Suede – Wolverhampton Civic Hall 1/11/94

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A young family prevented me from swooping into the Britpop explosion. Early Oasis, Pulp, and Blur all came and went. But I did catch Suede, although perhaps just a couple of months after their high- water mark. The good news is that it was on the “Dog Man Star” tour in 1994. The bad news was that it was just after Bernard Butler had left.

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I liked their debut album, a bit rough, but with some great songs. But “Dog Man Star”, their second, was a different package altogether. It was ambitious, musically complex, sounded lush, but still with the energy, albeit refined, of the first album. It was Butler’s flawed masterpiece. He had walked out during its recording leaving songs incomplete, there were arguments over arrangements, production and song length- but somehow the results are glorious.

Live, Richard Oakes, then only seventeen years old was hired to play Butler’s guitar parts which he learned note for note. Incredibly, it worked.

The band could have folded, instead they, and in particular lead singer Brett Anderson, emerged defiant. Wiry, sinewy and sedulous, he combined flamboyance with an instinctive understanding of what a front man should be . Setting himself apart , and distinct, from the likes of Liam Gallagher, Jarvis Cocker and Damon Albarn.

The Wolverhampton Civic Hall is a great traditional rock venue with a large standing floor area, wide stage, and seated balcony. The acoustics are fabulous. It was an ideal showcase for the band with wiry frontman Brett Anderson prowling the stage, as fey as Marc Almond, as arty as David Bowie, with the moves and energy of Mick Jagger.

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The set was as good as it would ever get. The high energy “Animal Nitrate”, teenage crie de couer “So Young” combined with the epic sweep of “Stay Together” and “Asphalt World”. They played pretty much all of the “Dog Man Star” album, “Introducing the band/ We Are The Pigs” the obvious powerful opener.


After the second album they drifted away from the edgy, arty, energetic sound in favour of a more commercial, pop one. They became a pop band. Without Butler’s inspired song writing that was inevitable – most thought that Butler’s departure would be the end for the band. But it wasn’t, and “Coming Up” the third album had no Butler songs whatever, but did include the catchy, if lightweight “Trash”. Surprising many, including me, they have survived, endured and prospered through a combination of ability, hard work and determination.

That night it was obvious that the band were something special, but often in pop it is for a moment, when the stars collide, and then tastes move on. But also, there are times when you see a band live and you have caught them at a special moment. Musically, I suspect that a show with Butler would have been better, but that tour caught them at a crossroads, where defiance and determination triumphed over loss and introspection. What a night it was.

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If We Could Talk to the Animals

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Cannock Chase Trekking Centre Owner Lisa Gregory

I am fascinated by means of communication which transcend our known understanding. Plato spoke of Universal Knowledge. Scientists wrestle with epigenetics – the transfer of knowledge from one generation to another, physicists ponder quantum physics, are there multi-universes? Is everything happening at the same time simultaneously in parallel universes?

 
On a more mundane level there is animal communication between species, and across species. That it happens is a given, the diversity of how it happens little understood.
Beyond that there is communication between humans and animals. They seem to understand us, much better than we understand them.

 
Over twenty years ago I started to ride at the Cannock Chase Trekking centre, based in Brocton back then, but now at fabulous stables at Teddesley Coppice. I rode with my daughter Sarah, then aged nine. It was where she learned the joy of free riding rather than the drudge confines of a riding school. Lisa Gregory, the owner, made an immediate impression. Vivacious, intelligent and personable, she was also clearly an outstanding horsewoman. I have been able to ride to a high standard since childhood. She personally reignited by enthusiasm for riding out, prompting Sarah and I to ride as regular customers.

 
Sarah loved a pony called Banner . I was never bothered about how nominally good or bad, slow or fast, temperamental or placid my horse was. Instinctively, I could just communicate. I remember several occasions when awkward customers complained about the shortcomings of their mount so persistently that Lisa would swap mounts, giving the complainant hers, and taking the allegedly troublesome horse herself. Miraculously, the troublesome horse became the best horse on the ride, and her own mount played up the complainant something rotten!

