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Brighton Bear launch new logo for 2019

Brighton Bear team launch new logo to accompany Brighton Bear Weekend 2019 celebrations.

DESIGNED by talented local artist, Richard Denne from Big Bad Brighton Bear, the three bears design (daddy, bear and cub) features hints of Brighton Pavilion and, of course one of the ever-present seagulls.

The new 2019 T-shirts come in red and navy from small to 3XL, cost £14 and are available from Prowler in St James Street, Brighton and brightonbearweekend.com where you can find all the information for the big weekend that this year takes place from June 13-16.

Graham Munday

This year Brighton Bear Weekend is once again proudly supporting The Rainbow Fund who give grants to local LGBT/HIV organisations who deliver effective services to LGBT+ people in the city.

Graham Munday, Chair of Brighton Bear Weekend, said: “It is always an exciting time for us at BBW HQ to launch our new logo for the year. It is great to be able to support and shine a light on local talent. I want to say a big thank you to Richard for giving his time and skill to us free of charge allowing BBW to raise more money for The Rainbow Fund with every T-shirt that is sold.”

Richard Denne
Richard Denne

Richard Denne, this years creator, explains: “I’m an artist who works out of my studio in Hove. Designing and making T-shirts happened by accident. One day I was making some large paintings which usually involved screen printing some elements onto them and I needed to clean the screen and there was a T-shirt laying around and I used that.  The result was very interesting and I was hooked. I made a few more T-shirts and then friends asked would I make them one. Always with an eye for a brand, I realised that I needed to design a logo to separate them from my fine art work and the bear head evolved.  Again by accident, a friend asked me to print a large version on the front of a shirt. He was a big bloke (bear) so I teased him by writing BigBadBrightonBear on it and BigBadBrightonBear.com was born.

“Jump forward five years and I was asked by a friend (Andrew Tull) on behalf of Brighton Bear Weekend to design this year’s artwork. It is an honour to be asked to design and I am looking forward to the weekend, even more, this year.” 

For up to date information about Brighton Bear Weekend, click here:

First ever parade at ‘Carnaval-Themed’ Fort Lauderdale Pride

Eyewitness to the historic 1969 Stonewall Riots to be honoured during Fort Lauderdale Pride in February.

THIS years Carnaval-Themed main events on the weekend of Saturday, February 23 and Sunday, February 23, will be held on the iconic Fort Lauderdale Beach and include the first Fort Lauderdale Pride parade ever along the promenade.

One of the grand marshals will be Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, a transgender activist who has been at the forefront of the fight for equality for more than 40 years. She was front and center during the police raid at the infamous Stonewall riots in 1969, became an advocate for prisoner’s rights through the 70s and 80s, and, after a move to San Francisco in the 90s, began working closely with the HIV/AIDS communities.

And in a new documentary Major!, premiering at the Inside Out festival, filmmaker Annalise Ophelian tracks Gracy’s current work for trans people of colour through the TGI Justice Project, which advocates for transgender women of colour who have been through the U.S. prison system.

More than 120,000 visitors from the USA and beyond are expected at the 42nd annual Pride Fort Lauderdale festival, which opens on Thursday, February 21 through Sunday, February 24.

The festival includes world-renowned entertainers on TWO stages, more than 100 local and national exhibitors, a food court, and of course, the world-class beaches of Fort Lauderdale.

This year’s entertainment line-up includes American Idol fan favorite Ada Vox who made history as the first drag queen to advance to the final 10 contestants, and singer, choreographer, YouTube personality, American Idol veteran and popular guest judge on RuPaul’s Drag Race, Toderick Hall. The celebrations will conclude at 7:45 p.m. with a stunning fireworks display on the beach.

Richard Gray
Richard Gray

Richard Gray, Vice President of Diversity and Inclusion at the Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention and Visitors Bureau says: “Diversity is in Greater Fort Lauderdale’s DNA; it’s who we are. I’m so proud that Pride Fort Lauderdale’s colourful theme represents how diverse our destination is, and demonstrates to the world how welcoming and inclusive we are.” 
 
