Here we go with what weโve found to do in the wilds of Wiltshire this coming week, exciting stuff, I know!
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week.….
Wednesday 17th
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Emmanuel Coppey and Antoine Prรฉat at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Two times BBC Folk Award winner Daoirรญ Farrell is at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Memory Cinema, for those with dementia, at Swindon Arts Centre are showing A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum. Tom Houghtonโs Itโs Not Ideal at Swindon Arts Centre. Peppa Pigโs Fun Day Out at The Wyvern Theatre.
Show Of Hands โ Full Circle Farewell Tour at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Thursday 18th
Quiz Night at the Peppermill, Devizes in aid of The Cotswolds Dogs & Cats Home.
PSG Choir taster session at the King Alfred Hall, Chippenham.
Thieves & Skiddy at The Tuppenny, Swindon. The Big Fat Monthly Quiz at the Vic.
Memory Sing at Swindon Arts Centre. Primary School Assembly Bangers Live! at Swindon Arts Centre. Peppa Pigโs Fun Day Out at The Wyvern Theatre.
Fretn Keyz with Dave Howell at Rude Giant Beerhouse, Salisbury.
Friday 19th
Youth Work Auction Fundraiser at John OโGaunt School, Trowbridge.
Take the Stage at the Neeld, in Chippenham. Chippenham Beer Festival too.
Bradford Roots Special at The Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon with Billy in the Lowground, Daisy Chapman and Thieves; Edโs pick of the week, that one is! Preview here.
The Droogs & John E Viztic at The Three Horseshoes in Bradford-on-Avon.
People Like Us at Prestbury Sports Bar, Westbury.
Swindon Jazz & Soul Festival, preview here. Draining The Swamp at Swindon Arts Centre. Barrelhouse & The Leon Daye Band at the Vic.
Winginโ It at The George & Dragon, Salisbury. A Murder Mystery at Salisbury Cathedral.
Johnny Cash Revisited at Chapel Arts, Bath.
ex Wishbone Ash, Martin Turner is at The Tree House, Frome.
Saturday 20th
Roma Antoine Exhibit and Art Sale at Tonka Bean, Devizes. Devizes Swap Shop at St James Church. The Bren Jones Big Band at the Wharf Theatre. Strange Folk at The Southgate. Down the Hatch at The Three Crowns. DJ Tappa Tappa at the Exchange.
Oriental Antiques Indigo Antiques Open Day at Manningford Bruce, Pewsey. Dutty Moonshine at the Barge on HoneyStreet. @59 at The Woodborough Social Club.
Martyโs Fake Family at The Pilot, Melksham.
The Future Sound of Trowbridge #8 at the Pump in Trowbridge; preview Here.
Mighty Magic Animal at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon. Griff Rhys Jones: The Catโs Pyjamas at Wiltshire Music Centre.
Pop-Up Bowie at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Driftwood at Tuckerโs Grave Inn, Faulkland.
Junkyard Dogs at The Kingโs Arms, Amesbury. Are You Worthy & Grant Sharkey at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury. Salisbury Pride Fundraiser at The Hope & Anchor, Salisbury.
Rosie Holt โ Thatโs Politainment! at Swindon Arts Centre. Wrong Jovi at the Vic. The Worried Men at The Queenโs Tap. The Tin Shack Band at The Woodlands Edge.
The Shires at the Cheese & Grain, Frome is sold out, so too is Bare Jams at the Tree House. Try the 41 Fords at The Sun; we love the 41 Fords!
Sunday 21st
Mr Griff at The Southgate, Devizes from 5pm. Devizes Town Band Showtime Sensations at the Corn Exchange, Devizes.
Open Mic at Red Lion, Lacock.
Jazz on Sunday Afternoon at Little Cheverall Village Hall.
The Dirty Weather Blues Revue at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
VW Campfest begins at Stonehenge.
Mini Ravers โ Spring Tour at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Monday 22nd and Tuesday 23rd
I got nothing, yet; keep a keen eye on our updating event calendar, as Iโm way behind updating it, and still got the front garden to sort out! Weeds, huh? I used go out to the garden to smoke de grass, nowadays I just go out to the garden to cut de grass!!
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some technical gubbings to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Christmas has come early for foxes and normal humans with any slither of compassion remaining, as the government announced the righteous move to ban trailโฆ
Chippenham folk singer-songwriter, M3G (because she likes a backward โEโ) has a new single out tomorrow, Friday 19th December. Put your jingly bell cheesy tunesโฆ
Wiltshire Music Centre Unveils Star-Studded New Season with BBC Big Band, Ute Lemper, Sir Willard White and comedians Chris Addison and Alistair McGowan revealing theirโฆ
Daphneโs Family & Childhood Connection to Devizes Celebrations of Daphne Oram have been building in London since the beginning of December, for those in theโฆ
Last night I was privileged to sit in on the Dress Rehearsal for this wonderful production.ย It was like having a private viewing of a great work of art, with a chance to see how it all came together, and to figure out what made the whole thing tick.ย It was also a chance for cast and crew, together with Musical Director Roland Melia, and Stage Director Matt Dauncey to iron out any last-minute wrinkles.ย There were a few but, as the song goes, too few to mention.ย This show is absolutely ready to go live for the rest of the week!
Giacomo Pucciniโs La Bohรจme is one of the most famous operas ever written, following the unforgettable story of two young bohemian lovers in Paris at the end of the 19th century. When young poet Rodolfo meets seamstress Mimรฌ, itโs love at first sight. But, faced by the cruel realities of poverty and ill health, will the flame that burns between them flicker and die? Or will the timeless strength of their youthful passion withstand every trial and tribulation that life can throw at them? With a great love story comes a beautiful score, including arias like Musettaโs Waltz and โYes, they call me Mimรฌโ (Si, mi chiamano Mimรฌ).
A classic tale of tragic romance, La Bohรจme is a great opera for beginners and regulars alike. Director Matt had updated the setting to the 1960s, with fashion to match but, to me at least, it made little real difference to the superb quality of musical operatic delivery. Using WHOโs trade-mark stripped back lines in terms of scenery backdrops, props, costumes and musical accompaniment, this was nevertheless a production that felt rich and full.
The four principals absolutely shone. Guest tenor Robert Felstead (Rodolfo), and WHO stalwarts soprano Lisa House (Mimi), baritone Jon Paget (Marcello) and soprano Jess Phillips (Musetta) all put in superb performances. And thatโs not to diminish the quality of the rest of the cast in any way. Contributions all round were spot on, and the staging was confident and upbeat. The rapid interplay of dialogue singing during certain scenes meant that everyone had to be completely on their game and if there were any slip-ups I certainly didnโt spot them.
The whole production is sung in English in four acts, with a half-time interval. The programme provides excellent notes and a synopsis of the plot for each act, and the whole thing wraps up in about two hours. These factors make the production accessible to all and easy to digest. If youโve not tried opera before, this is the sort of production that should change your mind, and Iโd encourage anyone to give it a shot. Equally those who are perhaps more familiar with the opera will not be disappointed, as whatโs on offer here is a truly sparkling version of a classic.
Tickets are still available (both online and at Devizes Books) for performances tonight (Wednesday), and for Friday and Saturday.
Future WHO events:
Sat 18th May Top Of The Ops Seagrey, nr Chippenham
Fri 6th December Christmas Concert St. Andrewโs Church, Devizes
Spring has sprung! There were two snails on my milk-float this morning, opening โdoing it,โ without shame; absolute filth! โฆ. I should have filmed it (in a jealous rage!) there might be a gap in the market for mollusc porn! Birds, bees, now snails, theyโre all getting some!
Okay, letโs get you out and about, and you never know your luck, you too can be like those snails! Hereโs what weโve found to do in the wilds of Wiltshire this coming weekโฆ..
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week.
Ongoing: Devizes RAF Squadron still have their Easter Egg Hunt running across Devizes, until 14th April; Iโd have eaten the lot by now!
And then There Were None runs at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes until Saturday; review HERE.
Wednesday 10th
Crafty Kids at Hillworth Park, Devizes. Acoustic Jam at The Southgate. White Horse Operaโs La Boheme at Lavington School opens and runs up to Saturday.
Runny Snotts Open Mic at the Three Crowns, Chippenham.
Dom Martin Solo Tour with special guest: Demi Marriner, at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Easter Panto, Beauty And The Beast at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon. Pop Kids Mini Rave at the Vic, with a Big Jam Session in the evening.
Thursday 11th
PSG Choir taster session at the King Alfred Hall, Chippenham.
Boo Hewerdine plus support: Vlado Nosal at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Tommy Hale & the Magnificent Bastards at the Beehive, Swindon. Lost Revellers at The Tuppenny. Tanwood Youth Theatreโs Frozen Jr. opens at Swindon Arts Centre, runs until Sunday. An Evening Of Burlesque at The Wyvern Theatre.
Friday 12th
Karaoke Night with Karl Maggs at the Exchange, Devizes.
Open Mics at The Barge on HoneyStreet, and The Parade Cinema, Marlborough.
Americana Beer Festival at The Bell, Bowden Hill, Lacock.
Sound of the Sirens at the Pump, Trowbridge, with Bluebeard in support.
This Carpenters Masquerade at Melksham Assembly Hall.
West of England Youth Orchestra Relaxed Family Concert at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Heavy For the Tropics at The Three Horseshoes.
Jon Amor Trio at The Ram, Bath. Emma Stevens Bandโs โBloomโ Tour plus support from BLรNID at Chapel Arts.
Barrelhouse at The New Inn, Swindon. Motorheadache at the Vic. Plucking Different at the Beehive. 12 Bars Later at The Village Inn, Shaw. Sir Bradley Wiggins at The Wyvern Theatre.
The Scribesโ Boombox at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Saturday 13th
Museum Explorers Club โ Animals in the Museum at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes. Museum Explorers club is for 5-7 year olds and is an introduction to popular topics such as the Romans and Ancient Egyptians. The Great British Yarn Crawl at Pins & Needles on Snuff Street, Devizes.
Humdinger at The Three Crowns, Devizes. Cooperโs Creek at The Southgate. Dreamettes at Devizes Conservative Club. And Stevie MC is in the mix at the Exchange.
But, Editorโs Pick of the Week is The Marley Experience at the Corn Exchange, Devizes. Iโve been looking forward to this since CrownFest last summer; hope to see you thereโฆjamminโ โtil the jam is done!
Meatloud at Melksham Assembly Hall. The Corsairs at The Grapes. The Singing Herdsman at The Pilot.
The Chaos Brothers at The Talbot, Calne.
The Monkey Dolls at the Lamb, Marlborough.
The Exact Opposite at the Pump, Trowbridge.ย
The Idle Silence, Cult Python, & Otterman at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Fire & Rain & American Pie at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Stockers Street Food Festival at The Hop, Swindon. The Daybreakers at the Vic.
The Good Old Fashioned Lover Boys at Tuckers Grave Inn, Faulkland.
The JB Conspiracy at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury.ย
Top Secret โ The Magic of Science at the Cheese & Grain, Frome. Mother Vulture at The Tree House.
Sunday 14th
CSF Wrestling at the Corn Exchange, Devizes. Jon Amor Trio Special with guest Stevie Watts at The Southgate.
Open Mic at Red Lion, Lacock.
Deadlight Danceโs The Wiltshire Gothic Album Launch at The Blue Boar, Aldbourne. Album reviewed HERE.
Murder Trial Tonight at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Barney & Kelly at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Monday 15th
Macbeth at Swindon Arts Centre, also runs on Tuesday.
Tuesday 16th
The Lost Trades at The Piggybank, Calne.
Swindon Jazz & Soul Festival Fringe event for Jazz Knights at The Royal Oak, Swindon, A celebration of Herbie Hancock, with Tom Berge.
Poetika at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some technical gubbings to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
And, while we’re planning ahead, April is hotting up, believe me, loads of good, good, even gooder stuff and stuff gooder than them! Have a look at the coming month HERE.ย ย
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Part 1: An Introduction March 1936: newlywed French telecommunications engineer Pierre Schaeffer relocates to Paris from Strasbourg and finds work in radio broadcasting. He embarksโฆ
Yesterday Wiltshire Council published an โupdateโ on the lane closure on Northgate Street in Devizes as the fire which caused it reaches its first anniversary.โฆ
Join the St Johnโs Choir and talented soloists for a heart-warming evening of festive favourites, carols, and candlelit Christmas atmosphere this Friday 12 th Decemberโฆ
This afternoon I find myself contemplating what the future holds for historical discovery and learning for all ages, fun and educational exhibits and events inโฆ
Featured Image: Barbora Mrazkova My apologies, for Marlboroughโs singer-songwriter Gus Whiteโs debut album For Now, Anyway has been sitting on the backburner, and itโs moreโฆ
Having to unfortunately miss Devizesโ blues extravaganza on Friday, I crossed the borderline on Saturday to get my prescribed dosage of Talk in Codeโฆwith aโฆ
No, I didnโt imagine for a second they would, but upcoming Take the Stage winners, alt-rock emo four-piece, Butane Skies have released their second song,โฆ
Featured Image by Giulia Spadafora Ooo, a handclap uncomplicated chorus is the hook in Lady Ladeโs latest offering of soulful pop. Itโs timelessly cool andโฆ
Mention the name of the author โAgatha Christieโ and most people will immediately think of her two main detectives, Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. But Christie wrote more than just crime mysteries featuring these two characters โฆ her prolific creative palmares include many stories without these protagonists. Arguably her most famous such tale was published in 1939 with a title that it is unacceptable to use in these far more enlightened times. In 1985 in the UK that title was amended to โTen little Indiansโ.
During World War II, she used that book to produce a stage play, named for the already re-named US title โAnd Then There Were Noneโ. The bookโs grisly ending was amended for this stage play, in an attempt, allegedly, to provide a lighter feel-good ending during the dark days of 1943, though later an alternative ending matching the bookโs was written. Directors are free to choose whichever ending they wishโฆ
Having read both the book and now the play, it must be said that the book stands up to scrutiny far better than the play does. There are some rather glaring oddities in the plotline of the play that just donโt withstand a very deep forensic review. One rather gets the impression Christie may have been asked by โsomebodyโ to create the play as a matter of public levity at a sombre time in history, and do so quickly, and as such the play itself seems at times quite slapdash. Key areas of the book are omitted in the play or included in one ending and not the other.
That all said the story is a rollicking one, fast paced and leaves the audience guessing right until the very end (unless they have seen the play, or films, or read the book of course!). And I must stress that the limitations of the play itself as above do not reduce the impact or the Wharfโs performances one iota. The pace is so frenetic that any possible plot oddities probably pass unnoticed as the audience is taken on the roller coaster ride of ten people on a secluded island all being murdered one by one by an unknown assassin.
Rose Fitterโs direction, ably assisted by John Winterton as assistant director and the Wharfโs excellent tech crew have created two and quarter hours of gut churning intrigue and suspense. Costumes by Gill Barnes and her team are totally spot on for a 1939 house party of โrich folksโ, waited on by two domestic staff. The set is a classic one room country house murder mystery replete โ of course โ with โten little solder boysโ and their poem quite rightly literally taking centre stage. There are some lovely, clever stage management touches (Beth Ramsay) throughout the show but to let on here would spoil the impact of them โฆ
The cast of eleven deliver Christieโs lines with panache, aplomb, and tempo. And what a cast! Many familiar faces to Wharf regulars mixed with a new face or two. I shanโt go into details of each cast member here because this review would become โWar and Peaceโ length, but its is more than fair to say that each and every character is fully believable, from obstreperous boatman to deferential staff, hardened and cynical, or repentant, ex-army and ex-police officers, naรฏve secretary, puerile playboy, quasi-evangelical bigot, stressed doctor and sardonic judge.
The dress rehearsal wasnโt devoid of a couple of slips but given the high pace and quick-fire interactions of the script in a community production that is maybe understandable.
What is thoroughly commendable is that three characters โ Claythorne, Lombard and Blore – between them have 60% of all the lines in the play, and with Wargrave 70%.
Not that this diminishes the rest of the cast โ the performance thrives as mentioned above on the superb characterisations displayed by everybody involved and the acting displayed is absolutely top notch. The wharfโs own intimacy aligns itself particularly well as usual โ those in the front row particularly are literally just inches from mayhem, arguments, and corpses!
Finally to that endingโฆย as the opening paragraphs mention there are two endings available for this play. So, which is it that this performance uses? Wellโฆย youโll have to come along and see it to find out! But on that note – this run of six nights is sold out, so if you have a ticket, you are in for treat. If you didnโt manage to procure one there is always the chance of a return but after allโฆย with regards to ticketsโฆ
Words by Ollie MacKenzie. Featured Image by Barbora Mrazkova.ย The creative process can be a winding, long, and often confusing journey. Seeing a project comeโฆ
Whoโs ready for walking in the winter wonderland?! Devizes sets to magically transform into a winter wonderland this Friday when The Winter Festival and Lanternโฆ
One part of Swindon was in perfect harmony last night, and I donโt mean the traffic circumnavigating the Magic Roundabout. Rather The Lost Trades wereโฆ
Raging expressions of angered feminist teenage anguish this month, perfectly delivered by Steatopygous via their mindblowing debut album Songs of Salome, I hail as theโฆ
Devizes Music Academy brings us Six: Teen Edition This Saturday, and we wish all the young performers the very best of luck!
So, I find myself chatting with Jemma Brown, who, if you live in Devizes but donโt know, you donโt get out much! With husband Anthony, theyโre the brainchild of drama group The Invitation Theatre Company, and FullTone, our homegrown orchestra which has thrilled audiences from Marlborough College to Bath Abbey and beyond, yet annually return to town to stage the most breathtaking FullTone Festivalโฆ.but thereโs a new style of show heading our way this Saturday 6th Aprilโฆ..
Jemma has brought together a phenomenal team under the Devizes Music Academy banner, a school of performing arts she has run for the past two years, and their phenomenal cast of young people, to bring an historical masterpiece to the stage in the centre of Devizes this weekend. Six:Teen Edition is a full-length adaptation of Toby Marlow and Lucy Mossโ Six, modified for performance by teen actors for family audiences.
Six was created and written by Marlow and Moss. What began as a one-off student production staged at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2017 has gone on to be staged professionally, and is currently seen on stages in Londonโs West End, on Broadway and on tours across the UK, Australia, New Zealand, North America, and nowโฆ..(insert drum roll here) ….Devizes!!!
Twenty local 13-19 year olds will be smashing their way through the stories of the lives of Katherine of Aragon (Ruby Phipps), Anne Boleyn (Amelie Smith), Jane Seymour (Jess Self), Anne of Cleves (Kelsey Husband), Catherine Howard (Mia Jepson) and Kateryn (thatโs how you spell it!) Parr (Lisa Grime), with 14 Ladies in Waiting in support – and promises to be quite something.
Think our young people canโt pull off a show of this magnitude? Think again! Jemma said โweโve spent the week absolutely drilling this show in full scale all day rehearsals – the voices of the six queens are off the scale and the entire attitude towards the production from all the performers has blown us away. We have full on tech from the best team (Patch Productions) coming in and quite literally are bringing the West End to the West Country! The music, the story telling, the dancing, the total and pure emotion of the songs, both in hilarity and devastation, rivals adult productions – fact. I canโt quite believe weโre doing it and that the young performers themselves have pulled off such a fantastic end result. Itโs very very exciting!โ
Itโs on at Devizes Corn Exchange for one day only – Saturday 6th April, but thereโs two showtimes, 2:30pm and 7:30pm. The strapline asks, would โHenry VIII approve of this show?! When you see SIX, weโre pretty sure youโll all be in agreementโฆ.who cares?!โ Devzine wishes Jemma and all the youths performing, we know a few from previous performances, all the very best with this amazing sounding show, and Iโm certain, no one will need their heads chopped off!
We fully agree with Jemma when she expressed, โsupporting young talent is so important, because encouraging kids to put themselves out there is a fantastic thing andโฆ..you might be surprised just how much you enjoy this gem of a show!โ
Tickets are from Devizes Books priced ยฃ15/ยฃ20; or online HERE.
Itโs nice to hear when our features attract attention. Salisburyโs Radio Odstock ย picked up on our interview with Devizes band Burn the Midnight Oil andโฆ
In thanking everyone who supported this year’s Wiltshire Music Awards, Eddie Prestidge of Stone Circle Music Events revealed his intentions of continuing with the awardsโฆ
Featured Image: Lillie Eiger Frome Festival is launching itsย โ25 for 25โย fundraising campaign with a very special concert featuring three locally based acts:ย Tom Mothย โ best knownโฆ
Iโve got some gorgeous vocal harmonies currently floating into my ears, as The Lost Trades release their first single since the replacement of Tamsin Quinโฆ
First week of April, thereโs no fooling you, hereโs what weโve found to doโฆ..
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week.
Wednesday 3rd
Crafty Kids in Hillworth Park, Devizes. RAF Cadetsโ Easter Egg Hunt continues across Devizes until 14th April. Easter Bouncy Castle Kingdom on the Green until 5th April.
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer in Wiltshire โ Free Talk at Melksham Library.
Screening of The Royal Opera Madama Butterfly at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Simon Munneryโs Jerusalem at Swindon Arts Centre.
Thursday 4th
Thereโs Easter themed holiday activities at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes. Rum & Records at the Muck & Dunder, Devizes.
Andrew Hurst is at St Nicholas Church, Bromham.
Hooch at The Tuppenny, Swindon. Subhumans at the Vic. Griff Rhys Jones: The Catโs Pyjamas at Swindon Arts Centre. The Illegal Eagles at The Wyvern Theatre.
Salisbury Open Mic at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Plumhall at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Friday 5th
Brian Poole at Long Street Blues Club, Devizes.
Teenage Halloween, Start The Sirens and Trashed at The Pump, Trowbridge. Open Mic at Newtown Social Club.
12 Bars Later at The 3 Brewers, Corsham.
The Forgetting Curve & Little Villains at the Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon. Kammerphilharmonie Europa at the Wiltshire Music Centre.
Swindon Old Town Comedy Club at Christ Church. Black Parade at the Vic. Phil Ellisโ Excellent Comedy Show at Swindon Arts Centre. King of Pop starring Navi and Jennifer Batten at The Wyvern Theatre.
Martin Carthy at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Norman Jayโs Norman Soul at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Saturday 6th
Jamie Williams
Jamie Williams & The Roots Collective at The Southgate, Devizes. The Clones at The Three Crowns. SIX: The Musical โ Teen Edition at the Corn Exchange. Back to the 80s party night at the Bear Hotel.
Mick Jogger & the Stones Experience at Seend Community Centre.
Siren at The Pilot, Melksham.
John Hackett Band at the Pump, Trowbridge.
Cara Dillon at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Desperate Measures, The Setbacks & Death Traps at the Three Horseshoes.
John Otway & Wild Willy Barrett at The Merlin Theatre, Bath.
The Beatles Complete Tribute Show at the Athenaeum Centre, Warminster.
Gaz Brookfield is in the Tent, at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
41 Fords at Tuckerโs Grave Inn, Faulkland.
Motley Crude at the Vic, Swindon. Swindon Recital Series at Swindon Arts Centre. Northern Live โ Do I Love You at The Wyvern Theatre.
A Band Called Malice at The Tree House, Frome.
Sunday 7th
Jim Blair at The Southgate, Devizes from 5pm.
Open Mic at The Red Lion, Lacock.
Little Wander PresentsโฆRia Lina at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. The Ben Fletcher Band at the Three Horseshoes.
Dreamboys at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Monday 8th
And then There Were None opens at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes, running until Saturday.
Tuesday 9th
Fish n Chip Supper & Quiz Night in aid of RNLA at Devizes Conservative Club.
Cafรฉ Concert at St Andrewโs Chippenham.
Swindon Jazz & Soul Festival Fringe, a Celebration of Wes Montgomery with Nigel Price at Jazz Knights, The Royal Oak, Swindon.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some technical gubbings to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
And, while we’re planning ahead, April is hotting up, believe me, loads of good, good, even gooder stuff and stuff gooder than them! Have a look at the coming month HERE.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Rolling out a Barrelhouse of fun, you can have blues on the run, tomorrow (7th November) when Marlborough’s finest groovy vintage blues virtuosos Barrelhouse releaseโฆ
by Ian Diddamsimages by Ben Swann and Ian Diddams Self-appointed โMoroseโ Mark Harrison was once again on totally top form at Komedia last Sunday entertainingโฆ
Wiltshire Council confirmed Blue Badge holders can park freely in council-operated car parks again, following a vote at the Full Council meeting on Tuesday 21โฆ
Featured Image Credit: Jamie Carter Special guests Lightning Seeds to Support Forest Live, Forestry Englandโs summer concert series presented with Cuffe & Taylor, has announcedโฆ
Wiltshire country singer-songwriter Kirsty Clinch released a Christmas song only yesterday, raising funds for the Caenhill Countryside Centre near Devizes, and itโs already racing upโฆ
It was never just the fervent ambience created which made me go tingly with excitement about Melkshamโs young indie band Between The Linesโ demo singleโฆ
A second track from local anonymous songwriter Joyrobber has mysteriously appeared online, and heโs bitter about not getting his dream jobโฆ.. If this mysterious dudeโsโฆ
Itโs not Christmas until the choir sings, and Devizes Chamber Choir intend to do precisely this by announcing their Christmas Concert, as they have doneโฆ
An exodus of musical lovers and, I’d assume, a healthy handful of friends and family, trekked southwards through winter’s final ambush last night, to enjoy the opening night of a dazzling performance of Sister Act at Dauntsey’sโฆ..
It was presented by the established local amateur dramatics group, Devizes Musical Theatre. I stress my usage of the word amateur in its foremost dictionary definition; the opposite of professional. The second connotation it was in some way inept couldn’t be further from the truth in this case. A common misconception in creative arts, I find, whereby those in it for the love thrust their hearts, soul, and elbow grease into it, more so than a pro going through the motions for their paycheck. The result usually is perhaps something raw, but highly entertaining and enjoyable, and their production certainly was the latter.
The run ends on Saturday (30th March,) at the last count just fourteen tickets remained, so I advise you to be quick, and lucky, to pick some up. It’s a large hall, selling it out proves the grand reputation Devizes Musical Theatre has built locally, this performance hits their pedestal.
With a debatable focus on the singing rather than acting, the benchmark of a good musical, surely, there’s some show-stopping moments. Georgia Watson makes the perfect diva Deloris, and there’s both astounding vocals and comic timing from Louise Peak as Mother Superior and Barry Gibney, who plays the socially awkward police chief Eddie. Particularly noteworthy is Grace Sheridan who plays Sister Mary Robert, in song and conviction of the influence Deloris holds over the convent.
Yet high accolades go out to all the actors, stage directors and team; Adam Sturges, Oli Beech and Simon Hoy as the mobsters, Gareth Lloyd as mafia boss Curtis, Graham Day as Monsignor OโHara and the huge backing of those wonderful singing nuns! It is the combination of their motivation and exceptional effort which makes this such a dynamic show, coupled with the elementary notion, Sister Act has universal appeal and is simply fun on a stick!
In critical reflection, the musical concludes somewhat differently from the movie. Without spoilers, the amusing scene where Deloris prays for Godโs forgiveness unto the mobsters holding a gun to her head, causing them to question their ability to shoot her, wrongly perceiving her as a nun, is replaced by a more slapstick finale akin to a Benny Hill chase scene. Yet on further consideration into my rather geeky complaint, I guess this works better on stage, such is the jollification of a musical, often bordering pantomime. And it wraps it up faster, allowing more time for these astute and timeless Motownesque songs. Devizes Musical Theatre use this to their advantage; you certainly get your money’s worth.
Veils off to first time director Emily Holmes, and musical director Naomi Ibbetson for an apt and fantastic show, which will send you off thoroughly entertained, and with a smile.
If Devizesโ celebrated FullTone Festival is to relocate to Whistley Roadโs Park Farm for next summerโs extravaganza, what better way to give it the rusticโฆ
This afternoon sees the inaugural grand ceremony of Stone Circle Music Eventsโ Wiltshire Music Awards taking place at the Devizes Corn Exchange. Itโs a selloutโฆ
In association with PF Events, Devizes Outdoor Celebratory Arts introduces a Young Urban Digitals course in video mapping and projection mapping for sixteen to twentyโฆ
by Ian Diddamsimages by Penny Clegg and Shakespeare Live โAntony & Cleopatraโ is one of Shakespeareโs four โRoman Playsโ, and chronologically is set after โJuliusโฆ
Unlike Buck Rogers, who made it to the 25th century six hundred years early, Devizesโ most modest acoustic virtuoso arrives at the 21st just shortโฆ
The first Kamikaze moth of the year dive-bombed my face the other morning. Forget blossoming trees and tulips, that’s a milkmanโs sure sign of springโฆbecause we wear a headtorch, you see? Oh, never mind, what do you care?! You just want me to tell you whatโs happening over the eggtastic week in the wilds of Wiltshire; suppose so, if I must! Happy Easter one and all!
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week.ย
Wednesday 27th
Last day to catch Vowvas film screening at Parnella House, Devizes, see poster for details.
Devizes Books PresentsโฆThe Island Continent; A trip through the history and culture of Australia at Wiltshire Museum. From the achievements of early Aboriginal tribes, through visits from European explorers, the inhabitants of the Red Centre and finally to the work of Australian imports to this country, they celebrate all that is great about the Antipodean life and culture. With contributions from Thomas Keneally, Nevil Shute, Clive James, Germaine Greer and Billy Connolly. An evening devised and introduced by Lewis Cowen. 7pm for 7.30pm. Tickets, ยฃ6, includes a glass of wine or soft drink and nibbles. Tickets available from Devizes Books cash only please. Or book by phoning 01380 725944 and pay cash on the door.
The regular Green Grub Club at St James, Devizes. And Acoustic Jam at the Southgate.
Opening night of Editorโs Pick of Week, Devizes Musical Theatre brings Sister Act to Daunstyโs School in West Lavington.
Siรขn Dicker: Waltonโs Songbook and Aly Bain & Phil Cunningham, both at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
The Rondo Variety Show at The Rondo Theatre, Bath. Bethlehem Casuals at The Bell, Bath.
Buzzard Buzzard Buzzard at The Tree House, Frome.
Thursday 28th
Starting Thursday and running all weekend, Wadworth have open days at the Wadworth Brewery & Tap Shop, Devizes, promising a โWeโll Meet Again Big Weekend.โ
Regular PSG Choir workshop at King Alfred Hall, Chippenham.
Stuart Rolfe and Becky Lawrence at The Old Bell, Warminster.
Robert Brown at The Beehive, Swindon. Flo Parker Bombosch & Sienna Wileman at The Tuppenny. And itโs Vic Fest 2024 at the Vic, celebrating its tenth year, music all Easter โBandโ Holiday Weekend: eggs opening at 7:30pm with Chasing Dolls, Ritual Divide, Kotonic, Trashed and Falls On Deaf Ears.
Luisa Omielanโs Bitter at Swindon Arts Centre, and The Best Of Queen at the Wyvern.
Friday 29th
Easter Bunny Hunt across Devizes by the Devizes RAF Cadets, all weekend.
People Like Us at The Three Crowns, Devizes.
Some reggae and soca with David Brewster at the Bear, Marlborough.
Future Sound of Trowbridge #7 at the Pump, Trowbridge with Nothing Rhymes With Orange, SOAK and Feedback. Junkyard Dogs at The Red Admiral, Trowbridge.
Martyโs Fake Family at The Old Road Tavern, Chippenham. Regular Music event at the Cause Cafe in Chippenham.
Iain Ballamyโs Fascinada at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. The Boot Hill All Stars at The Three Horseshoes.
Funkkinsteins at The Beehive, Swindon. The Chaos Brothers at The Ashford Road Centre. A Country Night in Nashville at the Wyvern. Vic Fest continues at the Vic, with Truck, Nervendings, Men In Vests, The Belladonna Treatment and Fluff.
Tool Shed: A Tribute to Tool at The Tree House, Frome. General Levy at the Cheese & Grain – amazing, and it doesnโt look sold out yet!
Saturday 30th
Melksham Lions Easter Egg Hunt.
Tom Davis & The Bluebirds at The Southgate, Devizes. Funked Up at the Pelican.
Nick Harperโs Tempus Fugitive tour at St Peterโs, Marlborough. Barrelhouse at The Lamb. And a reggae party with Razah-Hi-Fi at the Royal Oak.
Josh Kumra at the Barge, HoneyStreet.
The Unpredictables at The Bell, Great Cheverell.
Brad Stevens at The Consti Club, Chippenham.
The Lost Trades at The Pump, Trowbridge, sold out Iโm afraid. Be Like Will at the West Wilts Con Club in Trowbridge. Miss Bridy & The Two Notes at Gloucester Road Conservative Club. The Ultimate Retro Disco Party at the Civic.
Be Like Will
The Buttmonkeys at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon. The Mix at St Margaretโs Hall.
The Blue Moon Band at Tuckerโs Inn, Faulkland.
The Jukebox Graduates at The Swiss Chalet, Swindon. SGO at The Beehive. The Chaos Brothers at The Ashford Road Club. Awakening Savannah at The Woodlands Edge.
Marquee Square Heroes at Swindon Arts Centre. Bowie Live at the Wyvern. And Vic Fest at the Vic has Modern Evils, Life In Mono, Bluntnose, Sebastian & Me, Nothing Rhymes With Orange and Colour of Bone.
Reubenโs Daughters at the New Inn, Bath.
Junkyard Dogs at The Sun, Frome. The Wurzels at the Cheese & Grain. Viva Morrissey at The Tree House.
Junkyard Dogs
Sunday 31st
Scrambled Eggs Easter Hunt at Hillworth Park, Devizes. Illingworth at The Three Crowns. Adam Woodhouse’s Thieves at The Southgate, highly recommended if you like your Americana.
Thieves
Open Mic at the Red Lion, Lacock.
Junkyard Dogs at Calne Liberal Club.
Rob Clamp at The Barge, HoneyStreet.
Open Mic at The Old Road Tavern, Chippenham.
Sunday at Vic Fest, Swindon sees Kid Klumsy, Visceral Noise Department, AnyMinuteNo, Mr Badaxe, Rebel Station, Disruptive Influence, Bear Noir and Dangermind, from 5:30pm.
James Hollingworth at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
The Authentics at Tuckerโs Inn, Faulkland.
Moonlit Poachers with Jake Puntis at the Long Room in Box.
Carmina 3 at The Bell, Bath, and a Palestine fundraiser with DJs Goodgroove, JayCee, and others, see poster.
Monday 1st April
Canal & River Trustโs Letโs Walk through Caen Hill & Jubilee Wood. South Western at The Three Crowns, Devizesfrom 3pm-5pm.
Junkyard Dogs at The Red Lion, Lacock.
Tuesday 2nd
Swindon Jazz & Soul Festival Fringe presents at Celebration of Stan Getz with Terry Quninney, for Jazz Knights at The Royal Oak, Swindon
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some technical gubbings to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
And, while weโre on about planning ahead, April is hotting up, believe me, loads of good, good, even gooder stuff and stuff gooder than them! Have a gander at the coming month HERE.ย ย
I would recommend Andrew Hurst at St Nicholas Church in Bromham Thursday 4th, Brian Poole at Long Street Blues Club Friday 5th, Mick Jogger at Seend Community Hall on Saturday 6th and the John Hackett Band at the Pump, or Cara Dillon at Wiltshire Music Centre.
Following week, you can find And Then There Were None opening at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes Monday 8th, and the Marley Experience on 13th April at Devizes Corn Exchange; unmissable.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by FB messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Tell Us About Your Event
Please make sure we’ve not already picked it up and listed it before submitting, it saves me a lot of time; thank you!
Big up the Easter weekend, remember Easter is a time for celebrating the coming of spring, the beauty it encompasses, and the bringing of new life to the worldโฆ. by all means cover yourself in melted chocolate and ask your partner to get licking, but unless youโre prepared for all the gubbings bringing a new life into the world personally presents, be sensible and pop a Johnny on it! Filth, I know, but only the headstrong read this far!!
by Ian Diddamsimages by Chris Watkins Media and Ian Diddams Whilst probably best known for his editorship of โPrivate Eyeโ magazine and thirty-five years asโฆ
I mean, Devizes own contemporary blues throwback, JP is getting bookings, and rightly so. He’s off to Trowbridgeโs Lamb next Saturday for a double-bill withโฆ
As the excitement continues to detonate to an exploding point for our very first Stone Circle Music Events Wiltshire Music Awards on 25th October, weโฆ
After a larger quantity of social media teasers than previous years, Devizes Arts Festival has today revealed their full line-up for 2024. Better take a peaky sneaky gander at it, keep in their good books, because it looks rather special! Based on previous experience they usually range from pretty awesome to super-duper lights are gonna find me awesomeโฆso here goesโฆโฆ
The festival runs from Friday 31st May to Sunday 16th June, and never fails to bring us a diverse programme of separate events within the arts, music and theatre, but also takes in talks and walks. Some come with a worthy price tag, but thereโs lots of free fringe events also. All it takes is for you to support it.
I donโt know about you, but the first one I got excited about when I heard, was Bristolโs soulful indie-folk singer-songstress Lady Nade, who plays the Corn Exchange on Saturday 1st June. I put this Lady on my must-see list after fondly reviewing her album Willing back in 2021. Iโve not yet had the opportunity to see her live. Yet it is not for that reason Iโm grateful to the Arts Festival for booking Lady Nade, rather in contemplation of the elevated sentimentality channelled through her Americana-fuelled songs.
I summed up the album at the time, with โwritten during the pandemic, thereโs a secluded ambience echoing through these eleven sublime three-minute plus stories of friendship, love and loneliness lost and found, reflecting the fact it was recorded in multiple studios and engineered by all the musicians in isolation. Yet to hear it will hold you spellbound in a single place, till its conclusion.โ
If that doesnโt tempt you I donโt know what will! But Lady Nade is not before a high-energy Penzance sea-punk grand opening to the festival, with Golden Gnome award winning Jolly Roger, at the Corn Exchange on Friday 31st May; blistering barnacles, Captain Haddock, that sure sounds like some swashbuckling shenanigans.
History of Market Lavington, anyone? Sunday 2nd has a festival walk, followed by the first two free fringe events, consummate story-teller Adam Alexanderโs Seed Detective at The Peppermill from 2pm, and a solo loop pedal show with Eddy Allen, 7pm at the Cellar Bar.
Likely the best known name on the roster, comedian Lucy Porter comes to Devizes on Thursday 6th June, and Iโm sure youโre all aware of her distinctive, bouncy, feel-good comedy from TV and radio panel shows, and being victorious on Celebrity Mastermind.
Lucy Porter
Prior to this headliner, NHS doctor, journalist, broadcaster, speaker, campaigner and comedian Dr Phil Hammond on Monday 3rd June presents โHow to Fix the NHSโ and โThe Ins and Outs of Pleasureโฆโ Iโve my own suggestions on the subject, donโt get me started, but maybe add Prime Minister to Philโs already impressive rรฉsumรฉ!
Wiltshire based multiโinstrumentalist, the Edward Cross Quintet at the Assembly Rooms on Tuesday 4th June. Liz Grandโs superb, funny, moving, sensitive and informative portrayal of Clementine Churchill, also on Tuesday at the Merchant Suite.
Wednesday 5th June sees English naturalist, ecologist, author and broadcaster Mike Dilger, known as the wildlife reporter on The One Show, doing a talk on One Thousand Shades of Green, his quest to find 1000 different British plants in a calendar year and assess how our flora is faring in modern Britain. Geneticist, author and broadcaster, Adam Rutherford, who frequently appears on science programmes on both radio and TV, also gives an engaging, provocative and informative talk the Arts Festival promises to be unmissable.
Hollie McNish. Image: Kat Gollock
Poet and author Hollie McNish presents her Lobster Tour on Thursday 6th June at the Town Hall; Iโm just chatting about her with the legend who is Kieran J Moore, seems Hollie played Bath Komedia recently, he recommends, and you canโt get a better local recommendation than that.
The weekend sees a blues, skiffle, calypso and rockabilly mesh, apparently with a sweeping vaudeville twist, which sounds like a beguiling and exhaustive blend I must say!ย Jo Carley and the Old Dry Skulls are at the Corn Exchange Friday 7th June.
Jo Carley and the Old Dry Skulls
Londonโs Cable Street Collective headline Saturday, an intriguing one, their sound mixes African-influenced guitars and beats with soulful female vocals, socially conscious lyrics and western melodies, creating an idiosyncratic alt-pop sound thatโs all their own.
Sunday 9th June sees a Festival Walk into the West Woods; Sarsens, Soldiers and Sawpits. Two free fringe events, an Americana band from West Midlands called Rumour, from 2pm at the Three Crowns, and a fresh and lively approach to jazz at St Johnโs Church from 7pm with the Annie Parker Trio.
The final week of the festival sees world-renowned concert pianist, Ida Pellicciolo on Monday 10th June at the Town Hall. Belinda Kirk, world-record holding explorer, researcher and a leading campaigner promoting the benefits of adventure on wellbeing, talks at the Town Hall on Tuesday, along with intrepid Antarctic explorer Tom Creanโs story brought to life in a dramatic and humorous solo performance by Aidan Dooley from Play On Words Theatre Company, at the Wharf Theatre.
Two best-selling Wiltshire-based authors, Kate Webb and Jon Stock, discuss their craft at The Peppermill Hotel on Wednesday 12th June, and thereโs a remarkable intimate solo guitar performance from Martin Simpson at the Corn Exchange.
Duo Tutti, a classically-trained flutist and pianist duo who combine well-known classical tunes with interesting sounds to create a unique concert that is accessible to all, at the Town Hall on Thursday. Terry Quinneyโs Sound Of Blue Note accurately recreates jazz and the aesthetics which defines Blue Note Records, also on Thursday 13th June at the Town Hall.
Friday 14th June thereโs an organ recital at St Johnโs with award-winning organist and conductor Huw Williams, and we have the intriguingly titled Slambovian Circus of Dreams at the Corn Exchange, an electrifying live performance of moody but upbeat alt-roots rock.
The final Saturday of the Arts Festival, 15th June, we have something altogether different, hypnotist Matt Hale presents an 80s Spectacular, where Matt promises to have you partying like itโs 1985, humm, whether you like it or not. Iโm not sure about hypnotists, I might stand at the back!
Matt Hale. Image: DG-Imagery-3
Soulful and electrifying rhythm and blues band The Junco Shakers at the The British Lion on
Sunday 16th June at 2pm, and Clive Oseman and Nick Lovell, creators of Oooh Beehive, the number one spoken word and poetry open-mic night in Swindon, have a Wham! Bam! Poetry Slam 6pm at The Wharf Theatre; two free fringe events polishing off another spectacular Devizes Arts Festival.
by Mick Brianimages from Lauren Arena-McCann The playwright Tom Stoppard is probably best known for his work โRosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Deadโ, his absurdist comedy based around Shakespeareโs โHamletโ. Equally absurd is his country house murder mystery โThe Real Inspector Houndโ which has no *cough* resemblance to Agatha Christieโs โThe Mousetrapโ. A lesser known workโฆ
You might think it’s a laryngologist’s dream come true, this Lewis Capaldi-led decade’s penchant for the blue-eyed soul singersโ melismatic strain to cause Mick Hucknall to issue a health and safety warning, but to Swindon’s Brandon Clarke, aka Weather, it appears to be a natural and phenomenal giftโฆ.. This short and to the point newโฆ
Oh yeah, invite me to a place with a bar, throw some of the best blues this side of New Orleans at me and then hope Iโll articulate some words about it next morning, why don’t you?! It’s okay readers, it’s become standard protocol for me, I’ve got thisโฆwith help from Ben and Vicky! …Hereโฆ
Nothing cruel about our George Wilding; with his perfect match and another local legend of local music, Jolyon Dixon, they’re knocking out great singles like it’s child’s play….. You’re So Cruel is out today and is a prime example. It’s an upbeat two minute blast of feelgood indie-pop, seemingly unfazed by the cruelty of theโฆ
None too convenient when you need a wee down the alley where Wilkos was, but handy in other ways; all-seeing eye Noel has spotted something on his CCTV which is worth its weight in gold to anyone who dares to drive through Devizes. Northgate Street is apparently now open to one-way traffic like months ofโฆ
Thereโs a new single from Bristol-based Nothing Rhymes With Orange out tomorrow (Saturday 20th September) which takes the band to a whole new level, and it has got me thinking back to their Devizes rootsโฆ..ย You know, I really cannot remember how this thing started, if they contacted me or if I found them. Itโฆ
We are creatures of habit here in old Devizes. We’ll stand in the Market Place wearing a vacant expression, wondering where we can bag ourselves a good kebab in town now the Kebab House is sadly no longer. I urge you to think Sidmouth Street, think The Oliveโฆ. Yeah, I get you. Save the longstandingโฆ
Oh Danny Boy, oh, Danny Boy, they loved your boyish Eton looks so, but when ye was voted in, an all democracy wasnโt quite dying, if itโs now dead, as dead it well may be, ye’ll come and find the place where it was lying, and kneel and say an ave there for me aโฆ
Milkman hours with grandkids visiting it was inevitable a five hour day shift was all I was physically able to put into this year’s Swindon Shuffle. Apologies, but it was plenty to tell they knocked it out of the park again this yearโฆ.. They don’t even need a park. Just a selection of Old Town’sโฆ
The Wiltshire Music Awards are delighted to confirm a new headline partnership with Stone Circle Music Events, who will sponsor the Awards for 2025 and into 2026. As part of this agreement, the event will be rebranded as: Stone Circle Music Events โ Wiltshire Music Awards. This collaboration reflects Stone Circle Music Eventsโ ongoing commitmentโฆ
Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats!
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week.…
Ongoing: The Mousetrap at the Wyvern, Swindon runs until Saturday 23rd.
Wednesday 20th
Green Grub Club at St James, Devizes. Acoustic Jam at the Southgate.
Daniel Kemish at Chapel Arts, Bath. Tuto Tribe atThe Bell, Bath.
Thursday 21st
Iona Lane and Ella Clayton at the Pump, Trowbridge.
Jim Blair at The Beehive, Swindon. Somerset Velvet & Hatty Taylor at The Tuppenny.
Memory Sing at Swindon Arts Centre.
Adam’s Apple Jazz Trio at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Sylvertones at the Old Bell, Warminster.
Desperados (Eagles tribute) at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Friday 22nd
Devizes Ghost Walk with John Girvan. Eddie Martin Trio at The Southgate, Devizes. DJ Stevie MC at the Exchange.
Open Mic at The Barge, HoneyStreet
Damm! at The Bear, Marlborough
Band of Others at The Grapes, Melksham.
Take The Stage at the Neeld, Chippenham.
Eddie Gripper Trio at the Civic, Trowbridge. Wiltshire Rural Music Fundraiser at Emmanuals Yard.
Pussycat & The Dirty at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Furlined at The Beehive, Swindon. Moving Pictures at The Vic.
Ezio at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Rhythm Presents Funkagenda DJs at 23 Bath Street, Frome.
Saturday 23rd
Easter Egg Hunt at All Cannings. Jumble Sale at St Andrew’s Church, Devizes: 10-11am. John Rutterโs Requiem at St Andrewโs Church.ย Eddie Holgate Trio at the Southgate, Devizes.
Spring Concert at St Mary’s Church, Marlborough. Swipe Right at The Bear, Marlborough.
Peaky Blinders at The Pilot, Melksham. Rockin’ The Joint at Melksham Rock n Roll Club.
The Worried Men at The Talbot, Calne.
Radiation Sickness at The Consti Club, Chippenham. Counterfeit Quo, Status Quo Tribute Band at the Neeld.
Kevin Brownโs Shackdusters at the Pump, Trowbridge.
Moments of Pleasure; the Music of Kate Bush at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
M&W and Underbliss at The Three Horseshoes.
Soul’d Out at Tucker’s Graveyard, Faulkland.
Solarbird at the Duck, Laverstock. Rob Clamp at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Rachael Sage at Chapel Arts, Bath. Paul Footโs Dissolve at The Rondo Theatre, Bath.
A World Music Club at The Beehive, Swindon. Biffy McClyro at The Vic, Swindon.
Lottery Winners at the Cheese & Grain, Frome. Revelation Roots at the Tree House.
Sunday 24th
Sunflower Easter Fair at Devizes Corn Exchange: 11-4pm.
Josh Pughโs Existin’ La Vida Loca at Swindon Arts Centre. Jonathan Pie at the Wyvern, Swindon.
Junkyard Dogs at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
The F.O.S. Brothers at The Bell, Bath.
Stevie Wonder tribute The Wonder of Stevie at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Monday 25th
The Great Big Dance Off at the Wyvern, Swindon.
Kevin Figes’ Wallpaper Music at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 26th
Spring Wreath Making at Hillworth Park, Devizes. And, it must be the first time Editorโs Pick of Week is on a Tuesday! The James Oliver Band play Devizes Conservative Club.
Jazz Knightโs Swindon Jazz & Soul Festival Fringe Event at The Royal Oak, Swindon, is a celebration of Grant Green with Chris Cobbson. How Sweet It Is at Swindon Arts Centre.
Rhod Gilbert & The Giant Grapefruit at the Wyvern.
Sue Harding at The Bell, Bath.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some important things to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
And planning ahead, donโt forget Devizes Musical Theatre brings us Sister Act at Dauntsey’s School from Wednesday 27th until Saturday 30th March. Next week also sees Vic-Fest at the Vic in Swindon, with a huge line-up, People Like Us are at The Three Crowns, Devizes on Friday, while Nothing Rhymes with Orange headline the Pump in Trowbridge, The Lost Trades are there on Saturday. General Levy at Cheese & Grain Friday, The Wurzels on Saturday!
Nearly into April, where I would recommend Andrew Hurst at St Nicholas Church in Bromham Thursday 4th, Brian Poole at Long Street Blues Club Friday 5th, Mick Jogger at Seend Community Hall on Saturday 6th and the John Hackett Band at the Pump, or Cara Dillon at Wiltshire Music Centre.
Following week, you can find And Then There Were None opening at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes Monday 8th, and the Marley Experience on 13th April at Devizes Corn Exchange; unmissable.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Following the excitement and success of the first meeting of โYour Partyโ in Swindon, a second meeting has been arranged for 18th September 7.30 -โฆ
It’s been six months since Devizes-based young blues crooner JP Oldfield released his poignant kazoo-blowing debut EP Bouffon. He’s made numerous appearances across the circuitโฆ
There’s something to be said for the function duo route with universal appeal, you could be working somewhere hot! Powerhouse vocal harmony duo Reflections areโฆ
Formerly known as Judas Goat and the Bellwether, the now renamed band have announced the release of their latest single, โDrill Baby Drillโ (coming outโฆ
Photograph byย Simon Folkard It’s been a rocky road for Devizes Outdoor Celebratory Arts (DOCA) these last few years, and I didn’t mean the crushed biscuitsโฆ
Iโm laughing, not at the Glasto lineup, but the incalculable comments of negativity it has encouraged in Facebookland. It should be said though, most disapproving remarks appear on shares of the post and not the original, and most of them were posted this morning when most ticketholders are likely at work, funding their forthcoming adventure to Pilton. Now theyโre homebound, online anticipation and positivity has risen above the seething armchair critiquesโฆ…
Then there is this โold photographs of Wiltshireโ Facebook group I recently joined, where a picture of the Barge at Honey Street was posted today with the caption, โThe Barge at Honey Street, near Pewsey.โ Some aging, caps-lock permanently stuck on gammon responded, โIT IS NOT PEWSEY IT IS HONEY STREET!โ
If caps-lock usually implies angered shouting, and the nearest large village to Honey Street is Pewsey, perhaps it suggests how nonsensically negative and overreactive your average Facebooker has become, and how much it exists for aimlessly irritated and amateur critics to vent their general disgust over first world problems. It says more about them and the tenet of Facebook than the thing theyโre mocking. This much ado about nothing is amusing though, thatโs why I like this particular social media platformโฆ.
Glastonbury Festival released their main lineup poster today, and my gut reaction was similar to the priceless online onslaught of negativity in the comments. Being honest, itโs not inane, itโs not the best lineup weโve seen, but I restrained myself from passing comment, considering itโs an age test; the older you get the less headliners you should expect to know at an event self-professed to be a festival of โcontemporaryโ performing arts. No one online considered it might not be Glastonbury which has the problem!
And secondly, for the simple reason Iโm not going anyway, and havenโt attended for twenty-four years. I wonder how many of those feeding negative comments to the pitchfork assembly are going themselves. I hope and pray itโs not many, for Glastonbury is not the place for decomposing strident and pessimistic cynicsโฆ. like me, for example!
Glastonbury is and will always be an experience, you go to Glastonbury for going to Glastonbury, not whoever happens to be on a stage youโre passing. Yeah, itโs held some massive names in the past, pre-broken Brexit Britain, but does anyone commenting have an inkling how much and how hard it is to organise something on this scale? How much work goes on behind the scenes? Far more than typing your grievance in a text box, rest assured.
I can now count the acts Iโve heard of on the annual Glastonbury poster on my fingers, even less ones Iโd actually like to see, this lessens with every year Father Time takes from me, itโs an old dog new tricks scenario; Iโm content with shit happens. Most of the names Iโve heard of are through my daughterโs playlist, with a sprinkling of classics like Cyndi Lauper, to whet the appetite of grumpy old bastards who might yet turn up; itโll all come off in the wash!
I shouldn’t scratch my Uncle Albert beard and tediously spin a yarn of how I once failed to see the Mad Professor at the dance tent because of my genius navigation past the Pyramid Stage while Pulp was playing. A band who, being I was a โraverโ and they were โindieโ I wouldn’t usually beeline, but finding myself unable to gorge further through the masses, was forced to watch them, and forever became a fan through unexpected circumstance. But if I did, it would surely serve a purpose to illustrate a tale of the unexpected. Digest new things, you never know till you try. To moan this act doesn’t suit your whim is to misunderstand the concept of Glastonbury, or festivals in general. You need to open your eyes and ears to new things not just relish in the nostalgic era of your individual youth. But more importantly, the arts and entertainment industry at its knees, need you to do this more than ever before.
