The vinyl countdown as Riley-Smith Hall plays hosts to Northern Soul dance night

The poster for next weekend’s Tadcaster soul night

SOUL At The Riley-Smith Hall, Tadcaster, returns by popular demand on January 18 with the promise of floor-filling Northern Soul and Motown in the main room.

“We’ve started to hold these nights every four months and they’re proving quite popular,” says Ian Smith, from Harrogate and Ilkley Soul Clubs, who will be among those spinning the discs next weekend.

“All the music is played on the original vinyl releases and the resident DJs are well known on the county’s soul scene.”

Joining Smith will be Diane Layton, of Moortown and Haworth Soul Clubs, Andy Carling, of Wetherby Engine Shed and Moortown Soul Club, and Keith Hudson, Smith’s fellow DJ from Harrogate and Ilkley Soul Clubs.

“All four DJs have extensive record collections and will be playing tunes specifically to get dancers on to the floor,” says Smith. “The Riley-Smith Hall has an excellent sprung wooden floor and is perceived to be one of the north’s top soul venues for dancers.”

Next weekend’s special guest will be radio presenter John Kane, who hosts the Saturday evening Northern Soul show on BBC Radio Leeds and Radio York. “John is very popular and is sure to attract a number of his local listeners,” says Smith.

The Riley-Smith Hall has a choice of two dance rooms, the second room upstairs catering for fans of soul tunes post 1980 with sets by Mally Meah, Diane Layton and guests.

Admission is £7 on the door from 7.30pm and the dancing rolls on until 12.30am.

Uncovered! Steve Harley reveals acoustic album release and Harrogate concert

Making him smile: Steve Harley looking forward to playing with his Acoustic Band at Harrogate Theatre next month. Picture: MIke Callow

STEVE Harley, the original Cockney Rebel, will lead his Acoustic Band in an Uncovered gig at Harrogate Theatre on February 21, the very day he releases his album of the same title.

Uncovered features interpretations of “nine painstakingly chosen songs” created in many instances by peers and contemporaries of 68-year-old Harley; those with shared histories and some that he admired from afar. 

These are songs with heft and honesty, Harley says, that have always connected and resonated within him; material he has always wanted to perform and may even wish he had written.

Those tracks are David Bowie’s Absolute Beginners; Robbie Burns’s Ae Fond Kiss; Hot Chocolate’s Emma; Cat Stevens’s How Can I Tell You?; The Beatles’ I’ve Just Seen A Face; Jagger and Richards’s Out Of Time; the traditional Star Of Belle Isle; Longpigs’ Lose Myself and Bob Dylan’s When I Paint My Masterpiece.

These are complemented by two re-worked Harley compositions: (Love) Compared With You (Your Eyes Don’t Seem To Age), replete with a new third verse, and Only You, played live for several years but here recorded for the first time.

This diverse collection of Interpretations is “in some ways an almanac, rather than a set of great tracks”. Harley’s links with some of the songwriters go back to the start of their careers: Bowie in Beckenham; Dylan throughout his early teens; Cat Stevens/Yusuf and Paul McCartney, both early influences.

The newly founded Steve Harley Acoustic Band features Barry Wickens on viola, violin and acoustic guitar; Oli Hayhurst on double bass; Tom Hooper on percussion and roots music luminary Martin Simpson on the album, although the unavailable Simpson will be replaced by David Delarre on lead acoustic guitar on tour.

At the recording sessions, Scottish singer Eddi Reader joined Harley on Star Of Belle Isle, while Jim Cregan contributed a stirring guitar solo to Emma.

Those sessions were a joy, full of virtuosity and grit, recalls Harley. “I was roaring with stamina and passion when I went in to sing the final versions. I sang all 11 in one and a half days,” he says. “The hunger and desire to perform was almost primitive. Engineer Matt Butler has recorded my voice up-close and unaffected. I sing out but seem mostly restrained.”  

Londoner Harley is no stranger to acoustic music, having toured with his Acoustic Trio – as well as the full Cockney Rebel rock band – for years en route to receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award for Acoustic Music in 2018.

His acoustic set at Harrogate Theatre will combine songs from Uncovered with such Harley highs as Mr Soft, Judy Teen, Sebastian and Make Me Smile (Come Up And See Me).

