Sunday, May 30, 2021

From Bishop Seraphim Sigrist

Before our chat today we had a brief (20 minute) presentation from the studio of Spectral Arts. T Byron Kelly read poetry including Blake's Tyger. My screen shot was not wonderful so I allowed myself this fantasia which I somehow like and hope Byron may, reading with guitar...
here from his amazon book site is his self portrait
The chat which went for an hour and more following engaged the work of Spectral Arts.
Based in Blacksburg Virginia this is a multifaceted working over the years in the arts music, painting , poetry, which draws on the Appalachian Mountain region and its rich heritage of lives well and deeply lived and of art and yet which is little considered in these terms and when thought of ,seen too often instead in stereotyples as a land of hillbillys and rednecks(a pejorative term now for ignorant hicks but Byron observes originally from the bandanas worn by mine workers fighting for their rights in the early 20th century) As a Christian artist Byron (and the Arts) have also avoided stereotypes in their material... and the whole work in its conception and aspiration and developing achievement seems to me rich and deep indeed , we are honored by their collaboration.
In what distant deeps or skies.
Burnt the fire of thine eyes?
On what wings dare he aspire?
What the hand, dare seize the fire?
well God as first maker of course ,of lamb and of tyger, but we too can be makers beyond expectation in the mystery of art...and thanks to Spectral Arts for showing a way...

-Bishop Seraphim Sigrist, Transfiguration Fellowship
May 2021


Saturday, April 17, 2021

1989-2021

I remember starting out back in 1985 in a local cover band (The Stand) and even then there seemed to be more off campus places to hold a show. After being in a short lived band with Will Simmons of Milkbadger and Bees Make Honey, I was asked to join Crayon as a singer in '89 (before the band became Blindspot). That was an amazing time and my exposure to the artists in that band (Scott Flory, Duncan Macomber and Yax Lacey) proved invaluable. I also ended up meeting our drummer of over 20 years in that band (Doug Eagle V.) and after a period of time in an alt rock band called Dirty Pictures (featuring D.W. Baugh on drums and Adam Hodge on Guitars), Doug and I began recording performance poetry using a 4 track as The Spooks in early '93. At that point we focused on doing XYZ benefits and local gallery performances and they have been our primary venues since then. We have worked/recorded with a few guitarists (also under the name the Spiritworld).

-2009



Crayon was a major template for us in later bands and the first band in which I was encouraged to actually sing my poetry during performances. Joining the band was something like being asked to play in Nirvana at the time for local musicians. Crayon gave us new courage to move forward and explore in later bands as well and there would never have been a Spectral Arts had we not had some role in Crayon in our early days together. We had somewhat of a (surprise) Crayon reunion this evening at our studio when Scott Flory arrived with his guitar (our last jam together was in 1993 with Duncan Macomber on Bass and Butch Lazorchek on drums). I mentioned to Scott that I had been trying to tell my band mates the significance of our early work with Crayon for years, but after he played a few songs with our group I think they understood. Crayon was a band that changed our lives forever.

-2013


Spectral Arts and Project Morning Star are the last incarnations of the early work we began in 1989. The spirit of Crayon has permeated those bands in regard to how we have approached our music collectively and in terms of artistic openness and spontaneity. What we learned about working together creatively has carried us forward 30 years now. God has given us a joy and love we have for creating with one another musically and that has endured. 

-2021

by T. Byron K.

https://www.studioappalachia.com/spectral-arts.html

https://www.studioappalachia.com/project-morning-star.html

Sunday, February 21, 2021

Spectral Arts & The Creative Process

Though not always successful, tuning out all the demands and noise of this world and completely submitting ones self to that very fleeting moment in time when we're allowed to bang or strum or dance at will. Sometimes it lasts for an hour or three, sometimes just minutes.
Doug "Eagle" V.

Spectral Arts Band

Our band is like a family really-we take care of each other. It never made sense to me that a band needed to be named after one person in it, even if you write the music or lyrics yourself, you are still standing there with 4-5 other people on stage, it remains a group effort to both create and deliver the songs in our band. Making time to allow our songs to be born has been important for us-the right state of mind and openness is key. When things are aligning right for us and we are listening to each other well, miracles can happen but we have to be paying attention and we have to take the time for it. In our group each person plays a crucial role in our composition, we arrive at a song by spontaneously joining all of the elements together, when it does show up we hope the recorder is on and then we can take some time to listen to it after we lay it down and make sense of it. We often liken our process to a group fishing trip, but we all have to throw the lines in the water before we can catch any fish, standing on the shore talking about it won’t bring any supper home.
-T. Byron K.
4/30/2020

Saturday, February 20, 2021

Spectral Arts & The Creative Process

My poetry, music and art have always been a place for me of supernatural communion between the divine and earthly realms. The liberation of the ordinary is finding the eternal in the moment now-there is a sacred space of connection which transcends time itself and is born through spontaneity and my work has been to attempt to bring forth this language of light. We are curious bystanders at the crossroads of conscious and unconscious thought. Imagination, then, is the child of the dream and the mind. Poetry is a state of Grace.
-T. Byron K.