The sights and sounds of the Caribbean and Brazil will come alive throughout the festival as the 2019 Carnaval theme pays tribute to the diverse ethnic communities that call Greater Fort Lauderdale home and to the Mardi Gras/Carnaval season.

Miik Martorell
Miik Martorell

“This year’s Pride Fort Lauderdale is a nod to how inclusive Greater Fort Lauderdale is and we are excited to see everyone come together at this historic gathering, as we throw the first parade ever on Fort Lauderdale Beach,” said Miik Martorell, President of Pride Fort Lauderdale.

Admission is FREE for the main events on Fort Lauderdale Beach and all proceeds raised will go toward funding LGBT+ youth scholarships and local community organisers.

For more information about Fort Lauderdale Pride 2019 and to view the full schedule of events, view: www.pridefortlauderdale.org/.

The Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau has been proactively targeting and welcoming LGBT+ visitors since 1996, when it became the first Convention & Visitors Bureau in the USA with a gay-centric vacation planner, and dedicated website on a CVB homepage.

Since then, the destination has continued to break down barriers and facilitate essential visibility for the wider LGBT+ community at large. The destination now welcomes 1.5 million LGBT+ travellers annually, who spend $1.5 billion.

Fort Lauderdale also features one of the largest Pride Centers in the country, the first and only World AIDS Museum and Education Center, and is home to the Stonewall National Museum & Archives, one of the only permanent spaces in the USA devoted to exhibitions relating to LGBT+ history and culture. Most recently, Greater Fort Lauderdale opened the areas first LGBT+ Visitors Center in Wilton Manors home to one of the worlds only LGBT shopping malls.

British Airway fly direct into Fort Lauderdale from both Gatwick and Heathrow and Norwegian Air continue flying into Fort Lauderdale from Gatwick till the end of March.

For complete line-up of events, click here:

For more information about what Fort Lauderdale offers the LGBT+ traveller, click here:

New research to drive down inequalities in dementia care

A new £4.7m research programme aims to find out what is it that enables one family to live well with dementia and another with ostensibly the same illness and challenges to have very poor experiences.

BRIGHTON and Sussex Medical School (BSMS) will lead a national research network to address critical, fundamental, and as yet unanswered questions about inequalities, outcomes and costs following diagnosis with dementia. These answers are needed to improve the quality of care, and therefore the quality of life, of those with dementia and their carers.

DETERMIND (DETERMinants of quality of life, care and costs, and consequences of INequalities in people with Dementia and their carers) is one of four major research projects funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) as part of a £15 million initiative on research to improve the lives of people living with dementia.

To deliver the programme Principal Investigator Professor Sube Banerjee, an old age psychiatrist and Professor of Dementia at the Centre for Dementia Studies at BSMS, has brought together a strong, experienced, multidisciplinary team.

This combines clinical research in dementia and the NHS in Sussex, Newcastle, and south London, with the social and economic research expertise of the Personal Social Services Research Unit at the London School of Economics and the Social Policy Research Unit at the University of York, epidemiology and public health at the Institute of Public Health at the University of Cambridge and King’s College London, experimental and social psychology at the University of Sussex, and primary care and ageing at Newcastle University’s Institute of Ageing.

Prof Banerjee
Prof Banerjee

Prof Banerjee said: “Our study will look at inequalities in dementia care and outcomes and what we can do to improve them.  We will have a unique focus on decision-making, how care is funded, people with dementia of black Caribbean and South Asian heritage, the older LGBT+ population, and the benefits and harms of earlier and later diagnosis of dementia. We aim to find out which groups have better or worse outcomes following diagnosis of dementia and why there are inequalities in care and outcomes. What we learn from the experiences of people with dementia and their carers will be used to deliver care and support that maximises quality of life for all.”

