I can't find anything online for this band though !
SCOTTISH ARTS & MUSIC since 2007. Imagining SCOTIA! Photographer & Blogger - Musicnotes, Poetrynotes, Histories, Celtic Connections, Edinburgh festivals.
Wednesday, 29 January 2014
The Big Dish supported Del Amitri
Another cool
support slot was The Big Dish who supported Del Amitri at The Hydro Glasgow
Celtic Connections 2014.
I can't find anything online for this band though !
I can't find anything online for this band though !
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Del Amitri,
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Guitarist RM Hubbert
Sometimes the support artists are as interesting as the main
artist at a gig. Such was the case for last night’s concert when guitarist and
singer RM Hubbert took to the
concert hall stage in support of Glasgow
band Mogwai, Celtic Connections
2014, (full review to follow)
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Tuesday, 28 January 2014
Del Amitri Reunion Gig The Hydro Glasgow
This reunion gig after a twelve year
break, with one of Glasgow's favourite bands was
Celtic Connections biggest show so far and it’s first at the shiny new Glasgow Hydro. The show
was the start of a 12 date UK
tour for the band and drew a crowd of over 8,000. In fact Curran seemed somewhat surprised by the size of his audience and he said one of his mates had bought seven tickets!
The
excitement in the air for this return gig was palpable as the band took to the
Hydro stage. Successful Scottish 80s
band Del Amitri delighted fans with a return to their 80s favourites and with
the entire floor of the vast Hydro on its feet, the audience sang along with
gusto and with calls of 'brilliant' and
'We've missed you!!
They started
the show with some of their best known -
The Last To Know, Kiss This Thing Goodbye and then the driving rhythms of The Ones That Lead You Nowhere. Curran
and Harvie's songs are full of both optimism and regrets.
Other songs
- Driving With the Brakes on, Being Drunk
in a Band, Not Where It's At
and Hammering Heart, In The Frame.
Fiddler
player extraordinaire Aidan O'Rourke (from Lau) joined them on stage for several songs
adding that extra Celtic magic for a lovely take on the songs - This Side Of
The Morning, Sleep Instead of Teardrops and Be My Downfall.
.
Tell Her This was sung acoustically which gave the
enthusiastic crowd a chance to vent their vocal energy and resulted in some of the
biggest cheers of the night.
There was
also singing for their other hits such as - Nothing
Ever Happens, Roll To Me (top ten UK
Billboard), Driving With the Brakes on and Spit In The Rain - which is apparently a Glasgow taxi drivers favourite song!
The band
played rockier numbers and also took the pace down for the insightful
poignancy of their acoustic songs in the folk idiom, with Be My Downfall, What She Sees and Driving With the Brakes on.
Encore Songs
- In
The Meantime, Here and Now, Just
before you Leave, Move Away Johnny Blue,
The band
were on top form as Currie's rich vocals and their tight harmonies rang out
over the vast arena. Del Amitri's songs have emotional rhythm and country soul,
with sensitive guitar and words that ring true.
The band
centre on Justin Currie and Iain Harvie who are sensitive story tellers and have
a way with words that leaves them hanging in the air. With words such as....
Freezes up from time to time. Lonely
tonight and lonely tomorrow. Hard to say you love someone. My one girl once
again tonight, till we find someone new.....
The marrying
of rock and Scottish lyricisms gives Scottish bands an added uniqueness and
honesty on their music. I was over in the States when all these Scottish bands
came to the fore - Deacon Blue and Simple Minds, and I remember Simple Minds on
MTV.
There was a revival of Scottish arts and music in the 80s after we lost the vote because not enough people voted, so some (not all) of their songs were new to me - and I am certainly now a newly converted fan!
This really was a great feel good concert! I loved it.
There was a revival of Scottish arts and music in the 80s after we lost the vote because not enough people voted, so some (not all) of their songs were new to me - and I am certainly now a newly converted fan!
This really was a great feel good concert! I loved it.
They were
well supported by The Os from Dallas and The Big Dish, another
first rate Scottish band reunited just last year.
