Sunday 19 December 2010

Stoneyport: confirmed gigs - January to June 2011 (inc)

ALLAN TAYLOR
Fr 24 Jun 2011 STONEHAVEN Heugh Hotel 01569-76 76 66
Sa 25 Jun 2011 PORTSOY Salmon Bothy 01261-84 25 71
Su 26 Jun 2011 INVERNESS Bogbain Heather Farm 01463-77 20 10
Tu 28 Jun 2011 BALERNO (Edinburgh) Balerno Folk Club - info: 0131 228 6479




ALASDAIR FRASER & NATALIE HAAS
Fr 21 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Saint Andrew's In The Square 0141-548 6020
Sa 22 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Glasgow Royal Concert Hall/workshop 10am to 3pm 0141-353 8000
Sa 22 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Glasgow Royal Concert Hall/Main Hall 0141-353 8000

ALASDAIR FRASER (solo)
Su 23 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Glasgow Royal Concert Hall 0141-353 8000

CHLOE MATHARU
Tu 22 Mar 2011 EDINBURGH The Village 0131-478 7810










DAVID FRANCEY
Su 05 Jun 2011 LONDON Cabbage Patch 0208-991 5461







DAVID VERNON & DICK LEE
Tu 08 Mar 2011 EDINBURGH The Village 0131-478 7810








DICK GAUGHAN
Sa 01 Jan EDINBURGH Resolution Square (an "Edinburgh's Hogmanay" event)
Fr 07 Jan KINROSS Green Hotel 01577-86 34 67
Tu 11 Jan EDINBURGH Leith FC Village pub 0131-478 7810
Fr 14 Jan GLASGOW Celtic Connections Oran Mor 0141-357 6200
Sa 29 Jan LANGHOLM Buccleuch Centre 013873-81 196

--- IRELAND ---
from We 2 to Sa 12 Feb Dick is in Ireland touring and sharing a couple of gigs with Andy Irvine

with ANDY IRVINE
We 2 Feb DUBLIN Whelan's ; Tickets 00353-1-478 0766
Th 3 Feb BELFAST Féile an Earraigh - West Belfast Festival 028 90 314409 (at 7.30pm)

SOLO
Sa 5 Feb GRANGE Barry's Public House 071 917 3111 (at 9pm)
Su 6 Feb DUNDALK The Spirit Store 042 935 2697 (at 8pm)
Wed 9 Feb WESTPORT Matt Molloy's 098 26655 (at 8.30pm)
Thu 10 Feb GALWAY The Crane 091 587419(at 8.30pm)
Fri 11 Feb ROSCREA Leap Castle 0505 21647(at 8.30pm)
Sat 12 Feb INIS OÍRR Arran Islands ÁRAS ÉANNA 099 75150
=================
Sa 26 Feb 2011 WASHINGTON Washington Arts Centre 0191-416 6999
Su 27 Feb 2011 SHEFFIELD Greystones 0114-266 5599
Sa 26 Mar 2011 GLASGOW Centre for Contemporary Arts
Sa 30 Apr 2011 LIVERPOOL Philharmonic Hall 0151-709 3789
Fr 20 May 2011 NEW GALLOWAY CatStrand 01644-42 03 74
Th 09 Jun 2011 FROME Merlin Theatre & Arts Centre 01373-46 59 49
Sa 11 Jun 2011 BRISTOL Southbank Studios 07855-82 62 28
Mo 13 Jun 2011 FARNHAM Farnham Maltings 01252-74 54 44
Th 16 Jun 2011 REDBOURN Hollybush/Redbourne FC 01582-45 29 54
Fr 17 Jun 2011 LONDON DHFC 020 8693 1316
Sa 18 Jun 2011 LICKEY Lickey Parish Hall 0121 445 2342
Tu 21 Jun 2011 NORTHAMPTON Old White Hart 07879-66 05 23
Sa 25 Jun 2011 MILNGAVIE Fraser Centre 07743-88 59 91

JEANA LESLIE & SIOBHAN MILLER
Mo 24 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Glasgow Royal Concert Hall (11am Kids Concert) 0141-353 8000
Mo 24 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Glasgow Royal Concert Hall/ 0141-353 8000






MALINKY
Fr 21 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Glasgow Royal Concert Hall/Strathclyde Suite 0141-353 8000







MICHAEL MARRA
Sa 15 Jan 2011 GLASGOW City Hall Grand Hall/with SSO 0141-353 8000
Tu 18 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Glasgow Royal Concert Hall/Strathclyde Suite 0141-353 8000
Mo 07 Feb 2011 STIRLING Stirling Rugby Club 01259-21 85 21
Su 20 Feb 2011 NEILSTON Crofthead Bowling Club 0141-881 1422
Sa 12 Mar 2011 MILNGAVIE Fraser Centre 07743-88 59 91


MIKE WHELLANS
Su 02 Jan 2011 GALASHIELS Ladhope Inn/afternoon gig 01896-75 24 46
Fr 15 Apr 2011 MALTBY Wesley Centre 01709-58 59 77
Fr 29 Apr 2011 THORNHILL Elmarglen Hotel












The POOZIES
Th 27 Jan 2011 GLASGOW Old Fruitmarket 0141-353 8000
Mo 21 Feb 2011 WICKHAM Wickham Village Hall and Social Club 01329-83 36 25
Th 19 May 2011 LEEK Leek Arts Festival
Fr 20 May 2011 MORECAMBE Platform 01524-58 28 03
Fr 27 May 2011 ORKNEY Orkney Folk Festival





RAB NOAKES
Sa 26 Feb 2011 MILNGAVIE Fraser Centre 07743-88 59 91

Monday 6 December 2010


THE LAST show of our autumn/winter (not 'arf!) season at 28 YORK PLACE, Edinburgh is on Sunday 12 December 2011 and features the fabulous, the outrageous-ish, the harmoniously humungous BEVVY SISTERS - Kaela Rowan, Heather MacLeod, Lindsey Black (see www.myspace.com/thebevvysisters).

But before our trio of leading ladies schmoozes on-stage, opening the show will be Edinburgh-based songwriter SHARON KING with her band, The Reckless (Xmas) Angels (and yes, your memory is dead accurate - Sharon is the very one described as "A national treasure" by Jim Mather MSP, Minister for Enterprise, Energy and Tourism.)

Cheap cocktails (it says 'ere!), mulled wine, and mince pies and (weather permitting?!?!) Bootiful Bevvy Booty at The Bevvy Bootique - a fine line in finery, the very sort of line you just know you have to cross.

Forget the blowy, snowy flurries outside - c'mon down and check out the tanfastic singsters inside!

Doors/bar 7pm and then - let the celebrations commence when - at 7.30pm, Sharon et al take the stage.

Tickets: our usual £10
(only £10? Really? OMG! For two great acts - what a superb value xmas night out)
From Jim Welsh: text Jim on 07717-88 58 55, or email jwwelsh@btinternet.com.
Also available from Coda on The Mound, and of course at the door -
but, don't wait - it's not recommended, 'cos this looks like being a really popular gig.

Sunday 21 November 2010

Lulo Reinhardt Project - Cromarty Old Brewery - Mon 22 Nov 2010

As expected, Lulo Reinhardt Project's gig at The Old Brewery in Cromarty on Mon 22 Nov 2010 has now officially sold-out

Lulo Reinhardt Project - update on first UK tour - Nov 14 to Dec 4 2010


Lulo and the band have had a fantastic response from the first few gigs of their first UK tour which began on Sun 14 Nov at Farnham Maltings in Surrey.

After the Farnham gig venue programmer Chris Maddocks said: "What a fantastic gig last night – 2 standing ovations at the end. Brilliant!"

At Comberton (nr Cambridge; Mon 15 Nov), programmer Richard Brown said: "In two years working here I've never seen anything like it - they got a 5-minute long standing ovation. If the band hadn't eventually left the stage, they'd be there yet!"

At Birmingham's Kitchen Garden venue (Tue 16 Nov and from which a fuller comment is expected), it was just: "Great gig!"

At Edinburgh's Queen's Hall on Fri 19 Nov I was able to see for myself why these earlier comments were unexceptional(!) - not a whole audience on its feet here, but probably about half anyway. I'm waiting quite eagerly to see the review in The Herald tomorrow or Tuesday.

There's been a rejig of the band's visit to Sheffield on Mon 29 Nov where the venue (Boardwalk) is in some limbo while lawyers pour over its transfer to a new owner. In fact we've got two new gigs to replace this one ...

Sun 28 Nov 2010 SHEFFIELD The Greystones S11 7BS 0114-266 5599
Mon 29 Nov 2010 LEEDS The New Roscoe, LS7 1DH 0113-246 0778

Our enormously grateful thanks to these promoters who have taken on these very last minute gigs. Please support them if you're in Sheffield and/or Leeds.

Finally, if you're around the London area, then please do go to the band's last gig of the tour in The Jazz Cafe on Sat 4 Dec and make it a gig to remember. Sales are on the slight side just now and more are needed. You won't regret it, believe me! Just tell everyone you know in the London area to get in touch with the Jazz Cafe box office ASAP!

Here's an updated gig list ...

Su 21 Nov 2010 ABERDEEN Lemon Tree 01224-64 11 22
Mo 22 Nov 2010 CROMARTY Old Brewery 01381-60 02 77
(Don't go expecting to get in on the night - call the venue now! It's a smaller venue and c80% of tickets had been sold about a week go I was told.)

We 24 Nov 2010 LERWICK Lerwick Town Hall
Fr 26 Nov 2010 ST ANDREWS Byre Theatre 01334-47 50 00
(Selling well so don't expect to, "score on the door". Get in touch with the box office ASAP/now to make sure of your tickets!)

NEW GIG
Sun 28 Nov 2010 SHEFFIELD The Greystones S11 7BS 0114-266 5599

NEW GIG
Mon 29 Nov 2010 LEEDS The New Roscoe LS7 1DH 0113-246 0778

Tu 30 Nov 2010 YORK National Centre For Early Music 01904-65 83 38
(Selling well here as well so get along ASAP/now to make sure of your tickets! It's another where you might be disappointed if you leave buying until, "on the night")

We 1 Dec 2010 BURY ST EDMUNDS The Apex 01284-75 80 00
(Selling very well indeed - call the box office ASAP/now to make sure of your tickets!)

Th 2 Dec 2010 LEICESTER The Musician 0116-283 5533
NB: some more sales in Leicester wouldn't go amiss - check it out please!)

Fr 3 Dec 2010 LIVERPOOL Philharmonic Hall 0151-709 3789
(NB: this gig sold out back in August 2010!)

