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REVIEW: Transformers @ BREMF

Transformers

Brighton Early Music Festival

BREMF Consort of Voices

St Martin’s Church, Lewes Road, Brighton

Since its formation in 2010 as a student/top amateur ensemble , BREMF Consort of Voices is one of the jewels in the crown of the Brighton Early Music Festival , led by its energetic and adventurous director Deborah Roberts.

Fitting in with this year’s theme of Metamorphosis, this concert showed how Renaissance composers were all too willing to imitate their contemporaries or those of the recent past – often embellishing and developing the original.

So in  Transformers we were served up an intriguing mix of church and secular music from the late 15th to the late 16th century.

Under Deborah’s direction, the 23 singers are constantly moving between items, which the director tells us is so that we get a wide range of voice combinations and not just a wall of sound.

Entering from the back of the church and processing through the audience we get to hear each individual voice as they open the concert with the anonymous Christmas chant Prater rerum seriem. This magic but simple sound is followed by two later versions of the same piece – by Josquin des Prez and Cipriano de Rore . Both works brought the rich sonority of the two bass lines- seeming to chase each other through the work.

Works by Gombert and Monteverdi showed off the choir’s wide range – from simple beautiful melodies to soaring , spirited full-throated sections.

Three versions of Milles regretz – the original by Josquin considered to be a 16th century chart topper – is only 40 bars long. It’s gentle, beautiful and far too short !

Cristobal de Morales transformation is into a full-blown Mass , of which we hear a haunting section.

But the triumph of the night for me was the interpretation of Thomas Tallis Spem In alium , arranged for 11 voices by Mick Swithinbank.

Full details of all music this evening here

There is much more to come in this annual festival which continues to surprise and delight its audiences.

BREMF continues until 10 November.

For full programme go to bremf.org.uk

REVIEW: Avenue Q @ Devonshire Park Theatre

Avenue Q

Devonshire Park Theatre

Avenue Q is a cheeky parody of Sesame Street that pokes fun at this well-loved American television show. It takes aim at the foundational belief in the value of education by adopting its familiar characters and style and twisting them into commentary on life’s real lessons. It’s a warm pastiche and although it quickly butchers the family friendly format the musical tries to keep its heart of gold only slightly beaten.

It’s certainly fun and done with gusto, the puppeting is superb and the puppeteers quickly fading off and giving the puppets full empathic reign. The singing is great, with two or three stand out performances, ‘There’s a thin line’, which closes the first act is utterly dreamy and I closed my eyes to better concentrate on the singing.

Avenue Q has a huge following and it also has a huge reputation,  and if you’re a fan then I’m sure you’ll enjoy this full powered energetic production but I felt slightly let down by its promise. Sure, it’s puppets being naughty and who doesn’t like watching puppet sex?  Not only was it seriously funny, they were also having pretty good sex, but other than these odd brilliant moments there’s a dark heart to Avenue Q.

It being my first time down Avenue Q, I was expecting deconstructive irony, heavy with knowing jokes and woke humour, but instead got a misogynistic piece of work hiding behind some ageing jokes.  The female characters are all problematic, and it’s pretending to be sex positive whilst pushing some peculiar heteronormative ideas of redemption and the punishment for agency and  liberation. Lucy, ‘the slut’ becoming a god bothering born again chastity freak for instance.

But they’re puppets, I hear you cry, give them a break…. So I will, I’ll not say a thing about an intersectional understanding of racism and privilege, just roll my eyes & sigh.

Honestly the performers are great, with some sexy eye candy in blonde hunk puppeteer Ellis Dackombe, a lovely  performance from Saori Oda as Christmas Eve and the crystal-clear lyrical perfection of Cecily Redmans fantastic voice. The ensemble cast work the material well, puppeting like mad, giving some wonderful interactions with each other, singing their hearts out and some of the set pieces work superbly. The music felt a little over amplified in the front few rows, but with a lively live house band you can forgive a touch too much base.

It’s odd that the writers slip a few up to date references into the songs to get a laugh but leave the basic premise untouched, perhaps they are not allowed to change it. Pity. The set looks like a down at heel northern British town, more Coronation Street than New York brownstones – they ain’t American front doors kiddo. The American references come thick and fast, some of them 15 years old. The Gary Coleman character is only familiar to anyone over 40,  (my younger companion had to google him in the interval) Hell’s Kitchen is no longer the rough gritty place it’s referenced in the show etc.  Avenue Q would benefit from an overhaul to bring its charming irreverence up to date a bit.  The narrative thrust of the story has  a good pace with fun songs meshing into some story advancement and then  it all goes happy-every-after in a most unseemly rushy rush.

