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MUSIC REVIEW: Peter and the Wolf: Chamberhouse Winds

peter and the wolfsmallPeter and the Wolf

November 1, 2014

Brighton Dome Studio, New Road, Brighton

Chamberhouse Winds are a fun local group of professional orchestral players with a nice line in millinery who also know how to engage and hold the attention of young children for an hour or so and provide an entertaining and unusual performance for their parents too.  This ability to hold the attention of children is an astonishing skill and allowed the children to experience a professional classical concert, albeit a brief one, for the first time.  This was Prokovief‘s intention when he wrote Peter and The Wolf for the Central Children’s Theatre in Moscow in the 1930’s.

We went along with Little Miss Tilly, who is three and not always happy to sit still for more than a few minutes but enjoys dancing around to light classics on Radio 3 and here she was transfixed from the opening moment, both with the instruments which are skilfully introduced with informative humour to the children, and also by the eccentric performers themselves, and -of course- their great hats.  The recommend minimum age was five but there were some younger children there  and they seemed ok with the set up.  The hats, like the instruments represent different animals and this allowed the children to make the connection repeatedly between the musical motives and the story.

Wolf 2 medium

Narrator Jonathan Butcher introduced us to Prokofiev’s classic composition and the wind family of instruments and was charming and interesting, giving the children time to grasp the ideas he was presenting and getting them involved in all the right places, keeping their attention and enthusiasm focused throughout.  There were some cool illustrations being projected on the backdrop to further illustrate the story too, which elicited many ‘boos’ from the audience whenever the Wolf appeared.

There was an opportunity for children to chat with the musicians afterwards which was mobbed and they also allowed the children to have a go on the instruments which I thought was very impressive, almost as popular as the ice cream lady who could have done with a slot of her own too.

Great fun and an accomplished musical performance too.

For more information about the Chamberhouse Wind Group, click here:

 

 

Pay your child maintenance or damage your credit rating

Government to toughen powers against irresponsible parents who fail to pay the child maintenance they owe.

Child Maintenance Minister: Steve Webb MP
Child Maintenance Minister: Steve Webb MP

Separated parents who fail to contribute financially to the upbringing of their children, face ruining their own credit rating – under a tough new power to be brought in from next year.

From March 2015 (subject to Parliamentary approval), the Child Maintenance Service and Child Support Agency will begin sharing certain information about the payment records of their clients with credit reference agencies.

This means that arrears built up in maintenance payments will have the same effect on people’s credit score as other debts. Having a poor credit rating can cause people to be refused loans, mortgages, credit cards, hire purchase finance arrangements, mobile phone contracts and other forms of financial credit.

Principally, information will be shared about an individual when a liability order is made against them – a measure used as a last resort after other efforts to encourage payment have been exhausted. In the year April 2013 to March 2014, 12,410 liability orders were granted.

But it is also expected that the introduction of the new measure will have a deterrent effect on those who may otherwise choose to evade maintenance payments, so getting more money flowing to the children and families who need it.

Non-resident parents who have a good maintenance payment record will also be able to request that information about them is shared if they feel it may help improve their credit rating.

Child Maintenance Minister, Steve Webb MP, said: “For too long, a minority of absent parents have got away with failing to pay maintenance, leaving families without that financial support. This Government is determined to take action to tackle this kind of irresponsible behaviour and support families.

“I would hope that we see this power used very little, because the deterrent effect of a possible negative mark on a person’s credit rating will convince those who have previously failed to pay towards their children’s upbringing to do the right thing.

“Coming on the back of the launch of the Family Test, which has put the interests of family relationships at the heart of the policy making process, this is another example of how this Government is supporting families and building a fairer society.”

While the majority of non-resident parents do contribute towards the maintenance they owe – with compliance amongst CSA clients reaching a high of 86.2 per cent in June this year – this new measure is aimed at targeting the minority who fail to pay.

It is just the latest in a catalogue of radical reforms the Coalition Government has made to Britain’s child maintenance system.

Aimed at delivering fairness for families, children and taxpayers, the changes are seeing the old Child Support Agency wound down and its replacement, the Child Maintenance Service, taking a new approach.

Parents are encouraged and incentivised to co-operate in the best interests of their own children, while a vastly improved, efficient statutory service remains in place for separated families who choose to continue to rely on the state.

New support has been introduced giving families a better chance to take state bureaucracy out of their family arrangements – including the Child Maintenance Options helpline and website, and local projects around the country helping separated parents to continue to work together.

In addition, an online banking-style self-service facility has been launched allowing parents to manage their maintenance arrangements and keep track of payments. And new enforcement charges have been introduced to recoup the costs of pursuing those who continually don’t pay what they owe.

For more information about all the reforms to the child maintenance system, click here:

 

PREVIEW: Michael Ball at Brighton Centre

Ahead of the release of his 19th solo album If Everyone Was Listening on Monday, November 17 Michael Ball has announced he will play the Brighton Centre in April 2015.