Yet, in this ocean of boiling ageist whimpering which is the comment section on Glastonbury’s Facebook lineup post, which one could summarise as a multitude of disgruntled whingers unlikely to even attend, who cannot accept they’re past it and are whinging for the sake of whinging, one gen-zโs unintentionally amusing comment reversed the status quo, by calling the lineup, โa load of old dinosaurs!โ (Assuming they meant the acts listed and not the other commenters!) They win the internet today for standing against the grain, still bleating bollocks, but for precisely the opposite reason to everyone else, thus proving if you can’t satisfy everyone, why bother trying with anyone? Who the heck is SZA and how did they get listed above PJ Harvey? I might have to sacrifice a cute furry pet over this atrocity!
Though, in this, you should note the universal appeal Glastonbury promotes and always has. I recall the nineties when attendees foamed from the mouth at the thought Robbie Williams got up there to do his thing; youth today would hail this classic, as they wouldโve done for Led Zeppelin. Because should a change of tide wipe you out or this upset you, there’s a billion retro festivals, eighties nights, tribute acts, et al, which are more niche, and likely kinder on your wallet too. Maybe take some time to research them rather than jump a bandwagon?
Yep, if Shania Twain is the calibre of Elton John or Springsteen now, a tear will undoubtedly trickle down my wrinkled cheek, but it is not my cheek Glastonbury needs to appease, neither is it the witch hunt of unsatisfied grumpy old keyboard warriors. Key here is the simple notion; Glastonbury is so much more than a main stage and congested campsite. Don’t fuss over mainstream or contemporary things if they’re only going to engulf you in flames of irritation, think of your blood pressure.
No buddy, saunter them there Somerset fields and find the bizarre, outlandish, the upcoming, the amateur, the underground, then, and only then will you understand the true ethos of Glastonbury.
Or simply retire, watch it on the telebox; you can fast forward. With a cardboard cup of Lidl cider, and undercooked hotdog. Stay home where you can take a piss behind the sofa without queuing, and maybe start a blog where, like me, you can hypocritically rant your niggles without spoiling a Facebook post! What have we becomeeeee?!
What, again?! Another article about Talk in Code?! Haven’t they had enough Devizine-styled publicity?! Are their heads swelling?!ย Didn’t that crazy toothless editor catch themโฆ
Valedictorian graduate of Bates College in Maine, and with a PhD in neuroscience from Harvard, neuroscientist Lisa Genova self-published her debut novel, Still Alice inโฆ
Swindon’s annual colossal fundraising event The Shuffle is a testament to local live music, which raises funds for Prospect Hospice. If you’re ever going toโฆ
There was a geographical population imbalance this bank holiday Monday in Devizes which risked the entire town conically sloping into the back of Morrisons; noโฆ
Written by Jonathan Larson Presented by Maple Theatre Company
It’s always hard reviewing a show that one has seen multiple times before, performed by differing companies. Itโs also hard reviewing a show that is one of oneโs favourite shows EVAH. And if that wasnโt hard enoughโฆ Its far too hard to review a show that one has performed in oneself. Itโs wrong to compare โ its unfair and meaninglessโฆ differing companies, differing directors, differing theatres. So, ignoring the seven other productions Iโve seen including the one I bummed around in (quite literally โ if you know you know) โฆ. Here goes…..
For those that know the story of โRENTโ โ you can skip this paragraph. Otherwise, Jonathan Larsonโs story โ a glorious homage to Pucciniโs โLa Bohemeโ – revolves around a group of bohemians in the lower east side of New York City and deals with topics such as homelessness, drug addiction, betrayal, and AIDSโฆ as well as love, friendship, recovery, and hope. All wrapped up with a stunning score of often poignant, sometimes funny, always beautiful singing with six-part harmonies. If you want to know more โฆย duck go go is your friend as ever.
RENT on stage is usually set in a quasi-industrial area โ and Maple Theatre Company donโt buck that trend (I doubt RENT heads would allow it to be honest!). Scaffolding creates multiple levels which are used excellently throughout the show and frames several areas for the action. ON stage props and setting is minimal, but I raise my hat to the wonderful use of moveable music flight cases with wooden tops that represent beds, side tables and THE cafe table (if you know, you know). Quite brilliant also was the use of 40-gallon steel oil drums โฆย where โdrumsโ covers two definitions of that word.ย Chapeau to Luke Hocket, set designer (who also produced the show) and his set team of Tom Courtier and Milly Hayward.
Directing a show like โRENTโ is no easy task (not as hard as reviewing it obviously ๐) as the show is basically โthe sameโ whoever does it (as it is so iconic โ maybe after 400 years, like Shakespeare, some aspects will be changed, and we will get a RENT set on a spaceship โฆ)ย but Dionna Kate-Hargreaves set her own stamp on it in subtly brilliant ways. I mentioned the use of multiple levels already but the piece de resistance of the show is in many ways โฆย the drumming.ย (If you know you know).
And speaking of drumming that brings us to the music โ a six-piece band led by MD Kris Nock rocked out the show hidden subtly off stage but in full view (once you know, you know). I wonder if Krisโ toughest task (not as arduous as reviewing obviously) was teaching three actors to hit a large piece of metal in time with two sticks for some considerable time (if you know, you know).
Tech is as ever hidden away where no one can see them up in the attic of the Rondo, and technical director Tom Courtier and his crew slid their sliders and pushed their buttons andย lit their lights to full effect. (Iโve got a deep and meaningful understanding of tech). Rule number one in a theatre is never hack off the tech guys โ they have hammers, and saws, and unlimited access to 240v at all times (if you know, you know) so โ GREAT WORK GUYS!!!
Thatโs about it then. Set, Tech, props, direction, music.ย Yup. Thatโll do.
Ah.
Yes.ย That lot that cavorts upon the stage.ย Nearly forgot them. Starting with cavortingโฆย choreographer and dance captain Grace Egginton and Grace Shobbrook whipped the cast into a frenzy of whirling limbs when they werenโt singing.ย And often when they were come to that. It must be said the Rondoโs stage is quiteโฆ.ย Bijouโฆ particularly when by necessity a good half of it is taken up by aluminium scaffolding poles that donโt bend if you collide with them (if you know, you know) so the tightness of choreography is impressive.
And so โ the cast. Iโve used the line about โstrutting and fretting his hour upon the stageโ before so I wonโt use it again.ย Ooops.
It takes a dedicated cast to work โRENTโ โ it is emotionally draining (if you know, you know), taking its toll on the actorsโ own emotions. And this cast did Jonathan Larson proud. The ensemble – they always get listed last so here they are first cos thatโs important (if you know, you know) so bravo Daisy Wilson, Morgan Hames, Georgi pepper, Steven Hockett, Jasmine Lye, Sophie smith, Milly Haywood, and Sarah Easterbrookโฆย All of whom also starred in the all-important cameo parts that just make โRENTโ simply โworkโ. Special mention must be made though for Jasmine, who stepped up to play the role of the harassed waiter in the cafรฉ scene due to cast unavailability this evening.ย Cometh the hour, cometh the Jas!
I suppose that leaves the principals. *sigh*.ย OK. Wellโฆย ummm…ย errrโฆ
Well in all honesty they werenโt good. Nope. Not at all.
THEY WERE BELTING!!!ย FANTASTIC!!!ย MAGNIFICENT!!!
and other superlatives.
In no particular orderโฆย Bryan Houce played Markโฆย his portrayal got stronger and stronger throughout the performance as the middle-class wannabe with no confidence (thatโs Mark โ not Bryan!). Mimi was played superbly by Grace Egginton who quite rightly as a choreographer played the part of a striptease dancer very well.ย (Hmmmโฆย that maybe came out a bit wrong?) ๐Roger Davis, all angst, and anger was quite phenomenal played by Josh Phillips.ย Absolutely fantastic. Liberty Williams probably stole the show for โmost likely to break a wine glass at forty feetโ with her incredible top note harmonising as Joanne, and Naomi Marie as Benny (dรฉjร vu here โ if you know, you know) as the brooding, mean turncoat-comes-good ex-flatmate.
If I appear to be rushing through these principals, itโs because I could write war and peace about them otherwise. Next up โ in her first ever principal role (which is hard to believe, if not as hard as reviewing of course) playing Maureen was Sarah Askew.ย Now Sarah is no mean belter of a top noted harmony as well, as befits a rock band vocalist (if you know, you know) but โฆย well.ย If you need a top MOO-ERR then Sarah is your girl (if you know, you know).ย And then we have Davey Evans as Collins. Another wow moment.ย Collins is a complex character to play especially with the range of emotions demanded of it, and Davey perfected them all. Great voice too. Which leaves last, but of course NEVER leastโฆย Angel. George Friend. I had the pleasure of speaking with George before and after the show โ he is reprising the role he played in 2017 โ and he claimed (yeah right ๐) he couldnโt believe he could still reach the high notes he needed but they were well reached, another great performance.
So thatโs it. Iโve reviewed a show thatโs hard to review. A show that for an opening night was quite wonderful. And let us not forget either the debut show for a brand-new Bath based community theatre company.ย Top job.
Whilst dispersing highly flammable hydrocarbon gases into the atmosphere is not advisory, Butane Skies is a name increasingly exploding on local circuits. The young andโฆ
The excitement and hope generated by Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana announcing a new political party has reached Swindonโฆ.. A broad range of people haveโฆ
If I was bowled over backwards by Rubyโs teaser single last week, its title, Crowned Lightbringer, now also belongs to this five-track EP, released today,โฆ
Image: John Kisch Legendary songwriter and original Stranglers frontman Hugh Cornwell has announced a run of UK dates this November, accompanied by special guests Theโฆ
Atmospherically anthemic and reinforced with that infectious rhythmic groove weโve come to love Talk in Code for, More Than Friends is chockfull of it, andโฆ
by Mick Brian With Sandcastles Productions marking its debut production with Charlie McGuireโs original play Glass House, the cast and crew behind this production are clearlyโฆ
Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats, thereโs lots to get through! And I’ve not had time to run off a weekly podcast, though the thought was, cos I like doing them, but ainโt nobody listening to themโฆ. probably must be my jokes putting them off! I can understand that!
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week. Nothing ongoing on our list, so, letโs jump right into the weekโฆ.
Wednesday 13th
Green Grub Club at St James, Devizes. Acoustic Jam at the Southgate.
Runny Snotts Open Mic at the Three Crowns, Chippenham.
Los Gusanos at The Bell, Bath. And running until 16th March, Rent at the Rondo Theatre.
Big Jam Session at The Vic, Swindon. Memory Cinema โ Peter Pan at Swindon Arts Centre.
Junior Voice Festival โ Songs From Our Song Book at the Wyvern.
Thursday 14th
Make your own Easter Egg Masterclass at HollyChocs, Poulshot.
Fantasy Radio live Lounge at the Pelican, Devizes: Jambon Chapeau.
Comedy Loft at The Civic, Trowbridge.
Ruby Darbyshire at The Old Bell, Warminster.
PSG Choir workshop at the King Alfred Hall, Chippenham.
Foregate Brothers at The Beehive, Swindon. Alex Taylor at The Tuppenny. Jeff Woodhouse Medium at Swindon Arts Centre.
Howlinโ Ric & the Rocketeers at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Friday 15th
The What 4โs at The Black Horse, Cherhill.
The Groomโs House Party at The Town Hall, Devizes.
Tom Davis & the Bluebirds at The Barge, HoneyStreet. Trash Panda at the Cooperโs, Pewsey.
The Soul Strutters at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Be Like Will at The White Hart, Atworth.
Richard Wileman & Amy Fry, Phil Mercyโs Blind Convergence at Baristocats, Swindon. Jon Amor Trio at The Beehive. Penfold at The Vic. Cirque โ The Greatest Show at the Wyvern.
Sam Kellyโs Station House at Chapel Arts, Bath. Beatsenders Episode 3 at Nowhere.
Nine Below Zero at The Tree House, Frome. Limehouse Lizzy at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 16th
CUDS; Letโs Clean Up Devizes, on the Green. Wiltshire Air Ambulance Free Valuation Day at The Corn Exchange, Devizes. The Starlight Concert Series with the Full-Tone Orchestra at St Andrews. The Tricks at The Three Crowns. Lightninโ Hobos at the Southgate. Devizes Rugby Club has the ladies v Amesbury, 2nds V Amesbury, screening of Six Nations and Six OโClock Circus in the evening.
Charity Event in Aid of Dorthey House at St Nicholas Church, Bromham.
The Blue Moon Band at Woodborough Social Club.
Josh Kumra at The Bear, Marlborough.
Start the Sirens at The Grapes, Melksham.
Beetlehead at the Pump, Trowbridge with Charmtype in support.
The Gesualdo Six: The Wishing Tree at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Asha McCarthy at The Manu Centre. Radiation Sickness at The Three Horseshoes.
The Honky Tonks at Tuckerโs Inn, Faulkland.
Alan West & Friends at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Depeche Mode tribute, Enjoy the Silence at The Vic, Swindon. Tundra at The Woodlands Edge. Cirque โ The Greatest Show at the Wyvern.
Livewire AC/DC at The Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 17th
Craft Fair at West Lavington Village Hall 10-4pm
March Sighthound Stroll, Devizes: Meeting at the car park right at the top of the road leading to Caen Hill Locks and Cafe. ยฃ3 parking fee applies.
Stones Throw at The Three Crowns, Devizes. Howlinโ Matt at the Southgate, with a cigar box guitar making workshop beforehand.
Pewsey Players at St Johnโs, Pewsey.
Ruby Darbyshire at The Red Lion, Lacock: 12-2pm.
Bob Bowles at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
The Schmoozenbergs at The Bell, Bath.
Dom Jolyโs Conspiracy Tourist Tour at Swindon Arts Centre.
Monday 18th
Jonah Hitchens at The Bell, Bath
The Mousetrap opens at the Wyvern, Swindon, runs until 23rd March.
Tuesday 19th
Swindon Jazz & Soul Festival Fringe, a Celebartion of Nancy Wilson with Victoria Klewin & Adam Stokes Trio at Jazz Knights at The Royal Oak, Swindon.
Poetika (poetry slam) at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some important things to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, donate to us if you can, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Wiltshire Music announces a new season for Autumn Winter: and the first under the new leadership of Daniel Clark, Artistic Director and Sarah Robertson, Executiveโฆ
If youโve seen Jess Self performing at the Wharf Theatre, singing at the FullTone Festival or elsewhere Iโm certain youโll agree with us; Jess hasโฆ
It’s been a wonderful summer’s weekend, in which I endeavoured to at least poke my nose into the fabulous FullTone Festival, despite being invited toโฆ
Devizes annual orchestral festival, FullTone got underway yesterday afternoon with a showcase of local talent from Devizes Music Academy,ย and finalised Friday night with theirโฆ
A feast of Salisbury musicians have recorded the single Edge of Reason, a powerful tribute to the irreplaceable ThomโฏBelk, a champion of Salisburyโs music sceneโฆ
Come on spring! Oh well, hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats, thereโs lots to get throughโฆ.
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week. Nothing ongoing on our list, so, letโs jump right into the weekโฆ.
Find a podcast of everything listed, sprinkled with some great local music below. Itโs only a half hour long, trial thing, see how it goes, give it a listen, let me know what you think, especially if youโre the kind of person who cannot be bothered to read this! Music comes from Ruby Darbyshire, Canuteโs Plastic Army, Fly Yeti Fly, Ruzz Guitar with Peter Gage, and the Birdsmens.
Wednesday 6th
Green Grub Club at St James, Devizes. Acoustic Jam at the Southgate.
Eldermirth, the elderly daytime comedy show at The Neeld,Chippenham.
Cantaloop at The Bell, Bath.
Swindon Old Town Comedy Club at The Hop Inn with: Alex Kitson. Ross Noble at the Wyvern, Swindon. The Western Players โ Outside Edge at Swindon Arts Centre, running until 9th March.
Thursday 7th
Editor’s Pick of the Week; Jon Amor Trio Special with Ian Siegal at The Southgate, Devizes. Rum & Records at the Muck & Dunder.
PSG Choirs free taster session at King Alfred Hall, Chippenham.
Junkyard Dogs at The Old Bell, Warminster.
Canuteโs Plastic Army at The Beehive, Swindon. Mark Harrison at The Tuppenny. Taylormania at the Wyvern.
North Sea Gas at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Mobius Loop at 23 Bath Street, Frome. Sam Sweeney Band at The Tree House. Paul McKenna: Success For Life at the Cheese & Grain.
Friday 8th
Devizes Ghost Walk: with John Girvan. Cobalt Fire at The Southgate, Devizes. Palooza house night at The Exchange.
Seend Village Get Together at Seend Community Hall.
Frankisoul at the Pump, Trowbridge, with Syncopation Station.
Take the Stage at The Neeld, Chippenham.
Rewind to the 90โs โ Kevin and Perry lookโalikes at Venom Nightclub, Westbury.
Brasher, Eat Your Own Head, & Bad News First at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon. Junkyard Dogs at The Boathouse.
Rob Heron & The Tea Pad Orchestra at Chapel Arts, Bath. The Living Room, Jim Godfrey at the Grapes.
Shepherds Pie at The Vic, Swindon. At-It at The Queenโs Tap. Showaddywaddy at the Wyvern.
Saturday 9th
Wiltshire Climate Alliance’s Green Open Homes event opens and runs until 17th March. It is an opportunity to ask a local resident about an energy saving improvement that theyโve made, and see if it might work for you. On an event day, people who have made energy saving improvements open up their homes to share their experiences.
Matt & Tom at The Three Crowns, Devizes. Ruzz Guitar Trio at The Southgate. Matchbox Mutiny at the Moonrakers.
Fly Yeti Fly at Keevil Folk Club.
Pancho & Bear at Woodbrough Social Club.
Static Moves at the Lamb, Marlborough.
Scott Doonican at the Pump, Trowbridge. Martyโs Fake Family at The Greyhound.
Back to the 80s party night at Spencerโs Club, Melksham. Twice Bitten at The Pilot.
Phantom Lymb at The Talbot, Calne.
North Wiltshire Symphony Orchestra at St Andrewโs in Chippenham. Abba Sensations at the Neeld, Chippenham.
The Saga Louts at the Swiss Chalet, Swindon. Ghost UK with Phantom Droid at The Vic.
Black Rose at The Woodlandโs Edge. Dear Zoo at the Wyvern, Swindon.
Trowbridge Symphony Orchestra at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Full Tone Orchestraโs The Queen Symphony at Bath Abbey. Mumma Quiche and LC Hammered at The Bell, Bath.
Baskery at the Tree House, Frome. Mad Dog Mcrea at The Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 10th- Motherโs Day – donโt forget!!
Kate at The Three Crowns, Devizes.
The Worried Men at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Motherโs Day Jazz concert feat. trumpeter Laura Jurd & WYJO at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Joli Blon at The Bell, Bath
RPA Level Up Present โActually I Canโ at Swindon Arts Centre. Dear Zoo at the Wyvern, Swindon
Monday 11th
Chippenham Film Club March feature.
Escher Steps at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 12th
Dom Franks Quartet at Jazz Knights in The Royal Oak, Swindon.
The Spoonful at The Bell, Bath.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some important things to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Have a good week, and please listen to the podcast, itโll be fun, pinky promise!
Bit Wintery, innit? Calendars are going forward, weather is going backwards! Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats…..
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week. Nothing ongoing on our list, so, letโs jump right into the weekโฆ.
Okay, all being well, below, find a podcast of everything listed, sprinkled with some great local music. Itโs only a half hour long, trial thing, see how it goes, give it a listen, let me know what you think, especially if youโre the kind of person who cannot be bothered to read this! Also, I thought it might be good for anyone with sight or reading issues, but they will have to put up with me waffling! Music comes from Meg, Jol Rose, Phil Cooper, The Worried Men and Junkyard Dogs.
Wednesday 28th
Green Grub Club at St James, Devizes. Acoustic Jam at The Southgate.
The Importance Of Being Earnest at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, running until 11th March. Big Jam Session at The Vic.
Earl Okinโs Legend at Rondo Theatre, Bath. Buffoโs Wake at The Bell, Bath.
National Theatre Live at the Merlin, Frome, with Vanya.
Thursday 29th
Open Mic at The Crown, Aldbourne
Phil Cooper at the Tuppenny, Swindon. Alan Clayson & Chanson at the Beehive. Frank Carducci & The Fantastic Squad at The Vic. Daniel Foxx at Swindon Arts Centre.
Keith James โ โSolid Airโ โ The songs of Nick Drake & John Martyn at Chapel Arts, Bath. Tam Lin Retold at the Rondo Theatre.
Leaps of Faith at the Merlin Theatre, Frome.
Friday 1st March
The Cinelli Brothers at Long Street Blues Club, Devizes.
Technicolour Steam Train & Ed Dyke at The Pump, Trowbridge. Shape of You – Ed Sheeran Tribute at the Civic.
Jennifer Pike and Martin Roscoe at The Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Samantics at The Three Horseshoes.
Green Haze- Green Day Tribute at The Vic, Swindon. The Worried Men at The Queens Tap. Static Moves at the Deerโs Leap.
FearFree Fest 2024 at The Bell, Bath with DreamCaster, Kane Pollastrone, Mobscure, Louie Greensmith and Sharpie helping to support FearFree, a local charity breaking the cycle of abuse.
Free Community Festival at Komedia, Bath.
Saturday 2nd
CapFest at St James, Devizes. Plan of Action at The Three Crowns. Junkyard Dogs at The Southgate. The Music of Simon & Garfunkel at The Wharf Theatre.
Sam Cronin at The Barge, HoneyStreet. Open Mic at The Kings Arms, All Cannings.
Apache Cats at The Bear, Marlborough. Homer at The Lamb. Chuckle at the Church โ Comedy Night at St Peterโs.
The Chaos Brothers at The Grapes, Melksham
The Future Sound of Trowbridge #6 at the Pump, Trowbridge with Nobodyโs Dad, Sharpie and Sebastian & Me.
Spiers & Boden at The Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. The Derellars at The Three Horseshoes.
Mid Life Krisis, Diversify at The Vic, Swindon. Trios Amigos at the Swiss Chalet. Sonic Alert at The Queens Tap. Post 12 at The Woodlandโs Edge.
The Saviours Collective at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Witchfest Market at the Cheese & Grain in Frome, followed by Maniac Street Preachers Vs StereoIronics. The Blink 182 Show has sold out at the Tree House. Martha Tilston at Rook Lane Chapel.
Sunday 3rd and Monday 4th Iโve got nothing, but do keep a check on the event calendar for updates.
Update: Just in, there’s an open mic at the Lamb in Marlborough from 8pm on Monday 4th March.
Tuesday 5th
Jazz Knights presents Alan Barnes Quartet at The Royal Oak, Swindon.
ADHD and Women with Dr Samantha Hiew at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some important things to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Have a good week, and please listen to the podcast, itโll be fun, I promise you!!
Hey, teacher! Leave those sausage rolls alone. Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats, there be lots more than your average sausage roll to get through, yer filthy muckersโฆ..
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week. Nothing ongoing on our list, so, letโs jump right into the weekโฆ.
Wednesday 21st
Green Grub Club at St James, Devizes. Regular Acoustic Jam at The Southgate.
Carducci Quartet at Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon.
Jessica Fostekewโs Mettle at the Rondo Theatre, Bath. Amadou Diagne & Group Yakar at The Bell, Bath.
Lunchtime Recital at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Thursday 22nd
Open Mic at the Crown, Bishopโs Cannings.
Devizes Film Club at the Wharf Theatre, screening Official Competition.
Runny Snotโs Acoustic Sessions at the Neeld, Chippenham.
Fin Taylor at Swindon Arts Centre. Adam Rowe at the Wyvern Theatre. Stone Soup, Modern Evils and Phantom Droid at The Vic. Larkham & Hall at the Beehive. Oxbowlake and Jess Marie at The Tuppenny.
Avalon Comedy Network’s Pierre Novellie, Tessa Coates, Huge Davies and Jake Baker at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Paul Cowley at Chapel Arts, Bath. Cindy Stratton Band Everything Changes album launch at the Rondo Theatre.
Rob Newman at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Friday 23rd
Devizes Ghost Walk: with John Girvan. White Horse Operaโs Top of the Ops at St Joseph’s School.
Mark Morriss plays the Pump in Trowbridge with Sound Affects in support. Sax Man โShiltsโ at the Civic.โ
Drink and Draw at 31.Co.Work in Chippenham, opening the fringe February events across the town this weekend. Instant Wit โ A quickfire comedy event at The Constitutional Club. Heat 2 of Take the Stage at the Neeld Hall.
Thatโll Be The Day at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon. The Retro Rock Show at Swindon Arts Centre. The Hamsters from Hell and the Vooz at The Vic. Jay Styles is Michael Jackson at The New Inn.
Shoun Shoun & Venice Treacle at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Nanny Folio Theatre and The Amazing Bubble Man at Pound Arts, Corsham.
CharmType at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Rock the Tots Family show at Rondo Theatre, Bath. The Jake Leg Jug Band at Chapel Arts.
Eddie & The Hot Rods at The Tree House in Frome. Absolute Bowie โ Greatest Hits at The Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 24th
Seed Swap at St Andrewโs, Devizes. Editor’s Pick of Week: Deadlight Dance arrives in Devizes with an instore at Vinyl Realm from 11am, and they play The Southgate in the evening. The Wharf Theatre has The Lonnie Donegan Story. Kennet Gateway Club has the Rockinโ Bandits at Devizes Conservative Club.
@59 at The Lamb, Marlborough.
Wet Franc at The Pilot, Melksham. The Fabulous โ59 Ford at Melksham Rock n Roll Club
Toodles and the Hectic Pity, Charlie Gillman and Luke De-Sciscio at the Pump, Trowbridge. Adult Panto Alice in Wonderland at the Civic.
The REAL nursery rhymes and songs โ toddler to KS1 at Wiltshire Swindon History Centre, Chippenham. Clareโs Circus at King Alfred Hall. Hidden Canvases โ โStreet Art and the Cityโ A talk by Doug Gillen at the Platinum Hall. Letโs build LEGO Chippenham! at Wiltshire Swindon History Centre, Chippenham. Rock the Tots: Baby Boogie atThe King Alfred Hall. Toddler Tango at The King Alfred Hall.
Steppin Thruโ Time โ Mary Lou Revue at The Yelde Hall, Chippenham. The Rosellys at Rivo Lounge. Daft Laffs โ A night of comedy greats at The King Alfred Hall. The Old Road Tavern has a Mega Fringe fest, see poster below.
Louise Farrenc plays Symphony number 3 at Corsham Town Hall. Martyโs Fake Family at The Royal Oak. Shake It Up Theatre presents The Improvised Shakespeare Show at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Holy Popes, Shin Splintz & Big Byrd at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon. Adriano Adewaleโs Cataplufโs Musical Journey at Wiltshire Music Centre.
Mollyโs Chamber at Prestbury Sports Bar, Warminster.
Science Museum: The Live Stage Show at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon. Straighten Out at The Vic. World Music Club at the Beehive. Danny & The Randoms at The Queenโs Tap.
Glamarama at The Woodlandโs Edge. MetSon at the Swiss Chalet.
Martin Rowsonโs Giving the Gift of Offence at the Rondo Theatre, Bath. Phoenix River Band at Chapel Arts, with Sophie Rose in support.
The Sunbirds at the Tree House, Frome. The Beat featuring Ranking Junior at the Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 25th
Vince Bell at The Southgate, Devizes from 5pm.
Melksham Record Fair at the Assembly Hall.
Open Mic at The Old Road Tavern, Chippenham. Shed-ache Dance Theatre at The Constitutional Club Chippenham. Elvis in Blue Hawaii at the King Alfred Hall.
Bandeoke at Prestbury Sports Club, Warminster.
Schtumm presents DG Solaris & Courting Ghosts at the Long Room in Box. 3 Daft Monkeys Duo at The Bell, Bath.
Garth Marenghiโs Incarcerat at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
CSF Pro Wrestling: Showdown at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Monday 26th
Rock the Tots Family at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Josienne Clarke at Swindon Arts Centre,
Ben Tunnicliffeโs Nowhere Ensemble at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 27th
Valuation Day with Paul Martin at The Athenaeum in Warminster.
Sophie Stockham Quartet at Jazz Knights in the Royal Oak, Swindon. The Ronnie Scottโs All Stars โ Soho Songbook at the Wyvern Theatre. Connor Burns at Swindon Arts Centre.
Sam Thomas at The Bell, Bath.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some important things to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
As a child of the 70s I grew up with the new genre of horror films โฆย โThe Exorcistโ led the way in 1973 with its green vomit and spinning head. โThe Omenโ in similar demonic child plot followed in 1976, but also released in 1976 was a film featuring a less demonic but no less โฆย disturbedโฆย teenagerโฆย โCarrieโ. The screenplay was an adaptation of Stephen Kingโs 1974 novel of the same name about an outsider high school student of that name.
So having a horror story book, followed by a horror story film, what is the obvious next step to take with the overall premise?ย Thatโs right โ a musical. How obvious.ย After all, its hardly lovely, fluffy, boy meets girl, boy and girl fall in love, unlikely misunderstanding occurs, boy and girl separate, boy and girl get back together, love blossoms, final curtain, all interspersed with some jolly rollicking show tunes, stuff. Oh no โ its more everybody hates girl, mother suppresses girl, girl is awkward, girlโs peers humiliate girl, girl kills peersโฆ ย all interspersed with some โฆ wellโฆ not so bouncy (but excellent!) show tunes.
If you arenโt aware of the story proper, and the above synopsis isnโt enough, then google is your friend.ย Though in a bizarre happenstance of fate my poor typing skills initially wrote that as โgoogle is your fiendโ.ย Which may be somewhat more apposite given the storyline.ย Maybe.
Anywayโฆย I quite like dark musicals. And letโs face it โฆย musicals probably donโt come much darker than something that originated from the pen of Stephen King.
โCarrieโ is performed by โLuna Theatricsโ, a Bath based company at the Rondo Theatre this week. The cast is a young one as befits the storyโs setting in Chamberlain High School and where the eponymous anti-hero is a late to puberty seventeen-year-old. The set is a simple black box with minimal props โ it very much helps highlight the action with few distractions.
In attendance is the quite excellent live seven-piece band led by Alex Williams, tucked away but centre stage in the rear section that the Rondoโs stage allows for. Tech is provided by Alex Draper & Tony Giddings with specialist effects from Lazurus Molina and Jack Whittaker. Mollie Macpherson produced the show.
So what of the show I hear you ask? The book is by Lawrence D. Cohen, lyrics by Dean Pitchford and music by Michael Gore, but thatโs the stuff that google can give you of course. Itโs a fast-paced show which nonetheless pulls along the fairly simple story line in about an hour and three quarters โ not that it ever seems to be taking long I hasten to add lest that appear a criticism.
There are three key partnerships in the story. Mother and child โ Margaret and Carrie. Margaret is the overbearing, Old Testament god-fearing, benignly intentioned, oppressor of her daughter and is superbly played by Caroline Murray; itโs the smallest principal character yet without Margaret the story doesnโt exist, and Caroline ensures every nuance of the motherโs influence over Carrie is illustrated. Carrie โ all shy angst and awkwardness, is played stupendously by Amy Goodspeed. At first Amyโs portrayal seems a little lack lustre โ but this is me being slow โฆย as in fact she had encapsulated the persona of her character perfectly, which as the second act moves on expands into a more confident girl and burgeons with itโฆย until the final humiliation and the crushing of dreams. These two have for me the most beautiful parts of the musical โฆย a duet in the first act (โEvening Prayersโ) and Carolineโs stunning solo in act two (โWhen There’s No One”).
The second partnership is Sue and Tommy โ the high school perfect couple โ played by Ella Rodbourn and Ewan Wyatt. Both play their characters believably as the โin crowdโ that become supportive of Carrie. Ella demonstrates Sueโs frailty and uncertainty in particular really wellโฆย while Tommyโs prom scene with Carrie is done sweetly with compassion.
Then thereโs the โnasty coupleโ of Chris and Billyโฆย where itโs better to strike than get struck better to screw than get screwed, better to punch than get punched, better to burn than get burned as Chrisโ solo (โThe World according to Chrisโ) explains. Chris is perfectly belligerently portrayed by the ever adaptable and strong stage presence of Naomi Marie. Jack Whittaker is absolutely perfect as Billy, all alpha male testosterone, and no brain cells.
The rest of the cast all equally shine โ unsurprisingly. Rebecca Paterson & Joe Gibson as the harangued teachers, and other students consisting of Joshua Phillips, Katherine Flint, Holly Dumper, Adam Evans, Sarah Coles and Louisa Naylor.ย Ensembles are often glossed over but these eight keep the pace high and all take their opportunities to shine.
Thereโs one area I havenโt mentioned yet โ and step forward director and choreographer Adam Evans. The dance sequences are crisp, sharp, and energetic โ several cast members mentioned after the show how warm they still were after changing! The direction is spot on tooโฆย there are parts of the show that are genuinely scary and disturbing.ย
TL;DR? Itโs a cracking show. The music is excellent. Choreography excellent. Drama spot on. Acting and singing top notch.
And so back to the film in 1976โฆย Those that have seen it may be wondering if the stage musical has the sameโฆย surprising โฆ ending. Wellโฆ..ย
โฆย Youโll have to go and see the show to find out!ย Carrie is showing at the Rondo Theatre until Saturday 17th February, at 1930 with a Saturday 17th matinee at 1430.
Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats, letโs lots to get throughโฆ..
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week.
Look, if itโs all the same to you, I cannot choose an Editorโs Pick of Week; too much great stuff happening. Iโm doing a Chocolate making workshop at HollyChocs in Poulshot on Friday (see here,) then off to see Gaz Brookfield at West Lavington Village Hall, (Preview) which has to be one. Saturday, if you loved Adam & the Ants, you need to get to The Vic, Swindon for Ant Trouble (previous review) and if you love hip hop get down the Pump in Trowbridge for the Scribes (preview) but saying all this, when SGO come to the Southgate, Devizes, which they are on Saturday, itโs always a pleasure (past review.) Huge dilemma, ergo, can I have five Editorโs Picks of the Week this week?!!
Ongoing until 17th February, two enlightening exhibits at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes,ย Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars in Wiltshire, and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed HERE.
Potterne Pantomime presents Robin Hood at the Potterne Village Hall, running until Saturday.
Wednesday 14th
Seed Bomb Making at Hillworth Park, Devizes, and the regular Acoustic Jam at The Southgate.
Glad to hear The Charlton Cat at Charlton St Peter has a grand reopening on Wednesday.
Counterfeit Sixties Show at the Neeld, Chippenham. Love Stories in Chippenham, don;t know where, One Chippenham your website seems to be down!
A lunchtime recital with violinist Madeleine Mitchell at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Sterling Elliott at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Ghost The Musical at The Athenaeum, Warminster.
Memory Cinema at Swindon Arts Centre screens Miss Potter (PG.) The Big Jam Session at The Vic.
Carrie the Musical at Rondo Theatre, Bath. Diddy Sweg at The Bell, Bath.
Thursday 15th
Open Mic nights return to The Cellar Bar, Devizes.
Seend Fawlty Players Presents Aladdin at Seend Community Centre, opening today, running up till Saturday.
Kid Carpet and the Noisy Garden Centre at Pound Arts, Corsham.
B-Sydes, Heartwork & Ed Poole at the Tuppenny, Swindon. Bob Porter Project at the Beehive. The Magic of Terry Pratchett at Swindon Arts Centre. Frankie Boyleโs show opens at the Wyvern Theatre and runs until Saturday.
Bath Bachfest opens and runs until Saturday with lots of concerts across the city.
Friday 16th
Innes Sibun Trio at The Southgate, Devizes. Disneyโs Frozen Jr runs at the Wharf Theatre on Friday and Saturday.
Gaz Brookfield plays West Lavington Village Hall.
Ward Thomas at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon. Collateral with Zac & The New Men at The Vic. Soulphia, new name for Sophia Bovellโs Soul Rebels, plays The Cow in Swindon.
Classic Rock American Highway Show at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Bootleg Blondie at the Cheese & Grain, Frome. Liam Helm & The Hang Ups at The Tree House.
Sorrel Pitts will be signing copies of her new novel Broken Shadows at Devizes Books. Reviewed HERE. Thereโs a Devizes Town Hall Ghost Hunt. The Truzzy Boys are at The Three Crowns, and SโGO at The Southgate, reviewed here. Oh, and of course, itโs DOCAโs Festival of Winter Ales.
The Devilโs Prefects Album Launch at The Barge on HoneyStreet.
Operation 77 at The Lamb, Marlborough.
The Scribes Boombox reaches the Pump in Trowbridge, preview here.
The George Ward School Reunion Disco Class of the 1970s, at the Spencer Club, Melksham.
Wiltshire Police Band at St Andrewโs Church Chippenham. Valentines Concert in Chippenham, at the Neeld, perhaps? One Chippenham, your website is down.
Gwilym Simcock Trio at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Framed! And Help! I Think Iโm a Nationalist! at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Fleetwood Mac & Tom Petty The Legacy Show at Swindon Arts Centre. Apache Cats at Queens Tap. 12 Bars Later at Swiss Chalet. Ant Trouble at The Vic.
Deadlight Dance & Steve Mercy are art Chapter 22 Roots & Records, Bath. Joe Wilkinson
At the Rondo Theatre. This Flight Tonight โ A Tribute to Joni Mitchell at Chapel Arts.
Cover Stories at Salisbury British Legion Hall. The Wiseguys at the Rising Sun, Wimborne.
Even N Song at The Ship, Shipton Bellinger.
Judge Jules is at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Sunday 18th
Chantelle Smith is with Richard Wileman & Valve at The Vic, Swindon. Brian Conley at the Wyvern Theatre.
The Woodlanders at The Bell, Bath.
Monday 19th
Buffy Revamped at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon
Swingle-Tree and Whistling Treason at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 20th
Ian Bateman Quartet plays Jazz Knights at the Royal Oak, Swindon. Miles Jupp at the Wyvern Theatre.
POETIKA poetry slams at the Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some important things to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Have a good week- thatโs the last important thingy to say!!
Devizes Food & Drink Festival launched their 2025 programme of events today. Running from Saturday 20th to the 28th September, the Box Office opens onlineโฆ
With your standard festivals two-to-a-penny, some consisting of not much more than a bloke with a guitar in a pub selling undercooked and overpriced hotdogs,โฆ
Contemplated headlining this โClash of the Titans,โ but that evokes the idea of a dramatic power struggle with fierce consequences rather than proof Devizes canโฆ
Popular award-winning artisan chocolate business Hollychocs has announced that its Beanery Cafรฉ will close on Saturday 23rd August, marking exactly two years since its openingโฆ
by Ian Diddamsimages by Sandcastle Productions A very new addition to Bath based theatre companies, Sandcastles Productions brings their self penned piece of theatre toโฆ
by Ian Diddamsimages by Ian Diddams, Next Stage Theatre Company and Mike Stevens Florian Zeller is a contemporary French playwright and screenwriter, who received criticalโฆ
Rude to walk into an event sporting another event wristband but the welcome was friendly as ever at the Three Crowns in Devizes. It’s mid-afternoon,โฆ
Hey you, Feb already, hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshireโฆโฆ
Everything listed here is onour event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week. Oh, and accept no substitute, this is the definitive guide to what’s really happening around these parts!!
Ongoing until 17th February, two enlightening exhibits at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes,ย Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars in Wiltshire, and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed HERE.
The Importance of Being Earnest is currently running until Sunday at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes. This is sold out, Iโm afraid, reviewed HERE.
Wednesday 31st
Modern & Contemporary Art from the Collection of Chippenham Museum.
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
โFull Circle Part IIโ โ Phil Beer & Steve Knightley at Chapel Arts, Bath. Tight Lipped Combo at The Bell.
Truck at the Vic, Swindon, with the Belladonna Treatment and Nostomo. Viggo Venn at The Wyvern Theatre.
Thursday 1st Feb
The Tap Opening Night in Devizes.
Pound Arts, Corsham are screening Sherlock Jr. (1924) with live piano score by Meg Morley.
Cousins, Skiddy, Blair, Lynch at the Tuppenny, Swindon. Sebastian & Me, Talk in Code and Mirrored Faces feature at the Vic as part of Live Music Venues Week. Beyond The Barricade at the Wyvern Theatre.
Allโs Well That Ends Well at Rondo Theatre, Bath. Nigel Wearne (AUS) at Chapel Arts, with support from Simeon Hammond Dallas.
Open Mic at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Friday 2nd
Devizes Youth Action Group has their first event at the Devizes Corn Exchange. U18โs only, all-teen bands, Shox, Steatopygous, and BellaDonna play, with DJ Flam. Well done for organising, we fully support this initiative, and our own youngest reporter, Flo, will be there to give us the lowdown on it. Karaoke starts up at the Exchange nightclub below for the so-called grownups(!), with Karl Maggs on the wheels of steel. This will be a regular thing, the first Friday of each month.ย
Also on upcoming bands, check the first heat of Take The Stage at Chippenhamโs Neeld Hall, only costs a fiver entry.
Travis Waltons at the Pump, Trowbridge, with Martyโs Fake Family and The Earth & Me.
One Chord Wonders at The Boathouse, Bradford-on-Avon.
All Ears Avow, Death is a Girl, Fluff and Ritual Divide all play the The Vic, Swindon. Thereโs a Swindon Old Town Comedy Club at Christchurch, Old Town. Calling Planet Earth, Duran Duran tribute at the Wyvern Theatre, Dire Streets at Swindon Arts Centre.
And the In-Cider Festival begins at Weston-Super-Mare! Weston-Super-Mare, Eddie!
Saturday 3rd
The Thomas Atlas Trio takes over from the postponed LeBurn Maddox at The Southgate, Devizes. A darn good replacement, expect some amazing blues. Our trusty duo, Funked up will be at The Three Crowns, guaranteed good night at either. DJ Stevie Mc is in the mix at the Exchange.
Kieran doesnโt know it yet, weโll see if he reads this religiously, but Iโm invited to the Pump by frontman Jamie, so for this reason and for many others, this gets my Editorโs Pick of Week!ย ย
The Worried Men play the Pump, Trowbridge, with FuTuRe PlaN in support; anyone going up from Devizes? I needs me a lift!!
From the European Union Chamber Orchestra, Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon presents Yuzhang Li.
Still Marillion at the Vic, Swindon. Apache Cats the Rat Trap. The Thinking Drinkers at Swindon Arts Centre, and The ELO Show at the Wyvern Theatre.
Itโs Duckfest at the Duck in Laverstock, a Salisbury Live Beggar’s Bash thingy.
Phoebe Troup is at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Dylan tribute The Bob Villains at Tree House Frome Retro Electro at the Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 4th
All-family bike ride, Kidical Mass, from Hillworth Park, Devizes. Lewis Clark at The Southgate from 5pm.
Chasing Dolls, Lucky Number Seven, Better Heaven, Liddington Hill, and Oui Legionarries at The Vic, Swindon. Whitney Queen of the Night at the Wyvern Theatre. Ania Magliano at Swindon Arts Centre.
Monday 5th
Open Mic at the Lamb, Marlborough.
An Evening With Jasper Fforde at Swindon Arts Centre.
Tuesday 6th
Daniel Newberry Trio for Jazz Knights at the Royal Oak, Swindon. An Evening With Jeff Stelling at the Wyvern Theatre.
And thatโs all weโve got for now, other than some important things to say: Events listed here are subject to change, we are not responsible for cancellations, errors or postponements in anything listed.
Important note two, events which come to our attention from now on in, will be updated on the Event Calendar and NOT HERE. So, be sure to check in from time to time, use the Event Calendar to find more info on everything listed on here, and for ticket links, etc. Use the Event Calendar to check for updates and planning ahead.
Did we miss you out? Did you tell us about your event? Itโs not that we donโt like you, itโs because Devizine uses many sources to collate these listings, and sometimes we miss a few things. Listing your event here is free, but please make it easier for me by messaging or emailing the info, and then, and this is the really important part, make sure Iโve added it and let me know if not!
Have a good week- thatโs the last important thingy to say!!
If youโve popped into Wiltshire Music Centre recently; for a concert, workshop, screening orย even a meeting, you might have noticedโฏchanges in the foyer: recorded music,โฆ
Photo credit: David Leigh Dodd Pioneers of the indie-rock sound which would lead us into the nineties, Transvision Vamp lead singer Wendy James has announcedโฆ
By Ian DiddamsImages by Luke Ashley Tame of Acadia Creative Around 2 million women are victims of violence perpetrated by men every year, thatโs 3,000โฆ
Family run premier auctioneers of antiques and collector’s items, Henry Aldridge and Son announced a move into The Old Town Hall on Wine Street, Devizes;โฆ
By Ian DiddamsImages by Ian Diddams and Shakespeare Live Is it post watershed? Then I shall beginโฆ The etymology of the word โNothingโ is quiteโฆ โฆ
Amidst another packed summer weekend’s schedule laid that lovable large village Pewseyโs turn to shine; always a law unto itself, things went off; if itโsโฆ
The Importance of Being Earnest is rather like a newfound interest in jazz, you must โunlearnโ the four-beat pop you’re accustomed to, to fully appreciate it. You have to rewind, temporarily forget Rick Mayall and Ade Edmondson, forgo all farcical comedy from The Goon Show to Charlie Chaplin, and leave your Tardis in late Victorian England, then, you will laugh.โฆ.in a hoity-toity kinda fashion!
Opening Monday, it’s a sell-out at the Wharf Theatre in Devizes already, assuring me you know the plot and backstory; though I caught last night’s dress rehearsal, I’m not sure I need review it, only to assure ticket-holders theyโre in for a good night, express, once again, why you gotta love our communal and hospitable town’s theatre, and maybe attempt to convince you Iโm an intellectual!
One of the few plays Iโve read, Iโm reminded how ironic and sardonic towards pomposity Oscar Wilde was, and how much trouble he got from it; surely making The Importance of Being Earnest a Victorian Men Behaving Badly, albeit written by a genius of twisting narrative the like I find unable to make a modern comparable.
I find myself wondering how, or even if itโs possible, to modernise it, as they did with Brewsterโs Millions, for example. For it lambasts the snobbery of Victorian social etiquette as nonsensical, ridiculing the formalities of gentry as preposterous folly, and though it suggests insincerity and fabrications should be morally neutral, our protocols to be so feigned with social interactions has drastically improved through equality since, making this feel somewhat lost in time. Such is its ex-post facto beauty, concluding some things are best left the way they are.
This leaves the happy ending scene questionable by todayโs standards. In an unfeasible modern twist itโs surely likely both Jack and Algernon wouldโve been victims of their own circumstance; akin to a double-act of Basil Fawlty and Basil Fawlty. A modernisation of the play would end (spoiler alert) with the penultimate scene, where the ladies discover Earnest was a big, fat double-whammy fib to get in their knickers, and the boys wouldโve been summoned to punishment for their deceptions, liable to sharp kicks to their respective groin-areas!
True, isnโt it? Modern girls wouldn’t have given these unsuitable and practically unhinged suitors the time of day! Theyโd receive only a two-finger salute, probably de-friended and condemned on Facebook, and theyโd both be rung out to dry on Tinder, no matter how loaded they are! It is then, with a curiosity of Victorian ethics which makes this play so endearingly comical, classic and impossible to modernise; go tell Disney!
Though, with a line in the play ironically defuncting happy endings I hadnโt picked up on till last nightโs fantastic dramatisation of it, I strongly suspect that is precisely what Wilde was getting at, only leaving me ponder what he would think of our era today. Thereโs far more connotations to encrypt from this play than first meets the eye, but at least he wouldnโt be threatened with a bouquet of rotten vegetables from his boyfriendโs pop and in his attempt to sue the Lord, get banged up in the big house for it. More likely the Lord would get a wrap on the knuckles for a hate-crime; proving how far weโve emancipated and why this play is so intriguing and poignant, if outmoded comically.
And itโs played out wonderfully, Rob Finlay plays steadfast Jack Worthing, Oliver Beech makes the perfect punster Algernon Moncrieff, and their conflicting characters ricochet off each other like they were performing this in Melkshamโs Bounce House!
Sophie Kerr plays Gwendolen Fairfax, and Anna McGrail is Cecily Cardew, elegantly defining the constricted mannerisms of Victorian ladies, and Wildeโs attempts to satirise it. Comic gold from Debby Wilkinson as Lady Bracknell and Jess Bone as Miss Prism, particularly when the two finally clash. Rob Gill is the bumbling reverend, Tony Luscombe and Ian Diddams make the perfect butlers.
Lewis Cowen is one dedicated director who has made this play shine beyond the rafters of the Wharf. I think youโll love it, being far more intellectual than me, and I finish with an oxymoron Oscar Wilde might be proud of me for; oh, awfully witty, what-what! Photographer Chris Watkins was there, trying to grab some images from him to illustrate this with, for now, I apologise for not taking photos, but guarantee you, itโs yet another stunning performance.
Britpop icons Supergrass will headline Frome Festival as a fundraising event for grassroots community action group โPeople for Packsaddleโ who are fighting to saveโฆ
Another Triumph for WHO Andy Fawthrop Following the excellent recent production of La Belle Helene at Devizesโ Wharf Theatre back in March (see here),โฆ
Five Have An Out-of-town Experience You canโt always get that live music experience you crave by simply staying within the walls of D-Town.ย Sometimes,โฆ
By Ian DiddamsImages by Josie Mae-Ross and Charlotte Emily Shakespeare wrote several plays that were termed in the late nineteenth century โProblem Playsโ. Theseโฆ
Together in Electric Dreamsโฆ. at The Corn Exchange Fashionably late for Devizes Arts Festival, I’d like to thank Andy and Ian for informative coverageโฆ
Hey frozen duckling, hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshireโฆโฆ
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week.
Ongoing until 17th February, two enlightening exhibits at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes,ย Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars in Wiltshire, and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed Here.
Wednesday 24th
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Big Jam session at the Vic in Swindon. Rhod Gilbert & The Giant Grapefruit at The Wyvern Theatre.
Apricity Theatre Turns Ten The Rondo, Bath. John E Visticโs Country Club at The Bell, Bath.
Screening of The Old Oak at the Athenaeum in Warminster.
Thursday 25th
Runny Snotts Acoustic Sessions at The Neeld, Chippenham.
Mark Simmons: Quip of the Mark at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Ellis Evason at the Tuppenny, Swindon, Adult Panto โ Beauty And The Big Beast at The Wyvern Theatre.
Andrew Birdโs tour Taken Seriously is at The Rondo, Bath. Gordon Giltrap at Chapel Arts.
The Farewell Tour โ An Evening With Sir Geoff Hurst at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Friday 26th
Lucky Number Seven are the Pump, Trowbridge, with LXRDVIRS and Notre Dame of Tokyo. John Lawโs Re-Creations at the Civic.
BlueSoul at The Boathouse, Bradford-on-Avon.
Avalon Comedy Network: Stuart Laws, Lucy Pearman, Heidi Regan & Josh Weller at Pound Arts, Corsham.
This is Your (Improvised) Musical at The Rondo, Bath. Reggae vibes at St James Wine Vaults with the Biggle Sound System. Australiaโs Ernest Aines at Chapel Arts.
King Awesome at The Vic, Swindon, Texas Tick Fever at the Beehive. Stranger Sings at The Wyvern Theatre.
Saturday 27th
Phereakers at The Southgate, Devizes, Donโt Frett at The Three Crowns.
Josh Kumra at the Bear, Marlborough. Broken Dolls at the Lamb.
Bo Walton Band at Melksham Rock n Roll Club.
A Big shout out to organiser John McConnachie, as Editorโs Pick of the Week is at Calne Liberal Club for the annual 7 Bands in 7 Hours. The Killertones, Real Cheesemakers, Mike & the Misfits, People Like Us, 6 O’clock Circus, Homer and the Chaos Brothers join forces for this fundraiser. This year itโs supporting two young children Hartley, diagnosed with Down’s Syndrome and Fletcher who suffers bowel disorder. The mini-festival comes with a suggested ยฃ5 donation, and starts at 4pm. If you canโt make it you can still donate here.
Martyโs Fake Family at Gloucester Club, Trowbridge. Samantics with Devilโs Doorbell at The Pump.
Junkyard Dogs are at The Consti Club in Chippenham.
Shakespeareโs Fool at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Band of Others at Warminster Conservative Club.
Stranger Sings at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon. Papa Shango at The Vic with Here Comes The Crows in support.
Ukrainian Benefit Evening at The Bell, Bath. Ania Maglianoโs I Canโt Believe Youโve Done This at The Rondo.
Snuff at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury. Wilton Live all dayer at Wilton Community Hall, see poster. Sam Fraser is at Follow Comedy at Qudos.
Hugh Cornwell and special guests The Primitives at the Cheese & Grain, Frome, Bruce Juice, Bruce Springsteen Tribute at The Tree House.
Sunday 28th
Vince Bell at The Southgate, Devizes.
Screening of The Royal Operaโs Rusalka at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
South West Hotel and Careful Spider play a Schtumm at the Long Rooms in Box. Andy Burden Band at The Bell, Bath.
An Evening with Glenn Hoddle at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Monday 29th
Is the opening night of The Importance of being Earnest at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes. This is running until Feb 3rd, and we will bring you a review of it before it opens; watch this space!
Rock The Tots โ โThe 1990sโ at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Most Haunted Live at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Brooks Williams & Aaron Catlow at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 30th
Stop Making Sense at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Tom Clarke-Hill Quartet plays Jazz Knights The Royal Oak, Swindon. I See Orange at the Vic. Most Haunted Live at The Wyvern Theatre.
Pete Morton at The Bell, Bath.