Sa 4 Dec 2010 LONDON The Jazz Cafe 0207-344 0044

Tuesday 5 October 2010

New Monthly Concert Season At 28 York Place, Edinburgh EH1 3EP


28 York Place ticketing info: All tickets for all concerts only £10. Contact Jim Welsh by text messsage on 07717-88 58 55 or email Jim on either jim@stoneyport.com or jwwelsh@btinternet.com to buy tickets.

For all concerts - doors (and bar) from 7:30pm; show-time 8:00pm.



ON SUNDAY 17 OCTOBER 2010 we restart monthly concerts in 28 York Place, Edinburgh EH1 3EP.

This first concert is seriously top value for money (but of course they all are!!) with that remarkable one-man blues band MIKE WHELLANS (http://mikewhellans.com) heading up a three-hander show. Mike Whellans' music is straight down the line, good rockin' 12-bar blues played in his inimitable style on 6/12-string guitars (picked with great precision and at eye-watering speed), mouth-harp (packed with music - it's as if he's filled them up with great music and then he just blows it all out towards you), and a wee tottie drum-kit. And the other things he can do with his mouth? Well, you've just got to see and hear his show-stopping vocal percussion - a real tour de force - just got to be witnessed to be believed (catch his self-penned "Smile on Your Face" and his take on Jack Bruce's & Ginger Baker's "Train Time" - mighty!). Added to this he sings, is a drummer of no slight talent, writes songs, and seems to have boundless energy.

The other acts this first night are David Vernon (accordion) & Dick Lee (reeds). Dave and Dick are virtuosi from quite different musical backgrounds who share an infectious enjoyment of performing great music drawn from a wide range of genres expertly played. Expect to hear a mixture of Jewish wedding dances, South American Tango, folk tunes from the Balkans, French Musette and a whole variety of other surprises. A world-wide musical tour. (see http://www.davidvernonanddicklee.com)

Plus, not only that, but also Paul Johnston, the dynamic front man from Shetland's 'Rock Salt & Nails'. Paul's blurb in the recent AMC @ St Bride's programme said: " ... guaranteed to be Entertaining, Exciting & Enchanting. This night of self-penned songs will have you clapping, crying, and shouting for more. 'A manic mix of contemporary observational song.' (The Mid Yell Daily News) 'Miss this show at your peril, Paul will have you screaming for more, dancing on the tables & having the time of you life.' (The Baltasound Bugle)". Paul's AMC show more or less sold out by the way.

The second concert (more details later) in this autumn series will be on SUNDAY 14 NOVEMBER with SALLY BARKER'S great tribute show, "The Joni Mitchell Project" (see http://web.me.com/sallybarker/Joni_Mitchell_Project/Home.html) which wowed a very busy house in the 250-seat Big Room at AMC @ St Bride's in August.

Finally, just before Christmas - party night! SUNDAY 12 DECEMBER sees those excellent and irrepressible songstresses in harmony, The BEVVY SISTERS (www.myspace.com/thebevvysisters), headline with special guest Sharon King (www.myspace.com/sharonkingandthenevernevercowboys) opening the show.

Malinky UK tour dates for October and December


Malinky are off on an extensive UK tour this month - see below. In November they're in Germany(see http://www.malinky.com/) and they have a handful of UK dates in December.

Fr 08 Oct 2010 HENGOED Last Inn 01691-65 02 93
Fr 15 Oct 2010 LYME REGIS Marine Theatre 01297-44 21 38
Sa 16 Oct 2010 BRIDGWATER Bridgwater Arts Centre 01278-42 27 00
Su 17 Oct 2010 SOUTHAMPTON Bursledon Village Hall 07912-69 50 04
Tu 19 Oct 2010 CANTERBURY Canterbury Environment Centre 01227-45 28 53
Sa 23 Oct 2010 RUNCORN Brindley Arts Centre 0151-907 8360
Su 24 Oct 2010 BRIDLINGTON Spa 01262-67 82 58
Tu 26 Oct 2010 LEIGH ON SEA Ship Hotel 01702-71 51 11
We 27 Oct 2010 YORK National Centre For Early Music 01904-65 83 38
Fr 29 Oct 2010 HEXHAM Queen's Hall Arts Centre 01434-60 67 87
Sa 18 Dec 2010 SOUTH PETHERTON David Hall Arts Centre 01460-42 03 40
Su 19 Dec 2010 CARDIFF Millenium Centre (foyer)
Mo 20 Dec 2010 WICKHAM Village Hall and Social Club 01329-83 36 25
Tu 21 Dec 2010 DARTFORD Dartford Working Mens Club 01322-22 25 53

Poozies English tour dates - October 2010


The Poozies are touring in the south of England this week. Here are the dates (see also of course http://www.poozies.co.uk)

Th 07 Oct 2010 NORWICH Norwich Arts Centre 01603-66 03 52
Fr 08 Oct 2010 NORTH HYKEHAM Terry O'toole Theatre 01522-88 33 11
Sa 09 Oct 2010 FAREHAM Ashcroft Arts Centre 01329-31 06 00
Su 10 Oct 2010 LONDON Green Note 020-7485 9899
Mo 11 Oct 2010 NETTLEBED Nettlebed Village Club 01628-63 66 20

De Danann - October 2010 - UK gigs


De Danann - the newly reformed band - have two gigs in the UK towards the end of October ...

Fr 22 Oct 2010 LONDON London Irish Centre 07871- 08 81 21
Sa 23 Oct 2010 NEWCASTLE ON TYNE Tyneside Irish Centre 0191-222 0398

Lulo Reinhardt Project's first UK tour: November-December 2010


Here's the Lulo Reinhardt Project's current giglist for their first UK tour: November-December 2010 (see also http://www.myspace.com/luloreinhardt)

Su 14 Nov 2010 FARNHAM Farnham Maltings 01252-74 54 44
Mo 15 Nov 2010 COMBERTON Comberton Village College 01223-26 44 44
Tu 16 Nov 2010 BIRMINGHAM Kitchen Garden 0121-443 4725
Fr 19 Nov 2010 EDINBURGH The Queen's Hall 0131-668 2019
Sa 20 Nov 2010 GLASGOW ABC 2 0870-903 3444
Su 21 Nov 2010 ABERDEEN Lemon Tree 01224-64 11 22
Mo 22 Nov 2010 CROMARTY Old Brewery 01381-60 02 77
We 24 Nov 2010 LERWICK Lerwick Town Hall
Fr 26 Nov 2010 ST ANDREWS Byre Theatre 01334-47 50 00
Mo 29 Nov 2010 SHEFFIELD Boardwalk 0114-279 9090
Tu 30 Nov 2010 YORK National Centre For Early Music 01904-65 83 38
We 01 Dec 2010 BURY ST EDMUNDS Apex 01284-75 80 00
Th 02 Dec 2010 LEICESTER The Musician 0116-283 5533
Fr 03 Dec 2010 LIVERPOOL Philharmonic Hall 0151-709 3789
(NB: this gig - Liverpool - sold out back in August 2010!)
Sa 04 Dec 2010 LONDON Jazz Cafe 0207-344 0044

Monday 4 October 2010

Dick Gaughan - UK tour - November/December 2010


Here's Dick Gaughan's current giglist for his imminent Nov-Dec 2010 UK tour (see also Dick's website - http://www.dickgaughan.co.uk/).

Su 24 Oct 2010 GLASGOW Old Fruitmarket 0141-353 8000
Sa 30 Oct 2010 LINLITHGOW Linlithgow Academy 01506-84 46 45

Sa 06 Nov 2010 GLOSSOP Glossop Labour Club 01457-86 52 36
Fr 12 Nov 2010 LONDON Kings Head 0208-341 0716
Mo 15 Nov 2010 COLCHESTER Colchester Arts Centre 01206-50 09 00
Tu 16 Nov 2010 ST NEOTS Priory Centre 01234-37 62 78
Th 18 Nov 2010 WINCHESTER Tower Arts Centre 01962-86 79 86
Fr 19 Nov 2010 FAREHAM Ashcroft Arts Centre 01329-31 06 00
Sa 20 Nov 2010 LONDON Exmouth Arms 020-7281 7700
Su 21 Nov 2010 CAMBRIDGE Golden Hind 01638-60 39 86
Th 25 Nov 2010 TOPSHAM Globe Hotel 01392-87 78 95
Fr 26 Nov 2010 BATH Widcombe Social Club 07881-64 66 33
Su 28 Nov 2010 SOUTH MOLTON George Hotel 01769-57 25 14

Th 02 Dec 2010 BRIDGWATER Bridgwater Arts Centre 01278-42 27 00
Sa 04 Dec 2010 DOLGELLAU Ty Siamas 01341-42 18 00
Su 05 Dec 2010 LLANRHIDIAN Greyhound Inn 01792-85 08 03
Fr 10 Dec 2010 SHEFFIELD Boardwalk 0114-279 9090
Sa 11 Dec 2010 HEBDEN BRIDGE Trades Club 01422-84 52 65

Wednesday 25 August 2010

CHRISTINE HAS NO REGRETS

Christine Bovill has no regrets at turning her back on teaching and moving into showbiz.
And it was fate that changed the Glasgow-born performer’s life when the French-hating student was handed a vinyl recording by Edith Piaf.
The rest his history. Christine became obsessed with all things French. She completed a five-year languages degree, went into teaching and then, this year, launched her full-time showbiz career.
Former pupils are now contacting her for tickets to her show on August 29 at The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s during the Fringe.
Looking back, the performer admitted: “I was an eccentric teenager, nowhere more than in my musical tastes.
“I used to collect records from the 30s and 40s, old jazz, blues, big band.
“It made for a lonely adolescence but it gave me a foundation that would shape my journey as a singer.
"I hated French at school. My teacher hated me as much as I hated him, sitting me in a row-of-four all on my own.
“I was in my fourth year of Ordinary grade French when an old friend of the family handed me a vinyl of a singer called Edith Piaf.
Who? French? No way.
“Ah, but was told that I must listen to the second track on side A, sung in English.
“A song called No Regrets. The voice instantly plugged into my DNA like nothing before or since. Very quickly, I grew obsessed with all things French - simply from listening to this album.
“A fateful moment, which eventually lead me to university where I completed a five year languages degree, lived in France, sang in Paris, and toured with my one-woman homage to the great French star!"
While still studying, Christine got her first professional singing job, a residency in one of Glasgow's most popular jazz venues, The Inn On The Green.
There she spent several years polishing her take on the standards of the American songbook, penning, along the way, a "musicography" of Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald.
It was in The Inn On The Green that she first performed her Piaf show and she said: “Soon after, I found myself singing Piaf in Paris.
“The response was astounding and the novelty of Une Petite Piaf Ecossaise charmed the audience.
“After graduating, still determined to pursue a career in singing, I took a detour and entered the teaching profession.
“I spent the next few years in various Glasgow schools, teaching English and French. While managing to combine both careers for some time, it was only after taking up writing and recording my first solo album this year that I finally took the leap and left teaching altogether.
"I had become so used to the security of the pay check, and I loved the many challenges and rewards of teaching teenagers, but knew that it was now or never. I could not give a music career my all if I were still to commit to the day job.
“My restlessness and frustration pushed me off the ledge, and so, here I am, out there - singing, writing, playing - and loving every moment!!!
“Former pupils are now contacting me online, looking for tickets!?
The response in a short time has been so encouraging that I know I have taken the right path - the only path for me!"

