BPREVIEW: Lunar Festival @ Umberslade Estate, 5th to 7th June ‘15

Lunar Festival, Umberslade Park & Farm Estate – 5th to 7th June.

This weekend, Lunar Festival returns to Umberslade Park & Farm Estate – running from 5th to 7th June.

Lunar is a three day Greenfield festival, with daily tickets for £39 (advance) & £45 (otd) or a weekend pass for £89 & £100 (otd). The site opens at 10am on Friday 5th June, with camping available to those with a weekend ticket – just as God and Group 4 intended. For more info, direct from Lunar Festival, click here.

Hatched by the minds behind the Moseley Folk and Mostly Jazz Festivals, Lunar is the baby in the Birmingham born triptych – but well on its way to being a serious fixture in the summer calendar.Wilko Johnson

From a humble 500 capacity beginning in 2012, Lunar Festival has been picking up a fair wheel of momentum and attention – building a reputation for considered programming and good old fashioned festival nonsense. And letterpress demonstrations, should you so desire (I kinda would).

uk-magicdoorAvoiding the obvious headliner trap, Lunar’s live line up reads more like a beloved record collection than a page of NME listings.

This year, Wilko Johnson, The Fall, Sylvan Essen, Julian Cope, Andrew Weatherall and Public Service Broadcasting all make the BIG TYPE BILL – whilst the likes of Benjamin Folke Thomas, Electric Swing Circus & Higher Intelligence Agency keep a hungry cat amongst the pigeons.

Plus there’s a late night landing of clubs to keep you occupied, should you be little-one free and still up for a boogie – with Swingamajig, Modulate, Freestyle, Dark Corner Disc, and the ferociously successful Magic Door all chipping in.

But enough of the rhetoric, viddy this for 32seconds and you’ll get the idea:

Lunar Festival 2015

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Lunar Festival comes to the Umberslade Park & Farm Estate, from 5th to 7th June. For further information, and online tickets, visit http://lunarfestival.co.uk/

INTERVIEW: Kirstin Barnes – StereoMe @ TwoReflecT

Kirstin BArnes by Imogen Frost

Above pic by Imogen Frost / Below words & pics by Ed King

Vodka bottles and cupcakes; one symbolises what people think you are, and one symbolises what you really are.”

Kirstin Barnes explains the ‘girl next door’, a persona she felt when “I was leaving a school and everyone was expecting this that and the other from me,” and one of the four characters in her new project, StereoMe
StereoMe @ TwoReflecT - by Ed King

“When I started (StereoMe) I wanted to look at the different stereotypes that women fall under,” tells Barnes, talking to me at the end of TwoReflecT’s opening night at Vivid Projects, “especially through dating games such as LovePlus, where you ‘groom’ a girlfriend. The premise of the project was to look at how people can now go ’OK, I don’t want to have a real girlfriend; life would be easier if I had a computerised girlfriend. And now I can choose her.’” 

StereoMe invites its audience to do just that, asking you to choose one of four Kirstin Barnes characters from a mobile phone touch screen – with the selected persona then projected onto the walls of a secluded room.

Three of the characters are personifications of stereotypes, identities Barnes has felt both herself and women have been surmised by: the good time girl, the career girl, the girl next door. The fourth option is ‘me’, a character based on her current and self perception. Once chosen each character evolves a story, with Kirstin Barnes featuring in series of static poses amidst further audio and imagery – reaching out to the audience through soundscapes and 3D mapping.

StereoMe @ TwoReflecT - by Ed King“I was looking at Japanese dating games,” explains Barnes, “and the fact that pregnancy levels have dropped (after the release of LovePlus) to the point that it’s now considered a national problem. Most of the characters you can choose are in school uniform and aged between 14-17, so now you’ve got 60 year old men in ‘relationships’ with a digital schoolgirl. From that I began to look at how people can choose a stereotype.”

One ‘gamer’, known by the username Sal9000, even married his LovePlus digital partner in 2009. And if you need further reference points to this relationship dystopia, beyond the snowballing world of virtual reality Vs insanity, Google ‘man marries’ and see what comes up. But are these not isolated instances, albeit abhorrent and headline worthy, and just an unfortunate manifestation of modernity?

