Being a student is awesome right ? Meeting new people all the time, studying the one thing that interests you most, all the parties, the drinking and the chaos. The flipside for the most of us is a diet of beans on toast (with cheese on Sunday for “Sunday Dinner”) and never having any money (or at least not having any money that isnt earmarked for socialising right ?).

And when it all got a bit much our tutors and parents would retell you the one about how if you get a degree you can get a decent job. Decent jobs tend to pay well, money gives you the choice to live your life the way you want to….yeah ? Stick at it, it’ll pay off.

I used to call this the educational punchline. The irony being that it really isnt funny, when you get to the end where the hell is this higher state of jobs and wealth ? Turns out i was a big cycnic! Just beyond a year past my university days i can’t think of many of my peers who arent in decent well paid jobs. We rock!

So one of the things i pretty much gave up to come to university was my biking, i was fairly big into it in my college days (A-level time for those of you who did it properly) but with little time or money and a flat in London with no storage space for a bike i ended up knocking it on the head for a while. Thankfully my seniors were correct and with a little more time, space and money i’ve managed to pick up the old past-time once more! Let me introduce you to my new toy:

Isn’t it a beauty ? I’ve already had chance to take out for a good burn around. Below you can see the backpack i bought at the same time is already starting to look quite trail hardened! Along with my photography and technology rants you’ll start to see a few more posts and photos from rides out appearing on these them blog pages too.

Retrospect is a series of posts Andy Hicks and I promised to write about a year ago now to review our time at Rose Bruford College. Unfortunately we never got too far with them, which is a shame. Especially as I know Julian Bryant our old course tutor has posted a few prospective students our way over the last few months to get a feeling for Bruford life. Shame all you’ve been able to see is my thoughts on Cars.

So for Julian, Prospective students, and the motley collection of friends, family and co-workers who wander by these them pages. Here are a few more thoughts in the retrospect style.

I woke up at 6:42 this morning, wondering why my alarm neglected to go off 12 minutes earlier. Fortunately i’ve been an early bird for the last few days and the body clock has adjusted. I stumbled out of bed, and found that my flatmates had mistaken last nights takeaway for rubbish. Shame! i’d had my eye on that for breakfast, perhaps that was for the better. Luckily bathroom duties had been delt with the evening before as i’d returned home the night before pretty grubby. I cleaned my teeth and swore at my reflection in the mirror. It’s far to early.

Time to leave, here comes the fun. I grab my backpack which is thankfully still packed from the day before. I check i’ve still got the power supply for my Macbook and hunt for the other assorted electronics i’ll need today at work.

  • Macbook – Check
  • Windows Laptop – Check
  • UMPC – Check
  • 2 TB Raid Disks – Check
  • Camera and Lenses – Check
  • Paperwork – Check
  • Keys, Phone, Ipod – Check, Check, Check

Those who know me well will be aware that I love my gadgets. I may well have the perfect job. Still an extra backpack wouldn’t hurt. An hour and a half later and i’d negotiated the M25 (see previous note to all drivers for propper driving ettiquette). I wander out the car, hungry and tired into the beautiful surroundings of Wrotham Park. A huge marquee has been errected on the sloping grass behind the old stately home. When i say huge i mean HUGE. I’ve seen smaller tents containing less equipment at festivals. With the hill gently sloping away there’s plenty of room for a substage area. This is where we’ve built ‘dimmer city’ and ‘video land’.

I sit down on a flightcase and drink a really strong cup of tea. More technology. I take the plastic dustcover off my station and connect up my laptops and raid disks. I’ve got both my cinema displays with me on this one, i can’t feeling a bit smug through all the tiredness. Still, this isn’t a “monitor measuring contest”. Sat behind me to the right are arguably the two most prolific video freelancers around at the moment. They make the technology i’m driving look like a chalk and blackboard. 4 Mac Pros, all laced into a fibre channel SAN. They can churn out After Effects projects faster than anyone can think of the ideas.  4 days ago i didn’t even know some of this stuff even existed. Over my left shoulder is an Encore system and a pair of Cat Servers. Did i mention this was for a 13 year old kid’s barmitzvah ? Yeah, this is mega.