If you like naughty puppets, and the Eastbourne audience sure did, then you’ll love this well acted, beautifully sung performance but if you’re hankering after something clever, deconstructive and with some narrative heft, perhaps grab a copy of Team America  instead.  I liked it, I really did, it was fun, the Devonshire Park is a very comfortable space to spend a few hours, we laughed a bit, enjoyed the tunes, left humming snatches of melody but was somehow unsatisfied but then, as the final song points out – it’s only temporary, that’s only for now.

Until Sat 2nd November

Devonshire Park Theatre

Eastbourne

For more info or to buy tickets see their website here

 

Nice ‘n’ Naughty Chester

Nice ‘n’ Naughty Chester Pride fundraiser

“We are delighted to be making this donation to Pride today”‘ National Retail Manager said Victoria Gower.

“Over the last few weeks we have been completely overwhelmed by the outpouring of support we have had in response to our announcement of donating 10% of store sales, 10% of web sales and 20% of staff wages. Pride runs in the veins of Nice ‘n’ Naughty and we are proud to have employed LGBT+ staff for the whole 20 years that we have existed, so this feels like a wonderful full circle moment of being able to give back.”

It is for this reason, and in honour of Nice ‘n’ Naughty’s 20th birthday, that Director, Simon Prescott, decided to personally increase the donation, rounding it up to £500! On the day we were fundraising, all the staff dressed up and our newly refurbished Chester shop was filled with rainbows of every kind – proving that, just as always, we are a safe space for one and all. Chester Pride may have been postponed, but Nice ‘n’ Naughty pride is here and queer on every day of the year!

THE LOG BOOKS PODCAST:  UNTOLD STORIES FROM A UNIQUE ARCHIVE OF BRITAIN’S QUEER HISTORY

THE LOG BOOKS PODCAST

UNTOLD STORIES FROM A UNIQUE ARCHIVE OF BRITAIN’S QUEER HISTORY

What if you could glimpse into LGBTQ+ life from decades ago? The Log Books is a history of LGBTQ+ life in Britain as noted by volunteers at the helpline Switchboard. Each episode of this stirring podcast centres around log book entries made by the volunteers who staffed the phones from the charity’s first day in 1974. As a helpline for anyone who wants to talk about gender identity and sexuality, Switchboard has been hearing from and helping queer people for 45 years.

Now held in the archive at the Bishopsgate Institute, the volunteers’ log books offer a unique insight into the range of issues facing LGBTQ+ people in Britain in the 70s, 80s and 90s. Stories range from police entrapping gay men meeting for sex in toilets to women losing custody of their children for being lesbians. They include people kicked out of pubs for wearing pro-gay badges, alongside those struggling with gender identity before the language existed to make sense of it. The log books laugh and cry with the real lives of runaways and disco-dancers, with isolated fishermen phoning to chat and people unsure about how to have sex.

Hosted by writer ADAM SMITH and TASH WALKER, a trustee of Switchboard, The Log Books brings these old stories back to life. Told across eight episodes, covering 1974 to 1982, the podcast features dozens of log  book entries and interviews with more than 40 contributors. Each episode takes a different theme, using Switchboard’s log book entries as a springboard into contributors’ memories and discussions about the  same issue in 2019. The producers behind the podcast believe that it is not only important to remember our history but also to consider it in light of issues affecting us all today.

Producer ADAM SMITH​ Said “I’m thrilled to share the stories from  the log books with the world. They are such a unique portrait of life  in Britain from a significant moment in our history.  The years we’re covering happened before I was born, so it’s been a  huge honour to delve into our shared lineage as queer people, and to interview dozens of people who were bravely out before me.”

Producer and co-chair of  SWITCHBOARD TASH WALKER ​ said   “I have  learnt so much about Britain’s queer history reading Switchboard’s log books, laughing one minute and crying the next. Making this podcast and hearing the stories of the people who lived this history has been such a privilege. We owe a debt to the people who came before us, and helped us get to where we are today. I feel a  tremendous responsibility to share and educate people not only on Britain’s LGBTQ+ history, but also the integral role that Switchboard plays in it: supporting and informing people from 1974 right up until  today.”

LAUNCHING OCTOBER 28TH, 2019 THE LOG BOOKS PODCAST

Available on Google​ Podcasts, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Acast

for more info check out their website here:

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