"CHAUCER" JUN ON THE FRINGE

PETE Morton has switched from being a punk rocker into a medieval travelling troubadour.
The Leicestershire-born performer, who has also toured Europe as a busker, brings his self-penned work on Geoffrey Chaucer, sometimes referred to as
the father of English literature, to the Edinburgh Fringe.
Pete, now 46, was born in Leicestershire, first started performing by singing his little sister to sleep when she was three years old.
He progressed to a church choir and then punk with two school bands.
Then he discovered folk songs at 16 when he left school and went solo.
He said: "I became a busker and travelled around Europe until I was 22 then came back to play in folk clubs.
"I then toured around the world, mainly
solo, sometimes with Urban Folk.
"My recent projects have been an album of
songs in different languages and the development of Geoff Chaucer Junior, a medieval bard which I'm bringing to the Fringe.
"I claim to be the son of Geoffrey Chaucer and the inventor of rock n roll."

*For the record: Wikipedia says: "Geoffrey Chaucer was an English author, poet, philosopher, bureaucrat, courtier and diplomat.
"Although he wrote many works, he is best remembered for his unfinished frame narrative The Canterbury Tales.
"Sometimes called the father of English literature, Chaucer is credited by some scholars as the first author to demonstrate the artistic legitimacy of the vernacular Middle English, rather than French or Latin."
Pete, or rather "Geoffrey Chaucer Jnr", appears at The Acoustic Music Festival at St Bride's on August 26, 27 and 28.

Tuesday 24 August 2010

REED GETS US TV EXPOSURE

Preston Reed’s music is currently being heard coast-to-coast in North America.
The compositions of the Scots-based, American-born composer are featured on a documentary series by award-winning Kenneth Burns.
The famed American director and producer is known for his style of making use of archival footage and photographs.
Among his most notable productions are The Civil War (1990), Baseball (1994), Jazz (2001), The War (2007), and The National Parks: America's Best Idea (2009).
Burns' documentaries have been nominated for two Academy Awards (Brooklyn Bridge in 1982 and The Statue of Liberty in 1986) and have won seven Emmy Awards, mostly from The Civil War and Baseball.
Reed appears at The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s on Sunday, August 29 and he has invented a new way of playing.
The 53-year-old New Yorker wrote his first song at eight-years-of-age
and now includes gigs with Bonnie Raitt and Linda Ronstadt on his CV.
He has compiled 15 studio albums and sold-out venues across three continents.
Furthermore, he has hits on YouTube and played a live satellite broadcast that saw an audience of 120 million in 17 countries tune in.

Sunday 22 August 2010

ADRIANA HAS AUDIENCES IN A SPINA

ADRIANA and her band bring their brand of acoustic alti-folk back to the Fringe at the AMC @ St Bride's.
It's the third year that Adriana has appeared at the venue and follows her storming 2009 sell-out run.
Lanarkshire-based Adriana has worldwide ambitions and is making her mark on the Scottish music scene.
The concerts support her 2010 release of her debut album and she has performed with Paolo Nutini, Sheryl Cole and Oscar winning Ryan Bingham.
See her on August 22 at 6.30pm

Saturday 21 August 2010

ALAN HAS NEW HORIZONS

Battlefield Band stalwart Alan Reid appears on The Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August with Rob van Sante – a foretaste for the future.
The duo appear at The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s on August 22 (5pm) and the show is both a look back on Alan’s career as well as a preview of what he’ll be doing.
Alan, based at Torrance, near Glasgow, has been singer/songwriter/keyboard player with the Battlefield Band since 1969 and will be leaving at the end of the year.
He revealed: “I’ve been at the forefront of the evolution not only of the band but of the Scottish folk revival itself in that period.
“Rob is a singer/guitarist born in the Netherlands and resident in Leeds. He has been Battlefield's sound engineer since 1993. This will be our Fringe debut and in 2011 we will be performing full-time as a duo.
“Rob and I have been working together for ten years and have made two albums Under the Blue and The Rise and Fall O' Charlie.”
Alan, who was last year nominated at the Scots Trad Awards in the Composer of the Year category, added: “Because our main work has been with Battlefield Band, our live work has been very sporadic.
“In fact, our most recent gig being at Edinburgh's Ceilidh Culture last Spring but, from 2011, we will be doing lots of tours.”

NURSE HAS CURE FOR FRINGE BLUES

ROBERTO CASSANI is a community nurse in Perthshire but he’s hoping to make a splash at the Edinburgh Fringe.
The Scone-based singer turned his back on a record contract with a major record company in Italy and moved to Scotland ten years ago.
He now divides his life between music and nursing.
Roberto explained: “I’m a community nurse in north rural Perthshire, visiting children and adult patients in their own homes.
“I love nursing and performing equally and I have made the decision of doing them both. In Italy I was a full-time musician. I had a record contract with the major company but I didn't like the record company and their way of making music. It was all about making money.
“That totally stripped me of the joy of playing for a while so I took off to Scotland with my guitar and no English at all.
“I learnt English, met my wife, studied to become a nurse and started writing songs again, this time avoiding the record company route and becoming a travelling minstrel instead. “All I try to do is make people smile, laugh, make them happy, and it is working so far.”
His achievements in the last year include winning Burnsong, a prestigios songwriting competition aiming at finding songwriters who, apparently, would make Burns proud.
He performed at the Scottish Parliament to close the Homecoming Celebrations with a song called Put good knickers on and go into Town which is also the name of his current album and the title of his Fringe show.
Roberto added: “I’ve recorded at the legendary Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee, was invited to perform as an official showcase artist at the prestigious International Folk Alliance in Memphis, Tennessee and played at major UK festivals, including the Wickerman and Belladrum Festival.
“My plans for next year include releasing my new album Roberto Cassani on the Flying Trapeze.
“I'll also tour a new show called The Three Wise Men, with Indie legend Martin Stephenson and comedian Bruce Morton.
“Finally, after the new album is released, I'll take it on the road with more gigs and festival appearances.”

MODEL STUDENT

ST ANDREWS University student and part-time model Chloe Matharu makes her Edinburgh Festival Fringe debut at 19 – and is set for a big future both on and off stage.
The Edinburgh-born singer is studying molecular biology and Italian at university but is booked into The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s from August 23 to 25 (18:30).
Chloe, who has recently recorded her debut album, Next Market Day, which will be released on her own label in October, has cultural roots in Scotland, Wales and India.
She said: “I consider myself lucky to have grown up in a city as diverse as Edinburgh with such a vibrant traditional music scene.
“I can’t remember a time when I was not singing. I sang in choirs and at school. My family would never consider themselves as musical, but someone was always singing around the house.
“My mother has a lovely voice and used to teach us songs a lot as children.
“Although I always loved singing folk songs, my passion for performing traditional music was only truly fired when I began practising an unaccompanied folk ballad when I was preparing for a school exam.
“It was incredibly liberating to be able to share the song with the audience in my own time, without any support from instruments, and watch their reaction as the story unfolded.
“I was completely hooked by the combination of story and music. It’s the element of timelessness that captured my imagination. Each song you learn has its own history.”
Chloe was hugely influenced by the Folk Revival of the 1960’s and ‘70’s. She said: “The atmosphere caught in recordings and videos of these artists, particularly Pentangle, paint a vivid picture for me.
“I was struck with the sweetness and purity. Writing my own songs, I look to song writers from this period for inspiration, such as Shelagh MacDonald, Anne Briggs and Sandy Denny.
“There are also many contemporary Scottish singers that influence me in their performance style. Singers such as Julie Fowlis and the singer from Edinburgh, Katie Targett-Adams. They are just brilliant to watch at their concerts, they grace the stage.”
She added: “Many people are curious as to how I can claim cultural roots in Scotland, Wales and India.
“My mother is from Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire and I spend a lot of time there.
“I view South West Wales as my second home. My father’s family come from the Punjab, Northern India. I consider places and eras in time very important and I love hearing the stories older relatives tell me about their youth.
“Stories played a huge role in my childhood; my grandmother is from Greenock and brought us up on stories of her life there during the War. “The stories that people share with you in obscure moments, perhaps the first and last time they will share that experience with someone, are very precious. It’s these stories that illustrate the lifestyle and living conditions of certain time periods and should be acknowledged with the right spirit and passed on.
“At the moment I am studying Molecular Biology and Italian at the University of St Andrews but singing is my passion and I travel to perform at concerts in between studies.
“I’m enjoying university life. St Andrews is a small town with a fantastic vibe and there are many students from overseas, which I love. It’s great to have so much diversity in one town.
“Being next to the sea is very important for me and I was considering joining the Navy for a while.
“Going swimming in all weathers is a way I keep active. This year I took my first dip in St Andrews in February. I don’t use a wetsuit since I think it’s healthier to get your body to cope with the cold sometimes.
“It’s important to do sport and this year I have been enjoying fencing and yoga at university.
“I plan to take up golf and also to get more involved with Amnesty International, which I was really involved with at school, when I return. “This summer I have started Pilates which I will definitely be continuing in my spare time.
“At the beginning of my summer break I was asked to help promote the fashion range from the Scottish Textile House ANTA and have also been approached by Thistle and Broom who I look forward to modeling for.
I chose to study biology because I am fascinated by plant science and so was considering doing a postgraduate in that or something related to agriculture after I finish at university.
“However there is nothing I love more than singing, which will always take priority. I really enjoy the opportunities that performing brings, traveling and meeting new people.”
Incidentally, her new album was recorded at Castlesound Studios, Pencaitland, and features the playing of Ewan MacPherson on guitar, Lauren MacColl on fiddle and Ailig Hunter on double bass and sitar.