And thatโs your lot! Let me know if we missed anything, we can list events for free, but a chocolate muffin works better to persuade me! Lots to look forward to this month, Iโll lob a few posters below, but keep your best eye on theโฆโฆ
Poulshot’s Award-winning chocolate studio Hollychocs is proud to launch a heartfelt charity campaign in support of the Cystic Fibrosis Trust UK, with a charming chocolateโฆ
Events with diversity, be they ethnic, cultural, or life choices, must be welcomed, encouraged and viewed positively as assets offering variety in our local calendarโฆ
Swindon Palestine Solidarity continues to call for a ceasefire in Gaza and for aid to be allowed to enter Gazaโฆ.. Their three recent roadside signโฆ
Hibernating since Christmas, now I feel like a turkey, making up for it, stuffing eighteen bands into eight hours, such is the beauty of Bradford Roots Festivalโฆ..
Impossible to provide detailed analysis of each with such a sizable quota, not without an essay-length review, and there’s the handful I missed. Suffice it to say, every act I witnessed at Bradford Roots Festival was top notch, and locally-sourced, just as we like it here on the De-viz-ine!
Over two years from 2019, our man Andy returned from the annual convention and reported back. I skipped through it and published. I need not doubt his words, dedicating my time writing something else. I wrongly assumed at the time, likely from its name, that the Bradford Roots Festival was a folk festival, rather โrootsโ I now believe refers geographically; it’s the music of the here and now. I discovered this for myself attending last year’s and unexpectedly hearing jazz and youthful grunge bands you wouldnโt usually hear at a folk festival!
Open any fire door to the wonderful Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon, and there’s another surprise behind it. The festival is an annual indoor feast of music over four stages, fundraising for the Centre itself, their Zone Club, a musical group for disabled adults, and a chosen charity, this year’s being Parkinson’s support. I like to define it as a convention of local musicians rather than a festival, only because it’s all indoors and winter, but it doubles up as either. Either way you view it, it’s a brilliant event for all ages. For the elders there’s a bar and food options, for the youngest there’s craft rooms, workshops and naturally for a festival in January, ice cream!
You could also see it as a taster for the wealth of musical acts we have on this circuit; youโll find them performing in our local venues. Some I’ve previously tried and tested, others were new to me, and some essential to check off my ever-growing must-see list.
The latter true of the first, gutted to have been too late for Daisy Chapman at the acoustic Gudeon stage, Jol Rose followed. He’s the Swindon-based Americana soloist I met at a Swindon Shuffle of yore and been meaning to catch perform. Like all others, he didn’t disappoint, despite only catching his finale. Here’s a prolific acoustic magician with the experience under his belt to engage an audience. An open mic hour followed at this stage.
If Jol, though, came as no surprise, Thieves did. My next venture to the Wild & Woolley stage where blues is the order by day, and youth gather for indie by the eve, Thieves were playing an acoustic harmony not unlike the Lost Trades, and hey presto, I’m standing next to the one only Phil Cooper, one third of said Trades! Heโs compere for this stage, and will perform at the bar stage later. As Thieves progressed through a sublime set of bluegrass I likened it more to Concrete Prairie, and of similar quality. I’m staring at the frontman from a distance, thinking, by Jove, thatโs Adam Woodhouse, who I know as a soloist with a penchant for rock n roll covers. This new outfit, Thieves, only formed in June and is barking up his alley, youโd imagine the four-piece to have done this all their life. Adam tells me theyโre playing a Sunday at The Southgate, Devizes, in April, well worth your attention.
The festival breaks for its foyer tradition of Holtโs morris dancers and childrenโs parade, known as the Wassall, then Phil Cooper takes the Bar Stage, kicking off with his own Road Songs, finding time to superbly cover Goodbye Yellow Brick Road.
Such is diversity on offer, when itโs time for some jazz hey presto, again, Iโve finally made my way to the Main Stage for The Graham Dent Trio. Jazz pianist with a double-bass player and Nick Sorensen on sax, this is divine melodic invention, contemporary and unique, though I knew what I was letting myself in for, I saw them last year.
Drag myself away, for Bristol Uni indie four-piece, LilyPetals. New to me, confident youngsters with funky basslines over the archetypal rock, big tick from me. And a tick off my must-see list, Be Like Will on the main stage, a varied strong female-fronted three-piece pub circuit band who used the festival to play through their originals rather than their usual covers to appease a pub audience, which, either way, theyโd accomplish with bells on. The new tune finale was a definite article to how rousing this band can take an audience.
The showstopper though, and itโs a big show to stop, came from Ruby Darbyshire at the Gudgeon. An absolutely spellbinding performance left the crowd in awe as others mingled outside praying someone would leave to replace them; few did. Rubyโs stage presence has drastically improved in a relatively short space of time, her talent to adapt from acoustic folk to jazz scat need not. With just the right balance of originals and covers, she held us in awe, was the only artist to get an encore, and through Sinรฉad O’Connor, Dylan, Bob Marley and Springsteen covers she nailed them all and made them her own. Particularly poignant, Ella Fitzgeraldโs Misty, simply, wow!
Beguiling building layers of goth-rock were sounding from the Wild & Woolley, though, as Bristolโs female-fronted Life in Mono took to the stage. Evanescence in shape, yet solely idiosyncratic, hereโs a euphoric original band to look out for. With Life in Mono indulgently ticked off my must-see, a new one on me rocked the main stage, the steady gypsy-dad-folk of The Mighty Rooster, prior to ensuring I was at the Bar for the unmissable Chippenham folk singer-songwriter, Meg. A passionate and thoughtful young artist, Meg delivers in such a unique yet proficient way I deem it impossible for anyone not to love her.
Such is the tight schedule though, should I need waiver artists weโve seen and featured before in favour of ones Iโve yet to catch live? Trowbridge soul artist extraordinaire, Frankisoul is due on the main stage; anticipation brewing from the crowd while the band frustrate themselves with minimal setup times, resulting in a few technical mishaps, would, in any other circumstances be somewhat off-putting, but, fact is Frankisoul is such a character, and such a vibrant and sublime soul vocalist, hiccups were easy to polish over, still, they came up smiling and were my second showstoppers of the festival.
Clichรฉ is putty in Frankisoulโs hands, if his only cover, Gloria Gaynorโs I Will Survive is so, and they rinsed their originals with gusto and stylish proficiency, even down to a moment of hilarity upon Frankisoul mimicking the coat stage gimmick of James Brown. Itโs these originals which gravitated me towards them, reviewed here, I shivered apprehension comparing him to likes of Luther Vandross, particularly Otis Redding, and yeah, live thereโs a hint of eighties soul, of Kool & the Gang, but now I know he can live up to these.
Meanwhile the wonderful Courting Ghosts were unplugged at the Bar Stage, with their amazing blend of folk-rock, and Melkshamโs finest youth band The Sunnies rocked the Wild & Woolley. One Iโve been aching to catch, yet I didnโt catch enough of due to Frankisoul gluing me to my seat, if I liken The Sunnies to Devizes-own sensation, Nothing Rhymes With Orange, I think itโs fair to now state, The Sunnies angle slightly to more indie-pop, their originals tinged with a carefree and indeed, sunny-side-of-the-street feel; a blessing to watch, bloominโ marvellous!
With lively function band the Corporations attracting those left standing to the main stage, crowds lessened at the Wild & Woolley, sadly just when the epic finale was due. Yeah, itโs Devizesโ Nothing Rhymes with Orangeโs headliner; those in the know and a few curious punters stayed to observe our hometownโs fever as the boys pulled out their typical energetic and competent show. Evermore is their attraction spreading, with gigs lined up as far as Manchester now, NRWO, Iโll be banging on about their brilliance for a while yet it seems!
Conclude this now, Worrow, in some manner, youโre sounding boring! I Know, but, over a colossal word-count only teetering on covering all the happenings at Bradford Roots Festival, and only the one day of it too, I struggle to find anything to grumble about. What a way to start the year, Bradford Roots Festival is amazing, the shell, The Wiltshire Music Centre is a blessing to our county, the value for money is righteous, the atmosphere is equable and convivial, and long may it be so.
I want Devizine to be primarily about arts and entertainment, but Iโm often pathetically persuaded by bickering political factions to pass opinion on local politicsโฆ
Photo credit: ยฉ Rondo Theatre Company / Jazz Hazelwood A gender-queered production of William Shakespeareโs classic play, โThe Taming of the Shrewโ, will be performedโฆ
The first full album by Wiltshireโs finest purveyors of psychedelic indie shenanigans, Clock Radio, was knocked out to an unsuspecting world last week. Itโs calledโฆ
Bradford-on-Avon Town Councilโs annual festival, aptly titled The Bradford on Avon Live Music Festival is back this weekend, championing local talent with an eclectic line-upโฆ
by Ian Diddamsimages by Chris Watkins Performing Sondheim isnโt the simplest of tasks. Or, rather, singing Sondheim isnโt the simplest of tasks. With his dissonantโฆ
The phenomenally talented Ruby Darbyshire is performing at Silverwood School in Rowde on 27th June. Ruby has kindly offered to support Silverwood Schoolโs open evening…..โฆ
V busy week ahead, too busy to type the word โvery,โ (though I just did type the word โvery,โ) despite the cold spell, nothings gonna stop us now, reminding me somewhat of Ollie & Jerryโs theme โBreakinโ, thereโs no stopping us.โ
Not that it takes me much to be reminded of Ollie & Jerry – I think about them all the time, I wonder where they are and what theyโreโฆ..okay, letโs push on, we donโt need you to be like Turbo, no one to dance with other than a broom, (youngsters pipe down and Google it!) hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshireโฆโฆ
Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go there for links and more info. It may be updated with even more things to do than listed here, so check in later in the week.
Ongoing until 17th February, two enlightening exhibits at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes,ย Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars in Wiltshire, and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed Here.
Artist Clifton Powell with Eric Walrond portrait at Wiltshire Museum
Wednesday 17th
The Melksham & Devizes Primary have a new year meet at the Kings Arms, Melksham; we recently did an interview with them, a really important issue, check it out here.
The regular Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Lunchtime Recital Series at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, with Babatunde Aleshe in the evening.
Opening night of The Wind in the Willows at The Rondo, Bath, running until Sunday the 21st. Meanwhile, Starlings play The Bell in Bath.
British Lion are at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Thursday 18th
M3g plays The Tuppenny, Swindon, Zamba Lando at The Beehive, John Otway at The Vic, a memory sing at Swindon Arts Centre, and Get It On at The Wyvern Theatre.
Friday 19th
Borrowed Atlas plays the Pump, Trowbridge, with Ravetank in support.
Cara Dillon is at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Forbidden Nights at Melksham Assembly Hall, ladies!
Stompers at The Boat House, Bradford-on-Avon.
Littlemen at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Dark Prophecy at The Vic, Swindon, UK Pink Floyd Experience at The Wyvern Theatre.
Saturday 20th
Day course: Wood Engraving with Robin Mackenzie at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes.
An album launch gig for Cracked Machine at the Southgate, Devizes, with Clock Radio in support. Siren at The Three Crowns. Real Music are at the Bear, with a Soul, Motown Disco.
Open Mic at The Barge Honeystreet.
Chippenham Record Fair, at The Citadel on Bath Road; free entry.
Editorโs Pick of the Week is Bradford Roots Festival at the Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon; Iโve been saving myself since new year for this! Incredible line-up, all day Saturday and Sunday, preview here, hope to see you there?
Cara Dillon is at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Ian Diddams and Wendy Dopheide take Happy Jack to the Athenaeum, Warminster for a two night run, Saturday and Sunday; hereโs a review from when this show was at the Wharf in Devizes.
The Korgis โ Time Machine at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Apache Cats at The New Inn, Swindon, The Rolling Clones at The Vic. Abba Forever at The Wyvern Theatre, and an RPA Golden Ticket Show at Swindon Arts Centre.
Sunday 21st
Manos Puestas at The Southgate, Devizes.
Bradford Roots Festival continues.
Sing-A-Long-A Matilda The Musical (PG) at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Gordie Tentrees & Jaxon Haldane at The Bell, Bath.
Monday 22nd
Giovanni Pernice at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
The Swing Vote at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 23rd
Vasilis Xenopoulos & Tom Berge Trio for the regular Jazz Knights The Royal Oak, Swindon.
Giovanni Pernice at The Wyvern Theatre.
And thatโs your lot, let me know what we missed, we can list events for free, but a chocolate muffin works better to persuade me! Lots to look forward to this month, Iโll lob a few posters below, but keep your best eye on theโฆโฆEvent Calendar!! Also note, we have a new page for weekly events including clubs and activities, here: it’s new so we need to list some more, tell us what you know!
Adam Woodhouse, Rory Coleman-Smith, Jo Deacon and Matt Hughes, aka Thieves, the wonderful local folk vocal harmony quartet of uplifting bluegrass into country-blues has aโฆ
This summer David is returning with a brand-new show “Historyโs Missing Chapters”, a show made to uncover why, throughout history, some people and events haveโฆ
Under the new management, live music will be making a triumphant return to The Boathouse in Bradford-on-Avon and that Cracking Pair, Claire and Chloe ofโฆ
Always a happy place, our traditional record shop Vinyl Realm in Northgate Street Devizes is back in the game of hosting some live music afternoons.โฆ
One of Wiltshireโs Best by Andy Fawthrop Looking for something to do next weekend? One of Wiltshireโs biggest festivals is happening just up the roadโฆ
The longer I gaze in awe at the lineup for this year’s Bradford Roots Festival at the Wiltshire Music Centre the more tempted to break hibernation for an expedition to Bradford-on-Avon I get, even if it means in Robert Falcon Scott style. If it’s Antarctic conditions out there on Saturday 20th Jan, I’m hiring huskies!
Billy in the Lowground
Four stages of the crรจme de la crรจme of locally sourced music under one purpose-built roof ensures it’ll be warm inside. Bradford Roots Festival is a who’s who of local talent, more music convention than festival, and I don’t know if they took heed of some suggestions I made or we’re simply singing off the same song sheet, but, just, wowsers!
Frankisoul
One thing before waffling on those I do know, there’s much more that I don’t know, yet, which is equally gurt lush, and hope to shed some light on those once done and dusted. For now though, let’s virtually trek stage-by-stage, kicking off with the main stage. Graham Dent Jazz Trio I caught last year and look forward to, Be Like Will aren’t much after and we love those guys, but Trowbridgeโs upcoming soul hero, Frankisoul is a must for me. Reviewing his debut EP left me at loss for a local comparison, and while I’d never use Otis Redding lightly, such is the strength of Frankisoul’s vocals I did, and that’s the highest compliment I can reward, surely?! Though I’ve yet to catch him live, I’m putting him on a pedestal I’m certain he won’t kick over.
Nothing Rhymes With Orange at Devizes Street Festival
Wild and Woolley stage speaks for itself, Mark Green’s Blues Band are worthy of attention based on last year’s stunning performance. Yet it’s the gen z takeover in the latter half of the day down there which is really going to go off. Foxymoron, Melkshamโs finest The Sunnies, and Devizes homegrown sensation, Nothing Rhymes With Orange, are all must-sees. Nestled between them is Bristol’s Life in Mono, who, though slightly older, I’ve only heard great things about.
Courting Ghosts
Newly formed but brimming with experience and talent, Courting Ghosts are unplugged as a finale at the bar stage, which will be something else. It’s also grand to see one third Lost Trader Phil Cooper on the list, Phil was the mc last year, and one rising acoustic magician I beg you to catch, Chippenhamโs Meg.
Meg
There’s another stage I can’t even remember them having last year, The Golden Gudegon, kicked off by Trowbridgeโs incredible Americana artist Daisy Chapman, followed by the impressive force which is Swindonโs Joel Rose, and though the rest are new to me,ย Ruby Darbyshire is rightfully on that list, and I recommend you find the stage for these.ย
And that’s just Saturday! Though unless I win the lottery, or suddenly invent commercially viable cloning technology within a fortnight, Sunday, I’ll sadly miss it. Though Becky Lawrence, Billy in the Lowground, Karport Collective, and Ed Dyke are the ones I’ll be most sad to have missed.
Karport Collective
And there’s my take on it, I’m sure you may have a different opinion and can name drop a whole other set on this stunningly extensive lineup, that’s your prerogative, and I’ll always heed of your recommendations. But one sure thing, Bradford Roots Festival is on, and is a wonderful thing. Fundraising for Parkinsons UK, the Music Centre’s Trust and their inhouse Zone Club, a monthly music-making project supporting the creativity of learning disabled young adults. The Zone Club presents their work on the main stage at 11:30.
Becky Lawrence
Beer from Kettlesmith Brewing and plenty of food and drink. Tickets are just ยฃ32 for the weekend or ยฃ22 for Saturday and ยฃ17 for Sunday onlyโฆ.snap them up, it’s worth it for one of those acts recommended aloneโฆor maybe two, maximum!
If weโve had a keen eye on Swindonโs Sienna Wilemanโs natural progression as an upcoming singer-songwriter since being introduced to her self-penned songs via herโฆ
One of Salisburyโs most celebrated acoustic folk-rock singer-songwriters Lucas Hardy teams up with the Wiltshire cityโs upcoming talent who’s name is on everyoneโs lips, Rosieโฆ
by Ian Diddamsimages byย Chris Watkins Media One could argue that Anne Frank is possibly the most well-known civilian of the WW2 years, and certainly ofโฆ
Trowbridge singer-songwriter and one third of The Lost Trades, Phil Cooper has actually been doing more than playing solitaire, heโs released a new solo albumโฆ
An effervescent musical, full of promising young talent Written by: Melissa Loveday Images by: Gail Foster After the success of SIX last year, Devizes Musicโฆ
A photo is circulating on X of Calne’s Reform UK candidate Violette Simpson, which for some reason doesn’t appear on her election campaign….I wonder why?โฆ
Big congratulations to Devizes DJ Greg Spencer this week, the creator of Palooza house nights at The Exchange nightclub, for he made the prestigious billโฆ
Okay, so there must be a truckload of local social and political ranting to cover, but itโs new yearโs day, Iโm going to waffle about magic teapotsโฆ..
When you put out a piece highlighting local festivals happening over the next year itโs inevitable youโll miss a few, and good folk will email, hoping their shindig can be listed. Naturally, weโre always happy to hear from them, and will endeavour to add them to the list. But being this is such a fantastic concept, and besides, itโs called The Magic Teapot, how could I refuse a little extra attention?!
In the economic plight stationary music venues face troubled times, hereโs a mobile venue, which goes from festival to festival, hosting its own little festival inside it; magic indeedy! The Magic Teapot, though, hosts its own annual festival too, happening in the Mendip Hills from the 3rd to 6th May. I put to its creator, the aptly named Joseph Peace, he could put a model of a festival inside the festive teapot, making it like those Russian dolls!
He replied he liked the idea and would ponder it, but more importantly, after I had calmed down from the excitement of hearing from a magic teapot, Joseph told me The Magic Teapot has been running since 2017. โWe currently take The Magic Teapot to around 18 festivals each year,โ he said, โThe Gathering is the only event of our own we currently run, hiring a campsite to do it. It’s quite an undertaking so once a year is enough at the moment. When we get our own land we will be doing regular small events ourselves, hopefully that can happen sooner rather than later, fingers crossed.โ
This is the third year of The Magic Teapot Gathering, why am I last to hear about these things?! A totally acoustic, amplifier-free festival in four Magic Teapot structures which can easily accommodate everyone in the case of poor weather. Headliners for 2024 are 3 Daft Monkeys, Noble Jacks and Mobius Loop; lovely. Lots of opportunities to join in with playing and singing and each venue features a real piano and a warming central fire.
Make no mistake just โcos itโs new yearโs day, Iโm partially frazzled and 2024 hasnโt got off to a great start what with my daughter assaulting me with a teacake to the face last night, I absolutely love this festival with charms on, this whole Magic Teapot idea, and Iโm all tingly with just how communal and beautiful it all looks; somebody put some dandelions in my hair, pronto!
Melksham & Devizes Conservatives released a statement on the 7th April explaining an internal audit revealed one of their candidates was โnot qualified byโฆ
Last month we were pleased to announce our involvement with the new Wiltshire Music Awards in conjunction with Wiltshire Events UK, details of whichโฆ
Here we are again with another year under our belts and me trying to best sum it up without restraint; I reserve my right to free speech, spliced with a slither of satireโฆ.
2023 was, in a word, wet. ITV reports โsummer 2023 was unusually wet, with 11% more rainfall than average, but it was also recorded as being the eighth warmest on recordโฆ.โ I’m not sure I remember that last bit, just the perpetual drizzle, between the three months of April showers and the floods of Autumn! It was this, and my failure to find a suitable Peppa Pig costume preventing the promised second fundraising milk round; hopefully this summer, coupled with a free live music event, watch this muddy puddle!
Bit dodgy!
Freedom of speech is another sour point. I’ve tried to focus on entertainment and arts, and keep Devizine away from politics as much as possible towards the latter half of the year, it’s all too depressing. Yet it seems standing against prejudices and genocide is frowned upon by a few vocal sorts, who deliberately intended to degrade Devizine without the foggiest notion of what weโre about, for which, laughably, had the opposite effect; we reached record breaking stats again this year topping last year’s hits by 35% and reaching beyond the 150K mark. This is great, though points don’t make prizes in this game, it means we’re continuing to reach out to more people.
So letโs not dwell on the negatives, only to add the epicentre of my frustrations doesnโt derive from any particular councillors, as some might think. Certainly, in reporting some blackmarks on local issues and politics, one name in particular appears to recur, but the satire I write is never deliberately directed at anyone personally, only their actions, or inactions on the subject in hand. If this upsets you, try to act more positively. Example; if you publish a post on your own local Facebook group asking for event listings, some people will instinctively suggest Devizine is a possible place to look, being as thatโs the aim of what we do here. To ban them for life for merely uttering the word Devizine, which is what happened and was completely out of my control, is petty and deliberately undermining all my efforts and the efforts of our contributors who work hard for nothing to make Devizine what it is; and you donโt expect this behaviour from a town councillor to frustrate me a smidgen?!
I laugh off such minor issues, rather my annoyances derive at the middle of this year when I happened to be updating our event listings and came across a Katie Hopkins show at Meca in Swindon. Make no mistake, this bitter and twisted celebrity is outward racist, homophobic and spreads her hate through national hollering. I posted on our Facebook page, we would not list such an event as it goes against our principles, not really thinking of the consequences from some who enjoy being xenophobic.
Rather than Newquest picking up on the work we do to promote local venues, artists and businesses, or our fundraising attempts, it decides on highlighting us for clickbait by publishing an article in the Swindon Adver slating us for sticking to our morals. The effect of this was hoards of haters, who hadnโt even heard of us until this moment, flocked to our social media to sound their disapproval. I was inundated with all manner of threats by those who assumed, rather than us simply refusing to list the event, I was part of some imaginary gang defying their freedom of speech to spout racism and homophobia; you canโt make it up, and in turn, is part of the reason we stand on certain principles and moral codes while, it seems, the mainstream media are hell bent on rocking the boat and creating a hateful ethos in this once great, now damned country.
Ah, bollocks to those noisy twats in the minority, in wailing my frustrations a multitude commented how they love what we do, and their compliments far outreach the sort of oddball nutjob who would pay their hard-earned cash on a ticket to see a karen bath up racism in Swindon!
So, let’s go month by month, looking over 2023, shall we? Trying to maintain positivity throughoutโฆ..I said โtry!โ
January
We started 2023 much like this one, with a review of the past year; I know, Iโm like a stuck record! January saw us preview Ladies Day at the Wharf Theatre, Seize the Day appearing at the Corn Exchange for a Wiltshire Climate Alliance event, the FullTone Festival, Pure Gritโs Devizes Strongest contest, former Devizes resident, the Brave New Broken Hearts Club gig at St Johns, The Exchange nightclub hosting open mic nights, and Bradford Roots Festival at the Wiltshire Music Centre, of which I attended, cherished and reviewed.
Concrete Prairie @ Bradford Roots Festival
One of the funniest interviews Iโve done was with Marlbroughโs Pants, due to play the final gig for landmark landlord Vyv and Jackie at the Lamb, which happened in Jan, and was hilarious.
These Pants!
Adam Woodhouse at the Three Crowns
We Will Rock You @ Devizes School
Venturing out in January isnโt my cuppa though, truth be told. I broke hibernation to catch Adam Woodhouse at The Three Crowns, and Bill Green gave us a review of Devizes School’s performance of We Will Rock You. Other than this staying in listening to new music is favoured, and we reviewed a new single of the Lost Trades and added their second album announcement, On The Wayside EP by Viduals, and Marvin B Naylor and Rebsie Fairholmโs album Psychedelicat.
On ranting, yes, I told on the billions of untaxed investment under our very feet at Gastardโs wine cellars, and the Old Wharf Cafรฉ not meeting its potential by becoming a meeting room, and, of course, how Devizes Town Councillors lied about bird flu on Crammer, because they did, though seemed to successfully brush it under the carpet, but the high hitter, strangely, was one I wrote on my phone purely for fun, Ten Top Tips for Driving in Devizes. A popular topic, it seems, coming in at the second highest hitter this year.
February
Swindon folk ensemble SGO released a live album from The Southgate, and Devilโs Doorbell did one too, live from the Pump. We also reviewed the studio album Petrichor by The Lost Trades, and Painting With Sound, Will Lawton & The Alchemist’s new EP. This was followed by my first trip to the Pump, to see Will Lawton, with the Lost Trades in support, double-whammy!
Will Lawton & The Alchemists @ The Pump
The Lost Trades @ The Pump
I reported that Jon Amor Trioโs Residency at The Southgate shows no signs of letting up for 2023, and it remains the case to this day. Another unforgettable gig was Adam & His Ants tribute Ant Trouble at the Vic, that was something else.
Jon Amor Trio at The Southgate with Thomas Atlas
Ant Trouble @ The Vic
Andy gave us a review of the comedy night at The Piggy Bank, Calne, and after previewing the Brave New Broken Hearts Club gig at St Johns being unable to attend it, we found the wonderful writer Helen Edwards, who would continue to write reviews for us throughout the year. Thank you Andy, Helen, and Bill, from last month!
Brave New Broken Hearts Club
We previewed the Wharf Theatreโs Liz Sharman returning with another Shakespeare masterpiece, Measure for Measure, and a night of nostalgia and karaoke at The Castle Inn for the My Dadโs Festival organisers. I also attempted to introduce our regular song of the week piece, songs coming from Deadlight Dance, Atari Pilot, Sienna Wileman and Ajay Srivastav, the latter of whom I was later delighted to hear was coming to Devizes Arts Festival.
Measure For Measure
If the Crammer was a sour point last month, in Feb it got a whole lot worse as another swan died, this time in a road accident. We highlighted the campaign group asking the Devizes Town Council for a safety sign to warn drivers to slow down past the Crammer, they sadly rejected it, putting the aesthetic look of the crammer, already awash with pointless signage, above the wildlife, and risk to drivers.
But outside Devizes matters are serious. Yeah, we covered The Great Pothole Debacle for kicks, but the ongoing hunting scandal was paramount. One town councillor banning me from yet another Facebook group for merely suggesting the Wiltshire Police officer going for a promotion in the rural crime unit when she was an active member of a hunting gang was a tad conflicting, especially being in the same month the Avon Vale Hunt was suspended from the British Hounds Sports Association for posting a video of them killing a fox.
Besides this, Wiltshire Police maintained the officer was not acting illegally, instead tried to turn focus on to youth crime, with the PCC and Wiltshire Council staging a drop-in event in Devizes which targeted only youths at a time youths would be at college or school so unable to defend themselves. Understandably we were critical to all this, cos someone has to be! For light in Feb, I took some old photos of Devizes and added pretend modern comments as if they were posted on social media today, to lighten the overall gloomy happenings in local politics.
March
Well, warming up a tad now, March was my 50th birthday and so I had a little do in the Three Crowns, which if I could remember any of it I would never have forgotten it in my life! I mean, if a jobs worth doing I say, we had Ben Borrill kick us off, followed by Vince Bell, and then Deadlight Dance, and then Talk in Code stepped in, and I only wanted a support act, not four main acts before the main act! Iโm forever grateful to all of them, and to top it all off Ruzz Guitar Trio played us out, and thus, I was half a century old and feeling it!
I felt I shouldn’t really review my own birthday party on Devizine, if I could recall it anyway! But we did preview the Open Day at The Wharf Theatre, and Waking Back to Happiness, and Andy reviewed Measure For Measure, all at the Wharf Theatre. I also found time to preview Devizes Arts Festival, Potterne Festival, and the first Devizes Pride.
Poetika
Andy reviewed Thomas Atlas at Long Street Blues Club, with Ben Borrill in support. I took to an amazing Devizes Concert for Opendoors with Will Blake, PSG Choir Chloe Jordan and Andrew Hurst, and a huge congrats to Dora and the PSG for organising that. I also made it down to The Southgate for Concrete Prairie, and Helen reviewed the Poetika Open Mic Night at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Opendoors Concert 2023
Songs of the Week came from Talk in Code, Lewis McKale, Lucky Number Seven and Sara Vian. And we celebrated International Womenโs Day by highlighting our favourite local female musicians.
We announced Bradford-on-Avon raising ยฃ250,000 for a new skatepark, we chatted to Catherine Read, the Green Party Parliamentary candidate for Devizes, and Guardian Candidate for the Devizes East byelection, Vanessa Tanner, who won despite pathetic attempts to derail her campaign by the opposition.
Vanessa Tanner
Meanwhile, Guardian Jonathan Hunter hailed Wiltshire Council had โa complete disregard for the residents of Devizes,โ the Crammer Working Party asking Devizes Town Council to endorse a most dubious approach to future management of the Crammer, Wiltshire Police praised protesters against the fox hunting officer at Devizes Police HQ like it was ever going to any but peaceful, we took a stark look at Devizes Food Bank with Alex Montegriffo, where I got told off for speaking my mind about the Conservative approach to food banks, but they do seem to wear the idea theyโve increased the usage of them tenfold as a badge of honour, do they not?!
But the real highlight and top hitter of March was when a resident of Seend noticed a naked bloke rolling in her neighbours muck heap at night!
April
We previewed Chippenham artist Si Griffithsโ Forbidden Carnival Gallery. Girls Like That, and The Railway Children at Devizesโ Wharf Theatre. The Henry Normal and Nigel Planer tour coming to Devizes, The Vintage Bazaar in Devizes,
Swindon Shuffle, Thirty Years of Dreadzone before playing the Cheese and Grain, King Alfredโs Tower Charity Abseil, Devizes Street Festival, A Beginnerโs Introduction to Oils in All Cannings with Arts Together, a hometown gig for Nothing Rhymes with Orange, and all the local Coronation Celebrations.
NRWO at the Pump
Ben Niamor reported on Carsick, NRWO and Meg at Pump. Helen covered a Bournemouth Writing Festival. Andy provided a review of The Billy Walton Band at Long Street Blues Club. I managed to attend Nothing Rhymes with Orange and support acts in Lavington, one important one will be Dauntsys own Paradigm and I’ll explain why later. Oh, and Jon Amorโs Southgate residency with Leburn Maddox, managed this too.
Jon Amor and Leburn Maddox
Paradigm
Song of the Week included ร lesund and Nothing Rhymes With Orange, also reviewed Across the Water EP by Paul Lappin, 41 Fords album Not Dead Yet, Frankisoul’s EP on Fire, and Age of the Liar by The Burner Band.
Now, see what I was saying earlier about being better behaved on social and political matters as the year went on? Hardly anything throughout April, save an article titled Gorillas and the Pissed in Bishops Cannings! But when a minority of disgruntled villagers falsely accuse a pub of stealing a gorilla statue from Scotland in order to sabotage their business, well, you cannot expect me not to jump at the opportunity to stir the pot!
And, strangely I never did get a response from the local newspaper when our protocol April Fools joke was headlined Gazette & Herald to Buy Out Devizine, but there you go, I thought it was a good idea.
May
Previews for May included Devizes Arts Festival, Female of the Species, Devizes Scooter Rally and John Watterson keeping the Music of Jake Thackray alive in Pewsey.
We had Carmelaโs Wonder Wheels Challenge, and our writer Helen Edwards read her poem on BBC Upload. Helen wrote a breathtaking review of Lou Cox’s poignant comedy Having a Baby and the Shit They Don’t Tell You at the Wharf, and I covered the Railway Children.
Ian Diddams reviewed Waiting for Godot at The Mission Theatre, Bath, and The Four Sopranos at Devizes Town Hall.
Ben wrote on Alex Roberts and Fly Yeti Fly at The Barge, Honeystreet, Vince Bell at the Southgate, and Kyla Brox at Long Street Blues Club.
Si’s Forbidden Carnival Gallery in Chippenham opened with the exhibit Hail The Curious, which I attended the opening of, and I reviewed Devizes Street Festival in two daily parts. What a fantastic year it was.
I also took a trip to Frome to see Big Country and Spear of Destiny at the Cheese and Grain. Loved the venue and the vibe of the town, and ended up on a pub crawl with a friend in the know.
Song of the Weeks came from Canuteโs Plastic Army, and Snazzback, but the idea of the feature is starting to wane. We fondly reviewed Deadlight Dance’s debut album Innocent Beginnings, and Nothing Rhymes With Orange released a new single Butterflies.
Still well behaved on the news front, congratulating Vanessa Tanner as the new town councillor, but I did publish a piece called Your Place, or Mine? Devizes Town Council Squabbles Over Meeting Venue!
The top hitting article of the year came in May, How to Tell if Your Parents Were Ravers! It was a fun piece to write, and its universal appeal is likely the reason for its success.
June
In June my daughter sneakily managed to blag a week’s work experience with me, thinking she’d be able to stay in her PJs, but I sent her out to Chippenham to interview young upcoming folk singer-songwriter Meg, and, apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, she did a marvellous job.
As the mainstream local media seemed intent on sensationalising troubles with youth for clickbait, I refused to accept it was nothing more than an issue with a minority of youths. Nothing new, it’s always been this way. Jess’s interview with Meg got the ball rolling in which we would not only cover youth doing good work, bands and artists and others, but also encourage youth to write and photograph them too. I really believe this was the most positive thing to come out of 2023 for Devizine, and to think it stemmed from this negative trend of others publicising this exaggerated notion there’s a youth crime crisis.
In other areas, we previewed the Wharf Theatreโs upcoming season, Keevil Roots Festival, the fantastic CrownFest, CSF Wrestling, The Lavington Community Choir’s Pied Piper, Swindin Shuffle and My Dadโs Bigger Than Your Dad Festival. Ian Diddams previewed Shakespeareโs Henry VI at The Rondo Theatre, Bath. And I did the Devizes Beer & Cider Festival’s music lineup, though by the time the event came around the organisers sadly seemed to neglect our free promotion and gave us a cold shoulder, not sure what we did to upset them and hope to rebuild on this in the future.
The third highest hitting article of the year was the opening of Tonka Bean in Devizes, proving once again food and drink related stories are popular, still not enough outlets contact us for publicity.
Also we covered Talk In Code’s race to Glastonbury Pilton Party, local artist Clifton Powell commissioned by King Charles for Windrush portrait, and a major step towards revitalising Devizes Assize Court as the new home of Wiltshire Museum. But in all, June was about event reviews.
41 Fords
Devizes Doorbell @ Devizes Sustainable Fair
Starter for ten, we had Devizes Sustainable Fair, 41 Fords at The Southgate, Humdinger at the Three Crowns, Watson and Brown at the Wharf Theatre, which Ian kindly covered, and I sent Helen to the film premiere of Translations in Melksham.
But real group collaboration covered the entire Devizes Arts Festival, Helen on Carrie Etterโs Poetry Workshop, Ben took Elles Bailey and Will Kirk, Ian took The Sisters and The Brothers at the British Lion, and I managed three, Ajay Srivastav, Malavita and Noble Jacks.
Malavita at Devizes Arts Festival 2023
It really was a packed program so thanks to everyone for contributing reviews, but no more than Andy, who virtually squatted the festival, providing words on Christian Garrick & The Budapest Cafรฉ Orchestra, Hawes & Catlow, Chris Ingham Trio, Clive Anderson, Lois Pryce, Marcus Brigstocke, Lucy Stevens, Aglica Trio, Onarole Theatreโs Jesus My Boy, Texas Tick Fever, Sir Willard White, Sue Stockdale, and Tango Calor.
Songs of The Week from Beskar which featured vocals from local singer Chrissy aka One Trick Pony, and Ruzz Guitar Blues Revue. I reviewed albums by Danni W, and Liddington Hill.
Liddington Hill
We had some fun with my Top Tips to Survive a Muddy Glastonbury Festival, and another called Wiltshire Council Replicate Table Mountain in Devizes Pothole!
But poor WC, when Devizes New Chair to Area Board of Wiltshire Council was announced I got my knickers in nearly as much twist as Danny Kruger’s did over an Affordable Housing Development in Devizes, but I admit I jumped the gun on that one, but eat humble pie, na, not me. There’s too much other terrible rightwingy crap happening to focus on minor errors, like the counter protest to a drag queen reading stories at Swindon library.
July
Devizes Pride
Mantonfest 2023
Previewed Box Rocks, Embrace All, Swindonโs festival for disabled, and Matchbox Mutiny, Ben Borrill & Pat Wardโs new duo debut at The Gate, but previews are so springtime, reviews are what was happening in July, and lots of them! Devizes Scooter Rally, CrownFest, Devizes Pride, Mantonfest, and Karen Cannings guest reviewed Lavington Community Choirs The Pied Piper of Hamelin.
Bob Marley Experience @ CrownFest
Devizes Scooter Rally
Two art exhibits reviewed, Anna Dillonโs Wessex Airscapes at Wiltshire Museum and Alexander Kaiโs Figures in Focus at St Maryโs Devizes.
Alexander Kai at St. Mary’s
New tunes from Subject A and Beskar featuring Huntr/s, an album by Onika Venus. But on the subject of youth participation, July was exactly what we wanted. The Pump called for young talent with its Future Sound of Trowbridge project, we had a new tune from Nothing Rhymes With Orange, and I reviewed their gig at the Barge, but couldnโt make the one at Devizes Corn Exchange. This is where the drummer of Paradigm, Florence Lee came in, remember I said weโd mention them again? Well, Flo reviewed the gig and Kiesha Films supplied photography. This is precisely what weโre looking for, youth reviewing and capturing their own generationโs gigs.
NRWO @ The Corn Exchange
Flo did such a grand job I sent her on two historic bear hunts, to report on a Sound Knowledge gig in Marlborough with William The Conqueror and Michael Rosen Hunt at The Cheese & Grain, thank you Florence and Kiesha. Other youth interactions came with The Wharf Theatreโs youth production of Girls Like That, a feature on RAE, and a review of Becca Mauleโs Teenage Things EP.
Becca Maule
My only rant was on the subject of the overworked bus driver who fell asleep at the wheel.
August
Soupchick launching a falafel stall, Wharf Writersโ Group first Podcast, Whereโs the Cat? Chloe Jordan playing the Southgate, the return of the Imberbus, and My Dadโs Festival raising ยฃ9,000 for Prospect Hospice were hot topics in August.
Fulltone Festival 2023
The Fulltone Festival was covered with words by Jemma herself, and double-reviewed by Helen and myself. I also managed HoneyFest, Meg at The Neeld in Chippenham, Beyond Chippenham Streets exhibit, ran a general piece on open mic nights, and went salsa dancing with Devizes Salsa; Eso!
Devizes Salsa
Songs of the Week from Paul Lappin and Ruzz Guitarโs Blues Revue. New singles from The Scribes and Atari Pilot, and Sally Dobsonโs new project Foxbaroque. Albums came in from Dylan Smith, The Radio Makers and Junkyard Dogs.
Mr Tea & The Minions at HoneyFest
I managed one rant on the New Devizes-Melksham Constituency, taking a critical look at Michelle Donelan; harmless banter, you understand?
September
Devizes Food & Drink Festival in September, Ian reviewed Di, Viv & Rose at Wharf Theatre. I ran previews of Omega Nebula at the Muck & Dunder, Swindon Rocks for Children In Need, The Big Sleep Out In aid of Devizes Opendoors, and produced a podcast episode too!
We reported on The Future Smiths, Devizes Parish Wins Prestigious Award for Future Plans, and Watching the Winter Solstice at Stonehenge or Avebury: How to Prepare was an advertorial piece I confess, but while I try not to do these, it paid for this yearโs website fees with some pennies left to put on a gig with.
Songs of The Week from Meg, and Canuteโs Plastic Army. Beyond Reverence, Deadlight Danceโs debut album was reviewed.
I donโt usually report crime, but the headline Epic Fail, Devizes Burglar Steals Doormat was too funny not to run! Herein lies my frustrations though when I reported on Swindon’s MECA defending its right to promote racism, and I stand by my guns whatever the outcome, because we really donโt need this behaviour on the hospitality industry already at its knees.
October
A Typical Saturday of Live Music in Devizes is a Beautiful Thing! Was the headline, again me trotting around three pubs in town to include all gigs in one night! Then there was Seendโs own Live Aid, The Female of the Species, what a night.
The Female of the Species
Retro Relics Games Cafe opened in Lavington, 4Youth: New Street-Based Youth Project for Devizes begun, Devizes Libraryโs hopes to start a Lego Club, New Organ Arrives in Devizes Like โA Phoenix Rising from the Ashes,โ Devizes Teenagers Give Up Spare Time to Help Community Gardening Project, and Devizes Town Council Pledge on Single-Use Plastics.
I previewed Shakespeare Liveโs Autumn tour, World War One play The Last Post at The Wharf Theatre, Calne Music & Arts Festival Stand-Up Comedy Night, a Palestine Solidarity March in Swindon, took two trips to the Pump, one for Amelia Coburn, Ruby Darbyshire and M3G, the second for Professor Elemental and Devilโs Doorbell. Andy provided words on the White Horse Operaโs Gala Concert and Blood Brothers at Long Street Blues Club, and I managed to get down there one night too, to see the Billy Walton Band.
M3G @ the Pump
Mick Brian reviewed Happy Jack at The Wharf Theatre, NervEndings launched a scathing attack on the music industryโs chancers and charlatans, Nothing Rhymes With Orange frontman Elijah released a solo tune I paid a visit to the The Healthy Life Company, and we had an interview with Steve Vick, having renewed their sponsorship of Wiltshireโs Youth Orchestras at Wiltshire Music Centre.
For a giggle I answered Wiltshire Councilโs Public Transport Survey, and I wrote a Halloween gag about Eddie Cochranโs ghost in Chippenham!
November
Mick Joggerโs Devizes gig got a preview, 12 Bars Later popped into The Badger Set,
Ruby Darbyshire
Ruby Darbyshire played Glasgowโs Barrowlands with The Charlatans, and Gail and I met Henry Normal and Nigel Planer at Devizes Town Hall; heavy!
With Nigel Planer @ Devizes Town Hall
James Hollingsworth at The Southgate
Chicago Blues and Russ Ballard gigs at Long Street Blues Club were covered by Andy, and James Hollingsworth at The Southgate too. Ian did TITICOโs The Pirates of Penzance at the Corn Exchange.
Pirates!
Jess Self and cast of Jack & The Beanstalk at the Wharf
I did Jack & The Beanstalk at the Wharf Theatre, and loved it. I skanked in the Muck with Omega Nebula, DOCA Winter Festival and lantern parade, and attended the duo exhibits at Wiltshire Museum opening event.
Omega Nebula
We spoke highly of the Wiltshire Music Centre, and took a look at what was happening over Christmas in Devizes. Wicked Weather Watch launched a campaign to empower youth on climate action.
Winter Festival Devizes by Simon Folkard
We reviewed new tunes from The Scribesโ Jonny Steele, and the Dirty Smooth, and an album by the Two Man Travelling Medicine Show.
December
Illingworth at the Three Crowns
Previewed the Bradford on Avon Green Man Festival, reviewed Barrelhouse at the Southgate and Illingworth at the Three Crowns, and a most memorable gig at theย Wiltshire Music Centre with Kasai Masai.
We had new singles from M3G, Billy in the Lowground, and the Viduals,and an album review of Cephid.
Weโre continuing to highlight local festivals for 2024, and yes, Pewsey took a bit of criticism for the Tedworth Hunt parading without permission this Boxing Day. But, I did go all out on a satirical rant about the roadworks situation in Devizes, and got on my high horse with Councillor Iain Wallis, which some people thought was a little OTT.
NRWO at the Southgate
What I didnโt mention was it was through personal frustration the piece was reflected. Having given myself over forty extra minutes to cross town to get my autistic son to his disabilities football session at Wiltshire FA in Green Lane, we were still fifteen minutes late; punctuality key to his meltdown in the car. For Iain to then take to his social media group defending the appalling coordination of Wiltshire Council and turning comments off, which could have been fair suggestions as to how to solve the issue of future roadworks planning, was counterproductive, so he got a little bashing for his actions, as is all what he and anyone else here has ever got here, criticism for their actions or inactions on the subject weโre covering. It was not, and has never been a personal attack, much as he claims it is. But I do take all the opinions cast under my wing and the result was me getting rather frustrated and annoyed with it all. I believe if the actions of anyone in a position of power, such as an MP or councillor are dubious they deserve to be called out for it, and besides, it is only ever with a shrewd slice of satire which we do it with, not to be taken so seriously.
I threw my teddies from the pram, yes, and suggested giving Devizine up. I slept on it while a load of comments praising what we do here flooded our Facebook page, and this gave me a fresh perspective, running a quick photo article joking that,of course, I wouldnโt give it up, only to receive comments from someone who was previous supportive of Devizine stating I duped them into thinking I would quit; you cannot win! I can only assure you, the feeling was real, all these nasty folk who seem to want to derail us, mock us for standing up for what is right, they do get to me, and do make me feel like quitting, that much is true and the joke was it was all a joke, because it wasnโt. My god, why am I pouring my heart out over this silliness; if you like Devizine read it, if you donโt like Devizine, donโt read it, but donโt parade around slagging us off like youโre the victim, which I took the test of then and there myself and it does inflate the ego; simples!!
I wish you all a happy new year and sincerely hope we donโt need to go down this avenue again, I hope we can provide a platform to promote talented locals, venues, the arts and all, but tell me I cannot spice it up with a little controversial satire, whatโs the point in me doing it I ask you?! 2023 has been a great year, with lots going on, lots to report and so many people Iโm grateful for, for their contributions, input, advice and support, for they far outnumber the oddballs who seem to think weโre stifling creativity or backing some imaginary concept like cancel culture. The simple fact is, no other local media is highlighting and promoting local arts, it depends on the individual social media presence, and somewhere to combine and collate it all, I believe, is a positive thing. Rant over……
Onwards with our look through all the big local events and festivals coming our way in 2024. Note, there will always be additions, many annual events still to fix a date, as we work through the year weโll add them to our event calendar. This is just an overview of what we have so far. Iโve already added the Devizes International Street Festival on the May bank holiday, 26th and 27th, for an unmissable example!
We finished off the first part at the end of May, the last day of the month sees the Devizes Arts Festival begin, which continues through the first fortnight of June, which is where we will pick up from now. Only those two summer months to cover in this part, because thereโs so much happening over this period, and weโll conclude with August until December in the third and final section.
June
31st May- 16th: Devizes Arts Festival
Thereโs been a few leaks about acts at Devizes Arts Festival this year, my favourite so far is to catch the wonderful Lady Nade, but also find Martin Simpson, the Jolly Roger, Hollie McNishโs Lobster Tour, Jo Carley and The Old Dry Skulls, Phil Hammond, Rumour, and Antarctic explorer Tom Crean. Keep your eyes peeled for more info, we love the Devizes Arts Festival and we will be featuring it extensively throughout the new year, so, donโt touch that dial!
Malavita at Devizes Arts Festival 2023. Image: Gail Foster
1st: Shambles Festival, Melksham
Shambles Festival is a single-day dance music event happening at The King George V Park in Melksham. It features diverse entertainment combining DJ sets and live music, with 25+ Acts, Big top festival tents, Veli’cious food stalls, a bar located in a marquee and top-end sound systems, as a priority.
Itโs the second annual outing for this blossoming local dance event in the Sham, organised by 21-year-old Melksham-born DJ, James Wilkins, who states he wants to โsee a better representation of local talent in the arts in rural places.โ
This is precisely the kind of initiative we ache to promote on Devizine, thereโs a great need for more dance music events locally, and wish the team the very best of luck with it. Normally Iโm saying check our event calendar for ticket links and info, otherwise itโs time consuming for me, but Iโll drop this one, HERE, because Iโve a lot of time for this.ย
9th: Lions on the Green, Devizes
Wonderful start to summer in Devizes, when the Lions Club presents a free family day with a car show on the Green.
10th: Bradford-on-Avon Food & Drink Festival
Bradford on Avon Food and Drink Festival is a dynamic and fun celebration of all that is wonderful and delicious in the South West. Produce at its very best, plenty to see, drink and eat and in a vibrant atmosphere in the centre of this gorgeous and historic market town.
See Masterclasses and Interviews from local & celebrity chefs, Artisan Market, Street Food, Live Music, Childrenโs Fun Cooking Classes, Childrenโs Circus Skills, FestivAlesโ Pop up Pub, and much, much more.
15th: Chippenham Pride
Last year Chippenham held the best Pride around these country parts, by a country mile! in 2024 they will be expanding into Monkton Park as well as Island Park. There will be some exciting NEW areas for Chippenham Pride 2024, including a fully licensed bar, an awesome Cabaret stage, a kids area including rides, face glitter and fun stall as well an Education tent. And it’s all Free!
There will also be the much loved Pride walk throughout the town centre and into Monkton Park, well-being and retail stalls, 10 hours of Main Stage entertainment and the official flag raising ceremony at 10am!
15th: Neuroheadz Festival 2024, Cotswolds
Back for its third year, this is a one-day dance music festival with limited camping spots in the Cotswolds, Brokenborough to be more precise!
20th: Summer Solstice
Summer Solstice, locatedโฆerm, well, worldwide, but the best place in said world to see it in, is Wiltshire, at Stonehenge and Avebury, but, you knew that already!
20th: Iford Manor Jazz Festival, Bath
Grownups only, jazz performances sweeping across the beautiful woodlands and Japanese Garden, your chance to discover Ilford Manor, near Bath, in all its glory.
26th-29th: Glastonbury Festival
We have to put this mini-festival in, though if you want to go you should plan much sooner than this! The worldโs most famous festival on our doorstep, and it is much in the notion of this which allows the West Country to have a knock-on effect hosting so many others. There is nothing quite like Glasto, more experience than event, but, these days you have to be punctual. One day Iโll make it back there!
28th-29th: Chippenham Food & Drink Festival
Two day Food and Drink Festival at Monkton Park, Chippenham, bringing some of the best chefs, wine, live music and so much more over one summer weekend. Gather your friends and enjoy good food, good wine, & great times.
29th: Melksham Pride
Proud Melksham gets set for another yearโs Pride in the town.
29th: MantonFest, Marlborough
Mantonfest 2023. Image Gail Foster
Last one of June, and itโs an amazing one. We at Devizine love MantonFest with bells on. Such a quaint little secret garden party near Marlborough, itโs well-established and so welcoming and communal. Another year, another great lineup supporting local and youth acts as well as the best quality tributes to polish the night off, we love it, I told you we love it, didnโt I?!
Mantonfest 2023. Image Gail Foster
July
4th-7th: Minety Music Festival
Minety has fast become the most talked about festival locally, hosting some big names annually, but also taking giant leaps in promoting locally-sourced acts too, Minety is your go-to for a friendly local festival with big impressions and standards. The Feeling and Ash are the biggies for 2024, find Queen tribute Flash and, as I said, you can guarantee some quality local bands too.
5th-14th: Frome Festival
Fromeโs arts and culture festival takes place at various venues over a fortnight. Their mission is to celebrate Fromeโs unique arts scene by providing accessible cultural events for over 12,000 attendees per year and championing the creative community by providing an annual platform for over 100 events delivered by local artists and community groups.
6th-13th: Cheltenham Music Festival
Celebrated since its inception in 1945, Cheltenham Music Festival has become one of the UKโs leading classical music festivals, bringing together eight days of live music in the Regency spa town of Cheltenham each July. The Festival prides itself on encouraging a spirit of curiosity and welcoming bold performances. It is renowned for presenting world-class musicians in magnificent venues around various venues across the town.
6th: Cheese & Chilli Festival Swindon 2024
National touring company organised, still these festivals are a popular attraction, this one takes place at Lydiard Park.
10th-13th: 2000Trees, Cheltenham
This largely indie-based award-winning festival is one I only ever hear great things about.
13th: Devizes Beer Festival
Time once again to drink yourself stupid at Devizes Wharf, but we like it like that!
13th: Somerset Kaya Reggae Festival, Caryford
Bruton Dub Club and Kaya Festival bring you some of the best in UK reggae. Limited tickets for this communal reggae do.
14th Godney Gathering, Somerset
The Godney Gathering has quickly established itself as one of the best single-day micro festivals in the UK, achieving outstanding reviews locally and nationally. 2024 lineup yet to be confirmed, go to this on its reputation alone.
20th: Market Lavington Vintage Meet
Bigger and better than the title might sound, this is a large retro family festival with a village fete ethos.
20th: My Dad’s Bigger Than Your Dad, Swindon
The highlight of the Swindon calendar, supporting the local scene and raising funds for Prospect House, My Dad’s Bigger Than Your Dad is now four years young, and the institution you need to be part of!
Held at the Bowl in Town Gardens makes for the perfect location. No lineup announced yet, but in association with Swindon Shuffleย you can be rest assured you’re in good hands.
20th: Classic Ibiza at Bowood
Commercial venture for the Ibiza diehards, this one will set you back a packet, but for those who attend I hear good things.
25th-28th: Womad, Malmesbury
Being that we don’t get much day-to-day world music in our county, it goes without saying we do have the world’s finest word music festival. Annually for as long as I can recall the Charlton Park estate in Malmesbury plays host to Womad. Tickets are not on sale, sign up on their website for announcements.