Michael Ball
Michael Ball

MICHAEL IS Britain’s leading musical theatre star, a double Olivier Award winner, multi-platinum recording artist and a hugely popular radio and TV presenter. November 2014 sees the release of his latest album If Everyone Was Listening, featuring 15 tracks chosen by Michael to include a mix of individual classics, award winners and contemporary songs spanning the years 1960 to 2013.

For more than 25 years he has been at the top of his game starring in musical theatre productions in the West End and on Broadway winning critical acclaim, a devoted following and awards for his stage work and recording career.

In 2008 Michael made box office history at the Shaftesbury Theatre with his Olivier Award winning performance as Edna Turnblad in the smash hit musical Hairspray which he then took on tour across the UK throughout 2010.

Having sold millions of albums and DVDs nationally and internationally, he’s also performed in Australia, China, USA, Singapore and in 2007 made his BBC Proms debut: An Evening with Michael Ball at the Royal Albert Hall, which marked the first time a musical theatre star had been given a solo concert at the Proms.

April 2015

Tuesday 7            Bournemouth BIC
Wednesday 8     Oxford               New Theatre
Thursday 9         Ipswich             Regent Theatre
Saturday 11         London              Eventim Apollo
Sunday 12           Birmingham   Symphony Hall
Tuesday 14         Brighton            Brighton Centre
Thursday 16       Nottingham     Royal Concert Hall
Saturday 18        Manchester     Bridgewater Hall
Sunday 19           Liverpool          Auditorium
Tuesday 21         Blackpool         Opera House
Thursday 23       York                   Barbican
Friday 24            Newcastle        City Hall
Saturday 25        Glasgow            Clyde Auditorium
Monday 27         Sheffield           City Hall
Tuesday 28         Bristol               Colston Hall
Wednesday 29   Cardiff              St David’s Hall

May 2015
Friday 1                Plymouth           Pavilions
Saturday 2           Portsmouth      Guildhall
Sunday 3              Southampton  Mayflower Theatre

Tickets are on sale priced £45 in London and Birmingham and £40 in all other regions (subject to per-ticket charge plus order processing fee)

To book online at Live Nation, click here: 

Or for Ticket Master, click here:

 

 

PREVIEW: Sorry I’m A Lady

Fresh from the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Holestar cult queer icon and “London’s favorite Tranny with a Fanny” (Time Out) presents her one wo-man show, Sorry I’m A Lady for one night only as part of the Mimetic Festival at The Vaults.

Sorry I'm a Lady

PART THEATRE, part cabaret, Holestar exposes her unconventional showgirl biography through storytelling, belting vocals, original music, humour and occasional lap dance.

Hear how a former solider in the British Army, brothel receptionist, artist, dominatrix, MC and pop star became the UK’s première female drag queen.


 

Event: Holestar presents Sorry I’m A Lady at Mimetic Festival

Where: Cabaret Bar at The Vaults, Leake Street, London, SE1 7NN

When: Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Time: 8.30pm

Tickets: £10 (£8 concs)

To book online, click here:

Box Office: 0207 620 3364

 

New report identifies lack of commissioning coordination in children’s mental health services

The Parliamentary Health Select Committee has launched a report following its inquiry into children’s & adolescents’ mental health and CAMHS.

Dr Greg Ussher
Dr Greg Ussher

Welcoming the report Dr Greg Ussher, METRO Chief Executive said: “We welcome the Health Select Committee’s report into children’s and young people’s mental health services and CAMHS, highlighting increasing need and demand for services and diminishing resources and lack of coordination in commissioning. The Committee’s report exposes a crisis to which urgent and critical action is required.

“Our evidence to the Committee highlighted the needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning (LGBTQ) young people drawn from our Youth Chances research and our on the ground experience working with young people. We are pleased to see that the report acknowledges both the higher rates of mental health problems for LGBTQ young people and their specific needs and we urge the recently established Children and Young People’s Mental Health Taskforce to consider the evidence and respond urgently to their needs in its review.”

“We concur with the Committee on the lack of reliable and current data on children and young people’s mental health. This must be addressed with a national dataset that includes sexual orientation and gender identity.  We are horrified  at the high levels of mental health problems reported to us through our Youth Chances research with over half of LGBTQ young people reporting mental health issues and nearly half having considered suicide.

“On top of the general bias against mental health in the overall health budget, only 6% of mental health spend goes to children and young people; yet we know that early intervention is both critical and effective.  Young people need to be able to access services quickly when they need them, without high thresholds and long waiting times during which their problems often escalate.

“We welcome the Committee’s acknowledgement of the significant role of charities and the voluntary sector in providing these early intervention services and supporting children and young people and their families through the system.”

To read the report, click here:

For more information about the work of METRO, click here:

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