Sussex patients invited to take part
Sussex patients receiving care for dementia, as well as their carers and families, are being invited to join the study, which opens in July 2019.

Tanya Telling
Tanya Telling

Tanya Telling, Joint Director at the Centre for Dementia Studies and Deputy Director of Research and Development at Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, which will support the study, said: “Sussex Partnership is delighted to be involved in DETERMIND and to give our patients and their carers the chance to contribute towards these important research questions.

“The Trust has a large portfolio of dementia research and most importantly a growing number of studies that are led by our own researchers, such as Professor Sube Banerjee, which ensures that research is focussed, relevant and most likely to impact on patient care and outcomes in our region. We very much look forward to seeing DETERMIND progress and its outcomes make a difference to patients and their families.”

Understanding inequalities in dementia
Dementia is one of the most common and serious disorders we face with over 800,000 affected in the UK, costing £23 billion annually to care for.

Negative impacts on those with dementia and their families are profound, and an estimated 670,000 people in the UK are acting as primary carers for people with dementia. There are major inequalities in care for dementia with key factors including: local service provision, ethnicity, whether your care is self-funded or paid for by local authorities, and whether you are diagnosed earlier or later in the illness.

DETERMIND will focus on identifying and understanding factors that generate unequal access and experiences, leading to inequalities in care and inequities in outcome in the three years following diagnosis. To do this they will recruit a large (n=900) cohort of people newly diagnosed with dementia and their carers and follow them closely for three years. DETERMIND will generate definitive data and use these to drive activity to address inequities in access and outcomes.

Chatty Bus comes to Churchill Square 

Brighton & Hove Bus Company encourages people to get on the Chatty Bus at Churchill Square tomorrow (Tuesday, January 29) and start talking.

THERE’ll be Chatty Bus ambassadors on board who will be distributing ‘happy to chat’ badges to interested passengers and talking about how bus travel can help reduce social isolation and loneliness.

The bus company has got together with Brighton community group Impetus to get people more connected as part of the Campaign to End Loneliness.

Impetus volunteers will be on hand to discuss the services they provide that reduce social isolation, including befriending, advocacy and social prescribing, where the group links people to other community services and groups that improve health and well-being.

Brighton & Hove Buses’ Managing Director Martin Harris said: “There are so many situations where people may experience loneliness, whether that’s losing a loved one, becoming unemployed or starting university. Loneliness doesn’t discriminate. 
 
“Catching a bus and having a conversation can help ease that feeling just a little bit, as well as linking people with their friends and family. Groups like Impetus do really valuable work in the community and we’re pleased to have them on board.” 
 
Impetus CEO Jo Crease added: “We are delighted to partner with Brighton & Hove Buses to support the Campaign to End Loneliness. We believe no-one should be isolated in a city as active, vibrant and positive as ours, and we’re inviting everyone to join our efforts to connect people to reduce isolation and improve health and well-being in Brighton & Hove.” 
 
The Chatty Bus will be parked at Stop D in Churchill Square (outside WHSmith) between 10am and 2pm on Tuesday, January 29.

Metrobus will hold a similar event in West Sussex. The Metrobus Chatty Bus will be parked at Carfax in Horsham, in partnership with the Royal Voluntary Service, from 10.30am to 2.30pm.

Brighton & Hove Buses’ events are part of the Go-Ahead Chatty Bus Campaign, which kicks off on January 29 with events taking place in Brighton, Hull, Horsham, Newcastle, Plymouth, Oxford and Eastleigh.

Laura Alcock-Ferguson, Executive Director of the Campaign to End Loneliness, said: “A bus service can make the difference between someone being able to see friends and family – or going for days or weeks in isolation. The Chatty Bus takes things a step further by using the space on the bus as a place for connections to thrive. We welcome Go-Ahead’s work and want all bus users to take part.” 

One bus will also be at Sussex University campus on March 20 for coffee, chats and cake during the Holi Festival celebrations for One World Week. Impetus will provide a space for students suffering from loneliness to talk elsewhere on campus.