“I started with Darwin’s theory that men will look at a women as a fertility object,” continues Barnes, giving further background to StereoMe.It may not be their intention to do so, but they (men) ask is she young, is she nubile, has she got child bearing hips, is she going to be a potential mother? StereoMe @ TwoReflecT - by Ed King

And now we have all the social stereotypes. So the ‘girl next door’ is more likely to make a great mother, whereas the ‘good time girl’, the same woman – fitting under a different stereotype because of the way she’s been socially viewed, might get put on the sideline as a potential mating partner.”

The content of StereoMe is a clear challenge to one of the biggest divides in gender politics, perception. But the narrative remains just as clearly personal; Barnes proffers candid snapshots of her own life to illustrate her point. Every character seems to carry a double edged sword too, outside the confident imagery of ‘me’, as the surface perception masks both the woman and potential turmoil underneath.

“And now we go to ‘good time girl’,” introduces Kirstin Barnes with a slight laugh. “This is the girl that’s at every party, is seen everywhere, seems to be having a wonderfully fun time but actually, I was ready to implode.” The jumps from first to third person continue to pepper our conversation. “That’s why there’s little fire balls; it’s like a time bomb ready to go off. Although there’s this fun exterior inside I’m probably my most miserable.”

StereoMe @ TwoReflecT - by Ed King“And this is when I did what everyone wanted me to do and got a proper job,” describes Barnes as we select ‘career girl’ from the handset, “I earned loads of money and was really not happy. That was also the main time in my life where I wanted children, but because my boyfriend earned lots of money and saw me as a money earner too, I wasn’t seen as a potential mother.”

As we run though all the characters, StereoMe begins to feel more cathartic – a way, perhaps, of Kirstin Barnes owning something that once owned her. Reassuringly the ‘me’ character is by far the strongest, where hearts symbolise finding love in oneself and another. But whilst StereoMe is rooted in a much bigger debate, its immediate power comes from the inescapable self analysis. Is it hard to be so candid, to put a life so literally on display?

“I think it’s actually just the easiest way for me,” admits Kirstin Barnes, “I think my art is my own therapy. It’s my way of going through stuff and saying ‘oh, this is why I did this, this is why I’ve done that, and this is why I’m here now’. A lot of my stuff is more personal and confessional.

And I put myself forward as the stereotypes because by putting someone else in that shoe box I would be stereotyping too; I would be picking someone out and going, ‘you’d fit just perfectly as the ‘good time girl’’, ‘you look like you could run an office’ or ‘you look like you’ve wanted kids for years’. If I did that I’d be just doing what everyone else is doing.”StereoMe @ TwoReflecT - by Ed King

The gallery has shut, TworeflecT‘s opening night being a two hour window and the start of a three day run. I still need a picture to run alongside the interview, and with gun-to-a-knife-fight embarrassment all my (writer’s) pics are “horrible, you can get better. Higher up, no chin please.”

Mercifully, for all involved, Imogen Frost eventually takes the camera and responsibility of representation out of my hands. As something usable gets taken, I ask why, especially after baring so much soul in her exhibition, Kirstin Barnes can still be self conscious whilst having her picture taken.

“Of course I’m still self conscious,” she responds with another laugh, “I’m still human.” And there was me thinking an ‘artist girl’ wouldn’t be camera shy.

StereoMe features as part of the TwoReflecT exhibition, alongside work from Imogen Frost. TwoReflect runs at Vivid Projects in Minerva Works/Warwick Bar, on Fazeley Street (Digbeth) until 2nd Jun – open between 12noon-5pm.

For further info on TwoReflect, visit https://www.facebook.com/events/765696583538472/

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For more on Kirstin Barnes, visit http://www.kirstinbarnesphotography.com/

For more on Imogen Frost, visit http://imogenfrost.com/

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For more on Vivid Projects, visit http://www.vividprojects.org.uk/

10 WORD REVIEW: Birmingham Pride, 23rd & 24th May ’15

Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

All pics & content by Michelle Martin

For the full Flickr of pics, click here

Ed’s note…

Last weekend, Birmingham saw its biggest ever Pride event take place across the city – with a two day celebration centred around the Hurst Street festival.

