Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Trowbridge Village Pump 2007

As seems to be par for the course for 2007, another really wet weekend but mitigated by some great company and excellent music - not least by The Volt on Saturday. Were preceded by an impromptu set from Show of Hands - which was a nice touch since Phil Beer's mum Madge used to babysit for Jack when he was tiny!

The Volt played a brave set on Saturday - starting off with a new song they hadn't played in public before but they showed what professionals they are and had the audience on their side very quickly. The rain outside kept the crowd indoors which was a bonus. They played a more relaxed set late that night to a partisan "home" crowd which I thought established them as one of the premier young bands in the region - and were watched by Joe and Sam from Blackbud.

Also saw a magical set from Eric Bibb and a lovely warm set from Joe Brown.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

The Volt at Woolley Festival 2007


So The Volt played at Woolley Street Party again yesterday and a good set it was. Jack looked quite serious for most of the first part but I managed to get him to smile at one point as you can see on the left.



See links below for a couple of songs - recorded with my camera so not the best quality but a record nonetheless.

Clearing Up My Headroom - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-w2amtpv1gc

Twisted Land - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2_MJVJC-kY

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Long time, no blog

Must keep this up more often. Last couple of posts were about the Village Pump and Woolley Festival and here we are a year on about to do both again. A lot has happened in the last year - new job, living away during the week, turning 50, going off to India again, Ro and Jack really growing up. Jack's played some legendary venues already - including Glastonbury and is set for a career in music. Ro is currently in Serbia at a festival (she just texted me while watching Robert Plant) and has done work experience in Westminster. Must stop - it's beginning to sound like a Christmas Card round robin!!

More news as events warrant.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Village Pump

It's the Village Pump Festival this week which I'm kind of looking forward to and trying desperately not to compare it with Glastonbury. Everybody I know who goes says it's a really relaxed affair and it certainly seems to have local support. Good thing I suppose is that you're not tied there for the duration and can come and go. Must say the lineup looks slightly uninspiring so maybe I'll have to make a real effort to watch things I'd otherwise give a miss and join in the various workshops etc etc. Maybe I'll come across something really great....

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Making it Real

Spent the day in School today helping out with the Year 6 Induction Day. More soon....

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Community Play

Went to a really interesting meeting last night on the Community Play. I think I'll see how I can contribute. Might be worth seeing if there's any writing input I can give.

Monday, July 10, 2006

Woolley Festival


And so it was that Woolley "Festival" happened. A weekend of rock bands in a pub, kicked off on Friday night by the much better than expected Old Man's Hat who I thought would be some folk 'n fiddle group but turned out to be an excellent and tight blues covers band with a scrawny bearded frontman with a really good voice.
Saturday started off with The Saboteurs with the voice-to-die-for of Steve Loudon and the professor of guitar Paul Hartshorn. Carnaby Street followed - a 60s tribute band with a housewife on guitar. The Volt followed them and gave what I thought was a competant performance which could have been improved by the odd smile or two. While technically and musically they are obviously better than before they have lost that performance edge and connection with the audience that they once had which was what set them apart before and now are in danger of melding into that mass of indie bands. Hell of a lead guitarist though!! Talking of the melding mass, Patchway Theft had most people scurrying to the bar as refuge from the flat singing and dour songs. Finally and worth waiting for were The Nots - already blues pros with Will Southward's sublime guitar playing and Mike overacting as usual - at one point joined by Steve Loudon for the incredible rendition of "Red House". It's a pity they are now just an occasional band. Maybe now Will has finished his course he might be in the market for forming a new more regular band???

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Woolley Festival this weekend


Looking forward to seeing The Volt play their third successive Woolley Street Party. It will be an interesting progression for them from that obviously young and inexperienced "novelty" school band that played two years ago through the more assured and gig-experienced set they played last year (see pic above) to the more mature indie/blues sound they are on to now that Sam has joined (see right). They've been billed as "great young originals" and the fact they are playing fewer and fewer covers should stand them in good stead. Local papers have also been publicising. Should be good if the weather holds out.

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

So - who's in the header and why??

These are all pics of people or things that mean something now or have meant a lot to me in the past. I'll periodically update the header as and when it occurs to me and I'll post short pieces about why. There's my favourite film, author, footballer, piece of art plus a few more heroes and villains.

New modified template

After two or three nights fiddling with the template and groping my way around Cascading Style Sheets and Websafe colours, I think I've got to a look that will do for now. all I've got to do is finish the header picture with a few more heroes and that'll do for now.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

The wonder of Napster

The more I think about it, the more I wonder how it is that Apple and iTunes have got themselves into such a dominant position in the download market. All I can see is a marketing rip-off.

Napster's basic proposition is that you don't necessarily have to own the music you listen to so why not rent it? iTunes meanwhile expects you to pay the same price as you paid before for outdated formats (ie CDs) for something you can only play on their own proprietory hardware and software. When they launched the latest iPod, they said you could get around 20,000 songs on it. Do the maths - 20,000 x £0.79 = £15,800 to fill up your iPod. Same price from Napster - £15.99 per month. Seems like a no-brainer to me.

I've been downloading legal Napster-to-Go tracks for about a year now and still am yet to see the catch. OK, I have to use a Zen Micro or Toshiba Gigabeat but both are OK players and I still have a further 3 PCs on which I can download music to or listen to streams on. I've started to explore artists and genres I hadn't thought of before at minimal cost and every so often I find I need to actually own an album so i go out and buy it on CD (eg Springsteen's Seeger Sessions or Ryan Adams' 29).

I don't care that it might not be the coolest way to listen to music. It works for me.