26th-28th: Devizes Scooter Rally
Mods, skinheads, scooterists, there’s many scooter rallies up and down this great nation, but no other on this scale locally. Devizes should be proud the Devizes Scooter Club organises this brilliant and hospitable event. It attracts soul and ska aficionados from across the country and welcomes curious locals on equal level. Last year was awesome and affordable. The club is set for another boss rally, so put your braces together and your boots on your feet, and give me some of that old moonstomping!
27th-28th: FullTone Festival, Devizes
Fulltone Festival 2023 Day Two. Image Gail Foster.
It seems a shame FullTone is the same weekend as the Scooter Rally, but that’s the way the cookie crumbles. The FullTone Orchestra returns to the Devizes Green this weekend, with guests and its blend of orchestral and pop. An amazing weekend, a lovely vibe, and breathtaking stage and sound. Talk in Code returns again this year, and I’m certain a scattering of others will separate the Orchestra’s wonderful concertsโฆnice!
27th: Bristol Comic & Gaming Con
Ashton Gate Stadium hosts this convention of all things comic, gaming and film. These events are the commercial side of comic cons, but great fun for families.
28th: Potterne Festival
The best bank holiday you’ll ever have in Potterne! This annual showdown at Potterne Cricket Club is immensely popular and sells out each year. It brags a collection of great local cover and tribute acts and is lots of fun.
28th: M4 Festival, Swindon
Rumour is abound the M4 Festival is happening at Lydiard Park in 2024, but as of yet nothing official has been announced. Be careful, M4 went into liquidation, cancelling last year’s festival at the last minute.
All links to all festivals are on our event calendar, and I am sure many will be added over the coming months. We await news from Trowbridge Festival, Swindon Shuffle, Box Rocks, CrownFest at Bishops Cannings, and so many others yet to announce. For now, summer is nearly upon us, honest!! We will return to cover August and the rest of 2024 asap. I think just June and July are quite enough to take in for now, what with all this wintery wind and perpetual drizzle! Oh, come on summerโฆ.spring would do!
It was a fantastically successful opening night for Devizes Musical Theatre at Dauntseyโs School for their latest show, Disneyโs Beauty and the Beast, and Iโฆ
Renowned Devizes auctioneers and valuers, Henry Aldridge and Son announced today they are relocating their auction rooms to The Old Emporium, a Grade II listedโฆ
by Ian Diddamsimages by Ann Ellison. What can possibly be better than watching a performance of โBlood Brothersโ by Willy Russell? Watching TWO performances ofโฆ
by Ian Diddamsimages by Josie Mae Ross and Richard Fletcher John Hodge is well known for his screenwriting of โShallow Graveโ, โThe Beachโ, โA Lifeโฆ
One of Swindon’s premier grunge pop-punkers, The Belladonna Treatment released their debut single, Bits of Elation, with London-based SODEH Records earlier this month. I spokeโฆ
It wonโt be long before the only Quality Street left in the tin are empty wrappers and those toffee pennies no one likes, youโre swapping your Santa hat for your festival jesters one and thinking what a mess you can get yourself into in local fields. Yep, bar humbug, for just a moment, thereโs the locally based big ones to think about spending your Christmas bonus on a ticket forโฆ.itโs festival time 2024!
Not hanging about, and if youโre thinking itโs likely to be a tad nippy for a festie in January, note the iconic winter Bradford Roots Festival is all under the roof of the fabuloso Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon.
Yet to reveal a lineup, but you need not concern yourself, I guarantee it will host the crรจme de la crรจme of local talent and many from further afield. The organisers say, โAfter the success of last yearโs festival,โ which it truly was a wonderful thing (you can read my tuppence on here) โweโre bringing Bradford Roots back bigger and better with a full weekend of events and activities. Roots is synonymous with community spirit, local talent and an inclusive atmosphere.โ And therein lies my surprise last year; the diversity of the program with lots of upcoming bands as well as ones in the spotlight. Ergo, Iโll leak Devizes-own Nothing Rhymes with Orange, Melkshamโs finest, the Sunnies, and the most wonderful Ruby Darbyshire are all booked, and hope I donโt get into too much trouble for doing so!
ยฃ22 for a Saturday ticket, ยฃ32 for the two-day pass, students or under 18 go half price. I cannot think of a better way to start your festive-filled new year!
27th: 7 Bands in 7 Hours, Calne
Calne Liberal Club plays host to this fantastic fundraiser on Saturday 27th January. Itโs a suggested fiver donation on the door and youโll get an hour each of Homer, People Like Us, Six OโClock Circus, The Chaos Brothers, The Real Cheesemakers, The Killertones and Mike & the Misfits.
February
2nd-4th: InCider Festival, Weston-Super-Mare
โItโs Weston-super-Mare, Eddie, Weston-super-Mareeee!โ Sand Bay Holiday Village plays host to this crazy goodie, established over for a decade, the InCider festival in Feb is only the beginning, with the Cursus Cider & Music Festival running from 24th – 26th May, and the main hoedown, the OutCider Festival from 1st – 4th Aug 2024.
OutCider Festival is an old school, no nonsense weekend of fantastic live music, cider and madness in the Mendips. Organisers clearly state, โno tribute bands. No X-Factor. No Carling lager. No tossers!โ
OutCider Festival features 30+ acts over two alternating, barn-covered stages. The mix of music is eclectic, energetic and definitely not anything mainstream. The camping field is lush and spacious and welcomes live-in vehicles.
3rd: DuckFest, Salisbury
Ducking fagic Salisbury Live fundraiser at the Duck Inn in Laverstock. Beggarโs Bash hosts this one-day introduction to the best of live music Salisbury has to offer.
15th-17th: Bath Bachfest, Bath
Bathโs 13th annual celebration of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach and his contemporaries. The festival was founded in 2012 as a complement to Bath Mozartfest and successor to the long-established Bath Bach Festival founded by Cuthbert Bates and later directed by his daughter, patron Elizabeth Bates.
17th: Devizes Festival of Winter Ales
Raise a glass and celebrate with DOCA at Devizes Festival of Winter Ales on 17th February at Devizes Corn Exchange. Renowned and vital DOCA fundraiser this, in collaboration with Stealth Brew Co. Another double wintery session with a hearty selection of ales and ciders from the countryโs best independent breweries, alongside music and entertainment.
This 18+ event comes in two sessions, Fraser Tilley provides music for the early session, 11am-5pm, and Manos Puestos at the late session, 5:30pm-11pm, plus cabaret from Able Mabel at both.
Tickets Available online at tinyurl.com/winterales2024 Physical tickets are also available to purchase at Devizes Books and the British Lion, Devizes.
April
21st: VW Campout, Stonehenge
The multi-award winning family run park, Stonehenge Campsite and Glamping Pods, situated close to Stonehenge hosts this gathering of all things VW!
May
The Magic Teapot Gathering, Mendip
This is a late addition to our listings, but looks so lovely I had to add it! Full preview Here.
11th: Westbury Food & Drink
Leigh Park Community Centre in Westbury hosts this inaugural free festie for all things foodie!
11th: Bradford-on-Avon Green Man Festival
A free one-dayer, the festival is organised by the town council, a vibrant, family-friendly community gathering featuring traditional dance, music, song, and folklore which runs throughout the town centre on Saturday 11 May 2024, from 9.30am to 5pm. We preview in full, HERE.
17th-26th Bath International Music
The Bath Festival returns for 2024. Click here to sign up to email updates and latest news.
Celebrating its tenth year, Shindig is the most contemporary festival of performing arts in the UK, and renowned for being gurt lush! It particularly focuses on dance music, lineup is yet to be announced but tickets are selling out already, based on the festivalโs first class reputation rather than acts, but I can say Sister Sledge, De La Soul and many other legends of disco and soul have graced the stage at the Dillington Estate in the past.
24th-27th: Chippenham Folk Festival
The 50th Anniversary for Chippenham Folk Festival Folk Festival thai year was an amazing success, enjoyed by huge audiences with talented performers from across the UK and beyond. Time is now running out to buy EARLY BIRD TICKETS.
Cursus Cider & Music Festival, Weston-Super-Mare
Continuing from the InCider for OutCider Festival, Sand Bay Holiday Village plays host to this second crazy goodie!
25th: Love Saves The Day, Ashton Court, Bristol
Massive names in pop and dance, Love does indeed Save the Day. Fatboy Slim, The Sugarbabes and Years & Years headlined 2023, how they top it this year time will tell!
26-27th:DevizesInternational Street Festival
Goes without saying, DOCA’s International Street Festival is over this Sunday and Monday bank holiday, it’s free, it’s officially the best day you’ll have in Devizes!
26th: Could Be Real Tribute Festival, Swindon Town FC
Swindon Town FC hosts ‘Could Be Real’ Tributes Festival, bringing together the UK’s finest tribute artists and bands for a huge all day festival to celebrate a whole era of music and culture and this family friendly festival will be available for those aged 12 years and older.
31st- 16th June: Devizes Arts Festival
Thereโs been a few leaks about acts at Devizes Arts Festival this year, my favourite so far is to catch the wonderful Lady Nade. But hold onto your hats, thatโs enough for now, being as this wonderful Arts Festival reaches mainly into June, weโll feature it again when we come back for the second half of this annual roundup of festivals type thingy, which I will bring you as soon as possible.
All links to all festivals are on our event calendar, and I am sure many will be added over the coming months. For now, hold tight and we will bring new of the big ones over summer and autumn, but I must say, 2024 is already looking rather special!
A second single from Swindon Diva Chloe Hepburn, Situationships was released this week. With a deep rolling bassline, finger-click rhythm and silky soulful vocals, thisโฆ
I’m delighted to announce Devizine will be actively assisting to organise a new county-wide music awards administration, in conjunction with Wiltshire Music Events UK. Theโฆ
Can You Find The Wiltshire Potholes From The Moon Craters?! Now, at Devizine Towers we are far too mature and sensible to mock Wiltshire Councilโsโฆ
Review by Pip Aldridge Last week, I had the privilege of seeing the Fulltone Orchestra perform at the beautiful Tewkesbury Abbey beneath the Peace Dovesโฆ
Stop for the Noddy Holder moment, itโs Christmas! Our weekly roundup of what weโve found to do in the wilds of Wiltshire is a bumper edition this week, taking us right up to New Yearโs Eve, cos Iโll be a busy as Santa on a mission this yule, and only get the standard two days off work to be with the fam, which the equivalent to you posh lot is a year off to find yourself in Goa!
Please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in regularly. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan aheadโฆ..to 2024!
One other really important thing before we get going, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can this Christmas, please donate a little stocking filler to keep us going; awl, thank you, For info on how, see HERE. Please and thank youโฆ
Ongoing: Two exhibits at Wiltshire Museum in Devizes: Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed Here.
The Kenavon Venture Santa Cruise at Devizes Wharf continues running until 23rd December.
Wednesday 20th
I assume the regular Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes is on as normal.
Panto at the Civic Trowbridge with Goldilocks & the Three Bears, two shows 4pm and 6pm.
Gav Cross: After Supper Ghost Stories at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Craig Crofton Quartet at the Bell, Bath.
Thursday 21st
Playtime! Christmas Special: A Winterโs Tail and Father Christmas Storytelling at Pound Arts, Corsham.
The Hammervilles at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Claire Martin and the Jim Mullen Trio at the Civic, Trowbridge.
Matt Owens & the DVP at the Tuppenny, Swindon.
Sladest at the Tree House, Frome has sold out.
Friday 22nd
Christmas & New Year Meals at The Memorial Pavilion in Seend with Chef Eric Lepine Seend runs until 29th December, with a Christmas Dinner special on the 24th.
Funked Up Christmas Party at the Pelican, Devizes, One Trick Pony fundraiser at the Southgate.
The Parsonโs Nose in Melksham has Plan of Action.
Winter Concert at St Michaelโs Church in Axford by Music for 1-4 voices, and Piano, with Emilia Lederleitnerova-Spriggs, Alice Simmons, Brian Parsons, Gilbert Simmons. A cappella 4 part carols, seasonal songs both old and new, festive piano duets and a few jazzy Christmas favourites. And some warming winter refreshment!
Hooch at The Coopers Arms, Pewsey.
Christmas Sing-a-Long at the Civic, Trowbridge.
Peloton are at The Vic, Swindon.
Karport Collective at The Boathouse, Bradford-on-Avon. Far Cue at The Three Horseshoes.
The Pโhogues at the Tree House, Frome has sold out.
Saturday 23rd
Illingworth at the Three Crowns, Devizes. Barrelhouse at The Southgate.
Apache Cats at The Lamb, Marlborough.
Frenzy at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Drama Tots Christmas Special at Kington Langley Village Hall.
Filskit Theatre: Breaking The Ice at Pound Arts, Corsham.
The Fuzz at The New Inn, Swindon. Shepherd’s Pieโs Xmas Rock-Off The Vic.
The Sweet play the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Sunday 24th
Swing Into Christmas with Terry Franks at the Crown, Bishops Cannings.
Sing-a-Long with Jim at the Beehive, Swindon.
Leon Hunt, Jason Titley, Gina Griffin at the Bell, Bath.
Monday 25th
I havenโt got anything for Mondayโฆ.oh, hold on, Noddy, come in!! I wish you all a very merry Christmas, Brussel sprouts all round!
Tuesday 26th
Xmas Rave at 23 Bath Street, Frome.
Wednesday 27th
Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes, possible, not sure.
The Shudders at the Beehive, Swindon.
KโChevere at the Bell, Bath.
Thursday 28th
Experimental Blues Orchestra at the Beehive, Swindon
Friday 29th
Jon Amor Trio Christmas Special at The Southgate, Devizes. Mick Jogger & The Stones Experience at The Corn Exchange, Devizes.
SexJazz at the Beehive, Swindon. Rotten Aces at the Vic.
Saturday 30th
The Acrustic Badger Band & The Iโs at The Southgate, Devizes. Sound Hog Disco, Karaoke at the Three Crowns.
Pop-Punk Disaster at The Vic, Swindon
Sunday 31st
Right, here we go: eyes down for a full house, itโs New Yearโs Eve. Iโm not going to type New Years Eve for every entry, so take it as red, itโs New Years Eve, okay?! New Years Eve parties at:
Devizes Scooter Club at The Cavalier, Devizes.
The Reason NYE Party at Seend Community Hall.
Reggae Party with Razah I-Fi at the Royal Oak, Marlborough.
Siren at The Consti Club, Chippenham.
End of Story at The Talbot, Calne.
Blue Soul at the Wiltshire Yeoman, Trowbridge. Train to Skaville at Westwood Social Club.
Party Night at the Civic, Trowbridge.
Parties at The Tuppenny, Swindon, the Beehive, and The New Inn. Rave Against the Regime plays one at The Vic.
Junkyard Dogs are the Winterbourne Arms in Winterbourne Dauntsey.
One Chord Wonders at The Sun, Frome.
Phew, Iโm sure thereโs more, do let me know and hopefully Iโll get time to add them. Obviously, because this is a bumper fortnight edition, Iโm sure lots more will be added, so do keep your eye on the Event Calendar, as this might not be edited, cheers.
Have a great Christmas, and New Year, one and all!
If many space-rock acts have more band member changes than most other musicians change their socks, Hawkwind are the exemplar of the tendency. There mightโฆ
The second single from Georgeโs sessions with Jolyon Dixon is out today, Isnโt She Lonely. With the vaudeville ambience of Queenโs later material and sprinklesโฆ
A new music festival is coming to Devizes this July. Organisers of the long-running Marlborough based festival MantonFest are shifting west across the downs andโฆ
All images: ยฉ๏ธ JS Terry Photography An awards ceremony to celebrate the outstanding musical talent within the city, aptly titled The 2024 Salisbury Music Awards,โฆ
Monsieur, with these Exchange Comedy night you are really spoiling us, for usually comedy in Devizes is just what we make ourselves; laughing at visitorsโฆ
A drone operated by Wiltshire Hunt Sabs was attacked by a second drone, twice, while surveying The Beaufort Hunt, after it recorded them illegally huntingโฆ
Itโs beginning to look a lot likeโฆ. our weekly roundup of what weโve found to do in the wilds of Wiltshire this weekโฆ.. How many sleeps are left? I cheat, I have two sleeps a day, itโs an age thingโฆ..
Please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in regularly. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can this Christmas, please donate a little stocking filler to keep us going; awl, thank you, For info on how, see HERE. Please and thank youโฆ
Ongoing: Two exhibits at Wiltshire Museum in Devizes: Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed Here.
Wednesday 13th
Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Every second Wednesday of the month, itโs Runny Snotts Open Mic at The Three Crowns, Chippenham.
Lunchtime Recital at Pound Arts, Corsham, Flight of the Firebird with violinist Matthew Taylor and Peter French on piano.
Swindon Arts Centre screens The Muppets Christmas Carol as part of their Memory Cinema, for those suffering dementia.
Winter Wonderband at Chapel Arts. Ya Freshness & The Big Boss Band at the Bell, Bath.
Thursday 14th
Owyado Theatre presents a Twisted Christmas at Seend Community Centre.
Open Mic at The Crown, Bishops Cannings.
Junkyard Dogs at the Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Ben Poole is at The Tree House, Frome, Abba Reunion at the Cheese & Grain.
Friday 15th
Book Launch: Marking Time by Sir Mathew Thorpe at Seend Community Centre.
Carols at the Wharf with Devizes Town Band from 6:30, courtesy of the Kennet & Avon Trust. Edโs pick of the week, Nothing Rhymes With Orange at The Southgate, Devizes. Devizes Public Living Room Christmas Shindig at the Town Hall.
Alex Mendham and his Orchestraโs Vintage Christmas Party at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Severange @ The Three Horseshoes.
Green Matthews โ A Christmas Carol, at Pound Arts, Corsham.
โRockinโ & โSwinginโ Christmas Evening with Peter Gill & The Good Time Charlies Band at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Diverse Disco, a disco for anyone with disabilities, at Tree Nightclub, Swindon. Cut the Mustard at the Beehive. XSLF at The Vic with Borrowed Time and the Deckchairs in support.
An Intimate Evening With Glen Matlock at The Tree House, Frome. The Jive Aces โ โThe Not Quite Christmas showโ at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 16th
Kenavon Venture Santa Cruise sets sail at Devizes Wharf, and trips are daily until 23rd December. Breakfast with Santa at Devizes Fire Station. Christmas Market at Hillworth Park. The SODs Charity Christmas Gig 2023 at the Town Hall. The Big Sound Christmas Concert at St Johns. The Coco Club Christmas Ball at the Corn Exchange. Christmas Family Ravers at the Exchange. Fullhouse play Frankie Miller at Long Street Blues Club. Phase Rotate at The Southgate. And Sour Apple play The Three Crowns, for Simonโs birthday, happy birthday Simon!
The Vooz play The Lamb, Marlborough.
6 Oโclock Circus at The Talbot, Calne.
The Artisan Fundraiser for No7 Creative Space, Chippenham. The West End comes to Chippenham at Christmas at St Pauls. A Christmas Spectacular: Here we come a-carolling at St Andrewโs. 70โs 80โs Disco at The Consti Club.
March for Palestine in Swindon. Swindon Palestine Solidarity (SPS) invites the community to join in a peaceful march on December 16th to call for justice and raise awareness about the ongoing conflict in Palestine. Participants will gather at The Lawns entrance on Old Town High Street, on the corner with Charlotte Mews, at 11 am and begin the march at 11:30 am.
Santaโs Christmas Wish opens at Swindon Arts Centre, running until 24th. Apache Cats at the Queenโs Tap. Mark Valentine Band at the Beehive. Bedrock at The Woodlands Edge. The 12 Bands of Christmas at the Vic, see the poster below!
Rock the Tots Christmas Concert at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Franky & The BuzzCatz at The Three Horseshoes.
The Scribes at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Sense Recordings Free Party at The Queenโs Head, Box. The Marching Skaletons at the Bell, Bath.
The Foxes PresentโฆA Cool Yule at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Rhythm Of The 90s & Dave Pearce at the Cheese & Grain, Frome is sold out.
Sunday 17th
Devizes Young Farmers Tractor & Tinsel Christmas Market at the Market Place, Devizes. Andrew Hurst at The White Bear from 5pm.
Santaโs Christmas Wish at the Neeld, Chippenham.
GBH Big Band with Claire MartinIG at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Mark Greenโs Blues Band and others from 3am, free admission at the Mount Pleasant Social Club.
ยฃ20K by December 2023 Fundraising Appeal at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Clyveโs Funky Christmas Party at Chapel Arts, Bath. The Blues Mercenaries at the Bell.
Splat the Rat at the Beehive, Swindon.
Cara Dillon โ Upon A Winter’s Night at the Cheese & Grain, Frome. A Dannsa Dub at the Tree House.
Monday 18th
Rock The Tots: Christmas at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Messy Carols at the Beehive, Swindon.
Shing-a-Lings at the Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 19th
Kids Inflatable Christmas Party at The Civic, Trowbridge.
Christmas with Kim Cypher for Jazz Knights at the Royal Oak, Swindon.
Filskit Theatre: Wonder Gigs at Pound Arts, Corsham.
And thatโs all I have so far. Saturday 21st is winter solstice, to plan ahead for events over Christmas keep an eye on our event calendar!
Without sounding like a stuck record, itโs the same unfortunate news for Devizes Street Festival as it was last year; Arts Council England has notโฆ
Bussing into Devizes Saturday evening, a gaggle (I believe is the appropriate collective noun) of twenty-something girls from Bath already on-board, disembark at The Marketโฆ
Once the demonic entity Spring-Heeled Jack entered folklore it became subject to many books and plays, diluting the once real threat of this Victorian bogeymanโฆ
Devizes singer-songwriter Jamie Hawkins, famed for poignant narrative in his songs and one-third Lost Trade, has always had a passion for filmmaking; Teeth is theโฆ
If Iโve recently been singing the praises of arts diversity in Bradford-on-Avon, centred around the Wiltshire Music Centre and not yet touched upon the various other venues such as the Three Horseshoes and Boathouse, hereโs something to wrap it up into one neat package, the Bradford on Avon Green Man Festivalโฆโฆ
A free one-dayer, the festival is organised by the town council, a vibrant, family-friendly community gathering featuring traditional dance, music, song, and folklore which runs throughout the town centre on Saturday 11 May 2024, from 9.30am to 5pm.
They hail โthereโs something for everyone,โ and that story checks out; with over forty dance groups, comprising three-hundred and twenty dancers and musicians, the Bradford on Avon Green Man Festival ranges from Morris dancing to European styles, and encourages you to have a go!
Homegrown Performance troupe, Ganderflankers presents Jack and Jill in the Green, a whimsical journey of a 10ft tall Jack and Jill with their bands and fantasy beasts, visits twelve locations across the town.ย
Wiltshire Music Centre stage hosts a stage at the Holy Trinity Church, and the festival launch party will be held at the Centre on Friday 10th May, ticketed, it features folk-rock legends Lindisfarne. A new addition for 2024 will beThe Three Horseshoeshosting a blues stage, featuring the best local blues musicians. Thereโs also the Folk Club Stage in St Margaretโs Hall. The festival also boasts music sessions in town centre pubs, a regularly featured samba band at the Tithe Barn in the afternoon, a Mummersโ play performed around town, and buskers too.
Pagan Arts & Crafts market with about a dozen stalls selling everything for the closet pagan, shopsโ window dressing, and an Artisan Market with thirty or so local makers. With a childrenโs fun zone with fairground rides, magical storytelling and face painters, The Community Hub for local groups and clubs to showcase their activities, and yet to be confirmed Saturday night party to polish it off, looks like the party is in Bradford-on-Avon in Mayโฆ..twist my arm why donโt you!!
There are only a few tickets left for this yearโs Devizes Festival of Winter Ales, an important fundraiser for DOCAโฆ.. This year DOCA has teamedโฆ
A sublime evening of electronic elegance was had at Bathโs humble Rondo Theatre last night, where Cephidโs album, Sparks in The Darkness, was played outโฆ
I caught up with an excited Jonathan Hunter, leader of Devizes Town Councilโs independent party The Guardians, and local loyal youth worker Steve Dewar toโฆ
Experience the Bradford on Avon Green Man Festival, a vibrant, family-friendly community gathering featuring traditional dance, music, song, and folklore throughout the town centre onโฆ
If Iโm considering reviewing worldwide music again, why stop with this planet?! Though Iโve reasoned two tenacious links to mention this madcap Scottish interstellar outfit;โฆ
The team behind popular all-day music extravaganza, My Dadโs Bigger Than Your Dad Festival, can now reveal that nearly ยฃ11,500 was raised for Prospect Hospiceโฆ
Itโs beginning to look a lot likeโฆ. our weekly roundup of what weโve found to do in the wilds of Wiltshire this weekโฆ..
Please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in regularly. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, the thing everyone seems to brazenly browse past pretending it didnโt apply to them, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can, please donate a little something to keep us going; awl, thank you. If you love it, donโt lose it, like Bez on a nineties dance floor. For info on how, see HERE. Please and thank youโฆ
Ongoing: Two exhibits at Wiltshire Museum in Devizes: Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed Here.
Jack & The Beanstalk at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes, is wonderful, and runs till Saturday, but tickets are sold out, join the waiting list online, itโs worth it.
Wednesday 6th
Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Christmas Afternoon for Over 60s at The Neeld, Chippenham.
Old Town Comedy Loft at the Hop Inn, Swindon.
Thursday 7th
The Real Cheesemakers & Tom Veck at The Tuppenny, Swindon, Lucky Thief play the Vic with Life in Mono and Ritual Divide. Geoff Marsh Panto Caped Avengers at Swindon Arts Centre.
A Winter Union at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Friday 8th
Fun Quiz Night at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes. Devizes Public Living Room: has a Singalong with Sian & Rob at Devizes Town Hall, Strange Folk play The Southgate, People Like Us at The Condado Lounge.
Michele Stodart is at the Pump, Trowbridge with DG Solaris in support. Soul Strutters are at the Civic Cafe and Be Like Will at The Red Admiral, Hilperton.
Sons of Town Hall at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Leon McCawley at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon, the Boot Hill All Stars Christmas Party at The Three Horseshoes.
The Superskas at Chapel Arts, Bath. The Jon Amor Trio play The Ram.
Riskee & The Ridicule play the Vic, Swindon, with 2 Sick Monkeys and Street Outlaws. The Jake Leg Jug Band at The Queenโs Tap.
TV Smith at the Tree House, Frome, while Complete Madness tribute are at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 9th
Young Curators Club, and the Museum Explorers Club for December at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes. A Wreath Making Workshop at The Parish Rooms, on Long Street, Devizes Lions Christmas Fair at The Corn Exchange, from 9am-2:30pm.
White Horse Opera Christmas Concert at St John’s Church, Devizes. SoupChick has a โShow & Sleighโ feast in the Shambles. Black Nasty at the Southgate, James Mitchell at the Three Crowns.
Barrelhouse plays The Lamb, Marlborough, Homer are at The Bear.
The Blunders play the Barge on HoneyStreet with Dissident Noise Factory in support, there’s a Christmas market there during the daytime with Father Christmas and Mad Pete’s Magic.
Legendary local folk band, Stonegallows reunite for a final gig at the Pump, Trowbridge. The 12 Bells offers a more grungy evening with โTerrors From The Deep.โ
The Chaos Brothers play The Talbot, Calne.
Triple JD at the Old Road Tavern, Chippenham. A Ratpack Night at The Consti Club. Christmas Show at The Cause.
The 80s vs. 90s Christmas Party at Melksham Assembly Hall.
Wiltshire Jazz Academyโs December concert at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon, also, Martin Cathy and Jon Wilks. Kitchen Lover at the Three Horseshoes.
Attic presents: Learning to Fly by James Rowland at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Good Times at The Woodlands Edge, Swindon, Diversify Xmas Special at the Vic.
Untamed Burlesque at Chapel Arts, Bath.
L1nkn P4rk & Foo Fakers at the Tree House, Frome. Jon Gomm & Jo Quail at the Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 10th
Matchbox Mutiny are at the White Bear, Devizes from 5pm.
The Jon Amor Trio are at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Swindon Recital Series at Swindon Arts Centre
Flash Harry @ The Cornerhouse, Frome. Frome record fair at the Cheese & Grain.
Carols and Morris dancers at the Southgate, Devizes.
The Scummy Mummies at the Civic, Trowbridge.
Ooh, Beehive at the Beehive, Swindon, and Eric Mylod-Okafo Quartet for Jazz Knights at the Royal Oak.
Steeleye Span at the Cheese & Grain.
That’s all folks, unless you know different? Drop me a line to tell me what I missed. It’s free to be listed here, but I’m partial to a chocolate cupcake now and then!
Next week is getting really Christmassy, I’ll drop some posters for stuff coming up below, but don’t miss a trick by keeping up with our updating Event Calendar.
By Ian DiddamsImages by Jeni Meade No aficionado of 1960s and 1970s horror films would have missed seeing โRosemaryโs Babyโ, a story of Satanic pregnancy,โฆ
In November last year I was mightily impressed with Bristol soul-reggae producer Kaya Street, and reviewed their EP The Soul Sessions, read it here forโฆ
Another Stunning Week-End For Live Music Andy Fawthrop Normally Iโd be raving about just how good the live music was at The Southgate on Sundayย afternoon.โฆ
Developed in Devizes, blossoming in Bristol, as well as a snazzy new website, indie-punk phenomenon Nothing Rhymes with Orange released their next single, and itโsโฆ
Seems odd the perfect combination between Devizesโ only theatre, The Wharf, and one of the longest-running performance group, White Horse Opera hasnโt linked before, butโฆ
He’s behind you! Oh no, he isn’t, the director of the Wharf’s panto this year, John Winterton is right in front of me, and we’re having a cuppa in the foyer!
John makes a point, pantomime is an introduction to theatre for many. I can identify, my first experience at a show being an annual amateur panto which included my younger cousin’s dance group. Showing how slim my credentials for reviewing a pantomime are, the only other one I’ve seen was decades later when we took our kids to see Peter Pan at the Bath Royal; but I know what I like and liked what I saw.
And to question the need to write this at all, being tickets are near sold out anyway; this serves to say to those without tickets, you’re missing out, and to golden ticket holders, you’re in for a fantastic treat.
Doubting my decision to attend somewhat, prior to the show. I’m a grumpy old sausage without any need of drag queen clichรฉs, Carry-On titillation, and booing the baddie. Oh boy, did they turn my frown upside down.
Starter for ten, Jack and the Beanstalk at Devizesโ gem of a theatre contains all fundamental elements of pantomime, a loose narrative to distract from, drag, subtle smut, nonsensical comedy, breaking the fourth wall, patchwork clowns and loveable animal characters, parodies of pop songs, fairytale romance, song and dance. Save perhaps the archetypal celebrity. But who needs a Keith Chegwin or Ian from Eastenders when fourteen year old Jess Self takes the lead role of Jack, for if she’s no celebrity yet, she’s a bona-fide star.
This is where I need to take care not to add spoilers, plus note some imagination was required as this was a dress rehearsal and audience participation is key to pantomime above all others. The latter is easier than it sounds, being a big kid at heart, families, I guarantee will love this in equal measure.
To the nitty-gritty, writer Oliver Phipps has created an offbeat tribute to the folkloric fairy-tale which in essence deviates whimsically for comic scope rather than rolls traditional narrative, and tends to be mindful you’re watching a play in Devizes with local references and self-deprecating gags.
There’s atypical charming and fun characters to bounce off Jack, key to this performance is the apt casting. Oliver casts himself as the drag Dame Dotty, mother of Jack, and detonates exuberance and wit. Other notable comic creations to bind this perfect synergy is the Arlecchino patchwork clown Silly Simon, a brother of Jack’s eccentricity played by Oliver Beech, a lovably simpleton cow called Pat (geddit?) who, though we shouldn’t otherwise name-call but in this instance there’s no better way of saying, Jemma Gingell perfects the cow! And the most universal comic character, the egotistical and game show host wannabe, Spirit of the Beans, played immaculately by Jax Brady.
Other than dancers, Berrie Mildenhall, Jamie Linsley, Sienna Swain, Oliva Hibbert, Belle Stalham, and Fleur Brewer, villagers, Helen Pritchard, Ben Bryan, Poppi Lamb-Hughes and youngest actor Lucas Dowling at ten years-old, Jill, the princess love interest, played delightfully by Georgina Claridge, and villainess to boo Mrs Blunderbore, played wickedly by Hayley Baxter, all characters are comically forged, which gets my approval. Even the king and queen, so often not in pantos, are funny, acted by Corrin Barbieri and, down-to-his-jimmy-jams, Adam Sturges, respectively.
If you’re looking for a profound delineation of orthodox folklore, committed to chronicle and honour an original plot, then this isnโt for you, but if you’re not a bore, and seek true kooky panto, with genius wordplay, if you want to guffaw and giggle, sing and get involved, well, this is perfect, and youโll have a great time. I only mention this in remembrance of my Dad, who came over all Mr Spock after every panto, groaning logic, things like, โit could’ve been coincidence the glass slipper happened to fit,โ or โwhy didn’t Aladdin ask the genie for another three wishes as his last wish?โ Pantomime is fantastical and not for overthinking, forgoing continuity and logic, this one is fantastic and matches the description.
Another crucial point of the joys of the humble Wharf Theatre, which came up in chatting with John in the foyer, was that if I bit the bullet of expense and went up the Westend to see a show, sure I’d have an unforgettable evening, but I go for the show’s title, couldn’t now recall the name of the theatre. John delighted in telling me he recognised the same faces, regulars who sit in the same seats. They come for the Wharf’s reputation; I wonder if city theatres could boast the same. The simple fact is, while the Wharf is communal, local, and affordable, it may well be amateur but strides at Neil Armstrong lengths to produce quality shows. Above glitz and glamour of Broadway, what The Wharf compares with, and prioritises, is heart.
Jack & The Beanstalk at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes opens on Friday 1st December and runs up to Saturday 9th. Tickets are sold out, but you can join the waiting list online HERE, hope for a cancelation, and take this as red, not to miss out next year!
Featured Image Credit: Stewart Baxter Riot predictor Nick Hodgson formerly of the Kaiser Chiefs has a new band, the charmingly named Everyone Says Hi, andโฆ
Bob Marley sang โjamminโ โtil the jam is through,โ Jimmy Cricketโs catchphrase was โcomeโere, thereโs more,โ but it looks like The Southgate in Devizes isโฆ
The second feature film for director Keith Wilhelm Kopp and writer Laurence Guy, First Christmas enters development, to be produced by Shropshire-based production company, Askโฆ
Image credit: Forestry England/Crown copyright. Forestry England Nightingale Wood invites dog owners to celebrate Walk Your Dog Month this January….. Walk Your Dog Month isโฆ
To look around our beautiful landscapes youโd be understanding of visitors who assume itโs a barren outback with nothing going on, but we know different; look and thee shall find. Weโve a packed week ahead as we move into December, the fun never stops! Hereโs what weโve found to do in the wilds of Wiltshire this weekโฆ..
Please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updatingEVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in regularly. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, the thing everyone seems to brazenly browse past pretending it didnโt apply to them, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can, please donate a little something to keep us going; awl, thank you. If you love it, donโt lose it, like Bez on a nineties dance floor. For info on how, see HERE. Please and thank youโฆ
Ongoing: Two exhibits at Wiltshire Museum in Devizes: Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed Here.
Artist Clifton Powell with his portrait of Eric Walrond, on display at Wiltshire Museum
Wednesday 29th
NHS Blood Donation Clinic at The Corn Exchange in Devizes, between 1:30 and 7pm. The regular acoustic jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Roy Chubby Brown is at The Civic, Trowbridge.
Keith Jamesโ Every Human Heart at Swindon Arts Centre.
Piano Phase Project Sound Meditation at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Ushti Baba at The Bell, Bath. Opening at The Rondo Theatre, A Streetcar Named Desire, which runs until Saturday 2nd.
Far From Saints at the Cheese & Grain, Frome is now sold out.
Thursday 30th
Open Mic at The Crown, Aldbourne.
Wiltshire Air Ambulance Christmas Market, Trowbridge. Open Mic at Stallards.
Adele Cliff at Chippenham Comedy Club at The Old Road Tavern, Chippenham.
Christmas Memories at Melksham Assembly Hall.
Jam Night at The Boathouse, Bradford-on-Avon.
FitkinWall: Harpland at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Grubb & Eedens at The Tuppenny, Swindon.
Chris Diffordโs โNot Only But Alsoโ at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Voodoo Room at the Tree House, Frome.
Friday 1st December
Friday sees a Christmas market and Santa’s grotto at The Pelican Inn, Devizes, from 4pm to 9.
Itโs the opening night of Jack & The Beanstalk at the Wharf Theatre, running until 9th Dec. Youโre going to be hard pushed to grab a seat for this now, but do try Devizes Books or join the online waiting list on their website. We look forward to reviewing this on Thursday.
Vamos is at the Old Road Tavern, Chippenham, bringing you the fantastic Will Lawton & The Alchemists with Mac-Lloyd in support, this will be one cool gig, highly recommended; please pay what you can for it. Living Spit: A Christmas Carol at the Neeld Hall.
Tribute to Dire Straits, DS:UK at the Melksham Assembly Hall.
Operation 77 at The Talbot, Calne.
My Fair Lady opens at the Civic in Trowbridge, running up to Sunday.
I Fagiolini Angels & Demons at the Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. The brilliant Monkey Bizzle at the Three Horseshoes with Cara Means Friend.
Chris Difford is at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Alice Armstrong is a Chapel Arts, Bath.
Ed Tudor Pole at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Jon Amor Trio at the Beehive, Swindon.
Ozric Tentacles & Gong at the Cheese & Grain, Frome, now sold out, but The Specialised are at The Tree House.
Saturday 2nd
Calne River Warriors’ Wreath-Making Workshop at the Pocket Park, Calne.
Christmas Market at Avebury Barn.
Devizes LunaBarge at The Southgate Inn, Devizes. The Unpredictables at the Three Crowns, and the Moonrakers 80s Disco at The Moonrakers, Devizes.
Marlborough Concert Orchestra at St Marys, Marlborough.
Splat the Rat at The Barge Inn, HoneyStreet.
Christmas Light Switch on in Melksham with Plan of Action, on at 5:30pm.
Gary Stringer and Ella Clayton at The Pump in Trowbridge are sold out, and find the 41 Fords at Stallards.
The Dynamos at the Consti Club in Chippenham.
The Reason at Prestbury Sports Bar, Westbury.
FitkinWall: Harpland at Pound Arts, Corsham.
For Editorโs Pick of the Week we head over to the Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon for some African drumming with Kasai Masai in concert, and a drumming workshop beforehand.
Hell Death Fury at the Three Horseshoes in Bradford-on-Avon, with support.
Oye Santana at Chapel Arts, Bath, and Junction 18 have a 100th gig fundraiser for Bath Foodbank at St Mark’s Church.
Panto time at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, Snow White runs until 31st December. Charlie Baker at Swindon Arts Centre. One Trick Combo at The Woodlands Edge. Operation 77 at The New Inn.
Salisbury Music Awards at The Winchester Gate.
The Lanky Divas have an album launch at The Sun, Frome. Billy In The Lowground at The Tree House. The Counterfeit Beatles at the Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 3rd
Chirton School has a wreath making workshop.
The monthly residency of the Jon Amor Trio at The Southgate, Devizes. The Groom Familyโs Houseparty at Devizes Town Hall.
Christmas Market at Avebury Barn.
Charity Christmas Fair & Santaโs Grotto at The New Inn, Winterbourne Monkton.
Christmas Fayre & Santaโs Grotto at Chippenham Sports Club.
Really Big Really Clever plays the Pump, Trowbridge with NervEndings in support.
Budapest Cafe Orchestra at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Mike Hoddinott Trio at The Three Horseshoes.
My Darling Clementine at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Monday 4th
Mark Watson at Swindon Arts Centre.
Tuesday 5th
Callum Smith organ Trio, for Jazz Knights at the Royal Oak, Swindon
And thatโs all weโve got so far, but more stuff is added all the time, so keep a beady eye on
Salisbury acoustic singer-songwriter Rosie Jay released her debut EP today, taking its title from her first single from June this year, I Donโt Give aโฆ
I’m loving this new tune! Swindon’s upcoming reggae singer/DJ Silver-Star has teamed up with the legendary General Levy for a drum n bass golden nuggetโฆ
Everything to do in Wiltshire this coming week, right in one handy listing, you know the drill, jump to it, preferably before putting your Christmas tree up, it is, after all, only mid-November; take a chill pill!
Okay, please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in regularly. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, the thing everyone seems to brazenly browse past pretending it didnโt apply to them, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can, please donate a little something to keep us going; awl, thank you. If you love it, donโt lose it, like Bez on a nineties dance floor. For info on how, see HERE. Please and thank youโฆ
Ongoing: Dark, the latest exhibit at the Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham runs until 26th November.
Two exhibits at Wiltshire Museum in Devizes: Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed Here.
Wednesday 22nd
Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Memory Cinema at Swindon Arts Centre showing Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
Running until Friday 24th Voices for Life Extraordinary at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Kroke at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Clusterfunk at The Bell, Bath. Former ELO 2 Frontman Phil Bates Up Close And Personal Solo UK Tour at Chapel Arts.
Thursday 23rd
Kim Emery at La Bobina, Marlborough.
Dead Man’s Whiskey with Wicked in support at Underground, Swindon. A Christmas Carol at Swindon Arts Centre, Jake Leg Jug Band at the Beehive. Luna Barge at the Tuppenny.
Entertaining Angels at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Hear my Voice, the LGBTQ+ poetry night at The Rondo Theatre, Bath.
Passenger Club at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Friday 24th
Continuing into Saturday but the main show is Friday, folks, the DOCA Winter Festival in Devizes is always a wonderful evening. With the lantern parade, light switch on, Devizes Town Band and market, itโs my obvious choice for editorโs pick of the week!
Staying in Devizes, Chicago Blues Trio at Long Street Blues Club, Stones Throw at The Three Crowns, and a lantern parade Karaoke Party at The Pelican.
But itโs Marlboroughโs light switch on and market too, and Mean as Custard plays the Bear.
Writing and Researching a novel with Keith Stuart at Chippenham library, music cafรฉ at the Cause, and Kate Lomas, with Laissez Faire and others play a fundraiser in support of the new Chippenham Arts Centre, No.7.
Sad Dad Club at Stallards, Trowbridge. Parker plays the Pump, with A Bottle of Dog and Happy Dogs in support. And thereโs jazz with the Stilts at the Civic.
Carmen Co at St Michaelโs Church, Mere.
Red Light at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon, The Remnants at The Boathouse, Bradford-on-Avon.
Running to Saturday, The Bean Spillersโ Improvised Musical at The Rondo Theatre, Bath. Sheer Music is at Moles with Pet Needs, the Glitchers and Nothing Rhymes With Orange in support.
Oasish Vs Stereotonics at The Vic in Swindon, Phantom Lymb at the Beehive.
Frome Lantern Parade and Christmas Light Switch on too, with The Membersโ โSound of the Suburbs tourโ coming to the Tree House.
Saturday 25th
Thereโs a lecture at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes called The Hunt for Stourton Castle.ย ย Adam Woodhouse is at The Three Crowns, The Worried Men at The Southgate.
Alex Roberts is at The Barge on HoneyStreet. Trash Panda at The Lamb, Marlborough,ย
Static Moves at the Burbage Legion Hall, The Crofton Stokers at the Woodborough Club,
Billy & Louie at The Crown in Aldbourne, and the Ramsbury Christmas Food and Artisan Market .
The Heart Beats at Melksham Rock n Roll Club.
Freepeace at The Red Admiral, Trowbridge, Ed Byrneโs Tragedy Plus Time tour at the Civic.
Chippenham parkrun at Monkton, Wiltshire College & University Centre Chippenham Campus Open Day also in Chippenham. Chippenham Christmas Market at the Old Road Tavern. Spotlight 3: Modern & Contemporary Art from the Collection of Chippenham Museum, and a Pre-loved Clothes Event at Hardenhuish school.
The Fairytale Ceilidh: A Fantastical Dance Party at Pound Arts, Corsham, and Carmen Co at Grittleton Village Hall.
Bradford-on-Avon Floating Winter Fair today, with Bath Symphony Orchestra at Wiltshire Music Centre, and Borrowed Time & The Sinictones plays The Three Horseshoes.
Justin Adams & Mauro Durante at The Bell, Bath.
Moon at The Vic in Swindon, the World Music Club at the Beehive. Stephen K Amos at Swindon Arts Centre, Swindon Old Town Comedy Club has a Winter Showcase, Gaz Brookfield is at The Hop, Post 12 at the New Inn, and The Flashback Band hold an 80โs night at The Woodlands Edge.
Craig Charles Funk & Soul House Party has sold out at the Cheese & Grain, so has Depeche Mode tribute The Devout at the Tree House, Frome.
Sunday 26th
James Oliver Band at The Southgate, Devizes.
The Stu Henderson Trio: Jazz at the Horseshoe, Mildenhall, Marlborough.
Melksham Record Fair at Melksham Assembly Hall.
Mark Simmonsโ Quip Off The Mark at Swindon Arts Centre.
Wiltshire Youth Jazz Orchestra Concert with Steve Banks at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Ruzz Guitar Trio makes an appearance at The Three Horseshoes.
Schtummโฆ. presents Sarah McQuaid at The Queenโs Head, Box. The Schmoozenbergs are at The Bell, Bath.
Frome Vegan Fair at The Cheese & Grain.
Monday 27th
David Celia at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 28th
Sarah McQuaid at Swindon Arts Centre, and thereโs a bebop blowout for Jazz Knights at the Royal Oak, with special guests Ian Bateman & Alex Clarke, to remember the great Jazz promoter David Knight on what would have been his birthday.
And thatโs all weโve got so far, but more stuff is added all the time, so keep a beady eye on
Somewhere just outside Westbury a sizable barn hosted the most memorable new year’s eve raves in the mid-nineties, but Iโd never have imagined then, thatโฆ
A Scooby snack-sized pinch punch, first day of the month came from Minety Music Festival this morning upon announcing their headliner for 2025, The Funโฆ
by Ian DiddamsImages by Josie Mae-Ross and Infrogmation Tennessee Williamsโ quasi autobiographical drama โA Streetcar Named Desireโ was first performed in 1947 as the worldโฆ
Purveyors of perfect motion, house music promoters Palooza return to The Exchange in Devizes on Friday 20th December, for its grand finale of the yearโฆ..โฆ
Okay, so, Iโm aย little behind, recently opting to perfect my couch potato posture and consider hibernation, meaning Iโve not yet mentioned Kirsty Clinchโs newโฆ
Everything to do in Wiltshire this coming week, right in one handy listing; you might need wellies, or a small sailing vessel!
Okay, please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in regularly. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, the thing everyone seems to brazenly browse past pretending it didnโt apply to them, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can, please donate a little something to keep us going; awl, thank you. If you love it, donโt lose it, like Bez on a nineties dance floor. For info on how, see HERE. Please and thanking youโฆ
Ongoing: Dark, the latest exhibit at the Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham runs until 26th November.
Two exhibits at Wiltshire Museum in Devizes: Lest We Forget: the Black Contribution to the World Wars and Eric Walrond: A Caribbean Writer living in Wiltshire. Reviewed Here.
Wednesday 15th
Devizes Flower Club presents A Classic Christmas, a festive floral evening at the Corn Exchange, Devizes. The regular Acoustic Jam at the Southgate.
Fashion Reimagined at The Parade Cinema, Marlborough.
Marmen Quartet at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
James Mortonโs Groove Den at The Bell, Bath. Caught n the Hop begins at The Rondo Theatre, running up to Saturday.
A Lunchtime Recital with pianist Helen Farrar at Pound Arts, Corsham, followed by Gerard Loganโs Hauntings.
Uncanny: I Know What I Saw at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Thursday 16th
Open Mic night at the Crown, Bishops Cannings, with Jamie R Hawkins, Will Foulstone and Chrissy Chapman.
Jol Rose & Friends at The Tuppenny, Swindon.
Elf Lyonsโ Raven at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Tubular Bells Plus extracts from Dark Side of the Moon for the Moog Synthesizer 50th Anniversaries at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Massive Wagons at the Cheese & Grain.
Friday 17th
Running from today until Sunday, Devizes Eisteddfod. James Hollingsworthโs Pink Floyd Night at The Southgate, Devizes.
Folk Club at the Barge, HoneyStreet. Open Mic at The Parade Cinema, Marlborough. Josh Kumra at the Bear.
Rock for Heroes at Melksham Assembly Hall.
Christmas Market at the Civic, Trowbridge. Trowbridge Lantern Parade & Light Switch on.
Siren plays The Boathouse, Bradford-on-Avon. Really Good Band at the Three Horseshoes.
Tom Robinsonโs Up Close and Personal at Pound Arts has sold out.
25 year reunion gig for Roundabout at the Castle, Swindon, Editor’s Pick of the Week.
Tailgunner, Heathen Kings and Ambrius at Underground, Shades of Seattle at The Vic, Funkinsteins at the Beehive, Swindon. Phoney Towers at Swindon Arts Centre, Genesis Connected at the Wyvern.
The Roy Orbison Experience at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Dr Beatroot at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Splintering Heart plays Marillion at the Tree House, Frome, while The Orb are at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 18th
Saturday sees a Christmas Country Fair at Market Lavington Community Hall.
Window Wanderland begins across Devizes. The Russ Ballard Band at Long Street Blues Club, Devizes, Junkyard Dogs at The Southgate, and Drew Bryant at The Three Crowns.
@59 are at the Barge, HoneyStreet. Broken Dolls at the Lamb, Marlborough.
Sonic Alert at The Pilot, Melksham.
Kevin Brownโs Shackdusters at the Pump, Trowbridge.
Josie Field at The Old Road Tavern, Chippenham. Get Carter atThe Consti Club.
Wonk Unit, 2 Sick Monkeys and Anyminuteno at The Vic, Swindon. Rave Against The Regime at The New Inn. Everybody Singโs One Day More at the Wyvern, and Chloe Petts โ If You Canโt Say Anything Nice at Swindon Arts Centre.
Eco Fest at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon, with Saltlines Raynor and Gigspanner. Birdman Cult, Charleston Lane, and Future Plan at the Three Horseshoes.
Takeshi Matsumoto: Club Origami at Pound Arts, Corsham, and Goldust Productions: The Mayhem Cabaret 2023.
The Kate Bush Songbook at Chapel Arts, Bath
Brian Bilston at the Cheese & Grain in Frome, plus From The Jamโs โAll Mod Consโ 45th Anniversary Tour, and Supalung at the Tree House.
Sunday 19th
Sunflower Events; Christmas Fair & Craft Market at the Corn Exchange, Devizes.
Wiltshire Soul & Blues Club Monthly Jam in Lacock.
Courting Ghosts at Stallards, Trowbridge.
Kentwood Christmas Cracker at the Wyvern, Swindon. The Bootleg Shadows at Swindon Arts Centre. Strays Without Borders fundraiser at the Vic, and David Celia at the Beehive.
Trowbridge Symphony Orchestra at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Dry White Bones at the Three Horseshoes.
Rev. James and the Swingtown Cowboys at The Bell, Bath.
100 Years of Silents: Salomรฉ at Pound Arts, Corsham.
An acoustic set from Snuff at The Tree House, Frome.
Monday 20th
NHS Blood Donation Clinic at the Corn Exchange, Devizes.
Rock The Tots: Numbers at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Leburnicus at The Bell, Bath.
Sally-Anne Haywardโs Egg Shortage at Swindon Arts Centre.
Tuesday 21st
Exhibition On Screen: Klimt And The Kiss (Encore Screening) at Pound Arts, Corsham.
The Glen Manby Quartet at Jazz Knights in the Royal Oak, Swindon.
Annie Gardiner at The Bell, Bath.
Thatโs all weโve got so far, but more stuff is added all the time, so keep a beady eye on
With Black Friday just a few weeks away, Wiltshire based Blackmore Computers Ltd, is encouraging people to think pre-loved if theyโre planning on buying laptopsโฆ
If rural West Country had a penchant for trance in the happy daze of the mid-nineties, heady nights of fluorescent-clad crusties with eyes like flyingโฆ
Congratulations to Rosalind Ambler and Paul Snook from Devizes Writers Group… At the National Community Radio Awards held in Cardiff on 16th November Together!, theโฆ
Two of the county’s top retrospective cover bands meet for a double-bill of action in Market Lavington This Saturday. Calneโs indie rock five-piece Six Oโclockโฆ
Again we find ourselves congratulating and thanking young Chloe Boyle for fantastic fundraising efforts for Devizes homeless charity OpenDoorsโฆ. With friends and family she spentโฆ
Images: Chris Watkins Media It was lovely to spend Sunday afternoon at Devizesโ Wharf Theatre, to see how this yearโs pantomime Hansel & Gretel, isโฆ
Sheffieldโs DIY punk queer emo five-piece, Slash Fiction will be at the Pump in Trowbridge on Wednesday 20th November as part of their nationwide tour.โฆ
Devizes celebrated rum bar, The Muck & Dundar are hosting a dub reggae night with Omega Nebula on Saturday, and received this weekโs prestigious award of being Editorโs Pick of the Week in our weekly roundup! Because, diversity goes a long way on our local, and often insular music circuits! While thereโs nothing wrong in giving folk what theyโre accustomed to, offering variety scores house points from me, in towns otherwise typecast into subgenres; Devizes is a blues town, Marlborough has a penchant for goth and punk, Chippenham is folk, and so on. Where does Bradford-on-Avon sit in this pigeonholing exercise? Iโm in the dark, but perhaps with good reasonโฆ..
This line of thinking for me began as I accidentally kicked a guitar case departing the Southgate on Wednesdayโs regular acoustic jam night. Apology accepted by the owner of the case, he responded it happened quite often in pubs with a small space. It provoked an image of the Wiltshire Music Centre, whereby thereโs a whole wall of cubby-holes in which musicians can safely store their instruments away from cider-fuelled nutjobs like me; just like coats and bag pegs at school! But itโs not the only school-like thing about this purpose-built music heaven in Bradford, itโs so functional Iโd be glad to get a detention in there! I discovered this wandering their wonderful rooms in awe last winter when attending the Bradford Roots Festival. Behind every fire door was another gig going on like a classroom of music!
