BPREVIEW: Blossoms (NME Awards Tour) @ O2 Academy 24.03.17

Words by Lucy Mounfield / Pics courtesy of APB

On Wednesday 29th March, Blossoms perform at the O2 Academy (Birmingham) as part of the NME Awards Tour 2017 – with support from socio-political punks Cabbage, and Rory Wynne

Doors open at 7pm; the minimum age for entry is 14 with under 16s requiring adult accompaniment. Tickets are priced at £20.25 (+bf) – as presented by SJM Concerts/Gigs and Tours. For direct gig info, including full venue details and online ticket sales, click here.

N.B. At the time of writing the O2 Academy (Birmingham) is one of the last remaining venues on the NME Awards Tour 2017 to have tickets to sell.  Please check availability before attending or click here for more info from the NME.

On the back of three years touring, and a string of singles and EP’s released, Blossoms hit the road again to promote their eponymous debut studio album. A bit of a warm up before they visit mainland Europe, North America and Canada, Blossoms will be back in the UK for festival season and a potential place in the hall of fame of Mancunian indie rock.

Blossoms arrived onto the music scene in 2014 with their singles ‘You Pulled a Gun On Me’ and ‘Blow’, the video for the latter being shot at the Fitzpatrick Scaffolding yard in Stockport that was their formative rehearsal space (owned by the grandfather of bass player, Charlie Salt). After building up a back catalogue of singles, Blossoms established an almost cult following with tunes like fan favourite ‘Charlemagne’. Their latest single, ‘Sweet Honey’, was released in February this year – once again featuring a who’s who of Stockport locations.

Blossoms‘ synth-rock sound has been labeled as ‘psychedelic’ by some critics but the band themselves arguably prefer to bask in the pop mainstream, cultivating a more mass appeal. Their nostalgia of The Stone Roses has brought older fans to this new band, whilst their sun blushed melodies found favour with today’s pop luvvies and teenage dreamers.

Blossom’s Mancunian roots are a big part of their music (and name – ‘Blossoms’ being a pub in Stockport) but can they be the sound of a new generation, or will their nostalgia tinged indie rock forever remind us of 00’s indie? A dichotomy which was arguably cemented by their support slot at one of The Stone Roses’ homecoming concerts last June.

But with Blossoms‘ debut LP already hitting the No #1 in both the UK and Scottish album charts, alongside a string a plaudits from artists including Johnny Marr and Ian Brown, Blossoms seem to be on their way to fulfilling their dream of being ‘massive’. And if their tour manager tweeting ‘I don’t think @BlossomsBand can fly economy anymore’ is anything to go, they’re becoming at least as recognisable as their musical heroes.

Support band on the NME Awards Tour 2017, Cabbage, will no doubt bring some heavy opinions and political clout to the O2 Academy (Birmingham) – alongside the self/social media professed doctor of music, Rory Wynne.

The five-piece Cabbage display ‘a penchant for juvenilia’, look childish (nappy wearing stage costumes) and seem a little… unhinged at times (check the official video to ‘Kevin’) but their appearance is deceiving. Often described as ‘Manchester’s next great…’ (I’m not sure how the headliners feel about this!?) Cabbage take their musical influences from band such as The Sex Pistols and Joy Division; their darker punkier sound with manic drums tackles Brexit, poverty and the boredom of everyday life. It will be interesting to see how Blossoms respond to such a rousing start.

‘Sweet Honey’ – Blossoms

Blossoms perform at the O2 Academy on Wednesday 29th March, with support from Cabbage + Rory Wynne – as presented SJM COncerts. For direct gig info and online tickets sales, click here.