 
I happened to catch the following contemporaneous blog from Lisa about a recent incident of communication between human , and horse. I share it with you verbatim, and if you want a magnificent ride out on Cannock Chase look no further than Lisa Gregory and the Cannock Chase Trekking Centre:

 

 

23rd October 2018/in CCHT News, Our Horses /
THE BOND OF FRIENDSHIP
“Despite spending all my life working with horses there are still moments that give me goose bumps and catch at my heart strings.

 
Often those are moments that leave me reflecting on the bond of friendship that exists between ourselves and these beautiful and sensitive animals that share our lives.
I experienced one of those moments recently here at Cannock Chase Trekking Centre. It might seem trivial to some but it was something that really left me amazed. I will tell you the little story and you can judge for yourselves.

 
As followers of our Facebook page know, I am currently training our new arrival, a beautiful Andalusian mare called Nymeria. She is quite sensitive and a little bit challenging so I often work her in the arena in the evening when it is quiet with fewer distractions.

 
I had worked her and then turned her out. The rest of the herd were long gone so, with Nymeria loose, I walked up the field to open the gate and let her through.
Unfortunately she spotted them through a gap in the trees and became fixated that she should go the wrong way. With no lead rope or head collar I was stuck and could not persuade her to follow me through the open gate.

 

She was getting a little agitated when I had an idea and approached my good friend Capulate, who was grazing in the next field. As my blog readers know from when I wrote about him, he was one of the most challenging horses I have ever trained. We spent many, many hours together and as a result we have a special friendship. I love him, he loves me, simple as that.

 
We had a little chat and a cuddle that evening and I explained my predicament. Then I did some of my natural horsemanship join up technique and he left his grazing to follow me into the other field where Nymeria was still fretting. I really had no clue what would happen next.

I watched in delight as Capulate went straight to her and stood with her for a few seconds. Then he turned, and with Nymeria following closely behind, he led her through the gate and escorted her to her friends before resuming his grazing.

 
I closed the gate behind them and stood in quiet amazement. I am left with more questions than answers. How did he know what I wanted him to do? How did he understand? How did he communicate with the mare?

 
All I do know is that he is my beloved friend. I had a problem and he fixed it. The rest must just be magic!”

Cannock Chase Horse & Pony Trekking

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A Voyage for Madmen -Peter Nichols, book review

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I was at junior school when this competition was raced, the name Robin Knox Johnson has endured ever since. At the time, it was marketed as one of the last tests of human endurance, a billing was heightened by the space race, and the imminence of man landing on the moon. New frontiers were opening up. This is the story of nine men who took up the challenge to become the first men to circumnavigate the globe, single handed, without stopping or outside assistance.

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The victorious “Suhaili” in full sail

It is a story of stoicism, bravery, foolishness, vanity , incompetence and skulduggery. A story of mountainous seas, self doubt and determination, of flimsy boats and mighty oceans. All the ingredients of a great story. Yet although the narrative is Homerian in content, author Peter Nichols’ prose is not.

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The victorious Robin Knox Johnson

Nichols is an experienced seaman. Too often it feels as though we are poring through a ships lo when we should be feeling the salty spray on our faces, and the wind clawing at our frail human frames. He tells the story of each of the nine contestants, but with varying degrees of conviction. There are no first person interviews, just stories and supposition gathered together from contemporaneous accounts.

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The Tragic Donald Crowhurst and boat

The book draws to a close with Knox Johnson’s victory and Crowhurst’s apparent suicide. Both feel unsatisfactory. There is an old sales adage “ Don’t sell the sausage, sell the sizzle” and his accounts of both have the texture of a factual news report, not the breathless account of an eye witness. The most compelling story, that of Bernard Moitessier, who instead of claiming first prize, kept on sailing is frustratingly sketched. It is the ultimate vindication of the saying that it is better to travel than to arrive.

