With Nosferatu out of the way we (the Team Nosferatu ToV line-up) are all back to our normal every day lives.  Sort of.

I am hurriedly trying to get a bunch of stuff done before I relocate to Malaysia in 20 days.  Mr Tory Staples is working hard with Jester Underground and is now playing drums for Decortica, Mat Boshers awesome band.  Mat is, um I dunno I haven’t seen him since the show.  Same with Marcel who is probably doing something really interesting that I don’t know anything about.  I imagine it involves his band Battle Circus and their upcoming album.  Plum Green is working hard making amazing things happen for her band. Plum Green and the Dandy Men have a gig at the Dogs Bollix on the 19th of December, you should come along!

Michelle Klaessens from The Rock Factory did an awesome job of recording the audio from the Nosferatu show (at the same time as doing a great job as soundie!), and it’s now in the hands of Dave Edtmaier (Miscreant Recordings) for mixing.  I’m really excited to watch this along to the movie when it’s finished as I’m sure watching and listening is a completely different experience than watching and playing.

Transit of Venus Project has a new mailing list thing going on. You can sign up on our website www.transitofvenusproject.com I’ll send out an email about once a month, not too often to annoy anyone but often enough to keep everyone informed of anything they might need to know. This is the list you need to be on if you want a free copy of the Nosferatu audio recording when it is ready.  Also, when you sign up you get sent a link to download a free copy of Meatmarket.  This list, is the list you need to be on if you want to hear only the important things without sifting through all the babble I write in blogs and on twitter.  You know, the bits about toast and toenails and other such rubbish. Ok, maybe I lied about the toenails. But you know what I mean. The parts where I just start rambling on and on and on about whatever thoughts happen to pop into my brain at the time.  Like, you know, today I made these beautiful perfect delicious poached eggs for brunchternoon-tea. The whites were firm and non-slimy, the yolks were congealed gold on the outside but the inside was filled with orange hot melty awesomeness that poured out onto the toast when I cut into it.  I had just taken the first bite when the phone rang.  I won’t say who it was, but lets just say that by the time I managed to extract myself from the conversation my fantabulous poached eggs were stone cold and I was very very sad about this.

I think that is all I have to report today.  Hope you’re not all going mad leading up to the festive season, enjoy yourself, drive safe.

<3 K xxx

I have a lot of people to thank, I’d like to start with the awesome band!

Tory Staples, whom I’ve worked with on and off for the past five years, amazing drummer, amazing friend.  This project wouldn’t have lasted five minutes without his enthusiasm and support.

Marcel Bellve whose music I have always admired, it’s been a fantastic experience working with someone from one of my favourite bands!

Mat Bosher – our last minute life saver! Did an incredible job of getting everything together with such short notice and such good humor.

Plum Green – The cheesecake, the false mustache, the beautiful voice! And of course all the invaluable girl talk and moral support.

And special thanks to the behind the scenes crew…

Anthony Corban doing all that projectory stuff and generally helping outwith anything that need doing urgently

Michelle Klaessens from The Rock Factory was our fantabulous hard working sound girl and recording engineer for the night

Tyle Burke was there doing wonderful things I didn’t really know much about. Herding film students, jumping behind the sound desk when Michelle came on stage later in the evening.

Tim and Rilland made us a great pair of emergency last minute ushers hehe

The TAPAC crew Scott and Calvin who helped out on the night

And of course thank you to everyone who came along and watched the show!

It’s two days after the show now. I’m totally at a loose end, taking a weekend off to catch my breath before I get stuck into work next week.

What the show was like for me…

I was very worried leading up to the show, because I had never done anything like this before. Kinda a big deal to me.  I probably got a little stressed out (ok a lot) over all the things I had to remember not just in the playing of the show but the organizing and responsibility.  I guess the most accurate way to describe it is that I was terrified out of my wits that the show would be a failure, things would go wrong, no one would show up, and all my hard work would have been wasted.  Luckily that was not the case!

