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1
WIGNALL BEATS FEET IN THE MOTHERLAND,
AND AIMS TO DODGE BREAKDOWN IN AFRICA
Featuring MANDO DIAO , COLD WAR KIDS and DIVISION OF LAURALEE
with missed appearances from the ETTES
DAY 1 IN ROUTE
I'm stuck in a pub in route to
staying at a friend Nate Rose's place. He's a friend of a friend
who I've met a few times. He recently got some kind of American
stock related gig in London so he works screwy hours. Someone
was supposed to meet me at his flat in Notting Hill and let
me in but of course my flight, the tube, and everything else
was running late. I arrived 2 hours late to a locked door so
I had to drag all my crap to a pub and wait 3 hours until 10:30pm
when Nate gets home. Tomorrow I have to wake up early and get
to another plane and train and continue on to Sweden. There
are no two ways about it, flying to Europe from LA is a nightmare.
I think I barfed on the plane but it could have been a dream.
I was all hopped up on Ambien which is not touted to cause barfing
at all.
Days 2 and 3 were spent traveling.
Photography by its essential design, is a craft which requires
a crapload of gear. I have always fought this. I am a 1 pack
traveler. I need very little to survive. I embrace the land
and the train and the air… and am tied to 2 large bags
of camera gear. I now require a large space for me and my inanimate
entourage to spread out, not be crushed, and have electricity
consumption all around. I have become terrified of the worlds
bag screeners, and angry at digital everything. Can someone
tell me that it is ok to chuck all this stuff and buy a nice,
compact German Leica, 50 rolls of film, and a hand bag much
like a non-descript girls purse, but mine would be a man purse
full of creative possibility and grainy analog goodness.
me in a typical Swedish kitchen and some old
country sweden on the island of Gotland.
SWEDEN
So I’ve got a lot of gear,
and each piece does something useful and unique. With this gear
and a sore shoulder I am forking over flight overage charges
across Europe, 12 kilos at 50 bucks and 2 hours from London
and I’m in Sweden. My friend Fredrik, of Flagstone Management,
met me at the airport already on his way north to our final
destination of Borlange where I was to shoot Swedish rock and
roll outfit Mando Diao.
I now know that Sweden is one
of the most beautiful countries in the world. We drove for 2
hours North and I eventually figured out I was the farthest
North I had ever been, at least as far as Alaska, up by the
arctic circle, cold and far away. The whole landscape was filled
with the best looking birch trees I had ever seen. They grow
in groups like black bamboo surrounded by pines and other vaguely
familiar distant relatives to my home town trees. I am coming
here to lend my talents for which I have been thanked many times,
but I have found myself equally as grateful to this band at
being able to experience this country from the inside, face
pressed to the window, with the excitement of a child passing
McDonalds.
We arrived at our destination,
a middle priced hotel called Scandic that I guess is indicative
of what mid grade hotels in Sweden are like...a hell of a lot
better than American hotels. I would say comfortable but that
hardly begins to define the timeless Scandinavian tradition
of classy and elegant functional furniture that has lead to
this moment where this wide eyed and tired American has figured
out that Swedes are better than us at furniture, architecture
and design. That night we ate reindeer in the restaurant at
the hotel. All through dinner I was distracted by my chair.
I have never sat in a more comfortable restaurant chair. They
make coffee better than us too.
the hometown crowd in borlange and live picture
which I am in love with.
DAY 5 BORLANGE
My first day waking up in Sweden
I am the most happy I have been in a while. I am in the nicest,
most effortlessly stylish room I have ever slept in. Hard wood
floors, birch twin beds up off the ground without ridichulous
bed skirts that are so common in America, a fluffy comforter,
and a bathroom with heated floors and one of those showers with
no doors. To the average American I am describing the honeymoon
sweet at the swankiest hotel in LA but this is just an average
room. I think I could live in this room. I am slightly annoyed
that I have missed breakfast. Fortunately, better coffee than
any American coffee is available everywhere at any hour, it
is better than American coffee at home. Because it is so much
better than American coffee, I've just had this idea that if
I appeal to America's ass kicking ego by making them look bad
compared to swedes, maybe they will step it up with the coffee.
Unify with me here, we can live in a better world. There can
be a better tomorrow. Coffee does not have to taste like it
run off the wardens boot.
On day 1 in Brolange, I have
photographed Mando Diao for whom I have been shooting an on
going series of themed portraits. Today was the most elaborate
yet, although there was one where my brother and I had Gustav
hanging out of the tree looking like a Croatian mercenary. That
took a fair amount of effort. I really am not to be showing
these in public yet, especially on the internet, but I may throw
a little thumbnail on here just to proove that I am not lying.