KING HAS TOP FAN

SHARON King and the Reckless Angels now have “Government approval” – and it’s official.
Jim Mather, Scottish Minister for Enterprise, Energy and Tourism, met the band in Glenuig recently while on their recent West Coast tour.
And the MP for Argyll and Bute told them: "You really are a national treasure....you and Chopin are my favourites for listening.”
Sharon King (songwriting, guitar and vocals), Daisy Costello ( cello and backing vocals), Luke Plumb (mandolin) and Jenni Hopwood (backing vocals) appear at the Acoustic Music Centre at St Bride’s on Saturday, August 21 (8pm).
Sharon said: “Jim met us recently and we thank him for the quote.
“He is very keen to promote us abroad as a modern face of the contemporary Scottish music scene and took away a load of postcards and business cards with him to take to America. All very exciting.
“We are in the back room at St Bride’s, which is a lovely, wee intimate venue, seating only 50.
“We would love to see you there and hope, during the busy Festival period, you can take the time to support us.”

Tuesday 17 August 2010

GED ON THE BAWL


SCOTS musician Ged Brockie (pictured) cursed the media’s infatuation with comedy and said: “Give us a chance.”
The Edinburgh-based jazz guitarist is angry at the column inches devoted to celebrities on the Fringe.
And he groaned: “The Fringe is about new talent and new initiatives.”
Brockie headlines Dundee-born Bruce Hebenton-Graham’s Guitar concerto at The Acoustic Music Centre.
The conductor is Hollywood composer Hummie Mann (cor), a two-time Emmy-award winner and who is a guest lecturer at Edinburgh’s Napier University and who wrote the music for Mel Brooks’ movie Robin Hood: Men in Tights.
Brockie, who has performed in Europe and America, said: “The media only seem interested in comedy.
“We’ve got a world premier here.”
Hebenton-Graham, who has worked with household names including Andrew Lloyd Webber, Andy Williams, Sasha Distel, The Three Degrees and Scots-born Lulu, including being musical director during a week-long stint in a now-defunct cabaret club in Bo’ness, has sunk his life savings into the project.
Croydon-based Hebenton-Graham agreed that it was a gamble putting on a show at the Festival and he said: “There are so many shows for people to see. If you don’t do it you are going to say what would have happened if I’d done it.
“I would say that 90-95 per cent of the people that come up to the Festival are going to lose some money.
“However, they are going to get publicity and, when we’re finished here, we’ll have a great DVD and that will sell for years. We can even use it as a TV show.”
Mann, who has also worked with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, said: “It’s a tough game here and every year the Fringe catalogue gets fatter. This year I couldn’t believe it – it’s like a phone book. It’s a challenge to stand out.”
San Diego-based Mann added: “You shouldn’t pre-judge this piece by the title. Get rid of your pre-conceived notions of a concerto.
“Come down and enjoy a really interesting piece of music with a lot of variety - there is something in there for everybody.”

Sunday 15 August 2010

NARROW ESCAPE FOR FRINGE GROUP

A group of musicians en route for Edinburgh Fringe had a narrow escape at the weekend when they were almost run off the road by a herd of runaway cattle.
Pokey LaFarge & The South City Three from St Louis, Missouri, were heading for Nottingham after a week-long run of sell-out dates on the south coast of England.
And just after leaving West Ashling, near Chichester, on a country road, bound for the M25, their tour bus rounded a bend and was seconds away from disaster when the cattle dashed out into its path, forcing their Scottish tour manager, Gerald Roche, to take evasive action and get the truck out of the way of the marauding herd.
The vehicle ended up in the ditch but no one was hurt and band members praised their Scottish roadie for his quick action to avert a serious accident.
“It was quite dark,” said 26-year-old LaFarge, “and we were heading back to our hotel after the gig.
“As we came around a bend, the cows charged over right in front of us from a field and Gerry managed to swerve to miss them.
“After we made sure that everyone was alright, luckily, we were able to push the tour bus out of the ditch as it wasn’t too deep.
“But we had a narrow escape and we were grateful that Gerry was so on the ball there.”
The band were one of the big successes when they made their debut at Glasgow’s Celtic Connections Festival back in January.
They appeared at the Big Chill Festival in Ledbury last week and played a main stage slot at the Summer Sundae Weekender at the De Montford Hall in Leicester on Sunday.
Pokey LaFarge won five-star reviews when he played solo showcases at Edinburgh Fringe last year.
This time he returns with his full band for a three-night run at the Acoustic Music Centre at St Bride’s (Fringe venue 123) that starts on Tuesday, (August 17).
The band’s latest album charted in the USA on its release earlier this year and entered the Euro Americana Chart as well.
Hero of the day, Gerald Roche from Paisley, said: “The cattle were black and white so the headlights immediately picked them out.
“It was a good thing we were travelling at a safe speed on the country road and I was able to avoid them.
“Pokey and the lads are already joking about writing a song to recall the episode.
“There’s no truth in the rumour that it will be to the tune ‘moo-ve over darling’!”

Seedboat launched

Seven gigs to launch "The Seedboat" with Colum Sands and Maggie MacInnes..
a warm welcome to all to come on board!

The Seedboat....new album launch dates August / September gigs 2010

The Seedboat (Bàta an t-Sìl) Colum Sands & Maggie MacInnes

“The Seedboat is a totally captivating experience of tunes, songs, stories and rememberings crafted together seamlessly by two master musicians.. Maggie and Colum are superb performers individually: together they achieve a sweet harmony that transports you gently and effortlessly to another time and place. With such capable hands on the tiller, The Seedboat is a journey for the soul.”

August
Mon 16th , Tues 17th and Wed 18th
The Acoustic Music Centre,
Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
Tickets 0131-226 0000

Thurs 19th
Recital Rooms, City Halls, Glasgow
Tickets 0141-3538000


September
Thurs 2nd 8pm Newry and Mourne Museum
Bagenal's Castle, Castle St., Newry Co. Down BT34 2DA
Tickets : 028 3031 3178 :www.bagenalscastle.com

Fri 3rd Farmleigh House Long Mile Road Dublin 12 8pmwww.farmleigh.ie

Sun 5th The Folk Gallery Newcastle 8pm Tickets 02843722009


“The Seedboat sails from Barra shore, young Donald’s gone to Newry
And though he swears a swift return, til then she’ll miss him dearly..”

These opening lines of translation follow in the wake of a bitter-sweet love song that has inspired two musicians from either end of its voyage to embark on a fascinating new journey of music, song and story.
Mo Ghille Dubh Dhonn (The Brown Haired Lad) is one of the great treasures of the Scottish Gaelic song tradition, recalling love lost and found as The Seedboat sailed from Barra to Newry.
Now, some two centuries after its maiden voyage, the Seedboat sails again as Maggie MacInnes and Colum Sands invite all to find a seat amidst the cargo of Clarsach (harp), guitar and a bi lingual blend of songs old and new that explores the words and the tunes that have divided and joined the people of Ireland and Scotland for centuries.

Saturday 14 August 2010

WEE HOME FROM HOME

A Wee Home From Home was first co-produced by Communicado and Frank McConnell in 1988, and was originally directed by Gerry Mulgrew having been devised by him with Frank McConnell, Michael Marra and Karen Tennent.

The production was remounted in 2009 by plan B with the original creative team. Directed by Gerry Mulgrew, one of Scotland's greatest theatre directors, with music by the acclaimed singer/songwriter Michael Marra and choreography by award-winning Frank McConnell, A Wee Home From Home is a highly charged and compelling dance-theatre piece that explores the dizzying emotions and memories that one man’s homecoming can provoke. Told with affection, and wandering through other familiar territory that would rather be forgotten, the show is a roller coaster ride down an unpredictable memory lane.

Frank McConnell’s inspired and well-observed choreography perfectly partners the caustic and heart breaking observations contained in Michael Marra’s exceptional live music. Powerful, telling and seriously funny, A Wee Home From Home celebrates a vibrant and indomitable spirit in a show that offers a perfect mix of dance, music and theatre at its very best.

****The Times
****The Herald
****The Scotsman

NEW CRUSADE FOR CHRISTINE

A PAISLEY-BASED singer and property Good Samaritan aims to woo audiences at the world’s biggest arts festival.

Christine Sparks, lauded by Scots folk guru Watt Nicoll, is now on a new crusade, launching her International stage career at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

Renfrew-born Christine has been working with distressed home sellers for the last four years.

She and her Portsmouth-born husband John helped them stay in their own homes.

Christine said: “We became experts at preventing repossession, and saved many couples from being thrown out of their houses, often with only hours notice.

“Sometimes only one partner knew about the massive arrears that had been built up and we had to broker relationship saving meetings at the same time as saving their home from being repossessed.”

Initially, they called the company Property Samaritans and she revealed: “We felt that the name most suited our approach and the way we worked with couples in extreme financial trouble.

“However, The Samaritans objected so we changed it to Property Saviours.

“We worked with many couples and eventually created a portfolio of 50 houses and flats.

“Most of our tenants are still the original owners of the properties and they are likely to remain in the properties indefinitely.”

However, the lure of a stage career lingered and John added: “Christine has been singing since she was 16 and has always intended doing music full-time. When the property market changed, we decided to stop buying, manage the portfolio as a family business and concentrate on our music.

“Now my crusade is to enable Christine to sing to as many people as possible in the right kind of environment. A theatre is ideal as people are there to listen.

“Christine is accomplished in several genres. She is a genuine Celtic singer, a genuine jazz singer and a genuine rock and blues singer.

“We’ve tried to separate the genres, having been told that they don’t mix, but time and time again we find ourselves in situations where the variety of what Christine can do is the thing that people love.”

The couple appear at The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s on August 28 and John, a former professional sound man, added: “There are essences of Celtic, jazz and blues music woven throughout the show.

“The Fringe is a big stage for us because of its International reputation.”