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For more on Blossoms, visit www.blossomsband.co.uk

For more on Cabbage, visit www.ahcabbage.bandcamp.com

For more on Rory Wynne, visit www.rorywynne.co.uk

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For more on the NME Awards Tour 2017, visit www.nme.com/awards/tour

For more from the O2 Academy, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2academybirmingham

For more from SJM Concerts/Gigs and Tours, visit www.gigsandtours.com

 

BPREVIEW: One Love: The Bob Marley Musical @ REP 10.03.17 – 15.04.17

BPREVIEW: One Love: Bob Marley the Musical @ REP 10.03.17 – 15.04.17

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Words by Ed King / Lead pic courtesy of REP, rehearsal pic by Helen Maybanks

On Friday 10th March, One Love: The Bob Marley Musical opens at the Birmingham REP, running daily (except Sundays) until Saturday 15th April. Matinee performances will be held on Thursdays and Saturdays at 4pm.

Birm_Prev-logo-MAINThe following assisted shows will also be held: Audio Described on Saturday 1st April at 4pm, Captioned on Wednesday 5th April at 7:30pm, British Sign Language Interpreted on Friday 7th April at 7:30pm.

Standard tickets start from £15, with preview tickets available at £10 for shows from Friday 10th to Tuesday 14th March. For direct event information, including venue details and online ticket sales, click here.

One Love: The Bob Marley Musical is written/directed by Kwame Kwei-Armah and produced by the Birmingham Rep – in association with Playful Productions and Stage Play Limited. For a full list of cast and crew, click here.

Originally titled Marley, this is the second stage outing for a Bob Marley musical from Kwame Kwei-Armah – the first being run at the Centre Stage theatre in Boston where Kwei-Armah is the artistic director. Holding its UK première at the Birmingham REP, One Love: The Bob Marley Musical will most likely go on to tour the wider UK – although at the time of writing Birmingham Review can’t confirm any future dates after the REP run.

Taking place ‘across a dramatic period in the music legend’s life’, One Lovetells the story of a man propelled from rising reggae star to global icon’. But the name and cast list suggest the narrative will pivot on the One Love Peace concert hosted by Bob Marley in Kingston in 1978, where Marley reportedly joined the hands (literally)  of warring Jamaican politicians (literally again) Michael Manley (PNP) and Edward Seaga (JLP) live on stage.

Two years earlier Bob Marley, his wife Rita, and manager Don Taylor had been shot for their involvement in the Smile Jamaica concert, as gunmen attacked the Tuff Gong home and studio on Hope Road. Many believe Bob Marley and the Wailers had become targets for the CIA supported JLP after the date of the election had been moved to coincide with the arguably pro-PNP concert; the north america based intelligence agency has a track record of aggressive electioneering in central and south america.

Then there’s the music…

It’s hard to find an artist who has crossed more boundaries of style, culture, race and class as Bob Marley, bringing an accessible message of peace and unity to a Benetton commercial audience across the world.

BPREVIEW: One Love: The Bob Marley Musical @ REP 10.03.17 – 15.04.17 / Helen MaybankMost of us know this, having grown up surrounded by poster-after-badge-after-t-shirt-after-compilation, but the numbers behind the icon give an almost bewildering context: 13 studio albums in 18 years with over 75 million records sold before his death (Bob Marley and the Wailers hit over 21million in one decade of posthumous sales). Bob Marley has received awards from Rolling Stone to the United Nations, with one of most plaque or stars you can get featuring his name. And here’s another number, Bob Marley was only 36 when he died.

Not the be all and end all of reggae by any stretch – with members of The Wailers, Marley’s production team and the Island Record entourage being arguably as, if not more, pioneering – Bob Marley represented a moment in time. And despite his colonial bloodline, with extended self exiles in both America and the UK, Bob Marley was a force of recognition for the struggles of Jamaica, the African Diaspora and people worldwide who were suffering or forgotten.

In both life and death, Bob Marley has stood as an icon for hope and the continued hope of freedom itself. And from redbrick University walls to the back room of an Aston blues party, this message continues to travel. ‘Won’t you help to sing…?’

Check out Kwame Kwei-Armah talking about One Love: The Bob Marley Musical below:

rep-logo-transOne Love: The Bob Marley Musical opens at Birmingham REP on Friday 10th March running daily (except Sundays) until Saturday 15th April. For direct event info and online tickets sales, click here.