I never lie.
above, my coffee on a swedish table, Mando Diao
in traditional Swedish dress and a common swedish toilet, the
toilet is a 2 flush model for half or full flush loosely similar
to the un released DUOJET 2000 which I invented about 8 years
ago. the main differnce being the DUOJET has a gear/tank shifter
instead of a button. Aftermarket shifter tops would be sold
including a dice and an 8 ball.
DAY 8 OR SOMETHING CLOSE TO THAT
Another nice turn of events landed
me in Gothenburg were I stayed with the "Swedish Hammer"
Carl Blom. He is the lawyer and manager to Mando Diao. I call
him this because every story I hear about him involves the Hives
or Mando Diao getting out their record contracts, and then receiving
lots of money and creative freedom. I have resolved to always
stay on his good side. He has the most beautiful, text book
Swedish daughters I have ever seen, and a house that is sort
of a who's who of Swedish interior design. I really enjoy crashing
at peoples houses wherever I go and getting a peek into their
every day life. Unfortunately Gothenburg was not all sitting
around doing nothing which I am starting to miss. I was brought
here to photograph Division of Laura Lee, a viby art punk band
who lives in Gothenburg and is working on a new record. The
singer and I were both Mike Watt fans and as such got along
famously and I'd reckon they got the best pictures they've ever
seen.
DAY 9(ish)
Today I leave Sweden after a
little more than a week. I had a very nice walking tour of Stockholm
with Anika and Samuel who were kind enough to play tour guide
on more than one occasion. We believe Anika was named after
Pipi Longstockings best friend. Having not even heard of Pipi
since the late 70’s, I was amazed that in Sweden, Pipi
fever is alive and well. I had hoped for a little Dolf Lundgren
fever, being that I really enjoy cultural stereotypes like large
short short wearing blonde haired muscle men eating Swedish
pancakes and meat balls and hanging out with their androgynous
woman friends who are called Greta and are experts in Swedish
massage. Not surprisingly the guys in Mando Diao have never
heard of Swedish massage and are not sure if there are Swedish
pancakes either. There are however, boat loads of Lingon Berries,
top notch coffee, and some kind of near relative to meat loaf
named after some rich guy named Wallenvarger. So I leave Sweden
moments from now on a train over a bridge to Copenhagen Denmark
with all my heavy photo gear in tow and what will likely be
thought of as the future of music photography, and the satisfaction
that Mcdonalds and vallenvarger are making Swedes every bit
as fat as Americans. Tubby kids abound. Take that Sweden.
I have found a new and elegant
way to photograph live music. I do not know where I have found
this vision other than to say, 20 years of ignoring mainstream
photography and art has begun to culminate into something striking
and beautiful. I have been dreaming about photographs, not in
general, but photographs I will take tomorrow, and then I take
them. It sounds crazy but they are like pre cognitions or something.
I intend to change the way the world looks at music photographs,
I am learning to demand more of myself. We must demand more
from ourselves and our heroes. A final note on the band called
Mando Diao. They have just made, I think, one of the great records
of today, mark my words. I created the center fold for this
recording, and both are worthy of the other. You will see.
 
a Mando Diao commemerative
design for having gone gold in Germany, and the crowd at their
hometown show in Borlange, I am not permitted to release other
images digitally at this time by mutual agreements and secrets
best kept for grander destinies.
PART II
ANARCHY IN THE UK INDEED!

MATT & MATT VS. PORTUGAL
PIGLIANO AND THE COWARDS OF BELMONT SHORE by m.wignall
We left Dublin after
24 hours of literal travelling insanity. I met the Cold War
Kids at their London hotel at 10 at night when this all started.
Maust, Beeman and I went to a pub and had crappy food that we
kept saying was suprisingly good, mostly on account of the price.
We had to wake up at 4 am to fly to Edinburgh Scotland for T
in the Park music festival. This was a special kind of drag
as I had just come from 9 days of not getting enough sleep with
Mando Diao in Sweden. We drove in BMW's with suit wearing drivers
to Gatwick airport which seems as far as France especially at
4:30am. We got to the gig after a flight on Easyjet which we
now refer to as cheesy jet, idiot jet and any other number of
names that seemed more clever at the moment, if you've flown
them you'd understand. Scotland was rainy, and the band lost
their room to someone called Razorlight who had a larger entourage
than us ( I being the only one in the CWK entourage). I've learned
that these UK festivals largely consist of mud, and people living
in it. The bands for the most part live in their buses only
exiting onto a metal ramp where they are whisked onto stage.
