Monday 7 May 2012

Acoustic Rotherham 15 / May Day / Wath Festival / Filey Festival It's a BIGGIE


Well my friends, it’s been yet another extremely busy week for me, wearing my various hats for Rotherham Art Events and The Mashers in our solo and duo modes.

It’s been a super positive week, with new friends being made for both Rotherham Arts and The Mashers.

So to start from the beginning of all the activity. 

Sunday and Acoustic Rotherham 15 at The Queens in Rawmarsh. 

OK let’s be honest it was not one of our greatest successes.  However, it was still a super afternoon of music for those who popped along to listen on what was an awful day of weather.

My particular thanks go to Wychwood who paddled down the A1 to perform for us.  Unfortunately during the week four of the main artists listed were taken down by the dreaded throat infection which seems to be doing the rounds.  Not fun for those affected, especially in such damp conditions and given the temperature in the room we were using a sensible decision to stay away.

The good news was that Roy Blackman, straight from his bed, and also suffering from the throat bug did make it, and produced a typical Roy set of spoken word and song.  I don’t know how he does it, but he drew the audience in to his songs perfectly.  His CD is available HERE We are still planning Roy’s CD launch, and have decided that it will probably take place during Slamfest at the end of July when the weather should be fine and Roy will be at his best. 

Watch out for Roy and his CDs at Holmfirth next weekend.
  

Wychwood gave us a wonderful set of roots / folk music.  This was their second appearance at Acoustic Rotherham; this time with a slightly different line up, Debbie and Richard Roe still leading and joined by and in typical Masher style the brain goes dead and the name is lost.  Worse – this young man gave us a couple of numbers playing solo. 

And then it was down to some great music from the assembled supporters who had braved the weather, Rob Slow and John Statter, the latter’s dancing was a must see, Sue and Barrie Sutherland (The Road Crew) I think that’s what they should call themselves when in duo mode, Kevin Marshall played us a couple of tunes on his squeeze box, livening up the proceedings somewhat although unfortunately no one was moved to square dance; and not forgetting my old mucker, Paul Pearson who kindly popped across with Christine to give us a few songs before heading off to perform at Wyrd Folk 2, Dave Paskell’s new CD launch at the Riverside.

So while not one of our busiest afternoons it was a refreshingly different Acoustic Rotherham.   Of course the event was not helped as I have been so distracted by other matters recently.  However, the next two Acoustic Rotherham events are part of the two Rotherham Art Events Festivals, so hopefully we’ll return to our full glory for 16 and 17.  If you would like to be a part of this then Email acousticrotherham@jmucreate.com

Pictures from Acoustic Rotherham 15 can be found HERE
Tuesday night the Sutherland Road Crew collected me for a fine evening of Folk Music at The Red Lion, Braithwell, Folk Club.  Once again it was full, and it was so good to see Keystone Acoustic  (Pam and Pete) taking the trouble to travel from Featherstone to share a few songs with us, along with Paul and Liz Davenport, Roy Blackman, Ciarán Boyle, and a host of regulars.  Great night Sue – Sue was standing in as MC for the absent John who was playing with his big full scale train set and walking, he claims (more like an extended pub crawl).

Wednesday and a day of study, as we hone in on the right political structure for Rotherham Art Events.  Believe it or not following our Meeting with those who know on Thursday afternoon, we are getting very close to the final decision.   We hope to bring full details towards the end of next week. 

Anyone who would like to contribute towards adding / tightening up the language of the Aims Objectives please do so over the next week using the info@rotherhamartevents.com Email.   Everyone is welcome to contribute for consideration by the core Committee.You can find the aims and objectives as they currently stand HERE

On Friday we had the privilege of finding out more about Myplace from Manager Francesca.  Myplace being that new building close to the St Anne’s Roundabout, which so many wonder about. 

Myplace is a Youth Centre, and part of the YMCA.  It’s activities are open to all young people in Rotherham.  The project is still very much in it’s infancy, yet is developing fast. 

The building has an impressive range of facilities, from a neat 100 seater / 150 + standing theatre area, with lighting rig, meeting and activity rooms and a truly state of the art technology room containing a studio and enough computer terminals to keep anyone happy.   Incidentally, Mick and I were told that the room was underutilised at the moment because of a lack of Volunteers to oversee it’s use with the young people.  So anyone who has something to offer get in touch with the Management and they will put you to work.

Myplace also boasts a very nice Café / Coffee shop with an extensive menu, and the building is fully accessible to the disabled, throughout.

Overall Mick and I were well impressed, and our visit certainly laid most of the negative word of mouth things that we had heard about the building, and it’s use.  Personally I see this a failure by Myplace and perhaps the Council who are one of the Senior Partners to get a positive message about the building and it’s facilities out into the public domain. 