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Bernard Moitessier – the man who kept sailing

For anyone wanting to appraise themselves of the Golden Globe race, its protagonists and events, this book does the job well. Anyone who wants the spirit of the race, and why the men did it, will be disappointed.

Bernard Moitessier sailing his ketch rigged yacht 'Joshua'

“Joshua” Moitessier’s boat.

However the tale does bear telling. An era before satellite phones, GPS, ship mounted radar and reliable weather forecasts. When boats could be out of contact for months – but remerge from the vast oceans intact. When men were tested to their limits, and sometimes found wanting.

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Abigail’s Party – Derby Theatre

Abigail’s Party – Derby Theatre
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I saw “Abigail’s Party” when it appeared on television in 1977, the year it was written, some forty one years ago, watching as a teenager. It received generous reviews. I loved it. I also found it very uncomfortable watching. It shone a bright light on the world around me, one of aspiration amidst a crumbling economy. Played out on a single, period set, it is about five characters, and their place in North London suburbia. An exploration of manners, people, and their foibles.

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I was curious to see how well it had survived approaching half a century on. This revival is a co-production between Derby Theatre, Queens Theatre Hornchurch, Wiltshire Creative and Les Theatres de la Ville de Luxembourg.

Thankfully, Director Douglas Rintoul does not re-invent the setting, dialogue or conceit. The production depends upon its cast who rise to the challenge admirably. Beverly is the star turn, beautifully, and spikily, played by Melanie Gutteridge. Blonde, and sassy, dressed in a slinky halter neck print long evening dress, and fashionable again wedge heels, she is the pulse of the production, her brash pronouncements a wafer – thin veneer for her underlying vulnerability. Her extended solo presence at curtain up imposes her physicality on what is to follow.

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Lee Newby’s stage set perfectly captures the 1970’s as much as the detail of Mike Leigh’s script verbally remembers a bygone age of Mini’s and Bacardi and coke. Christopher Staines infuses Beverly’s husband Laurence with a touch of Leonard Rossiter, and a dash of John Cleese, as he balances Estate Agency, and a high maintenance wife with a low level intellect. Amy Downham has less luck than Melanie Gutteridge with the Wardrobe Department, sporting a garish, short dress, and mustard tights which Gok Wan would not approve of in the 21st Century. She does however have the most room to develop her character from a skittish ditsy airhead to a woman whom you can rely upon when it counts. Her husband Tony, played by a gloriously statuesque Liam Bergin, is all facial and body expressions, with lines so sparse they were surely learned over breakfast.

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The most interesting and problematic character is divorcee Susan, mother to the eponymous Abigail from whose house party she is escaping. Susie Emmett imbues her with a quiet desperation as events unfold before her. Is she watching on disdainfully? Or is she a victim too?

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Rights issues have caused the music to be altered from the original, but is nonetheless satisfying, and faithful to the era. The sounds of Demis Roussos conjure the slow dance, the Sex Pistols “God save the Queen” rumbles from fifteen years old Abi’s house party beckoning in a new musical hegemony.

At a hundred minutes running time, the play does not outstay its welcome and prospers as a revival, rather than a reinvention. It continues until 20th October, before completing its tour at Salisbury Playhouse and Les Théâtres de la Ville de Luxembourg.
Gary Longden

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Allan Jones – I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down. A book review.

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As a fifteen year old I did not anticipate that I would be reviewing professionally forty five years later. Newspaper journalism was tedious and dry, with the exception of Clive James. Popular music was both incredibly popular, and largely uncovered by the serious press. This offered an opportunity to those young men and women writing for the music weeklies, Melody Maker, New Musical Express and Sounds . That writing was off beat, irreverent and sometimes experimental. Amongst it, Allan Jones was the best.

