"It seems to me that the spiritual component exists in the theater as in no other medium."


Los Angeles Times, May 5, 2002

Drawing Inspiration from the Gods

Stephen Legawiec borrows from world myths to create uncommon productions for his Ziggurat Theatre.

By F. KATHLEEN FOLEY

Philosophers from Plato to Paglia have long acknowledged that myth is society’s building block, the barometer of a common world culture extending back to the cave. But just what place does myth have in Hollywood, where the high concept is king and humanistic considerations commonly yield to the youth demographic?

That’s an issue Stephen Legawiec, founder and artistic director of the Ziggurat Theatre, has set out to address, one production at a time.

During the past half-dozen years, the Ziggurat Theatre has made a name for itself with evocative, visually stunning productions inspired by world myths. The company’s inaugural production in 1997, “Ninshaba,” featured two Middle Eastern goddesses as central characters. “Twilight World,” mounted in 2000, was a loose adaptation of the Tereus and Procne story from Ovid’s “Metamorphosis.” In 2001, “Aquitania” employed the French legends of Charlemagne as a jumping-off point for a lighthearted meditation on time and utopianism. “Red Thread,” Ziggurat’s latest production at the Gascon Center in Culver City, opening Friday, borrows freely from a Chinese folk tale for a timely parable about a heroic female assassin who must break her new vow of pacifism to save the kingdom. Ironically, Legawiec makes a living as a television promo writer–a professional distiller of high concepts. But if by day he is a spinner of spiels, by night he’s a weaver of tales–the curiously timeless original theater pieces that he creates.

A multi-tasker with a vengeance, Legawiec has written, directed and largely designed (sets and makeup) every Ziggurat production since the company’s inception. He comes by his interdisciplinary skills naturally. The son of noted Polish violinist and composer Walter Legawiec and Eleanor Legawiec, a secretary and homemaker, Legawiec was an art major before he switched to acting–a painful transition, as it turned out.

“I went to two graduate schools for acting–first Cornell, then Rutgers,” Legawiec explains. “They both kicked me out. They thought I wasn’t any good. That was a pretty severe experience.”

Experience that later stood him in good stead. “Directing comprises so many things,” he says. “I had a design sense because of art school and a musical sense because of my father. I think that my art and music and acting backgrounds all coalesced into the raw skills that one needs for directing.”

Those skills impressed Robert Velasquez, Ziggurat’s resident costume designer, from the outset. “I like Stephen’s work because it’s so innovative,” Velasquez says. “He writes everything himself, and his work is so unique. That’s the real challenge. You can’t just pull things from costume shops. Everything must be designed.”

After his acting school debacle, Legawiec eventually teamed up with his friend Steven Leon (now a Ziggurat board member) to found the White River Theatre Festival, a Vermont theater that evolved from a summer-only venue to a six-month season. During the winter months, when the theater was dark, Legawiec lived in Boston, where he began toying in earnest with the notion of myth.

“My family is Polish,” he says. “And being a Polish Catholic, you are really steeped in ritual, because of the Mass. I thought a lot about the importance of myth and ritual in theater–an area I had never turned my attention to before.”

Legawiec used his Polish heritage as a starting point for his initial exploration. “I assumed everyone in Poland was working in myth and ritual,” he says. “Of course, that was far from the truth.”

Acting on that mistaken assumption, Legawiec wrote to the Krakow-based Teatr Stary, Poland’s leading repertory theater, explaining that he was a young American theater director interested in observing a Polish theater’s rehearsal process.

To his amazement, his inquiry was met with a firm invitation. “They were very accommodating,” he says. “They sent me the schedule for the whole year and said, ‘Come when you can.'”

Legawiec spent the winter of 1990-91 in Poland, arriving in time for the country’s first post-Communist presidential elections. “It was a very tempestuous time for the country and the theater,” he recalls. “Under the old Communist system, actors couldn’t be fired; they were employed for life. For the first time, the theater was in the position of having to fire people.”

