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REVIEW: KAYA @Brighton Festival

Ceyda Tanc Dance
KAYA at Brighton Festival

Ceyda Tanc is a Brighton-based choreographer creating dynamic dance influenced by her Turkish heritage, highlighting the intersection of modern Britain’s diverse cultures.

With a unique movement vocabulary fusing traditional Turkish folk dance with contemporary styles, Ceyda’s work utilizes the virtuoso movements of male Turkish dancers conveying striking shapes and an emotive and sensual energy.

The all female dance group challenged gender stereo styles with their use of bold masculine moves that only men use in Turkey and although the movements fluidly showed grace and power there seemed little narrative to them.

The piece was inspired by stories of refuges and migrants, but I found the lack of diversity in the dancers themselves a distraction. Almost as if it were some kind of meta comment. The lights, shade, costume and make up all blended into a soft neutrality which erased the dancers as individuals until once or twice they were boldly lit and thrust up into the light, before fading.

There was certainly a restless energy to the movements, a feeling of relentless moving on and some magical moments of dynamic repetitive sensual direction that transfixed us but it failed to gain traction in any real urgent sense.

This was a story of easy migration, or perhaps a story of migration told and retold so many times that it had become a softened legend, losing it’s hard edges and human pain. Like hearing your grandmother tell of her grandmothers journey here from a country no longer on the maps, distant and remote.

Kaya was engaging and interesting but I left feeling disconnected with the heart of this peace, although the audience showed their appreciation of the performance.

For full details of the event, click here:

REVIEW: Magnard Ensemble @Brighton Festival

Magnard Ensemble

Monday May 14 at St Nicholas Church, Brighton Festival

Suzannah Watson Flute
Mana Shibata Oboe
Joseph Shiner Clarinet
Jonathan Farey French Horn
Catriona McDermid Bassoon

This superbly balanced ensemble had the most delightful programme of short and engaging pieces for this lunchtime concert in the wonderfully antique St Nicolas Church, high on the hill in the warm spring sunshine.

As we walked through the meadows of the churchyard with the sun playing gently with the new leaves and flowers we felt we were in for a treat. The ensemble offered a varied programme of music spanning 300 years and as soon as they opened this performance with a sprightly, tightly honed rendition of Ligeti’s Six Bagatelles we were confirmed in our opinion.

This young but technically brilliant ensemble bounced through this strident playful piece giving it just the right amount of depth when required before introducing some shade into the emotional texture and finishing neat and pithy.

The programme was a curious mix of arrangements from BachPrelude and Fugue in B Flat Minor and Mozart’s Adagio in B Flat Major mixed in with Hindemith’s Kleine Kammermusik Op 24, No 2 which was an exercise in perfection, and moved from rhythmic sections to gentle slower movement before ending in a fierce crescendo.

The hour-long performance was rounded off by Paul Patterson’s Westerly Winds, a lovely piece and obviously well-known to the Magnard Ensemble as is Patterson himself as he was in the audience and visibly pleased by their performance of his work. It’s a delightful and evocative homage to southern English counties with echoes of folk and jaunty music from traditional and folk sources, folded together with gentle reflective piece and themes from the first two sections.

As charming as they are talented this young and fanatically gifted ensemble have far to go, it was a really pleasure to be able to listen to them take turns to introduce each piece and then play. They make music fun. The audience adored them and we waved them off onto the tides of success as the Westerly Winds caught their sails.

We left with a spring in our step and a smile on our faces, after a perfect seaside Lunchtime concert

Full details of the event, click here:

Stand in solidarity with LGBT+ people around the world at IDAHOBIT

A community event celebrating LGBT+ life!

BRIGHTON will mark International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT) on Thursday, May 17, 2018.

May 17 commemorates the day in 1990 the World Health Organisation removed homosexuality from its list of mental diseases.

In 86 countries globally, homosexual acts are illegal while in many countries lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and those who identify as trans (LGBT) are often murdered simply for their sexuality or gender identity.

Join the volunteers of the Brighton and Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum at 6pm sharp outside of the Jubilee Library, Brighton as they celebrate LGBT+ lives around the world to mark IDAHOBIT.

Jubilee Library
Jubilee Library

An outside event which will include:
♦ A live performance from The Rainbow Chorus
♦ A minute’s ‘noise’ to remember the international victims of homo, bi and transphobic violence; (so bring a whistle, horn, bell, tambourine, trombone etc to make some noise!)
♦ The chance to view the new installation of The Rainbow Cities Network photo exhibition at Jubilee Library.

For more information, click here:


Event: IDAHOBIT – A community event celebrating LGBT+ life

Where: Outside Jubilee Library, Jubilee Square, Brighton

When: Thursday, May 17

Time: 6pm

Cost: Free event

Voting opens in 2018 Golden Handbag Awards

Online voting is now open for the 2018 Golden Handbag Awards.


There are a couple of changes to voting this year. Any individual who has won more than seven times in a single category will no longer be eligible to receive your votes and will receive a special Platinum Handbag presented by Gscene Magazine to recognise their achievements over the years.

This year this affects Miss Jason in the Favourite Entertainers (drag) category and Joan Bond in the Favourite Door Hostess/Scene personality category who between them have won a total on 17 Golden Handbags over the years in these two categories.

This decision was taken after consultation with the people it affects to keep the awards fresh and make sure the same people do not keep winning the same key awards every year.

The other change affects the two categories for Bar Staff. In the past you have been able to choose to vote for Favourite Bar Girl and Favourite Bar Boy. This year there will be a single category for Favourite Bar Person, but you have an opportunity to register two votes and there will still be two winners.

This decision has been taken to make these awards as inclusive as possible to those in the trans and non binary communities. In effect, gender is being taken out of the voting process in these categories. You just vote for your favourite two people be they male, female, trans or non binary.

To vote, click here:

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