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Allan Jones

The title is an Elvis Costello song title, and Elvis features quite frequently in this series of contemporaneous interviews and reports. There is not one album or live review, instead a series of encounters. He writes about people, the Police on tour in India, The Clash on tour in America, Neil Young in a plush London hotel suite, Bowie and Lou Reed falling out in a restaurant.

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Lou was not the easiest dinner companion

His skill is making you feel as though you were there. I read most of these pieces when they were written. As a teenager his writing connected me to these stars, for better or for worse. His judgement on the pomposity of Sting and the Police was prescient, his disdain for Black Sabbath irrational, although it is unclear whether his mockery caused his beating by Tony Iommi, or whether it was a result of it. I still recall a live review in which he compared Ozzy Osbourne’s vocal skills to that of a braying donkey, with the donkey finishing ahead.

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Ozzy Osbourne after reading Allan Jones’ latest live review

Music journalism as it evolved into the late 1970’s degenerated into narcissistic , nonsense, in much the same way as Prog Rock had a few years before. The Face and Smash Hits magazines would not have prospered otherwise. But Allan Jones, broadly, stayed the right side of the line. Opinionated and cock sure yes, but self -deprecating and self- effacing too, Crucially his writing made me laugh – it will make you laugh too.

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The Pistols signing for  a hippy record company – what could go wrong?

Always well written, it is a joy to read, and a nostalgic trip down memory lane for those who remember the 1970’s and early 80’s from which this material is culled. It captures a fin de siècle too, before MTV, before multi format packaging, when the record companies needed the artists almost as much as the artists needed the record companies. The panic at Virgin when they realised what they had signed, and the despair of their A&R department, as the Sex Pistols landed in all their filth and fury, is worth the cover price on its own.

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Jane McDonald – Wolverhampton Grand Theatre

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Jane McDonald has crept up on me. As for many, my first glimpse of her was on the original “Cruise” documentary. It was immediately apparent that she was a star turn, glamorous, saucy, with personality, and crucially a very good singing voice that was at ease with a variety of musical styles. She is no overnight sensation, with her cruise career predated by the hard slog of the club circuit. A grounding that defines what she is.

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This was my first live show, the last night of the 20th Celebration tour. Securing tickets very late in the day was not easy. Memorably my “contact” at Wolverhampton Grand had told me “ there is sold out, then there is Jane McDonald sold out “, but where there is a will, there is a way. I was expecting a slick, professional show, with bags of personality. That is exactly what she delivered.

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A full house, the last of the sold out tour, greeted her like a home coming queen, big hair, big dress, big voice, and she didn’t relax her grip throughout the two hour show. The material was eclectic, diverse and exceptionally well performed. The night took off with “Downtown” and musically hit its peak with a Bacharach/ David medley. Three gorgeous female back-up singers also strutted some pin sharp dance moves, and were perfect for the call and response requirements of Bacharach’s songs.

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Jane is a performer comfortable with her audience, she pauses the show to read out some birthday/ anniversary greetings, there is a bit of comedy, and plenty of banter with her fans. She is also smart, promoting the date of her 2019 Grand show, June 6th, to an audience who would probably all have signed up again that night. The Grand is a perfect venue for her. The acoustics are superb, the 1200 capacity large enough to provide her with a handsome payday, but intimate enough to retain a cabaret/ music hall character to her show.

 

 
What struck me was how much her band seemed to be enjoying the music and the performance and how skilled a performer she is. The vocals never faltered, the hand gestures flourished, her hips shimmied playing to all three levels of the auditorium. She is in the tradition of Petula Clark, Cilla Black, Shirley Bassey, Lulu and Kylie, borrowing a little from each one.
The first half closed with “You Are My World”, the second with “Never Enough”, then a 70’s style disco romped brought the curtain down on the night, and the tour.

 

 
Her own material is strong, but she has secured a place in an elite level of performers who can sing the material of others, yet claim an audience because they are singing that material, not because the audience have come to see a specific repertoire performed.