In the midst of the political upheaval, however, the Teatr Stary remained surprisingly laid-back. Legawiec was particularly impressed with the theater’s lengthy rehearsal process. “They would rehearse something for three or four months, until it was ready to open,” he marvels. “That kind of unlimited rehearsal time was a real revelation to me.”

A more profound revelation was to follow–Legawiec’s visit to Jerzy Grotowski’s theater and archive. “I didn’t know much about Grotowski at the time. I just knew he was important,” he says. “I talked to the people who ran the archive, and they gave me Grotowski’s book, ‘Towards a Poor Theatre,’ and videotapes of his productions. That night, I slept in the theater. I read the book from cover to cover and watched the videotapes. It was a surreal experience.”

And a life-altering one. “Grotowski talked a lot about myth in his book, and it was clear that all his staged productions used ritual in a big way. Grotowski’s philosophy really had meaning for me. And I was also struck by the idea that Grotowski spent a year or so on each individual production. He had no time limit.”

Returning to his Vermont theater, Legawiec chafed at the strictures he’d formerly accepted as routine. “When I was confronted with my short little two-week rehearsal periods, I didn’t feel I could go on,” he says. “So I proposed to my non-Equity actors, ‘Give me two extra hours a week to work on a piece. Maybe we’ll perform it, maybe we won’t.'”

That venture, the Invisible Theatre Project, resulted in “The Cure,” later remounted in Los Angeles in 1998. Subtitled “A Dramatic Ceremony in One Act,” the play also marked Legawiec’s first experiment with invented language, a technique he returned to in 2001’s “A Cult of Isis.”

Although the words in Legawiec’s invented language pieces may not be intelligible, the meaning is–a distinction Ziggurat member Jenny Woo appreciates.

“When he experiments with invented language, Stephen is trying to tap into the subconscious, to express something more guttural and emotional,” Woo says. “At other times, his work is very verbal and intellectual. You have to listen to the words and really pay attention. But the invented-language pieces do the opposite. They distance people from the literal understanding so that they can merely feel.”

After his Vermont theater folded, Legawiec moved to L.A. and set out to form a new company, implementing the principles he’d developed with the Invisible Theatre Project. Actress Dana Wieluns, a charter member of Ziggurat, then known as the Gilgamesh Theatre, remembers those days.

“I responded to an ad in Back Stage West that called for actors interested in a long rehearsal process and new theatrical forms,” Wieluns says. “I remember the ad made that distinction. It was a call for actors wanting to work in the theater as opposed to film and television. That first piece, ‘Ninshaba,’ rehearsed for six months.”

In L.A., where actors routinely ditch small-theater commitments for more lucrative bookings, Legawiec’s leisurely process was a hard sell. “On that first project, we started with nine actors,” Wieluns recalls. “By the second rehearsal we were down to six, and a week later there were only three of us. The others realized they couldn’t commit for that length of time.”

What inspired such loyalty among the die-hards? “The reason I keep working with Stephen is that he’s one of the few people who embraces the theatrical,” Wieluns says. “He wants to put on stage the kinds of things that can’t be committed to film or TV. I think for Los Angeles that’s a unique thing.”

An unapologetic purist, Legawiec views the gap between theater and other media as a great divide. “It seems to me that the spiritual component exists in the theater as in no other medium,” he says. “I’ve never had a spiritual experience in the movies, the feeling that you’re part of something larger, or you are beholding the mystery of life.”

Legawiec routinely travels the world to research his plays. On a trip to China in September, he immersed himself in Chinese opera, a style that influences his staging of “Red Thread.” The play derives from an obscure folk yarn written during the Tang dynasty. Despite the antiquity of his source material, Legawiec’s updating resonates in ways he never anticipated.

“The story’s about an assassin who swears off killing just when the kingdom needs her most,” he says. “Coincidentally, the play deals with war versus pacifism during a time of crisis.”