Del Amitri , Scottish alternative
rock band, formed Glasgow
1983. Justin Currie (bass and vocals), Iain Harvie (lead guitar), Bryan Tolland
(guitar) and Paul Tyagi (drums). Currie and Harvie are the only band members to
remain and were the songwriters. The band had several top ten albums UK - . http://delamitri.com/
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Thursday, 23 January 2014
Roaming Roots Revue Celtic Connections 2014
I was at a Laurel
Canyon concert Sunday,
such great songs came out of this era – and this concert was about the young people keeping this
groove alive today….
The concert was a journey through the California sounds of Laurel Canyon with some of the newer Scottish and American artists along with those summer breezes - both nostalgia and looking forward and proved a real treat for both aging hippies and younger fans!
Idlewild
front man Roddy Woomble sang Neil
Young’s Out On The Weekend and then a
sons written by himself and Roddy Hart, Love
Steals Us From Lonliness. Next James Taylor and Joni Mitchell look-alikes
and sound-a-likes Zervas and Pepper
performed Ghost Writer and Mitchell’s
Woodstock. After which respected folk band Lau
with Kris Drever on vocals, performed James Taylor’s Fire and Rain.
The beautiful Webb Sisters sang their close subtle harmonies on Everything Changes and Linda Ronstadt’s Heart Like a Wheel. Then Roddy Hart and The Lonesome Fire were joined on stage by lead man from California’s The Dawes for an excellent rendition of Jackson Browne’s After The Deluge. Frank Reader then sang a moving interpretation of a Judee Sill song, The Kiss. A treat to end the first half was a return of Cory Chisel and Adriel Harris, who both looked and sounded the part in casual American style and they sang Times Won’t Change and the Eagles Hotel California.
Second Half.
Roddy Hart and The Lonesome Fire
began with a rocking version of Jackson Browne’s Running on Empty. A highlight was dramatic American country singer Lindi Ortega with her song Cigarettes and Truckstop and the Eagles Desperado. After which we had new and top
Scottish trio, Clark, Mitchell, Reilly,
with Helpless (CSNY). Young Glasgow
singer songwriter Siobhan Wilson
sang her song All Dressed Up and
then, with Tommy Reilly on piano,
one of my all time favourite songs, A
Case of You, with a beauty of voice and interpretation that captured the
essence of the song and held the audience silent.
The Webb Sisters sang Judee Sill’s song Jesus Was A Crossmaker, followed by Roddy Woomble and Lau with Roll Um Easy (Little Feat). An LA band The Dawes were another highlight with their songs Most People, A Little Bit Of Everything and Desperados Under The Eaves (Warren Zevon) plus an encore. Hart is clearly both a Jackson Browne and Dawes fan!
The concert was a journey through the California sounds of Laurel Canyon with some of the newer Scottish and American artists along with those summer breezes - both nostalgia and looking forward and proved a real treat for both aging hippies and younger fans!
Forty years ago in the early 1970s
when the music in New York became too corporate, many young musicians seeking
artistic freedoms and sunshine took off for LA – The Byrds, Crosby, Stills
& Nash, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Jackson Browne. It was a time of longer
hair and flowing skirts, peace signs and flower power dreams. I chose this
concert because last years inaugural event received top reviews and also
because the early 70s produced so many top albums and
some of my all time favourite sounds.
Scottish
singer songwriter Roddy Hart and his
quality band The Lonesome Fire
opened this colourful and varied concert with the Byrd's song So You Want to Be A Rock n Roll Star.
The beautiful Webb Sisters sang their close subtle harmonies on Everything Changes and Linda Ronstadt’s Heart Like a Wheel. Then Roddy Hart and The Lonesome Fire were joined on stage by lead man from California’s The Dawes for an excellent rendition of Jackson Browne’s After The Deluge. Frank Reader then sang a moving interpretation of a Judee Sill song, The Kiss. A treat to end the first half was a return of Cory Chisel and Adriel Harris, who both looked and sounded the part in casual American style and they sang Times Won’t Change and the Eagles Hotel California.
The Webb Sisters sang Judee Sill’s song Jesus Was A Crossmaker, followed by Roddy Woomble and Lau with Roll Um Easy (Little Feat). An LA band The Dawes were another highlight with their songs Most People, A Little Bit Of Everything and Desperados Under The Eaves (Warren Zevon) plus an encore. Hart is clearly both a Jackson Browne and Dawes fan!
The cast of
players finished on stage with some of Laurel Canyon’s biggest hits – Love The One Your With (Stephen Stills),
Take It Easy (The Eagles) and California Dreaming (The Mamas and The
Papas).