 

 
She was given a standing ovation on arrival, after many of the songs, at the end of the first half, at the end of the second half and had the entire theatre on its feet for the close shaking our groove thing, “Amazing Grace” thrilled the older of her older fans, Bob Seger’s “We’ve Got Tonight” was the unexpected delight of the evening.

 

 
A faultless performance, great songs, a palpable connection with her audience in a fine venue was a fitting end to her tour. Catch her live when you can.

Gary Longden

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All Shook Up – Lichfield Garrick Theatre

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I was too young to appreciate Elvis in his pomp. Yet his music, and celebrity, is ubiquitous, and a little distance is no bad thing, providing context and time for balanced appreciation. When he burst onto the scene he was an enfant terrible, now his country and gospel roots make him seem decidedly mainstream. An integral part of the story of pop.

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A jukebox musical, “All Shook Up” was first performed in Chicago in December 2004, before transferring to Broadway the following year. It did not last the summer, and has been largely forgotten. But Sutton Coldfield Musical Theatre wisely reasoned that with the greater acceptance fourteen years later of the jukebox genre, an iconic popular star, a rich songbook, and plenty of rock n roll dancing, they should revive it.

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The story loosely draws upon “Twelfth Night”, but in truth the narrative is Much Ado About Nothing, apart from the music – which is what the audience have come to see and hear, and is where the show’s strength and power lies. It is like watching one of Elvis’s own movies, but live and in colour with glossy production values, and songs just bursting to be sung. There is a lot of music to cram in, an Elvis fan pleasing 30 musical numbers, including reprises.

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The links between the songs are that Chad stops by a small town to get his bike repaired. While there, he shakes up the dreary lives of the town’s citizens, reprising the theme of Synge’s “Playboy of the Western World”. Soon everybody is falling in love with someone who loves somebody else. But not so irrevocably that a song cannot come to the rescue, and all the couples naturally find happiness in time for the finale.

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A strength of the show is that this is not an Elvis showcase, with its success dependent upon an Elvis impersonator. Chad, the lead character, is a sexually-charged, leather-jacketed motorcyclist. But there the familiarity stops in a shrewd piece of casting by Director Elisa Millward. Adam Gregory has light, not slicked back black hair. He has plenty of verbal swagger, but much of it is comic, and he plays the part in a self-deprecating, self- effacing manner. Confident and assured, he allows others around him plenty of space to shine, performing the songs as himself, not in Elvis imitation. It works, much credit is due to Millward and himself for pulling it off.

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Opposite Chad, Lucy Surtees plays love interest Natalie/ Ed whose slender good looks have to be concealed until the final scene. She convinces as Ed, as well as Natalie, having to move from awkward tomboy, to awkward teenage boy, to bombshell beauty at the close, doing all with consummate skill.

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Two comic parts provide the evening with some essential levity, Tony Orbell delights as gawky, gangly nerdy Dennis, and sideman to Chad. Louise Grifferty has the most fun as the kill-joy Mayoress in a portrayal which wickedly mixes Miss Hannigan with Cruella de Ville, and ends with a liaison with her security which will have been familiar to anyone watching Jed Mercurio’s Bodyguard on BBC1.

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Sheila Pearson has done a tremendous job as Musical Director. It has been adapted for musical theatre, choral parts, and female leads, without neutering the spirit of the original arrangements. Her ten- piece band is so accomplished, Elvis himself would surely have engaged them, a four piece brass section combining with the wood stage to produce a gorgeous, rich, timbre.

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An advantage of amateur productions is the ability to produce large cast numbers at relatively little cost. Pearson draws out some powerful chorus work, while choreographer Maggie Jackson has a field day with Rock n Roll dances galore, plenty of flared skirts, and an unusually sharp front line, which sometimes was part of an all singing, all dancing, forty strong ensemble. The lead vocals are liberally shared with not a weak link in earshot.