NO REGRETS FOR CHRISTINE

Christine Bovill has no regrets at turning her back on teaching and moving into showbiz.
And it was fate that changed the Glasgow-born performer’s life when the French-hating student was handed a vinyl recording by Edith Piaf.
The rest his history. Christine became obsessed with all things French. She completed a five-year languages degree, went into teaching and then, this year, launched her full-time showbiz career.
Former pupils are now contacting her for tickets to her show on August 29 at The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s during the Fringe.
Looking back, the performer admitted: “I was an eccentric teenager, nowhere more than in my musical tastes.
“I used to collect records from the 30s and 40s, old jazz, blues, big band.
“It made for a lonely adolescence but it gave me a foundation that would shape my journey as a singer.
"I hated French at school. My teacher hated me as much as I hated him, sitting me in a row-of-four all on my own.
“I was in my fourth year of Ordinary grade French when an old friend of the family handed me a vinyl of a singer called Edith Piaf.
Who? French? No way.
“Ah, but was told that I must listen to the second track on side A, sung in English.
“A song called No Regrets. The voice instantly plugged into my DNA like nothing before or since. Very quickly, I grew obsessed with all things French - simply from listening to this album.
“A fateful moment, which eventually lead me to university where I completed a five year languages degree, lived in France, sang in Paris, and toured with my one-woman homage to the great French star!"
While still studying, Christine got her first professional singing job, a residency in one of Glasgow's most popular jazz venues, The Inn On The Green.
There she spent several years polishing her take on the standards of the American songbook, penning, along the way, a "musicography" of Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald.
It was in The Inn On The Green that she first performed her Piaf show and she said: “Soon after, I found myself singing Piaf in Paris.
“The response was astounding and the novelty of Une Petite Piaf Ecossaise charmed the audience.
“After graduating, still determined to pursue a career in singing, I took a detour and entered the teaching profession.
“I spent the next few years in various Glasgow schools, teaching English and French. While managing to combine both careers for some time, it was only after taking up writing and recording my first solo album this year that I finally took the leap and left teaching altogether.
"I had become so used to the security of the pay check, and I loved the many challenges and rewards of teaching teenagers, but knew that it was now or never. I could not give a music career my all if I were still to commit to the day job.
“My restlessness and frustration pushed me off the ledge, and so, here I am, out there - singing, writing, playing - and loving every moment!!!
“Former pupils are now contacting me online, looking for tickets!?
The response in a short time has been so encouraging that I know I have taken the right path - the only path for me!"

ROSIE ON FRINGE STAGE

Rosie Nimmo was advised by her supervisor to get more balance into her life so she started singing.
That helped the Edinburgh-based therapist cope with stress while working with young people who suffered sexual abuse.
A voice coach then heard Rosie and told her to take her singing career further. She joined a blues and rock band.
The rest is history. Now, Rosie has her own band which appears at festivals all over Britain.
She also has two albums, the covers of which were self-designed, and Rosie is in demand.
She will provide the entertainment at the launch of the Edinburgh Book Festival for the second year running.
And the popular singer awaits word to see if one of her compositions will be used by VisitScotland in a TV commercial next year.
Multi-talented Rosie, a graduate of Edinburgh College of Art, has shown work at Edinburgh’s world-famous RSA.
And she fits her artistic work around her real job, providing adults with additional support.
All this is a far cry from nine years ago when her stage career began.
Rosie said: “I sang all of the time, even at karaoke events. Friends suggested I did more singing and it was when I met my supervisor that things started to happen.
“I told her that I would love to develop my singing as it brought great joy and she knew a voice coach who told me that I had a voice worth doing something with.
“With her encouragement, I joined a blues and rock band but left a year later to start up my own blues, rock and soul band, Rosy Blue, with a friend from work.”
The friend was Stuart Allardyce and he and Rosie have developed the band which plays every year in the Dundee Blues Bonanza.
They also appeared at last year’s Maryport Blues Festival and are regulars at local venues in and around Scotland’s Capital.
Last weekend, they were involved in Edinburgh International Jazz and Blues Festival.
Rosie said: “In the last few years I’ve started to write my own songs based on personal experience and observations.
“We’ve now produced two albums which have been played on several national BBC radio shows and I’m waiting to hear if a track will be used by VisitScotland in their television advertising next year.”
So, where can you see Rosie at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2010? The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s on August 16.

MODEL CHLOE IN TUNE FOR FRINGE

ST ANDREWS University student and part-time model Chloe Matharu makes her Edinburgh Festival Fringe debut at 19 – and is set for a big future both on and off stage.
The Edinburgh-born singer is studying molecular biology and Italian at university but is booked into The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s from August 23 to 25 (18:30).
Chloe, who has recently recorded her debut album, Next Market Day, which will be released on her own label in October, has cultural roots in Scotland, Wales and India.
She said: “I consider myself lucky to have grown up in a city as diverse as Edinburgh with such a vibrant traditional music scene.
“I can’t remember a time when I was not singing. I sang in choirs and at school. My family would never consider themselves as musical, but someone was always singing around the house.
“My mother has a lovely voice and used to teach us songs a lot as children.
“Although I always loved singing folk songs, my passion for performing traditional music was only truly fired when I began practising an unaccompanied folk ballad when I was preparing for a school exam.
“It was incredibly liberating to be able to share the song with the audience in my own time, without any support from instruments, and watch their reaction as the story unfolded.
“I was completely hooked by the combination of story and music. It’s the element of timelessness that captured my imagination. Each song you learn has its own history.”
Chloe was hugely influenced by the Folk Revival of the 1960’s and ‘70’s. She said: “The atmosphere caught in recordings and videos of these artists, particularly Pentangle, paint a vivid picture for me.
“I was struck with the sweetness and purity. Writing my own songs, I look to song writers from this period for inspiration, such as Shelagh MacDonald, Anne Briggs and Sandy Denny.
“There are also many contemporary Scottish singers that influence me in their performance style. Singers such as Julie Fowlis and the singer from Edinburgh, Katie Targett-Adams. They are just brilliant to watch at their concerts, they grace the stage.”
She added: “Many people are curious as to how I can claim cultural roots in Scotland, Wales and India.
“My mother is from Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire and I spend a lot of time there.
“I view South West Wales as my second home. My father’s family come from the Punjab, Northern India. I consider places and eras in time very important and I love hearing the stories older relatives tell me about their youth.
“Stories played a huge role in my childhood; my grandmother is from Greenock and brought us up on stories of her life there during the War. “The stories that people share with you in obscure moments, perhaps the first and last time they will share that experience with someone, are very precious. It’s these stories that illustrate the lifestyle and living conditions of certain time periods and should be acknowledged with the right spirit and passed on.
“At the moment I am studying Molecular Biology and Italian at the University of St Andrews but singing is my passion and I travel to perform at concerts in between studies.
“I’m enjoying university life. St Andrews is a small town with a fantastic vibe and there are many students from overseas, which I love. It’s great to have so much diversity in one town.
“Being next to the sea is very important for me and I was considering joining the Navy for a while.
“Going swimming in all weathers is a way I keep active. This year I took my first dip in St Andrews in February. I don’t use a wetsuit since I think it’s healthier to get your body to cope with the cold sometimes.
“It’s important to do sport and this year I have been enjoying fencing and yoga at university.
“I plan to take up golf and also to get more involved with Amnesty International, which I was really involved with at school, when I return. “This summer I have started Pilates which I will definitely be continuing in my spare time.
“At the beginning of my summer break I was asked to help promote the fashion range from the Scottish Textile House ANTA and have also been approached by Thistle and Broom who I look forward to modeling for.
I chose to study biology because I am fascinated by plant science and so was considering doing a postgraduate in that or something related to agriculture after I finish at university.
“However there is nothing I love more than singing, which will always take priority. I really enjoy the opportunities that performing brings, traveling and meeting new people.”
Incidentally, her new album was recorded at Castlesound Studios, Pencaitland, and features the playing of Ewan MacPherson on guitar, Lauren MacColl on fiddle and Ailig Hunter on double bass and sitar.

"CHAUCER" COMES TO FRINGE

PETE Morton has switched from being a punk rocker into a medieval travelling troubadour.
The Leicestershire-born performer, who has also toured Europe as a busker, brings his self-penned work on Geoffrey Chaucer, sometimes referred to as the father of English literature, to the Edinburgh Fringe.
Pete, now 46, was born in Leicestershire, first started performing when he was three by singing his little sister to sleep.
He progressed to a church choir and then punk with two school bands.
Then he discovered folk songs at 16 when he left school and went solo.
He said: "I became a busker and travelled around Europe until I was 22 then came back to play in folk clubs.
"I then toured around the world, mainly solo. I then toured around the world, mainly solo.”
Since an earlier appearance in Edinburgh in 1990 when he appeared with Urban Folk (Roger Wilson, Simon Edwards) in a notable Folk Festival concert, songwriter Pete has worked hard at his craft.
He is now rated as one of the best British songwriters of the 21st century with an expressive voice exactly right for his material.
He added: “My recent projects have been an album of songs in different languages and the development of Geoff Chaucer Junior, a medieval bard which I'm bringing to the Fringe.
"I claim to be the son of Geoffrey Chaucer and the inventor of rock n roll."
*For the record: Wikipedia says: "Geoffrey Chaucer was an English author, poet, philosopher, bureaucrat, courtier and diplomat.
"Although he wrote many works, he is best remembered for his unfinished frame narrative The Canterbury Tales.
"Sometimes called the father of English literature, Chaucer is credited by
some scholars as the first author to demonstrate the artistic legitimacy of
the vernacular Middle English, rather than French or Latin."
Pete, or rather "Geoffrey Chaucer Jnr", appears at The Acoustic Music Festival at St Bride's on August 26, 27 and 28.

MINISTER BACKING FOR RECKLESS ANGELS

SHARON King and the Reckless Angels now have Government approval – and it’s official.
Jim Mather, Scottish Minister for Enterprise, Energy and Tourism, met the band in Glenuig recently while on their recent West Coast tour.
And the MP for Argyll and Bute told them: "You really are a national treasure....you and Chopin are my favourites for listening.”
Sharon King (songwriting, guitar and vocals), Daisy Costello ( cello and backing vocals), Luke Plumb (mandolin) and Jenni Hopwood (backing vocals) appear at the Acoustic Music Centre at St Bride’s on Saturday, August 21 (8pm).
Sharon said: “Jim met us recently and we thank him for the quote.
“He is very keen to promote us abroad as a modern face of the contemporary Scottish music scene and took away a load of postcards and business cards with him to take to America. All very exciting.
“We are in the back room at St Bride’s, which is a lovely, wee intimate venue, seating only 50.
“We would love to see you there and hope, during the busy Festival period, you can take the time to support us.”