Looking forward to touring with his new line-up, Harley says: “We have real adventures on tour. I’ve seen the Northern Lights, the Midnight Sun and dozens of wonderful galleries, museums and great cities, all on my down-time. I have a great life as a wandering minstrel.”

Tickets for February 21’s 7.30pm concert are on sale on 01423 502116 or at harrogatetheatre.co.uk.

Pianist Robert Gammon to play Dementia-friendly Tea Concert at St Chad’s in York

THE first Dementia-friendly Tea Concert of 2020 will take place at St Chad’s Church, Campleshon Road, York, on January 16 at 2.30pm.

Pianist Robert Gammon will play music by Bach, Mendelssohn, Medtner, Chopin and Schubert in a 45-minute classical programme to be followed by tea and coffee, homemade cakes and a chance to chat.

“Everyone is welcome at these concerts,” says clarinet player Alison Gammon, who will join Robert for a concert on March 19. “The atmosphere is very relaxed and suitable for anyone who might not feel able to attend a formal classical concert. There’s no charge for admission, but donations are welcome.”

In further concerts, Paul Milhau will play solo violin on February 20 and The Clementhorpe Piano Trio will perform on April 16. More concerts are planned for the rest of 2020 too.

Pleas note, St Chad’s has a small car park and street parking is available along Campleshon Road. Disabled access is via the hall.

Academy of St Olave’s to boost Accomplish Children’s Trust at January 25 concert

Alan George: musical director of The Academy of St Olave’s

YORK chamber orchestra The Academy of St Olave’s will perform in support of the Accomplish Children’s Trust at St Olave’s Church, Marygate, York, on January 25.

Under the musical direction of Alan George, they will present a wide-ranging programme pf music from the classical era to the 20th century, opening with two contrasting Mozart works: the exuberant overture to his first mature opera, Idomeneo, and the elegiac Masonic Funeral Music.

“The second was composed in memory of two of Mozart’s fellow Freemasons, which unusually features three basset horns – a low-pitched member of the clarinet family – and a contrabassoon in the woodwind section,” says Alan.

“There’s also contrast between the pair of Scandinavian works that complete the first half: Grieg’s ever-popular Holberg Suite for string orchestra, evoking a bygone Baroque age, and Nielsen’s Serenata In Vano, a quirky quintet for clarinet, bassoon, horn, cello and double bass that the composer described as ‘a humorous trifle’.”

The 8pm concert will conclude with Haydn’s Symphony No. 99 in E flat major, composed in 1793 for the composer’s second visit to London.

“We’re thrilled to begin the new decade with such a diverse programme of music, from Mozart’s seldom-heard masonic music – including the extremely rare opportunity to hear three distinguished basset horn players – to Nielsen’s eccentric quintet. Alongside Grieg’s neoclassical masterpiece and one of Haydn’s finest symphonies, our audience are in for a real treat.”

Concert proceeds will go to the Accomplish Children’s Trust, a Christian charity with connections to St Olave’s church that aids children with disabilities and their families in Africa. The trust supports projects that address education, medical care and income generation for families through grants to grass-roots organisations in Uganda, Malawi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. More information on the charity’s work can be found at accomplishtrust.org.uk.

Tickets are on sale at £14, concessions £13, students and children £5, at academyofstolaves.org.uk, from Visit York, in Museum Street, on 01904 555670 or on the door.

Shed Seven to Let It Ride at Live After Racing show at Doncaster Racecourse

Shed Seven: under starter’s orders for a day at the Donny races

YORK’S revived Britpoppers Shed Seven will play Live After Racing at Doncaster Racecourse on August 15 on a day that will combine chasing winners with Chasing Rainbows.

Tickets for this Music Live performance will go on pre-sale for Artist + O2 customers via ticketmaster.co.uk at 10am on Wednesday (January 8), followed by general sale on Friday (January 10) at 10am at ticketmaster.co.uk, with more information available at doncaster-racecourse.co.uk.

The Sheds have just mounted their biggest ever Shedcember winter tour, chalking up their record run of 23 shows between November 21 and December 21, with Leeds First Direct Arena on December 7 at the epicentre.