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The score is commendably eclectic. Of course we hear “Jailhouse Rock,” which opens the show revealing an impressive jail set pleasingly realised by Production Manager Paul Lumsden and vibrantly lit by Steven Rainsford. “Heartbreak Hotel,” “Teddy Bear,” “It’s Now or Never,” “Love Me Tender,” “Can’t Help Falling in Love,” and “Burning Love” follow, but the song driven narrative requires some quirky selections to develop the story. Thus, we are also treated to lesser known material such as “Roustabout,” “Follow That Dream,” and “I Don’t Want To,” from the Girls! Girls! Girls! soundtrack.

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Acting demands are slight, if in doubt say it in a song, and they do. The set up for “It’s Now or Never” is so cheesy that every one of the audience could have had an omelette, yet it is done with such panache by the cast that it evokes a smile not a groan. By contrast, the fairground dance sequence is razor sharp, economical, and straight out of Grease, I could have sworn that Olivia Newton John was up there somewhere! However ” C’mon Everybody” is the night’s big production showstopper half way through the first half.

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The enthusiasm, vim and brio of cast and musicians swamp the auditorium, by the end the contagion is complete, with no chorus not sung along to, no foot not tapping, no hands not clapping along. Above all, it is great fun, a lavishly, brightly costumed, show which does great credit to all involved. “All Shook Up” was Elvis’ biggest chart record , inspired so it is claimed by a shaken up bottle of Pepsi. Glass bottles of Pepsi may be a throwback now, but the music lives on in this production, leaving cast, musicians and audience – all shook up. Runs until 22nd September.
Gary Longden

 

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Dick Whittington – Lichfield Garrick Theatre, preview.

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Behind the Arras was honoured to attend a preview of this year’s pantomime, “Dick Whittington” at the Lichfield Garrick.

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Local actor Sam Rabone, who hails from Streetly, is now not only the Dame, but also this year, for the first time, the Director for the show. Appearing for his third consecutive year, he should be able to find the stage door without directions and have a cheap taxi fare home. He is fitting this year’s pantomime between directing children’s shows in Dubai.

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The cast without their clothes on!

The cast includes Katrina Bryan (CBeebies), and Ben Thornton, the show is written by Paul Hendy (Evolution Pantomimes), and produced by the same team behind the Lichfield Garrick’s smash hit pantomimes, “Aladdin” and “Sleeping Beauty”.

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Katrina Bryan

Children’s television star Katrina Bryan stars as Fairy Bowbells, Joanna Hayward is her nemesis as Queen Rat. Katrina, is best known for playing Nina in the hit CBeebies series “Nina and the Neurons”, She has recently finished filming in Scotland for a new CBeebies family drama series called” Molly and Mack” about an 8 year old girl called Molly and her brother Mack, who is 18. The series is all about Molly’s fun adventures with Mack, her friends, and the eccentric but loving group of adults – one of whom is played by Katrina – who run the stalls in an indoor community market. It is due to be showing round about the time “Dick Whittington” is playing at Lichfield.

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Dick Whittington

The Garrick pantomime is rightly now a Christmas institution in Lichfield, Staffordshire, and beyond, always funny, quick paced and suitable for all the family.
“Dick Whittington” runs at the Lichfield Garrick from Thursday 29 November to Monday 31 December 2018, with a variety of schools, matinee and evening performances. Prices start from £15 for children and £19.50 for adults and can be booked online at http://www.lichfieldgarrick.com or by calling the Box Office on 01543 412121.

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Jersey Boys – Wolverhampton Grand Theatre

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On one level this is a very slick jukebox musical, but music has the capacity to take us to another place, which is exactly what this show does.

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First performed on Broadway in 2005, with music by Bob Gaudio, lyrics by Bob Crewe, and book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice, it ran on the New York stage until 2017, and has been touring across the world. It is presented in a documentary-style format from four seasons ( neat eh?). Valli is the voice. Gaudio the music. Massi the revelatory narrative.

