Music is given a different slant by artist Phil Mouldycliff, creator of Tide Frames, a series of mixed-media works serving as a visual score, with a merging of dance steps and manuscripts.
Mouldycliff says: "I do not feel the desire to produce work - which in itself is a public statement - when the effect I hope that it has on the individual is essentially a private experience."
There was one glass case which hit me on a personal level. Paul Mason's collection of dust and rubble could raise a few eyebrows. Yet the debris in question was tiny remnants of Morecambe's Midland Hotel. A once-glorious, art deco landmark on the Lancashire coast, it has lain derelict for the past few years but is now in line for a £7.1 million renaissance.
I was the resident singer there many, many summer seasons ago. I was stunned to rediscover the turquoise and white colours which used to adorn the outside, along with its iconic seahorses, now just slivers of plaster, sitting on a tray, accompanied by an old postcard of the resort.
Stranger still, there was also an old Morecambe map focusing on the very street where the local newspaper - scene of my first job - was and still is situated.
Happy memories.
And that is what Debris Field is all about.