Rotherham Art Events shall certainly be looking for a partnership with Myplace and hope to include work by their clients in our Festivals.  Especially young people Events that can’t be staged in pubs etc.  or for groups of disabled people. Find out more HERE

And then Friday sort of exploded into one of those standout days. 

We eventually, thanks to Mick, established a connection with the Town Centre Team, meeting this coming week, text messaging carried on as a phone Call from Ziggy’s Workhouse Gym confirmed them as our first major Sponsors.  Ziggy’s will be sponsoring the Main Stages at both Slamfest in July and the Busking Day in September.  A fantastic gesture that really gets things moving.  The link to Ziggy's Workhouse Gym can found HERE

Karl (he being Ziggy) has also donated a guitar to the cause, we will be raffling the guitar + of course any other donated prizes, watch out for details of this.

To date we’ve setting this Community Business up with absolutely no working Capital, but now we can see the wood from the trees, and can move forward with a bit of confidence.  There are many hidden costs to setting the Business side and the projects up, so if you’d like to become a full member of Rotherham Art Events then you would be doing us a huge favour.  You can find the benefits and details HERE

And the excited texts continued, as Mick passed on news of a major donation to RAE as particularly amongst the Music Community people line up to give support to overall objectives.  Watch out for news of Fund Raising Concerts heading your way by some of the top bands in Rotherham who are donating their time and talent to raise funds. 

It is fantastic to see Artists being so prepared to help other Artists.

To complete Friday it was add to Stagecoach profits again, and mad dash to Town for ROMP.  Another night of great performance poetry, by my almost flying visit was pass around fliers to draw people’s attention to the Banners High Festival.   A short visit as I had to charge batteries ready for the weekend.

My spies tell me that the second half of the evening was equally as good as the first half I saw, with all the local favourites supplemented by the best of the Region.

I’m told that there was some misunderstanding at the end of the evening, which I hope will not sour ROMPs relationship with The Bridge as it’s such fine supporter of the arts in Rotherham.

And so to the Masher Weekend.

The Rotherham May Day March was the first one in the Town for many years and had taken some organising.  Unfortunately, and sadly I think, the Organisers could not find the £100 needed to pay for the Insurance which would have allowed both a March on the public roads and more importantly as far as I am concerned a PA.

So it was a mix of the new and the old.  The March being restricted to the pedestrianized area of the Town, being the new, and the speeches being delivered by megaphone, the old.   Fortunately the Rotherham Red Choir was on hand to sing a few rousing songs in the freezing conditions, (who would have thought that it would be so cold in May?) but the Masher was reduced to a walking role, as his voice would not have filled All Saints Square. 

The rousing speeches warmed us up, particularly the contributions from Gav Roberts and the PCI Representative at the end.  Gav was in his element, and finished with one of his classic poems.  These should be published.   For more see Gav at The Banners High Festival on the 2nd June.  Information and tickets HERE

Good to see the Labour Party represented by Ken Wyatt who called for unity amongst left to fight the Coalition austerity programme.  A sentiment seconded by the PCI spokesman.   And as many of you already know it’s something that we really need to work on Unity of the left. 

We sing the songs, we say the words but at the bottom line our political prejudices get in the way, and we spend far too much time being suspicious of each Left Group rather than deliver unity.  Personal ego gets in the way of true Unity.  And what do I mean – well it’s clear, one loses a vote or a decision, so toys are thrown out of the pram and yet another Organisation is created, and there are just so many examples of this.   It might be argued that the left is defragmenting itself rather than unifying.

Unfortunately the young, well not so young, cannot remember the days when the Labour Party, and the Young Socialist section in particular had a true socialist programme.   Kinnock and Blair / Mandelson destroyed this by ripping true grass roots democracy out of the Party.  In truth the battle should be to get true democracy and a true socialist programme adopted by the Labour Party.  Do I wish for too much?  One thing is for certain we will not achieve anything by denying the existence of the Labour Party or ignoring it. 

ENOUGH!!!  - Pictures from the May Day March can be found HERE

A quick return to base for a rest and then it was make up on and off to the Wath Folk Festival for the “Silver Roots” Competition. 

Greeted in Wath by the assembled Morris Dancers doing their jigs was a fine way to start the afternoon, however, please, please can someone do something about signing!!!   Without the Morris Dancers it would have been hard to know that what has become a Nationally recognised Festival was going on.  No Welcome sign in the car Park or signing to the main venues. 
So it was a good job that I knew where I was going; The Red Lion. 

The timing of the Silver Roots contest had slipped, we started with a 1:00pm kick off, slipped to 2:00pm and then finally a firm start of 3:00pm was set.  Unfortunate as we had to be finished by 4:15pm.  

