Saturday, 26 February 2011

test audioboo

I'm testing the lovely Audioboo on the blog. This is an extended version of my conversation with Stephen on listening:

Listen!

And here it is again, in stereo this time:



If quality stereo is your thing and you have a nice pair of headphones then download it here.

Thanks for listening.

Oh - and if iTunes is your thing, subscribe to our podcasts by clicking here.


Friday, 25 February 2011

quite magical











A week on from the
The Story, I thought I'd respond to the requests I've had with a fuller 17 minute version of my conversation with Stephen on listening, in which we talk about freedom, space and silence.

Stephen is one of the gentlest people I know. And his capacity to describe what listening feels like, what it creates and what it gives others is as natural as it is articulate.

Our conversation took place one evening before supper at the second Round Table I ran in France. It's a modest but - for me at least - a rather special conversation. And I'd like to dedicate it to everyone who's ever listened to me.

Really listened.

Here it is to download.

Friday, 18 February 2011

the story














Once a year, the lovely Matt Locke warms the hearts of a few hundred people or so at Conway Hall in London with an event he calls The Story.

Matt asks a select and varied pool of story lovers, practitioners and tellers to share their thoughts on how and why what they do. The slots are 20 minute long. The money raised goes to the bizarre and brilliant Ministry of Stories And anyone can come along. It sells out. It's a once a year thing. And I'd never heard of it until last Autumn when Matt invited me to be one of the speakers.

The line-up was a truly tasty one. My slot fell between Adam Curtis (you scared me Adam - thank you) and Cornelia Parker (who stole my power supply - I'm after you Cornelia, but happy to settle for a piece of your beautiful artwork as recompense.)

One of Matt's brilliant (or terrible) ideas is not to video the day. Brilliant because it's a live event and the sense of commitment people had made to be there is part of its uniqueness; terrible because the content was of such great quality and richness that I need to see everyone's session again.

Anyway - last night as a way of rehearsing it really - to make sure I was close enough to hitting the 20 minute mark - I recorded an audio only version.

So here it is; for anyone who couldn't be there today and for anyone who was but who wants to hear it again or share it with someone else.

And if you want to see the slides in gorgeous HD along with the sound, here they are.

The short clips of conversation I use in the podcast might be familiar to the small band of people who've occasionally followed The Dialogue Project's work at the real and beautiful Latitude Festival or in the less real (and less beautiful?) worlds of Twitter, Facebook or anywhere else virtual.

But I've framed up the clips in this podcast a bit differently - as examples of my work as a story listener, rather than a story teller.

I loved being part of @thestory2011.

Thanks for asking me Matt. Thanks for hosting it Margaret. And thank you to Richard, Rebecca, Holly and everyone else who went out of their way to make today such a pleasure for me to be part of.

And thanks to all 400 of you in the audience today for giving such an incredible sense of attention for (what was apparently slightly longer than) 20 minutes.

I'm glowing a little bit with the responses so far. I hope the session was as stimulating to listen to as it was to do.

While it's fresh: things I want to remember about how I prepared.

1) I'm glad I rehearsed - it meant I could relax, enjoy it and tune in a bit to the audience.

2) I'm glad I had my standby Mac in my bag - having a Plan B doesn't make Plan A any less exciting.

3) I'm glad I had two cups of coffee on the go: one stage left, one stage right. It meant I didn't have to walk across the stage holding a cup of coffee.

Thank you to Billy, Stephen, Chris, Jane and Dan for letting me share your voices with some new people.

And thanks too to the young people whose voices I also used but can't name.

You were heard today.

Lots.