Nick Martin in Clean Bandit video

Clean Bandit’s ‘Skating Minister’ reveals Island connection

What you might not realise is that the Skating Minister is actually a highly accomplished artist who happens to live on the Isle of Wight.

How does an artist ends up skating in a music video?
Nick Martin, who teaches life drawing at Quay Arts (listen to our 2009 podcast with him), has appeared in two music videos for Clean Bandit, last year in Dust Clears – which has had over six million views on YouTube – as well as appearing in the later video for Rather Be (which has had an enormous 88 million views).

Nick told OnTheWight,

“I was approached by the band as they wanted an older skater and together we came up with the idea of using Raeburn’s ‘The Reverend Walker skating on Dudingston Loch’.

“It seemed apt, as I trained in Edinburgh, skated competitively until I was 19 and have always loved the painting of the Scottish minister.”

He went along to Queen’s ice rink in London for an audition and, not surprisingly given his singing and skating talent, he got the job.

The skating singer
Nick went on to explain,

“We flew out to Lake Vattern in Sweden, which is 40 miles long and four miles wide and frozen from December to March. We had a lot of fun filming for two days in perfect conditions for figure skating.

“I had to sing (for the lip-sync) as I was skating which was interesting! I sing with the Tritone Singers on the Island and have always loved singing. It’s a nice change from painting portraits and singing Vaughan Williams!”

The rise of Clean Bandit
The Cambridge-based band have been going from strength to strength. They’ve appeared at all the major summer festivals, and will be returning to the Isle of Wight in September for Bestival after their Isle of Wight Festival success.

Nick tells us that they’ve appeared on ‘Later ‘with Jools Holland’ and were recently on Radio Four’s ‘Front Row’ talking about their success. Their Album came out in June and is enjoying a great success having been in the charts since its release.

We love the video, especially now it has an Isle of Wight connection, and were fascinated to learn of Nick’s other talents.

Look carefully in the video below and you can also see a glimpse of Nick on the number one single ‘Rather Be’ which has had an enormous 88 million+ hits on YouTube

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Richard
23, July 2015 1:55 pm

Typical government. promise you the earth in the run up to an election and as soon as they get in they. They u-turn on it

Wighton
23, July 2015 3:13 pm

Maybe the Tories in West Wight will now question whether it really was a good idea to vote in the Tories, and maybe instead of having something else and a wind turbine…

The Sciolist
23, July 2015 3:36 pm

I expect most will welcome this exciting new low cost energy, I can’t see a downside. Wind is expensive and rarely produces, solar is expensive and ugly.

Rod Manley
Reply to  The Sciolist
23, July 2015 5:12 pm

It isn’t low cost. It would even be cheaper to dig coal out of the ground and make coal gas. Easy technology, tried and tested.Fracking is bonkers.

lisaC
Reply to  The Sciolist
24, July 2015 3:30 pm

It certainly isn’t low cost. it is hugely expensive to produce, and government have admitted it will have no effect on UK energy prices. It is nothing more than a ponzi scheme, for instance Chesapeake have made a loss 22 out of the last 24 years. In the UK Cuadrilla ran at a loss although the bosses were of course still paid millions. Very few will benefit… Read more »

lisaC
Reply to  The Sciolist
24, July 2015 3:53 pm

I’d like to invite anyone with rightful concerns about fracking to join the facebook community page Frack Free Isle of Wight. With the government determined to frack despite the cost to the environment, human health and democracy, we need to do everything we can to educate ourselves and others. it is not only the anti-fracking community that is saying this. The government’s own Environmental Audit Committee concluded… Read more »

Rowan
Reply to  lisaC
24, July 2015 8:25 pm

Agreed. Amd they’re ignoring the cost to the climate.

ewald
Reply to  The Sciolist
25, July 2015 10:44 am

Investors could lose $4.2tn due to impact of climate change…

why not investing in a solar car producing more electric power than it uses?

Cicero
23, July 2015 4:10 pm

Politicians lie! Before elections they tell more lies than usual!

This is yet another example of the lies Tories told to get reelected- more u-turns emerge every week.