Quote Rolling Stone – 'It's about the vibe man and free
jamming … Goldberg.‘ They want to be loose.. to have the freedom to groove
their own groove.’ Photos and Review Pauline Keightley - http://pkimage.co.uk/
Roddy Hart has pulled together and compared
another top quality concert that offered the audience breadth, diversity and
quality. Hart also organised Celtic’s "Forever Young: A 70th Birthday
Tribute To Bob Dylan" Celtic Connections 2011, and were house band for
Gerry
Rafferty concert (2012) broadcast on BBC 2
Scotland. The concert drew on Celtic festival’s success with melding
American and Scottish sounds to offer interesting cross overs and highlight the
links between the Celtic music of the British Isles
and the American States. - http://www.roddyhart.com/
Monday, 20 January 2014
Nicola Benedetti performed Opening concert Celtic Connections 2014
Nicola Benedetti |
Duncan Chisholm and Wolfstone |
Joy Kills Sorrow |
Next there was a real treat for festival goers with Scottish classical violinist and world class music star Nicola Benedetti who has been working on Scottish material for her forthcoming album with Shetland fiddler Aly Bain and accordionist and composer Phil Cunningham. Bain makes it all look effortless and Cunningham is a talented pianist and composer. She performed 6 tunes – Hurricane, Chan & Chanaidh, Dean Brig/ Banks, Gentle Light, Coisich, Puirt. Nicola played a song with Julie Fowlis’s clear vocal tones, which was a delight to hear. Then fiddler Aly Bain and Phil Cunningham on piano both joined her on stage. It appeared Aly had been coaching her on folk music techniques – he is trained in traditional Shetland style with its shifting rhythms and defined edge.
The tune Gentle Light, written by Phil Cunningham, provided interweaving pure melodies that offered subtle flights – a joy. After which they took the tempo up with some energetic reels. After the set Aly, who is a quiet unassuming man, gave Benedetti a big hug and it was evident his joy of working with the younger accomplished player. Master craftsmen easily make their instruments soar with layers of melody and harmony. Collaborations may take us out of our comfort zones thorugh challenging raise us up.
Julie Fowlis &Nicola Benedetti |
Second Half : Peter Mawanga & The Awaravi movement provided colourful Malawi culture with dance rhythms followed by beautiful Gaelic singer Julie Fowlis who sang Smeorachb and An Roghainn, Puirt. She told us the moving song The Choice was about the wish for second chances.
Yves Lambert trio |
The surprise for the night was American country singer songwriter Beth Neilson Chapman, who has written may hit songs for pop and country artists and she sang Pray and Nothing I can do About it (a hit for Willy Nelson). The concert was aptly finished by Benedetti and Phil with the fine tune Aberlady.
Beth Neilson Chapman, |
I am pleased to see the festival go from strength to strength and raise its game each year with the standard, quality and range of musicianship and artistry. It is a huge boost for Glasgow to host this world class music festival that celebrates not only the folk traditions but also contemporary and world music. A heart warming uplifting note to start the festival on! Photos and Review Pauline Keightley.
All Photographs are copyrighted Pauline Keightley and are taken with the permission of the artists, the festival, and the venues involved. Please respect my copyright. Photos at Celtic Connections since 2008. http://pkimage.co.uk/celticconnections
Benedetti
studied violin from age 4, she attended the Yhudi Menuhin school of
music and she was BBC Young Musician of the Year 2004. She has performed solo
with Scottish National Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic orchestra, London Symphony
Orchestra,
Wednesday, 15 January 2014
Life vs Hello
Back in the fifties
photographer Eliot Elisofon took photos of the real African peoples to show
their true majesty and strength of character. Before this many African images
were of famine or war.
Back then
images (and text and music) made a difference in peoples lives. They hoped to
show a better way forward, more understanding, knowledge, history, beauty and
information. Perhaps the word I search for here is substance.
The biggest
selling Photo magazines were Life and the French Match. Life was bigger than
Hello and it had full page colour images of major events such as the first moon
landings or the Kennedy's. In many ways it opened up a whole new world in ways
that the small B & W Tv screen was unable to.