We started at about 11am that morning, met up at The Manor rehearsal space to work on a couple of things.  ”The curse of Nosferatu” has reared it’s ugly head in the form of incessant scheduling nightmares for this project.  We gave practice our best shot with which ever band members were there at the time.  By the time we had everyone in the same place at the same time it was halfpast three and time to load out! We got all our gear to the venue around four and began to set everything up. I had been almost in tears because I thought I had lost my box of leads, turned out I hadn’t and then I felt like a complete fool for over reacting. Set-up and sound check must have taken us through till about 8-8:30pm, I had been running off during sound check to put my make-up on and get dressed because I didn’t want to get caught short of time.  The whole time I was on edge and the adrenaline was causing me to bounce about the place and burst into nervous giggles, or snap at people for no real reason.  I had managed to not have any ushers arranged but thankfully a couple of friends stepped into the role. I had no one organised to open the curtain (first gig ever with a curtain you see!) so my Dad was dragged backstage to do that job.

It was almost nine o’clock, miraculously the band were all onstage behind the closed curtain. Matt and Marcel began playing some atmospheric music and I suddenly realized in my panicky forgetfulness I hadn’t lit the candles on my piano. I waved frantically at my Dad to not open the curtain while I tried to quickly light them.  Got that done, sat down, the curtain opened and the show began.

As I played the nervousness started to fade and I began to enjoy myself. It is nice getting to perform without having to put on a performance. The movie provides the visual side of things and you just get to concentrate on the music.  By the end of 84 minutes my arms were ready to drop off! Playing for that long with no stops was quite an intense experience, at times I couldn’t hear the rest of the band over my piano and just had to hope and trust we were playing the same thing.  The show itself seemed to fly by. 84 minutes was over so soon but I was so exhausted.

After the show I came and said hi to friends and family who had come along. All the feedback I heard was really positive which was nice after all the work that we had done.  When we’d had enough of a break and a few drinks we went back on stage for a jam and played to the few people who didn’t have to work the next morning.  This was a really fun part of the night. Michelle got up from behind the sound desk and jumped on keys, I stole Marcel’s guitar and we played some Amperzahn songs and some ToV songs, some with Ant on bass some with Josh, then Marcel jumped on Matt’s guitar and Tim jumped on bass followed by drums and played Doing OK (with the drum battle), I don’t know how Tory survived, he is such a hard out drummer! And then 2/3rds of AntiVenom were there so dragged them onstage and I jumped on drums for a song.  Admittedly I’m not the best drummer in the world (ok ok I suck!) but it was awesome fun!

Eventually the fun had to end, we said goodbye to the last few people to leave and then began the pack-down and load-out process.  This is the part of the night I hate the most. When all I want is to relax after the show, but instead I have to disassemble pianos and roll up leads and put my sneakers back on for  heavy lifting! I ended up with big bruises on my knees from toppling over climbing in and out of the loading dock.  I got home by 2am, tired and grumpy, but woke up feeling really pleased with how the show went, and feeling kinda silly for being so tired and grumpy towards the end of the night.

Pene from AntiVenom took a few photos during the show… here ya go!

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THE GIG IS ON THURSDAY

I have exactly 10 minutes to write a blog.

Things have been hectic. This is probably a good thing, there is nothing worse than boredom, give me stress and rush over boredom any day thanks.

Last minute rehearsals, last minute ticket worries (worrying we’re gonna sell out one minute and worrying we’re not gonna sell enough to cover costs the next). Last minute wondering what to wear. Last minute text spamming all my friends, I don’t want them to miss out on tickets if we do sell out.  Last minute putting a “turn your phone off” sign up at the start of the movie. Cramming all the last minutes with productive things.

Eating on the run, sleepless nights and early mornings, split nails and tired hands from practicing, awful hair from just not having the time to do anything with it!

<3 K xxx

Here’s a bunch of random pics from lately… Imagine your own stories to go with them if you like!

pizza break

stupid idea

xmas already

hitch hikers

can haz nap

tory

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Yeah

making magic

I can haz

Tickets!