WORLD PREMIER FOR ST BRIDE'S

SCOTS-BORN BROCKIE FRONTS WORLD GUITAR PREMIERE
HOLLYWOOD glitz comes to the Acoustic Music Centre (AMC) @ St Bride’s from August 16 with Scots guitarist Ged Brockie playing a leading role. He is masterminding and performing the première of Dundee-born Bruce Hebenton-Graham’s Guitar Concerto #1 conducted by two-time Emmy award-winning Hummie Mann.
Edinburgh-based Ged is one of Scotland’s
finest jazz guitarists and has gained an international reputation.
Ged is recognised as a performer, composer and educator and his work has taken him across Europe
and to the west coast of America. The respected musician is a member of the hugely-popular
Scottish Guitar Quartet (SGQ), a fit that complements his own critically acclaimed solo albums and
performances. The SGQ have redefined the music normally associated with acoustic guitar
ensembles and Ged is a principal writer.
His unique and powerful compositional voice has led to the use of his work in many media and
educational works as well as several films. These include a commission for music for Images of the
Scottish Parliament, a seven-minute film for the Scottish Government.
It is his latest project which is set to hit the headlines at The 2010 Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
Ged will perform Guitar Concerto #1. Five performances will take place at the AMC with some of
the finest classical musicians Scotland has to offer as part of a 21-piece chamber orchestra.
Ged said: “The music of Bruce Hebenton-Graham is a glorious meld of diverse musical genres that
the composer has crafted into five movements that will enthral all who hear it.
”The orchestra will be conducted by composer, orchestrator and conductor Hummie Mann.
”As part of the series of concerts, one performance will be given over to a recording, both audio and
visual, which will form the centrepiece of a DVD production.
“The DVD will also include interviews with the composer and his work plus Hummie and various
members of the team.”
Ged added: “The AMC has been chosen to host the event as it is the true home of all things
acoustic, either music or instruments, at The Fringe. ”This is, without doubt, the largest musical
offering to date from the AMC and we believe this could be the first ever world première of a new
guitar concerto at The Fringe.”
*The dates for the concerts are August 16, 17, 19, 22, 23 at 7.15pm. The concerts last for 75
minutes.
Nexus Digital Media is the main sponsor and will film one performance for a planned DVD. The
sponsorship has attracted a New Arts Sponsorship grant - funded by the Scottish Government and
delivered by Arts & Business Scotland. The grants provide match funding for new arts sponsors,
doubling their sponsorship benefits.
Guitar Concerto web site address: http://www.edinburghfringeguitarconcerto.com
Nexus Digital Media web site address: http://www.nexusdigitalmedia.tv/
Arts & Business Scotland web site address: http://www.artsandbusiness.org.uk

TOXIC TRIBUTE TO TOM

SCOTTISH climber, author, broadcaster, photographer and environmentalist Tom Weir is remembered on the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
The Springburn, Glasgow-born personality, was part of the post-war Himalayan expedition, and in 1952, was one of the first to explore the previously closed mountains of Nepal, east of Kathmandu. Mr Weir died aged 95 in 2006.
Lothians-based songwriter Sandy Wright and his Toxic Cowboys perform Sandy’s song about Weir, whose older sister Molly was a well-known Scottish actress, during their set at The Acoustic Music Centre, St Bride’s to August 29 (11:00).
The popular group launch their biggest ever nationwide tour after their extended run at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
The band are drawn from Orkney, Forfar and Edinburgh and will feature songs from their recently-released, acclaimed album, The Songs of Sandy Wright, during their Fringe gig.
An appearance at the city’s Corn Exchange with Eddie Reader and Chris Dreever follows in January before by the 15-city tour of Britain including Liverpool and London.
The band includes: Edinburgh-based Ian Stoddart who appeared in the celebrated film released in 2000 called “Chocolat” playing saucepans for Pirates of the Caribbean star Johnny Depp.
Orkney-born Sarah MacFadyen is the fiddle player with Dave Rattray from Forfar – a content marketing specialist by day – on guitar.
Joel Sanderson from Edinburgh is on bass and cello while multi-instrumentalist Sandy Wright from Gorebridge, Midlothian, completes the band.
Sandy was given his first recording contract when he was 59 and he was nominated in the 2009 Scottish Trad Awards.
Sandy said: “My song about Tom was performed by the band Aberfeldy and he was a huge name in Scotland through his TV show Weir’s Way.
“His sister, Molly, was also a TV personality and Tom was accomplished in so many areas.
“He was an environmentalist and won the John Muir Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of that and it is only fitting that he is remembered on the world stage.”

LINCORNE DEBUT AT FRINGE

LINCORNE AT THE AMC: August 14 and 15 (5pm)

Lincorne make their Fringe Festival debut tonight (SAT) and it is only the second second time the Spanish Group has played in Scotland.
Two years ago, Lincorne played gigs in the Highlands but they now have a two-night stand at The Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride’s.
The group mix the vibrancy of Latin America with the melodies of their Galician roots.
Santiago de Compostela were a trio three years ago, guitar, pipes and flute and a year ago they became a quintet by adding nikelharp and fiddle.
Most members of Lincorne started playing in Galician traditional bagpipe bands and in traditional folk bands like Os Estalotes and A Quenlla. They are all school teachers.
They come from the four provinces of Galiza and they are all native Galician speakers. However, nowadays most of them live in or near Santiago de Compostela where it's easy to find them in the sessions of that city.
Lincorne are:
Gonzalo Goás: guitar and vocals. He comes from Abadin (Lugo). He started playing guitar with the famous folk Galician band A Quenlla and afterwards he has also participated in Xúa and collaborated with other Galician musicians like Davide Salvado (singer) and Carlos Freire (percussionist). He is a music teacher.
Xacobe Varela: Bagpipes and vocals.He comes from Ourense. He has been playing the bagpipes since he was a young boy. He started playing in folk traditional groups where he learned Galician traditional music and songs. For several years he played in Os Estalotes, a very well-known session band in Santiago de Compostela. He is a primary school teacher.
Xan Aparicio: nikelharp. He comes from Verín (Ourense). He also started playing Galician bagpipes and whistle in several bands. Some years ago he decided to learn to play the nikelharp. He is the first Galician musician to interpret Galician music with the nikelharp. He is a primary school teacher.
María García: violin. She comes from Lalin (Pontevedra). She is classically trained and played in the Galician Youth Orchestra. Some years ago she became interested in folk music. She also played in folk-rock bands such as Motor Perkins. She is a music teacher.
Xabier Agra: Flute and vocals. He comes from Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña). He also played in Os Estalotes for some years. He lived in Ireland for two years where he learned Irish music and played with the Glens of Antrim Comhaltas. He is a secondary school teacher.

"CHAUCER" COMES TO TOWN

"A Random History of Rock 'N' Roll in Middle English" by Geoff Chaucer Junior
Written and performed by Pete Morton, accompanied by Chris Parkinson

Venue No.123: The Acoustic Music Centre@ St Brides - 10 Orwell Terrace EH11 2DZ
Dates: 26th - 28th August
Times: 26th - 27th August - 6.00 pm; 28th August - 9.30 pm
After travelling the length and breadth of the English shires for hundreds of years, the "Trewe Kygne of Rocke 'n' Poppe" Geoff Chaucer Junior has finally wound up at the Edinburgh Fringe. Bringing with him his unique musical comedy of song and dance. Come and bear witness to the original versions of some of the most iconic pop and rock songs, delivered by the medieval bard himself. You thought you knew where your greatest hits collection came from? think again, let Geoff Junior give you the real story, you'll never listen in quite the same way again.
'A Piece of brilliance!'-Mardles Magazine
'A great dancer for radio'- BBC Leeds
'Brilliantly bonkers!' Raggalds Music Venue, Queensbury.
Pete Morton has been described ny FRoots Magazine as '..amongst the best the roots scene has produced in living memory', and by The Guardian as ' a revelation..' He has a wealth of great songs and is a dynamic performer respected on the folk and roots circuit throughout the world. Chris Parkinson is a highly acclaimed Accordion, Melodeon and Harmonica player who has worked with countless people on the folk scene and beyond, including Waterson/Carthy, Ralph McTell, and Billy Connolly.

Thursday 27 May 2010

STONEYPORT ASSOCIATES: Touring 2010 and 2011 Update

Here's a busy newsletter about the Stoneyport roster of artistes taking us through into next year while rounding off 2010.

It's a bit of a read but it's packed full of useful information for you, the bookers and press folk, who help make our world go around.

Many of our acts work abroad as well as all over the UK and Ireland and I've noted availabilities accordingly. Some acts may have local agreements with agencies outside the UK.

Promoters remember: promo/demo CD's are almost always available for you - please do ask if you want a copy. Plus there are MP3's on the artistes' pages at www.stoneyport.co.uk

Unless stated otherwise please contact jb@stoneyport.demon.co.uk with enquiries.


ALAN REID and ROB VAN SANTE
www.reidvansante.com
available 2010/2011: generally available for clubs, concerts, festivals around the UK and abroad depending on what Battlefield Band is doing (see www.battlefieldband.co.uk/tourdates.htm)

Alan Reid has been ever-present in Battlefield Band since 1969. The Batties were pre-eminent in the vanguard of 1970's Scots pioneering folk bands with an influence heard in many of today's young ensembles. In a band noted for its composing skills and interpretations of traditional music, Alan's songwriting has been an important component.

Alan formed a duo with singer/guitarist Rob van Sante in 2000. They have released two albums, 'Under the Blue' and 'The Rise and Fall o' Charlie'.


ALASDAIR FRASER and NATALIE
HAAS
available 2011: UK touring dates not set yet for 2011

"The duo’s near-telepathic interplay was dazzling both for its breathtaking technical prowess and its boundless dynamism,be it in tunes from that same golden era, the age of Burns and Gow, or Fraser’s own memorable compositions."
(Sue Wilson, Hi-Arts Journal; Celtic Connections Festival)

ALLAN TAYLOR
www.allantaylor.com
available 2011: UK-wide (ex-Scotland) tour in February and continuing in April.
available 2011: Scotland in September since Allan was here in April 2010.

ALLAN TAYLOR and RAB NOAKES
www.allantaylor.com and www.rabnoakes.com/
available 2011: UK-wide through April-May-June
as a 75 to 90-minute stand-alone show very suitable for festivals


AMOS GARRETT
www.melmusic.com/amos_garrett/index.html
available 2011: UK-wide and Europe May 2011
NB for all information contact: Jim Condie
t: +44(0)141-423 6309, m: +44(0)7813-93 91 91, e: jim@jimcondie.co.uk

"Talk to anyone who does know his work, and they'll almost certainly be in near-awe of his guitar skills. He has recorded with a staggering number of other artists. But Amos is much more than just a supremely talented sideman and his own albums would beautify any decent record collection. The chance to see him play live in this country is a rare treat."
(Manchester Evening News, September 2001)

ANDY M STEWART and GERRY O'BEIRNE
www.andymstewart.com and www.gerryobeirne.com/
available 2011: dates not set yet but Andy is very keen to tour in the UK and abroad in Europe if possible.

Andy and Gerry gave a very successful, sold-out solo concert during Celtic Connections (Jan 2010) in Glasgow's Tron Theatre ...

