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REVIEW: The Science of Instruments: Museum Lab

img-20161001-wa0017BEHIND THE SCENES WITH THE SCIENCE OF INSTRUMENTS

The Museum Lab

BREMF in association with Brighton & Hove Museums

BREMF and Brighton Museum collaborated on this interesting event which allowed us to discover some of Brighton Museums’ collection of historic musical instruments, with a talk by Richard Earle an instrument maker & restorer and  a curator from the collection along with a chance to see some of the collection up close.

e6main2Taking place in the superbly interesting room of the Museum Lab, at the top end of Brighton Museum this was a lovely interesting and very satisfying relaxed lecture/talk about the evolution, construction and development of various of the instruments in the museums extensive collection. Mainly focusing on Oboes, Clarinets and flutes the discussion took us from reed beds in the south of France, via ancient Greek pipes to the shifting of cannon boring technology  to music, the development of the lathe and the characteristics and the density of box wood.  We toured the history of these instruments, and some of their creators with a fantastically curious collection laid out in front of us to observe and understand the intricate incremental changes which lead to the instruments we know so well today.  Richard Earle, a Lewes-based oboe maker and player had endless fascinating throw away facts which would have taken a whole lecture just to tease apart and explore on their own and his charming modest and amusing tone kept the more arcane and technical sides of the talk interesting for a non player. It’s such a pleasure to listen to someone talk about a subject they not only love with a passion but also understand with an encyclopedic breadth. He was charming.

img-20161001-wa0003There was an equally charming curator who had introduced the collection and gave us an insight into both the collectors, and the context of their (our?)  collection and how it came to be part of the rich store of Brighton’s heritage. Further information on this Spencer Collection of Musical Instruments can be found here.

I learned a lot today and enjoyed myself listening to learned folk give me a measured insight into musical heritage. It’s always a pleasure to learn and when it’s in such lovely surroundings – a treat.  After some questions, and more superb precise but sideways rambling (in the best possible way) answers we were given an opportunity to hear Richard Earle play one of the oboes, although only for a very short time this was superbly evocative and then could look over the selected instruments with guidance and assistance from the curator at hand.

Richard Earle is also one of the artistic directors of the delightful ‘The Workshop Series’ in Lewes, these classical music concerts are based at the workshop of harpsichord maker Malcolm Rose and clavichord maker Karin Richter, in Lewes. Celebrating its 25th anniversary, with concerts for the next few months -you can book tickets here.

See the full line up of events in the Museum Lab here*

For more information about the Early music festival or to book tickets see their website here.

bremf2016Saturday October 1st

2-4pm

Brighton Museum Lab

*There is charge for entry to the Museum to non residents of the city, see here for more information.

PREVIEW: Round the Horne: The 50th Anniversary Tour

Apollo Theatre Company bring radio classic to the Barn Theatre, Southwick to celebrate 50th anniversary.

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Celebrating the ground-breaking
radio comedy series of the 1960s, Apollo Theatre Company lovingly recreate the original recordings from the BBC’s Paris Studios to mark fifty years of enduring laughter.

The production toured the country during 2015 and has just finished an eight week run at the Museum of Comedy in London.

With the eponymous Kenneth Horne at the Helm and the stellar supporting cast of Kenneth Williams, Hugh Paddick and Betty Marsden, Round the Horne burst onto the comedy scene in 1965.  With its infamous movie spoofs and hilarious regular characters such as Rambling Sid Rumpo, Charles and Fiona, J. Peasemold Gruntfuttock, and Julian and Sandy, it was one of the biggest radio programmes of its time, regularly garnering audiences of up to 15 million each week.  Known for its risqué double entendres and rude-sounding made-up words, Round the Horne was unlike anything that had gone before it, frequently testing the bounds of acceptability and decency.

The show is perhaps best remembered for the characters of Julian and Sandy and their use of the hitherto little-known camp slang, polari, which enabled the characters to say things that would otherwise have been completely unacceptable at the time.  In doing so Round the Horne broke boundaries by creating two openly homosexual characters, played by two homosexual actors, two years before homosexuality was decriminalised in Great Britain.

Director Tim Astley has compiled the script for this production using only material from the original broadcasts, with the full blessing and support of the original writers’ estates.

Explaining why he wanted to mount this production, Tim said: “As someone who has been a fan of Round the Horne since I was about 12 years old, I thought it was only right that its 50th anniversary be celebrated, and what better way to do that than to be able to transport fans back to the original recordings and recreate the anarchic atmosphere that made the programme such fun to listen to. 

“First and foremost I am a fan, and I am approaching this project with the ethos of being as faithful to the originals as we can.  We are lucky enough to be working with the original scripts and will be recreating them as accurately as possible so that every member of our audience, no matter how much they know about Round the Horne to begin with, leaves feeling that they have been transported back to the Paris Studio in 1965 and experienced first-hand those joyful recordings.”

Still broadcast to this day on BBC Radio 4 Extra, Round the Horne has endured tremendously over its fifty years and is still as funny today as it was then.  Not only will this production thoroughly entertain those who have loved this comedy series from day one, but hopefully also make new enthusiasts of the uninitiated.

You can catch the production locally today and tomorrow (October 4-5) at the Barn Theatre in Southwick at Leatherhead Theatre, Leatherhead on October 7 and at the the Royal Hippodrome, Eastbourne on November 4-5.

To book tickets for the Barn Theatre, Southwick, click here:

To book tickets for the Leatherhead Theatre, Leatherhead, click here:

To book tickets for Royal Hippodrome Theatre, Eastbourne, click here:

For full list of tour dates, click here:

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