The bus will be specially designed by local artist Lois O’Hara and covered in bold, bright colours and shapes to promote positive mental health. Students can vote for their favourite design before the bus wrap is done.

Second release of Brighton Pride tickets available at noon today

With just twenty-seven weeks to go to Brighton Pride, 2019, Second Release tickets go on sale today at noon.

THE announcement of artists performing at Preston Park will follow on Monday, February 4, giving local residents a full eight days to purchase tickets for Pride in the Park before the inevitable rush for tickets after the headliner is revealed.

Ticket prices have been frozen for another year and 10,000 tickets were sold when the first release of tickets was announced last October.

The Pride LGBT+ Community Parade will take place on Saturday, August 3.

To apply to participate on the Pride parade, click here:

After last years inaugural event, the community and family friendly LoveBn1Fest will take place in Preston Park on Sunday, August 4, celebrating everything Brighton & Hove brings to all our communities and rainbow families.

Tickets for all Pride events are available exclusively through the official Pride Ticket Shop.

To purchase tickets online, click here: 

Tickets purchased through secondary sites such as ViaGogo WILL NOT BE VALID.

To sign up as a Pride volunteer and get a free pass to Pride in the Park on Saturday, August 3, click here:

Isolation by Richard Jeneway

YOU look but do you see? Well for me that is my life as a blind person. My focus is on what I hear observe by body language, smell, touch, voice inflection along with intuition and gut instinct.

WHEN we are out and about do we really see what is happening or do we unconsciously take away that what we don’t want to see? As we enter late winter and with thoughts of spring can we make some changes to what we actually see?

What do we hear? Do we listen when someone is talking to us? We think we do but can we remember or indeed reflect on a friends thoughts. When I listen to various groups of people who are older, I wonder if service providers hear and listen to people’s expectations and needs .Often I am advised that ‘collated statistics’ are evidence of the services people want, but are they?

Is anyone listening, I mean really listening?
Within the older HIV population and along with older LGBT+ communities, who is hearing what we say? In my view and evidence based it is the smaller organisations which are Peer and Volunteer lead are the ones who really do listen.

I was asked very recently by a funding organisation how charities along with small groups can connect with people who are isolated. There are so many reasons, feeling disconnected or not belonging to the community that surrounds us, mental health, depression, loss of friends and partners, carers or poor physical health, coupled with often with low-income and high living costs can contribute to isolation.

Some who are considered to be isolated choose that lifestyle for various reasons but are often contented with that way of life.

How do I know that? Because I know personally, some older people in the area when asked the answer is the same and little would draw them out of their established daily routine.

There is a sense of security we all feel within our living space, so listening to that group of people who may be isolated feeling intense loneliness breaking that routine is a great challenge.

Over the years of Volunteering I have listened with an open mind to many, mainly men, talking about loneliness and what mechanisms, if any, they have developed to combat those days when no one calls and the only contact is if they venture to the shop or have a coffee or via social media.

So would you notice someone sitting alone nursing a cup of tea and might you say Hello? Perhaps not for fear of rejection or a negative response or just because we are busy with our lives; but sometimes a few words can make a world of difference.

Now, there are many local organisations out there which offer lunch, supper, coffee and cake and various health, entertainment and hobby activities, but again if you are alone and feeling isolated and would like to connect but lack the confidence to engage I would urge you to go along even for half an hour to consider taking part. Many of the smaller groups and charities can offer a named volunteer to meet you at or just prior to the event and stay with you during the event and introduce you to others.

A great example of community peer lead events was the Lunch Positive supper evening this week. Over 40 people attended aged 50 and over. The range of food was fantastic and served at tables by the dedicated Volunteers.

This is a new event happening only for the second time. Many of the older people in Brighton who may be considered isolated do not feel connected to the scene because they do not attend bars where there is alcohol.

