A band without walls at the end of the world: The Green Mist, Next Stop Antarctica and the Tasmanian geographic imaginary
The Green Mist is a floating international blues entity which evolved in the deep south of Tasmania. Featuring former members of the Violent Femmes and Beasts of Bourbon, the Mist’s first album Next Stop Antarctica represents a vivid evocation of the peculiar strangeness of the island’s atmosphere,...
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ftunivnewcastnsw:uon:11871 2023-05-15T13:54:24+02:00 A band without walls at the end of the world: The Green Mist, Next Stop Antarctica and the Tasmanian geographic imaginary Stewart, Keryn Hopcroft, Helen 2009 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/934614 eng eng UTS ePress Trans/Forming Cultures Vol. 4, Issue 1, p. 131-148 http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/TfC/article/view/1063 music culture place Tasmania Green Mist musical band journal article 2009 ftunivnewcastnsw 2018-07-27T00:25:01Z The Green Mist is a floating international blues entity which evolved in the deep south of Tasmania. Featuring former members of the Violent Femmes and Beasts of Bourbon, the Mist’s first album Next Stop Antarctica represents a vivid evocation of the peculiar strangeness of the island’s atmosphere, history and environment. Musician Julien Poulson’s father Bruce was a historian who lived in a derelict organic garlic farm in the small town of Southport; an area that is often bitterly cold, perpetually gloomy, bleak yet strangely beautiful. Bruce was one of the people who discovered the remains of a garden built in 1792 by French explorers in Recherche Bay, and this discovery was later used to help protect the site from logging. While his dad was dying of cancer, Julien helped him put together his final book about Recherche Bay’s history and later many of these old stories formed the basis of album tracks. Using The Green Mist as a case study, this paper will explore the links between physical place of production and creation; the use of both individual memory and historical narratives in song writing; and the extent to which these factors form part of a conscious or deliberate strategy. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica NOVA: The University of Newcastle Research Online (Australia) |
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Open Polar |
collection |
NOVA: The University of Newcastle Research Online (Australia) |
op_collection_id |
ftunivnewcastnsw |
language |
English |
topic |
music culture place Tasmania Green Mist musical band |
spellingShingle |
music culture place Tasmania Green Mist musical band Stewart, Keryn Hopcroft, Helen A band without walls at the end of the world: The Green Mist, Next Stop Antarctica and the Tasmanian geographic imaginary |
topic_facet |
music culture place Tasmania Green Mist musical band |
description |
The Green Mist is a floating international blues entity which evolved in the deep south of Tasmania. Featuring former members of the Violent Femmes and Beasts of Bourbon, the Mist’s first album Next Stop Antarctica represents a vivid evocation of the peculiar strangeness of the island’s atmosphere, history and environment. Musician Julien Poulson’s father Bruce was a historian who lived in a derelict organic garlic farm in the small town of Southport; an area that is often bitterly cold, perpetually gloomy, bleak yet strangely beautiful. Bruce was one of the people who discovered the remains of a garden built in 1792 by French explorers in Recherche Bay, and this discovery was later used to help protect the site from logging. While his dad was dying of cancer, Julien helped him put together his final book about Recherche Bay’s history and later many of these old stories formed the basis of album tracks. Using The Green Mist as a case study, this paper will explore the links between physical place of production and creation; the use of both individual memory and historical narratives in song writing; and the extent to which these factors form part of a conscious or deliberate strategy. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Stewart, Keryn Hopcroft, Helen |
author_facet |
Stewart, Keryn Hopcroft, Helen |
author_sort |
Stewart, Keryn |
title |
A band without walls at the end of the world: The Green Mist, Next Stop Antarctica and the Tasmanian geographic imaginary |
title_short |
A band without walls at the end of the world: The Green Mist, Next Stop Antarctica and the Tasmanian geographic imaginary |
title_full |
A band without walls at the end of the world: The Green Mist, Next Stop Antarctica and the Tasmanian geographic imaginary |
title_fullStr |
A band without walls at the end of the world: The Green Mist, Next Stop Antarctica and the Tasmanian geographic imaginary |
title_full_unstemmed |
A band without walls at the end of the world: The Green Mist, Next Stop Antarctica and the Tasmanian geographic imaginary |
title_sort |
band without walls at the end of the world: the green mist, next stop antarctica and the tasmanian geographic imaginary |
publisher |
UTS ePress |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/934614 |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctica |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctica |
op_relation |
Trans/Forming Cultures Vol. 4, Issue 1, p. 131-148 http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/TfC/article/view/1063 |
_version_ |
1766260150032662528 |