By contrast
today's Hello magazine is completely about our celebrity culture - and if you scratch
beneath the surface I have no idea ( apart from fashion style) what the
magazine tells us. There are no scientists, authors, artists and a few
musicians, on its pages. It is all gloss, gloss, gloss and I worry for the
impressionable young. They appear to be feeding an appetite for gossip, but are
they not also creating that appetite?
Today
quality images of nature can be seen in tv films.
Nowadays only the Sunday Times
magazine offers some quality photojournalism and nature images in a proper full page spread. There is today an
over emphasis (especially for women) on fashion and celebrity. While I enjoy
creative fashion images in Vogue or Bazaar but….
for me nothing quite beats the incredible
nature photo, an insightful portrait, the memorable photojournalism war photo,
a dynamic or expressive live music image, or a moment in history..
I miss those large colour quality
historic Life magazine images.
In fact it was Life magazine that
first sparked my passion for photography and portriat drawing.
When I view the magazine racks I am
discouraged by the low standards of images - the gaudiness, brashness, lack of
subtleties..
We can view millions of images online
these days but to find the quality among the average.....now that is the
challenge that is both time consuming and confusing too!
185 views
185 views
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Eve Ensler One Billion Rising
Eve Ensler (born May 25, 1953) is an American playwright, feminist,
activist best known for her play The
Vagina Monologues. I was inspired last night on BBCs Hardtalk by writer and
feminist Eve Ensler who works against violence towards women. Certainly when I
listen to the news it is often about violence towards women ( just today in the
UK DJ Dave Lee Tarvis and Rolf Harris are both in court for charges of sexual
assaults on young women)
She says women need to break the silence - and that most
women keep quiet about their problems.
Violence towards women occurs in all countries worldwide - there is
still incest, bullying, sexual harassment in the developed world - 1 in 5 women
in UK are attacked, 1 in 3 in the US, 1 in 5 women on college compasses US are
attacked. Violence against women is what
maintains Patriarchy.
Her play The Vagina Monologues makes it OK for
women to speak out.
She heard women talk of these issues and stories that upset her. One older woman spoke of being assaulted as a
young girl and after this experience she never had sex. Eventually all the
women's stories were made into her play The
Vagina Monologues which is now performed world wide in 140 countries. She
said the storied are universal and that all women understand them. She claims that the violence perfumed by men
against women can lead to depression, suicides and eating disorders. She says women need to break the silence. She
said that the threat of violence and daily terror leads to a siege mentality
and that this existence of fear leads to depressions, destroys self esteem,
confidence and sense of worthiness.
Ensler stated that her feminism motivates her art and that
they drive each other. Eve was bullied
by her own father and she said often these men are spilt personalities
projecting one normal image to the outside world another violent one
indoors.
Writing was the one experience where she was able to make
sense of her environment and have a
persona that wasn't being drowned.
Of course we tend as women to blame ourselves - that is that
we are somehow the cause of these attacks by our own behaviour. I remember watching the movie Goodwill
Hunting when the therapist says to Will -
Its Not Your Fault, Its Not Your Fault over and over. I find it very hard not
to believe it is not somehow my fault.
Perhaps this book on art and words and music is about my
journey to make sense of it all. Music has been my escape route to a better
place. When I was very young I started to write poems and to draw.
We write to you one month before 14 February, the actual day we will rise and dance for Justice. But we all know One Billion Rising for Justice is clearly not just a day. It is a campaign, a strategy, a determination, a new energy. It is months of preparation, investigation, and collaboration. It is the careful, conscious work of building a coalition, inviting new activists, and acknowledging those who have been on the frontlines for years. It is envisioning and writing new laws and legislation. It is breaking the silence, releasing our stories, naming and identifying injustices, creating demands, organizing forums and panels and events, as well as writing songs and poems and plays, and making videos. It is identifying the places where we will rise. It is learning about our sisters’ struggles around the world and making them our own. It is bringing the most marginalized to the front. It is the grassroots leading the way. It is men joining and standing with us. It is acknowledging the places of intersection. It is a decision, a vision of the world where the bodies of women and the body of our mother earth are honored and cherished and safe and held sacred. It is trust. It is expanding our identities and wounds to include the others. It is a fierce refusal to undermine or attack or diminish, but to take the time to find the language to express our grievances and frustrations, with the belief that each one of us in this struggle is on a path of evolution and revolution, wounded, broken, and doing our best. It is a wild energy that says Yes. Freedom is possible. Unity is Possible. Everything is possible. It is a Rising – dissolving borders, edges, separations. It is love, an unstoppable wave of love and justice.