Many of their generation have died or just stay at home feeling the community has perhaps overlooked them. This event is a safe space where people with HIV can meet up, socialise and from what I hear fulfils a great service to what is a growing part of our community. As people live longer with HIV services like this are of high value, particularly because it is Peer lead by volunteers.

Something powerful stayed with me talking to people after supper. One older man told me he never goes out in the evening because he feels he does not fit in anymore. His routine is to stay at home, read, watch television or listen to music and social media.

His parting remark was that he felt energised coming to the supper and importantly excited about the next supper evening. He had met up with some old friends he had not spoken with for some considerable time. For me that is powerful for the simple reason that the supper has made at least one person break a self-inflicted routine.

Richard Jeneway
Richard Jeneway

If you are like that person or know someone who is alone then make the change and take the first step to try some of what is on offer, who knows you might end up re engaging with old friends or making new.

If money is an issue that need not be a barrier as some of the regular events are at low-cost. Discover what is going on locally and encourage someone who is alone to break out of their mould or better still offer to take them along.

We live in a City with such large LGBT+ communities of all ages,/cultures and genders which should be applauded and celebrated but let’s put the real meaning back into community by looking out for those who seem alone whatever their age.

Remember for those who are older being alone is often not their choice and is probably because of circumstances beyond their control.

Stody Rainbow Party returns in May 2019

People from LGBT+ communities invited to the magical gardens at rural Norfolk estate for The Stody Rainbow Garden Party 2019, in association with Norwich Pride and Kings Lynn & West Norfolk Pride.

ON Saturday May 25, 2019, Stody Lodge Gardens near Holt in North Norfolk will once again extend a welcome to people from the LGBT+ communities, their friends and allies, to celebrate diversity in all its forms within 14-acres of colourful rhododendrons, azaleas, magnolias and camellias.

This is the second year running that Stody Lodge Gardens has held an event in support of the rural LGBT+ communities. This year it is organised by the owners of Stody Lodge Gardens in close partnership with Norwich Pride and Kings Lynn & West Norfolk Pride.

The Stody Rainbow Garden Party, 2019 will build on the fantastic response to the inaugural event, The Stody Big Gay Out, which took place on May 26, 2018, but with even more fun, activities and surprises planned.

Richard Hulbert, Head Gardener at Stody Lodge Gardens, said: “As a gay man I am extremely proud to be sharing the extraordinary gardens at Stody Lodge in Norfolk with the wider LGBT+ community. Through the Stody Rainbow Garden party we want to challenge the stereotype of the LGBT+ community in a rural environment and positively promote diversity and inclusiveness.  It is my hope that this event will encourage tolerance and other similar events across the UK. I was amazed at how successful The Stody big Gay Out was and surprised at how supportive our local community were. I am really pleased to have this second opportunity to invite the LGBT+ community back to Stody Lodge Gardens.”

Kate MacNicol, owner of Stody Lodge Gardens, added: “Our rainbow-coloured gardens provide the perfect backdrop to a true celebration of the LGBT+ community. We were blown away by the feedback on last year’s event and couldn’t wait to start planning for next year. With a new name and additional partners on board there will be a huge amount of fun activities and surprises for you all to enjoy.”

Julie Bremner, a Trustee of Norwich Pride, said: “The team at Stody have been incredibly supportive and generous towards our community and we are very excited about plans for The Stody Rainbow Garden Party in May 2019. It is important that all of us show our support for those living in a rural environment and I can’t wait to once again bring some of the joy of Pride to the countryside.”

Jo Rust of Kings Lynn & West Norfolk Pride, said: “We heard about the brilliant event that took place at Stody Lodge Gardens last year and were delighted to be invited to join the team. We know how challenging it can be for someone identifying as LGBT+ who lives in the countryside. This is a fantastic initiative that has our full support.”