The timing may be coincidental, but the message of “Red Thread” is as fresh as when the story was written 1,200 years ago. That’s typical of the Ziggurat Theatre, as it crosses cultural boundaries and spans generations in its own continuing saga.

Another reason why your city needs to be fabulous and groovy

Study: ‘Gay-friendly’ cities enjoy more economic prosperity
David Edwards and Josh Catone
Published: Saturday June 23, 2007

Richard Florida, a professor from George Mason University and author of the book The Rise of the Creative Class argued that the more “gay-friendly” a city is, the more economically prosperous it will be.

In his March 2007 paper “There Goes the Neighborhood,” Florida uses something he calls the “Bohemian-Gay Index” to demonstrate that “artistic, bohemian, and gay populations” have a “substantial effects on housing values across all permutations of the model and across all region sizes.” He also found that more open and “gay-friendly” areas generally support higher income levels.

(A PDF of the paper can be read at this link.)

This morning on CNN’s In the Money, Florida argued that educated kids are generally moving to the most “gay-friendly” cities after graduating from college because those cities tend to have the best job markets.

After realizing that the top 5 “gay-friendly” cities in the US — San Francisco, Seattle, Boston, Portland (Oregon), and Tampa — are also prosperous centers of technological innovation, Florida decided to do a more thorough study. The results, he said, held up for other cities as well.

“Places that were open to gay and lesbian people were also the kind of places that could attract not only smart young people, but also Indian and Chinese immigrants who come here and start a lot of high tech companies,” he said. “They were attracting people across the board, building up a talent base, and then innovating and starting these new enterprises.”

Florida said he thinks it is the open mindedness of these cities that has allowed economically successful communities to emerge, rather than prior economic success attracting open minded people.

“Places that a large gay and lesbian community gravitated to, a large group of musicians and other open minded people gravitated to. When these kind of geeky entrepreneurs became important economic growth, those were the places that accepted them, too,” he told CNN.

Video at The Raw Story.

Grass Roots Record Co. Summer Revue Tour

June 23
Alela Diane, Lee Bob Watson, Mariee Sioux, Aaron Ross, & Benjamin Oak Goodman
The Echo, Los Angeles, CA 1822 Sunset Blvd, Echo Park, CA
5pm $8 All-Ages

June 24
Alela Diane, Mariee Sioux, Lee Bob Watson, Aaron Ross, & Benjamin Oak Goodman
Steynberg Gallery, San Luis Obispo, CA 1531 Monterey Street, San Luis Obispo, CA
8pm $6 All-Ages

June 25
Alela Diane, Lee Bob Watson, Mariee Sioux, Aaron Ross, & Benjamin Oak Goodman
The Attic, Santa Cruz, CA 931 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz, CA
7pm $10 ADV $12 Door All-Ages

June 26
Alela Diane, Mariee Sioux, Lee Bob Watson, & Aaron Ross
The Hemlock, San Francisco, CA 1131 Polk Street, San Francisco, CA
9pm $7 21+

June 27
Alela Diane, Lee Bob Watson, Mariee Sioux, Aaron Ross, & Benjamin Oak Goodman
Holocene, Portland, OR 1001 Morrison, Portland, OR
9pm $7 All-Ages

June 28
Alela Diane, Lee Bob Watson, Mariee Sioux, Aaron Ross, & Benjamin Oak Goodman
The Triple Door, Seattle, WA 216 Union Street, Seattle, WA
7pm $13 Adv $15 day of All-Ages

June 29th
In-Store Silver Platters (Queen Anne Store)
701 4th Ave N, Seattle, WA
6pm FREE

June 30 & July 1st
Alela Diane, Lee Bob Watson, Mariee Sioux, Aaron Ross, & Benjamin Oak Goodman
What You Got? Festival, Olympia, WA All-Ages

July 1st
In-Store Music Millennium
801 NW 23rd, Portland, OR
7:30pm FREE

July 11
Lee Bob Watson
Hot Summers Nights, Top of Broad Street

OPENING TOMORROW: RICK GRIFFIN retrospective in Laguna

Heart and Torch: Rick Griffin’s Transcendence, the artist’s first major retrospective and solo museum exhibition, opens on June 24, 2007. A cult figure that set the iconographic terrain for the 1960s and 1970s counterculture, in his art Griffin expressed idealism and hope along with a darker side that perfectly embodied the contradictions of the era with its mixture of hedonism, politics, and avant-garde expression.