Over 75,000 people joined the Pride Parade, starting in Victoria Square and winding its way to the main festival site – led by the Lesbian & Gays Support the Miners group that featured in Matthew Warcus’s 2014 film Pride.

Birmingham Pride Parade 2015

Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

From Birmingham’s Lord Mayor and Peter Tatchell to Spiderman, people of all ages, stages and whatever else you need to cling on to, marched under the banner Freedom – Together United. In aPride 2015 logo city no stranger to public demonstrations, this year’s Birmingham Pride was precisely the two words that make up its name. Plus I heard there was a bar open.

Four main arenas/stages anchored a throng of ancillary venues, with acts from Example, Ms Dynamite and Fuse ODG to Baby D, Heather Small and Jimmy Somerville making up a seriously strong line up for your weekend ticket buck. But the main attraction at Pride is always the people in attendance, with an undercurrent of sincerity, Birmingham Pride 2016 logo, smdebauchery and face painted pageantry that most festival promoters would sell a grandmother or two to see happen.

Birmingham Pride has been running for 19 years in our city, evolving from a simpler array of stages in the Hurst Street Car Park to the phenomenal two day gathering that we celebrate today. And with 2016’s twenty year anniversary already being promoted, things are likely to get only more fabulous. I had to squeeze the word in somewhere.

Michelle Martin went to Birmingham Pride 2015 for a 10 WORD REVIEW, asking the people on the shop floor what the event means to them. Check out her extensive extra pics in The Gallery too, they’re also quite fa… I’m done.

For more about Birmingham Pride, visit http://www.birminghampride.com/

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10 WORD REVIEW: Birmingham Pride 2015

Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“We have a strong connection with the gay population as some of us are ourselves. We come to spread our love with everyone.” – Sailor Girls

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“We have more freedom to do what we want.” – Robert & Thomas, Handsworth

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“I see my friends embrace who they are, without restrictions. If you walk hand in hand with your partner, you get horrible looks by some people. At Pride, everyone is equal.” – Jodie, Perry Barr

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“I have a chance to enjoy being who I am. Some people think I’m disgusting for what I am. I’m just different.” – Andrew, Birmingham

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“I have fun. There’s a great crowd, the music is ridiculous.” – Rebecca, Birmingham

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“I can be different and no-one can judge me.” – Pride performer

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“I get to see so many people supporting the gay community.” – Lucas, Birmingham

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“Equality is everything to people like us. We are becoming more accepted with events like Pride. The more there is, the better.” – Rosie & Jessica, Walsall

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“I can love my man openly. And so can many others.” – Joseph & his ‘bitch’, Birmingham

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Birmingham Pride 2015 by Michelle Martin / Birmingham Review

“We come to basically get smashed with our gay comrades, and enjoy ourselves as much as possible in two days before coming back to reality.” – Romans at Pride

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BPREVIEW: TwoReflecT – Kirstin Barnes & Imogen Frost @ Vivid Projects, 30th May to 2nd June

TwoReflect @ Minerva Works/Warwick Ba, Fazeley Street, DigbethOn 30th May, TwoRefelcT opens at the Vivid Projects space in Minerva Works/Warwick Bar on Fazeley Street, Digbeth.

Following the initial view on 30th May, between 6-8pm, the installation will be open daily until 2nd Jun, between 12noon-5pm.

Entrance to TwoReflecT is free and has been presented with support from Birmingham Open Media and Leon Trimble.Main with web colour bcg - lr

Featuring installations from Kirstin Barnes and Imogen Frost, TwoReflecT is a showcase of two Midland’s artists through prominent visual display.

Kirstin Barnes presents StereoMe, a look ‘at identity and female issues’ and the perceptions of self, with Barnes as the subject.

Embracing the phenomenon/dystopia of virtual reality and online dating games, citing the disturbingly popular LoveMe as an example and namesake, StereoMe features three stereotypes Kirsten Barnes has felt subjected upon her – the ‘Girl Next Door’, the ‘Career Girl’, the ‘Good Time Girl’. Alongside a fourth persona, the original ‘Me’, participants are invited to select the version they prefer by using a gaming controller.

