Welcome to the original peep magazine. Supporting the under represented. Interviewing Newcastle upon Tyne’s underground creative pioneers. peep is a media company with cross platform content including a live show, quarterly publication and live events. We specialise Marketing, photography, journalism and creative culture.
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I'd love to get involved in something like this, I'm a under-underground rapper from Newcastle I'd love to come to an event if you'll have me sometime.
Mate ya should get me on a hot a good story to tell... Im a visually impaired bloke I'm a black belt in karate a purple belt in kickboxing and I've brrn a rapper for 18 years plus I'm a radio presenter and did a skydive for cancer charity
Love Jamie henda me I've known him half his life and watched him progress in music and painting he's the north east legend for grime him and just b a lad a grew up with in Ashington and mcs with for yeers they are the uks best grime rappers in my opinion. Hb stay freezing ne63 and ne15 love
Another little interview from the man himself - Blak Twang headlining the event last year. @peep caught up with him at the The Star and Shadow . Check it our here - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-amfWLeu-OjE.html
Hi @miamor2001 thanks for checking out the content. I think the idea is based around imperial Japanese uniforms, which I believe were loosely based around the imperial German army uniforms with a French influence. I think there is plenty room for 'artistic interpretation' also. I hope this helps.
that almost sounds depressing , it was a rebelling youth culture and its never gone away , tho folk in the collectives and the folk through the door are still here they are still mates and still supporting diy projects with free or cheap gigs , glue sniffing was done in that era , not by the punks but by the street kids of all genres , and the fliers always said no glue no glass at collective gigs , it was our free high of that generation some did it some didnt , it wasnt like the extacy of the next generation , the scene is friendly and always has been , your always going to get the odd lout , but all ive got is mates , chat to a punk and they will nine times out of ten be a decent friendly person
My memory may be messing with me, but I recall Mr Zee was the first person I saw with a Tag Belt (courtesy of the Metro Center). Great vid. With Love, SINCRO AKA All Day :). 86/23
@PlaydatePlayer hey, thanks for checking out my interviews. Appreciate it. Whats a 'tag belt' . I've subbed your channel. Do you remember the Spectrum game 'Tir Na Nog' Endless hours on that . . . . and not really going anywhere. Timeless !
I do! ! remember being blown away by the fact the character's hair moved up and down at the back. State of the art back then :). It was rock hard to play too... @@peep
Ha brilliant ! yes, I do remember the hair. You’re right, it was all ‘state of the art’ I think we were all just happy to be playing ‘video games’ Do you remember a spectrum game with an Eagle on the box? I believe it came free with the Spectrum. It was some kind of hunting game . . . a very early Minecraft concept. Then there was Monty Mole and Manic Miner ! stuff of mad man’s dream !!! @PlaydatePlayer
@margaretdavison135 everybody loves 'The Lost boys' just watched it again after many years ! Everyone seems to say the name "Michael" a bit too much , but apart from that it's really cool. Plus the soundtrack is very good, especially the OTT guy with the Sax ! ! ha
Thanks for the upload. I think TNS was predated locally in the late 80s by TND (The New Dimension). To be fair, TND were just a bunch of local kids slavishly copying Subway Art names (Dis One, Riot, AOK etc) and style, but they did do some mediocre painting and stickers at the time. Can’t really say much more in order to protect the guilty. 😂
Ouseburn has been gentrified to fuck. A band I was in used to rehearse and record there in the 90s. 1 studio was forced to close to make way for expensive student accommodation, another studio owner was kicked out when the Cluny opened as the owner felt it didn't fit with their 'vision'. Now the whole area is unrecognisable, multi story flats everywhere. It used to be an area full of local musicians and artists, now its students and hipster twats with no locals left.
Thanks for your comment @impablomations. You’re not alone in these thoughts of the Ouseburn. Appreciate you taking the time to check the ‘All City’ series out. I will be doing a few more. thanks again. @peep
Hello cliff sainsbury, i just saw your doc its really good to go back in time, great about your grandad, you probably dont remember me i think we were in the same class at delaval road, jacqueline hollis, and i hope your'e keepng well. My goodness 60 years ago !!!
Hello @jhollis55 thank you for taking the time to watch my Northumbria University film, profiling my grandad. How did you find it? I'm guessing, when you mentioned "goodness 60 years ago" it must be his son you're referring to? His name is also Cliff Sainsbury. Anyway, thanks again for watching this.