The exhibition, which includes some 140 paintings, drawings, posters, album covers, and artifacts, surveys thirty years of Griffin’s work from the 1960s until his death in 1991. The accompanying 156-page catalogue, published in association with Gingko Press, is the first publication to address Griffin’s impact on the surf, psychedelic rock, and born-again Christian movements.

Heart and Torch is organized for Laguna Art Museum by Susan M. Anderson, and co-curated by guest curators Greg Escalante and Doug Harvey with curatorial consultant Gordon McClelland.

Griffin Lecture Series

Sunday, June 24, 2007 – 1:00pm Psychedelic Moment: The Big Five and Zap Comix in the 1960s

This panel on Griffin and San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury features the artist’s widow and internationally respected artists who initiated the psychedelic art and underground comix movements. With Ida Griffin, Alton Kelley, Stanley Mouse, Spain Rodriguez, and Robert Williams. Moderated by Jacaeber Kastor, founder of Psychedelic Solution Gallery, New York.

Sunday, July 15, 2007 – 1:00pm Chronicles of a Subculture: Rick Griffin, Murphy, and Surfer Magazine

This panel highlights Griffin’s popular cartoon character, Murphy, featured in Surfer magazine in the 1960s, with artists and designers Art Brewer, Jim Evans, Hyatt Moore, Randy Nauert, John Van Hamersveld, and Mike Salisbury. Moderated by Steve Pezman, publisher of The Surfer’s Journal.

Sunday, August 19, 2007- Typographical Transcendence: Tales from the Griffin Vault

Carl Rohrs, artist and instructor at Cabrillo College, discusses Griffin’s unique contribution to graphic design featuring rarely seen works by the artist.
Sunday, September 16, 2007- Evangelism, Music, Art, and Visual Faith: A Confluence in the Art of Rick Griffin.

Chuck Fromm, publisher of Worship Leader magazine and patron of Griffin’s The Gospel of John, discusses the influence of the born-again Christian movement on the artist’s life and art.

Belltown Paradise/Making Their Own Plans and Spatial Justice

From an Arthur contributor:


Starting with a holistic approach to Portland’s urban space (now functioning in other cities), the City Repair Project works to address social conditions of alienations in urban environments. Their projects address neighborhoods of homeowners, renters, and the homeless alike through “Placemaking”. With a mind to cutting through city bureaucracy by stressing the values which make cities livable if not great, City Repair is committed to non-hierarchical methods of group sharing and collective space urban interventions. With ecological themes combined with gardens, cob architecture and humane environments, City Repair works with a spacial conception of the urban malaise to get deep into what others just conceive of as “social problems.” By sighting the problems of poverty, pollution, crime and stress in real designable spaces, City Repair’s civic interventions are profoundly captivating.

Spatial Justice is a concept advanced by Ava Bromberg, editor of two excellent books Belltown Paradise/Making There Own Plans and the new Spatial Justice issue of the Critical Planning Journal out of UCLA. Concepts of spatial justice work to reframe social problems in space- the territorialization allowing for an active engagement with problems as a collection of ecosystems, rather than isolated abstracted alienated concepts.