For more on Kwame Kwei-Armah, visit www.unitedagents.co.uk/kwame-kwei-armah

For more from Birmingham REP, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.birmingham-rep.co.uk

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BREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 24.02.17

BPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 17-18.03.17 / Steve Tanner

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Words by Lucy Mounfield / Production shots by Steve Tanner

If you haven’t read Moby Dick, don’t be afraid. James Wilton‘s re-imagining of Hermann Melville’s 720 page epic novel needs no prior knowledge of the story – Captain Ahab’s long and tortuous journey to capture the eponymous great white whale.Birmingham Review

Contemporary dance has often struggled to master story-telling without using the classical syntax of gesticulation, pained emotional expressions and extreme en-pointe footwork.  So for the James Wilton Dance Company to take on a mammoth literary work and turn it into a piece of contemporary dance, Moby Dick into Leviathan, is a massive gamble.

To adapt something that has a life of its own, crafted and worked into one form (a classic piece of literature in this instance) is a hard task. Recently Mathew Bourne tried to accomplish this through ballet with the cinematic genius, The Red Shoes – originally written and directed by Micheal Powell and Emeric Pressburger in 1948.

Bourne duly stayed close to the story told in the film but in doing so lost any sort of emotional energy in the portrayal of his characters. Bourne’s dancers took to gesturing wildly, their facial expressions becoming the driving force of the story rather than movement. Dance became secondary to the story and consequently we, as the audience, felt disconnected to the characters. This provokes the question: why make a contemporary dance version if there is an original and definitive? BPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 17-18.03.17 / Steve TannerBecause great performances should show something that has not been told or visualised before.

Melville’s novel has transfixed many dramatists, most falling foul of the same pitfalls that Bourne’s The Red Shoes did. However James Wilton managed to use dance to strip the story of Moby Dick to its bare bones, the abstract movements creating a rich visual and emotional landscape. The story of Ahab’s arduous adventure has been picked and dissected by Wilton for key themes and ideas. The theme that most resonated was that of man versus nature – the ever growing need to capture and tame the natural world.

Leviathan relinquishes any narrative complexity or linear structure, sparse staging enables bold choreography to capture the intensity and energy of the story without translating every page. Leviathan‘s simplicity reminds me of Orson Welles’s dramatisation of Moby Dick for the stage in 1951. Welles used a minimal set design, the actors becoming the props, much like the dancer’s erratic physicality of the stormy seas in Wilton’s adaptation. The dancers provide the outline of the action, the audience fill in the blanks with their imagination.

BPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 17-18.03.17 / Steve TannerThe white whale (played by Sarah Jane Taylor) is fluid and stoic, oddly serene, and majestic in the stormy sea. The yoga poses that Taylor forms heightens her composed control over the waters. Whereas Taylor balances, her arms and torso rolling and undulating rhythmically (seemingly to tease Ahab), the captain and his crew constantly hold and use each other’s bodies as ballast, balancing tentatively along the stormy seas, the arms becoming their ship twisting and turning against the waves.

Leviathan‘s bold choreography creates stark imagery that caught my imagination completely. Early on Wilton‘s crew formed the image of the evolution of man from monkey, Neanderthal to the end point of Ahab – the fully formed human male.

This symbolism evoked Ahab’s single-minded determination to capture Moby Dick as he walked stiffly onstage amongst his crew who were fighting brutally. He was focused, chanting and pumping his fist on his chest, his masculinity was controlled rather than his crew who were reduced to sycophantic animal like creatures that crouched and hovered by their leader. Wilton is making a point here: the animals are the human captors whilst the whale commands the seas, navigating her way around the crew. Perhaps, more broadly, he is questioning the evolution of humankind and whether we have chosen the right path.

BPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 17-18.03.17 / Steve TannerThroughout Leviathan there is a constant tussle to assert power, Ahab becomes more violent towards his crew, trying to stay in command of something even if it is his own people rather than the whale. This is made more obvious when Ahab sits on a throne made of his crew, their musculature is tamed by their master and leader.

In one early scene ropes are placed around the stage to convey Ahab’s attempts to capture the whale. Lunatic Soul’s powerful heavy rock accompaniment conveyed the bravura of the crew – their aspiration and determination thuds sonically with every drum beat. Later on as Ahab’s obsession and mania reaches breaking point the ropes curl themselves around him instead. As he fights for freedom he is enslaving himself ever more to his psychological obsesBPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 17-18.03.17 / Steve Tannersion for control, which turns inward rather than out towards the whale.

Ahab’s desire for control of the natural world is his ultimate downfall. In the second half of Leviathan the crew wear white, like the whale, instead of khaki and grey like Wilton‘s Ahab. They undulate and ripple across the stage, almost break dancing at points, as they bob and weave through the imaginary sea. They have become Moby Dick and at one point, with Taylor, form the great whale – haunting Ahab whose body hunches and bends as he is tormented by his unreasonable desire to capture her.

To me, the abstract and disjointed movements of the second half represent the frenzied thoughts of Ahab who now can only see and think about the whale. High pitched vocals cut through this scene, the line ‘I condemned myself to solitude’ representing Ahab’s nonsensical quest. The imagery of the whale and crew, as powerful waves pushing down Ahab, alludes to Wilton‘s concept of the unreasonable destruction of our climate which at the end of Leviathan eventually proves fatal to man.

BPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 17-18.03.17 / Steve TannerLunatic Soul’s soundtrack works well, generally. The music itself is fitting, but for me it was marred by a few issues. Firstly it was all blasted out at a uniform volume, whereas I felt many of the sections needed to be quieter – the show would have benefited from some dynamic range, which could have emphasised the more intense moments and prevented the whole from being fatiguing.

Secondly, several of the transitions between tracks were clumsy, making it obvious that the music was a collection and not a whole commissioned for the piece. Finally, I found the presence of vocals sometimes distracted me from the dancing.

However the performances in James Wilton’s Leviathan are faultless, the mix of capoeira, athletic dance and acrobatics are performed with verve and gusto. Overall James Wilton Dance Company has managed to portray the essence of Melville’s tale without being constrained by the story.

Dance in its many forms is celebrated in this production and bring the characters and natural world to life. For anyone who believes dance cannot tell a complex story without words, you are wrong: Leviathan proves dance can be as stirring as theatre.

For more on James Wilton Dance, visit www.jameswiltondance.org.uk

For more from mac, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.macbirmingham.co.uk 

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BPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 24.02.17

BPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 17-18.03.17 / Steve Tanner

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Words by Lucy Mounfield / Pics by Steve Tanner

James Wilton Dance presents Leviathan, coming to mac on Friday 24th February. Birm_Prev-logo-MAIN

Doors open at 8pm with tickets priced at £14 (£12 concessions). For direct info, including venue details and online ticket sales, click here.

The long-unanswered question that all choreographers strive to fulfil: can a story be told through the medium of dance? It is hard enough to create a brand-new narrative for the stage, but it is even harder to adapt one of the greatest novels of all time. James Wilton Dance has done just that, re-imaging the seminal novel by Hermann Melville, Moby Dick.

BPREVIEW: Leviathan @ mac 17-18.03.17 / Steve TannerThis American epic is long held as a stage must, although history has told us that most theatrical adaptations of this story have failed to stay on the stage for very long. However, Leviathan has been cited as the multi-award winning choreographer’s ‘best production to date’ by The Reviews Hub, with The Stage calling it a viscerally exciting’ production from ‘extraordinary’ dancers.

Reporting on James Wilton Dance’s previous production, Last Man Standing, critic Robert Beale has previously celebrated the company for its ‘breathtaking virtuosity and split-second synchronisation’whilst stating ‘the world’s best classical companies rarely approach this level of physical discipline.’ No doubt, hopes are Leviathan will be of equal merit.