Joanna Jane B. a member of the transgender support group OASIS Norfolk, said: “Last year’s event was such a beautiful day in all respects, so many superlatives. The gardens were magnificent – the colour and scents from the azaleas and the colour of the rhododendrons was so spectacular, just superb. A credit to everyone for their hard work and dedication, not least the wonderful performance by the Sing with Pride choir. My companions for the day, Beccie, Petra and I felt so welcome, happy smiling faces everywhere and good conversation at the refreshment area. We left with an overwhelming sense of happiness and wellbeing. A lot of Oasis ladies are looking forward to returning again next year.”

Norwich Pride and Kings Lynn & West Norfolk Pride will serve delicious rainbow cakes and homemade teas to visitors to the garden.

All proceeds from the tea rooms will go to help fund Norwich’s 11th Anniversary Pride on July 27, 2019 and the second Kings Lynn & West Norfolk Pride on Saturday, August 17, 2019.

All members of the public are welcome to attend The Stody Rainbow Garden Party on Saturday May 25, 2019.  As well as being able to wander through Stody’s magical 14-acre gardens, including it’s 4-acre technicolour azalea water gardens (the largest of its kind in the UK), visitors can enjoy a fantastic range of activities and entertainment. There will be live music, talks, facepainting, fantastical animals, games on the lawn and much, much more.

The event is very family friendly with all ages welcome. Further details to be announced in the spring.

Entrance is £7, children under 12 free. There is good disabled access to most areas of the garden. Accessible toilet and parking available. Dogs on leads welcome.

Anyone interested in donating a cake to the rainbow tea rooms to be served on May 25 2019 at Stody Lodge Gardens, email: jules@norwichpride.org.uk


Event: The Stody Rainbow Garden Party 2019

Where: Stody Lodge Gardens, Stody, Melton Constable NR24 2ER

When: Saturday, May 25

Time: 1pm-5pm

Cost: £7 children under 12 free

For more information, click here:

MUSIC REVIEW: Wake up and smell the Cherryade

London’s own LGBT+ bubblegum duo Cherryade explore the effects of the music industry on mental health, in their Indie anthem Shout Loud.

 

“SHOUT LOUD,” cries a quirky London accent, full of cheek and anarchy. “Shout loud, but they still can’t hear you. I’m not breaking out,” the voice cries, as tectonic drums and swirling synths clap along to the cheerful beat. Suddenly the Ducks! style galactic intro from only seconds before becomes a mere memory, with the cheerful earworm of a song now taking over the brain. As a first look into their upcoming E.P 4 Reasons Why, the whimsical duo known as Cherryade choose to expose the hidden upheavals of the music industry on mental health, but despite its heavy weighted topic the track feels gleefully light and sweet as the iconic chorus enters the ears for the first time.

Long drawn out drones that sound as though the duo had borrowed an organ and its merry player from a church service, hooked them both into an amp, and let them play out their celebratory chords, cloud the chorus, cementing the notion of faux cheer. But this faked elation, this oddly light wave of synths and deceptively cheerful cluster of beats quickly unravels the web of faux happiness, as the bouncing chorus cascades into the darker verse, and the true meaning of the song comes to light.

I won’t remember the feeling, when i shoot out my brains,” cheers singer Ella, nonchalantly and rather off the cuff, letting the words become lost in the faux jolly drums that seem to line the verse – a perfect reflection of the cries for help by a stressed musician that are covered with a bandaid, dismissed and quickly medicated by the industry. I’ll keep on blocking it out, while i drown in my doubt,” harrahs the unfazed voice, beneath fluffy clumps of cotton drum loops and candy floss synths. Of course, the bleak reality captured in each word the duo bleed throughout the track falls under the radar to the casual listener, looking for a good song to dance away the night to. But once one looks past the enthused beats and positive beam of synths, the lyrics expose the darkness that lies within – eerily appearing akin to a suicide note in the making.

The pink pop duo may have crafted a light, dance-ready electronic bop, complete with catchy hooks of “Shout loud,” and sickly sweet candied imagery, retro gameboy stylised synths and soft drum taps, but they have more than transcended the safety of mindless pop with their poignant and strikingly real lyricism.