Concrete Prairie at Bradford Roots 2023
Now, if it seems to you slightly presumptuous to claim your venue is the โcentre of musicโ in Wiltshire, youโve not visited this place. Overall it seems Bradford-on-Avon offers, perhaps, the widest range of music in our smaller county towns. The lively Three Horseshoes provides free music every weekend evening, and while diverse too, favours upcoming punk and indie bands, whereas the gurt lush Boathouse tends to offer more mainstream acts. Then, theyโve got this place, Wiltshire Music Centre, the lucky buggers!
If diversity is what youโre looking for, youโll be right at home here. Examples, while we eagerly await the lineup for this yearโs Roots Festival on 20th Januaryโฆ.huh? A festival in mid-winter, are you having a laugh, Worrow?! No, though it was the only festival Iโve been to where I had to de-ice the windscreen afterwards, itโs all under the roof of this magnificent building. I was mightily impressed by the range of acts performing there too. It was like a whoโs who of local music, a convention more than a festival, and something really worth trekking down to the Bradford on the Avon for; heck, Iโd go to the Bradford near Leeds for this!ย
Concerts, gigs, whatchamacallits, are often backed up with interactiveness, workshops and classes, and even if you cannot make an event, they often live stream like lockdown was still a thing. Anyway, I digress, examples, thatโs where I was, wasnโt I?! While we endeavour to list it all on our event calendar, thereโs simply too much going on at the centre to reel it all off here and now, mostly my fault for waffling, so do look up their website HERE.
The Museum of Marvellous Things
But if diversity is what youโre after, just up till the end of the year alone, the Wiltshire Music Centre, currently running Oscar Wildeโs The Importance of Being Earnest, plays host to ECO:FEST, a mini festival of music and creative activity delivered in partnership with Climate Friendly Bradford on Avon, Bradford on Avon Town Council and other partners, next weekend, Nov 18th. A magical family giant puppet show which brings picture books to life for ages 3+, The Museum of Marvellous Things on the 12th, to one of the most impressive and engaging new talents in the chamber music scene, Marmen Quartet, on the 15th November.
Thereโs both the Trowbridge Symphony Orchestra, on the 19th, and the Bath one, on the 25th, and in contrast thereโs jazz with Steve Banks on the 26th. December brings some interesting events too, though. Iโm particularly drawn to Saturday 2nd December, when Congo supergroup Kasai Masai perform their unique blend of traditional and modern African sounds. And, as we said about the interactive element before, thereโs a drumming workshop beforehand with Kasai Masai. Then, on Sunday 3rd, Eastern European folk meets jazz withย The Budapest Cafรฉ Orchestraโs hot club swingโฆ.I should take a sleeping bag and camp in Bradford-on-Avon!
Kasai Masai
For the last twenty-five years the Wiltshire Music Centre hosts over 150 concerts a year, involving more than 1,000 professional, community and young musicians, building up a passionate community of music aficionados, players, aspiring young musicians, and amateur musicians. It provides a permanent home for local orchestras, choirs and music groups. It works extensively with young people locally, delivering an exciting Creative Learning programme in Wiltshire and beyond with 30 projects for over 5,000 young people every year, from concerts to education and community work for all ages, abilities and backgrounds.
Billy in the Lowground at Bradford Roots 2023
Their vision, โto maximise the opportunities for live music to inspire, enrich and transform peopleโs lives,โ has a rich history since a group of visionaries recognised the lack of musical provision in the area, and set forth on an ambition to bring performances and rehearsal facilities to the community. Wiltshire Music Centre Trust Ltd is a registered charity, the founding Artistic Director, Keith Nimmo, retired in 2013 and handed the baton to current Chief Executive and Artistic Director James Slater. It is, in Wiltshire terminology, a gurt lush, proper job arts centre with a focus on music! How much more diverse can you possibly want for?!
by Ian Diddamsimages by Playing Up Theatre Company When is a mousetrap not a mousetrap? When itโs written by Tom StoppardโฆIf you have seen โTheโฆ
Wiltshire Music Centre is delighted to announce the new appointments ofย Danielย Clark as Artistic Director, andย Sarahย Robertson as Executive Director.ย Danielย andย Sarahย join Wiltshire Music Centre in a new co-leadershipโฆ
By Mick Brianphotos by Chris Watkins Media Disney aficionados will need no introduction to โThe Little Mermaid,โ Disneyโs 1989 film about mermaids falling in loveโฆ
Remember, remember, weโre moving into November; leaves, loads of โem! Being as we are no longer doing weekly roundups, hereโs some highlights of events inโฆ
The simple answer is yes, very concerned. Following the publication of an article in Melksham Newsโs last issue questioning the councilโs public notice policy, Wiltshireโฆ
Four hundred years ago, if you had gone to a playhouse (such as they existed) to see a play performed youโd have seen men and boys play all the parts โ it was illegal for females to be an actor. Shakespeare, Marlow, Johnsonโฆ all had their output performed by the male of the species.
Now, in the twenty-first century, we live in far more enlightened times. But that said โฆ The Lord Chamberlain’s Men are a touring Shakespearian troupe that perform in exactly that way of four hundred years ago (incidentally as I write this The First Folio is 400 years old TODAY!). Sascha Regan has famously โ or in some quarters infamously โ created an all-male company that performs Gilbert and Sullivan (and very well too โ close your eyes in particular and I challenge you to doubt the soprano voice singing the female character leads). Matthew Bourne has created all male ballet performances, including Swan Lake, with its light toed dance of the cygnets.
In some ways, the intervening four hundred years has upheld a seeming tradition of all male casting โ although that doesnโt sit comfortably with some in those ballet and G&S worlds at least.
Pirates!
Enter stage left โฆ Jemma Brown. Jemma is hugely supportive of Sascha Reganโs all male G&S productions. Regular readers of Devizine, and Devizes residents, will also know her as one half of the dynamic duo of Browns along with husband Anthony, who have brought the town, county and region TITCO (itself resurrected from her own parentsโ company of the same name) and more latterly the โFulltone Orchestraโ aka FTO. Jemma, a very short while ago, attended an all-girl school โ where she appeared in all female casts (by necessity perhaps butโฆ) of various plays and performancesโฆ including G&S.
So it probably wasnโt a total surprise when Jemma announced that TITCO were to produce and perform an all-female cast production โฆ of โPirates of Penzanceโ the almost definitive Gilbert and Sullivan operetta, loved by many the world over for its silliness, brilliance โฆ and stunning music. Gilbert was the sharply witted satirist for sure โ but Sullivan was a magician with music. (No surprise either then that they also created โThe Sorcererโ). Especially when Anthony โ no small musical genius in his own right in many ways โ is a massive G&S fan anyway.
And so this show was born. Iโll interject with a personal note here (yes, I know thatโs bad form!). When one watches shows that have been around for 400 years, 180 years, even 70 yearsโฆ everybody has done EVERYTHING about them to death. There is nothing wrong with โtraditionโ of course (ask Tevyeโฆ); but if nobody bucks that tradition, then all we ever share is the SAME show over and over again. Art surely demands that different visions are tried โ even if they fail.
And THIS show โฆ. Doesnโt fail. Trust me โ Iโm a journalist!
Pirates!
Itโs a pure โPiratesโ โ nobody has changed the text, lyrics, and music. Of course. But you have females playing policemen, pirates, and a Major General. Well, thereโs nothing new there really is there? Cressida Dick, Anne Bonny, Sharon Nesmith โ for starters. (Google is your friend if you donโt follow that listโฆ). But โ I digress. What of the show?
An opening night audience of well above a hundred speaks volumes in itself. There is a low-level installed stage โ eschewing the Corn Exchangeโs in place elevated stage โ simply yet perfectly lit by the excellent as ever Phil McClounan. Sound by Chris Worthy, which was clear throughout the evening. And of course, the musical accompaniment by the versatile and ridiculously talented Dominic Irving.
And then โฆ the cast. Wellโฆ for those that have followed TITCO over the past fourteen years, there are some familiar faces and names, but the real MAGIC of THIS show has been Jemmaโs ability to bring others into the fold. From those that are already used to treading the boards to complete first timers. Oh yes โ there are some involved for whom this is the first EVER show. Not that you would know watchingโฆ itโs a rumbunctious, effervescent, and vigorous non-stop hundred-minute performance. But donโt worry โ youโve twenty minutes to have a pee in the interval and grab a drink to relax into the second half!
Pirates!
Being all-female naturally, one may expect the female roles to work well โ well, of COURSE they do! Especially with the supreme talents of Terรฉsa Isaacson as Ruth, solos, duets, and triplets delivered with consummate ease. And also, of course, Grace Sheridan as Edith and Georgia Watson as Kate, two daughters of the Major General. And of course, then there is Mabelโฆ OMFG! This production is worth seeing in its own right, but if you need any further convincing, just go to listen to Daisy Woodruffe, totally NAIL Mabel. Wonderful, wonderful stuff from all four!
But โ and here is the elephant in the room I sense in some quarters โ how do these women deliver all those male characters. You know, the Pirates (or Pilots โ what?) and Policemen, especially the Pirate King, Seargeant, and that bloke with the daft birthday, Frederic? Wellโฆ what can I say? You donโt get Bryn Terfel for sure โ but then I doubt Bryn could deliver Mabel for all his brilliance and training, so its 15-all and new balls, please, and YES โ of COURSE they deliver. In fact, it’s this aspect that really, really makes the show. You canโt put a fag paper between the excellence in delivery of all four major โmaleโ characters here. Mari Webster is simply superb โ and believable โ as the Pirate King, all swashbuckling and forthright. And I rarely say that orphan. Sarah Davies with her Brummy Seargeant and wonderfully choreographed daft policemen โ Debby Wilkinson, Mel Coombe and Amanda Kapoor, almost steal the show. And Fredericโฆ now, G&S and even Pirates (which is pretty daft as a concept!) is never pantomime (oh yes it is, no it isnโtโฆ etc). But the concept of a principal boy is a well-established principle (and principal) in British Theatre and Naomi Ibbetson demonstrates that principle in her principal role to perfectionโฆ and her beautiful voice against Daisyโs in “Oh, here is love, and here is truth” is as good as any you will hear anywhere, in any company. That leaves Tina Duffin as the major-general. Now โ we all know the song we want to hear that character sing. Itโs not an easy song to deliver โ its wordy, its tongue-twisty, its LONG! There is no respite. But Tina delivers it clearly, crisply, and absolutely spot on. Bravo!
There is one more male character that orphan gets overlooked. Samuel. Samuel is a sort of Gilbert โtack onโ โ Iโve always got the impression Gilbert had something more to say but had run out of characters to say it, so Samuel got invented. Samuel is played by Laura Deacon. And is probably the best Samuel Iโve ever seen (sorry to people I know who have played the role!). Meaty, meaningful, and really sold the character as not just a Gilbert write in. Double Bravo.
And that leaves the rest of the ensembleโฆ no lumpen chorus here (thanks to Gail of Devizes for that perfect phrase). Lots of pirates and daughters filling the stage โ and theatre floor too at times โ with โbusinessโ and keeping the joyful atmosphere going. I said right at the beginning that for some of these ensemble this was their first ever show, performing in front of people, let alone over a hundred. Bravo to them especially. Bravo to answering the call, stepping up, being in it to win it. Bravo for learning the songs and being joyful. Bloody bravo.
If you like G&S โ go. If you donโt like G&S because you got dragged through it at school, go, or your mum and dad dragged you out to performances 40 years ago when a less โfreeโ interpretation was available โ go. If you think all female casts are โwrongโ โ goโฆ you may just find you enjoy it because after a very short while you really wonโt notice it.
Pirates!
And if you still donโt like it โ just buy a ticket and go anyway. Because itโs the 21st century, and after all, it’s really not that much different than what was happening 400 years ago anyway in many ways.
โThe Pirates of Penzanceโ, performed by TITCO All-Female cast, is in performance at the Corn Exchange, Devizes at 7.30pm every night until 11th November.
Feeling a tad grumpy and under the weather, what with returning home from work soaked to the skin every day, venturing out on a Friday evening looking forward to the prospect of another downpour come morning is not a decision taken lightly. You’d be forgiven for assuming taking said plunge to watch two self-confessed old guys reading poetry in Devizes Town Hall would be a definite no-no, but this was comedy legends Henry Normal and Nigel Planer; twist my arm why don’t you?
Kudos as a starter for ten for hosting such an entertaining touring show in our humble town. While Devizes Books deserves a mention for the books are in said store, sure, it was a promotional tool for the respected author’s outpourings, but it was well received and the type of event you couldn’t have got any closer up and personal to two renowned characters without taking them to bed, which didn’t happen as far as I’m aware, (Mrs Devizine wouldโve sounded me out) though I confess to being unusually starstruck by Mr Planer’s presence! I kept imagining him waving his eight arms around when the genie granted his wish, “Rick! Rick! Ya gotta see this man! You’re gonna freak!”
‘Cos I was an impressionable nine-year-old when The Young Ones came on the telebox, heralding in a new wave of alternative comedy to the masses. I’d suggest though the magnetism between Rick and Adrian was the making of it, it was half-baked and only progressed later through Filthy Rich & Catflap and Bottom, Neil was arguably the most well-defined character. His comedy pop career legacy is also kingpin to why he was my personal favourite, even prior to my student hippy phase, I hasten to add.
Henry Normal & Nigel Planer Poetry & Comedy Night, Devizes
If The Goons had given our parents surreal comedy, and Monty Python twisted psychedelia into the melting pot, Britain wasn’t prepared for the anarchistic new wave of Footlights’ and The Comedy Store comedians. It was in essence, punk comedy, our parents doubting if we should be allowed to watch it a catalyst to why we had to. To read the prolific Henry’s rรฉsumรฉ is like a who’s who of comedy, and his co-writing TV credits, Mrs Merton Show, The Royle Family, Gavin and Stacey, Red Dwarf, The Mighty Boosh, Alan Partridge, and so many others all display clear roots in the alternative comedy of the eighties, so too did his performance last night.
Though Normal spent this impressive career mostly on the other side of the camera, his charisma as a working-class Midlands lad was projected with such proficiency and hilarity he could fill-in for, even upstage any stand-up comic, and that’s the pinnacle of any comedian. His customary, wry satirical stabs at conservatism were applauded, in Devizes Town Hall, and this made me smirk! Though he did make me promise not to repeat his jokes, which I had no intention of, only here to express how hilarious they were; tins of fruit salad though, I remember well, thanks for jogging my memory!
Though the sublime observation comedy routines of a reminiscing matured fellow dealing with the confusion of a modern era were but foundations for his poignant poetry. And if these introductions were comical the end result was thought-provoking and often sombre in reflection, the contrast his delivery style, the result was inspiring, even if poetry is not usually my forte.
Henry Normal & Nigel Planer Poetry & Comedy Night, Devizes
Surprisingly through both these two prestigious careers in TV and radio, they never professionally worked together in this field, rather they united through their love of poetry in the mid-nineties. Equally surprising to note Nigelโs stage impromptu presence was less stand-up routine than Henryโs, evident he saw himself more actor than writer, still he presented a lifetime range of poetry from one his books, a poetry collection, decidedly more out there and experimental, though equally as skilled. One particularly ingenious verse compared all traditional poetry methods by using each method respectively; it overload my dullard mind by comparison, but finger in the air, boy, that was smart.ย
Similarly to Henryโs stint, the interludes were amusing and enlightening, as he openly and passionately discussed the character of Neil, giving insight to its creation prior to appearing on the Young Ones. The only question I had for him was to ask how much of himself he put into the character, but the sheer enthusiasm of his backstory answered this for me. Heavy, I mustโve, like, had a backward premonition, man!
Nigel fascinated us by reading selected passages from his book, Jeremiah Bourne in Time, a genre-spanning time travelling slice of intelligent fiction, and after another bout of fine poetry from Henry, leaving us with a jaw-dropping final prose, there was an informal Q&A session, where hands went up to ask all manner of queries, only one about roller-coasters being surreal enough to fit the agenda of a younger Henry and Nigel, though today reminiscing was both paramount and favourable for the equally matured audience.
And two ageing fellows reminiscing and reflecting on two glorious vocations was less Uncle Albert than you might assume, given their illustrious life journeys. Throughout they opened up about their personal lives, yeah, name-dropped a bit but who wouldnโt?! Through hardship, fame, parenting and divorce they mustered enough ammo to present their view on maturing and the modern world, yet never without this tinge of nostalgic anarchism, the like which embedded their names on the cornerstone of British comedy.
Henry Normal & Nigel Planer Poetry & Comedy Night, Devizes
An entirely different night for me, whoโs last presence at a poetry slam was never, though I had our hometown poet laureate Gail Foster on hand not only to steal her photos, but to cast a more critical and professional eye, and she seemed to love it too! As an amateur so-called comedy writer I came away inspired to push on with my own wares, though I had to draft this piece out of respect for such a great night from two exhilarating luminaries, and get my rainwear out for another round of milkmanship.
Wasnโt there an episode of the Young Ones with a flood, whereby the gang try to kill Neil with an electric hedge-trimmer, only to be distracted by Mr. Balowski breaking down the door to Neil’s room with an axe?! Glad to say nothing this exciting happened on the milk round, and, like Vyvyan’s hamster, Neil escaped with his life, because last night was thoroughly enjoyable; do catch the tour if it comes your way!
Dumping pumpkins in the woods is bad for wildlife says Forestry England. As millions of pumpkins hit supermarket shelves and make their way to gardens,โฆ
If Phil Cooperโs 2018 โThoughts and Observations,โ was one of the first albums we ever reviewed here on Devizine, itโs been a while since Iโveโฆ
Devizes Outdoor Celebratory Arts announced their upcoming project, YEA Devizes today. Made possible by a grant from National Grid Electricity Transmissionโs Community Grant Programme, theโฆ
Alberta Cross, along with the up-and-coming local bands Something Moves and BroccoliBoy, will perform at a charity gig on Saturday 30th November at 23 Bathโฆ
Chippenhamโs young folk singer-songwriter Meg, or M3G if you want to get numeric, will release her 6th single The Mist on Friday 18th October, andโฆ
Our very own illustrious orchestra, The Fulltone Orchestra, are staging live performances of Enyaโs 1988 breakthrough album, Watermark in Basingstoke, Bath and Cheltenham later thisโฆ
Boo! Weโve got everything to do in Wiltshire this coming week, right in one handy listing, as usualโฆ..
Okay my little pumpkins, please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR;they might not be added here, so do check in regularly. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, the thing everyone seems to brazenly browse past pretending it didnโt apply to them, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can, please donate a little something to keep us going; awl, thank you. If you love it, donโt lose it, like Bez on a nineties dance floor. For info on how, see HERE. Please and thanking youโฆ
Ongoing, Dark is the latest exhibit at the Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham, running until 24th November.
Wednesday 1st
Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Lunchtime Recital at the Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, followed by Jimeoin: The Craic.
Track Dogs at Chapel Arts is sold out, but the Gin Bowlers play the Bell in Bath, and opening night of Sheila’s Island at the Rondo Theatre, running until Saturday 4th.
Thursday 2nd
Rich Hallโs Shot from Cannons at Melksham Assembly Hall.
Sayers & English Weather at The Tuppenny in Swindon, Geoffrey Wansellโs Monsters In Our Midsts at Swindon Arts Centre, and Shock Horror at the Wyvern.
Martin Simpson โ A Master of His Art at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Friday 3rd
Calne Bonfire & Fireworks at Beversbrook.
Marlborough Fireworks at Marlborough Town FC.
Devizes LGBTQ+ Drag Queen Bingo Disco @at The Wyvern Club, Devizes. Poet Henry Normal and very special guest Nigel Planer at Devizes Corn Exchange. Susan Santos & Alastair Greene at Long Street Blues Club.
Gaz Brookfield is at the Pump, Trowbridge, sold out Iโm afraid. Meg and Oxygen Thief in support there.
2 Tone All Ska at The Consti Club, Chippenham.
Rosie Hood Band at Pound Arts, Corsham, and Mitchell and Vincent at Fovant Village Hall.
The Terrace Soul Weekender at Alexandra House in Swindon. Get Carter at The Vic.
Hejira is celebrating the music of Joni Mittchell at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Karport Collective are at The Boathouse, and Severed Illusions, Peruvian Necktie, Dystopian Dread & Accelerated Mutation all at The Three Horseshoes.
Ignotis, Feedback & Nothing Rhymes With Orange play Burdall’s Yard, Bath.
The Hot Damn! at The Tree House, Frome, The Blues Others โ A Tribute to the Blues Brothers at The Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 4th
Curious Kids: Victorian Homes at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes. Thereโs the Swap Shop at St James from 11-2pm. An extraordinary piece of theatre telling the story of Britainโs Womenโs Land Army of World War II, Lilies on the Land at the Wharf Theatre, and No Fixed Abode play The Three Crowns.
Midlife Krisis Bonfire Night at The Barge, HoneyStreet.
Apache Cats at The Wheatsheaf Inn, Calne.
Chippenham Kickboxing Academy: Hero of the Hall at Melksham Assembly Hall. Raindrops at Melksham Conservative Club.
Martin Jenkins Groove Ensemble at the Old Road Tavern, Chippenham.
Be Like Will at The Wiltshire Yeoman, Trowbridge. Franki Soul at Emmanuelโs Yard.
Two Diamond Souls โ an evening with Odin Dragonfly at the Old Rectory Stanton St Quintin.
Nick Harperโs Tempus Fugitive with support from Patrick Duff at Pound Arts, Corsham.
There will be a Palestine Solidarity March from 2pm, meeting at Regents Circus, Swindon. Mortellica at The Vic. Myra DuBois: Be Well at Swindon Arts Centre. Trois Amigos at The Woodlands Edge.
But we stay in Swindon for Editorโs Pick of the Week, when Talk in Code, The Dirty Smooth, Kotonic, and Mirrored Faces join together at Underground (formerly Level III) for a BBC Children in Need fundraiser.
Fistful or Rage at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Young Francis Hi Fi at the Royal Oak, Bath, Santarnal at The Bell. A free party at The Queenโs Head in Box.
Out In The Streets Launch Night: Drum & Bass & Jungle at Salisbury Guildhall
Martin Stephenson & The Daintees at The Tree House, Frome, and Fleetwood Bac at the Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 5th
Day course of Wood Engraving with Robin Mackenzie at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes. Devizes Bonfire Night at Devizes Town FC. The Grand Order of Water Rats presents a Charity Variety Spectacular at the Wharf Theatre. And itโs the Jon Amor Trioโs monthly residency at the Southgate starting at 5pm, special guest is Adam Holgate.
Blondie & Ska at The Royal Oak, Corsham. Stories In The Dust at Sherston Village Hall.
An Evening with Glenn Hoddle at the Wyvern, Swindon.
Patsy Gamble Collective at The Bell, Bath.
Monday 6th
The Opening of the Garden of Remembrance by the Royal British Legion at the War Memorial in Devizes, I shall leave further details of days and times of services relating to Remembrance below.
Dave Gormanโs Powerpoint To The People at the Wyvern, Swindon.
The Good Stuff at The Bell, Bath.
The Hunna at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Tuesday 7th
Simon Spillett & Ross Hicks Trio at Jazz Knights in The Royal Oak, Swindon. I am The Manic Whale at The Vic, Hancockโs Half Hour at the Wyvern.
Marina Elezovic at The Bell, Bath.
Ondara is at The Tree House in Frome.
Thatโs all for now, folks, but our event calendaris updating, and to plan ahead, check it out. Devizine is going out to over 100K local folk and listing your event will remain free, nudge me if youโve told me and itโs still not listed, all you have to do to insure it is here is to tell us about it!
Boo! Weโve got everything to do in Wiltshire this coming week, leading us into Halloween and the end of the monthโฆ..as we always doโฆ.boo! Itโs that time of year when I get repetitive strain injury from typing โHalloween Party!โ
Okay my little pumpkins, please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in regularly. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, the thing everyone seems to brazenly browse past pretending it didnโt apply to them, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can, please donate a little something to keep us going; awl, thank you. If you love it, donโt lose it, like Bez on a nineties dance floor. For info on how, see HERE. Please and thanking youโฆ
Happy Jack is running at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes, until Saturday, weโve a review of it HERE.
Wednesday 25th
Devizes in Bloom invites you to plant a bulb for Christmas, at Hillworth Park. Donโt forget the regular Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Music for Miniatures has a Bubble Bach at The Neeld, Chippenham.
Changing Times: The Impact of Total War in Wiltshire and its effects Post-War, 1939-1955, with Julie Davis at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Memory Cinema, films designed in a setting suitable for those with dementia, are showing High Anxiety (PG) at Swindon Arts Centre, while thereโs a Quiz Night at The Castle.
Mike Oldfieldโs Tubular Bells and Pink Floydโs Dark Side of the Moon are reenacted at the Rondo Theatre, Bath, and the Sun Kings play The Bell.
Thursday 26th
Those wonderful River Warriors of Calne invite families to the Pocket Park for half term autumn activities. Thereโs also a Demonstration of Mediumship at Calne Town Hall.
The Brewery Inn, Seend start their Halloween Haunted Garden, which runs until 31st October, which is HalloweenโฆBoo!
Open Mic at Stallardโs, Trowbridge. Open Mic at the Crown, Aldbourne.
Hags: A Magical Extravaganza by Scratchworks at Hullavington Village Hall, and Luke Wrightโs Silver Jubilee at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Spontaneous Potter at The Wyvern Theatre in Swindon, while Nervendings and Fluff play the Vic. Fran McGillvray & Mike Burke at the Tuppenny.
Parameter Promotions Presents Lewis Poole Live at The Electric Bar, Bath, and the Rondo Theatre has Butchered.
Friday 27th
Friday sees the opening of a new exhibit at the Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham, called Dark, and it runs until 26th November.
Devizes Arts Festival Comedy Night at The Corn Exchange, Devizes, and theyโre celebrating Daveโs birthday at The Southgate with an ongoing Beer & Cider Festival all weekend with lots of music, no doubt. Halloween Party at the Bridge, Horton.
Trash Panda at The Coopers Arms, Pewsey. Static Moves at The Bear, Marlborough, and Marcus N Kellie Lutener is at The Lamb with a Halloween Party.
A Festival of Remembrance concert at the Civic, Trowbridge, while the Pump another round of The Future Sound of Trowbridge with Mobscure, Ravetank and LXRDVIRS.
Halloween Family Disco at The Neeld, Chippenham.
Abbamania at Melksham Assembly Hall, Halloween Party at the Pilot.
Hags: A Magical Extravaganza by Scratchworks at Hawkesbury Upton Village Hall.
Highly recommended Siouxsie and the Banshees tribute, Painted Bird at The Vic in Swindon, Sister Sister at North Swindon Club, Bad Good Times at The Queens Tap.
Sean Collinsโ Smokinโ Funny at the Rondo theatre, Bath, Josienne Clarke at Chapel Arts.
Bon Giovi at the Cheese & Grain, Frome, Faux Bonamassa at the Tree House.
Saturday 28th
Autumn in the Park at Hillworth Park in Devizes. The Four Sopranos have a CPRE fundraiser at the Town Hall. Susan Santos at Long Street Blues Club. The Southgateโs ongoing Beer & Cider Festival, with music from Red Light and Free Peace.
The celebrated Halloween Party at The Three Crowns, Puscifer Presents Global Probing Halloween Bash at The Snuff-Box.
Editorโs Pick of the Week!
But, if youโre going to a Halloween party Iโm a firm believer you should pick it up as a ska-loween one! Therefore it makes purr-fect sense that the Skaloween at Devizes Scooter Club HQ, the Cavalier should be Editorโs Pick of the Week, with ska band Skamageddon. In case you were wondering, the music is ska, the theme is halloween!!
Dorothy House fundraiser at The Lamb in Urchfont, with Humdinger.
Oktoberfest at Seend Community Centre.
Hooch at The Coopers Arms, Pewsey.
Apache Cats at The Talbot, Calne.
The Monster Ball at Melksham Assembly Hall.
Shivers and Shadows at The Neeld, Chippenham, followed by the Emeralds Boxing event.
The Worried Men at the Pump, Trowbridge, Train to Skaville at The Gloucester Road Conservative Club, Halloween with the Buttmonkies at Stallards, Be Like Will at The Red Admiral.
A mod, northern soul and ska night at The Players in Westbury. Band of Others, with optional Halloween fancy dress at the Cock Inn, Warminster.
Triple JD Band at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford On Avon.
Rachel Fairburnโs Showgirl at the Rondo Theatre, Bath. Steven Brinbergโs celebrated tribute to Barbra Streisand, Simply Barbra, is at Chapel Arts. Siren plays The Devonshire Arms.
The Vintage Bazaar at the Cheese & Grain in the daytime, but with Glenn Hughes sold out, people of Frome need to head for 23 Bath Street for the Frome Fair Fundraiser, a Night of BOO! – Boot Hill All Stars will entertain you.
Jo Caulfield at Swindon Arts Centre. Destination Anywhere has a mod-soul-ska club night at The Vic. Down & Dirty Halloween Party at The Woodland Edge, the amazing SexJazz at The Castle, and Damn at the North Swindon Club.
Sunday 29th
Thereโs a Haunted Hayride at Poulshot Village Hall; now, that sounds fun!
Devizes Town Band at The Corn Exchange, with Chloe Jordan for an autumn themed concert. Blues at The Southgate, Devizes with Thomas Atlas.
Guinea Lane Saxophone Quartet at the Heritage Centre, Pewsey.
October Jam at The Wheatsheaf, Calne.
Thereโs a fundraiser for Friends IVF treatment at The Vic, Swindon, with Mirrored Faces, Copper Creek, Thieving Magpies, N/SH, and more.
Junkyard Dogs play the Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
King Dinosaur at The Bell, Bath.
Monday 30th
Rock The Tots: have some Spooky Fun at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Reverend Richard Coles: Borderline National Trinket at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Nightshift at the North Swindon Club.
Mobrasuto at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 31st
Trick or treat! It is Halloween and I know of no Halloween party; weโve exhausted ourselves already rather than exorcised ourselves!
There are the regular Jazz Knights at The Royal Oak, Swindon, with the Robert Fowler Quartet, Gigspanner Big Band at Swindon Arts Centre, and Gary Delaneyโs Gary In Punderland at The Wyvern Theatre.
Then, Bobโs your dadโs brother itโs November, and though I confess thereโs still a lot of updating to do, which I must stop playing online backgammon and get on with, thereโs lots to be keeping you out of trouble, so keep an eye on our event calendar for updates for next month.ย
Devizine is going out to over 100K local folk and listing your event will remain free, nudge me if youโve told me and itโs still not listed, all you have to do to insure it is here is to tell us about it!
Forget the feud between Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur, this is England’s West Country rivals The Skimmity Hitchers and Monkey Bizzle in a viciousโฆ
Take a play written in 1982, about two people born in 1914, from West Yorkshire. Written by a professional playwright with huge global stage hits to his name…โฆ..
Perform it in a theatre in 2023, with two actors born in the early 1960s, in Wiltshire. Directed by a retired head teacher with much local based success in community theatre.
What do you get?
Let us take a step back from that question for nowโฆ
John Godber, of โBouncersโ (1977) fame was a schoolteacher and then professional writer, who crafted this biographical play about his own grandparents. It was his first ever play, written when he was 25 years old, as it happens, though it didnโt see the light of day publicly for some while. It is written in reverse chronology. That is, the play opens with the two protagonists, Jack and Liz, in their later years and works its way backwards through their livesโฆย from death, to married life and its tribulations and joys, to being grandparents, and parents, marriage, honeymoon, courtship and that first date.
Jack is a cantankerous, bullish miner. Liz is a far from kowtowed Yorkshire lass who gives as good as she gets, and in snippets we glean from the story holds all the aces in the relationship in reality.
Jack is played by Ian Diddams, Liz by Wendy Dopheide. Both are the same age in real life, as we meet them as their characters at the start of the play. Whilst by the end of the play they are aged seventeen, so wonderful are their portrayals that it easy to see via their mannerisms and control of voice that they pass for such youthful individuals. Ian is a no stranger to the Wharf Theatre, whilst this is Wendyโs first appearance there. The play is directed by Lyn Taylor, who has both directed and performed across Wiltshire.ย Technical is headed up by Jon Lewthwaite, more than ably assisted by a multitude of talented people sliding sliders, making noises, and pressing buttons! There are also two other characters in this play, unlistedโฆย Wendy and Ian as themselves, as narrators. Godberโs writing and their acting flips effortlessly between southern English 21st century actors, and an early to mid-20th century Yorkshire couple. Then there are the side characters, played by the same two actors. Here Wendy gets kudos for also playing not only herself and Liz, but also a grandson, a ticket seller, a barman and a neighbour. Ian merely has to double up once โ he gets the easy ride clearly. Oh โ and I nearly forgotโฆย take your time and think carefullyโฆย you may even spot the un-named John Godber in the playโฆ
So โ back to that questionโฆย What do you get?ย You get something quite excellent.
Now โ lets be fair โฆย great shows start with a great playwright, so take a bow John Godber. It is a play that is fifty-five pages long of quite small font. Both characters have over four hundred and seventy lines of dialogue each. Hamlet is Shakespeare’s longest play. In its entirety it is over FOUR HOURS LONG to perform. Its titular character has three hundred and fifty-eight lines. Horatio has the next largest number of lines โฆย at a hundred and nine.
Let that sink in a moment.
So โ how does it stack up? Itโs a simple, even stark, set that sets the tone nonetheless perfectly.ย A hatstand, a bookshelf, a coal scuttle and a gramophone represent Jack and Lizโs home. Two chairs centre stage complete the set. But these are no ordinary chairs. They not only represent easy chairs and dining chairs but also a bath, a birthing table, a washstand, railings, and a bench. Less is more they say and here director Lynโs vision really comes to the fore. Allied to this is a wonderfully choreographed lighting set โ want a fireplace with flickering flames? No problem.ย A northern nightclub with glittering lights?ย A doddle. How about a cinema?ย Easy-peasy.ย Not to forget some wonderfully evocative sound effectsโฆย seaside, cinema again, and of course and obviously (!) the Tower Ballroom at Blackpool.
Costumes are simple but effective with minimal fuss. Working class garb with outer garments garnered from the aforementioned hatstand.
And then thereโs the music. Mario Lanza, John Hanson, Kitty Kallen, Reginald Dixonโฆย amongst others. Their doleful tones โ and tunes โ haunt the first act in particular. And a memorable rendition of a duet by Maurice Chevalier and Hermione Gingold.
And thatโs it. Just under two hours including an interval gives you an insight into a 20th century Yorkshire minerโs family. Two wonderful performances by Wendy and Ian, great directing by Lyn, and top technical input by โthe crewโ.
Do yourself a favour and get to see this, this week at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes.
And returning to that question at the very start of this piece once againโฆ
What do you get? You get community theatre at its finest.
Seems like an age since I last visited Bradford-on-Avonโs wonderful Wiltshire Music Centre, though Iโve been listing their vast range of events on our calendar.โฆ
Wiltshire Music Events UK has hosted tons of memorable events locally, from CrownFest and The Marley Experience at Devizes Corn Exchange, to more everyday gigsโฆ
The “Business Fit For Future” programme has launched with startups across Wiltshire seizing the opportunity to participate in free online business planning workshops. This initiativeโฆ
Featured Photo: Forestry England/Crown copyright Planned timber harvesting is set to begin at popular walking destination, West Woods, from the end of September until Marchโฆ
Despite the population of Devizes throwing confetti and paint at each other in their most celebrated annual ritual, I believe I picked the right weekendโฆ
The newly drafted forest plan for West Woods and Collingbourne is open for public consultation until Monday 7 October. The plan outlines how each woodland willโฆ
Gliding through October at colossal speed, with temporary bursts of cold spells hinting winter at us, and some, some I repeat, faintly whispering the C word; we’re gathered here today not in anticipation of the yule but to look at what’s going on this coming week and weekend, as we usually doโฆ..ย
Okay my little poppets, please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in as regular your digestive system after a vindaloo throughout the week, or you might miss something really up your street. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, the thing everyone seems to brazenly browse past pretending it didnโt apply to them, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can, please donate a little something to keep us going; awl, thank you. If you love it, donโt lose it, like Bez on a nineties dance floor. For info on how, see HERE. Please and thanking youโฆ
Wednesday 18th
Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
An Evening With Harry Redknapp at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, Fiona Allenโs On The Run at Swindon Arts Centre.
Monkey Chuckle at the Bell in Bath, and award-winning youth theatre company Merriman Theatre Group presents Six Teen Edition, a full-length adaptation of Toby Marlow and Lucy Mossโ international phenomenon SIX, modified for performance by teen actors for family audiences, opens at the Rondo Theatre, Bath, running until 21st October.
Wrecking Ball: A Nashville Experience at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Thursday 19th
Kevin Bloody Wilson at The Wyvern Theatre, and Tom Stadeโs Natural Born Killer at Swindon Arts Centre. Dark Prophecy and Ritual Divide at The Vic, and Kid Carpet & Grasslands at the Tuppenny, Swindon.
Wildlife photographer Doug Allanโs Itโs a Wrap at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Friday 20th
Tom Harris and Pat Wardโs new venture No Alarms & No Devizes at The Barge on HoneyStreet.
Yes, Scouting For Girls are in Marlborough on Friday, thanks to Sound Knowledge, but it sold out like ages ago; youโve got to be quick on these things! Though you can find the duo Stripped at The Lamb.
Willow Hill at the Civic Hall, Trowbridge.
A relaxed and BSL Interpreted performance of The Gruffaloโs Child at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Fleetwood Mac & Tom Petty Legacy at Chapel Arts, Bath. Bluesoul are at the Boathouse in Bradford-on-Avon.
Genesis Visible Touch at the Cheese & Grain, So Toto at The Tree House, Frome.
Saturday 21st
Matchbox Mutiny at The Three Crowns, Devizes, The Will Edmunds Trio at The Southgate, Big Blue This at The Crown. CSF Pro Wrestlingโs Deadly Draw 2023 at The Corn Exchange, Devizes.
Nothing Rhymes With Orange play The Bell, Great Cheverell.
Editorโs Pick of the Week goes to The Female of the Species, local super-groupโs annual outing at Seend Community Centre, this year is for Alzheimer’s Supportย and has the theme, the MTV Years, and will be a-maze-zing! Tickets are ยฃ12.50 and selling fast, from HERE.
Colin Paul & The Persuaders at Melksham Rock n Roll Club.
Itโs also Trowbridge Carnival, and thereโs a Pipe & Slippers Rave at the Civic.
Women In Rock at The Neeld, Chippenham.
Rhys Jamesโs Split Milk at Swindon Arts Centre, Matty One Man with The Forgetting Curve and Here Come the Crows at The Vic, 2-ToneAllSkas at The Woodlands Edge, Metaprism, Drallion and Grove Warden at Underground, Homer plays The Bakers Arms, Post 12 at North Swindon Club, and One Trick Combo t the Queenโs Tap.
Ward Knutur Townes Trio at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Mini Ravers Lil Monsters Halloween Party at the Cheese & Grain, followed by The Freddie and Queen Experience. Junkyard Dogs play The Sun in Frome.
Sunday 22nd
Manos Puestas at The Southgate, Devizes from 5pm.
Sound Knowledge presents Bombay Bicycle Club at St. Peterโs Church, Marlborough.
Sunbirds play The Neeld, Chippenham.
Knives, LagunaGoons, Modern Evils and Viduals at The Vic, Swindon, Legends of American Country at The Wyvern Theatre, Rockabilly Rumble at North Swindon Club.
Jake Leg Jug Band plays the Bell in Bath.
Independent record store Raves from the Grave in Frome have a mega “we’ve run out of space” sale at the Assembly Rooms from 10-3pm with DJs and refreshments.
Monday 23rd
Based on John Godberโs Yorkshire grandparents, and other members of his family, Happy Jack is a memory play, which examines the relationship between Jack and Liz, and opens at The Wharf Theatre, Devizes on Monday, running until October 28th. We hope to bring you a review on this prior to the opening on Monday.
Flibbertigibbet Theatre: Babble at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Hot Club of Avon at the Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 24th
Half Term Tennis Holiday Camp starts at Devizes Tennis Club, running until 26th October.
John Law Re-Creations at Jazz Knights in The Royal Oak, Swindon, Lilโ Jimmy Reed with Bob Hall & Hilary Blythe at Swindon Arts Centre, and La Bamba at The Wyvern Theatre.
Sue Harding is at The Bell, Bath.
Thatโs all weโve got for you so far, but remember to keep an eye on ourevent calendar for updates. Iโm delighted to rap stats with you, and announce Devizine is flying over the record-breaking annual hits from last year, and thereโs still two and half months to go. Devizine is going out to over 100,000 local folk and listing your event will remain free, all you have to do to insure it is here is to tell us about it!
If there’s been welcomed stand-ins for the monthly Jon Amor Trio residency at the Southgate in Devizes recently, Ruzz Evans and Eddie Martin, Jon โtheโฆ
Supporters of local live music know, least they should do by now, that Swindon is the place to head this following weekend, 12th-15th September, becauseโฆ
Devizes-own indie-pop-punk youth sensation Nothing Rhymes With Orange smashed the Exchange on Friday as a farewell to their local fanbase. They pursue a music courseโฆ
Reports of another road traffic accident at the notorious Black Dog Crossroads near Lavington today coincides with Wiltshire Councillor for the Lavington constituency, Dominic Munsโฆ
For that certain some-Karen who drove through town last weekend, jumped on social media to waffle off the clichรฉ rant โnothing happens in Devizes,โ butโฆ
An early and rarely-performed play, ‘Two Gentlemen of Verona’ has feisty heroines, lovelorn & bickering young men, dictatorial parents, foolish suitors, cross-dressing, letters galore, wild outlaws, witty servants, a big fight, and a lugubrious clown with a dog, and Shakespeare Live are touring Wiltshire with it, So buyeth thy ticket f’r the p’rf’rmance….
Shakespeare Live, best known for over 30 years of outdoor productions in Wiltshire, have been touring their popular annual autumn show for several years, focusing on plays less often performed or on original Shakespeare-based pieces. This year, as often before the pandemic, the production was picked by the RSC for performance at their open-air Dell space in Stratford upon Avon in August.
Directed by Gill Morrell. featuring well-known Shakespeare Live actors together with some talented newcomers, including Bernard the golden retriever, and featuring fabulous medieval costumes and live original music, Shakespeare Live promises ninety minutes of fast, furious, and very, very funny entertainment.
The autumn tour starts on Saturday 14th October at The Cause in Chippenham, then The Merlin in Frome on Sunday 15th, two nights at The Mission (Tuesday 17th and Wednesday 18th), The Town Hall in Corsham on Thursday 19th, and the final show at The Marden House Centre in Calne on Friday 20th. All shows start at 8pm and tickets are ยฃ14 from www.shakespearelive.com.
Trowbridge-Devizes finest musical export for a decade or two, acoustic folk vocal harmony trio, The Lost Trades, step out for a nationwide tour this September.โฆ
The Fulltone Orchestra has confirmed today that their annual festival will take place on The Green in Devizes from 25th โ 27th July 2025โฆ. โItโsโฆ
Chandra, Hindu God of the Moon, with his own NASA X-ray observatory named after him, and also frontman of a self-named friendly Bristol-based four-piece pop-punkโฆ
Paul’s self-made cover to his latest single, Some Days depicts a fellow sitting under a tree pondering life, while an autumn zephyr blows leaves aroundโฆ
Itโs when you hear those American addresses, like house number 21,456 Park Avenue, you realise Long Street in Devizes is a long street only comparableโฆ
Impressive, in a word, is the Lawrence Art Societyโs annual exhibition at Devizes Town Hall this year, in both quality and quantity; you’ll be amazedโฆ
Here I am again, like Huey Lewisโฆ..with the news. No national headlines though, no, thatโs all too depressing, just the lowdown on things to do this coming week across our gurt lush county of agricultural rolling downs, neolithic monuments, and a seemingly endless succession of Greggs bakeriesโฆ..
Okay my little sausage and bean melts, please be aware this is not comprehensive and new events can and might yet still be added to our blossoming, occasionally updating EVENT CALENDAR; they might not be added here, so do check in as regular your digestive system after a vindaloo throughout the week, or you might miss something really up your street. You can also find links to everything mentioned there, and plan ahead.
One other really important thing before we get going, the thing everyone seems to brazenly browse past pretending it didnโt apply to them, we need donations to fund this, so, if you can, please donate a little something to keep us going; awl, thank you. If you love it, donโt lose it, like Bez on a nineties dance floor. For info on how, see HERE.
Final days to pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed HERE, this ends on October 15th.
Oh, and this above, and this below, clowns, in Chippenham, a must-see!
Wednesday 11th
Regular Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Calne Music & Arts Festival continues. The Avebury Vocal Ensemble, and a Calne Wordfest Writersโ Group at Marden House during the afternoon, and standup comedy with Graham Coulam introducing Paul Ricketts and Steve Gribbin in the evening.
Thereโs a lunchtime recital at Pound Arts, Corsham with pianist Simeon Walker.
Opening at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon and running until the 15th, Salos Presents Elf, The Musicalโฆtoo early? Too late!
Thursday 12th
Calne Music & Arts Festival has The Primary School Choirs in concert at Kingsbury Green Academy Hall, and Calne Speech and Drama School present โSea, the Fool, the Devil and the Catsโ by Ted Hughes at Marden House, followed by some jazz with The Nick Sorensen Trio.
Sean Collinsโ Smokin Funny arrives at Swindon Arts Centre, Andy Oliveri & Kizzie at The Tuppenny, Swindon.
Kiki Dee & Carmelo Luggeriโs The Long Ride Home Tour comes to Chapel Arts, Bath.
Friday 13th
Join Devizes OpenDoorsโs Big Sleep Out and help raise funds to support homeless and vulnerable adults in our community. You can sleep out at St Jamesโ Church in Devizes, organise your own sleep out at work, at school, even in the garden at home, or pay to stay in bed by making a donation. Find out more and register at devizesopendoors.org.uk
Calne Music & Arts Festival has Ukrainian Jazz Harpist Alina Bzhezhinska in Concert at Marden House, followed by The Lost Trades.
Wilts & Berks Canal Trust Quiz Night at The Neeld, Chippenham.
My Octopus Mind plays the Pump in Trowbridge, with The Message in support.
Jazz at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon, with Dario Napoli Hot Club. Start the Sirens & Ophella Waiting at The Three Horseshoes.
An Evening Of Mediumship With Nikki Kitt at Swindon Arts Centre, Soulweaver Reigniting The Fire at Underground, formerly Level III, Bedrock at The Queens Tap, Evanescence of Fire at The Vic.
Rusty Shackle, Ninotchka and Concrete Prairie play Komedia, in Bath, Damien OโKane & the Ron Block Band are at Chapel Arts.
Saturday 14th
Marlborough Mop Fair. The Magnitones play St Michael’s in Aldbourne.
Itโs the Lions Arts Coaching Day in Devizes, and a first, I believe, for Danny & The Randoms who play at The Three Crowns, and The Unpredictables, Finely Truslerโs new ensemble play the Moonrakers.ย The Jack Grace Band is at the Southgate.
Pig Race night at Erlestoke Golf Club! Bring your own ketchup!
Dub roots reggae at The Barge on HoneyStreet with Jah Lion Movement.
Be Like Will play Stallards in Trowbridge.
Editor’s Pick of the Week is Amelia Coburn is at the Pump in Trowbridge, with Ruby Darbyshire and MEG in support.
Thereโs seven acts playing Hullavington Live at The Village Hall, and itโs free entry.
At Calne Music & Arts Festival, โFlowers in art from Botticelli to Hockney,โ a talk by Gail Brown followed by โMeet the Artistsโ with Cathy and Nick Pearce and โHMS Pinaforeโ โ presented by Opera Anywhere.
Taylor Swift tribute Katy Ellis at The Pewsham, Chippenham.
Back to the eighties party night at Spencerโs Club, Melksham.
Iโve Every Whitney at Kingsdown Golf Club, Corsham.
Brodsky Quartet 50th Anniversary of the Shostakovich Cycle at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon. Dreamwave at The Three Horseshoes.
Happy Dogs at HMV Bath at 3pm.
Carl Hutchinson โ Watch Till The End at Swindon Arts Centre, David Flynn Memorial night at The Vic, Swindon, Concrete Prairie at Rodbourne Cheney Social Club, The BeatRoutes at The Castle, Rockabilly Rumble at The Queens Tap, Homer at the Rolleston, Dimensions at North Swindon Club, Vicky Jackson is PINK at Underground, and Swindon Ska Fest at The Moonrakers.
Sunday 15th
All About The Music Record Fair at Devizes Conservative Club from 10am-4pm.
PSG Choirs are at Marlborough Town Hall for an Autumn Concert. Starts at 6pm, tickets are ยฃ8.
Gothic Acoustic Matinee with Deadlight Dance at the Blue Boar, Aldbourne.
Calne Music & Arts Festival has Evensong at St. Maryโs Parish Church, and a Photographic Talk โ โArcticaโ with Pam and Eddy Lane at Marden House.
Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon have Groove Baby Grooving With Pirates!
Below the Salt at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Waterlines at Underground, Swindon, an Elvis tribute at The Castle, and Damn at the North Swindon Club, and SGO at The Tuppenny.
Monday 16th
Sounds of the 60s Live with Tony Blackburn at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Tuesday 17th
Do You Believe In Ghosts at The Wyvern Theatre, while the Eric Mylod Okafo Quartet take the Jazz Knights at The Royal Oak, Swindon.
Thatโs all weโve got for you so far, but remember to keep an eye onour event calendar for updates. Iโm delighted to rap stats with you, and announce this week Devizine has hit level on the record-breaking annual hits from last year, and thereโs still two and half months to go. Devizine is going out to over 100,000 local folk and listing your event will remain free, all you have to do to insure it is here is to tell us about it!
Following on from last monthโs email, this is a final reminder that yearโs Imberbus service will be running this coming Saturday โ 17th Augustโฆ
Tickets are limited and selling fast for a staged reading of Oscar Wildeโs most renowned comedy masterpiece, The Importance of Being Earnest, performed inโฆ
People from the Swindon community flocked to protect their town and itโs residents, in anticipation of the rumoured far right anti-immigration march through theirโฆ
New single out today from Swindon-based gothic-folk duo, Canuteโs Plastic Army, and itโs three yeses from meโฆCan one person give three yeses? Iโm wayโฆ
A new World War One play will be coming to Devizesโ Wharf Theatre this November, ahead of Remembrance Day……
The Last Post brings to life a series of letters between a boy in Folkestone and his father who is fighting on the Western Front in Belgium. The span of the play is 70 years but begins in 1914. William Downing is desperate for his father Joseph to come home in time for Christmas. That this sentiment was so rooted in the reality of all the soldiers and their families of the time makes this play so poignant.
The show is suitable for the whole family, and the eighteen-show run across England is the first time that the moving adaptation of Keith Campionโs book will be in theatres, following a hugely successful run in schools last year.
The theatrical adaptation of The Last Post is performed by just three actors, taking on a multitude of characters from ten-year-old boys to, in one memorable scene, Lord Kitchener himself. The skill of the actors mean that the show is always entertaining but grounded in reality.
The play is produced by Hobgoblin Theatre Company, a leading Theatre-In-Education company, which gives thousands of children their first taste of theatre every year.
Dan Foley, the showโs director, said, โWhen Keith approached us to adapt his book we leapt at the chance. The book has been a fantastic resource for teaching World War One in the classroom and we felt a stage version could reach even more people.โ
โAfter the reaction from schools last year, we knew this was a special piece and deserved to be in theatres. Keithโs story offers an insight into the reality of life at home and on the war front ahead of Armistice Day, 105 years on from the end of World War One.โ
The challenge of turning written letters into an engaging piece of theatre has been dealt with by using a split stage and multimedia projections.ย The books author, Keith Campion agrees. โI am delighted with this incredible adaptation of The Last Post.ย Powerful and poignant, it brings the book alive in an accessible and moving way for young children and families.โ
โThe danger when teaching events from over 100 years ago is that they can end up becoming a dry list of battles and political changes that lose children. By putting them through the eyes of a person their own age, then children become engaged,โ continues Dan.
โWe feel strongly that the story of the Great War is just as powerful now. We hope the people of Devizes will agree.โ
The show will be on at The Wharf Theatre on 11th November at 1:30pm. Tickets are available HERE.
Second impressive single from young Salisbury singer-songwriter Rosie Jay is released today. Sing Another Love Song; a sound of the summerโฆ.. Her debut breakup trackโฆ
Tory tears welled at County Hall this week, when Cllr Richard Clewer, leader of Wiltshire Council threw his teddies from his pram over the Government’sโฆ
Weโre into August already; Christmas before you know it, so you better get outside and taste the sun while it lastsโฆ. Hereโs what weโve foundโฆ
If it’s been a fantastic weekend on Devizes Green with the orchestral Full-Tone Festival, further out of town scooterists, mods, skins and anyone else withโฆ
Righty-oh, no time for messing about, weโve lots to get throughโฆ. What have I become?!! Thereโs always time for messing around. Hereโs a snapshot of Professor Elemental last time he was in Trowbridge to prove it; heโs back at the Pump this Saturday, you wonโt find another hip hop gig quite the same!
But we do have lots of things to do this weekend in wonderful Wiltshire, hereโs what weโve found, but do check in the event calendar, as it will be updated whereas this wonโt. So, to make it clear to all:
Please, if you can donate a little something to keep us going, do, thatโs all I ask. We need to fund this, people. For info on how, see HERE.
Pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed HERE, this ends on October 15th.
Oh, and check out Si Griffiths’ Clown Soup at the Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham too!
Wednesday 4th:
The Edward Twohigre exhibit at Katharine House Gallery in Marlborough opens on Saturday, but thereโs a walk and talk session today, see the poster.