James Wilton is the lead choreographer and artistic director of his eponymous dance company, which he started after graduating from London Contemporary Dance School in 2009. Since then the company has gone on to create five theatre based works and five outdoor works, which have toured to South Korea, China, the USA, Dubai, India and Europe.

Wilton‘s choreography combines contemporary dance with athletic bravura, which has previously lent itself to small intense pieces. Leviathan, however, takes on a larger narrative – exploring themes such as Man vs. Nature, ambition, psychological control and self destruction.

For Leviathan, James Wilton will take the lead role of Captain Ahab himself – a man determined to capture the legendary white whale. Ahab’s crew, featuring a cast of six dancers, will traverse the dangerous sea the whale inhabits using Wilton‘s trademark verve and style, mixing a ‘blend of athletic dance, martial arts, capoeira and partner-work’. These athletic and highly energised movements will be accompanied by a progressive rock soundtrack by Lunatic Soul.

Leviathan – James Wilton Dance

James Wilton Dance presents Leviathan, coming to mac on Friday 24th February. For direct event info, including venue details and online tickets sales, click here.mac

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For more on James Wilton Dance, visit www.jameswiltondance.org.uk

For more from mac, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.macbirmingham.co.uk

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BPREVIEW: Behind Bars @ REP 24.11.16

Behind Bars @ REP 24.11.16Words by Lucy Mounfield

On Thursday 24th November, BOLDtext Playwrights present Behind Bars – an evening of short new plays about prison reform, performed at the Birmingham REP.  

Doors open at 8pm, with the audience invited to ‘Pay-What-You-Can’ as admission. For direct event info, click here.birm_prev-logo-main-lr

BOLDtext Playwrights are a group of working playwrights who aim to ‘create more opportunities and new platforms for our work in the Midlands and beyond’. Their work has previously been showcased in venues including the Birmingham REP and Warwick Words.

For Behind Bars, expect an evening of thought-provoking and deeply serious ideas. Three short plays about prison reform will take place in the REP’s smaller theatre, The Door, all written by Liz John, Nicola Jones and Tim Stimpson – writer of the Helen’s Trial in The Archers. With this Archers storyline even gaining national news attention, the criminal justice system is  arguably at the forefront of many people’s minds.

On their website, BOLDtext Playwrights offer up some pointed questions, such as ‘Does prison work? Or is it a revolving door?’ which gives an insight into the questioning nature of the evening. Following the short plays will be a debate about prison reform from a panel of representatives from both sides of the justice system.

Do BOLDtext Playwrights have an agenda? Or do they simply want to create an atmosphere of debate and insightful enquiry? Well, on the WordPress page for Behind Bars they have some pretty damning facts about the UK’s prison system, which feel very much like the roots of the idea for the event:

‘We lock up more offenders than any other Western European country, yet UK re-offending rates remain sky high – 60% in Birmingham for those serving sentences under 12 months. And with under-staffing, over-crowding, spiraling rates of assault, self-harm and suicide, substance misuse and mental illness – what can our prison system realistically achieve?’rep-logo-trans

Will Behind Bars offer us an alternative to this situation? At the very least it should make us think about our country’s prison system: what works, what doesn’t, how effective is it at reform, and does it make the country safer? And above all, are we are happy with it?

Behind Bars looks to be an evening that will hit us hard and fast with ideas. And with the political year we have had, it’s clear many people are looking for a platform to stand up and have their say.

Behind Bars runs at REP for one night only, on Thursday 24th November. Tickets are free but should be booked in advance at Birmingham Rep, then ‘Pay-What-You-Can’ on the night.  For direct event info, click here.

For more information on BOLDtext Playwrights, visit www.boldtextcollective.wordpress.com

For more from the Birmingham REP, including the full event programme and online tickets sales, visit www.birmingham-rep.co.uk

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