Belltown Paradise/Making There own Plans is a cool double sided book put out a few years back by the exciting Whitewalls Press (Sun Ra’s Notebooks, Prison Inventions). Along with Chicago based, man for all seasons, Brett Bloom, this book presents several projects that are working on the level of landscapes to create inclusive, creative and just places for human cohabitation. Half of the book is devoted to transformations and stories from the Belltown neighborhood of Seattle. The other half focuses on a bunch of projects: City Repair gets a work up here as do Park Fiction (a German utopian group which facilitates spaces for “collective production of desire”) and Can Masdue. Can Masdue is a part of the intriguing (and endangered) Spanish Anarchist scene and is a project affiliated with the “rurbano revolution”.

The Spatial Justice issue goes way deeper into conceptions of spatial justice-giving frameworks (starting with postmodern Marxist geographer David Harvey) to the situationist/holistic/anti-hierarchical/D.I.Y. conceptions that are inspiring analysis and action in the worlds of proactive, progressive, urban design. A slightly heavier read than Belltown Paradise, the journal has its share of write-ups of radical D.I.Y., City Repair like, spatial interventions including an essay about Camp Baltimore and a rad essay about German Bauwagon culture (think squatting industrial wasteland in improvised circus trailers). Also included are discussions of alternative ways to design villages in Palestine, to resist the occupation, and explorations of how street festival’s in Philly help to cement a sense of blackness in gentrifying neighborhoods as a force counteracting economic displacement (gentrification). A wonderful case where expressions of culture serve to mark space, creating power.

My favorite section of the book is a series of interviews with spacial thinkers who offer expansive ways to consider how it is that we occupy land across all kinds of divides, and ways that we might better live here together. Spatial Justice offers ways to think beyond the brick and mortar which binds us to the status quo.

Technical Ecstasy

Man gets sick benefits for heavy metal addiction
Published: 19th June 2007 15:12 CET

A Swedish heavy metal fan has had his musical preferences officially classified as a disability. The results of a psychological analysis enable the metal lover to supplement his income with state benefits.

Roger Tullgren, 42, from Hässleholm in southern Sweden has just started working part time as a dishwasher at a local restaurant.

Because heavy metal dominates so many aspects of his life, the Employment Service has agreed to pay part of Tullgren’s salary. His new boss meanwhile has given him a special dispensation to play loud music at work.

“I have been trying for ten years to get this classified as a handicap,” Tullgren told The Local.

“I spoke to three psychologists and they finally agreed that I needed this to avoid being discriminated against.”

Roger Tullgren first developed an interest in heavy metal when his older brother came home with a Black Sabbath album in 1971.

Since then little else has mattered for the 42-year-old, who has long black hair, a collection of tattoos and wears skull and crossbones jewelry.

The ageing rocker claims to have attended almost three hundred shows last year, often skipping work in the process.

Eventually his last employer tired of his absences and Tullgren was left jobless and reliant on welfare handouts.

But his sessions with the occupational psychologists led to a solution of sorts: Tullgren signed a piece of paper on which his heavy metal lifestyle was classified as a disability, an assessment that entitles him to a wage supplement from the job centre.

“I signed a form saying: ‘Roger feels compelled to show his heavy metal style. This puts him in a difficult situation on the labour market. Therefore he needs extra financial help’. So now I can turn up at a job interview dressed in my normal clothes and just hand the interviewers this piece of paper,” he said.

The manager at his new workplace allows him to go to concerts as long as he makes up for lost time at a later point. He is also allowed to dress as he likes and listen to heavy metal while washing up.

“But not too loud when there are guests,” he said.

The Local spoke to an occupational psychologist in Stockolm, who admitted to being baffled by the decision.

“I think it’s extremely strange. Unless there is an underlying diagnosis it is absolutely unbelievable that the job centre would pay pay out.

“If somebody has a gambling addiction, we don’t send them down to the racetrack. We try to cure the addiction, not encourage it,” he said.

Henrietta Stein, deputy employment director for the Skåne region, is also puzzled by the move; “an interest in music” is not usually sufficient to qualify for wage benefits.

“Certain cases are confidential but in general there is always a medical reason that is well-documented,” she said.