Cicero
23, July 2015 4:14 pm

Let’s see if they frack Undercliffe Drive SSSI! :-))

Hermit
23, July 2015 6:20 pm

They wouldn’t be able to if Thwart didn’t prevent the turbines going up, cheers Thwart you short sighted ******

Ali Hayden.
23, July 2015 6:41 pm

Lies, lies + more lies to get elected. The Island should follow Lancashire County Councils example at the end of June + say NO. With funding to local councils being cut to the bone, the government is offering cash incentives to those areas who agree to fracking. I have sent a link to OTW that shows graphically the effects that fracking has to residents , land +… Read more »

Geoff Lumley
23, July 2015 6:42 pm

I bet some of my colleague IW Councillors who didn’t vote for my ‘Anti-fracking on the IW’ Motion to Full Council last April are now kicking themselves, particularly those from AONB and SSSI areas (marked with *): Against (8)- Councillors Paul Bertie, Ray Bloomfield, David Eccles, Richard Hollis, John Howe*, Stuart Hutchinson*, Daryll Pitcher, Ivor Warlow Abstentions (12)- Councillors Jonathan Bacon*, Julia Baker-Smith*, Reg Barry, Rodney Downer*,… Read more »

Wighton
Reply to  Geoff Lumley
23, July 2015 7:10 pm

Yes, Geoff, I am sorry that they did not have the smarts about how politics works that you have. You presented a preventive measure….

Ali Hayden.
Reply to  Geoff Lumley
23, July 2015 9:48 pm

To be fair Geoff, the Councillors who either voted against or abstained at April 8th Full Council didn’t vote that way about fracking on the Island. They voted that way because of the wording of motion that you put forward;The motion put forward by Labour councillor, Geoff Lumley, read, Council agrees to declare the whole of the Isle of Wight to be a Fracking Free area. Whilst… Read more »

Wighton
Reply to  Ali Hayden.
23, July 2015 9:53 pm

And yet Lancashire’s Council passed very similar wording. Maybe the officers et al advised incorrectly; it would not be the first time.

Vix Lowthion
Reply to  Ali Hayden.
23, July 2015 10:09 pm

I was at the meeting too. Councillors were given legal advice by the Council Leader in the chamber. I think that was an overlapping of roles which led to the confusion and abstentions.

Geoff Lumley
Reply to  Ali Hayden.
24, July 2015 9:32 am

Ali. Let that be your consultation then when an application is made in the Arreton valley.

Ali Hayden.
Reply to  Geoff Lumley
24, July 2015 10:11 am

Geoff, that is why our planning laws need changing! The whole planning process is geared in complete favour of all developers. With Appeals available, free of charge to them, many take up the offer. Please see the my post below that the Lancashire decision is also, now going to appeal. Every Council in the country should be working together to come up with a water-tight argument against… Read more »

Wighton
Reply to  Ali Hayden.
24, July 2015 10:26 am

Ali, I’m not arguing with you FYI, as you are right about the unfairness of the law. But the Council had a choice to stand up and say “no” then (like Lancashire) or not. Of course industry was going to appeal! They would appeal the vote from months ago, or appeal each and every individual planning application, costing councils lots of money either way. All of that… Read more »

Ali Hayden.
23, July 2015 10:30 pm

…..or maybe they realised the could not pre-determine a valid future planning application should it be put forward? This news 7 hours ago; The shale gas firm Cuadrilla is to appeal against the decision by Lancashire County Council to refuse permission to drill and frack at two sites in the county. The company wants to extract shale gas at Little Plumpton and Roseacre Wood on the Fylde… Read more »

Tanja Rebel
23, July 2015 11:24 pm

Quadrilla’s decision to appeal is bad news for Lancashire and potentially for this country as a whole. Sadly, our Government is hell-bent on pushing fracking through, whilst at the same time reducing subsidies for solar energy schemes. This tells you which way the wind is blowing… However, lets hope Lancashire Council stands firm! After all, they have shown real courage so far. And lets hope the Isle… Read more »

Steve Goodman
24, July 2015 12:04 am

More on the fracker’s latest, (from FOE) with a petition link to follow. Lancashire Council were under huge pressure from Cuadrilla to accept fracking, but they listened to the people and turned Cuadrilla down. It was a triumph for people power and democracy over corporate interests, and a victory for people everywhere fighting fracking and climate change. But Cuadrilla doesn’t like what Lancashire Council said – now… Read more »