12 months ago (almost to the week) i was still wandering the hallowed walls of RBC. Its crazy to think where i’ve got to today. I’ve no illusions of grandure, i’m only a year in to a life time’s worth of work. But its pretty exciting already. Photos to follow soon no doubt.

Like so many of the guys i went to uni with, getting into the production industry wasn’t a planned or deliberate choice. There was no, “mummy when i grow up i want to be a roadie” conversations to be had at all. Instead it was the result of a much more organic process. Like many my interest was grabbed during my secondary school days. A drama teacher at the school called Jay Marriott ran what we called the ‘stage crew’ which serviced the termly showcase of work by the drama and music departments as well as the annual school play. It wasn’t too hi-tech or complex, but we had fun non-the-less! Jay left the school as i moved into year 10 and it seemed natural progression that we continue our little club on ourselves.

By a democratic process (a show of hands) i ended up fronting the Stage Crew for the last 2 years i spent at my secondary school and handled hires and organisational responsibilities for the most part. Now i know, i’d call that role a production manager. Either way the roles were fairly unimportant, as the shows would almost always be 8 pars a couple of S4’s and the dated (i mean 1980’s) in house sound equipment.

Academically i was a conscientious student, i worked hard and i turned up to my lessons etc. Unfortunately however i was fairly average in my ability. I stumbled through my GCSE’s a got what i considered to an okay set. When it came to further eduction, the ethos at the school was very much “drop outs go to college, propper students stay at 6th form’ A ruthless money making scheme if nothing else!

I stayed at the 6th form for a year struggling with a collection of A/S levels that i was both uninterested in and performing poorly at. My overall grades for that year were one D in Drama. A poor show considering i took four subjects! It just goes to show, just because you’re conscientious doesn’t mean you’re an academic!

Knowing that i’d messed up, and flailing at the prospect of failure and uncertainty i hit the internet and found a course that i knew i’d enjoy. The Theatre Productions Course at NCN Clarendon was the answer.

I spent 2 of the best years attaining a BND and came out with a distinction. I’d finally managed to find something i was good at and had made a really good set of friends in the process. Throughout the course i’d studied, Lighting, sound, costume, set design, stage managment, and props. When it came to the end there was that same panicky feeling of uncertainty. Not sure what to do, or if i was even in any position to get a job with the qualifications i’d attained. So what do you do ? More eduction! I’d particularly enjoyed the Lighting and Stage Managment aspects of my course at Clarendon So thats what i applied to do at uni.

My first interview was at a place called Rose Bruford in Kent. I fell in love with the place straight away, the grounds, the resources and tutors all appealed to my way of working. A few weeks later i would get the acceptance letter to offer me a place on the Stage Management course.

retrospect-copy.jpg

Having recently graduated for Rose Bruford College with a degree in Stage Management I now have a full time job working for a video company based in London. Over the course of the next few weeks Andy Hicks (a fellow Rose Bruford Graduate, and now video technician) and i will be reminiscing on the journey we have taken over the last three years. This will form a series of posts on our respective blogs that we are calling ‘Retrospect’

We hope that they will become an informative read for current and future students of not just Rose Bruford but those training in the arts. As well as a great way to document our progress so far and the route it has taken.

Each post we’ll pick a subject that we think will be of interest and/or relevance and will each be posting our take on this subject. As the series develops you will be able to get a good cop, bad cop or good cop, good cop (depending on the subject!) account of that time frame by reading the corresponding posts on each site.

As you will begin to realise Andy and I have both come from a fairly similar place, and undertaken the same course. We have taken pretty different paths to get to where we are today, but now both hold jobs with London based video companies and are facing the same prospects as graduates trying to make it in a competitive working world.

retrospect-copy.jpg