Tullgren currently plays bass and guitar in two rock bands and says that he tends to get a lot of positive reactions for daring to be himself.

“Some might say that I should grow up and learn to listen to other types of music but I can’t. Heavy metal is my lifestyle,” he said.

The War on Medical Marijuana by PAUL KRASSNER

The War on Medical Marijuana
by Paul Krassner

Anthropologists of the future will look back upon these times as incredibly barbaric. One such example is medical marijuana, which is already legal in a dozen states, yet prohibited–and trumped–by federal law.

New York and Connectictut are next in line. The New York Times recently editorialized, “Although there are other prescriptions that are designed to relieve pain and nausea and there is concern about the health effects of smoking marijuana, there are some truly ill people who find peace only that way.”

Those “other prescriptions” are aided by the pharmaceutical industry, which spent a record-breaking $155-million to lobby the government from 2005 to mid-2006. As for “concern about the health effects of smoking marijuana,” it was reported at the 2005 meeting of the International Cannabinoid Research Society that smoking marijuana–“even heavy long-term use”–does not cause cancer of the lung, upper airwaves or esophagus.

Syndicated columnist Clarence Page–referring to WAMM, the Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana–has written about the DEA raiding “a legitimate health co-operative that was treating more than 200 patients, some of them terminally ill, in Santa Cruz [California]. Snatching medicine out of the hands of seriously ill patients sounds like terrorism to me. In this case it was federally sponsored and taxpayer-financed.”

Founded by Valerie and Mike Corral, WAMM has been helping people dying of cancer and AIDS for 14 years. Learning that such patients could not afford the high cost of marijuana, WAMM established a communal garden where medicine is grown for patients who have a doctor’s recommendation; they may take what they need and give what they can, even if that is nothing.

The late Robert Anton Wilson, prolific countercultural author, told me, “I never thought I would become another WAMM patient. My post-polio syndrome had been a minor nuisance until then. Suddenly, two years ago, it flared up into blazing pain. My doctor recommended marijuana and named WAMM as the safest and most legal source. By then I think I was on the edge of suicide–the pain had become like a permanent abcessed tooth in the leg. Nobody can or should endure that.”

After the DEA raided WAMM’s garden and arrested its founders, outraged Santa Cruz city and county officials actually sponsored WAMM’s medical marijuana give-away on the steps of City Hall, and joined WAMM’s lawsuit against the DEA, the U.S. Attorney General and the Office of National Drug Control Policy. WAMM is considered the most likely organization to ultimately sway the Supreme Court. According to Federal Judge Jeremy Fogel, “WAMM is the gold standard of the medical marijuana movement.”

Meanwhile, WAMM is in desperate financial straits. If you can contribute to their cause, check out their fundraising site http://www.wamm.org/helpwamm.htm. Although it would be a blessing to be funded by a MacArthur grant or philanthropist George Soros, Valerie points out that, “If those of us who believe in the alternative WAMM offers unite, we can keep the vision alive. If each of us contributes as little as $5 a month, we can move political history. That’s one trip to Starbucks, and less than a movie.”

States’ rights…it’s not just for racists any more.
———
Paul Krassner compiled and edited Pot Stories For the Soul, available at paulkrassner.com.

Nunatak

Antarctica – the coolest Live Earth gig in the world
British Antarctic Survey press release no: 11/2007. 12 Jun 2007

What must surely be the coolest gig in this summer’s Live Earth concerts takes place at the British Antarctic Survey’s (BAS) Rothera Research Station. On 7 July the science team’s indie-rock house band, Nunatak will debut in the global event that features over 100 of the world’s top musical acts. Concerts from all 7 continents will raise awareness of climate change world-wide.

Darkness and freezing temperatures isolate the Antarctic continent during the Southern Hemisphere winter so the only people who can actually go to the Antarctic concert will be Nunatak’s 17 over-wintering colleagues. But an astounding 2 billion people worldwide will get to enjoy the 5-piece combo through broadcasts on TV, film, radio and the internet.