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It’s a classic American tale- Rags to riches, and back to rags. In the early 1960’s the music was all, with little interest in, or investigation of, hit musicians . If the criminal records of the group, for which they had been imprisoned, had been known as they became famous, their careers would have been over. Their clean image a conscious attempt to distant themselves from their murky past at a time when popular music had a bad boy image, but little substance. As the show was being created, the production team were approached by family members of the late mob boss Gyp DeCarlo to ensure that he would be portrayed “ respectfully”.

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However good the narrative, the show depends upon singing excellence and is well cast. Jim Gibbs, playing the role of Frankie, excels with his falsetto, Simon Bailey, Declan Egan and Lewis Griffiths, playing the other three Seasons offer pitch perfect vocal harmonies. Gibbs, an understudy deserves particular credit for filling big shoes effortlessly, and convincingly. He also delivered the stand out number of the night, a beautifully sung, and arranged, “My Eyes Adored You”. Musical Director Francis Goodhand ensures that all the songs have just the right light and shade to help them breathe, with modern technology offering nuances and depth not possible when the songs were originally written. A gantry and staircase provide a basic framework for the set, a video screen is used sparingly, and to great effect, particularly when some original footage compliments an onstage song.

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Pre-show and full of expectation

New Jersey has been the crucible for several essential American talents, Bruce Springsteen, Count Basie, Jon Bon Jovi, Whitney Houston, Debbie Harry, Frank Sinatra amongst them. New York even more so. Springsteen’s autobiography tells of a time when music was playing all around him, influences were diverse and new, and everybody thought they could be a star. Basic recording techniques put an emphasis on songs that were simple and catchy and there was a thirst for more of this new music. It was a heady time, and one which nurtured the Four Seasons.

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The original Four Seasons

Hit songs assail the senses with astonishing speed, the narrative provides a pace rarely seen in jukebox musicals, and the finale works splendidly as each Season checks out from the stage eschewing the normally obligatory extended greatest hits mash up. This is a fine show, which does justice to the music, the musicians, and the time. A full house offered a deserved standing ovation at the close. Jersey Boys runs until September 8th.

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Bruce Springsteen- Born to Run The Autobiography


I first came across Springsteen when the music press adverts and billboards appeared proclaiming him : “The future of Rock n Roll”. It was a bold claim. It turned out to be justified.

I tried to buy tickets for the legendary Hammersmith Odeon shows, but for once, I was unsuccessful, instead having to settle for the album, which sounded like nothing I had ever heard before, and the distillation of everything I had heard before at the same time. The master musical alchemist at work creating ethereal magic from mundane earthly materials. That was 1975. Forty -three years later the legend that is Bruce Springsteen endures and flourishes, one of a handful of American Rock stars who still mean something. With Tom Petty gone, only Neil Young remains as a peer. Some ten years my senior, he felt like an elder brother. He looked cool. The cover photo of him and Clarence Clemons was striking, even then. The scrawny white guy flanked by a saxophone toting black behemoth. Bruce himself looked like an extra straight out of Scorsese’s “Taxi Driver”.

I love and loathe American rock simultaneously. At its best, with the likes of Springsteen, Young, Petty, Dylan and Lynyrd Skynyrd, it has a pivotal place in modern Western popular culture. At its worst, with the likes of Foreigner, Journey, Kiss, Toto, Aerosmith, REO Speedwaggon, and Boston, it is an empty, soul less derivative shell. Springsteen pretty much defines what the best of American Rock is. His influences oblique and well chosen.

I approached his biography with caution. Rock biographies, and auto biographies, are generally dreadful. My fingers had been well and truly burned recently with Steve Jones, David Bowie, and Morrissey biographies, each desperately disappointing for different reasons. It took me two years to buy a copy. Why? I did not want to be let down. The genre is flawed. I did not want my high estimation of the man sullied. But perhaps most of all, through his music I felt that I already knew him. That he had said all that he had to say through his songs. I was wrong.