So time was really limited. 

In that time we had, eventually, had to fit six acts.  With Keystone Acoustic, Carole Palmer, Heather Woodhead, Gary Hannon, Pete Swift and Stuart Crew all competing for the top prize of £50.

We set off with the plan of allowing artists three songs, and I thought it had worked perfectly, only one of the above had slipped in unnoticed, which rather embarrassingly lead to the final two performers having to be cut down to two songs. 

Personally I think that only giving three songs to a performer hardly allows for nerve settling, let alone giving of one’s best, two songs is highly restrictive, so I hope that next year more time is allowed for the contest.

And wow, we were treated to some absolutely brilliant performances.  Which is why the time allowed was unfair, as the artists had clearly put considerable work into preparing for their spots.   I’ve been privileged to have seen all one of the acts on my travels and I can honestly say that the extra sharpness under the competition conditions really produced some outstanding and above normal levels of performance.  Which obviously is what such events are all about.

The lack of time meant that the Judges, The Masher (that’s me) and Roy Blackman could not give our comments about the individual performances given and our reasoning behind the eventual decisions concerning places.

Roy is a past Master of the Judging game, sending me messages throughout in his secret shorthand code, while for me this was a first serious judging job, and how difficult it is, especially faced with such different genres of Folk Music being placed against each other and with such polished performances. 

So here is Roy’s and I thinking when creating our top four. 

First a big thank you to Pete Swift and Stuart Crew for entering the Competition.  For those who don’t know, both are stalwarts of the local music scene and have worked tirelessly for the good of Folk.  Both performances show the strength we have locally in our song writing and music. 

Gary Hannon was placed 4th.  OK we don’t usually go that far down the list, but both Roy and I felt that his self-written songs and the polished performance needed special mention.  This was a performance far and above anything either of us had seen from Gary in the past, and the songs struck a note with the audience. 

And of course it was very kind of him to give graciously by only playing two songs, so as to allow us to fit in an additional competitor.

I think we should at this point make it absolutely clear that between the top three performers there was very, very little.  All produced outstanding performances that would have graced the main stage of any Festival in Country.

In third place.  Representing the Black Country came Carole Palmer.  A beautiful singer and song writer of contemporary songs, not without their touch of humour and irony

This was a polished performance, stepping the Competition up a peg or two.  Not only were the songs perfectly performed but Carole’s engagement with the audience was first class, a sign of a seasoned Club singer who could hold their own as the main guest.

We’re so glad to have heard that following the session that she received so many enquires about CDs and congratulations for the performance from audience members.

We hope that we’ll see more of Carole in the area, and an invitation to appear at an Acoustic Rotherham event this year has already been issued.  It will be great to hear a full set from Carole.   Keep your eyes peeled for news of when she will be appearing.

The runners up spot went to Keystone Acoustic.  Once again, and I know it sounds repetitive, but yet again a wonderful polished performance including songs adapted from the work of local poets, but also self-written material.  As a duo it’s slightly easier to be entertaining – ask one who knows – for while one might be tinkling away on the guitar the other can make introductions crack jokes, and in the case of Pete and Pam even pass around visual aids.

We know that Keystone Acoustic will go from strength to strength; they have already made a major impact on the local Folk and Acoustic music scene and will be so in the future.

For reasons unknown to me, the announcement that the Rawmarsh Masher had cleaned up first place and the £50 first prize was met by dumbfounded silence by the audience.   But……….

And so to the Winner.  We awarded first place to Heather Woodhead several different reasons.  First and probably the most important being that the performance of her three traditional folk songs was flawless.  And the songs Heather chose were not easy.  Throughout the performance you could have heard a pin drop, recognition of the spell her voice cast over the audience.

A personal input from me was that I have seen Heather grow as a performer from a nervous emerging talent at one of the very first Acoustic Rotherham’s, to this current outstanding level of performance.

Both Roy and I hope that this victory will really help to bring Heather to the front of Club Organisers minds as on the evidence of what we heard and saw on Saturday there are few who can perform traditional songs so well.  We also hope that it will also give a boost of personal confidence to Heather.

Finally, with so many contemporary songs, even if some were well based within the tradition, we thought, given that there was so little to choose between the top three performers we should give the top prize to someone who held up the best Folk traditions at a Folk Festival.

So congratulations to Heather.  To those placed below, well parallel, we say, we had to declare a winner, but all three of you were winners in our minds on the day.

To finish the Wath Festival section it was so good to see so many friends about this year, and to see two of my favourite young lady performers Holly Tamar and Catherine Bindon performing at the Emerging Talent Concert.  Rock on stars of Acoustic Rotherham, it’s great to say, we recognised the talent and had them perform before other caught on. 