The Regular Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes
Swindonโs Old Town Comedy Club at The Hop Inn has headliner Louise Leigh. Swindon Music Service presents A Night at The Proms at The Wyvern Theatre.
George Mabuza Group at The Bell, Bath.
Nik Kershaw at the Cheese & Grain has sold out.
Thursday 5th:
Ruled by Raptors at The Vic, Swindon, Quo, Fish, Boazard at The Tuppeny. Geoff Norcott plays Swindon Arts Centre, and Sarah Millicanโs Late Bloomer is at The Wyvern Theatre.
Friday 6th:
Friday sees the opening of the Calne Music & Arts Festival running from 6th-15th October. Thereโs a private view opening for the Art Exhibition at Marden House. From thereafter the Open Art Exhibition will be on display throughout the Festival.
Wilswood Buoys play the Pump, Trowbrige, with Meg, Ed Dyke and Henshaw in support.
Plan of Action play the Parson’s Nose in Melksham.
An Evening of Mediumship with Nikki Kitt at The Neeld, Chippenham.
Platform 4: Triffids! At Pound Arts, Corsham, Iโve no idea what that is but it sounds interesting!
Coleview Music Festival begins in Swindon, elsewhere in the town, Giselle at The Wyvern Theatre, and Swan Lake. KERRANGโD at The Vic, Fleisch at Underground, Texas Tick Fever at the Beehive, and Bazooka Joe at The Queens Tap.
Ant Trouble play a free gig at The Royal Oak, Bath; this is one of the best, if not the best tribute acts Iโve EVER seen, Adam & the Ants fans be warned, you will mislay the last forty years! Also, find the Titus Reggae Band at Chapel Arts.
Nicky Blackmarket is up for a banger at 23 Bath Street, Frome, Mik Artistikโs Ego Trip is at The Tree House, Laurence Jones at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 7th:
I believe I have the right date this time around! Itโs Marlborough Mop Fair, and find @59 at The Lamb in Marlborough.
Grizzly at The Barge, HoneyStreet.
In Devizes, thereโs the Fantasy Radio screening Faith, Hope & Charity at the Wharf Theatre, but I believe this is sold out, Iโm not 100% sure. But, get on those tabletops, People Like Us play The Three Crowns, Split Whiskers at The Southgate, and Rockhoppaz at The Crown.
Staying in Devizes, the White Horse Operaโs Gala Concert at Devizes Town Hall, and calling all honey lovers & bee enthusiasts, The Annual Wiltshire Bee & Honey day is at The Corn Exchange, Devizes.
But Editorโs Pick of the Week goes to Long Street Blues Club, theyโve got The Billy Walton Band.
Grief Operaโs Love Goes On at St Andrews in Chippenham.
Free Family Day at Calne Music & Arts Festival from 11-4pm. There will be a 360-degree immersive Theatre Dome experience, Calne Samba Band, Clareโs Circus, a variety of activities by Calne Wordfest, Music and Art workshops throughout the day, an Art treasure hunt, Stilt walker and more! Refreshments and light lunches will be available. Children must be supervised at all times.
Calne Choral Society kick off the music, performing Faurรฉโs Requiem at St.Maryโs Church, and itโs onto Truckstop Honeymoon at Marden House, Calne.
41 Fords are at the Pilot, Melksham.
Frank Zappa tribute, Burger & The Beast at Stallards, Trowbridge, while Professor Elemental is at the Pump, with Devilโs Doorbell in support, that has to be editorโs pick of week, or have I done that already? Can I have two?! I think I can, Iโll just check with my legal department!
Kirsty Clinch at Suave in Westbury.
REME Museum, at MOD Lyneham has an Annual Model Show.
Sam Avery at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, Tool Shed at The Vic, Fuzz at The Woodland Edge, Jim Blair at the Castle, Last Train Smoking at The Queens Tap, DV8 at North Swindon Club, and Sonic Alert at The Wine Bar, Highworth.
October Live at the New Inn Amesbury is looking good, with Illingworth, Becca Maul, Tipsy Gypsies, and The Duskers.
Harvest, what an album! The Songs of Neil Young from the album are performed by Orange River Remedy at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Frome record fair in the daytime at the Cheese & Grain, Think Floyd in the evening, and
The Sums (Sum 41 Tribute) & Riot! (Paramore Tribute) at The Tree House.
Sunday 8th
TwoManTing at The Southgate, Devizesโ I love those guys!
Triple JD at The Red Lion, Lacock.
Darts tournament at the Civic in Trowbridge.
Calne Music & Arts Festival has Jemima Palfreyman โ Piano Snapshots from Mussorgsky to Broadway and everything in between and Life Drawing workshops.
Scott Bennett at Swindon Arts Centre, Corsairs at the North Swindon Club.
Monday 9th
Visual Radio Arts has a live stream, free to view, of The Honey Pot.
Calne Music & Arts Festival has a Guitar Recital from Mark Willcocks, rising star Sammy Till-Vattier in concert, Iโve seen this St.Johnโs, Marlborough prodigy at MantonFest, and itโs something amazing. Thereโs a Drink & Draw at the Lansdowne Strand Hotel too.
Filskit Theatre: Wonder Gigs at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Tuesday 10th
Pewsham Scarecrow Trail starts at Kingโs Lodge School, running until 14th October.
Calne Music & Arts Festival have Yoga in Art, Music Scholars of Marlborough College In Concert, and Jazz Club โ Introducing Amadou Diagne in concert with the Touki Trio
Talking Jazz, the only other thing Iโve got on Tuesday so far, is the regular Jazz Knights sessions at The Royal Oak in Swindon. Theyโve got Bluprint, which is Daniel Newberry Saxophone, Guy Shotton Organ, and Alex Goodyear, Drums.
But we will have updates as the week goes on, so check in on theโฆ.
You need this to plan ahead too, so do yourself a favour and bookmark that page! Have a great weekend and donโt even utter the C-word, itโs only October for crying out loud! I know, youโre excited, me too, nearly wet my knickers thinking about those jingle bells!
Jam-packed July! If thereโs always lots to do throughout the year, July especially so! Hereโs what weโve found in the wilds of Wiltshire this coming weekโฆ.โฆ
Gallivanting through festival season omits crucial visits to my local watering hole; I’ve missed it sooo much, and now feel thoroughly refreshedโฆ with a hintโฆ
Featured Image by Simon Folkard Following the announcement earlier this year about the cancellation of the Devizes International Street Festival due the loss of Artsโฆ
Jam-packed July! If thereโs always lots to do throughout the year, July especially so! Hereโs what weโve found in the wilds of Wiltshire this comingโฆ
The 50th Anniversary of the now legendary Village Pump Festival, which was brought back to the UK festival circuit in 2018 by director Nicholas Reed,โฆ
The parish of St John with St Mary in Devizes has won a prestigious award for its plans for St Maryโs Church on New Park Street in the town.…
Last Friday, the town centre parish won the Innovation prize at the annual awards of the Diocesan Advisory Committee for Salisbury, the church body which examines and approves proposed changes to churches in most of Wiltshire and Dorset.
Nigel Carter of St Maryโs Devizes Trust said, โWe were delighted to win the top prize for โInnovationโ for our plans to revitalise St Maryโs, making it fit for a wide range of community and artistic uses for decades to come while remaining a place of worship.”
The Revโd Gerry Lynch, Curate of St John with St Mary, Devizes said, โCredit for the proposals for the future St Maryโs of winning an award is shared between many people who have put their time, energy, and imagination into ensuring this spectacular Grade I listed building is a blessing for the people of Devizes for generations to come. Both the parish and the St Maryโs Devizes Trust have played an enormous part.”
โChurchgoers and non-churchgoers from a wide range of interests, over many years, have worked so hard and all itโs a pity that all of them couldnโt have come down to Salisbury to receive the award together, as all of them deserved it.โ
left-to-right: Nigel Carter, St Maryโs Devizes Trust; the Rt Revโd Andrew Rumsey, Bishop of Ramsbury; the Revโd Gerry Lynch, St John with St Mary, Devizes.
Devizine would like to congratulate everyone who has worked so hard on this ambitious and exciting project, and we look forward to a time when the work is complete and a programme of events is on the horizon. Nigel expressed, “we have a formidable fundraising task – similar to that associated with the Assize Courts – so maybe five years before completion.”
Summer is done and dusted, youโve got to lower yourself onto the toilet seat that little bit steadier, as we move into autumn. Still, the silver lining is thereโs always lots to do locally; hereโs what weโve found coming up this weekโฆ.
Not comprehensive, as I tell you each time, more will be added to our event calendaras we move through the week and they come to our attention, so check in on it from time to time. If you donโt let us know about your event you cannot expect it to be here, drop us a line and guarantee itโs listed here, it costs nothing.
Please, if you can donate a little something to keep us going, do, thatโs all I ask. We need to fund this, and any extra will be put into hosting events, something we would like to do more of but without financial support it makes it impossible. Any donations will be kindly accepted, you will get special attention, and we thank you. For info on how, see HERE.
Pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed HERE, this ends on October 1st.
Ongoing until 29th Sept, The Incredible Quizzical Bath Pub Tour.
Clown Soup exhibit by Si Griffiths at the Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham.
Devizes Food & Drink Festival is up and running, until 1st October.
Wednesday 27th
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Subject A at The Bell, Bath.
ZambaLando at โMoose Hallโ Old Town, Swindon, Lunchtime Recital at The Wyvern Theatre, with Ed Byrneโs Tragedy Plus Time in the evening.
Thursday 28th
Devizes Film Club Presents Lunana at The Wharf Theatre, and thereโs a Murder Mystery Dinner at The Corn Exchange.
Marlborough Literature Festival opens, running until 1st October.
The Unravelling Wilburys at Melksham Assembly Hall.
The Last Baguetteโs Playtime! at Pound Arts in Corsham, with the The Jackie Oates Trio in the evening.
Zambalando plays Savernake Street Hall, Swindon, Guy Tortora at The Tuppenny, Cooper Creek at The Beehive. Big Drink, One Man Boycott, Liddington Hill and the Starkers at The Vic. Magic Of Motown at The Wyvern Theatre, and the Phoenix Players โ โI Thought I Heard A Rustlingโ at Swindon Arts Centre, running until Saturday 30th.
Ed Byrneโs Tragedy Plus Time goes to the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Friday 29th
The Unpredictables are at The Churchill Arms in West Lavington.
Autumn Beer Festival at The Bell, Lacock.
Open Mic at Marlborough Town FC. El Toro at The Bear, Marlborough.
Sice Boo from The Boo Radleysโ โThe Secret of Happinessโ at The Pump in Trowbridge.
Martin Kempโs Back to the 80s at The Civic.
Thereโs a 24 hour Danceathon at Cumberwell Park Golf Club in Bradford-on-Avon, for the Fearless charity.
The Unravelling Wilburys at The Athenรฆum, Warminster.
Diverse Disco, a party for disabled and learning difficulties, at The Tree, Swindon. The Britpop Band at the Vic, The Heretic Order and The Self Titled at Swindon Underground (formerly Level III,) Devizes Road Oktoberfest at the Tuppeny in Swindon continues all weekend. Echo at the Queenโs Tap. Tea & Tour of the Spotlight Room at Wyvern Theatre, followed by Babatunde Alesheโs Babahood.
LGBTQ+ poetry night, Hear my Voice at Rondo Theatre, Bath, The Alter Eagles at Chapel Arts.
The Tom Petty Legacy at the Tree House, Frome, with Graham Parker & the Goldtops at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 30th
Leburn Maddox at The Southgate, Devizes, Illingworth at The Three Crowns, Strange Folk at The Lamb.
Thereโs also a grand lineup at The Crown, Bishops Cannings, with music from 4pm, Steve Morano Band, Talk in Code and Purple Fish. they’ve a fire-dancer between the acts, BBQ and pizza, free entry, splendid pub, twist my arm, why don’t you?!
Thereโs the Hillbillies at the Barge on HoneyStreet, and The Monkey Dolls at The Lamb, Marlborough.The Monkey Dolls @ The Lamb, Marlboroug
Josh Kumra @ The Bear, Marlborough
Pete Lambโs Heartbeats play an Alzheimerโs Support fundraiser at The Spencers Club in Melksham. Seriously Collins at The Melksham Assembly Hall.
Truckstop Honeymoon at the Pump in Trowbridge, with Swingletree in support, The Jon Amor Trio at The Red Admiral, Hilperton. Scout Killers at the Civic and Be Like Will at The Greyhound.
Ultimate Meatloaf at The Consti Club, Chippenham.
Six Oโclock Circus at Calne Liberal Club.
Sarah-Louise Young: The Silent Treatment at Pound Arts, Corsham.
The Lone Sharks at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon. And a Bradford Roots Sessions evening at the Wiltshire Music Centre, with Concrete Prairie, Courting Ghosts, and Fly Yeti Fly, proper job, ed’s pick of the week that one right there be, oo-argh!
The Spooky Kids and Korn Again at The Vic, Swindon, Tundra at The Woodlands Edge, And Solo at North Swindon Club, Click at The New Inn, Hush at The Queens Tap, and Sh!t-Faced Shakespeare โ Much Ado About Nothing at The Wyvern Theatre.
Celebrate Zappa : Treacherous Cretins at The Tree House, Frome, Motรถrheadache at The Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 1st
Monthly residency for the Jon Amor Trio at The Southgate, Devizes, with guest Ruth Hammond.
Fireman Sam is at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, and Victorius at Underground.
Interstate Express at The Bell, Bath.
Monday 2nd
Ope
Billy Billingham MBE โ Always A Little Further at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon
Orfic at The Bell, Bath
Tuesday 3rd
Calne Music & Arts Festival starts with the Nonpareil, a Local Photography Group Exhibition. It runs across the festival until 28th October, at the Heritage Centre, Calne. Open 10:00 โ 16:00 Tuesdays to Saturdays (closed Sundays & Mondays) Visit the Heritage Centre to see the exhibition of photography by โNonpareilโ, a small group of very experienced local photographers. It includes Award Winning Images from their Exhibitions and Salons that have been exhibited around the country. The festival lineup is in full on our event calendar.
100 Years of Silents: Our Hospitality (1923) with live musical score, at Pound Arts in Corsham.
Queenz โ The Show With Balls! at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, with
The Haunting at Swindon Arts Centre.
Thatโs all folks, but there are lots more to come!! Let the sunshineโฆ..but do check in on our event calendar too, as updates will be on there, not here, this is just a guide. Have a great week whatever you do do!
And hey, we’re doing a monthly podcast again now; a bit of fun and some great local music on there, please take a listen…. at your own risk!
With the last minute heatwave looking as if itโs packing its bags, we move into autumn still with lots to do locally, the silver lining of the clouds aboveโฆ..ย ย
Not comprehensive, as I tell you each time, more will be added to our event calendar as we move through the week and they come to our attention, so check in on it from time to time. If you donโt let us know about your event you cannot expect it to be here, drop us a line and guarantee itโs listed here, it costs nothing.
Please, if you can donate a little something to keep us going, do, thatโs all I ask. We need to fund this, and any extra will be put into hosting events, something we would like to do more of but without financial support it makes it impossible. Any donations will be kindly accepted, you will get special attention, and we thank you. For info on how, see HERE.ย ย
Pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed HERE.
Ongoing until 29th Sept, The Incredible Quizzical Bath Pub Tour.ย
New exhibit at The Forbidden Carnival, Chippenham, Si Griffiths obsession with clowns…..
Wednesday 20th:
Ah, the regular acoustic jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Memory Cinema at Swindon Arts Centre, for those suffering dementia and their carers, what a wonderful idea, this sessions theyโre screening Labyrinth (U.) Absolutely Dragulous at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Women Who Give No F*cks at the Rondo Theatre, Bath, while Azhaar & Global Wave at The Bell.
Thursday 21st:
Superfirends play the Pump, Trowbridge with Beetlehead in support.
Andalusian guitarist/composer Juan Martรญn at Chapel Arts in Bath, while Fiona ALenโs On the Run is at the Rondo Theatre.
Pete Firmanโs TrikTok st Swindon Arts Centre, and running Thursday to Friday at The Wyvern Theatre, Splash Test Dummies.
Friday 22nd:
That time again for the Marlborough Mop Fair.
Funked Up play The Pelican, Devizes.
Talk in Code appears at The Three Horseshoes Bradford-on-Avon, with Nothing Rhymes With Orange in support.
Richard Durrant at Pound Arts in Corsham.
Ex-Wishbone Ashโs Martin Turner is at Chapel Arts, Bath , an Evening With Martin Stephenson at the Rondo Theatre, Bath.
Peter & The Test Tube Babies at The Vic, Swindon with Slagerij. SkaโD For Life at the North Swindon Club, To Sleep at Swindon Arts Centre.
Lump play The George & Dragon, Salisbury.
Crazy Arm are at the Tree House, Frome, with Jo Whileyโs 90s Anthems at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 23rd:
Marlborough Mop Fair again. And an Open Mic at the Parade Cinema from 6-8pm
Heddington Scarecrow Trail: continues Sunday too!
St Johnโs Charity Michealmas Fair at Devizes Corn Exchange, and the Devizes Food & Drink Festival begins, running until 1st October.
The Hoodoos at The Southgate, Devizes.
Junkyard Dogs at the Cock Inn, Warminster.
Hell Death Fury at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon
CarmenCo at Langford Parish Hall, and Owen Spafford & Louis Campbell at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Diversify at The Vic, Swindon, Operation 77 at The Woodlandโs Edge, Take It Easy โ The American Classic Rock Show at Swindon Arts Centre.
The Radio Makers have an inStore at HMV Bath.
Slagerij headlines a ska-punk fest at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Strange Folk at The Sun Inn, Frome, Cats In Space at the Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 24th:
Mr Griff at The Southgate, Devizes from 5pm.
Melksham Ladies RFC V Devizes Ladies RFC at Melksham Rugby Club.
Open Mic at The Old Road Tavern, Chippenham.
Junkyard Dogs at Stallards, Trowbridge.
James Hollingworth at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Dr Zeboโs Wheezy Club at The Bell, Bath.
The Replays at North Swindon Club.
CSF Pro Wrestling: Showdown at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Monday 25th:
Rock The Tots: Food, Glorious Food at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Electio, a new play from local playwright Peter Hynds at The Vic, Swindon. Supreme Queen at The Wyvern Theatre, continues on Tuesday.
The Malbec Orquesta at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 26th:
Quentin Collins & Tom Berge Trio at Jazz Knights, The Royal Oak, Swindon while Jen Bristerโs The Optimist is at The Wyvern Theatre.
Ian Perry at The Bell, Bath.
Thatโs all folks, but there are lots more to come!! Let the sunshineโฆ..but do check in on our event calendar too, as updates will be on there, not here, this is just a guide. Have a great week whatever you do do!
Jam-packed July! If thereโs always lots to do throughout the year, July especially so!ย ย Hereโs what weโve found in the wilds of Wiltshire this comingโฆ
With the unfortunate cancellation of Devizes International Street Festival this year due to Arts Council cuts, all eyes are on our wonderful Hillworth Park nextโฆ
Need to keep informed and updated on the general election and its effect locally? Don’t bother with national media sources, everything you need to vomitโฆ
Jam-packed July! If thereโs always lots to do throughout the year, July especially so! Hereโs what weโve found in the wilds of Wiltshire this coming weekโฆ.โฆ
With the danceable penultimate act attracting a packed crowd, I observed a young teenager, who, on spotting a disregarded beer bottle, picked it up andโฆ
By Mick BrianPhotos by cast and arenaphotography William Shakespeareโs tragedy, inspired by real life eleventh century Scottish kings, is well known by anybody thatโs doneโฆ
Three women meet at university in 1983. Mixed backgrounds, sexual preferences, dreams. From early reticence, to friendship, to love. Sharing despair, hope, loss. Love conquers all.…..
The play opens with a simple set, three cleverly used telephones โ pre mobile days as an era. Early scenes are short, sharp, frenetic, reflecting youth and urgency, energy and the simplicity of student life. As the play progresses the scenes become longer, less frenetic (though losing no natural pace and rhythm) again reflecting the increased complexities of life. We share with the three their aspirations, of career, promiscuity, love. These provide clashes, arguments, disagreements as each character struggles to comprehend anotherโs chosen path. There are surprises on the way โ some happy, some โฆ life changing, some tragic. This is a gently poignant, bitter-sweet comedy .. a few genuine laugh out loud moments, many internal amusementsโฆ and several gut wrenching, even tear inducing scenes.
The audience on Tuesday night was healthy โ fairly full, but just four men. Whilst this play deals with female friendships and where men are peripheral unseen but discussed characters, some bad, some good, sometimes amusing, this is far from being โchick lit on stageโ or especially not an anti-men piece.ย Itโs a cracking portrayal of human interaction and of lifeโs rich pattern. It deserves a more mixed audience.
Three mesmeric performances โ Di (Georgia Watson), Viv (Claire Warren) and Rose (Tempeste Day), woven together by superb direction (Alison Warren), based around a simple set (Wharf Technical crew ๐ ). Another example of excellent community theatre. On our doorstep here in Devizes. If you are still picturing local theatre as wooden performances and lumpen ensemble with stilted line delivery โ come and change your perception. Grab one of the few tickets left, get to the wharf this week, and catch one of the remaining performances.
by Ian Diddamsphotos by Richard Fletcher & Lisa Hounsome The concept of historical brutal dictatorships and comedy is not necessarily one that one considers asโฆ
A leopard doesn’t change its spots, and neither does a British Lion. Watch other Devizes pubs change landlord, decor, attractions, and styles. Watch them close,โฆ
With the last minute heatwave looking as if it MIGHT be packing its bags, we move into autumn still with lots to do locally, the silver lining of the clouds aboveโฆ..ย ย
Not comprehensive, as I tell you each time, more will be added to our event calendaras we move through the week and they come to our attention, so check in on it from time to time. If you donโt let us know about your event you cannot expect it to be here, drop us a line and guarantee itโs listed here, it costs nothing.
Please, if you can donate a little something to keep us going, do, thatโs all I ask. We need to fund this, and any extra will be put into hosting events, something we would like to do more of but without financial support it makes it impossible. Any donations will be kindly accepted, you will get special attention, and we thank you. For info on how, see HERE.ย ย
Pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed HERE.
Ongoing until 29th Sept, The Incredible Quizzical Bath Pub Tour.
Di & Viv & Rose opens at the Wharf Theatre in Devizes on Monday, and continues until Saturday 16th.
Abigailโs Party continues at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon until Wednesday 13th.
Wednesday 13th
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes, bring an instrument, voice, or just do as I do, just sit back, perhaps joke about playing the triangle, and enjoy the musicians doing their stuff!
Rosalie Cunningham comes to Chapel Arts, Bath, weโve seen Rosie at MantonFest, groovy, psychedelic rock n roll, loved it! The Bobby Kennedy Experience at the Rondo Theatre, and
Dusk Art Rhythm Quartet at The Bell, both in Bath too.
Thursday 14th
Melksham Music & Drama presents Joseph & the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at Melksham Assembly Hall, opening Thursday, running till Saturday.
Editorโs Pick of Week made easy this time, Swindon Shuffle not only raises funds for Prospect Hospice, itโs free, and a virtual cathedral of our local live music circuit. In the words of the great Zaphod Beeblebrox, โeveryone who’s anyone is going to be there,โ albeit he was referring to Millways the restaurant at the end of the universe, weโre only on about Swindon, still, it fits! feat your eyes on the poster below, enough said….
Running across the various pubs over the entire weekend, kicking off on Thursday, Iโm not going to list them all, because hereโs the poster and that says it all.
Elsewhere in Swindon, The Story of Guitar Heroes at The Wyvern Theatre, and Andrew Birdโs Taken Seriously at Swindon Arts Centre.
The Annie Keating Band at Chapel Arts, Bath, plus support from Steady Habits. Markus Birdmanโs Platinum at the Rondo Theatre.
Friday 15th
Seend branch of the Royal British Legion hosts the Pop Pickers at the Seend Community Hall.
The Future Sound of Trowbridge series sees a third instalment at The Pump, with Rae and Foxymoron supporting The Sunnies.
Rockabilly Rumble at North Swindon Club, John Kearnsโ The Varnishing Days at Swindon Arts Centre, The Ultimate Boyband Party Show at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, and the Shuffle continues throughout the weekend.
Aretha & the Soul Sisters with Lisa Grand & the Jezebel Sextet at Chapel Arts, Bath, Will Collierโs Chet Baker Project at the Rondo Theatre.
Peter Doherty plays the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Saturday 16th
Devizes Heritage Day, leaflets are available from participating venues and also Devizes Books, and Wiltshire Museum. Devizes RFC V Chosen Former Pupils at Devizes Rugby Club.
Dr Zeboโs Wheezy Club at The Southgate, Devizes.
Live Music and Family Funday for Wiltshire Mindโs 30th Anniversary at The Pilot, Melksham, and a Psychic & Crystal Fayre at Melksham Scout Hut, 10am-4pm.
Heritage Open Day: Hidden on the High Street at the Neeld, Chippenham, and a new exhibit by Si Griffths at the Forbidden Carnival, see poster.
Sour Apple plays Kings Arms, Hilperton. Matt Owens and Courting Ghosts at The Pump in Trowbridge.
Train to Skaville are at Swindon Underground, formerly Level III, Simplicity at The Woodland’s Edge, 80s Mania at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, And Solo at the North Swindon Club, and of course the Shuffle continues throughout the weekend.
Roving Crows at Chapel Arts, Malone Sibun unplugged at the Rondo Theatre, Bath.
These Wicked Rivers at the Tree House, Frome.
Sunday 17th
Eddie Martin plays a Sunday session at The Southgate, Devizes from 5pm.
Ruzz Guitar Blues Revue at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon from 3pm.
Warminster Heritage Open Day at the Athenaeum
Emerald Storm at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, Ska Katz @at North Swindon Club.
The Glad Rags at The Bell, Bath.
Monday 18th
Thatโll Be The Day at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Lewis Barfoot at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 19th
Psychic Sally at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, and Jazz Knights has Roger Beaujolais & Tom Berge Trio at The Royal Oak.
Thatโs all folks, but there are lots more to come!! Let the sunshineโฆ..but do check in on our event calendar too, as updates will be on there, not here, this is just a guide. Have a great week whatever you do do!
Cool, Man Andy Fawthrop Devizes Arts Festivalโs programme continued on Thursday night, and it was time for a little jazz.ย As I often say (apparently)โฆ
A Lunchtime Amuse-Bouche by Andy Fawthrop Devizes Arts Festivalโs programme continued on Thursday afternoon with a lunchtime classical concert in the beautiful surroundings of theโฆ
Masterclass by Andy Fawthrop Devizes Arts Festivalโs programme continued last night, and it was the turn of another big name to grace the stage ofโฆ
Over the coming weeks I’m having cuppas with candidates of the Melksham-Devizes constituency crazy enough to indulge my political ignorance and endure my inane waffling;โฆ
World Class Piano by Andy Fawthrop And, following a lively few days of varied events over this last weekend, weโre now into Devizes Arts Festivalโsโฆ
Trowbridge RFC V Devizes RFC at Trowbridge Rugby Club
King Alfredโs Tower Charity Abseil for SOS Africa is taking place on the 9th, 10th 16th & 17th September.
Bit hot for cosplay, but thereโs a Sci Fi Day at The REME Museum, Lyneham.
Thereโs a Twilight Cinema at Hillworth Park, Devizes, screening Top Gun Maverick.
Autumn Fabric Pumpkin Making Workshop at the St Johnโs Parish Rooms, Devizes.
Grizzly Rhys plays The Southgate, Devizes.
Chloe Jordan and Pete Lambโs Heartbeats play a Wiltshire Air Ambulance fundraiser at The Corn Exchange, Devizes.
Long Street Blues Club, Devizes opens for a new season with The Ian Parker Band.
Bristolโs boss reggae and ska legend Ya Freshness & The Big Boss Band are at Devizes Scooter Club in the Cavalier.
The Boot Hill All Stars are at The Barge on HoneyStreet, with Whistling Treason.
Barrelhouse play The Lamb, Marlborough.
Mantonfest 2023
Saili Katebe at the Yelde Hall, Chippenham.
Bobbiโs Academy Of Dance โ Dance First Think After at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Salisbury RFC have their Beggar’s Bash.
The Unravelling Wilburys play Chapel Arts, Bath.
Frome 80s Festival at the Cheese & Grain.
Lifesigns are at The Tree House, Frome.
Sunday 10th.
Hillworth Park Proms with Devizes Town Band at Hillworth Park, Devizes.
The Jon Amor residency at the Southgate, Devizes from 5pm, guest this month is Adam Phillips.
Nothing Rhymes With Orange plays at The Exchange nightclub, with Stoneface and Ignotis in support.
Pewsey Carnival Week begins, running until 17th.
Daisy Chapman, with Carrie Martin and the Gordon Wood Band at Schtumm, Queenโs Head, Box.
Old Baby Mackerel at The Bell, Bath.
Swindon Recital Series at Swindon Arts Centre.
Bridget Christieโs Who Am I? at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Monday 11th:
Di, Viv & Rose opens at The Wharf Theatre, Devizes, running until the 16th.
Wiltshire Motorcycle Rally at Salisbury Rugby Club.
Abigailโs Party opens at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, running until the 16th.
Von Wildenhaus at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 12th
Kosta Burgess at The Bell, Bath.
Libor Smolds & Daniel Newberry Quartet at Jazz Knights, The Royal Oak, Swindon.
Thatโs all folks, but itโs early days for September, and there is lots more to come!! Let the sunshineโฆ..but do check in on our event calendar too, as updates will be on there, not here, this is just a guide.
Seven-piece sui generis ensemble The Cable Street Collective were everything I expected them to be last night at The Corn Exchange; another impressive booking forโฆ
As if the FullTone Festival isnโt exciting enough for Devizes, the Town Council has allowed them an extra day, on the Friday 26th Julyโฆ.. Seeingโฆ
Andy Fawthrop Itโs All In The Genes Today Devizes Arts Festival presentation took on a more serious and talkative tone with another marquee signing takingโฆ
The first gig and club night by Devizes Youth Action Group exclusively for secondary school aged youth in Devizes back in February was hugely successful,โฆ
Hereโs what weโve found to do in the wilds of Wiltshire this coming week. Donโt forget your sunscreen and a nice party umbrella! Everything listedโฆ
Have you had โthe visitโ yet? Your local councillor house-calling hand-in-hand with Conservative candidate Michelle Donelan? I have. At least it broke up my busyโฆ
Bank holiday done and dusted, hope you had a good one whatever you did. But Wiltshire shows no signs of letting up on great things to do moving into September; hereโs a roundup of events this coming weekโฆ..
Not comprehensive, more will be added to our event calendar as we move through the week, so check in on it from time to time.
Pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed HERE.
Ongoing until 29th Sept, The Incredible Quizzical Bath Pub Tour.
Wednesday 30th:
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Devizes Salsa at West Lavington Village Hall; new members welcome!
The Deadnotes play the Pump in Trowbridge with The Sunnies and Lindup Brothers
Thursday 31st:
Thereโs an Open Mic at The Crown, Aldbourne.
Happy Kingsley plays The Neeld Bar in Chippenham from 8pm.
End of the Road Festival in Salisbury opens, running until Sunday.
VirginMarys & Lucky Number Seven play The Vic, Swindon.
Friday 1st:
Thereโs an Open Mic at the Barge on Honey Street.
Too Complicated at The Wellington, Marlborough.
Letโs Rock this Country with Shania & Friends at Melksham Assembly Hall.
The Pump in Trowbridge begins its series of Future Sound of Trowbridge gigs, with Nothing Rhymes With Orange, Feedback and Paradigm.
Queen 2 at the Neeld Hall, Chippenham, The Blue Moon Band at The Old Lane.
41 Fords at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
2 Sick Monkeys at The Castle, Swindon,Blind River Scare at The Beehive, State of the Quo at The Vic, and the Deprivation Festival at Underground, formerly Level III.
Phil Beerโs 2023 Solo Tour at Chapel Arts, Bath.
The Scribes play The Winchester Gate in Salisbury.
Ion Maiden at The Tree House, Frome, with Aynsley Lister at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 2nd:
Devizes RFC V Thornbury at Devizes Rugby Club.
And, of course, itโs Devizes Carnival: The parade departs from the Green at 5:45pm, with an environmental theme.
Julien Biddulphโs trio, Work Experience debut at the The Southgate, thereโs karaoke at The Three Crowns, and a Carnival Disco Party at the Pelican.
Swindonโs Apache Cats make their debut at The Bell in Great Cheverall.
Over The Lamb in Marlborough we see the second Famous Hangover Sessions, with a great lineup, Royal Soul from 12pm, George Wilding from 1pm, Jimmy Morre at 2:30, Jolie & the Souls at 4pm, Rivera Arcade at 5:30, Nothing Rhymes With Orange at 7pm, Mick OโToole from 10pm.
Trash Panda plays Great Bedwyn Cricket Club.
And itโs Pewsey Pride at The Coopers, with The Reason and, of course, Miss Luscious Lips!
The celebrated homemade festival, Party on the Drive 3 is in Chippenham, and Yanniโs Old Skool Reggae Night at The Neeld.
Be Like Will play Southwick Sports & Social Club, Shot By Both Sides at Stallards in Trowbridge, and From Jovi are live at Trowbridge RFC, with The Sunnies as special guests.
Swindonโs second annual Paint Fest will be happening across the town centre. Blitz Kids with Head Noise and Thee Acid Tonguea offer a night of new wave and synth, psychedelic punk at The Vic.
Hatepenny at The
Dire Streets tribute at Chapel Arts, Bath.
41 Fords are at The Sun in Frome, Sex Pistols Exposรฉ at the Tree House.
Sunday 3rd:
Gunina Lane Saxophone Quartet with The Pewsey Players, Take Five and Pewsey Winds at St Maryโs Bishops Cannings.
The White Horse Vehicle Show, Westbury.
Old Town Street Foods Festival, in Swindon, with Absolva and Furyhead offering some melodic metal at the Vic.
Monday 4th:
I got nothing, yet, keep an eye on the calendar!
Tuesday 5th:
Curious Kids at Wiltshire Museum, Devizes.
Thatโs all folks, but itโs early days for September, and there is lots more to come!! I’m telling you, next Saturday you are seriously spoiled for choice, you lucky, lucky, people!
If the opening Friday evening of Devizes Arts Festival was amazing for lively pirate-punk craziness, Saturday night was too for precisely opposite reasons. Bristol’s soulstressโฆ
With a rolling hook in the chorus, piano riff over acoustic guitar and a heartfelt narrative, hereโs a promising debut single from Salisburyโs young singer-songwriterโฆ
Land ahoy me hearties! Devizes Corn Exchange was boarded last night by Cornish punk pirates Jolly Roger, for a frivolous and swashbuckling opening to Devizesโฆ
Images used with kind permission of Pacific Curd Photography West Wilts and Somerset folk-rock collective Courting Ghosts are about to release their debut album, Fallingโฆ
We’ve been chatting with the Community Organiser and Campaigns Manager of Devizes and District Foodbank, Alex Montegriffo, about an important free community conversation on Mondayโฆ
By Ian DiddamsPhotos by Gail Foster In 1971 Ken Russell enchanted film audiences with โThe Devilsโ, which incorporated nuns in the story โ somewhat controversially.โฆ
Friday evening in the liveliest of Devizes pubs, The Three Crowns, with Devizes best upcoming band, Nothing Rhymes With Orange pulling a two hour setโฆ
In recognition of his selfless ministry and leadership of St James Church, where the community and residents are at the core of everything, birthday boyโฆ
Imagine, it’s only just eight pm on the opening day of Honey-Fest at the legendary Barge on HoneyStreet, and the haystack-filled marquee is already positively pumping, largely due to the energetic hoedown of Bristol’s Mr Tea and the Minionsโฆ…
Too tempting not to, a double whammy with Devizesโ homemade upcoming marvels, Nothing Rhymes With Orange opening, I made a pit stop at HoneyStreet to black my nose and didn’t really want to leave!
I was intrigued as to where the ยฃ125 weekend ticket stub would go in comparison to an atypical weekend at the Barge, which, face it, is usually a mini festival itself! Though there’s no colossal stage erected, the sizable marquee makes for an apt music area, as in past events. Though this weekend thereโs extra concentration angled at creating an appealing non-stop lineup for the entire weekend and as the ticket includes camping too, it is justifiable. Though, day tickets available on the gate are priced at a far more reasonable tenner; given these factors Honey-Fest is a must for the hedonistic alternative, and you will be guaranteed an amazing bank holiday weekend. It didnโt take more than half-hour for me to acknowledge this!
The Barge ends up being the spiritual home of anyone who passes through, a magic which holds in the air surrounding it. Though, if it has been this way for decades, what Lenny and his team have created recently, is the kind of environment we, as regular attendees since the nineties, would have wished it to be like back then. Ergo, Honey-Fest is a win-win, a festival within a campsite and wharf surrounded pub, which already hails the spirit of counter-culture festivals of yore, anyway!
And I couldnโt suggest a more apt act than the astoundingly fantastic Mr Tea & The Minions, I told them on Facebook theyโd love the Barge, a no-brainer indeed. A headline act, Iโd say, but scheduled early to fit their agenda, it was back to Bristol then onto a festival in Kent, followed by a trip to Guernsey for another.
They first came to my attention seeking out alternative forms of ska when doing a regular slot on Boot Boy Radio, an internet station designed to appease Two-Tone diehards. A desire to expand the agenda of the show from simply being retrospective led to me discovering South American ska, and Balkan. The latter so crazy and energetic, a mix of skaโs offbeat and oompah and brassy Truba, and their folk. It is a recipe certain to rub off internationally. I became aware of Bristolโs burgeoning scene, bands like the Smerins Anti-Social Club and Carny Villains and was already aware of the Scrumpy & Western folk flavour of The Boot Hill All Stars, et al. Aside the name Mr Tea & The Minions amused me, their sound was an instant love, for while others blend the influences of west country folk and Balkan ska, most adapt swing into the melting pot, or just fly off the handle of carefree loops of instrumental nuttiness. Here is a band composing structured songs with narrative within those confounds, most definably ska-folk, often amusingly but always with purpose, while still maintaining the infectious high-energy tomfoolery. I soon hurried off a review of their album Mutiny in 2019. ย ย
Over the moon when Loz booked them for Devizes Street Festival last year, I roamed the Market Square excitedly ordering everyone to watch them, and they did, and they agreed, if I remember rightly! Gladdened they came out with the title track to Mutiny at HoneyFest and done a sublime rendition of Junkyard Lovesong from the album, but greater pleased to hear some new songs, like their latest single Twitchy Feet, and a swinging self-stylised finale cover of The Bloodhound Gangโs Bad Touch, which simply rained fun. Here is the liveliest, friendliest six-piece family band with the structure and proficiency to command any age to a dancefloor I know of locally; what an amazing start to Honey-Fest, leaving me pondering, if this is an intro, what was yet to come.
Though none of this occurred before young singer-songwriter Marley begun musical proceedings at 4pm, which unfortunately I was still polishing off some beans on toast at home for, and followed by our favourite Devizes band, the utterly awesome Nothing Rhymes with Orange, which, since missing their stint on Fantasy Radio on Thursday, was what I was making a beeline Pewsey direction for. In fact, last time I did catch them it was also here at The Barge, an intended and worthwhile detour homebound from MantonFest.
That time though they were wedged in the corner of the bar and raising its roof. Here in the marquee the sound mechanics would be greater, yet they would need to overcome the niggly issue Elijah was Lost-Voice Guy for the evening! Though they prevailed, the charismatic frontman persisted, and Sam Briggs filled in too, as unperturbed they produced their collection of beguiling indie-rock originals, including their latest creation, Cats Eyes, and wowed the audience young and old, varying degrees of hippies, tipi glampers, passing druids, the odd stilt walker and every other charming and fun oddity who will pass by you at the Barge, making it such the magic place it is!
But the showstopper was a demanded encore just when Elijahโs voice had all but given up, he asked the audience if anyone knew the words to Sex on Fire, to which a random volunteer affirmed, and Elijah asked she come on stage to assist. And she did, and it was as advertised, on fire. But more importantly, it signifies how this upcoming band are fast becoming accustomed to the spotlight, breaking the fourth wall and dragging the crowds into their banter. Something they could always do in their comfort zone of a loyal fanbase, but to rock up to a varied audience like the Barge, isnโt so simple. Their performance was in short, the essence of a blossoming phenonium.
But of course, this was all but the very beginnings of HoneyFest, and if so, the whole shebang will wow you. Hats off to the team at the Barge, not just for staging this particular extravaganza, but for the many wonderful memories there and how theyโve maintained this spirit, supported our local live music circuit and created this divine pocket of resistance from the surrounding cliquey conventional area. Thereโs food wagon, thereโs a toy and clothes swap tent, thereโs magical art displays, and crazy street theatre type crazies, but as I said, it may not be as hugely altered from the standard ethos of a weekend camping at the Barge as it could be, but itโs welcoming, itโs as wonderful as the Barge has ever been, and if it isnโt brokenโฆ…
To conclude my findings, look, weโre overloaded with things to do this bank holiday, I know, itโs gone bonkers, but if youโve no plans for tonight, this place could have your name all over it, and if not, hereโs hoping thereโs more annual HoneyFests. Failing any of those, of course, any weekend at The Barge is a blessing and whole heap of fun; forever recommended with festival jesterโs hats on and bells on.
Itโs going to be all strawberries and cheese baps in pith helmets swinging in trouserland bedlam, with chap-hop shenanigans galore at the Barge on Honeystreetโฆ
ย Abrilli, sole Director and owner of Tonka Bean Cafe Bar in Devizes announced today, due to โsignificant changes in personal and financial circumstances due toโฆ
Righty-ho then, this weekโs rodeo roundup of all the lovely fings to Scooby-Doo across Wiltshireโs rolling landscape is rather like when you went on holiday as a nipper and your folks bought you your chosen comicโs summer specialโฆ a bumper edition!
Okay, millennials and gen z, youโll need Google to make any sense of that. The rest of us greying lot will remember spilling Ready Brec on their oversized Beano, Dandy or Nutty summer special while listening to the rain hammering onto a caravan roof, but everyone knows with the bank holiday looming, thereโs a lot to get through, so here goesโฆโฆ
Oh, one quick thing while I remember, as these roundup posts are getting more popular, (we had over 10K hits for last weekโs) you can see from below itโs too much to stick on a Facebook post, so we do it this way because those not on Facebook can also see whatโs happening, but more importantly, this list is published early in the week for ticketed events, events which come to our attention, like those smaller pub gigs which pop up on Facebook or Twitter(if we can still call it that) during the week will NOT be listed here, but they will be on the updating event calendar HERE. So, DONโT take this preview piece as comprehensive, DO check the calendar later in the week.
Pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed HERE.
Also The Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham has a street art inspired exhibit, Reviewed HERE.
Ongoing until 29th Sept, The Incredible Quizzical Bath Pub Tour.
Wednesday 23rd:
The regular Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon kick off their weekend earliest, with โsummer of loveโ festivities, thereโs spoken word and The Cleverly Brothers tonight.
Joe Pasqualeโs The New Normal: 40 Years Of Cack comes to The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Fromage en Feu at The Bell, Bath, Iago Banet, The Galician King of Acoustic Guitar at Chapel Arts.
Beaux Gris Gris & The Apocalypse are at the Tree House, Frome.
Thursday 24th:
Nothing Rhymes With Orange are part of a Fantasy Radio Live Lounge at The Crown, Devizes, with poetic interludes by Gail Foster. You can cheat and listen to it on Fantasy, or come down the pub!
The Undercover Hippy at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
James Kirbyโs The Honest Man Tour at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Mr Love & Justice at The Tuppenny, Swindon. Ghosts of this Town Album Launch Party at The Vic, Horrible Histories โ Barmy Britain at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Friday 25th:
Emergency Awareness Training! Wiltshire Air Ambulance at Hillworth Park, Devizes, but also the chance for the kids, and parents of course to meet Bluey from 12-2pm.
Yeah, Iโve no idea who Bluey is, but I know these guys will rock, Plan of Action at The Three Crowns, Devizes, and these guys will skank, Blondie & Ska at The Pelican, and well, we just love People Like Us who are at the Condado Lounge; spoiled rotten for choice Iโd say, Devizes!
Honey-Fest over at the Barge on Honey-Street starts, and what a great lineup there; Mr Tea and the Minions! Further afield, it’s the Reading Festival.
Radiation Sickness at The Consti Club, Chippenham.
Riff Raff Aurora at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford on Avon. West of England Youth Orchestra at the Wiltshire Music Centre.
Jurassic Earth at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
And music in Swindon is coming up roses: Stop Stop & Studded Rose at The Vic, Black Rose at the New Inn, Stratton, and Sonic Alert at The Queenโs Tap.
โShadowing Hankโ Justin Daishโs tribute to Hank Marvin & The Shadows is at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Dr Beetroot heads another glamping live music sesh at the Baa, near Salisbury.
Saturday 26th:
Continuing on Sunday, itโs time again for the FullTone Festival on the Green in Devizes; yay! And if youโre not going to this, or fancy popping out for a stroll, the fantastic Ruzz Guitar Trio play The Southgate.
Humdinger plays The Coopers, Pewsey.
Forest Fest at The Foresters Arms, Melksham has Manhattan Nights, This Way Up, and Martyโs Fake Family, kicking off at noon.
Cooperโs Creek are at The Wheatsheaf, Calne. Zero Hour at The Wiltshire Yeoman, Trowbridge.
Bradford-on-Avon have Castlefest at the Castle, and the fun continues at the Three Horseshoes with cabaret and circus acts. Ocean Blue, a relaxing duo of sax-based pop classics, jazz, blues, Boassa nova, and funk at the Boathouse.
In Swindon, 12 Bars Later at the Wroughton Club, Comedy at the Bowl at the Old Town Bowl, Apache Cats at The Queens Tap. The Little Mermaid at The Wyvern Theatre.
Sunday 27th:
Jim Blair at The Southgate, Devizes, while FullTone continues on the Green. The Potterne CC Festival is on, thereโs a bus to the village from the town centre.
Talbot-Fest at the Talbot in Calne, see poster.
Start the Sirens play The Grapes, Melksham.
A happy 16th anniversary to the Open Mic night at the Old Road Tavern in Chippenham. This one kicks off at 7pm.
Starry Eyes, a charitable trust based in Trowbridge, which provides an opportunity for people of all ages, shapes, sizes and backgrounds to get involved in music, has a Disney Day at Studley Green, Trowbridge. Tickets will be available on the door with a range of activities and entertainment available.
The Summer of Love festival comes to a Reggae Reggae Sunday finale, with Troy Ellis with Hail Jamaica at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Itโs Sazz at the New Inn, Stratton, Swindon, 21st Century ABBA & Elton at the Old Town Bowl.
The Original Mike Hoddinott Blues Allstars at The Bell, Bath.
And The Hammervillesโ Bank Holiday Beach Party at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Monday 28th:
Unmissable should the headline read; Well Hung Heart at The Southgate, Devizes. But thereโs more, The Reason plays The Three Crowns, and The British Lion holds its Black Rat Monday, with a BBQ and the amazing Be Like Will.
Box Rocks at the Queenโs Head in Box, is the fundraising smasher of bank holiday Monday, previewed HERE, fantastic lineup yet again!
Another outdoor all-dayer at the Lamb Yard in Bradford-on-Avon, see poster.
Kid Hyena at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 29th:
Bank holiday over, back to work! I chant this because Iโve forgotten what a bank holiday is; no rest for the wicked (and I mean wicked in eighties ironic slang, cos Iโm of that era. Nowadays they say โsick,โ whatโs wrong with them?!)
But thereโs still Jazz Knights at The Royal Oak, Swindon with Swing From Paris, and Rob Clamp plays The Bell, Bath.
And weโre not slowing down when we delve into September, you know? The Deadnotes play the Pump, Trowbridge with The Sunnies in support on Wednesday 30th, The End of the Road Festival kicks off in Salisbury the day after that.
Into September, thereโs lots to look forward to from the off, The Future Sound of Trowbridge series starts with Nothing Rhymes With Orange at The Pump on Friday the 1st, with our wonderful new writer Florence Leeโs band Paradigm in support.
Then thereโs Devizes Carnival, Pewsey Pride, Swindon Paint Fest, the infamous Party on the Drive 3 in Chippenham, Hillworth Park Proms in Devizes, Burbage Beer Festival, a Sci Fi Day at The REME Museum, Calne, Chloe Jordan and Pete Lambโs Heartbeats at the Corn Exchange Devizes for an Air Ambulance fundraiser, the new season of Long Street Blues Club begins, boss reggae with the arrive of Ya Freshness at Devizes Scooter Club, Nothing Rhymes with Orange play the Exchange, Pewsey carnival, The Wharf Theatreโs Di, Vi and Rose, Swindon Shuffle, Devizes Food & Drink Festival, and so much more to come!
White Horse Opera members, Soprano Barbara Gompels, Mezzo Soprano Paula Boyagis, Tenor Carlos Alonso together with pianist Tony James join forces with international cellist Anupโฆ
By Ian DiddamsImages by Chris Watkins Ruth Ellis was hanged aged 28 years old, by Albert Pierrepoint the official executioner in the UK, at Hollowayโฆ
A group of local women and their families are gathering together to lay a huge installation of childrenโs clothes outside the office of Justin Tomlinsonโฆ
If I said these four words, in this order: open, mic, cellar, and bar, lots of Devizes folk will be evoked with fond reminiscences of Alan Jones and Richard Ben’s regular sessions down in the basement of the Bear Hotel. Many local musicians cut their teeth there, else if already established, rung out their labour of love, and that, in a nutshell is what open mic nights are all aboutโฆ.
But with the event being kaput, I get asked time over, here at Devizine, if I know of any still operating. So last night I popped along to see Nick Beere of Marlborough’s Mooncalf Studios, hosting one at the Bell in Great Cheverell, and off the back of it thought today we could talk about it, and present a more general piece on local open mics; double-whammy.
“I don’t know why I got started doing it,” Nick tells me, as he sets up for the next act. Far from karaoke, Nick is tweaking technical bobs, engineering the sound and advising newcomers, to make them both comfortable and sound professional. There’s a communal feel about open mic nights without pretence. Vince Bell is there, no stranger to an open mic, explaining their importance as a bridge from practising and playing to your friends and family, to getting out gigging. Indeed, there’s an unplanned duo playing tonight, Lisa the singer, and though it’s a nervous start for them, the applause received sent them brewing with deserved confidence.
While you can take it as red Vince delivered his sublime acoustic goodness, he’s here with Devizes singer-songwriter Sorrel Pits, coming across as one of those artists to make excuses, prior to pulling off some beautiful songs adroitly self-penned with meaningful prose.
Guitarist Steve Nicholls and bassist Troy Orourke are also present, uncertain about the future of their band Alfred’s Tower since the singer left, but accompanied on cajon they produced some wonderful instrumental pieces. They asked me if I knew of any singers in need of a band, so if you’re on the hunt get in touch with us and I’ll hook you up. And within this here’s another notable point about open mics, they’re convention-like for networking, a social get-together of like minded talent, and new connections will undoubtedly be made at them.
The Bell at Great Cheverell makes for a hospitable village free house, catering for diners more so, yet often hosting live music; those Truzzy Boys being a particular favourite. No one seemed bothered by being treated to a selection of songs after their meals. Nick runs the open mic here on the second Tuesday of the month, the first Monday of the month he does similar at the perhaps more apt Lamb in Marlborough, and the third Thursday at the Horseshoe in Minal.
To get involved with open mics, a quick Facebook search is all you need to do to get the ball rolling. Though there’s lots of said groups inactive though, especially post-lockdown. I’ll stick a few groups and pages which we’ve discovered and are currently running at the bottom of this piece. For if you want to break into the local scene, open mic could well be your route.
Other local open mics worthy of your perusal are Tom Harris’s at the Barge on HoneyStreet. The next one being 22nd September. Join HERE for updates.
In Devizes I only know of one, The Exchange nightclub runs. The next one is Thursday 7th September, and thereafter the first Thursday of each month. HERE is the group you need to join. Though another similar thang, even more communal than open mics are acoustic jams, a particularly popular one being each Wednesday at The Southgate.
Stallards in Trowbridge have open mics on the last Thursday of each month. This group is HERE.
The Old Road Tavern in Chippenham has regular open mics on the last Sunday of the month. Group is HERE. Next evening is Sunday Aug 27th, 7pm to 10.30pm, their 16th anniversary. Chippenham FM’s Brian Reid has been running it since 2014. “We regularly get thirty-forty people each month,” he told us.
Another crucial point Brian made was the Old Road’s is open to poetry and comedy too, as others are likewise. “We have a space which I am proud to say is welcoming and attentive and supportive of newcomers,” he explained, “and a lot of experienced participants come too.”
In Bath Connor McLeod has a regular Monday evening at Belushis, and there’s a general open mic group for Bath, HERE.
Delaney’s in Wantage have open mics the first Thursday of the month, next up also 7th September.
For Open Mics across Wiltshire, HERE, and For Open Mics throughout the Southwest, HERE. Have mic will travel!
And if I missed your favourite one, let us know, and we’ll add, provided you don’t expect me to sing personally, as there’s a government health warning on that!
by Ian Diddamsimages from Mark Harrison Facebook Last summer I was lucky enough to see Mark Harrison play at the โTangled Rootsโ festival over Radstockโฆ
In what appears to be a deliberate attempt to smear the campaign of opposition candidate for Wiltshire Police Crime Commissioner, independent Mike Rees, it seemsโฆ
Donโt hold your breath, but is โฆ .isโฆis that summerโฆ. coming? Ah, hereโs what weโve found this coming week to do in wonderful Wiltshireโฆ..
Usual gubbing, all the info and ticket links are on our jam packed event calendar, HERE, and you can plan ahead too. Any updates after today will also be put on there, so do check in later in the week too, as this is not exhaustive or comprehensive, or other such long words like that!
Do pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed here.
