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Farmhouse Films

Phone: +61 427 659 659



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22.01.2022 There's another permanent desk available at Mixtape Creative located at 4/47 Station Road, Margaret River. If you and are in need of an office space to work out... of, let us know. At the moment we have 9 occupants who have businesses involved in Film, Photography, Graphic Design, Writing etc.It's a great, friendly atmosphere where everyone gets along, and which is very rarely full. Usually 2-4 people in here at a time. If at all interested please get in touch and I can fill you in on price, facilities etc... [email protected] 0427 659 659 Cheers Daz



19.01.2022 Stoked to announce that ONE SHOT managed to pick up an award for 'Best Short Film' at Zierbena Surf Film Festival 2019 in Spain. Thanks to all the organisers of the event especially Txus, the judges and all the crew who attended. Russell Ord - Photography, Farmhouse Films

17.01.2022 What a privilege it was for us to witness The Vast Project come together and to see, touch, hear and feel the artworks that were created because of the honest and pure vision of a few. This album which was released yesterday is one piece of the puzzle and although biased, we think is simply magical. It is a result of the curiosity and vulnerability of the artists who came to the Pilbara, coupled with the openness of the land and the acceptance of its people. Congratulations to everyone involved.

16.01.2022 Hi everyone, local Margaret River legend Richard Todd's documentary 'Dying To Live' is being broadcast on SBS at 8:35pm tonight (Wednesday). It is a must see, tackling the important issue of organ donorship in Australia. I encourage you to sit down with your loved one's and watch this program that is Free-to-Air's top pick of the week. Well done to all involved. There is also a Facebook Q & A following the program at the link below.



12.01.2022 In The Australian today, I write about The Vast Project. ++ Jae Laffer was driving north from the West Australian town of Roebourne when Cossack first came into... view. A hub for pearling in the 19th century, given its proximity to the northwest coast of the continent, the town had long since fallen silent after decades of disuse. But as he set up camp with his friend, music teacher Qynn Beardman, for a night among the ghosts of pearlers past as well as the land’s original inhabitants dating back tens of thousands of years Laffer found himself compelled to do something he loves, but which does not always come easily: write songs. Inspired by the isolation, the awesome terrain and the innumerable human stories that had passed through that tiny patch of coastal land, the singer and songwriter of award-winning rock band The Panics was filled with a sneaking suspicion that some of his peers might be similarly moved to create great art in this place, too. It took a few years from that first visit to the abandoned town for the idea hatched by Laffer and Beardman to come to fruition. After making a list of great people he’d met on tour and backstage at festivals over the years, Laffer put out the call. For four nights last September, Cossack could lay claim to the highest proportion of the nation’s great songwriters per capita, when its population swelled to about 40. Among those lured west by his siren song were Bernard Fanning (Powderfinger), Sally Seltmann (Seeker Lover Keeper), Paul Dempsey (Something For Kate), Glenn Richards (Augie March), Kav Temperley (Eskimo Joe) and Alex Gow (Oh Mercy). They slept side by side in tents erected above gravel. They shared meals and bathrooms, and were charged with the responsibility of breathing new life into a ghost town. We wanted to put something on in a region where there’s been a lot of great art projects but we wanted to be the one with no agenda, no politics involved just people working together for no reason except that they liked to create, says Laffer. It was basically a giant experiment, done for the right reasons. In pitching the concept to his peers, he was quick to emphasise their time in Cossack was more about soaking in the unique location, rather than willing themselves to produce new work. I can’t stress enough that people were under zero pressure and that was in writing, says Laffer, smiling. The Panics frontman could attest to the productivity the locale encouraged. Previous trips had already spurred the writing of two songs, which appeared on the band’s last album, 2016’s Hole in Your Pocket. Yet the guests he invited to Cossack last September weren’t the sort of people to sit around waiting for the muse to strike, especially when most of them had travelled all the way from the east coast to breathe in the air that blows in from the Indian Ocean. As well, an unspoken sense of healthy competition may have been floating through Cossack, as great creative minds spent their hours foraging for new musical ideas, both together and alone, while occasionally wondering what their temporary neighbours might be digging up next door. The result of Laffer and Beardman’s ambitious idea to plant new artistic shoots in fertile soil has produced an extraordinary collection of songs connected to a particular place. Comprising 18 tracks with plenty of collaborations and cross-pollinations, the project shares its name with an adjective that frequently comes up in conversation with these artists as they reflect on their time in Cossack. That same adjective aptly summarises the nature of the town’s surrounding Pilbara landscape, too: vast. Read online:

09.01.2022 FOR SALE- $2200 Apple Mac Pro (Late 2013) DM or call Darren McCagh on 0427 659 659.

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