In June 2018, they played to 8,000 people in the open air at Manchester’s Castlefield Bowl. Could Doncaster Racecourse on an August summer’s evening surpass that total? Wait and see!

Gates will open at 11.15am for the 1.10pm racecard; Shed Seven will be under starter’s orders at 5.45pm.

Review: Guildhall Orchestra opens New Year with family concert at York Barbican

Lynne Dawson: ” bewitching in an unattributed version of Goldilocks”

Review: York Guildhall Orchestra, York Barbican, January 4 2020

TUBBY the Tuba was the headline star and Goldilocks & the Three Bears put in an unscheduled appearance at York Guildhall Orchestra’s family concert on Saturday afternoon.

There were also sizeable selections from two musicals, Les Miserables and The Sound Of Music, while the more traditional delights of Johann Strauss the Younger added Viennese touches to the New Year hi-jinks. A good time was had by all.

Not that the YGO took its duties lightly. On the contrary, behind Simon Wright’s genial baton there lurks a hard taskmaster; he ensured his charges delivered their customary high standards.

Anyone whose 2019 was less than satisfying will have been soothed by the story of Valjean’s journey from despair to hope, evoked by the musical version of Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables. YGO brought reassurance to this emotional roller-coaster: we can all now face 2020 with confidence.

So too with the Von Trapp family, whose real-life journey from Nazi Germany to liberation in the USA inspired Rodgers & Hammerstein to write The Sound Of Music60 years ago. Here we had 15 singers from York Stage Musicals (otherwise unidentified), half sopranos and half children, adding vivacity and verve to the familiar songs.

Brian Kingsley: soloist for Tubby The Tuba

Although her name unaccountably escaped mention on the front cover of the programme, YGO president Lynne Dawson’s contribution to the afternoon was invaluable, as narrator in the two children’s stories. Her charming, chameleon voices brought her characters instantly to life: we felt Tubby’s disappointments keenly.

She was partnered here by Opera North ace Brian Kingsley, the north’s finest tuba player, whose velvet tones were plaintively suggestive.

Dawson was equally bewitching in an unattributed version of Goldilocks, which amusingly made reference to other favourites such as Brahms’s Lullaby and Henry Bishop’s Home, Sweet Home. Soloists in both wind and brass were really on their toes here.

The Strauss family and Franz Lehár filled in the rest. And how. The orchestra’s kitchen department had fun popping the corks in the Champagne polka and providing fireworks for Thunder & Lightning. The brass went to town in the Tritsch-Tratsch polka and the crazy ending of Lehár’s Gold & Silver.

But it was the majestic sweep of the strings in two Strauss waltzes, The Emperor and The Blue Danube, which lives in the memory. The audience clapped heartily in the Radetzky march at the close: everyone went away happy. This event has deservedly become a New Year tradition in York.

Next up: YGO’s 40th anniversary concert at York Barbican on February 15. Don’t miss it.

Review by Martin Dreyer

Nothing special happened in YORKshire’s artland in 2019…or did it? Time for the Hutch Awards to decide

Veteran Yorkshire arts journalist CHARLES HUTCHINSON doffs his cap to the makers and shakers who made and shook the arts world in York and beyond in 2019.

Alan Ayckbourn at 80 in Scarborough. Picture: Tony Bartholomew

New play of the year: Alan Ayckbourn’s Birthdays Past, Birthdays Present, at Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, from September 4

Sir Alan Ayckbourn penned one play to mark his 80th birthday, then decided it wasn’t the right one. Instead, writing more quickly than he had in years, he constructed a piece around…birthdays. Still the master of comedy of awkward truths.

Honourable mention: Kay Mellor’s Band Of Gold, Leeds Grand Theatre, November 28 to December 14.

Lili Miller (Catherine) and Pedro Leandro (Rodolpho) in A View From The Bridge at York Theatre Royal. Picture: Ian Hodgson

You Should Have Seen It production of the year: Arthur Miller’s A View From The Bridge, York Theatre Royal, September 20 to October 12.

Once more, the sage Arthur Miller bafflingly did not draw the crowds – a Bridge too far? – but Theatre Royal associate director Juliet Forster found resonance anew for this age of rising intolerance in Trumped-Up America and Brexit Britain.