"IT’S OFFICIAL. Andy M Stewart still has what it takes. On the strength of this virtuoso performance at a packed Tron Theatre, the former Silly Wizard frontman must be regarded as one of Scotland’s finest singer-songwriters in the folk tradition, and a very funny guy to boot ... Gerry O’Beirne, who accompanied him throughout,also provided a masterclass in guitar accompaniment and song arranging with his fingerpicking runs reminiscent of Bert Jansch and his subtle, delicate playing."
(full review at www.hi-arts.co.uk/Default.aspx.LocID-hianewq9t.RefLocID-hiacg5005001.Lang-EN.htm)

See also video link at www.bbc.co.uk/scotland/music/celticconnections/2010/artists/andy_m_stewart/from their Glasgow Royal Concert Hall main stage appearance during Celtic Connections.

JUNE 2010
Sa 5 GLASGOW City Hall Recital Room
Su 6 INVERNESS Bogbain Heather Farm (Northern Roots Festival)

BERT JANSCH
www.bertjansch.com/
available: no dates set yet for UK work although
it's great to see Bert back on the road in the USA with Neil Young in May-June 2010 finally doing the tour which had to be cancelled in 2009.

BELLEVUE RENDEZVOUS
www.myspace.com/bellevuerendezvous
available: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad
NB contact for all information: Ruth Morris, m: +44(0)7796-37 01 46, or
bellevue_rendezvous@yahoo.
co.uk.

"The group’s work is an exploration of folk tradition across the whole of Europe, from Serbia to Scandinavia via the UK.It traverses time barriers as well as geographical boundaries with some of the music dating back to medieval times. Many of the tracks on their new album Salamander are new compositions redolent of these strong influences."
(full review at http://www.hi-arts.co.uk/Default.aspx.LocID-hianewqj8.RefLocID-hiacg5005.Lang-EN.htm)

The BEVVY SISTERS
www.myspace.com/thebevvysisters
available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad
" ... started off at excellent, progressed swiftly to stunning and, fetched up as positively spectacular."
(**** The Scotsman)

NB for all information contact: Heather Macleod
m: +44(0)7746-78 49 09, or heathermacleod@hotmail.co.uk

CHLOE MATHARU
www.myspace.com/chloematharu
"There's a plaintiveness and restraint to Chloe Matharu's singing that owes more to classic traditional singers like Anne Briggs than it does to the poppier inflections of many of her young folk contemporaries. And there's a refreshingly unaffected, intimate and pastoral quality to many of the arrangements on her debut album too."
(Karine Polwart)

Chloe's voice: " ... a mature and gentle tone ... delivers a wonderful variety of songs with confidence and sincerity ... a voice with the purity of a folk classic"
(Bella Hardy)

2010
JUNE
Sa 26 Sedbergh Folk fest
JULY
We 21 Llantrisant FC
(we're after more gigs in S/SW Wales and possibly SW England to add to this July 21 date)
AUGUST
We 11 Edinburgh Wee FC
Sa 14 North Berwick, Fringe By The Sea
Th 19 to Sa 21 Irvine Marymass Festival (residency)
Mo 23 to We 25 Edinburgh Festival Fringe (Acoustic Music Centre @ St Brides/venue 123)
SEPTEMBER
Peebles Arts Festival tbc
OCTOBER
Wed 27 National Centre for Early Music (opening for Malinky)

available: unless as stated above Chloe is generally available for clubs, concerts, festivals in the UK or abroad as follows (inclusive dates) ...

2010
Mo 24 May to Su 26 Sep
Mo 8 to Sa 13 Nov
Sa 18 to We 22 Dec
2011
Sa 22 Jan to Su 6 Feb
Sa 26 Mar to Su 10 Apr
Th 26 May to Su 25 Sep

DAVID VERNO
N (accordion) and DICK LEE (reeds)
www.davidvernonanddicklee.com
available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad

"Dick Lee's
clarinet and David Vernon's accordion combine wonderfully, and their diverse selection of melodic tunes is totally engaging. Kicking off with Jewish klezmer 'hora' wedding dances, moving onto a Carlos Gardel tango, thence to the Balkans via a 'novelty number' called The RouletteWheel, their playing is full of spirit and there are few musicians who can explain so simply what a complex time signatures really means. Stranger on the Shore is a delight, as is their version of Shostakovitch's film music for The Gadfly . . . they make a great double act."
(* * * * Jan Fairley, The Scotsman)

DE DANANN - reformed ... one of the truly great bands!
available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK

Line-up: Alec Finn (bouzouki, guitar), Johnny 'Ringo' McDonagh (bodhran), Eleanor Shanley (vocals). Mick Conneelly (fiddle, bouzouki), Derek Hickey (accordion), Brian McGrath (piano, banjo).

De Danann (named after the legendary Irish tribe, Tuatha Dé Danann) were formed in 1975 in Galway and became one of the most influential bands in traditional Irish music before going their separate ways in 2003. The band released their eponymous debut album, 'De Danann', in 1975 and in total recorded 14 albums including, 'Anthem', 'Star Spangled Molly', and, 'A Jacket of Batteries', achieving chart success with many of the albums reaching gold or platinum status.
[please note: Frankie Gavin, who was one of the original band's founding members, is not in this reformed line-up because he is now touring with his own band.]

DICK GAUGHAN
www.stoneyport.co.uk/artists/docs/gaughan.html or www.dickgaughan.co.uk/
Dick is the only performer to have received both a Lifetime Achievement Award (BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, February 2010), and to be inducted into the Scots Trad Music Hall of Fame (December 2009)

available 2010:
September-October in
Scotland or abroad
November-December UK tour ex-Scotland

available 2011:
January-April in
Scotland and northern England
May-June rest of UK
June-July-August-September abroad
October-December UK
(these 2011 availabilities are 'notional' and can be varied although May-June and Nov-Dec 2011 will almost certainly see Dick touring in the UK)

2010
NOVEMBER
Fr 5 NEWCASTLE/TYNE Irish Centre (tbc)
Sa 6 GLOSSOP Labour Club
Su 7 to Th 11 available
Fr 12 LONDON Kalamazoo Club
Sa 13 or Su 14 available
Mo 15 COLCHESTER Colchester Folk Club
Tu 16 ST NEOTS The Priory Centre
We 17 off
Th 18 WINCHESTER Tower Arts Centre
Fr 19 FAREHAM Ashcroft Arts Centre
Sa 20 LONDON Cellar Upstairs Folk Club
Su 21 to Th 25 available
Fr 26 BATH Folk Club
Sa 27 EXETER venue tbc
Su 28 SOUTH MOLTON George Hotel
Mo 29 off
Tue 30 available
DECEMBER
Mo 1 available
Th 2 BRIDGWATER Arts Centre tbc
Fr 3 off
Sa 4 DOLGELLAU tbc
Su 5 GOWER Halfpenny FC
Mo 6 BRIDGEND venue tbc
Tu 7 to Th 9 available
Fr 10 SHEFFIELD The Boardwalk
Sa 11 HEBDEN BRIDGE Trades Club

FRIBO
www.fribo.co.uk/
available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad
NB for all information contact: Ewan MacPherson
m: +44(0)7766-00 40 26, or ewan@stoneyport.com

"Skilful and deservedly rising Edinburgh-based trio featuring Norwegian singer Anne Sofie Linge Valdal’s light, high-register vocals,fiddler-singer Sarah-Jane Summers and Ewan MacPherson on guitar, mandola and vocals. They bring a new trans-North-Seaperspective and ideas to well-chosen, non-obvious trad songs and tunes, mostly Norwegian with some Scottish and originals."
(Sing Out!)

INTERNATIONAL GUITAR NIGHT
see http://guitaristbriangore.wordpress.com/2009/11/03/international-guitar-night-uk-2010-edition/ for full bios of the three players and tracks as well as links.

available 2010: fourth UK tour Fri 15 Sep to Sun 10 Oct (inc)

available 2011: fifth UK (and hopefully European this time) tour mid-Sep to mid-Oct 2011

NB: almost all the gigs on the 2010 tour below have associated educational visits in primary or secondary schools or in FE colleges

gigs and availability 2010
SEPTEMBER
Fr 17 to Mo 20 available
Tu 21 DUNDEE Marryat Hall
We 22 INVERNESS Eden Court Theatre (OneTouch)
Th 23 available
Fr 24 BRADFORD ON AVON Wiltshire Music Centre
Sa 25 COMBERTON (nr Cambridge) tbc
Su 26 available
Mo 27 FARNHAM Maltings
Tu 28 LEICESTER The Musician
We 29 NEWCASTLE UNDER LYME New Victoria Theatre
Th 30 LIVERPOOL Philharmonic tbc
OCTOBER
Fr 1 to Su 3 available
Mo 4 and Tu 5 GLASGOW (venue tbc)
We 6 ABERDEEN Lemon Tree
Th 7 BRACO (nr Stirling) tbc
Fr 8 MUSSELBURGH Brunton Theatre
Sa 9 and Su 10 available

JEANA LESLIE and SIOBHAN MILLER
http://jeanaleslie-siobhanmiller.co.uk/index.php
available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad

These talented performers combine instrumental versatility with sublime harmonies to create unaffected performances of traditional songs. Since winning the BBC Radio 2 Young Folk Award (2008), life has been a whirlwind. Their debut album, 'In a Bleeze', was critically acclaimedwinning them both 'Up and Coming Artist' at the MG Alba Awards and the Hancock 'Horizon Award for Best Newcomer'. Having touredsuccessfully in the UK and Europe they will release a new album in 2010.

