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Emily Barker's video: Emily Barker - Dinosaur Bones Official Music video

@Emily Barker - Dinosaur Bones (Official Music video)
The new album "A Dark Murmuration of Words" is out now - https://smarturl.it/eb-words ========================================= DINOSAUR BONES On the 27th October, 1949, two sisters married two brothers in Rotterdam, The Netherlands. One of those pairs was Reiner and Toos, my grandparents, or Ray and Cath as they were known in Australia when they emigrated to Perth in 1952. 'The Double Wedding' was filmed and years later when my nanna passed away, my grandpa grieved by watching the wedding repeatedly. He showed it to me, my siblings, and to dad and mum (their daughter), offering a commentary of who was who frame by frame and cleverly, Mum captured this commentary on her dictaphone. Later when updating the format from VCR to DVD, she overlaid the audio recording. Twenty years on, I found the DVD and felt it was time for another upgrade given the advances in technology - it is now safely stored in the cloud and on various hard drives, and now also as snippets of their special day accompanying my new single, Dinosaur Bones, in a video created by filmmaker Tori Styles. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------   I know so little that anything You might tell me would be a revelation. – W.S. Merwin (Sire)   The past is as mysterious as the future: we never really know what happened there. – Alison Croggon (Navigatio)   When my parents downsized and moved from my childhood home – a small farm by the Blackwood river –  into town, there were boxes and old suitcases of mine that accompanied them. On my next visit to Bridgetown I found them stored in a wardrobe awaiting my attention (mum and dad were hoping I might downsize my possessions too). One of the suitcases once belonged to my grandpa – it was brown with faint stripes and the clasps had gone rusty. In it were childhood love letters and trinkets, diaries, CDs, tapes, notebooks and photographs. I even found my first ever journal – a Christmas present from my parents when I was 8 years old. I’m still keeping journals; I could probably fill an entire wardrobe with them if I shipped them from the UK back to Australia (sorry mum and dad). As I was sifting through the souvenirs of my early life, it made me think about the footprints we leave behind as we make our way through life... how much of ourselves we share through stories passed on to younger generations, and what remains of us after we’re gone. It made me reflect on my grandparents and parents and how much I don’t know – just snippets from stories – memories that fragment the more I try to remember. Isn’t it interesting too, how we add to those fragments over time, how we flesh them out? Like finding dinosaur bones, then draw the muscles, sketch the skin, add the meaning. Dinosaur Bones was the first song we recorded during the making of A Dark Murmuration of Words back in November 2019 at Studiowz in Pembrokeshire, Wales. It features the fine musicianship of Lukas Drinkwater (bass), Pete Roe (keys), Rob Pemberton (drums and synth), Misha Law (viola) and Emily Hall (violin). The riff that appears in the verses was taken from a writing session with my dear friend Ted Barnes many years ago which – somewhat appropriately for the song – I found when sifting through a batch of old recordings. I fleshed out the music and added these words…   Dinosaur Bones (Emily Barker, Ted Barnes)  Organise these memories into hand-me-down cases Generations worn, a rusted clasp, the lining’s torn I was thinking of my father and about dinosaur bones And how we create the story with the fragments that we’re thrown   Sifting through these letters, come alive in callow words Sorting into boxes what to keep and what to burn I was thinking of my mother and the pieces she let go And how we adopt a story until it becomes our own   All the ways we print ourselves in sedimentary stone  Draw the muscles, sketch the skin, add the meaning   Turning pages down a street where time is standing still Searching through old photographs for emptiness to fill I was thinking of my grandparents and a past I wish I’d known And how we alter the story, with each telling that gets told   All the ways we print ourselves in sedimentary stone  Draw the muscles, sketch the skin, add the meaning, add the meaning Rob Pemberton - drums, percussion, synth Pete Roe - Wurlitzer electric piano Lukas Drinkwater - bass, electric guitar Misha Law - viola Emily Hall - violin Emily Barker - vocals, acoustic guitar Produced by Greg Freeman ========================================= The new album "A Dark Murmuration of Words" is out now - https://smarturl.it/eb-words ========================================= Stay in touch: Sign up to my newsletter: https://smarturl.it/eb-Newsletter https://emilybarker.com https://facebook.com/emilybarkerhalo https://twitter.com/emilybarkerhalo https://instagram.com/emilybarkerhalo Subscribe to this channel for more videos: https://smarturl.it/halo-youtube

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This video was published on 2021-10-01 15:37:28 GMT by @Emily-Barker on Youtube. Emily Barker has total 7.8K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 165 video.This video has received 85 Likes which are higher than the average likes that Emily Barker gets . @Emily-Barker receives an average views of 1.3K per video on Youtube.This video has received 21 comments which are higher than the average comments that Emily Barker gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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