Chris Knight as Donkey in York Stage Musicals’ Shrek The Musical

York’s home-grown show of the year: York Stage Musicals in Shrek The Musical, Grand Opera House, York, September 12 to 21

Nik Briggs swapped directing for his stage return after five years in the wind-assisted title role and stunk the place out in Shrek tradition in a good way. Jacqueline Bell‘s Princess Fiona and Chris Knight’s Donkey were terrific too.

Honourable mention: Pick Me Up Theatre in Monster Makers, 41 Monkgate, October 23 to 27

Rigmarole Theatre in When The Rain Stops Falling

Company launch of the year: Rigmarole Theatre in When The Rain Stops Falling, 41 Monkgate, York, November 14 to 16

MAGGIE Smales, a previous Hutch Award winner for her all-female Henry V for York Shakespeare Project, set up Rigmarole to mount Andrew Bovell’s apocalyptic Anglo-Aussie family drama. More please.

Comic capers: Mischief Theatre in The Comedy About A Bank Robbery

Touring play of the year: The Comedy About A Bank Robbery, Grand Opera House, York, February 5 to 12

Crime pays for Mischief Theatre with a riotous show, so diamond-cutter sharp, so rewarding, in its comedy, that it is even better than the original botched masterplan, The Play That Goes Wrong.

Honourable mention: Nigel Slater’s Toast, York Theatre Royal, November 19 to 23

Sarah Crowden and Susan Penhaligon in Handbagged at York Theatre Royal

Political play of the year: Handbagged, York Theatre Royal, April 24 to May 11

In a play of wit, brio and intelligence, Moira Buffini presents a double double act of 20th century titans, Margaret Thatcher and The Queen, one from when both ruled, the other looking back at those days, as they talk but don’t actually engage in a conversation.

Emma Rice: director of the year

Director of the year: Emma Rice for Wise Children’s Wise Children, in March,  and Enid Blyton’s Malory Towers, in September, both at York Theatre Royal

Emma Rice, once of Cornwall’s pioneering Kneehigh Theatre and somewhat briefly of Shakespeare’s Globe, has found her mojo again with her new company Wise Children, forming a fruitful relationship with York Theatre Royal to boot. Watch out for Wuthering Heights in 2021.

Director John R Wilkinson in rehearsals for Hello And Goodbye at York Theatre Royal

York director of the year: John R Wilkinson, Hello And Goodbye, York Theatre Royal Studio, November

Theatre Royal associate artist John R Wilkinson had long called for the return of in-house productions in the Studio and what he called “the blue magic of that space”. He duly delivered a superb reading of Athol Fugard’s apartheid-era South African work starring Jo Mousley and Emilio Iannucci.

Oh what a knight: Sir Ian McKellen

Comedy show of the year: Sir Ian McKellen in Ian McKellen On Stage With Tolkien, Shakespeare, Others…And You, Grand Opera House, York, June 17

A delightful variation on the An Evening With…format, wherein Sir Ian McKellen celebrated his 80th birthday with a tour through his past. His guide to Shakespeare’s 37 plays was a particular joy.

Honourable mention: John Osborne in John Peel’s Shed/Circled In The Radio Times, Pocklington Arts Centre bar, March 27

Bonnie Milnes of Bonneville And The Bailers

Event launch of the year: Live In Libraries York, York Explore, autumn

In the wood-panelled Marriott Room, veteran busker David Ward Maclean and Explore York mounted a series of four intimate, low-key concerts, the pick of them being Bonnieville And The Bailers’ magical set on October 25. Along with The Howl & The Hum’s Sam Griffiths, Bonnie Milnes is the blossoming York songwriter to watch in 2020.

Meet The Caravan Guys:Theo Mason Wood, left, and Albert Haddenham discuss masculinity in How To Beat Up Your Dad at The Arts Barge’s Riverside Festival

Festival of the Year: The Arts Barge’s Riverside Festival, by the Ouse, July and August

Under the umbrella of Martin Witts’s Great Yorkshire Fringe, but celebrating its own identity too, The Arts Barge found firm footing with two locations, an ever-busy tent and, hurrah, the newly docked, freshly painted barge, the Selby Tony. The Young Thugs showcase, Henry Raby, Rory Motion, Katie Greenbrown, jazz gigs, a naked Theo Mason Wood; so many highs.