As the duo themselves explain: “We wrote this song about feeling frustrated as both artists and people who work within the music and film industries, and how that plays a massive part in mental health. There’s a massive pressure to succeed but at the same time you’re constantly being told what you should and shouldn’t do, and what rules to follow… it kills the creativity in what everyone is doing, and just isn’t healthy for anyone involved”.

And, with the unfortunate circumstances of artists like Avicii, the carefully constructed lyrics and deeper meaning of the track becomes all the more erudite. Perhaps we should be less consumed by the immediacy of music, perhaps we should step back, give the artists a break, and stop demanding so much of them. And perhaps the industry should listen to these people, and treat them like what they are: people.

All in all, good work Cherryade.

 

Calling all thrill-seekers

Dare yourself to do something brave and raise money for Martlets by stepping out of the British Airways i360 pod into darkness, 450 feet above Brighton beach, on Saturday, March 30.

PERFECT for thrill-seekers, the night-time i360 iDrop is an exhilarating sponsored challenge that will see you gliding down from the pod through the open air, whilst taking in amazing views of the coastline.

Open to anyone aged 14 or over; no previous experience is needed, just a sense of adventure and a head for heights. All equipment will be provided and the trained staff at Wire and Skywill make sure you have a fantastic experience and are kept safe every step of the way.

Charlotte Bolton from the hospice’s Events Team said: “If you are the kind of person who likes to challenge yourself then the Night i360 iDrop is definitely for you!

“It is a physical event, but it is something that anyone can do with a bit of bravery and lots of encouragement from their supporters!

“Our life-changing hospice care is only free thanks to the generosity of the people of Brighton & Hove.   So sign-up now, challenge yourself and really make a difference!”

Fundraiser Chris Spokes who took on the iDrop last summer, said: “This forced me to tackle a life-long fear of heights.  Stepping backwards off the platform was one of the toughest things I’ve ever done.

“The event was brilliant and there was fantastic camaraderie.

“I’d definitely do it again and would encourage other people to take the plunge.  It will create amazing memories and support the important work undertaken by the Martlets team.”

It costs £50 to register for the iDrop and Martlets is asking that everyone who takes part raises a minimum of £250 in sponsorship.

To find out more or to sign-up, click here:

 

New GLOW choir term starts February 16

GLOW! Brighton’s Community Choir for LGBT+ people and their allies sing songs from around the world, all taught by ear!

Photo: Neil Huntingdon
Photo: Neil Huntingdon

THEIR new term starts on Saturday, February 16,  2019 – all voices are welcome to attend.

Unique amongst the many choirs in Brighton, GLOW Choir is a Natural Voice choir for LGBT+ people and allies to unite in song. All voices are welcome, without exception! There is no ‘identity policing’ at GLOW, no discrimination is tolerated and the atmosphere is one of respect, relaxation, learning and fun.

The needs of disabled choir members are catered for and people of all levels of musical experience and ability are welcome to join in.

GLOW choir sing a wide range of songs in many moods and genres from across the globe, all taught by ear.

Once a term GLOW choir has a sharing/concert, and at least 50% of the profits from this are donated to their chosen charities.

Whilst many participants enjoy performing at the End of Term Sharing, there is no obligation to perform if you just want to go along and enjoy the sessions.

Choir leader Hannah-Rose Tristram has been leading choirs, teaching singing for over a decade, and has travelled the world in pursuit of great music for a cappella voices.

At their latest end of term sharing event, GLOW choir raised £100 for LGBTQ+ mental health charity, MindOut.


Event: GLOW choir rehearsals

When: Saturday afternoons weekly from February 16 – 22, end of term sharing June 22

Where: c, 64 Old Shoreham Road, BN1 5DD.

Time: 2.30pm-4.30pm

Price: Drop in: £10 Full Price, £9 Standard, £7 Concession.  Up front term pay = 3 sessions free.

For more information, click here:

 

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