At just over five hundred pages, this is not a quick read. Yet not a single page is wasted. We do not reach “Born to Run”, the commercial year zero for the man, for some two hundred pages. As a rule, I skip artists descriptions of their childhood, they do not interest me. This one did. Springsteen combines a colourful, insightful prose style with the vernacular. It quickly becomes apparent that this is no ordinary auto biography. Reading the words are like reading the lyrics of his songs. His personal insights become universal ones. His gift as a songwriter is drawing you in, you believe what he says because he is articulating either how you feel, or how you would feel if you were him in that situation.

Kiss and tells, excess, drink, drugs, sex, wasted money, sharks and victims are the lingua franca of most successful rock books. Here Springsteen demonstrates enormous restraint. Some might harbour a grudge with a manager who essentially took the band for half a million dollars. Not Springsteen. Instead he goes out of his way to tell things from ex manager Mike Appel’s perspective. His first wife? Not a bad word to say about her. Miami Steve’s departure from the band? He understands. What we find is a man at peace with himself. The only conspicuous indulgence is summonsing Sony’s private jet to take him and his family to New York after an LA earthquake. Not once does he talk about security guards, instead only of when the NYPD refused the band a post gig escort because of their umbrage at “American Skin”. Instead he hops on a motorbike with friends, connecting with the landscape and the people that inhabit it.

As a fan, particularly a young fan, the process of writing and recording music is taken for granted. It should not be. Great music on its own is not enough. Production is all. What impresses is his fanaticism at producing the best song, vocal, arrangement and production possible, even if that process takes years and swallows up as much money as he is making. It also become clear that this is HIS band, the rest hired hands, loyal and essential, but hired nonetheless. Not in a superior sense, his appreciation of the band members is fulsome, but in an understanding that he needed the job done, his way.

He does not have a bad word to say about anyone, and his appreciation of deceased band members Danny Federici and Clarence Clemons is warm, poignant and respectful. Sometimes you have to read between the lines. Miami Steve’s ego is handled respectfully, Federici’s addictions, sympathetically. Lavish entertainment for his family, and looking after his parents is implicit, rather than explicit. Memorably his explanation for the consistently high octane shows that the band delivered is explained in three words, “I make them”. In his flirtation with Jake Clemons to join the band the demands he puts upon all who play with him are uncompromisingly laid out, as is his understanding of what every song, every guitar and sax solo, means to the fans. His depression is laid out starkly, the depths previously unmentioned. There was also a tacit admission that the highs and lifestyle of the road are so intoxicating that ordinary life just doesn’t suffice – when even the kids no longer need to give you a lift in the car. Yet it is that everyday description, that any empty-nester will recognise, which is a secret of his success. At all stages of his life he can communicate the human experience in lyrical prose, with broad brush strokes that anyone can recognise and associate with. Bruce reveals himself to be a man who you could have a beer with, shoot some pool with, ride the trail with, or just sit on the boardwalk and pas the time with.

With Nils Lofgren (l) and Miami Steve ( R)

He does not spend much time telling the story behind the songs, I suspect that will be in another book, but he tantalisingly reveals that there is more music in the vaults from the “Tracks “era. He also makes no mention of the Jim Steinman connection with whom he reputedly used to visit the opera with and for whom Roy Bittan and Max Weinberg played on the huge hit album “ Bat out of Hell”. When Bruce yells “There is an opera out on the turnpike, there is a ballet being fought out in the valley” in “Jungleland”, it allegedly acknowledges Weinberg. Is it a case of stories being held back? Or of “if you don’t have anything good to say about someone say nothing at all”? Roy Bittan is not nearly as prominent as I would have anticipated, Gary Tallent fleetingly namechecked. But perhaps that is the point? This is Bruce’s band, Bruce’s book. He also clearly needs the fame, the adulation and the popularity. His least popular “Lucky Town” and “Human Touch albums, which I think have considerable merit, are passed over

When I reluctantly turned the last page on this book I was sad it was over. I felt as if Bruce had been speaking to me for five hundred pages. I felt as though I had grown to know him better

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