Honourable mentions: York Festival of Ideas, June; Aesthetica Short Film Festival, November.

Terry Hall: leading The Specials at York Barbican. Picture: Simon Bartle

York Barbican gig of the year: The Specials, May 9

Still The Specials, still special, on their 40th anniversary world tour, as the Coventry ska veterans promoted their first studio album in 39 years, Encore, still hitting the political nail on the head as assuredly as ever.

Honourable mentions: David Gray, March 30; Art Garfunkel, April 18; Kelly Jones, September 14.

Mocking Malvolio: Cassie Vallance’s Fabian, back left, Andrew Phelps’s Sir Andrew Aguecheek and Fine Time Fontayne’s Sir Toby Belch wind up Claire Storey’s Malvolio in Twelfth Night. Picture: Charlotte Graham

Happiest nights of the year: Shakespeare’s Rose Theatre in Twelfth Night, Castle car park, York, July 4 and September 1

JOYCE Branagh, Kenneth’s sister, set Shakespeare’s comedy in the Jazz Age, serving up “Comedy Glamour” with a Charleston dash and double acts at the double. “Why, this is very midsummer madness,” the play exhorts, and it was, gloriously so, especially on the last night, when no-one knew what lay just around the corner for the doomed Shakespeare’s Rose Theatre.

Samuel Edward Cook in Glory Dazed

Most moving night of the year: Glory Dazed, East Riding Theatre, Beverley, January 26

Cat Jones’s play, starring York actor Samuel Edward Cook, brings to light issues surrounding the mental health of ex-servicemen as they seek to re-integrate into civilian society while struggling with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The post-show discussion with ex-soldiers from Hull spoke even louder.

Serena Manteghi in Build A Rockdet. Picture: Sam Taylor

Solo show of the year: Serena Manteghi in Build A Rocket, autumn tour

NO sooner had she finished playing Ophelia in Shakespeare’s Rose Theatre’s Hamlet than Serena Manteghi revived her remarkable role as a seaside resort teenage single mum in Christopher York’s award-winning coruscating  play.

Honourable mention: James Swanton in Irving Undead, York Medical Society, October 10 to 12.

A Blessed encounter: interviewing Yorkshireman Brian

Favourite interview of the year: Brian Blessed, giving oxygen to his An Evening With Brian Blessed show at Grand Opera House, York, in August

The exuberance for life in Brian – Yorkshire man mountain, actor, mountaineer and space travel enthusiast – at the age of 83 would inspire anyone to climb Everest or reach for the stars.

Old soul in a Newman: John Newman’s hot, hot gig at The Crescent

Gig of the year: John Newman, The Out Of The Blue Tour, The Crescent, York, June 30

THE unsettled Settle sound of soul, John Newman, and his soul mates parked their old camper van outside the almost unbearably hot Crescent, threw caution to the wind and burnt the house down  on a night that must have been like watching Joe Cocker or Otis Redding on the rise in the Sixties.

Honourable mentions: Nick Lowe’s Quality Rock’n’Roll Revue, Pocklington Arts Centre, June 25; The Howl & The Hum, The Crescent, York, December 14

Van Gogh: ‘ere, there and everywhere at York St Mary’s

Exhibition of the year: Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience, York St Mary’s, York, now extended to April 2020

This 360-degree digital art installation uses technology to create a constantly moving projected gallery of 200 of Vincent Van Gogh’s most famous 19th century works in the former church. Breathtaking, innovative, and, yes, worth the admission charge.

Honourable mention: Ruskin, Turner and The Storm Cloud, Watercolours and Drawings, York Art Gallery, from March 28

Agatha Meehan, centre, as Dorothy in The Wizard Of Oz at Leeds Playhouse

Christmas production of the year: The Wizard Of Oz, Leeds Playhouse, until January 25

AFTER its £15.8 million transformation from the West Yorkshire Playhouse to Leeds Playhouse, artistic director James Brining gave West Yorkshire’s premier theatre the grandest, dandiest of re-opening hits. Still time to travel down the Yellow Brick Road with Agatha Meehan, 12, from York, as Dorothy.

