Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeEntertainment‘Stillness and calm’ amid pandemic

‘Stillness and calm’ amid pandemic

Joseph Stanaway is used to living “off the grid” but his upcoming gig is quite the opposite.

After playing percussion for gallery openings, circuses and local films, he will live-stream the dulcet tones of the handpan into lounge rooms next Friday.

“Because of my age I find the digital world a bit of a challenge,” admitted the Highton local, who describes himself as on the “wrong side of 60”.

“I just try to focus 100 per cent on the music. My music is 50 per cent structured and the rest is improvised – I’ve worked like that for many years.”

His journey into meditative music began when a truck hit his first wife’s car in Sydney as she was learning to drive.

Stanaway was working as broadcast consultant co-ordinating Australia’s then limited video links for events such as the 1982 Commonwealth Games in Brisbane.

But after the crash the couple “had to get out of Sydney”, so he bought land in Tasmania where he “built some shacks”, he said.

Then a marriage breakup sent Stanaway into “crisis mode” and he began researching the “healing power” of music.

“The person I was on the inside wasn’t the person people saw on the outside,” he said.

“Music provided me with a pathway that kept me alive.”

He joined a local band that played gigs for local Wilderness Societies and Triple J’s launch in Tasmania, he said.

He then moved back to Sydney and founded percussion group Primal Pulse.

“Later in the ’90s I started developing my voice stuff and using my music as a healing tool.”

He travelled to Germany in 1999 with his second wife after she landed a job as a contemporary dancer.

They explored “quirkier places like Prague and Dubrovnik” plus Italy, Morocco and Switzerland before returning to New South Wales in 2004, he said.

After moving to Geelong a few years ago he began working as a cleaner and gardener at the Potato Shed.

Next Friday he hopes to help locals find peace amid the stress of COVID-19 and experience stillness through meditative music in the Shed’s Bird Bath Cam Sessions.

“If people can just slow down, take a few deep breaths and breath the sound in – it just helps them to balance out a bit,” he said.

“It’s just all about coming back to yourself.”

More information: www.geelongaustralia.com.au/potatoshed

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Man under police guard after hospital death

A psychiatric patient is dead and another is under police guard after an incident at a mental health facility plagued with controversy. Homicide detectives are...

One round to go

More News

Shelley and United part ways

Geelong United has immediately parted ways with star Jaz Shelley in a move the club said was “mutually agreed”. The club said the decision followed...

One round to go

Independent photographer Ivan Kemp ventured to King Lloyd Recreation Reserve for the GCA3 Murgheboluc vs Thomson clash and to Armstrong Creek Sports Precinct for...

Olivia to don green and gold again

A Highton teenager will represent Australia at DTB Pokal 26 in Stuttgart, Germany, from 19 to 22 March as part of the Australian Women’s...

A pillar of history

Mick Slocum is bringing history back to the region, following the restoration of Geelong’s last remaining Victorian-era pillar box, with plans for Portarlington. ...

Understanding the wetlands

Bellarine community members have a better understanding of wetland values thanks to strong support during Ramsar Week. More than 200 people engaged...

Boy charged over Little Malop Street stabbing

Geelong Crime Investigation Unit detectives have charged a boy following a stabbing in Geelong’s Little Malop Street on Thursday. The 16-year-old has been charged with...

Funding to improve road safety across Victoria

Victorian community organisations and groups will receive a total of $600,000 in grants from the Transport Accident Commission (TAC) to develop and implement local...

Crack down on dodgy drivers

New reforms are being introduced to protect Victorian taxi or ride-share passengers from being ripped off. The reforms, which come into effect on Sunday...

NATURE WATCH with Jen Carr

I was driving to Torquay one day and spotted a juvenile black-shouldered kite in a dead tree. I had to make a tricky u-turn...

Protect our hoodies

People travel thousands of kilometres to catch a glimpse of a blue whale or get up close and personal with a koala. But you may...