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Sleep Piano

It’s starting to really dawn on me that I won’t be in New Zealand for much longer.  Well, unless I forget to pay my car registration fines before I leave and get arrested at the airport… It could happen, can someone remind me to call them in the morning?

I remember blogging after the EP release  in May that it seemed like the end of an era.  I was reminded of this watching Friends tonight. Man I love that show, doesn’t matter how many times I’ve seen it I still love it hehe.  So yeah, there was the whole big EP recording era, which if you include all the stuff I recorded and scrapped it goes back as far as 2005.  Look at the “member since” date on the ToV myspace  31/08/2005.   Ages ago.  But now I feel like the end of another story is approaching.  There was the bedroom recording era, which ended with the release of our EP, and then there was the short lived  ToV as a live band era, which I think will come to a finish with this last show.

Honestly I don’t know what will happen with ToV when I’m gone.   I have toyed with the idea of course, of firing everyone before I leave and getting new members in Malaysia.  I had thought about forcibly kidnapping Tory and taking him with me.  I have considered the possibility of retiring ToV back to a recording project, maybe even a long distance online recording project.  Or just dropping it all together.  I don’t know.  At this point I guess it doesn’t really matter. What is important right now is making our last show the best ever! We’ve talked about playing through a bunch of the old stuff at the Nosferatu show after we’ve screened the movie, we’ve talked guest members, ex-members and nostalgia.  Again I don’t know exactly what will eventuate, all I know is that I’ve worked really hard on Nosferatu and it’s gonna be both awesome and a little sad.  Awesome because I think it’s some of the most interesting stuff I’ve ever written, at least for me from a musical perspective.  And sad because I am sad to be leaving Auckland.  I’ve lived here just over five years and I’ve grown to love this city more than anywhere else I’ve lived before.  And not just this city but of course the people in it, the people are the ones who make this city what it is.  I’m gonna miss all the friends (and enemies!) who have made my life so entertaining here.

Sorry I’m rambling.  It’s because I’ve temporarily banned myself from twitter/facebook . I may yet have to ban myself from this blog! (p.s. if you’re reading this on facebook and rolling your eyes, it’s an automated thing that puts it on there from my website duh!)

Back to the piano now,

<3 Kristie xxx

p.s. Because there’s still some confusion I’m confirming that Nosferatu is on Thursday November 26th

Oh that’s right, we even have a proper written-by-someone-who-doesn’t-ramble press release for it now.  Here ya go…

TRANSIT OF VENUS PROJECT presents ‘NOSFERATU’
A special screening of the original vampire classic with new music written and performed live by Transit of Venus.
Auckland rock band Transit of Venus are performing a very special one-night show on November 26th where they provide an all new soundtrack to F.W. Murnau’s legendary silent vampire epic from the ’20s, Nosferatu. Fronted by multi-instrumentalist and composer Kristie Addison, Transit of Venus have also recently released their debut EP Bittersweet Love.
TRANSIT OF VENUS presents NOSFERATU is live at The Auckland Performing Arts Center, 8.30 November 26. Don’t miss it.
BOOKINGS: www.tapac.org.nz & Phone: 09 845 0295
$30 adults, $25 students and senior citizens

Hello my dear sweet and wonderful readers.  I write today, not with a lot of new news but with a determination to keep blogging regularly even when I don’t have a lot to say.

Trying to take regular short breaks from piano after my right hand wrist started to play up after yesterdays practice session (I’m typing left handed right now hehe).  If only my childhood piano teachers could see how much practice I’m doing these days.  If I hadn’t boycotted piano for ten years I’d probably be kickin serious piano ass right now!

News news news…  Well my life has pretty much just involved playing piano for a while.  Pretty boring I know, but it’ll be worth it in the end! And by the end I mean November 26th when this cursed Nosferatu Project will be finally unleashed on an audience.

Well, better get back to it!

<3 Kristie

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