"... the two together, whether in close-knit unison or boldly intertwined harmony, combined to authentically spine-tingling effect."
(Sue Wilson, Scotsman)

Th
e IDEAL BAND
(NEW LINE-UP)
www.kencampbellscotland.co.uk or www.myspace.com/kencampbellscotland

available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad

NB for all information contact: Ken Campbell
m: +44(0)7808-17 34 83, or music@kencampbellscotland.co.uk

"A welcome revival of the Ideal Band, Campbell's distinctive vocals and original songs with a
smattering of trad.arr, distinctive flavours of cello and rich undertone ofPaterson's piano. Warmly welcomed by all who waited so long for a follow up."
( R2 - formerly Rock and Reel magazine)

LAURA CORTESE
www.lauracortese.com/ or www.myspace.com/lauracortese

available 2011: UK tour April-May
NB for all information contact: Jim Welsh
m: +44(0)131-554 2614, or jim@stoneyport.com

"Technically brilliant yet warm-hearted fiddling
sprinkled with urbane splashes of cool jazz and hot pop."
(Boston Globe January)

"Cortese's mix of modern and traditional sty
les creates an explosive sound that favors melody and rhythm over overtly technical performances.The momentum in songs like "Blow the Candle Out" propels the listener to a giddy plane where dancing is mandatory."
(The Denver Post)

LULO REINHARDT PROJECT
www.lulo-reinhardt-project.de/english/index.htm or
www.myspace.com/luloreinhardt

available 2010: UK tour Mon 15 Nov to Sat 4 Dec
available 2011: UK touring dates not set yet but probably in Nov-Dec

" ... the finest concert of acoustic guitar I have ever seen ... "
(Sydney Morning Herald)

NOVEMBER
Su 14 FARNHAM Maltings
Mo 15 to Th 18 available
Fr 19 EDINBURGH The Queen's Hall
Sa 20 available
Su 21 ABERDEEN The Lemon Tree tbc
Mo 22 to Th 25 available
Fr 26 GLASGOW venue tbc
Sa 27 to Mo 29 available
Tu 30 YORK The National Centre For Early Music
DECEMBER
We 1 LIVERPOOL Phil tbc
Th 2 LEICESTER The Musician
Fr 3 BURY ST EDMONDS Apex Arts Centre
Sa 4 LONDON Jazz Cafe

MALINKY
www.malinky.com/

available 2010:
Fri 17 Sep to Sun 31 Oct and Wed 1 to 22 Dec,
UK tour
November touring in Germany

available 2011:
UK touring dates not set yet

"One of the great traditional Scottish bands"
(www.folkworld.de)

" . . revelling in darkly atmospheric tales, sunnier intervals and skilful instrumental arrangements."
(The Herald)

SEPTEMBER

Fri 17 COCKERMOUTH, Kirkgate Centre
Sat 18 WHITCHURCH Leisure Centre
Sun 19 FOREST of DEAN, Forest Folk Club
Mon 20 to Thu 30 available
OCTOBER
Fri 1 ULVERSTON, South Lakes Music Promotions
Sat 2 available
Sun 3 MELLOR BROOK Community Centre
Mon 4 to Thu 7 available
Fri 8 OSWESTRY Offa Events
Sat 9 to Thu 14 available
Fri 15 LYME REGIS Marine Theatre
Sat 16 BRISGWATER AC
Sun 17 SOUTHAMPTON Woolston & Bursledon Folk Club
Mon 18 available
Tue 19 CANTERBURY Festival
Wed 20 to Fri 22 available
Sat 23 RUNCORN Prospect
Sun 24 BRIDLIGNTON Musicport World Music Weekend
Mon 25 available
Tue 26 LEIGH on SEA Hoy at Anchor Folk Club
Wed 27 YORK National Centre for Early Music
Thu 28 available
Fri 29 HEXHAM Queen's Hall Arts Centre
Sat 30 and Sun 31 available
DECEMBER
Wed 1 to Wed 8 available

Thu 9 FAREHAM Ashcroft Arts Centre
Fri 10 THAMES DITTON Ram FC
Sat 11 SPROUGHTON
Sun 12 to Thu 16 available
Fri 17 REETH Hall
Sat 18 SOUTH PETHERTON David Hall Arfts Centre
Sun 19 CARDIFF Millenium Centre
Mon 20 WICKHAM Forest Folk
Tue 21 DARTFORD Folk Club
Wed 22 available

MICHAEL MARRA
www.marra.me.uk/ or www.myspace.com/michaelmarra

available 2010: Mon 6 Sep to Sat 23 Oct and Fri 12 Nov onwards into Dec, UK touring

available 2011: UK touring dates not yet set - the diary is wide open!

"Having seen this under-rated singer perform twice before, three equally spell-binding performances have convinced me that he's Scotland's answer to Bob Dylan".
(Aberdeen Evening Express)

SEPTEMBER
Mon 6 to Thu 30 available
OCTOBER
Fri 1 and Sat 2 DERBY Festival
Sun 3 to Thu 21 available
Sat 23 LOSSIEMOUTH Warehouse Theatre
NOVEMBER
Fri 12 to Tue 16 available
Wed 17 ABERDEEN Lemon Tree
Thu 18 and Fri 19 available
Sat 20 MALTON (N Yorks) The Shed
Sun 21 to Tue 30 available
DECEMBER
Wed 1 to Sun 19 available

MIKE WHELLANS
http://mikewhellans.com or www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsj2gNYs0Dc

available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad

"Mike Whellans is the real thing, a keeper of the one-man blues ban
d flame that burned so passionately in the work of this highlyspecialised form’s masters, including Doctor Isaiah Ross, Jesse Fuller and Whellans’ great British forerunner, Tony ‘Duster’ Bennett.

"Like all true bluesmen and women, when Whellans sings and plays, he means it. He can set a scene of darkness and foreboding
as the Boogie Man lurks, playtwelve-string guitar in the grand driving blues tradition to propel his Winding Track, and sing of hugging his baby’s deserted pillow so that you really feel his loss.

"The one-man blues band is self-sufficient, of course, but as with Bennett, Whellans can call on other musicians to expand his palette and yet retain
thespirit of individuality that is his major strength – even when guests such as David Bromberg have recorded their parts on different continents.

"If you’re already familiar with Whellans, you’ll know to expect blues that’s fired up and ready. But if this is your introduction,
prepareto hear a talent who’s not only his own man as a singer, guitarist and ace blues harpist, he’s his own rhythm section, too."
(Rob Adams)

PIPEDOWN
http://www.pipedown.co.uk/

available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad

"Exciting debut album from Scottish and Irish four-piece acoustic band fronted by Lee Moore's bagpipes and smallpipes. A syncopated backline with attitude and lots of high octane sets of tunes from Bulgaria, Brittany and the British Isles keep the feet tapping all the way."
(fRoots)

"Crisp and clean, tight and confident, the Pipedown sound immediately shows the benefit of its contributors' experience in a set of Scottish and Irish, mostly up-tempo material. An abundance of nimble cross - rhythms and funky syncopation, underpinned by Fivey's pipe-band background, is complemented by Moore's fine melody playing and thoughtful harmonic colourations from the strings."
(**** Sue Wilson, Sunday Herald)

The POOZIES

available 2010: Wed 22 to Sat 25 September, Scotland
available 2010: Tue 5 to Mon 11 October, UK/ex-Scotland

available 2011: Mon 9 to Sat 21 May and Mon 3 to 10 Oct, UK/ex-Scotland
available 2011: Wed 14 to Sun 25 Sep, Scotland

2010
SEPTEMBER (Scotland)
Wed 22 ARISAIG
Thu 23 STRATHPEFFER Pavilion
Fri 24 PORTREE Aros Centre
Sat 25 PEEBLES Eastgate Arts Centre
OCTOBER
Tue 5 and We 6 available
Thu 7 NORWICH Arts Centre
Fri 8 LINCOLN/North Hykeham, Terry o'Toole Theatre
Sat 9 FAREHAM, Ashcroft Arts Centre
Sun 10 available
Mon 11 NETTLEBED Village Club

2011
MAY
Mon 9 to Thu 12 available
Fri 13 ANDOVER Lights tbc
Sat 14 to Thu 19 available
Fri 20 MORECAMBE Platform
Sat 21 available
SEPTEMBER (Scotland)
Wed 14 available
Thu 15 to Sun 18 COLONSAY Festival
Mon 19 to Sun 25 available
OCTOBER
Mon 3 to Sun 9 available
Mon 10 NETTLEBED Village Club

RAB NOAKES
www.go2neon.com/rab-noakes.htm

available 2010: October, UK-wide tour

available 2011:
March and October, UK-wide tour

"Not that you would know it from his lean rock’n’roll physique but Rab Noakes is now in his sixties. His four decades of involvement in music have been marked by two recent releases: a second album with his occasional band The Varaflames, titled Unlimited Mileage, and the release on CD for the first time of his debut album 'Do You See The Lights?' which first saw the light of day in 1970. Showcasing an exemplary taste in interpretations alongside his own songwriting, a Noakes show is a decidedly non-fusty lesson in the history of popular music."
(The Herald)


SHARON KING and THE RECKLESS ANGELS
www.sharonkingmusic.co.uk

available 2010/2011: generally available for clubs, concerts, festivals around the UK and abroad

NB for all information contact Sharon on: (m) +44(
0)7792-68 70 74, or e: sharonking01@btinternet.com

'Midway between Margo Timmins (Cowboy Junkies) and Laurie Anderson - simultaneously cool and deeply involved ... Life, love, dreams and aspirations are all discussed in simple but effective language.' (NetRythms). A spinner of confessional tales, Sharon King creates quirky and inventive songs. A troubadour in the truest sense, she excels as a live performer. Supported by her hypnotic, rock steady acoustic guitar, her endearingly candid, dry humour creates a relaxed intimacy with the crowd. 'Firmly in the territory of the best of Scottish contemporary music that has given us Karine Polwart, et al.' (R2)

JUNE 2010
Fr 4 Jun ARISAIG Astley Hall

JULY 2010
Sa 31 GLENUIG Glenuig Hall

AUGUST 2010
Fr 13 NEWBURGH The Steeple
Sa 21 EDINBURGH Acoustic Music Centre @ St Bride's (Venue 123)


SINSHEEN
available 2010/2011: generally available for gigs in the UK or abroad

" ... an awe-inspiring performance, cut with two warm and engaging stage presences, and a clutch of
emotionally charged songs which spoke to the heart and stirred the soul.”
(Garden Sessions, Edinburgh Festival Fringe)

"Sinsheen were a perfect choice for our international visitors who were treated to the best of Scottish traditional music. The presentation was quintessentially Scottish. They sang a great variety of wonderful songs professionally presented”
(David Valentine Head of Economic Development Angus Council)

"Sinsheen were glorious. Some of my favourite songs were sung ... beautifully. "
(audience, Penicuik Folk Club)


WRIGLEY SISTERS
www.wrigleysisters.com/

available 2011: April, UK-wide tour

There's a new album being recorded which it is hoped will be out by the end of 2010

"… awesome performers."
(fRoots)

"Jennifer - rough-edged bowing, quirky tonal modulations; Hazel - jazzy, mischievous, strongly rhythmic accompaniments ... with such talented teenaged traditionalists on the scene the future looks rosy."
(Scotsman)

"Jennifer's multifaceted fiddling - ranging from coquettish twists to full-blooded expression - as well as her consistentlyhigh-quality tunesmithery.
All of which Hazel matches with judicious guitar or piano accompaniments."
(The Herald)

"These staggeringly gifted twins … are quirkly inventive and daring exponents of an ageless musical tradition …
a one off (or a two-off), and absolutely exhilarating."
(Folk On Tap)