Dame Berwick Kaler’s fina;l wave at the end of his 40 years of pantomimes at York Theatre Royal. Picture: Anthony Robling

Exit stage left: Berwick Kaler, retiring on February 2 after 40 years as York Theatre Royal’s pantomime dame; Tim Hornsby, bowing out from booking acts for Fibbers on June 29, after 27 years and 7,500 shows in York; Damian Cruden, leaving the Theatre Royal on July 26 after 22 years as artistic director; James Cundall’s Shakespeare’s Rose Theatre, in September, after hitting the financial icebergs .

Richard Bainbridge R.I.P.

Gone but not forgotten:  York Musical Theatre Company leading man, director, teacher, chairman, bon viveur and pub guvnor Richard Bainbridge, who died on July 6.

Jessa Liversidge celebrates the Songbirds from Barbra to Bush at Helmsley concert

Jessa Liversidge: celebrating female singers of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s in Songbirds

YORK singer Jessa Liversidge presents Songbirds, a celebration of female icons through the decades, at Helmsley Arts Centre on January 18.

“The show is a wonderful journey of song, celebrating some of the most iconic female singers and songwriters of the Sixties, Seventies and Eighties,” says Jessa.

“From musical theatre legends Julie Andrews and Barbra Streisand and pop sensations Carole King, Karen Carpenter, Kate Bush and more, to the hilariously clever comedy of Victoria Wood, this programme has something for everyone.”

Every song will be sung by Jessa in her trademark style: heartfelt, pure vocals, delivered with emotional conviction, complemented by entertaining storytelling.

Born in Dundee and now based in North Yorkshire, Jessa has devised and performed three one-woman shows: her tribute to wartime women Till The Boys Come Home, the musical theatre compilation Some Enchanted Sondheim and now her melange of vintage pop, musical theatre and comedy, Songbirds, which she launched at Tollerton Village Hall last November.

She has sung at the Joseph Rowntree Theatre and National Centre for Early Music in York, Helmsley Arts Centre and Castle Howard, as well as performing as a soloist at the Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at York Barbican for the past three years.

She sings as a guest soloist with the award-winning Shepherd Group Brass Band and featured on their In Concert II CD. “I enjoy spreading the joy of singing with all ages, from singing lessons and schools to my dementia-friendly group, Singing For All,” she says.

At her 7.30pm concert, Jessa will be accompanied by pianist Malcolm Maddock, who studied music at St John’s College, Cambridge, specialising in composition and performance when working under tutors David Wilcock and John Rutter.

On moving to London, he worked at the London Opera Centre and Covent Garden. He has lived in York for the past 30 years, working for soloists, bands, choirs and musical theatre companies.

Looking ahead, Jessa hopes to perform her Songbirds show in York in the spring. Watch this space for more details.

Tickets for the Helmsley concert are on sale at helmsleyarts.co.uk or on 01439 771700.

Country duo Ward Thomas will be live and Unfiltered at Leeds City Varieties in April

Ward Thomas: Playing Leeds City Varieties this spring

COUNTRY-POP twin sisters Ward Thomas will play Leeds City Varieties Music Hall on April 30, the second night of their Unfiltered acoustic tour.

After winningthe Global Artist Award at the 2019 CMA Awards, Catherine and Lizzy Ward Thomas have announced a seven-date tour for Spring 2020.

The Hampshire twins will be complementing fan favourites from 2019’s top ten album, Restless Minds, 2016’s chart-topping Cartwheels and 2014 debut release From Where We Stand with new compositions.

The stripped-back arrangements will show off the sisters’ harmonies in an intimate setting after a year when they toured Europe with Jack Savoretti, joining him in a duet of The Killers’ Human at his sold-out Wembley Arena show. They also played the Isle of Wight Festival, supported David Gray on his Australian tour and performed Whiskey Lullaby with Brad Paisley at London’s O2 Arena.

Tickets for April 30 are on sale on 0113 243 0808 or at cityvarieties.co.uk or seetickets.com.