Also The Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham has a street art inspired exhibit, I hope to pay a visit and report back tomorrow.
And thereโs the Cepen Park Emoji Trail for Dorothy House, see the poster.
Wednesday 9th:
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Lots for youngsters at the Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon, Fidgety Feet Dance & Drama, and two sessions of Fly Like a Bird for 5-7yrs, and then from 8-10yrs.
Thursday 10th:
Little Piccolos Summer Workshop and Beautiful Bunting at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Lego workshop, Bricking It at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Sarum Live Open Mic & Jam, at the Duck Inn, Laverstock, Salisbury.
Friday 11th:
The Roughcut Rebels at The Old Lane, Chippenham.
The Radio Makers & Deadlight Dance at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
More crafts and kidโs stuff at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon; Celebrate the Sun, and again, two aged sessions for a Frozen Dance Party, with a screening of Frozen 2!
Road Trip at The Vic in Swindon, Swipe Right at the Queenโs Tap.
Outdoor Cinema Night โ Dirty Dancing at Warminster School.
Stofest โ 2nd attempt! at South Newton & Wishford Village Hall near Salisbury.
Whoโs Next tribute at the Tree House, Frome. Live music at The Baa, see below…
Saturday 12th
Seend Fete on the Green, by the Lye.
Melksham Assembly Hall get all Lego, see the poster.
Duane Conn & The Connections at The Southgate, Devizes, Down The Hatch at the Three Crowns.
Pants at the Lamb, Marlborough, Second Hand Band at The Three Tuns, Great Bedwyn
Top Of The Pops Band at The Consti Club, Chippenham.
Happy 20th birthday to Venom at Club Ice, celebrating with a birthday bash at Westbury.
41 Fords are at The Royal Oak, Corsham.
Frenzy at the Three Horseshoes, Bradford on Avon.
Editorโs pick of the week is Swindon & Wiltshire Pride at Regents Circus, all rainbow blessings to you!
Elsewhere in Swindon, Homer is at The Swiss Chalet, Retro Electro at The Vic, Barrelhouse at Queenโs Tap, and The Vipers at the New Inn in Stratton.
Illingworth plays The Avon Brewery, Salisbury.
Rosie Merritt is live at The Queen Charlotte, Andover.
Rat Race at the Cheese & Grain, Frome; ska!
Sunday 13th:
All About The Music have their first Record Fair at Devizes Conservative Club, 10am-4pm.
Be Like Will are at The Farmhouse Inn in Southwick, Trowbridge.
Mike Hoddinott Trio at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Ortonesque at the Old Town Bowl, Swindon.
Monday 14th:
Lego Animation Workshop at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Tuesday 15th:
Another Lego Animation Workshop at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Alex Goodyear Trio presents the Music of Oscar Peterson at the regular Jazz Knights, at The Royal Oak, Swindon.
The Winchester Gate, Salisbury, have their regular poetry evening, Poetika 114 โ Pirates and Mermaids.
And thatโs your lot, for now, do check into our event calendar as between picking my nose and bum, I might yet updateโฆ what? No one reads this far anyway, do they?! This is a checkpoint, see whoโs still awake! Good reason for it though, itโs when we look at future stuff to be doing, and thinking about bookingโฆโฆ.
Like Liz Stringer at Chapel Arts, Bath on Thursday and a Tom Speight Instore at Sound Knowledge Marlborough.
Next weekend is Devizes DOCA Colour Rush & Confetti Battle, followed by The Jake Leg Jug Band at The Wharf Theatre. Sausage and Cider Day at The Brewery Inn, Seend. Sunday find the monthly Jon Amor residency at the Southgate, Devizes, yay!
And raver-families, check out The MidLife Krisis Summer Family Event at Supermarine, Swindon!
Further into the month, of course we have another one of those bank holiday things; FullTone in Devizes, Potterne Beer Festival, Box Rocks, Talbot-Fest in Calne, Ruzz Guitar Trio at The Southgate, Devizes, Cooperโs Creek at The Wheatsheaf, Calne, 12 Bars Later at the Wroughton Club, Swindon, and so so much more will be coming in, I promise you! We might yet have a summer after all!
Then, beginning September we see the Pump feature the Future Sounds of Trowbridge, a series of gigs for upcoming bands, which Iโm going to have to tell you about in a separate post, as Iโm too excited and need a weeโฆ..groundbreaking journalism, accept no less; have a great week!!
Hereโs what weโve found to be doing locally this coming week into August alreadyโฆtake a raincoat for this is British summer time, yay!
Hereโs a thing, all the info and ticket links are on our jam packedevent calendar, HERE, and you can plan ahead too. Any updates after today will also be put on there, so do check in later in the week too, as this is not exhaustive or comprehensive, or other such long words like that!
Ongoing through the month, Marlborough Open Studios, countywide artist open studios, where you can invite yourself into many artistโs homes for free to see their work and what biscuits they have! Open Studios runs on the first four weekends in July between 11am and 5pm.
Do pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed here.
Ongoing until Sunday, the Westbury Festival continues until 30th July, with lots going on there.
Wednesday 26th:
The regular acoustic jam at The Southgate, Devizes, and Negra Santa at The Bell, Bath.
Thursday 27th:
Jam Night at the Boathouse, Bradford-on-Avon.
The Beware of the Bull show, An Audience Without Jake Thackray, which you might have seen in Pewsey, is at Chapel Arts in Bath.
The ELO Experience at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
And festivals kicking off are Womad near Malmesbury (27th-30th) and the same dates for Camp Bestival near Lulworth; you lucky lot!
Friday 28th:
Ah, Editorโs pick of the week, Devizes Scooter Rally 2023 all weekend. The Scooter Club are saying the date for pre-order tickets has passed, but you can pay on the gate, except for overnight campervans and caravans, which must have been pre-booked. Friday has 41 Fords and Sharp Class, Saturday The Butterfly Collective, Roughcut Rebels, The Killertones, and Orange Street. Previewed HERE.
Devizes Town Hall has a magic night with Chris Hiscock.
The other biggie is Trowbridge Festival at Southwick, only a few ticket options left for this now, so get in quick.
Jaspreet Singh: With Love, Jaspreet at Swindon Arts Centre, The Daybreakers at The Vic, Good Times at the Queens Tap, and The Dukeโs Theatre Company presents Twelfth Night Summer Tour at Old Town Bowl.
Billy in the Lowground at the Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
R.E.M by Stipe at the Tree House, Frome.
Saturday 29th:
Dylan Smith at The Southgate, Devizes, Midnight Hour at The Three Crowns.
William The Conqueror has an instore at Sound Knowledge in Marlborough, with an intimate gig at St. Peterโs Church. Miles Kane is at Marlborough Town Hall, and Barrelhouse are at The Bear. Reggae Garden Party at The Pelican in Froxfield.
Spiritual medium Mitch Garlington at Melksham Assembly Hall.
Calne Bike Meet 2023.
The Last Baguette: Pandoraโs Box at Pound Arts, Corsham.
People Like Us at Prestbury Sports Bar, Warminster.
In The Night Garden at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, and also running on Sunday.
Sophia & The Soul Rebels at The Moonrakers, Swindon, Shades of Seattle at The Vic, and Rotten Aces at the Woodland Edge.
LCassidy, Backsy MOC + MissFaithee (Situationships) at St Margaret’s Hall in Bradford On Avon, Us-Two at The Boathouse.
The Dom Harrison Dilemma at The Bell, Bath.
Metallica Reloaded at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Sunday 30th:
Pims in the Park at Lydiard Park, Swindon, a great Julia House fundraiser, with some great bands including our favs Talk in Code, Sarah C Ryan, NoMiddle Ground and N/SH.
Monday 31st:
Mal Webb & Kylie Morrigan at The Bell, Bath.
Tuesday 1st:
Rock The Tots are at Old Town Bowl, Swindon.
Thatโs all I have for now, but early days, and more will come in, so pay attention to our updating event calendar, and follow our socials for updates and new stuff to do, rather than relying on me editing this, because I rarely get time for it! Have a great week!
What if I told you the forthcoming production at the Wharf Theatre in Devizes was staged by the Wharf’s own Youth Theatre Group? Would you preconceive it to be akin to a school production? Would you assume it amateurish, or immature? Girls Like That is none of the above, I was invited to a sneaky preview dress rehearsal type thingy, and it’s complex, multi-layered and poignantly provocativeโฆ.
I left the Wharf contemplating the model protagonist versus antagonists is ambiguously played out here, as the centre of attention, due to a lewd photograph of her going viral, Scarlet, played wonderfully by Chloe Lagden, is silent throughout the majority of the play, and until the closing scene where she lays it thick on the line; the layers of blame, of victim of circumstance, and the harassing group banter leaves a bitter taste of irony, of who is right and who are wrong.
Even the title remains questionable once the play has concluded; does the โgirls like thatโ refer to the Scarlets of this world, and their terrible mistakes, or her peers who seem determined to gossip and spread hearsay through their outrage at what she did? I remain undecided, but an open-ended play is favourable if you wish to leave with deliberations about your own social engagements, which it certainly does. Face it, we never truly grow out of our malicious adolescent craving to better ourselves by putting others down, and I only said that because my dad is a black belt in karate!
Of course, it focuses on contemporary methods of harassing, online, but there’s interesting monologues dividing the present day, of twenty year gapped reminiscences, examples of masculine abuse and inequality, which though you assume are only there for an insight to past techniques of humiliation and how they differ or are similar to today’s, there’s a twist at the conclusion to roll them nicely into the narrative…. not forgoing, elders in the audience will love the cultural reverences I’d suspect the actresses would need to Google!
The nine other young actresses, Scarletโs frenemies, each play their parts of equal substance, as if they were made for them. I pondered if they each took reflection from this on their own actions, or this is the superb direction from renowned director Lou Cox, or more likely a bit of both. But one thing I am sure of, the cast; Samantha Scott, Bea Yates, Eloise Bromley, Darcey Oswin, Megan Hughes, Pip Aldridge, Jess Harding, Jess Worrow, and Lisa Grimes, together with Chloe, play utterly convincing parts with gusto and actuality.
There’s subtly placed humour too, satirical and black, and it’s easy to see now how Girls Like That was named best play for young audiences at the Writersโ Guild of Great Britain Awards in 2015, though I would argue with strong language and passionately delivered prose, here is a story to leave an impression on the most hardened adult mind equally.
Clogs and stilettos this play, for me, because being an honest reviewer, anyone who requests a nudie photo of me must either be criminally insane or a director filming a whole new level of twisted horror-comedy; walking in someone else’s shoes is most effective when they’re an entirely different style of shoe. Even if you cannot relate to the circumstance presented in Girls Like That, I believe there’s a moral there for us all, as the naivety of the characters mature, the nature of gossip and backbiting never really fades through age, it just gets more complex and crafty. Ergo, anyone, a victim, perpetrator or both will identify with this gritty, reality-driven play, but all will relish in its gorgeous portrayal.
The popularity of recognisable shows at theatres in general, means previous performances at our wonderful Wharf Theatre, such as The Railway Children, can be taken as red, whereas something lesser-known like this you have to take a chance. Iโm only here to express my thoughts, and would humbly suggest Girls Like That displays the diversity of performances the Wharf are willing to put on, and you will leave breath-taken.
Well done to Lou and her team of aspiring, and indeed, inspiring actors at the Wharf Theatre Youth Group, itโs marvellous!
Girls Like That starts tomorrow, Thursday 20th July, and runs until Saturday 22nd. Shows at 7:30pm, tickets are from ยฃ10, from the Wharf website HERE, or from the Box Office on; 0333 666 3366.
If we spoke only last month about Wiltshire Councilโs threats to prosecute Wiltshire Music Events over posters advertising a Bob Marley tribute event in Devizes,โฆ
By Florence Lee Images by Kiesha Films โThey promised hardcore shenanigans which never fall below 180 bpmโ SHOX: After seeing Shox in February I wasโฆ
Girls, girls, girls, we love them here at Devizine, especially our esteemed all-female local supergroup The Female of the Species. 2024 will be their ninthโฆ
Two teen Devizes punker bands appear on Trowbridgeโs Pump triple-bill this Saturday, as the search for the Future of Trowbridge reaches its eighth instalment; unsureโฆ
Review by Karen Cannings. Photography by Gail Foster.
Market Lavington Community Hall was filled with music and applause on Friday 7th July, as Lavington Community Choir presented their summer concert under the direction of Paula Boyagis…..
The choir showcased their vocal skills and versatility in a range of jazz-inspired songs, accompanied by a talented jazz ensemble featuring Tim Price on piano, Tony Jones on flute, James Monckton on double bass, Henry Liebling on Sax, Nick Kingman on percussion/drum kit and Nick Hale on miscellaneous percussion.
The first part of the concert included some classic jazz tunes such as ‘Moon River’ and ‘The Way We Were’, arranged for choir by Bernard Wight. The choir sang with rich harmonies and expressive dynamics, creating a warm and engaging atmosphere. Jessica Phillips, Soprano, charmed the audience with her sweet voice in ‘Let there be Love’, while Paula Boyagis, Mezzo Soprano, delivered a rich and expressive performance of ‘Autumn Leaves’. Jim Donovan then entertained everyone with his rendition of ‘Mack the Knife’, complete with a trilby hat!
The second half featured a jazz cantata based on Robert Browning’s poem ‘The Pied Piper of Hamelin’, composed by accompanist Tim Price when he was only 16 years old as a student at Dauntsey’s School. The choir, soloists and jazz ensemble brought this humorous and whimsical story to life with catchy melodies, lively rhythms and colourful narration. The original director of music at Dauntsey’s School, David Price, was present in the audience to enjoy the revival of his former pupil’s work. The conductor of the cantata was Paula Boyagis, who also sang the role of the Piper (complete with flute solos) resplendent in a colourful costume of red and yellow.
Mark Wastell, sang and acted his role as the Mayor with great conviction.
There will be some foot-tapping folky goodness at the wonderful Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon on Friday. This year’s Bradford Roots Festival may be aโฆ
After an inaugural midweek gig with local legend Andrew Hurst this month, it seems Bromham’s St Nicholas Church could be the unexpected new rural musicโฆ
Spring has sprung! There were two snails on my milk-float this morning, opening โdoing it,โ without shame; absolute filth! โฆ. I should have filmed itโฆ
By Mick Brian.Images by Chris Watkins Media Mention the name of the author โAgatha Christieโ and most people will immediately think of her two mainโฆ
Another summery week ahead of us, and our weekly report on all the stuff weโve found to do. We will continue to support all local events and we wonโt succumb to petty squabbling about any of them, by anyone.
It seems unfair that we seem to get minimal respect for what we do by a few local councillors, perhaps it is because of this reason, I really donโt know. Devizes Town Council posted on their Facebook page last week, asking for suggestions to improve the free local council-run pamphlet โThe Messenger.โ I was the only one who offered an idea, being the events list in it only promotes those events governed by the council, that it would be helpful to both us and their readers if they could include a kind of โfor more information on local eventsโ link to Devizine, but they have not bothered to even respond.
It begs the question why Devizes Town Council would ask for suggestions and not reply to those few who do; a simple yes or no would have sufficed! Now that I’ve said it Iโm sure it will get political, Iโll be witch-hunted and banned from social media pages again when all Iโm guilty of is telling people about events going on, so here we go; do let me know if anything below offends you or is any way โbullyingโ someone, wonโt you?!
Donโt forget nothing is comprehensive, other events might well be added during the week as and when we discover them, so check in on our event calendar, for more info and links on these, updates and planning ahead.
Ongoing through the month, Marlborough Open Studios, countywide artist open studios, where you can invite yourself into many artistโs homes for free to see their work and what biscuits they have! Open Studios runs on the first four weekends in July between 11am and 5pm.
Do pay a visit to Wiltshire Museum, Devizes, for the Anna Dillon exhibition; reviewed here.
Wednesday 12th:
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Jarman at Swindon Arts Centre.
Amadou Diagne & Group Yakar at The Bell Inn, Bath.
Sophie Duker at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Thursday 13th:
Mark Thomas: England and Son (Work In Progress) at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Chris Murphy at The Tuppenny, Swindon.
Ghosts of this Town album launch at The Vic, Swindon.
Friday 14th:
Lost Monkey Productions presents Nothing Rhymes With Orange, Foxymoron and Overstory at the Corn Exchange, Devizes.
The Unpredictables at The Peppermill, Devizes.
Wrestling Night at Marlborough Town Hall.
Slageri & Kimng Alias at The Barge Inn, Honey-Street.
Sour Apple at The Pig and Whistle, Melksham.
Nervendings and Mosaic at the Old Road Tavern, Chippenham.
Jazz at the Cafe with Jacqui Hicks at The Civic, Trowbridge.
The Carrivick Sisters at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Barrelhouse at The Vic, Swindon.
Sara Petite (4 piece) plus support: Savannah Gardner at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Heathen Apostles at the Tree House, Frome.
Asian Dub Foundation at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Saturday 15th:
Arty Kids at Hillworth Park, Devizes.
Wiltshire FA Wildcats Festival at Green Lane Playing Fields, Devizes.
Italian Auto Moto Festival in the Market Place, Devizes.
Devizes District Wargames Group: Attack 2023 at Devizes School.
Chris Murphy & Barney Kenny at The Southgate, Devizes.
Roughcut Rebels at The Three Crowns, Devizes.
Midlife Krisis Summer โ Summer Dance at The Barge, Honey-Street.
Humdinger at The Lamb, Marlborough.
On Remand at The Crown, Marlborough.
Sour Apple at the Ship, Upavon.
Market Lavington Vintage Meet Family Fun Weekend
Family Fun Day at Woodborough Social Club from 12-4pm.
Pewsey Pride at the Coopers Arms.
The Passion of Joan of Arc at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Never 42 at Swindon Arts Centre.
Whole Lotta DC at The Vic, Swindon.
Nicki Leighton-Thomas โ One Good Scandal at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Later with Frome College at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Newton Faulkner at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Gorilla Riot at The Tree House, Frome.
Sunday 16th:
Deadlight Dance & Reverence 80 at The Blue Boar, Aldbourne.
Characters Stage School: The Addams Family at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
GM Dance Academy Showcase at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Warmington, Lindley and Webb at The Bell Inn, Bath.
Monday 17th:
The Westbury Festival opens with lots of great events running until 30th July.
Rock The Tots: Rock Gods vs Princesses at Pound Arts, Corsham.
BD Lenz at The Bell Inn, Bath.
Tuesday 18th:
Open Mic at The Angel, Westbury.
Jazz Knights at The Royal Oak, Swindon with Roger Beaujolais & Tom Berge Trio.
Harri Mason at The Bell, Bath.
And thatโs all we have so far, do check into our event calendar for updates, and have a great week!
Wiltshire Councilโs ambitious plans to resurface all the roads in Devizes before the next ice age have been cancelled because rare dinosaur fossils have beenโฆ
November was one crazy month for our friend and researcher from the Regional History Centre at the University of the West of England, Brian Edwards.โฆ
With howling, coarse baritones Nick Fletcher, the main vocalist of Marlboroughโs gothic duo, Deadlight Dance chants, โhere comes the rain, and I love the rain,โฆ
Hey, busy week this week, hereโs what’s happening across the county. Donโt forget thereโs more info on these, ticket links and irregular updates on our fantabulouso Event Calendar, so get ahead one step ahead of the game!
Ongoing, Hail the Curious, the inaugural exhibit at The Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham; check it out by the end of the month. Devizes Tennis Club starts week one of their Tennis Holiday Camp at Devizes Tennis Club; book here.
Wednesday 28th:
Ah, the regular acoustic jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Jo Brand: Work In Progress at Swindon Arts Centre.
William KZ at The Bell, Bath, The Beat featuring Dave Wakeling at Bath Forum.
Thursday 29th:
Open Mic at Stallards, Trowbridge.
B-Sydes & Old Man Boom at The Tuppenny in Swindon, while Something Underneath and Chasing Dolls are at the Vic, Drew Bryant is at Timmyโs Bar, and Coldplay tribute Coldplace at The Wyvern Theatre.
Comedy at Komedia in Bath with Phil McIntyre presents Danny Bhoyโs Now is not a Good Time, Danielle Ward and Tread Softly Productionsโ hilarious, intelligent and seriously moving, no-holds-barred look at being a woman in comedy, The Half at the Rondo Theatre.
Friday 30th:
The acclaimed Welsh film, Translations gets a screening at Melksham Assembly Hall, Helen gave us a preview, HERE.
Drew Bryant is at The Pelican, Devizes, with Illingworth at The Three Crowns. And we look forward to Devizes first Pride on Saturday with Drag Queen Bingo at The Wyvern club and an LGBTQ+ Club Night at The Exchange.
Thereโs an Open Mic at Marlborough Town FC, Swipe Right play the Bear, and Reading Dub Club with the Jah Lion Movement visits the Barge on Honey Street.
B-Sydes at the Pump, Trowbridge, with Old Man Boom in support.
Opening is the amazing Minety Music Festival, nr Malmesbury, and happening all weekend.
Chippenham Comedy Festival starts at the Old Road Tavern, and continues until Sunday 2nd July.
Modern Evils, Viduals and Trippy Kicks at The Vic, Swindon, while Moon and Truck are at The Castle, and Jon Amor Trio at the Beehive. Comedy at The Wyvern Theatre with Phil McIntyre presents Danny Bhoyโs Now is not a Good Time.
Iona Lane with Malin Lewis at Pound Arts in Corsham.
Spectrum at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
The Ministry of Burlesque cabaret at Komedia, Bath, while the Rondo Theatre have Eleanor Higgins and Bush Productions queer cult sensation, In Pursuet, following two sell-out runs at Edinburgh Festival Fringe. And โYour Songโ โ a Celebration of the Songs of Elton John at Chapel Arts.
Keith Brymer-Jones is at The Memorial Theatre, Frome, with Led Zep tribute Coda at the Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 1st:
Marlborough Open Studios starts, and runs over the first four weekends in July between 11am and 5pm. This is a countywide open studios extravaganza where you can visit many different local artists in their studios.
It is Mantonfest near Marlborough time again; yay! Nothing Rhymes With Orange are at The Barge on Honey Street.
Free to take clothes, swap and donate at Devizes Swap Shop at St James Church from 11am-2pm. It is Devizes first Pride at Hillworth Park, and of course, the 22nd Devizes Beer & Cider Festival. To finish, Jamie Williams & The Roots Collective will continue from the beer fest over to the Southgate.
Thereโs the Heddington and Stockley Steam Rally and Country Fair.
Becky Lawrence & The Reason play The Green Dragon in Market Lavington.
Saucy Jack at The Pilot, Melksham.
Barney Kenny & Chris Murphey at The Pump in Trowbridge.
Matt Woosey at Pound Arts in Corsham.
Trowbridge Symphony Orchestra at Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon, and highly recommended Adam and the Ants tribute Ant Trouble at The Three Horseshoes, with The Sylvertones at The BoatHouse.
Italia Conti at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon. My Chemical Romance and Fallout Boy tributes at the Vic, The Black Charade and Fell Out Boy!
Figgle Fest 10th Anniversary, at Figheldean Village Hall Salisbury.
Tribute to Small Faces, the Small Fakers Band has sold out Chapel Arts, Bath.
Gordie Mackeeman & His Rhythm Boys at Frome Memorial Theatre, with An Evening with Simon & Oscar from Ocean Colour Scene at The Cheese & Grain, and Foo Fakers & Nirvanot at the Tree House.
Jon Amor regular session at the Southgate in Devizes, increibley with the Gris Gris, Robin Davey and Greta Valetni; just wow!
Inspire 2023 free music festival at Warminster Pleasure Grounds.
Zone Clubโs Summer Celebration Concert at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Regular first Sunday of the month Blues Jam at the Vic in Swindon.
Monday 3rd I got nought, yet.
Tuesday 4th:
Running until 8th July, the Bradfordiansโ Amadeus at the Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Jazz Knights at The Royal Oak in Swindon brings you the Alex Goodyear Quartet.
That’s your lot for this week, unless you know any different? It’s free to have your event added to our EVENT CALENDAR and feature on our weekly rodeo roundup, so don’t make me come chasing after you, do let us know about them. Have a sixties style fab and groovy weekend!
An exodus of musical lovers and, I’d assume, a healthy handful of friends and family, trekked southwards through winter’s final ambush last night, to enjoyโฆ
The first Kamikaze moth of the year dive-bombed my face the other morning. Forget blossoming trees and tulips, that’s a milkmanโs sure sign of springโฆbecauseโฆ
The Liberal Democratโs are today celebrating a historic election win in the heart of Marlborough, in the first contested Town Council election for thirteen yearsโฆ.โฆ
After a larger quantity of social media teasers than previous years, Devizes Arts Festival has today revealed their full line-up for 2024. Better take aโฆ
Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats! Everything listed here is on our event calendar; goโฆ
Image: Czampal Iโm laughing, not at the Glasto lineup, but the incalculable comments of negativity it has encouraged in Facebookland. It should be said though,โฆ
Ian Diddams Written by Jonathan LarsonPresented by Maple Theatre Company It’s always hard reviewing a show that one has seen multiple times before, performed byโฆ
In true Royston Vasey style, unfortunately due to time and resources we donโt review international music as we did during lockdown, choosing to focus moreโฆ
Delighted by winning the Best Theatre/Arts Venue category of the WiltshireโฏMuddyโฏStilettos Award 2023, Devizes Wharf Theatre wanted to thank everyone who voted for them. โWe are so proud of our little theatre and all our incredible volunteers,โ they told Devizine, โthe theatre literally would not run without their time and effort. Thank you also to everyone who supports us whether that be by coming to shows, volunteering, or, indeed, nominating us for this award in the first place!โ
MuddyโฏStilettos is all about celebrating and supporting local businesses and this year saw over 800,000 people voting on various categories around the country, and we congratulate the Wharf, for it really is a wonderful little theatre on our doorstep; but we all knew that already, didnโt we?!
There is only one more show left of the summer season at the Wharf, one Iโm personally looking forward to. Girls Like Thatis a gritty reality-driven drama directed by Lou Cox, and performed by the Wharf Youth Theatre Group. It explores the pressures on young people today in the wake of advancing technology, and was named Best Play for Young Audiences at the Writersโ Guild of Great Britain Awards 2015. It runs from 20th-22nd July.
And itโs on with the new program. Saturday 19th of August sees The Jake Leg Jug Band at the Wharf. An authentic sound of 1920’s and 30’s America, from jazz, blues, gospel and ragtime, this trio put their own twist on songs of murder, betrayal, gambling, liquor and redemption.
From Monday 11th September to Saturday 16th, find Amelia Bullmore’s comedy, Di and Viv and Rose, dealing with friendships among a group of three cohabiting female students in 1983, displaying how their solidarity precariously survives physical separation, career paths and even mortality.
On Thursday 28th September thereโs a Devizes Film Club screening of Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom. A 2019 Bhutanese drama film directed by Pawo Choyning Dorji. The first film from the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan to be nominated for an Oscar, it follows a young teacher with a dream of moving to Australia but finds himself teaching a classroom of eager children, and a yak!
October 23rd to 28th sees Lyn Taylorโs Happy Jack, a 1989 play by John Godber, about a couple who live in a mining village in West Yorkshire.
Steaming into November, and the 4th has an uplifting story of heroism and love by Ali Smith, Cadbury’s Angels. Set in wartime when a group of women working on the production line at the Cadbury factory in Birmingham decided to secretly send letters and cards inside the tins of chocolates that were dispatched to the soldiers fighting on the front lines. To the men fighting miles from home, and away from their loved ones, these women became known as The Cadbury Angels.
Sunday the 5th November, remember, thereโs Water Rats Charity Variety Spectacular, some top stars all raising money for the Water Rats Charity.ย
Saturday 11th November thereโs two showings ofThe Last Post, a poignant, moving and thought-provoking stage show for children and families. The story revolves around the correspondence between Joseph, who is at war, and his son William at home.ย The split stage, multi-rolling and use of projections allows for fast-paced transitions from England to Belgium so the audience remains immersed in this simple but moving story that entertains in an appropriate and engaging manner.ย
With November behind us, oh no it isnโt, December now, and where would be without panto time? This year will beJack and the Beanstalk, and itโs running from Friday 1st to Saturday 9th.ย
Bounding into 2024, we can expect to find Oscar Wildeโs farcical comedy,The Importance of Being Earnest, from 29th January to 3rd February. Auditions for this will be on 18th September, see here.
All tickets for the above performances will be at the box office as of Saturday 1st July. Anything we publish hereafter is top secret speculation taken from leaked documents from the very top of the Wharf Theatre, and I will likely be shot for merely whispering them to you …..in some over dramatic theatrical way too!
Stagecoach Performing Arts School are visiting with a production of Frozen Jnr, followed by a Lonnie Donnigan tribute show on February 24th.
2nd March sees the Music of Simon & Garfunkelshow come to Devizes and in April you can look forward to something very Agatha Christie. From 13th May until the 18th, Amanda Whittingtonโs The Thrill of Loveis the performance. Set in a smoggy 1953 gentlemanโs club in Londonโs West End, where young manager, Ruth Ellis, had it all, the money and lifestyle that she had always dreamed of. However, by 1955 she had lost it all and was the last woman to be hanged in Great Britain.
And on the 1st of June, expect Top Secretโs explosive family show, The Magic of Science.ย An opportunity to surround yourself with the mystery of magic, cleverly fused with wondrous and miraculous feats of science. It is promised the venue will be transformed into a real-life science laboratory and lots of unbelievable “how did they do that!” moments.ย
On International Womenโs Day a group of women from the Swindon community decided to organise a clothes memorial for the over 11,500 Palestinian children killedโฆ
Wowzers! Huge congratulations and a colossal thanks to young Chloe Boyle from Devizes, who is planning to spend the night of April 5th sleeping outsideโฆ
Newly formed and locally based collective Palooza hosted their opening night at The Exchange nightclub in Devizes yesterday, offering house music with universal appeal andโฆ
Salisbury-based event organisation Wiltshire Music Events has been ordered to remove posters advertising the Marley Experience gig at the Devizes Corn Exchange on 13th April,โฆ
The fifth single coming out from Chippenham singer-songwriter M3g on Friday, Ashes of Memory, and if Iโve said in the past what separates Meg fromโฆ
Swindonโs sonic indie popsters Atari Pilot are a prolific bunch, and have a new single out called The Rules Never Changeโฆ. And, they donโt. Thereโsโฆ
Happy Summer Solstice, Wednesday, sunrise expected at 3:57am supposed to be a drier night than last night, possibly cloudy; have a wonderful solstice everyone; love and light.ย
Hereโs what else is happening across the county this midsummer week. Donโt forget thereโs more info on these, ticket links and irregular updates on our sparkly Event Calendar, so plan ahead.
Ongoing, Hail the Curious, the inaugural exhibit at The Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham; check it out by the end of the month.
Tuesday 20th:
Poetika 112 โ The Sun And The Moon at The Winchester Gate, Salisbury.
Wednesday 21st:
Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Classic Car Evening Gathering at Atwell-Wilson Motor Museum in Calne
Running until 24th June, The Western Players present The Dinner Party at Swindon Arts Centre
MorningStar plays The Bell, Bath.
Oh, and of course, thereโs that little shindig called Glastonbury Festival; have one for me if you are heading that way, and if youโve room in your backpack I have been known to fold up quite compact if duty calls!
Thursday 22nd:
Music For Miniatures at The Neeld, Chippenham.
Sebastian & Me & Mirrored Faces at The Vic, Swindon
Lol Goodman Band at Pound Arts, Corsham.
The Damned, yes, I said the Damned, at Komedia, Bathโฆ. well, Iโll be!
Friday 23rd:
Lucky Number 7 plays The Pump in Trowbridge, with JCC and Enter Red.
The Free Association presents St. Doctorโs Hospital, an improvised medical drama, directed by Graham Dickson at the Neeld, Chippenham.
Emily Storm at The Kings Arms, Melksham.
Robinson Stone at Pound Arts, Corsham.
The Unthanks at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Xodus – a Tribute to Bob Marley & The Wailers at Chapel Arts, Bath.
TommyInnit at Bath Forum.
Phoxjaw at Moles, Bath.
Hamsters From Hell & The Lonely Road Band at The Vic, Swindon.
Moore’s Exotic Reserve at The Tuppenny, Swindon.
Ed Sheeran Tribute at The Ridge, Swindon.
ZambaLando at Fiesta de Cuba, Greenbridge, Swindon
Saturday 24th:
The Vintage Bazaar at The Corn Exchange, Devizes.
California Dreams at The Wharf Theatre, Devizes. Enjoy a trip through the music of California in the 60โs and 70โs. Recording just a stoneโs throw from each other and guesting on each otherโs records, a group of musical legends worked simultaneously to turn out some of the greatest songs of all time. Hits by The Mamas & The Papas, Eagles, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Linda Ronstatd, The Byrds, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and many more.
Poulshot Village Fete.
Devizes Chamber Choir presents Summer by the Sea at St Andrews Church, Devizes.
Earl Slick Band @ Long Street Blues Club, Devizes, big question mark over this one, it might well be cancelled, do check ahead.
SGO at The Southgate, Devizes.
Funked Up at The Three Crowns, Devizes.
Ben Borrill at The Moonrakers, Devizes.
Calne Carnival
Melksham Pride
The Strollers at Melksham Rock N Roll Club, now in Spencerโs Sports & Social Club.
Back to the 80’s at Melksham Rugby Club.
Big Family Music Day at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon.
Bus Station Loonies at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Atlas Rise at Moles, Bath.
Aoife Scott at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Mixed Bag at Prestbury Sports Bar, Warminster.
Stars of Time Film and Comic Con at Steam, Swindon.
Drag Me Down & Youth Illusion at The Vic, Swindon.
Mickelson: Jump off the Earth UK tour at The Hop Inn, Swindon.
Fleetwood Shack at Level III, Swindon.
Talk in Code at Brown Street, Salisbury.
Sunday 25th:
Devizes Tennis Club starts week one of their Tennis Holiday Camp at Devizes Tennis Club; book here.
Itโs the Pro-Wrestling Showdown at The Corn Exchange, Devizes.
Junkyard Dogs at The Southgate, Devizes.
No Go Glasto charity gig for Diabetes UK at Stallards, Trowbridge.
Weekly bandstand concerts in John Coles Park, Chippenham.
Lazy Summer Sundays at Richard Jefferies with Canuteโs Plastic Army.
Wifi Wars at Swindon Arts Centre.
Keith Brymer Jonesโ Life, Clay and Everything at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Collapse The Sky & ChemiQueen at Level III, Swindon.
India Arkin live in session at the Electric Bar in Komedia, Bath.
Eddie Martin at The Bell, Bath.
Monday 26th:
Brendon at The Tap & Barrel, Swindon
Phil King Band at The Bell, Bath
Tuesday 27th:
Letโs Swim Get Swimming & Tokyo Toy Company at The Vic, Swindon.
Wyvern Theatre Swap Shop at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Jazz Knights Presents Nigel Price and the Alban Claret Quartet at The Royal Oak Swindon.
Spiers & Boden at Komedia, Bath
The Hill Book Launch at the Rondo Theatre, Bath.
Thatโs all I got, folks. Not as busy as last weekend, but still lots to keep us all out of trouble! Donโt forget though, to check in on our event calendar for updates as they will come in from time to time!
American poet, Carrie Etter has been a resident in England since 2001, and a reader in Creative Writing at Bath Spa University. She published four collections, most recently, The Weather in Normal, and numerous chapbooks. On Saturday Carrie gave a poetry workshop and reading at Devizes Town Hall, as a fringe event of Devizes Arts Festival…..
โCarrieโs workshop was absolutely fantastic, a distilled overview of prose poetry with many examples to show the variation in style and our own time to create (with no pressure).ย Carrie was inspiring, impassioned and quick as a whip.
Her students at Bristol University are very lucky to have her as a teacher (as were her many past students from at Bath Spa University). The open mic at the end was inclusive, supportive and fun. Carrieโs final poem saw me wiping away tears; beautiful.
I wish I could write a longer review but I am doing this one-eyed with a poorly optic nerve. Iโm effervescing with words which will have to wait or be dictaphoned, when they come I now have many tips as to how to form them better.ย Thanks Carrie, your generosity is abundant – Iโve a feeling youโll get a roomfulโs worth of follow up messages. Helen.
Members of Swindon Palestine Solidarity made themselves heard at the Labour Party fundraising dinner, where Jess Phillips MP was the guest of honour, protesting atโฆ
Swindon indie popsters Talk in Code return tomorrow (1st March) with a new single, Something Of Nothing โฆ..hold tight to your Deely-Boppers, things are aboutโฆ
Think early nineties dance-indie crossover and the Madchester circuit might understandably spring to mind. Yet Pop Will Eat Itself were Brunmies, The Shamen were Scots,โฆ
I trouble procrastinating upon being gifted a previously released CD from an artist for review, unfortunately they land on the backburner, prioritising upcoming news items.โฆ
Ian Diddams Regular readers of Devizine may be well accustomed to hearing the name โVince Bellโ. For those less frequent readers or those that haveโฆ
Bit Wintery, innit? Calendars are going forward, weather is going backwards! Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold ontoโฆ
Devizes Arts Festival headed into its final weekend with a fine Friday night gig at The Corn Exchange.ย As Clair Figes of the Arts Festival said in her introduction, this was all about the music.ย Whilst there might have been some hesitation to give any Russian music any air-time at the present time, perhaps these days would have been different if more people had spent more time listening to music, rather than fighting.ย Let the music flow, she said.ย And how right she was.…..
So then the sharply-dressed quartet that is the Budapest Cafรฉ Orchestra came to the stage, and proceeded to blow everyone away with a really virtuoso performance of world music. This was gypsy and folk-flavoured music from Spain, the Balkans, Russia, wherever, and it was played with verve and panache.
Established in 2009 by British composer and violinist, Christian Garrick, and with 13 albums to their name, the Budapest Cafรฉ Orchestra is a small but impeccably formed ensemble of just four players. They combined violin, guitar, accordion, double bass, saz and balalaika to dazzling effect, creating a sound that you might expect of a far larger ensemble.
The BCO consisted of Christian Garrick (violin, darabuka), Eddie Hession (button accordion), Kelvin Cantlon (double bass), and Adrian Zolotuhin (saz, guitar, balalaika, domra). Each one of them is a master in their field, and each one of them has played with some of the most famous artists in the world. Their pedigree is impeccable. And boy did it show last night, as they collectively breezed through their highly entertaining two sets.
It was high energy, and it was delivered with style, and a great deal of wit. The versatile switching of instruments, the comedic commentary from Christian, the twirling shades of the on-stage standard lamps โ it all added up to a visual and aural delight. And, not surprisingly, the large audience absolutely loved it.
Yet another triumph for this yearโs Arts Festival.
Hey, teacher! Leave those sausage rolls alone. Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats, there beโฆ
West-side in the Lavingtons last night, tumbleweeds could’ve blown along the High Street as an army of highway operatives rode into the village with heavyโฆ
Featured image by LoraDore After an impressive forty-five years of Guiding in Worton, through Brownies, Guides, Young Leadership, and as the Unit Leader there forโฆ
Hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshire, hold onto your hats, letโs lots to get throughโฆ.. Everything listed here isโฆ
This Saturday sees Bristol’s Hip Hop phenonium, The Scribes bringing their Boombox show to The Pump, Trowbridge, and will be the group’s only performance inโฆ
Devizes Arts Festival headed towards the end of its second week with a double-dip into the chocolateโbox of goodies. At lunchtime we had some hot folk, and in the evening we had cool jazz……
St Andrews was the venue at lunchtime as Kit Hawes (guitar, vocals) and Aaron Catlow (violin, vocals) played an absolutely wonderful set of folk tunes and songs. This was no ordinary duo though โ what we heard was absolutely spell-binding stuff. It was largely fiddle-led instrumentals, supported by a wonderful picked guitar, as the two musicians really leaned into their set. Between songs, the pair were chatty and engaging, charming the audience with their laid-back style. The only thing wrong with their set was that it was too short! However, we could forgive them as the guys had to get away because, following this performance, the duo were due to visit two care homes to meet and perform for the residents, courtesy of the performing music charity, Live Music Now. Absolutely sparkling stuff.
For the evening we moved just across the road to the Assembly Room of The Town Hall for The Chris Ingham Trio and an altogether cooler, more laid-back experience. The trio featured Chris himself on piano, vocals and commentary, with Joe Pettitt on upright bass, and George Double on percussion and (soprano) vocals.
Their programme was based around the jazz compositions of the beloved comic actor Dudley Moore (1935-2002). Whilst being more famous for his comic sketch acting on TV and in films, often with his co-comic Peter Cook, Dudley was also one of the UKโs most dazzling, swinging jazz pianists and a composer of wit and depth. The decision to revisit Mooreโs music in The Jazz Of Dudley Moore, with sounds from the fabulous 1960s Decca trio albums, the TV show โNot Only But Alsoโ (1965-70) and the brilliant movie soundtracks for โBedazzledโ (1967) and โ30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthiaโ (1968) was a good one, and it made for an excellent evening of jazz, that was both instructive and thoroughly entertaining.
During the evening we (well definitely me!) learned a lot about Dudley Moore and his life. Moore was a vastly under-rated and prodigious jazz talent. He was a working-class Dagenham boy, which always left him feeling somewhat second-best next to the highly intelligent and Cambridge educated co-conspirators Peter Cook, Jonathan Miller and Alan Bennett. He felt he could not always communicate as well as his peers, and music was his outlet for his feelings, his desire to love, and his need to be loved (see โLove Me!โ). There is much melancholy there, and his psychological profile was of a man who was lonely, and whose emotions were fragile. He spent much of his life in therapy of one sort or another. His inner demons drove his manic comedy, his drinking and his womanising. Yet he was possessed of immense personal charm and playfulness.
All of this Chris and the boys attempted to convey in words, and illustrate through the music. Chris could never (in his own words) play piano in exact imitation of Dudley, so the idea was to give โanother run-out to the spirit of the manโs musical styleโ โ playful, and committed to swing, often with a bossa nova groove.
Chrisโs commentary between songs was erudite, yet chatty and witty. His playing was spirited, yet sympathetic, as he led the trio through โBedazzledโ, โCornfieldโ, โSong For Suzieโ, โWaterlooโ, โSad One For Georgeโ and many others. A well-deserved encore of โGood-byeeeโ simply put the cherry on the cake of a really wonderful evening.
The Devizes Arts Festival continues for only two more days until Saturday 17th June.
As part of the global Kidical Mass movement, this event combined a family-friendly cycle ride with aย protest, calling for safe streets for everyone. The rideโฆ
On Saturday, people from across Swindon came to Swindon Palestine Solidarityโs charity dinner to raise funds for Medical Aid Palestine and raise awareness of theโฆ
To international acclaim on the folk circuit, weโve loved to follow the progress of the Lost Trades since day dot, when Phil Cooper enthusiastically toldโฆ
Devizes Arts Festival headed towards the end of its second week last night. And here was another highlight…..
Clive Anderson is pretty well known household name, being seen on TV and heard on radio as a presenter, writer and interviewer over the past 30 years. Heโs an award-winner, a versatile comic writer and, an often overlooked feature, a barrister by training. Heโs fronted his own TV and radio shows, and has been a celebrity guest on countless others.
Last night, in a fairly packed Corn Exchange, he brought his own show โMe, Macbeth and Iโ to the stage. Appearing for the first half in full โScottishโ regalia, his opening assertion was that Macbeth (sharp intake of breath from the luvvies in the audience), sorry โThe Scottish Playโ was the greatest play ever written, and certainly Shakespeareโs best drama. Using this, and his frequently referred-to Scottish ancestry, as a thin framework on which to hang the rest of the show, he set off in pursuit ofโฆ.Iโm not quite sure what.
We had some wonderful, although sometimes rambling, anecdotes from his career in showbiz, name-dropping with gay abandon (Cher, Sting, Robin Williams, Peter Cook, Mikhail Gorbachev to name but a few), although this was rarely gratuitous. Anderson has interviewed them all, and had some great back-stories to relate. He covered his early start in comedy (Cambridge Footlights and Comedy Store), his learning path in presenting live TV, and the vicissitudes of coping with sometimes unpredictable guests. He also shared a number of theatrical anecdotes, milked from โLoose Endsโ with Ned Sherrin, and concluded an overlong first half with the results of his researches into the truth (or otherwise) of the bad luck stigma associated with 400 years of productions of Macbeth. This allowed him to mention Gielgud, Beerbohm, Olivier and Orson Welles, as if in passing.
The second half picked up where heโd left off, although the Scottish outfit had now been abandoned for a more conventional lounge suit. The style was still the same however โ occasionally incoherent, repetitious, going off on tangents and losing his thread. However we always seemed to get back to the point, which left me wondering if this method of delivery was a reflection of his natural style, or a slightly nerves-driven affectation.
Whatever โ it was mostly interesting and funny, with a few topical depth-charges casually dropped into the comedy waters (Gove, Rees-Mogg, Prince Andrew etc). There was a discourse on his own Scottish heritage and of Scottish national stereotypes. The final section allowed him to revisit great interview disasters of others (Parkinson and Rod Hull/ Emu, Russell Harty and Grace Jones) and of himself – the famous Bee Gees walk-off, Richard Branson and (for me the best) Bernard Manning and National Prune Week.
It was funny, but not hilarious. It was interesting and educational, but not gripping. The audience mostly seemed to love it, but I found it difficult to warm to the man somehow. His comedy is more intellectual than human/ emotional, so that might be it. Anyway โ a good night out, and another success for Devizes Arts Festival.
The Devizes Arts Festival continues for three more days until Saturday 17th June.
A third instalment of space rock swirls and cosmic heavy duty guitar riffs was unleashed in January from our homegrown purveyors of psychedelia, Cracked Machine.โฆ
Feeel the melody that’s in the (Devizes) air! If the nineties house clubbing revival is whatโs happening elsewhere around the nation, we have to admit,โฆ
Hey you, Feb already, hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshireโฆโฆ Everything listed here is on our event calendar; goโฆ
Perhaps best known as the frontman of Afro Celt Sound System, the Belgium-based artist N’Faly Kouyatรฉ will be hitting the road for nine intimate showsโฆ
The Importance of Being Earnest is rather like a newfound interest in jazz, you must โunlearnโ the four-beat pop you’re accustomed to, to fully appreciateโฆ
The format of this, my first foray into this kind of event, seeโs BBC radio presenter Sue Davies chatting with Will, the furniture restorer and woodworking maestro from the Repair Shop on the gogglebox. Apparently his first event of this kind too.. Sue has a dry wit and gentle manner well suited to this, as one might expect given her careerโฆ..
We are treated to many interesting answers and anecdotes, if this is his first time doing such a thing it does not really show, apart from when he chats himself away from his answer and has her remind him of the question! But thatโs only reflective of his genuine joy, and passion for his work.
He seemed mildly embarrassed to admit the first thing he remembers making were some nunchucks from some of his dadโs chains and a stolen broom handle, so he could swing them like his heroes, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles!
His grandfather used to restore furniture, something he had long forgotten until after he started a met-college furniture course having failed a graphic design first yearโฆ twice!
A successful business in proper antique furniture restoration followed before the TV people came knockingโฆ
The way he talks openly and positively of his Family in the shed, the Repair shop team is lovely if not perhaps surprising. 80,000 emails so far requests, 9th series in productionโฆ and an incredible following.
The tale of the people thinking they can go down..! An old lady with a broken clock, having travelled some way and crestfallen she had misunderstood, but was on the doorstep, so Steve fixed it for her in his lunch break..! Sounds like the sort of warmth and humble humanity that you get from the incredible transformations in the programme.
That was during the airing of series one. Now itโs secure, segregated in the museum most of the time such is the profile now reached. They Film nine months of the year, and he has recently reduced the days given over to the show to be able to be an active dad too. It would be easy to forget what a huge hit he is a part of, he truly comes across as every bit as genuine and lovely as what you see suggests.
In the second half our penned questions were answered , ranging from the obvious to the cheeky, a fun thing to do. Favourite woods, favourite jobs, future ambitions you name it we askedโฆ
I thoroughly enjoyed the evening, interesting and a chance to connect in some small way with something I personally love and appreciate. Positive, humble craftspeople making dreams come true, and Iโve met one of them and got my book signed.. brilliant.
I was pleased to see no entourage with overpriced wares but in fact Devizes Books selling the books at the usual reasonable rrp.
I managed to speak to a couple of arts festival committee members before leaving and thank them for their work and the opportunity; another great event.
The Devizes Arts Festival continues at various venues around town until Saturday 17th June.
Hey frozen duckling, hereโs whatโs happening over the coming week in the wilds of Wiltshireโฆโฆ Everything listed here is on our event calendar; go thereโฆ
Devizes-based chocolate engineer Holly Garner, 2023 Chocolate Champion for the Southwest, has launched her new chocolate classes for the first half of 2024โฆโฆ From learningโฆ
Tuesday before Christmas Iโm in New Society. I gazed across to a table by the window, recalling an optimistic response from local Labour candidate Rachaelโฆ
Devizes Arts Festival played a blinder this afternoon by cranking up the outside temperatures to a level suitable for listening to Lois Pryce talking about riding her motorcycle around the heated countryside of Iran in 2013 and 2014. .
The talk/ slide show/ video was entitled โRevolutionary Ride โ One Womanโs Solo Motorcycle Journey Around Iranโ and it did exactly what it said on the tin.
Lois Pryce, apart from picking banjo on Sunday as part of the bluegrass group The Brothers & The Sisters at The British Lion on Sunday, is a woman of many talents. Sheโs also an author of three books about her solo adventures in far-flung lands (Alaska to Terra del Fuego, London to Cape Town, and now Iran). Sheโs also a speaker and freelance writer and broadcaster.
Her latest book, Revolutionary Ride, is a memoir about her experiences in Iran, undertaken in two separate parts in 2013 and 2014. She covered over 3000 miles, did her own basic bike maintenance, camped out many nights, and (most importantly) funded the whole trip herself without the need for sponsors.
She freely admitted that before going, she was largely uneducated about the wider political situation then existing between Iran and the West, did not speak nor understand Farsi (including road signs), didnโt have a visa, didnโt understand the likely problems to be encountered by a lone female riding a motorbike (technically illegal), and that the only maps she had were pre-Revolution. Nothing daunted, she headed into all the technical, cultural, logistical and legal problems, and just kind of โgot on with itโ.
She drew many parallels and contrasts between the massive amount of hospitality and friendliness she received at a personal level from virtually everyone she met, and the official state-led political situation. She described it as a “chilling regimeโ, almost entirely cut off from the rest of the worldโs infrastructure (internet, banking/ credit systems, foreign imports), with an extreme set of Islamic-led laws, customs and social structures. For women especially, this meant โa life behind the veilโ. Nevertheless there was always a thriving โunder the counterโ culture in everything from motorcycling to music to alcohol.
There were many anecdotes and examples of her โhelmet to hijabโ existence on the road. And after the break (for book sales and signings), there were plenty of questions from the packed audience.
A highly entertaining session, and well-attended. Which just goes to prove that if you put on something interesting, even in the middle of the afternoon on the hottest day of the year, there are plenty of folk in D-Town with nothing better to do. Build it, they say, and they will come. Another Home Run by DAF!
The Devizes Arts Festival continues at various venues around town until Saturday 17th June.
Fashionably late for the party, apologies, the fellow Iโm not sure if he minds me calling โthe Mike Oldfield of Swindon,โ though itโs meant asโฆ
Bristolโs fine purveyors of idiosyncratic folk-raving, Ushti Baba, who if youโre in Devizes you might recall played Street Festival in 2022, have a new singleโฆ..โฆ
With an album review in the pipeline for Dad which includes vocals from Sienna, our Swindon princess of melancholic poignancy has a new single, Timeslipsโฆ..โฆ
Our favourite loud Brit-popping local Geordie and gang are back with a second album. Theyโre calling it Gazelles, after the previously released single opener Endlessโฆ
Featured Image: FullTone Festival, Devizes 2023 by Gail Foster Onwards with our look through all the big local events and festivals coming our way inโฆ
Another summery week ticked off, and our event guide just keeps getting bigger. This week is huge, people, huge โฆโฆI mean the week is huge, not the people, Iโm not one to body shame as, I believe, is the appropriate gen z term; pass my pronouns, thereโs good fellow.ย
Donโt forget thereโs more info on these, ticket links and irregular updates on our sparkly Event Calendar, so plan ahead. But this week we haveโฆdrum rollโฆ..
Ongoing, Hail the Curious, the inaugural exhibit at The Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham; check it out by the end of the month.
Tuesday 13th
Floral Display at Hillworth Park, Devizes, continues Wednesday too. Devizes Arts Festival still going strong, they have Lois Pryce: Revolutionary Ride โ One Womanโs Solo Motorcycle Journey around Iran at 3pm in the Bear Hotel, and the fantastic Elles Bailey Band, 8pm at the Corn Exchange.
Nick Beere has an inaugural Open Mic Night at The Bell, in Great Cheverall, which hopes to become a regular second Tuesday of the month thang.
McCartney โ The Songbook at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Free-movement dance session 60โs to 80โs music at Salisbury Methodist Church.
Wednesday 14th
Poulshot Green Gathering.
Devizes Arts Festival has Clive Andersonโs Me, Macbeth and I. 7:30pm at the Corn Exchange.
Acoustic Jam at the Southgate, Devizes.
Memory Cinema at Swindon Arts Centre for those with dementia and their families, showing
Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory. Menopause The Musical 2 at The Wyvern Theatre.
Charlotte Sauste-Bridoux at Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon.
Lunchtime Recital with cellist Idlir Shyti at Pound Arts in Corsham, and a double bill in the evening with Fly Yeti Fly & Pound Sound.
Thursday 15th
Devizes Arts Festival has folk duo Kit Hawes & Aaron Catlow, 12pm at St Andrews Church, and the Chris Ingham Trioโs The Jazz of Dudley Moore, 8pm at theTown Hall.