The Cold War Kids are not big enough for a bus as they are still
a pretty ma and pa orginization, they have something like a
bus, and while not living in squalor, they sure don't live like
the people called Razorlight. So we spent the day in Scotland
looking for places to lay down and get free food both of which
were graciously available in the main hospitality tent. There
was little contact with mud, and the gig went famously, right
after Sinead O'conner in fact, who we all agreed is looking
very hobbit like these days. That evening, having already been
at Gatwick and Edinburgh airports, we headed back to Edinburgh
in our jalopy, which I have failed to yet mention, and borded
our 2nd jet for the day to Dublin where we would basically repeat
the aformentioned scenario. Our jalopy, driven by our rough
and tumble brittish driver was aqcuired through the company
Blah Blah Blah. They are the cheapest way to travel as a band
in the UK. The wheels are vintage Mercedes plumbing truck or
some such work vehical, and the trailer was a horse or donkey
trailer with a tarp tied over the open top, that had a very
suggestive female printed around 6 feet high on the back of
it. The driver was cool and I spent most of the time in the
jalopy sitting next to him in the front seat as I tend to get
car sick any where else. I asked a lot of questions about the
UK, as I had never been. The boys sat in the back on the wrap
around leopard skin couch which was either based on, or the
isnpiration for, a leapord print tattoo on the drivers forearm.
I loved the whole thing as I like people with character and
this whole scene was just dripping with it.


Outside of eating
late at some variety restaraunt in Dublin where an asian lady
that ran the place eyed us with hate and scorn as we danced
to gangsta rap music being played uneccisarily loud, we had
a largely uneventful time, I acquired some unnamed quota of
good photos of the band and it was off to London in morning
where we would begin to move our different ways. Matt Maust
and I would stay in London with our friend, financial tycoon
Nate Rose, and the rest of the band would head to Portugal to
visit Matt Avero's relatives on an island where they eat coconuts
and have no or very few cars. This is where things began to
get exciting.
Getting onto Cheesy
Jet is problematic if you have more than a fanny bag. We all
had a lot of crap, especially me with all my photo gear, at
check in we had to combine, rearrange and condense to save money
and not have to check in said photo gear. The color photo of
"dangerous materials" are the items that for whatver
reason did not make it into the collective check in bags of
Maust and myself. A lighter, a knife, and various containers
containing a who's who of dangerous substances hidden within
hair re-growth shampoo and conditioner bottles that are way
to big to fit in the plastic bags. I speak for Matt and myself
when I say sneaking this through Dublins bag screening was a
thrill the likes we rarely see. We figured out over the course
of many flights, that by buttoning or zipping up a jacket, it
becomes a shirt in the eyes of the screeners. It can't be a
heavy jacket, you'll get popped everytime for that, but a wind
breaker, a blazer, buttoned, no problem, walk on through, unbuttoned,
you have to strip down, red flags galore. We had an apple which
was to be our diversion, and pockets riddled with our precious
booty. I held the apple aloft and loudly asked, can I bring
this through the beeping arches? Everyone is now focused on
the apple, me and Maust walked quickly through, David Blaine
and Chris Angel would have been proud, in relative terms we
just made the statue of liberty dissapear. Sadly our brand of
magical diversion was so flawlessly executed that only we could
revel in its brightly burning glory. Every instinct I had was
to turn around and say ha! We have just infiltrated your shoddy
system, we know the secret, that it is all a show, all wound
up in political correctness and self importance and continuing
under estimations of our clever foes. The croud at the screening
area would have been in awe, we would have been the object of
envy and secret flatteries. I looked down, swallowed my pride
and cluctched my precious survival lighter and knife. Matt had
his herbal hair re growth shampoo, and we knew we were more
than just men lost among the oceans of human beings travelling
the world. Anarchy in the UK indeed!

At the airport that
day we all hugged and said our good byes. I have surfed for
most of my life though I try to keep it a secret, being an artist
and having an alter ego called Matt Death in tow, it looks pretty
bad to my public to be hanging out in flowered shorts getting
a tan and engaging in happy sunny beach activities (irnonically
I have little to no public to worry about and any public I have
is purely delusional). For this and other reasons I was and
am insanely jealous of Matt A (Portugal Pigliano), Nathan, Johnny
and Beeman. Portugal is fabled to have some of the best surfing
in Europe and they were to be on some island with the same name
as a crumby town in the central valley of California. I knew
they were going to Portugal but they kept saying they were going
to Madera I think, and I kept wondering why they were so excited
to go to that crap hole not realising it was the islands name.