And that in itself marks an improvement in the Festival programming with more recognition going to local talent needing a bigger stage.  Perhaps though, room might be found for this emerging talent on the under Bill to some of the big names in the Montgomery Hall for the evening concerts instead of a Saturday Tea time in a not too big room, I’m sure that the exposure would be of great benefit to the talent.   Just a thought.

Photographs from The Silver Roots Competition can be found HERE

Throughout Saturday my designated roadie had been the much suffering son number one Jack, and it was great to have a Saturday evening catching up and relaxing with a not too brilliant Cup Final and a couple of old rubbish franchise films.
 
So it was up early on Sunday for our trip to the Filey Folk Festival.  The life of a rock and roll Folk singer is never dull. 

Filey is one of the growing number of grass roots based Folk Festivals that feature much of the top Regional talent in the genre and who do it for now’t.   This what makes the acoustic music community so special, indeed as Rock boys have shown in Rotherham as well, the ability for musicians to come together and create something great. 

There was a chill northern wind blowing as we reached Filey, so paddling and sun bathing was cut to a minimum, in favour of seats inside the Belle Vue pub.  I think cosy best describes the room used for the music. 

But we had a great afternoons entertainment kicked off by Paula Ryan who seemed have the complete menagerie of instruments, every time I looked up she seemed to be playing something different, and what a voice, just suited for her repertoire of Irish tunes and songs.  

Steve Chapman-Smith then produced a set of his rockin’ roots music.  Steve has left the Trubadors to go solo, which in away is a great pity.  On the evidence of this afternoons performance Steve really does need the foil of the treble offered by the mandolin and banjo to his heavy guitar and gravel voice.   It’s a personal view. 

Banging it out with a bass drum came Dave Kelly and his band, with some interesting arrangements of classic skiffle songs.  Great to see such enthusiasm as he marched through songs ranging from the Wild Rover to Lonnie Donigan.  Dave certainly livened up that deadly post lunch, pre time to hit the pints period.

And then Joe Solo who has built a reputation for himself in the North of the County singing his self-penned songs accompanied by a ukulele.  His songs have a contemporary pop song  feeling to them, and left me wondering if they might not have been given better justice if played on a guitar or better by a Band.  Personal choice.  However, his final song provided the reason for why he hads built a reputation for himself as performer as between choruses he launched into a tirade of jokes and comments that made the final chorus the Mashers Bloody Rotten Audience seem short……….   I think the song ran for around fifteen minutes.    And very funny for all that.

The position of the stage was then turned around to facilitate one of the Bands going on later in the evening.  And naturally it was The Mashers who were to be the test dummies for the new position. 

Now throughout the afternoon I had begun to think that John Masher was not going to make it, however, as I was taking the air, having a fag to you, into view came John loaded down to by his instruments.  Phew, The Mashers would have their full sound. 

I’m not sure that the new stage positioning worked that well, as the sound played directly into a corner, and as it was tucked around a corner only those in the twenty pound seats occupied earlier by The Masher crew could actually see us.  OK a blessing for some, but for those wanting to see Dickie’s master class in how to find multiple variations of the basic C chord not so good.

Those who could see us or those we could see appeared to enjoy our forty minutes of frivolity, and political rant.  Of course we can’t go far without finding someone who has day tripped from the Socialist Republic, and so it was in Filey as a lady from Anton, was to be seen joining in with our songs of Revolution and agitation.

We really enjoyed ourselves as usual and finished John was whisked away again by his support crew before he was arrested.

Son number one and I stayed for one more act, Chris Martin, I’m so glad we did.  A master class in slide blues, framed in an entertaining set full of great jokes, which I’ve immediately written down.  I certainly hope I’ll be able to tempt Chris down the A1 to Rotherham to share his music with us.  Top stuff, and a pity that we had to slip away before he had finished, or see the final two acts of the night, Three Sheets T Wind (who had organised the stage) and Blackstone Edge to finish off.

Crawling into house at 10:15pm all I could say was phewwwwwwwwwwww…………….   Before finding the duvet.  

You can find pictures of the big day out in Filey HERE

It’s another busy week ahead.  For me Meetings and my long anticipated visit to the neurologist are on the Diary. 

However, my heads up are – The Myke Barritt Music Trust has an important EGM on Wednesday night, where the future of the Trust will be discussed.  Anyone interested is invited especially if you’ve supported Trust events in the last couple of years. 

You can find all the documents you need for the EGM HERE

And for you hardy folkies at the weekend it’s the Holmfirth Festival, which is a super grassroots event for singers and players if you can get into the pubs.

All the week’s events including Florin Gigs and Spoken the spoken word HERE

That finishes this mammoth edition of the News Blog. 

Whatever you are doing this week, have great fun, support your local artists and KEEP IT LIVE

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