Nunatak’s lead singer Matt Balmer said,

“I can’t believe we’ve been invited to do this – it’s a fantastic opportunity to encourage people of the world to deal with climate change. We expected to spend our Antarctic winter here at Rothera quietly getting on with our work and maybe performing at the occasional Saturday night party. We could never have imagined taking part in a global concert!

Director of BAS, Professor Chris Rapley, CBE said,

“The need to reduce our carbon emissions to avoid serious climate change is one of the greatest challenges humans have had to confront – is a complex issue that will only be solved by us all working together – scientists, politicians and society. Right now, Antarctic scientists and our colleagues in the Arctic are taking part in International Polar Year – the biggest ever globally co-ordinated research effort – to help find the way forward. Hopefully, Live Earth will make a real difference in public awareness and attract talented young people to become scientists – it’s a cool job with a real purpose. I am looking forward to Nunatak’s appearance in the Live Earth concert inspiring young people the world over.”

About the Band

Nunatak (a Greenlandic word): An exposed summit of a ridge mountain or peak (not covered with snow) within an ice field or glacier. These stunning features occur in the most remote beautiful yet fragile and threatened environments on our planet.

Nunatak is the British Antarctic Survey’s Rothera Research Station’s house band. The five person indie rock band is part of a science team investigating climate change and evolutional biology on the Antarctic Peninsula – a region where temperatures have risen by nearly 3°C during the last 50 years.

From April to October – the Antarctic winter – planes can’t fly in because of the cold – the frozen sea keeps ships out. Physically isolated from the rest of the world, the 22 wintering team share their talent and creativity with one another. But now Nunatak will play what must surely be the planet’s coolest gig.

Matt Balmer – electronics engineer with the physics and meteorology team

The 22-year old who cites Led Zeppelin, Oasis, The Verve and Britpop as his musical influence is no stranger to performing. As singer songwriter he played rhythm guitar with Lancaster band ‘Think of Anything’ – a euphoric live act, who in November 2005 recorded the limited edition Bonfire sessions EP released on white label. Matt gets back to UK sometime in 2009.

Tris Thorne – communications engineer

Tris, who manages the satellite technology and IT ensures that Rothera Research Station stays connected to the outside world. The 28-year old from the Orkney island of Sanday loves the sound of long-stroke diesel engines and live mackerel – presumably from his days as a fishing-boat deckhand. He plays his fiddle like a lead guitar and has performed with various bands including Finn Macleod & Kris Drever, Ugly as Sin” with Dom Tucker, “Remedy” with Dan Burgess. Tris leaves Rothera in Spring 2008.

Ali (Alison) Massey – marine biologist

For the next two years going to work everyday for Ali, 28, means kitting-up in dive gear, cutting holes in the sea-ice with a chain saw and plunging into the chilly water to investigate how the rich marine life around the Antarctic Peninsula is responding to rapid climate change. Ali has been playing the saxophone since she was at school. Nunatak is her first band and Live Earth will be her first large audience. Ali gets back to UK in May 2009.

Rob Webster – meteorologist

Former voluntary maths and English teacher Rob, 24, was based in Nepal before taking up the challenge to work in the world’s most exciting place making meteorological observations that will help scientists world-wide understand climate change. A folk and techno music fan he packed his guitar and fiddle when he left for Rothera five months ago. He is Nunatak’s drummer. He returns to UK late 2009.

Roger Stilwell – Field General Assistant (polar guide)

When Roger, 24, is not out using his mountaineering skills to keep science field parties safe he’s listening to Shakira, Britney Spears, The ‘Hoff’, The Village People, Metallica. Nunatak’s bass guitarist played trombone in youth orchestras and University dance bands. During the last six months at Rothera he’s missed cats – non-native animals are banned from Antarctica – but jamming with band, riding his unicycle and socialising with the science team help ease his pain. Roger is due home in May 2008.