Having that all cleared up, Maust and I decided to stay in London
as he needed a break from travelling and I was on my way to
Africa to photograph the installation of charitably funded water
wells in remote villages. After 2 weeks of European work and
travel, sitting around financial tycoon Nate Rose's Notting
Hill flat was sounding pretty grand.
RIGHT-ON BRIGHTON JULY 10
Maust had this picture
of him and Nate in front of the burned down peir in Brighton,
and based on this feature I suggested we go out there and do
some proper photography. Maust is great at bumming around whatever
city he is in and usually is wandering aimlessly looking at
stuff and doing whatever he does. We decided that Brighton would
be a great day trip and we would feel like we were on vacation,
and would live large, and would have a far better time than
our brothers eating coconuts on the island in Portugal. On the
train, we repeatedly discussed how Nick Cave lives in Brighton
and in our little worlds this may as well have been the queens
palace we were going to see. It is funny the people and things
that strike us as royalty. Nick Caves part of town, and a burned
out pier fouling up everyones view. I was in heaven. Me and
Maust took beautiful photos, and mentioned a handful of times
how we should have had the hole band there to photograph. It
really is such an amazing area. I resolved to take the best
portrait of Maust that I had ever taken in my life just to stick
it to the our brothers eating coconuts on the Island in Portugal.
(view picture at the start of this page for said portrait).
We came across a big dumb happy dog and a ferris wheel and it
was all very sad in a happy and nostalgic kind of way. That
kind of sums up Brighton in my thinking.

We met a guy with
a handle bar mustache from the Rumble Strips, he was touted
as one of the nicest people Maust had met in Europe and after
he bought us a round of Guiness and poorly executed Irish Coffee
I was in agreement. Over a pint he told us the story of two
Welsh men, who with a GPS tracking system and months of gear,
borded a pink peddle boat and peddled their way to America.
When they arrived some months later, with no clothing in tact
and full beards, they were arrested and deported. He said this
kind of behavior is to be expectd from the Welsh. I think I
like the Welsh.
We got back to London
and did more sitting around in financial tycoon Nate Rose's
flat. We occupied ourselves for hours with his stupid internet
connection and the 40 some odd wireless connection signals that
were every last one password protected. Not very sharing the
Brits. I was supposed to photograph this band the Ettes who
I very much like. They have a fabulous girl drummer with big
hair and dark eyes, a cute and friendly girl singer, and a strapping,
ascot wearing bass playing young man who may or may not be involved
with the singer. I photographed them once before and it was
great and we hung out and talked about Strangers With Candy,
a very funny show which is obscure enough to create an immediate
bond between people in the know. We were to meet at the millenium
bridge, which I find overstated, and the big communist looking
museum. I was tired from 3 weeks of photos, me and Matt wanted
to see a movie, and they were 45 minutes late so we split. I
couldn't get a phone to work right anywhere in Europe so we
couldn't call, and I was feeling more self important than usual
in regard to the respect of my time. With a lot of travel behind
me and what would become a African travel cliche of self realization
and epiphany to come, it was a welcome break to my sometimes
crazy life behind the camera. I left my cameras at financial
tycoon Nate Rose's and Maust and I went to see Elvis Perkins
and his goons. They put on a fine show and it was nice to see
some faces from our side of the pond. The next day Maust carried
my bag for me to the train station, listened to me bitch about
petty problems and complaints about my failed music career,
and saw me off to Heathrow Airport where my 2 weeks in Africa
would begin. I never found out what happened to Portugal Pigliano
and the Cowards of Belmont shore.
PART
III
OUT OF AFRICA...BARELY. I'M BEGINNING
TO SEE THE LIGHT!
I cannot even begin to process
this information and write about it yet other than this 1 story.
I woke up in a mud hut with no
running water or toilets within 100km. I get up earlier than
everyone else every day to photograph which is sometimes a little
disconcerting because even at 6am there are 20 or so young indigeounous
Africans silently waiting, maybe all night, just to see the
strange white person again. On this particular morning I stumbled
to the land cruiser, unshaven, having not showered in 5 days
as there is no such thing in these villages. I opened the door
and grabbed my herbal deoderent from my bag. All 20 eyes watched
in amazment as I proceeded to apply it to my arm pits. I held
it out for one child in the front to smell, and they all made
this sound that they make, which is more of a word than a sound,
and it is the sound in their language that expresses amazment
or wonder. All 20 unbathed kids wanted a smell and by the time
they were through, my deoderent was literally caked in mud and
snot. I am somewhat of a germaphobe so I smiled, and then hid
in the car where I could privately wipe the holy hell out of
the top end of my roll on.
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