time for Christmas…

    www.landfilleditions.com

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