StereoMe ‘hopes to question the future of relationships through outdated stereotypes, mixed with future technologies, digital dating, virtual girlfriends and to reflect on the emergence of new technologies in the arts.’

For a further introduction top StereoMe, click here or on the image below:

StereoMe 2015, med

Imogen Frost presents Natural Projections at the TwoReflecT exhibition. Continuing Frost’s portfolio of fusing ‘traditional photographic processes into immersive installations that attempt to alter and recreate meaning through display’, Natural Projections aims to explore what photography, and reality, is through ‘subtle yet immersive imagery that evoke questions of time, space and existence.’

Natural Projections Imogen Frost uses ‘immersive installations that attempt to alter and recreate meaning through display’ and ultimately poses the larger question, what is reality? An installation that challenges one’s perception of self and external agents, just as the reflection of a face is both true and false, Natural Projections invites its audience to further question the way in which they ‘perceive and understand the world around us’.

Both Kirstin Barnes and Imogen Frost will be available to discuss their work at the 30th May opening view.

TwoRefelct opens at the Vivid Projects space, in Minerva Works/Warwick Bar on Fazeley Street (Digbeth), running from 30th May (6-8pm) and daily until 2nd Jun (12noon-5pm). For further info, visit https://www.facebook.com/events/765696583538472/

For more on Kirstin Barnes, visit http://www.kirstinbarnesphotography.com/

For more on Imogen Frost, visit http://imogenfrost.com/ 

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For more on Vivid Projects, visit http://www.vividprojects.org.uk/

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BPREVIEW: Richie Ramone @ The Oobleck, 28th May ‘15

SYL tour poster, lrOn Thursday 28th May, Richie Ramone comes to The Oobleck, at Alfie Birds in Digbeth – as part of his Smash You Live! 2015 World Tour.

Doors open at 7:30pm with tickets priced at £10 (advance) & £15 (POTD), with support from Idol Dead + Venrez.

With one of the most famous surnames in musical history, Richie became a drummer for The Ramones in the early 80’s – contributing to the band’s 1984 album, Too Tough Too Die.Main with web colour bcg - lr

The only drummer to write and sing lead vocals on Ramones tracks, Richie further helped craft and record the subsequent Animal Boy (1986) and Halfway to Sanity (1987) albums, alongside being credited for the Smash You: Live ’85 LP released in 2002.

Leaving The Ramones in 1987, following a reported fall out with Johnny Ramone over merchandise, Ritchie continued to work with other founding members Joey and Dee Dee Ramone – feature on Dee Dee’s solo recordings from the late 80’s. Ritchie Ramone also featured on Joey’s 2012 sophomore solo album, Ya Know?

Richie Ramone - coppedPost millennium, Richie Ramone would also record The Whistle Before the Snap 2013 album with Boston based Celtic Punk band The Gobshite – alongside featuring on the band’s Live from the Doghouse album the same year. Richie Ramone also recorded the five track EP with The Rock n Rolls Rats, titled Rebel 67.

Signing as a solo artist to DC-Jam Records in 2013, Richie Ramone released his first solo album, Entitled, in October 2013. Performing with members of established Punk bands from both sides of the pond, including past and present members of the UK based AntiProduct, Richie Ramone has been taking his Smash You Live! Tour across the globe since March 2015.The Oobleck - logo

Coming to The Oobleck with just four more dates to go, having started in North America and travelling through Italy, Spain, Australia and Sweden, Birmingham can see Richie Ramone live on stage on Thursday 28th May – in the closing run of his Smash You Live! 2015 World Tour.

And if you don’t get why that’s a major fu*king deal, click here or on the link below. Then sit quietly in the corner and read your Rock & Roll Hall of fame – where Ritchie’s place is undoubtedly being kept warm.

‘Somebody Put Something in My Drink’ – written & performed by Richie Ramone

SPSiMD

Richie Ramone brings his Smash You Live! 2015 World Tour to The Oobleck, at Alfie Birds (Digbeth) on Thursday 28th May. For tickets & info, visit http://theoobleck.co.uk/event/richie-ramone-idol-dead-venrez/

For more on Richie Ramone, visit http://www.richieramone.com/

For more from The Oobleck, visit http://theoobleck.co.uk/

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