This year, on 14 February 2014 we are calling
on women and men everywhere to harness their power and imagination to rise for
justice. Imagine, One Billion women releasing their stories, dancing and
speaking out at the places where they need justice, where they need an end to
violence against women and girls. Join
us!
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Friday, 10 January 2014
Emeli Sande Photos
Emeli Sande Photos - from her
gigs here 2007 to 2012 are available to purchase on my website - http://pkimage.co.uk/f514285744
PHOTOS – our eye improves
- just through practice, practice, practice. Sorry there are no
shortcuts.
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Celtic Connections 2014!
I am looking forward to Celtic
festival 2014!
Celtic Connections includes well
known musicians from traditional and roots music,world, indie, jazz, folk, soul
and Americana. I always particularly enjoy the unique and often fun collaborations.
This year
the festival will host concerts at the new Glasgow Hydro venue and will
showcase some of the cream of Scottish musical talents. Highlights
include 80s Scottish band Del Amitri and
respected rock band Mogwai along
with RM Hubbert.
Also an International Burns Night at the Hydro
that includes - world musicians The Mahotella Queens, Alkinoos
Ioannidis, Raghu Dixit, Neil Finn of Crowded House alongside Scottish talent with Karine Polwart, Salsa
Celtica, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Capercaillie, Rachel Sermanni and
Dougie MacLean
The Old
Fruitmarket during Celtic hosts fun ceilidh nights with bands such as the Treacherous Orchestra and
Irish singer Imelda May.
There are
also wonderful small venue gigs worth checking out that include some of the
stalwarts of the Scottish music scene including - Rab Noakes, Dick Gaughan. Plus
the beautiful singing voices of Julie
Fowlis, Eddi Reader, Mary Chapin Carpenter,
Also a 30th
Anniversary concert for Capercaillie one
of Scotland’s
foremost Celtic bands. The band were among the first to connect Scotland’s
Gaelic traditions to the pop and world music scene, with all the “boldness,
sensitivity and deep-dyed musicianship” such cross-fertilisations demand. Their
new album, At the Heart Of It All,
circles back towards Capercaillie’s founding Gaelic wellspring, centring on Karen Matheson’s sublime vocals,
arranged with consummately elegant restraint.
Among the artists appearing - Del Amitri, Imelda May, Capercaillie, Bobby
Womack, Mahotella Queens, Salsa Celtica, Amadou & Miriam, Lúnasa, AR Rahman
& Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Mogwai, Peatbog Faeries, Julie Fowlis,
Elephant Revival, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Manu Dibango, Treacherous Orchestra,
Shawn Colvin, Nicola Benedetti, Stockton's Wing, The Gloaming, Lau, Suzanne
Vega, Seth Lakeman, RANT, Boban Marković Orchestra, Alkinoos Ioannidis, The
Olllam, Bill Callahan, De Temps Antan, RM Hubbert, Lloyd Cole & the
Leopards, Kathleen MacInnes, Tim Finn, Dick Gaughan and The Stray Birds.
2014 will see Celtic
Connections celebrates its 21st year. Over 2000 musicians from every
corner of the globe will come to Glasgow
between 16th January and 2nd February 2014.
All Photographs are copyrighted Pauline Keightley and are taken with the permission of the artists, the festival, and the venues involved. Please respect my copyright. Photos at Celtic Connections since 2008. http://pkimage.co.uk/celticconnections
All Photographs are copyrighted Pauline Keightley and are taken with the permission of the artists, the festival, and the venues involved. Please respect my copyright. Photos at Celtic Connections since 2008. http://pkimage.co.uk/celticconnections
Next summer Glasgow will host the
Commonwealth Games. Celtic Connections has become the biggest celebration of
the tunes and songs that connect Scotland’s musical legacy to the
rest of the world.
Del Amitri
Fri 24 Jan 2014, 07.30 PM
The Hydro
The Hydro
MOGWAI
Tue 28 Jan 2014, 07.30 PM
Main Auditorium
Tue 28 Jan 2014, 07.30 PM
Main Auditorium
music, gigs, reviews, photos,
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Celtic Connections 2014,
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