Steve Goodman
Reply to  Steve Goodman
24, July 2015 12:08 am

Link to petition:

Please add your name, and ask David Cameron to stop this historic victory against fracking in Lancashire being overturned.

petition

vectainsulaman
24, July 2015 5:01 pm

Every one wants to keep the lights on and our houses warm.How do the NIMBYS propose to do it. NO to Navitus bay marine wind turbines,no to onshore wind, no to fracking.do you really want to go back to dark ages. Perhaps the wealthy English migrants would like to see the Nucler power station once proposed for Newtown back on the plans see what that does to… Read more »

Cicero
Reply to  vectainsulaman
24, July 2015 5:23 pm

“Imagine high paid high skilled jobs available to island people.”?

And what would they be after the fracking sites have been built and left to operate mainly automatically? Would they compensate for the increase in Island property insurance rates due to higher risk of subsidence in t he already unstable Island geology, removing contamination of water resources and land etc?

Steve Goodman
Reply to  vectainsulaman
24, July 2015 6:11 pm

Imagination is the only place where that is going to happen, because the frackers use their own skilled people for as long as they are needed at each drill site before moving them on to the next. A few locals might just get some temporary security and driving work, because there has to be a lot of heavy lorry movements (however un/suitable the rural roads may be… Read more »

LisaC
Reply to  vectainsulaman
24, July 2015 6:33 pm

How many highly skilled highly paid jobs do you imagine for Island people? According to Cuadrilla’s Lancashire proposals, they would employ a total of 11 people for those sites. It is not a labour intensive process, most of the manual work being done very quickly during the exploratory phase. We do not have vast expanses of bare land requiring new roads and pipelines as in the US.… Read more »

jackie
Reply to  LisaC
24, July 2015 7:57 pm

please don’t use vestas as a good example. They sacked 600 people, still another 400 jobs to go before they even come close to making up that loss

LisaC
Reply to  jackie
24, July 2015 9:48 pm

I hear that Jackie, but all the more reason for our government to fully commit to renewables now and build for the future. Offshore wind receives a lot less opposition than onshore in the UK, so I would like to think Vestas would make up those jobs and more. We can all help a little by switching energy suppliers to those who only produce or source 100%… Read more »

Ali Hayden.
24, July 2015 6:55 pm

Let us not forget the reason why Lancashire Council actually objected to fracking in the first place, we need to go back to 2011. In April, a tremor measuring 2.3 on the Richter scale was felt in the Lancashire seaside resort, followed by an event in May that measured 1.5 on the scale. “It is highly probable that the hydraulic fracturing of Cuadrilla’s Preese Hall-1 well did… Read more »

Wighton
Reply to  Ali Hayden.
24, July 2015 7:03 pm

Exactly! There are many risks, from explosions of the methane to polluted water supply to subsidence…. fracking has consequences. It is not a “renewable” energy but yet another consumable that an energy company wants to make money from. As long as we are in the market for an insatiable appetite for consumables that need to be bought recurrently, the energy companies will do anything to sell you… Read more »

Rowan
24, July 2015 8:36 pm

Our government, chosen by only 25% of voters, want fossil fuels and don’t like renewables. And we probably won’t get a chance to vote for a better-informed, more decent government for another five years. (I’m still hoping for lots of resignations and bye-elections until they lose their tiny majority, but we can’t count on it.) So we will probably be forced to accept fracking. But that doesn’t… Read more »

Rowan
24, July 2015 8:51 pm

They SAY they want to tackle climate change and then they do the opposite!

https://www.gov.uk/government/news/combatting-climate-change-a-vital-safety-net-for-families-and-businesses

Oh, and don’t you just luuuurve the way they categorise us all as belonging to only two possible groups: families or businesses. People can’t just be people. If we don’t live in families and work for businesses then we don’t actually exist as far as our government’s concerned!

Rowan
24, July 2015 8:54 pm

One thing we can still do to stand up for wildlife sites is get in our views to the European Union about their threat to remove or weaken the Birds Directive and Habitats Directive. The consultation closes this weekend. Fracking and the Habitats Directive don’t go together.

http://www.wildlifetrusts.org/news/2015/07/24/don’t-undermine-laws-protect-nature-say-nearly-half-million-europeans

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