Paul Henshaw plays The Tuppenny, Swindon. An Evening with Brian Bilston at Swindon Arts Centre, and Phil Wangโs Wang In There Baby! at The Wyvern Theatre. Liddington Hill EP release party at the Vic, with Lucky Number Severn & Dark Prophecy, EP reviewed here.
Folk Open Mic Meets From the Book, at Brown Street, Salisbury, A Night of Folk Music and Poetry, and continues on Saturday.
AC/DC tribute, Hellโs Bells at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Friday 16th
Devizes Arts Festival has Gaelic folk anthems with Christian Garrick and the Budapest Cafรฉ Orchestra, 8pm at Corn Exchange.
John Langan & Maxine Ria at The Barge, Honey-Street.
Park Lane at The Civic, Trowbridge.
Radiation Sickness at The Old Road Tavern, Chippenham.
Longleat Summer Party.
John Bramwell & The Full Harmonic Convergence at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Swindon Folk Club Guest Night: Patakas at The Hop, Swindon, Pink Mac at The Vic,
21st Century Abba at Meca, Oye Santana at Swindon Arts Centre, and In Conversation With Stacey Dooley at The Wyvern Theatre.
Second night of the Folk Open Mic Meets From the Book at Brown Street, Barbar Luck at The George & Dragon in Salisbury.
Band X atThe Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Isabelle Farahโs Ellpsis at the Rondo Theatre, Bath, and The Alex Voysey Blues Band presents โFaux Bonamassaโ at Chapel Arts.
Legends, Bob Marley & the Wailers kick off a ska and reggae weekender at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Saturday 17th
Maps for Devizes Open Gardens are ready and on sale now from Devizes Books, Hillworth Park Cafรฉ, Devizes Town Hall and The Giving Tree in the Little Brittox. ยฃ7 in cash per map, continues on Sunday.
Devizes Sustainability Fair in the Market Place from 10am-4pm.
Devizes Arts Festival has a free fringe event, Carrie Etter Poetry Workshop and reading, atย 2pm in the Cheese Hall of Town Hall. Limited numbers so book your place. And 8-piece reggae Latin funk powerhouse Malavita! 8pm at the Corn Exchange, makes the grand finale of what has been a fantastic year for the festival.
Elsewhere in Devizes, find Will Edmunds Trio at The Southgate, and Humdinger debut at The Three Crowns.
Keevil Summer Roots Festival, a first for the village, preview here.
Stonehenge Campaign Festival, free, at the Barge on Honey-Street.
The Plough at Shalbourne has a FREE Ale and Sausage Festival, with Two Complicated, Deadlight Dance, @59, Reuben Medlin Band and more.
X-Factor winner Steve Brookstien at The Civic in Trowbridge.
Debut Dance Company: Bodies of Water at Pound Arts, Corsham, followed by Iona Johnson: Musical Storytime and Bella Hardy in the evening. But check out the poster for Corfest at Corsham Rugby Club, what a lineup, loads of my favourites from Train to Skaville, Nothing Rhymes With Orange, Plan of Action and Splat the Rat; nice one!
Barrelhouse play The New Inn, Swindon, Hannah Rose-Platt & Adam Giles Levy at The Tuppenny, Wizards of Oz and Judas Rising at The Vic. Patti Boulayeโs Iโm Coming Out at Swindon Arts Centre. Swindon Music Trust holds a Party in the Park at Town Gardens, tickets are ยฃ11.50, great lineup, see here.ย
Bath Symphony Orchestra are Across the Pond at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon, find Stanchions at The Three Horseshoes.
Peter Gill โ Piano Legends at Chapel Arts, Bath, with John William Richardโs Almost Hollywood at the Rondo Theatre.
An evening with Logical Park at The Swan near Barton Stacey, Salisbury.
G4 Live at The Memorial Theatre, Frome, with the Cheese & Grainโs second night of their ska and reggae weekender, featuring the Neville Staple Band.
Sunday 18th
DOCAโs Picnic in the Park at Hillworth Park in Devizes, a must!
Max & Ivan: Life Choices (Work In Progress) at Pound Arts, Corsham, with Gav Cross: Snack and Stories too.
GBH Big Bandโs I Got Gershwin at Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon, while the amazing Dry White Bones play The Three Horseshoes.
As Fanning at Komedia, Bath
Paul Burlingโs Big Daddy Variety Show at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Monday 19th
Declan Gaynor @ The Tap & Barrell, Swindon
And I got nuthin for Tuesday, yet But if I missed anything out let me know, feed me cake and I can update this and our calendar, but if you donโt tell me donโt come crying! Have a great week, remember, sunscreen, people, sunscreen.
Look out for our incoming next article, as we reveal the music lineup at Devizes Beer Festival on the 1st July!
The Tedworth Hunt intend to stage a meeting in Pewsey this Boxing Day, despite not making an application to the Parish Councilโฆ.. Their usual meetingโฆ
Featured Image: Colin Rayner Photography It wonโt be long before the only Quality Street left in the tin are empty wrappers and those toffee pennies noโฆ
By T.B.D and D Rose for Devizine.The author can be reached at housetyg@gmail.com This month the historic Cooper Tires factory in Melksham which began theโฆ
If The Southgate is Devizesโ finest and most reliable pub music venue, it’s usually favoured by an adult crowd. Yet it’s without doubt that Nothingโฆ
Something I was trying to skive off doing this year, being time consuming, is a local Christmas shopping piece, but then this terrible roadworks situationโฆ
The LGBTQIA+ community bravely showed their support for Drag Queen Story Hour at the Wyvern Theatre yesterday, by staging a counter protest to the fascists who were blasting bigoted lies accusing drag performers of being groomers and of sexualising children, when in fact, pantomime dames and drag queens have been a staple of family entertainment for decades.….
Attacking drag queen events is clearly camouflage for a campaign of homophobia (according to Swindon Advertiser, one fascist could be heard saying that: “It’s against the natural order for a man to be with another manโ) directed at all LGBTQ friendly venues and spaces, and fascist scapegoating of minority groups is always a Trojan horse to normalise violent political repression.
The discrimination LGBTQIA+ people experience in society and even from their own families is endemic and a truth those comfortable with heteronormative privilege such as myself can never fully understand, which is exactly why we all need to do what we can to allow people to live their lives and be themselves unencumbered by prejudice or bullying of any kind.
Businesses and supermarkets putting up rainbow flags, nice as it is to see, is not enough when the government, media, and extremist groups are expressly targeting anything and everything LGBTQ.
Pride is a protest and a wonderful expression of community, let’s keep it that way until homophobia is history and love is the order of the day on a fair and free planet. This article is dedicated to my loved ones in the LGBTQIA community.
Dry January, anyone? Well, Lady Nade just plunged into an outdoor 4ยฐC eucalyptus sauna for a social media reel. But whilst I’d require a stiff … Continue reading “Lady Nade; Sober!”
Chippenham folk singer-songwriter, M3G (because she likes a backward โEโ) has a new single out tomorrow, Friday 19th December. Put your jingly bell cheesy tunes … Continue reading “Rooks; New Single From M3G”
The Devizes Arts Festival hit the half-way stage last night with an absolute sell-out performance. Honestly, you couldnโt move in the Corn Exchange last night, with every possible space used to get people in. Thank goodness the aircon was working!
Youโd probably have to have been living on another planet not to know who Marcus Brigstocke is. In my book, heโs a major comedy talent as writer, actor, presenter and performer. Since the mid-1990s, heโs been on TV and on Radio 4 more frequently than youโve heard about a Tory political scandal, which is quite a lot.
Last night he did two sets โ one short introductory session, before bringing on New Zealander Jarred Christmas, and then a much longer second session to fill the second half.
Christmasโ appearance was something of a surprise to me, since no support act had been billed, and I suspect also to most of the people in the room. Also no stranger to TV and radio, his set was funny and engaging. Hitting on themes such as Zoom, the Haka, drinking pints of Baileys, body changes, incontinence and what he referred to as the British Armyโs use of โdecompressionโ camps in Malta for servicemen returning to the UK from Iraq and Afghanistan. There were a string of good running gags, a few of which could never be repeated here.
But, good as he was, he wasnโt the reason people had bought tickets in their hundreds. Weโd all come to see Mr. Brigstocke, and his main set was well worth waiting for. Starting off at a gentle canter, he poked light fun at the Coronation, the Queenโs reputation as being โfunnyโ, and the reasons why heโd quite enjoyed the lockdown period of Covid (โthe best two Christmases Iโve ever hadโ, the shared single-use face-mask, the saving vaccines, and the devastating impact on cottaging on Clapham Common).
Building up the pace, he began to lay into the โwellnessโ movement, with particular scorn reserved for Gwyneth Paltrowโs Goop products (especially scented candles, and vagina-steaming โ Iโll never look at a dishwasher quite the same way again). Gradually his laser-like sarcasm alighted on subjects as varied as rolling TV news (we donโt really need it), the need to stop asking โthick peopleโ what they happen to think about complex subjects (they have no bloody idea), and some of the latest political news. Having got that off his chest, he drew the set to a gentler close by talking of his more recent personal life, his second marriage, his new child and being a parent again.
My take was that (as Iโd fully expected him to be), Marcus was extremely funny. The audience clearly loved it too, and cheered to the rafters. But what makes him so good? My personal analysis is that his skill lies in his light touch. He skewers his subject with a sharp stiletto rather (as some lesser comics do) bludgeoning his subjects to death. He makes his point and moves on. Whilst he riffs on a theme, he doesnโt labour the joke. He swears very rarely, so that when he does itโs for real emphasis, not to โshockโ. He does pick on a few people in the audience, but in the best possible way. He belittles and shames no-one (he reserves his hatred and contempt for self-serving politicians), and uses the interactions to make friends or simply to emphasise a point heโs making. He avoids all the lazy techniques beloved of lesser comics. Definitely a master craftsman.
An absolutely cracking night out โ well done the folks at DAF for bringing such a great performer to our little old town.
The Devizes Arts Festival continues at various venues around town until next Saturday 17th June.
I’m enjoy Monday’s stream from the wonderful Visual Radio Arts, recorded right here in Devizes. They’ve been hosting some great shows recently, from Richard Wilemanโฆ
So yeah, I thought Iโd be funny by commenting โcanโt waitโ on Chippenhamโs upcoming folk singer-songwriter Megโs Facebook post announcing her latest single, because, youโฆ
Featured Image: Colin Rayner Photography If Iโve recently been singing the praises of arts diversity in Bradford-on-Avon, centred around the Wiltshire Music Centre and notโฆ
You may know the tiny village of Keevil, the name of which will never cease to remind me of Evel Knievel, for its airfield steeped in spitfire history, but there are some things in the village deeply rooted to the ground. One is a rather exclusive folk club regularly held in the village hall.…
It first came to my attention when the Lost Trades announced it as a date on their ambitious album tour, leading me to gulp, Keevil, you mean the Keevil, for like Christopher Lambert in Highlander, there can be only one? Yes, came their reply like a Facebook whisper, as if it was all as top secret as Area 51. A low key affair, I was told, hardly exploited on the social media sites Iโm addicted to sourcing all known information from. And, if Iโm honest, Iโve never had need to physically pass through there; for fear of treading on a Trowbridge patch, my milk-float turns around at Bulkington, which incidentally will never cease to remind me of the Lipps Inc disco classic, you know how it goes; โwant to take you to, Bul-kin-town!โ
However, away with such disco and American stuntman silliness, we did receive an email from Rachel Howe about next week’s Keevil Summer Roots Festival, which aside elucidating the folk nights were a, โsmall affair; only 76 allowed in our village hall with tables and chairs,โ this event will be open to a larger audience, and itโs free during the day, other than a fiver to park.
So, from 3pm next Saturday, 17th June, the village welcomes their inaugural Summer Roots Festival, on the Barnfield Recreation Ground. Find afternoon activities and entertainment on the Recreation Ground, completely free to enter, with happenings catering for all ages including children’s activities, tug-of-war, crafting corners, artisan gift stalls, food van, ice cream, Festival Bar, โmuch more.โ
That โmuch moreโ includes the Wilshire Police Band, so behave yourselves, and Forest of Dean acoustic duo Jan & Ian.
Raymondoโs food truck, the Festival Bar and doors open at the village hall, ready for the music to start at 6pm. The tried and tested at their regular folk club musical haul includes Wiltshire based foot-stomping five-piece Stoneโs Throw, with a Keevil-own drummer they will be playing classic rock and pop anthems. Grassroots folk singer songwriter Alan Hinds. Westburyโs easy-listening family duo MGB, Frome-based ukulele renditions of classical tunes marvels The Frukes, and Bathโs lounge jazz duo, Body & Soul, local acoustic eyeopener Ian Rayney, ragtime and music hall aficionado, Hilary Pavey.
Keevil may be one of the smallest villages in Wiltshire but, thanks to the tireless efforts of a group of volunteers, it seems theyโve packed a punch. Wishing they could do more with theirย Recreation Ground. They are excited to be bringing this festival-style celebration of local creative talent to the village, and we wish them all the best with it. So, put that in your pipe, Evel, who never did attempt the Grand Canyon jump!
To look around our beautiful landscapes youโd be understanding of visitors who assume itโs a barren outback with nothing going on, but we know different;โฆ
How did you celebrate your seventeenth birthday? Did you pop up to Glasgow to accompany The Charlatans, on bagpipes, at the historic Barrowlands ballroom, andโฆ
Photographs by Simon Folkard Astronomical winter starts on the 22nd December, yโ know, but the Met Office uses a meteorological definition of seasons, making theโฆ
Wiltshire-based charity, Wicked Weather Watch (WWW), is looking to expand its innovative approach to climate education with their upcoming Big Give Christmas Challenge campaign….. Theโฆ
Everything to do in Wiltshire this coming week, right in one handy listing, you know the drill, jump to it, preferably before putting your Christmasโฆ
The Devizes Arts Festival continued last night with another one of those difficult-to-categorise items.…
โGertrude Lawrence: A Lovely Way to Spend an Eveningโ is the latest collaboration between actor and singer, Lucy Stevens and pianist Elizabeth Marcus. Previously the pair had done similar shows around Ethel Smyth, Kathleen Ferrier and Virginia Woolf.
Gertrude Lawrence was one of Britainโs brightest theatrical stars during the first half of the 20th century. She was widely known as a charismatic stage presence who excelled in sophisticated musical comedy, having built up her career through the poorer cousins of provincial rep theatre, variety and music hall turns from a very early age. Taking her โbreaksโ as they presented themselves, building on the support of her various lovers and husbands, and thriving on her theatrical liaisons, she emerged as a true star.
This two-part monologue, with musical interludes and accompaniment, told her story from her earliest days of South London poverty. By and large it used Lawrenceโs own words, but the linkages and the songs brought it all very much alive. Lucy Stevensโ powerful, yet seemingly effortless, voice was the thing that gave this piece real life. Stepping back and forth between spoken word and snatches of song, the performance fizzed along with real energy. It was by turns funny, pathetic, surprising and largely good-natured. Whilst Lawrenceโs character came across at times as vain, emotionally brittle and patronising, there was no doubting the womanโs talent, versatility and sheer hard work (twice she had to work flat out to clear her debts in both Britain and the USA)..
Her interactions with famous actors, performers, composers, songwriters and the like (โhe wrote this one especially for me, darlingโ) were dropped into the monologue with gay abandon (Kurt Weil, Noel Coward, Rogers & Hammerstein, Ira Gershwin) and her transatlantic peregrinations mentioned almost casually. But equally, so were her tenuous relationships with her own mother and her daughter. The woman was obviously something of an enigma, but clearly dedicated full-time to her glossy career.
In sum, this was a spell-binding and consummate performance by Lucy Stevens. And, as accurately billed, โA lovely way to spend an eveningโ!
The Devizes Arts Festival continues at various venues around town until Saturday 17th June.
Devizonians (if that ainโt a word it is now) will undoubtedly be aware of โThe Fulltone Orchestraโ and its festival. They may also be aware of the โFulltone Big Bandโ, especially if they attended last years August bank holiday festival. They may even be aware very recently of โThe Four Sopranosโ. All of these entities are separate in their own right, but share much in common, and not just personnel. Thereโs a general air of fun, excitement, and passion about them all. And so its no surprise at all to find that exactly the same magical recipe is rife in another associated gathering โ the โWatson and Brown Little Big Bandโ.
The brainchild of Vicki Watson and Jemma Brown, hatched we are told over a coffee, the latest sound to hit the mean streets โ or at least the arts spaces โ of Devizes the โLittle Big Bandโ broke its duck this evening at the Wharf Theatre. Comprising of nine musicians and three singers the ensemble took us through a whirlwind two hours of jazz numbers ranging from twenties swing by Gerschwin, to seventiesโ Van Morrison, to noughties modern jazz and even some Cole Porter musical theatre โ and so much more. With arrangements by Vicki Watson and Simon Ridge, Jemma Brown and Sean Andrews, aided by an Moeen Ali like Ashes callup for Ed Kerr who replaced the sadly cold ridden Anthony Brown this evening, sung their way through โRoute 66โ, โMoondanceโ, โSay a Little Prayerโ, โEvery Time We Say Goodbyeโ and a male duet with โWell Did You Evahโ until half time and a coffee. All interspersed with instrumentals such as โFascinating Rhythmโ, that 2008 number mentioned above โIโm digโ, โShiny Stockingsโ, โSolarโ and โDat Dereโ.
Vicki Watson and the Watson & Brown – Little Big Band
The second half continued in the same frenzied vein with more well known swing numbers โ โAinโt that a kick in the headโ, โMe and my Shadowโ (Ed in for his second spell!) , โOne for my babyโ, โThingsโ and โStraighten up and fly rightโ. The instrumental pieces forged on also โ and we learn that maybe Miles Davies didnโt pen quite as many songs as we may think he did โฆ and that he played piano at times under a pseudonym. โChili Peppersโ, โUndecidedโ and a funked-up version of โBillieโs Bounceโ, gave the singers some breaks as well โ but the โLittle Big Bandโ were by no means gap fillers. This second half in particular gave the musicians longer chances for solos for our appreciation. Two trumpets (Andy Urquhart and Gethin Liddington), a trombone (Simon Ridge), three saxophones (Vicki Watson, Joe Davies, Mike Wilkins) with Vicki doubling up on flute, bass guitar and electric double bass (Ollie Watson โ itโs that surname again!), with Archie Combe on keyboards (I played rugby with his dad you know!) formed this tight combo for our delectation and joy.
The overall effect was foot tappingly mesmeric. There were some hiccoughs, but its an opening night of a brand-new venture โ but most and more importantly that air of fun, excitement, and passion I mentioned at the start of this review shone through above and beyond everything โฆ and created an evening of BIG smiles, BIG sounds – and a Little BIG Band.
The โWatson and Brown Little Big Band play at the Wharf Theatre, Devizes on Friday 9th June and Saturday 10th June still, 7.30pm start.
Intriguing and divergent is my two word summary of the latest exhibition at Devizes’ Wiltshire Museum, from one who grew up with first-hand second Worldโฆ
Devizes celebrated rum bar, The Muck & Dundar are hosting a dub reggae night with Omega Nebula on Saturday, and received this weekโs prestigious awardโฆ
This week the organiser proudly presented a cheque for a whopping ยฃ9537.75 to Prospect Hospice staff. The third year of My Dadโs Bigger Than Yourโฆ
Contemporary folk rock in the UK tends to come in three formats which never the twain shall meet, usually. Firstly you’ve got your acoustic goodnessโฆ
If our ground-breaking heroes of boom bap, the Scribes bring the noise during live performances and bless any venue with crowd-pleasing positive vibes, yet areโฆ
Snotty nose, change of weather, otherwise Iโd have dragged my sorry ass down to Underground, formerly Level III in Swindon for last weekendโs Children inโฆ
The Devizes Arts Festival continued to deliver its wide-ranging programme yesterday. Following tango, folk, opera, talks and drama, Wednesday and Thursday saw the arrival of its two back-to-back classical concerts in The Assembly Room in The Town Hall. It seems like you wait ages for the classical bus to come along, then two arrive together!
Wednesday night saw The Leslie Taylor Memorial Concert, delivered by the young and very talented Aglica Trio, and Thursday lunchtime featured the Dieci Corde duo.
The Aglica Trio was created in 2016 in the Guildhall School of Music & Drama when Carys Gittins (flute), Agnieszka ลปyniewicz, (viol), and Lise Vandersmissen (harp) graduated with Distinction. All of them are now multi-award winners, and have pursued careers as both soloists, and as part of various other ensembles. Bringing together Welsh, Polish and Belgian influences, this promised to be something a little different.
Their programme on Wednesday began with Claude Debussyโs Sonata in three movements, where all three instruments were well to the fore, engaging in a light conversation of themes. It was light and airy for the most part, but with a somewhat fiery finale. This was followed by The Song of Amergin by Hilary Tann, which was much more strident in character, and by Two Interludes by Jaques Ibert, wherein Lise managed to make her harp sound very much like a piano at times.
After the interval there were three more pieces. First was a lively flute-led Sonatine by Maurice Ravel, a couple of short exercises written by harpist Lise, and finally (my personal favourite of the evening) the Zodiac Trio Op. 70 by the Welsh composer William Mathias. This final piece really showcased the different voices of the three instruments โ Pisces, the jolly, easy-going flute, then Aries, the โmiserableโ viol, and at last Taurus, the fiery and passionate harp. Although at times slightly discordant, this was a wonderful piece with an exhilarating finish.
Fully deserved rapturous applause was the only possible outcome.
Next day, in exactly the same venue, it was the turn of Dieci Corde in the shape of Clare Deniz (cello) and Mihael Majetic (guitar). Both of them have thriving independent musical careers, but they regularly perform together as Dieci Corde (ten strings) as it lets them explore more interesting ways of performing with their respective instruments.
The Devizes Arts Festival continues at various venues around town until Saturday 17th June.
Residents from communities across Swindon are organising another show of solidarity with the people of Palestine….. They are inviting everyone to join them at 2pmโฆ
Steve Vick International (SVI), a leading innovator in pipeline engineering solutions, is thrilled to announce the renewal of their sponsorship agreement with the Wiltshire Musicโฆ
Boo! Weโve got everything to do in Wiltshire this coming week, leading us into Halloween and the end of the monthโฆ..as we always doโฆ.boo! Itโsโฆ
Creators of original music who may psychologically build a hierarchy with them atop, tribute acts on the bottom and cover bands hovering somewhere between, tendโฆ
Henry VI by William Shakespeare, Rondo Theatre, July 5th-Sat 8th, 7.30pm. A Preview โ by Ian Diddams…….
Shakespeare wrote three plays about Henry VI โ imaginatively entitled part1, part 2, and part 3. But in true George Lucas style, part 2 was written first, then part 3, with the prequel โ part 1, written last.
So what is better than watching one Henry VI play? Watching all three, together of course! And that is exactly what the Rondo Theatre Company, handily placed, with nominative determinism, at the Rondo Theatre, Larkhall, Bath is doing in early July this year, as its annual charity performance.
Now โ Shakespeare has a bit of a reputation for lengthy plays. Hamlet takes about four hours to perform, and certainly several of his output would take over three hours easily. All three parts of Henry VI performed back-to-back would last longer than a dayโs test cricket, with no likelihood of finishing early for bad light. But fear not โ Director Nic Proud has taken Occamโs razor (and Wilkinsonโs sword, not to mention Macโs knife) to it all and has whittled it down to just the length of a football match plus a half time for a cup of Bovril and a meat pie.
I can feel the Shakespeare aficionados quaking already. But all the real essence of Henry VI is there โ Margaret, the scandalous queen and her naughty boy Suffolk, arrogant Warwick making at least one king anyway, Richard P fighting for his right to party โ well rule at least – Edward who eventually comes fo(u)rth, and of course the arch villain of the whole piece eventually, towering over everybody, Richard (do you see what I did there?). Oh โ and some bloke called Henry VI apparently, all limp wristed, cuckolded and basically a bit rubbish as a wannabe king.
Rest assured though, dear reader and Shakespearean buff. This amalgamation of Henry VI belts along at frenetic pace, with daggers, swords, and treachery at every turn. Dash out to the loo and you are likely to miss at least one murder and a heap of skulduggery. In true weeping angelsโ fashion, donโt blink!
We begin with Henry Vโs death and the crowning of Henry VI โ then a whirlwind marriage arraignment of Margaret (with Suffolk as her bit on the side of course), Richard Plantagenetโs vocal claim to the crown, top soldier Warwickโs clear-headed countenance, and the Wars of the Roses. The battles of Wakefield and Tewkesbury enacted on stage with swords and daggers a-flashing, with their deaths of Richard P and Prince Edward to boot. And of course the slaughter of the playโs titular character by bad boy Richard, and the elevation as monarch to Edward IVโฆ. and a final twist in the tale from tricky Dicky himself.
Nine actors, one director and an assistant, a tech crew and the Rondo theatre. Plus a few swords, a couple of daggers and some stunning costumes by Chrissy Fry. And for a particular Devizesโ interest, two Devizes based actors (editor’s note: yes, it’s you and Lucy Upward, isn’t it? Cheeky!) appear as part of this too, you lucky people! The Rondo theatre is located just a 30 minute drive from Devizes, with lots of free evening street parking, with a pub and Indian restaurant handily located within 100m of each other โ so make an evening out of it!
What more could really you ask for?
Henry VI is performed at the Rondo Theatre, Larkhall, Bath between July 5th and 8th, 7.30 pm each evening. Proceeds from the performance will be donated to the Royal Osteoporosis Society, as this is the Rondoโs annual charity performance.
4Youth (South West) are pleased to announce the beginning of a 2.5 year street-based youth work project based in Devizes, Wiltshire on Monday and Thursdayโฆ
Gliding through October at colossal speed, with temporary bursts of cold spells hinting winter at us, and some, some I repeat, faintly whispering the Cโฆ
Devizes Town Councillors voted unanimously to adopt a Single-Use Plastic Policy and appointed Councillor Vanessa Tanner as the Plastic Free Champion for the town, atโฆ
An early and rarely-performed play, ‘Two Gentlemen of Verona’ has feisty heroines, lovelorn & bickering young men, dictatorial parents, foolish suitors, cross-dressing, letters galore, wildโฆ
If my Saturday’s entertainment at The Pump was decidedly offbeat and a tad bizarre, what with chap-hop, pith helmets and vintage jazz played through aโฆ
The Devizes Arts Festival is now in full swing. ย On Day 5 it was time for the first theatre offering ofย this yearโs programme. ย Onarole (geddit?) Theatre were in the Corny Bin in the shape of Jonathanย Darby to present a four-scene one-hander entitled โJesus My Boyโ. ย It was written by John Dowie,ย directed by Chris Jaeger, and was originally performed by Tom Conti.
Here we had a different take, a very different take, on the traditional bible stories probably familiar to all those there present. It was very much a sideways look from the point-of-view of Jesusโ father Joseph, played as a slightly inept carpenter, a good Jew, an ordinary man simply looking to keep his head down and himself out of trouble. He recounted, with down-to-earth good humour and some laugh-out-loud assertions, the beginning of his slightly hen-pecked relationship with a very determined and single-minded Mary, progressing through a harrowing but amusing child-birth scene, right through to the crucifixion and its aftermath.
Much of the humour stemmed from Josephโs insistence on debunking the many myths, orย apocryphal stories, taken for granted and repeated in the Bible. ย There was never going to be anyย room at the inn (it was the only one in town) and he simply forgot to book. ย The Torah is not, in fact,ย a long a complex document โ it can be taught in one sentence whilst standing on one leg. ย Andย stoning adulterers and blasphemers is not as straightforward as you might have thought.
But away from the amusing anecdotes (Jesus is better at carpentry than his father, Mary packed way too much stuff before setting off for Bethlehem, and the almost Pythonesque squabbling between the different Judean sects), there was much that was harrowing to listen to, not least the detailed description of the prolonged, vindictive and agonising death brought about by crucifixion.
Jonathan Darbyโs performance, to my eyes and ears at least, was pitch-perfect. His rapid movement between comedy and tragedy, humour and pathos, was a thing to behold. The audience sat enraptured, and the hour-long performance seemed to simply whizz by. It was moving, beautiful, religious, political and very human all at the same time.
Yet again, hats off to the Arts Festival for bringing this really excellent performance to the town.
The Devizes Arts Festival continues at various venues around town until Saturday 17th June.
Trouble, troublemaker, yeah, thatโs your middle name, oh-oh, sings my homeboy Olly, but really, I ask you, what kind of a parent gives their kids a middle name like troublemaker? Ah, well, sign of times; hereโs the lowdown on everything weโve found to be doing around these backwaters this coming weekโฆ.
Donโt forget thereโs more info on these, ticket links and irregular updates on our sparkly Event Calendar, so plan ahead. But this week we haveโฆdrum rollโฆ..
Ongoing, Hail the Curious, the inaugural exhibit at The Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham; check it out by the end of the month.
Wednesday 7th
Devizes Arts Festival still going strong, with Welsh, Polish and Belgian influences, the Aglica Trio explore exciting works by lesser-known composers as well as delving into the standard classical repertoire. 8pm at Devizes Town Hall.
Regular acoustic jam at the Southgate in Devizes.
Dragons And Mythical Beasts at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
San Reetam at Komedia, Bath.
Thursday 8th
Devizes Arts Festival has cello and guitar duo Dieci Corde at 12:30pm in the Town Hall, and Lucy Stevens is Gertrude Lawrence in A Lovely Way to Spend an Evening, 7:30pm also at the Town Hall.
Meanwhile over at The Wharf Theatre, it’s the opening night for Watson and Brownโs Little Big Band, running until Saturday 10th.
Also running until the 10th, The Marlborough Players Presents Ian Hislop & Nick Newmanโs A Bunch of Amateurs at Marlborough Town Hall.
The Overmorrow play The Tuppenny in Swindon, The Zoots are at Swindon Arts Centre with some Sound of The 60s, and Alan Fletcherโs The Doctor Will See You Now is at The Wyvern Theatre.
Comedy Drag Bingo with Charlie Hides from Ru Paulโs Drag Race at Komedia, Bath, Human Nature at the Rondo Theatre, Luke De-Sciscio is at Chapel Arts, with support from Ella Clayton.
Friday 9th
Major British comedy talent Marcus Brigstocke is at Devizes Arts Festival, 8pm at the Corn Exchange. Plan of Action plays The Southgate, Devizes, and Gaz Brookfield is at The Barge on Honey-Street.
Mobile Blackout at The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon, Quartetto Di Cremonaโs Italian Postcards at the Wiltshire Music Centre.
Living Spit presents One Man and His Cow at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Celebrate Me at the Rondo Theatre, Bath, Mississippi MacDonald at Chapel Arts, and Kalopsia, Intrusive, Sharpie & Dreamcaster all at Moles.
Grunge Tribute Shades of Seattle at The Vic in Swindon, a change from the Chaos Brothers as previously advertised, Oasish at Coleview Community Centre, and
An Evening And A Little Bit Of Morning with Mark Steel at The Wyvern Theatre.
Saturday 10th
Marden Village Fete. Thereโs an Antique Sale at Devizes Market Place from 9am-3pm, and the Devizes Arts Festival continues with a free fringe event at 2pm in the Condado Lounge, Jukebox James, Tessa Dunlop, 3pm at the Town Hall, and folk-influenced Americana with Noble Jacks at 8pm in the Corn Exchange. Noble Jacks are a rip-roaring alt.folk band with roof-raising energy, whose warm electro-acoustic interactions fuse together a mixture of folky footstompinโ rhythms and engaging lyricism.
Elsewhere in Devizes, the Eric Bell Band Band play Long Street Blues Club, Lewis Clark is at The Southgate, Ben Borrill at the Moonrakers, a One Chord Wonders and The Killertones for a Cavalier special, see poster.
Time for The Famous Hangover Sessions at the Lamb in Marlborough, with Splat the Rat, The Station, The Vooz and of course, Pants.
North Wiltshire Symphony Orchestra Presents a Summer Concert at the Neeld Hall in Chippenham. John Morrissey memorial gig at the Consti Club in aid of Dorothy House.
The Stones, tribute at the Civic in Trowbridge, oh, and this….
Nadine Khouri at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Itโs the Bradford-on-Avon Food & Drink Festival, Vonj at the Three Horseshoes.
Boorish Trumpson at the Rondo Theatre, Bath, Untamed Burlesque at Chapel Arts.
King Awesome at The Vic, Swindon, Kentwood Choir t Swindon Arts Centre, and
Elizabeth & Philip โ A Story of Young Love, Marriage, and Monarchy at The Wyvern Theatre.
Nearly Dan โ The Spirit & Sound of Steely Dan at the Cheese & Grain in Frome.
Sunday 11th
Lions on the Green, Devizes Lions Clubโs annual car show and fun day at Devizes Green. Devizes Arts Festival, Festival Walk โ Wansdyke Wanderings. Briefing at 10.20am. Thereโs a free fringe event, 2pm at the British Lion, hard stompinโ, bluegrassy, old-timey playing of The Sisters & The Brothers.
Friggit at The Tuppenny in Swindon.
The Jon Amor Trio play The Three Horseshoes, Bradford-on-Avon.
Adam Giles Levy is at the Electric Bar in Komedia, Bath, Josh Berryโs Sexual Politics at Rondo Theatre, Flamenco Express at Chapel Arts.
Monday 12th
Devizes Arts Festival have An Evening with furniture restorer, Will Kirk, primarily known for his work on BBCโs phenomenally successful restoration programme The Repair Shop.
7:30pm at the Corn Exchange.
Rock The Tots: Whatever The Weather at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Wiltshire Schools Dance Festival at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Tuesday 13th
Devizes Arts Festivalโs Lois Pryce: Revolutionary Ride โ One Womanโs Solo Motorcycle Journey around Iran at the Bear Hotel, the Elles Bailey Band play the Corn Exchange at 8pm.
McCartney โ The Songbook at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
Thatโs all I got for you, trouble, troublemaker. I know youโre no good, but youโre stuck in my brain, or Brian, or whatever. So, just for you a reminder this list is not exhaustive, and more events will undoubtedly be added to our event calendar as and when we discover them. So keep an eye on it, just the one though, be safe and have a good week.
With a wide selection of family-friendly and retro board games, RPGs such as Magic the Gathering, Warhammer and Pokรฉmon,ย and serving tea, coffee, cakes and, oh,โฆ
Wiltshire Council are asking public transport users, residents, businesses and visitors in the county to take part in a public transport review, to help shapeโฆ
Righty-oh, no time for messing about, weโve lots to get throughโฆ. What have I become?!! Thereโs always time for messing around. Hereโs a snapshot ofโฆ
Devizes teenagers from Wiltshire Army Cadets recently gave up their Saturday morning to help with a community gardening project on Windsor Drive in Devizes….. Theโฆ
Featured Image: Gail Foster If the most popular band to come out of Devizes recently, Nothing Rhymes With Orange are really gathering pace and attentionโฆ
Another day, another venue, and the Devizes Arts Festival is now getting into its stride. ย Thisย afternoon was the first of the five FREE events in this yearโs programme, and what a cracker itย turned out to be.…
Texas Tick Fever hail from that there Stroud, up in the Wild North Country, and rolled into town full of energy on a beautiful sunny afternoon in the courtyard of The Three Crowns. The Vize was about to be treated to some bluegrass, yโall. Although theyโre a firm fixture on the roots music circuit, theyโre a band Iโd not personally run into before. Took โem about two numbers and I was quickly hooked.
The boysโ marketing BS had talked about their music being โmoonshine-fuelledโ, but this being Theย Vize, it was more Wadworth 6X and ice-cream-fuelled. ย Not that that mattered in the slightest, asย they were on absolutely top form.
Their blend of Americana/ roots/ hillbilly/ Appalachian/ backwoods/ hayseed and good old bluegrass quickly had the crowd applauding. With plenty of wise-cracking and self-deprecating humour on the side, this was just perfect stuff for a lazy afternoon at the pub. Featuring banjo and guitar, occasional harmonica, kick-drum and harmonising vocals, the guys made some great music. There was new and original stuff, and plenty of covers, including Sittinโ On Top Oโ The World, It Takes A Worried Man, Down In Mississippi and (believe it or not, older readers look away now) that old theme to The Beverly Hillbillies. Amazing. And who could forget their fully-deserved encore of Duelling Banjos? Terrific stuff.
Theyโve also won my โBest Introduction To A Songโ Award for one of their intros. Following a decent re-telling of the urban myth, where legend has it that Robert Johnson met the devil at a crossroads and gave him his soul in exchange for mastery of the guitar, Stretch leaned into the mic and grinned, saying โwell, anyways, this next song has absolutely nothinโ to do with thatโ. Comic timing at its best.
Absolutely terrific entertainment, and an early highlight of the Festival for me.
And thereโs more FREE Fringe next Saturday 10th June in Condado Lounge with Jukebox James, next Sunday 11th June in the British Lion with Sisters & Brothers, and the following Saturday 17th June with Carrie Etter Poetry.
The Devizes Arts Festival continues at various venues around town until Saturday 17th June.
It was time last night for The Devizes Arts Festival to roll out its first big-hitter of the 2023 programme, and what a smash it proved to be. Although not quite sold out, the Corn Exchange was pretty full, and those who turned out were rewarded with a sparkling performance.…
Sir Willard White is one of the worldโs best-loved and most versatile opera stars of the last 40 years. He is a performer whose illustrious career has taken him to the most prestigious opera houses and concert halls throughout the world. It was opera royalty come to pay us a state visit.
The evening opened with the Kymaera Duo, the twin guitars of Shane Hill and Simon James, who have been performing together for over twenty years. Their beautiful and understated rendition of the classic โSummertimeโ set a very high bar for the rest of the evening. Soon they were joined by the tastefully yellow waist-coated Sir Willard.
Over the next couple of hours we were entertained with songs and reminiscences from his life onย stage and screen. ย The songs were selected because they had been particularly important to him, orย held some special meaning. ย Pausing to explain and to introduce each piece, he took us on a musicalย journey from his youth in Jamaica, through his early career, the first truly complete recording ofย Gershwinโs Porgy and Bess in 1976 to the songs that made the bass-baritone singer Paul Robesonย famous in the 1920s and โ30s. ย He explained that, amazingly, he had never wanted to be a singer inย the professional sense, he just wanted to do something that would define him as โa real manโ. ย But,ย having tried out the idea of working in an office with a briefcase and a rolled umbrella, Mr. White (asย he termed himself) discovered that would not be his life.
With occasional instrumental pieces from the guitar duo to spell the singer, the Great American Songbook was rolled out for us, together with a few other unexpected classics. We had Gershwin, Nat King Cole, Aaron Copeland, and even Bob Marleyโs Redemption Song. โIt Donโt Mean A Thing If It Ainโt Got That Swingโ, โSome Enchanted Eveningโ, โMy Wayโ, โOle Man Riverโ were delivered in what appeared an effortless style, all the while accompanied by some fabulous guitar work.
A totally splendid performance and a deserved encore. But even then it wasnโt over. In an equally engaging coda to the evening, Sir Willard took questions from the floor. In this section he revealed (even more that the main performance) what a really charming, urbane and thoughtful man he was. His style was avuncular, gentle and understated, and his philosophy of life, of self-care (of voice and body) and of mutual self-respect was thought-provoking. All in all, a great evening, and a worthy gem in the Arts Festival crown.
The Devizes Arts Festival continues, with events every day, until Saturday 17th June. The full programme of events, times and prices is available online.
Dry January, anyone? Well, Lady Nade just plunged into an outdoor 4ยฐC eucalyptus sauna for a social media reel. But whilst I’d require a stiff … Continue reading “Lady Nade; Sober!”
Chippenham folk singer-songwriter, M3G (because she likes a backward โEโ) has a new single out tomorrow, Friday 19th December. Put your jingly bell cheesy tunes … Continue reading “Rooks; New Single From M3G”
The Devizes Arts Festival kicked off its 2023 programme with a real bang last night, and perhaps this will be the best one yet if the opening gig was anything to go by.…..
Tango Calor is, not surprisingly, a tango band trio. It was originally formed by the concertina, sorry โ bandoneon, player Mirek Salmon in Bristol in 2016. Joining him was jazz pianist Daan Temmink, and the Cuban vocalist Indira Roman. And together the three of them produced a sparkling evening of music for a full room and an appreciative crowd.
Tango Calor at Devizes Arts FestivalImage: Gail Foster
The Assembly Room in the Town Hall is a beautiful venue (and I may have banged on about this before) provided itโs used for the right performers. Tango Calor certainly fitted that bill. With the room laid out cabaret-style with tables and chairs, leaving a dance-floor at the front, and good sound and nicely-subdued lighting, the atmosphere was just right.
Tango Calor at Devizes Arts FestivalImage: Gail Foster
We were treated over two sets, to a wide range of South American and Caribbean rhythms, some instrumental, and some accompanied by Indiraโs infectious Spanish vocals. The songs were romantic, sensuous, melting like warm chocolate. Iโd be the first to admit that tango is not at the top of my list of favourite musical styles, but even I was won over. I stayed right to the end, and the evening seemed to be over all too quickly. We even had a few brave couples getting up to dance, which was wonderful to watch. Iโm no expert, but they certainly seemed to be making all the right moves in the right order. The warm applause after each number was often as much for the dancers as it was for the musicians.
Tango Calor at Devizes Arts Festival. Image: Gail Foster
The band received a justified all-clapping, all-singing encore, and then it was all over. Back into the Devizes evening with a warm glow of appreciation for a top-notch performance. Roll on the rest of the Festival!
The Devizes Arts Festival continues, with events every day, until Saturday 17th June. The full programme of events, times and prices is available online.
For those that are too busy to read this film review and to help our tech-conditioned โkeep-it-quickโ minds please see the one liner below:
โA raw portrayal of the depths that a mental illness can reach with a glimpse of the impact on others and the eventual hope that can lead to recoveryโ
Or, if youโve a few more seconds, read the Tweet-length review here:
โA reflective, unsettling film depicting mental ill health, grief and two people coming together to heal. Kate Morgan-Jonesโ performance brings depth and skill with a brilliantly realistic scene showing a crisis episode. Walls are broken down and agoraphobia is given a platform for understandingโ
I suspect Iโve lost a few of you. For those still reading, thank you. Here is the full lowdown of โTranslationsโ, the black and white, romantic, mental health exposรฉ drama set in Wales:
Most of my reviews are pretty long and I apologise each time I link one to a social media account. But I wonโt change the length. Well, not for now at least. To write only a short piece would be a disservice to the people who have put their soul into the work. They deserve a full debrief for the hours and cash that theyโve ploughed in, usually with no guarantee of success. It takes a risk-taker and an entrepreneur, with often an activistโs determination to see a creative project through to the finish. This is especially true of a feature film where the stakes are higher than most other forms. Add to that a focus on topics that are vital but are difficult to portray, and you have a true passion-project worthy of review words. โTranslationsโ by director, Keith Kopp and writer, Laurence Guy is one such project.
From the opening scene where Stef, the main character, performed her poignant poem โWallsโ, my gut was stilled into a contemplative but not wholly comfortable quiet. It was going to be one of those – a film that would take the viewer on a ride through dark, complex emotions. An internal rollercoaster where I knew I would be swirled through loop-the-loops of mental anguish. I wasnโt sure I was ready for this. Whispering, โplease let it have a happy endingโ to myself, I sipped my tea and carried on.
Stef is in her twenties. She writes, talks to herself (who doesnโt?), and hasnโt left her house in a long time (years). Her beloved brother, Liam died whilst travelling with his best friend Evan (Alan Emrys). The story of how this happened is pieced together throughout the film. Stefโs mental health, which wasnโt great before, suffered hugely after his death with agoraphobia now ruling her reality. A few segments into the movie, and after a long absence, Evan arrives at Stefโs Welsh cottage. His presence transformed her walled-in existence. Laughter and chemistry ensued with the pair reminiscing shared childhood and teen memories. But close behind came an open window into the mental torment that gripped both characters. Morgan-Jonesโ portrayal of an acute mental health crisis in Evanโs company was sublime and harrowing. The contradictory nature of desperately wanting help yet vehemently pushing it away and the deep shame that followed gave a true insight into an illnesses of the mind.
Evan, whilst trying to help Stef also gave many clues to his own health problems. These stemmed from his guilt at Liamโs death and his wanting to be invisible; to โsoak into the walls so no one can see meโฆ like a ghostโ. Grief washed over them both and at times the feeling of angst ping-pongs between them with a competitive hue. A game of โwhoโs the most miserable?โ Stef and Evan share grief, mental health challenges and both feel trapped; one indoors and the other behind a camera. I was often left wondering, can the troubled really help the troubled?
I instantly questioned why the movie was in black and white. The answer revealed itself in an early scene which showed a framed picture hanging on Stefโs wall of a barren, lonely tree (seen a number of times during the film). Devoid of colour with all life stripped away, the tree evoked a feeling of isolated fear. I think many of us felt a version of this during the most stringent lockdown weeks of 2020, our own surface-level insight into agoraphobia. Black and white also gives a greater intensity and emotional impact on screen; the viewer needs to look closer for meaning and work harder for understanding. I wasnโt sure at first. I donโt love having to work whilst being entertained and I really did want to see the colour of the delicious sounding curry, but I became convinced that it was 100% the best choice of medium for โTranslationsโ. I would have loved to see colour creep in towards the end during Stefโs transformation but perhaps this would have been too obvious, Iโm no film director.
Other aspects of the movie that caught my attention included the filmโs score. It created a strong ambience throughout and, along with the dialogue, dramatised the emotion and helped to share powerful messages. A slow, heavy beat often preceded a philosophical musing from one of the characters whilst the crescendoing thud-thud-thud staccato made me feel Stefโs anxieties as if they were my own. A stand out visual moment from the film that made me smile was seeing Evan rolling and smoking a cigarette. It made me reflect that despite the number of people who smoke โrolliesโ we hardly ever see the ritualised making of them on screen. Parts of the film that will stay with me are readings of the โWallsโ and the โLine in the Sandโ poems. โWallsโ was performed twice in the movie and in a clever, circular finish, โLine in the Sandโ bought the film to its close. I would love these poem clips to go viral to illustrate what agoraphobia can feel like and to help people feel less alone and more hopeful.
Please go and see this film. You wonโt come away feeling lighter but you will have a glimpse into a mental health challenge that, in its most severe form, affects well over a million people in the UK. Kate Morgan-Jonesโ performance is believable, haunting and impactful. She understands the torment, the struggle and the complexity that accompanies mental health conditions and she shows this in every scene. The film has lingered in my mind and has got me thinking about all those conditions we know about but build walls around. Watch this movie to start breaking down these walls, to transform our ignorance into understanding and to help our neighbours, friends and families feel less alone and โlocked inside (themselves)โ. Please support this film and perhaps then we will begin to see more pictures that educate and give true insight into mental illness. Thank you โTranslationsโ for opening my eyes a little wider.
Written on 24/05/23 by Helen L Edwards @helenledwards4
Awards: Riverside Film Festival 2023 (Audience Choice Award for Best Feature Film, Best Actress, Best Screenplay)
โTranslationsโ tour: Screenings start on the 2nd June in Wales. It reaches The Little Theatre in Bath on the 25th June and the Melksham Film Club on the 30th June
Okay, clever clogs among us Iโm sure will tell me the Eskimo Nebula is a bipolar double-shell planetary nebula, 6,500 light-years away which is surroundedโฆ
According to the confines of youth cultures of yore, I shouldnโt like Marlborough-based duo Deadlight Danceโs debut album, Beyond Reverence, as while attempts to fitโฆ
By Ian Diddams Three women meet at university in 1983. Mixed backgrounds, sexual preferences, dreams. From early reticence, to friendship, to love. Sharing despair, hope,โฆ
Set to be a busy month in town as The Devizes Arts Festival rolls out their extensive and promising programme, the best way I think to tackle this is week-by-week, highlighting some of those events which really shows off the diversity and quality on offerโฆ..
No sooner than the month kicks off, so does the festival, in tango style, this Friday 2nd June.
The Town Hall hosts one of the most exciting tango bands performing in the UK, Tango Calor.
Doubled-up on Saturday, as polar adventurer and motivational speaker Sue Stockdale presents A Life of Adventure, 1pm at St John’s Church, and versatile opera star Sir Willard White brings his Kymaera Duo to the Corn Exchange in the evening.
Sunday morning they walk the civil war battlefield of Roundway Down, but the fun, I think, really begins at 2pm in the Three Crowns when that most wonderful Americana combo, banjo and guitar, is played out by Texas Tick Fever, who promises some foot-stompinโ good olโ hillbilly adaptations of known tunes. This is just one of two free fringe events on Sunday, the second at 7pm down in the Cellar Bar of The Bear Hotel; my personal pick of the week.
We recently gave Ajay Srivastav one of our song of week features, as his music is a truly unique blend of the kind of acoustic we love from our own live music circuit, but as a British born artist of Indian heritage, his songs, with themes of protest and change, have this subtle Indian tinge, and itโs sublime. Donโt go expecting all-out Bhangra or the sitar plucking of Ravi Shankar, Ajay is decidedly blues and can be offbeat at times, working with legends such as Gregory Isaacs, Jah Wobble and Zakir Hussain. Ajay says of his style, โI just wanted to say my thingโฆ I was tired of listening to other people talking โ I want to be heard, and this is what I have to say. And I hope people understand where Iโm coming from.โ
Yet if from tango to opera and onto the unique blends of Ajay Srivastav displays Devizes Arts Festivalโs diversity, Monday 5th at 8pm in the Town Hall is something completely different. The worldโs most talented living micro-artist, Graham Short will be taking us on the journey of his โLife as a Micro-Artist.โ Now this one really interests me, because as an art college dropout, if I ever was to become an artist Iโd be the sort hanging naked from a swinging cradle splattering random paint onto a canvas! One assignment from my personal hell was a bearded lecturer who demanded I take a black and white photo and recreate it on a grid of one millimetre squares, painting each square with a grayscale of ten; a millimetre, I ask you, the dexterity of gods, not humans!
Well, cut a long story short, I considered the guy to be nuts, as he criticised the tiniest bit of bleed as โuseless!โ See, I can admire those colossal Renaissance paintings in the National Gallery for their sheer scale, and dive into their gorgeous clumps of oil so skillfully placed, but intricate detail simply baffles me, how the nimbleness of a micro-artist can create those miniatures with such calculation is beyond my fathoming. It is one reason when out of work I dare not apply at Cross Manufacturing, as I figured the fiddly attention to the tiniest of detail would be too much for my sausage-fingers! I mean Graham Short is the kind of fellow who engraves Churchill’s ‘We shall fight on the beaches’ speech on the tip of a World War II bullet, for crying out loud, thatโs something to be in awe of.
Aged fifteen Graham Short left school in Birmingham without any qualifications, undergoing a six-year apprenticeship in copper plates and steel dies engraving for printing, but he didnโt take to the printing trade, so, years self-employed as an engraver gained him clients including Gieves & Hawkes of Savile Row, outfitters to the Royal Family; Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle, Balmoral Sandringham,and 10 Downing Street followed. He engraved business cards for everyone from Richard Attenborough to Za Za Gabor. In recent additions to his blog he discusses aside the easiest metals to work on, gold, platinum and brass, his troubles engraving tablets for the Institute of Cancer Research, saying, โthey are too soft and flake easily;โ I couldnโt even begin to consider the complexities of such, still baffled by the expectancy of the bearded art college lecturer who expected me to paint millimetre squares, the blooming slave driver!
Devizes Arts Festival has a diverse program of events, I rest my case. So, Tuesday, expect a humorous and moving one-man one-act play originally performed by Tom Conti at the Merchant Suite by Onarole Theatre, called Jesus, My Boy!
On Wednesday find classical Welsh, Polish and Belgian influences with the Aglica Trio at the Assembly Room, and cello and guitar duo Clare Deniz and Mihael Majeticโs Dieci Corde at the Town Hall on Thursday 8th, with actor and singer, Lucy Stevens and pianist Elizabeth Marcus at the Assembly Room in the evening with Gertrude Lawrence: A Lovely Way to Spend an Evening.
Weekday finale polishes off with British comedy writer, actor, presenter and performer Marcus Brigstocke at the Corn Exchange, eyes down at 8pm for this Radio 4 comedian, whose talent was noted early in 1996 when he won the BBC New Comedian Award at the Edinburgh Festival, and thatโs enough to digest for one day; we will be back highlighting next week as soon as conceivably possible!
Kempston joystick! There’s a new single from Swindonโs sonic indie-rock blasters Atari Pilot, and it seems theyโre waiting for the summer to fall. Hint,โฆ
Schools are back, summer has finally arrived, hereโs what weโve got this coming week…… Not comprehensive, more will be added to our event calendarโฆ
Let’s face facts, they’re not referring to their average age here, are they?! Todayโs topic is belting through town like a headless chicken escapingโฆ
Devizes Street Festival 2023 came to a glorious close in the Market Place yesterday with the unique and dynamic brass, keys and guitar combo, Misha & His Merry Men, a collective of varying musicians on a theme of peace and love, which made for the perfect summary of the event as a whole; our waffle about the first day is HERE.
With new DOCA coordinators Annabel and Ashley at the helm and the barrier set high by their predecessor Loz Samuals, there was no telling how this would go. Maybe thereโs a few lessons learned by the new team, as this is no easy feat to pull off, but backed by the knowledgeable and ever-friendly volunteers I think they made an excellent team and carved a vision of how DOCA events will carry on the traditions set by previous coordinators, from Loz to Ian Hopkins, and of naturally, add their own stamp too.
It was an honour, even if last millisecond planned, to be on the stage to introduce the bands and see the mass of people flooding the Market Place with happy smiles and cheers; Iโve never done anything like this before and though like a rabbit in the spotlights, it gave me an insight into what it feels like for a band to be in front of a colossal crowd; nerve-wracking! So be it for me to say, the opening act on the main stage was also one Devizine had a hand in picking, with a want to introduce a local act amidst the national and international performers across this amazing street festival.
Now, you should note Iโve no intention of continuously getting all Royston Vasey on DOCA, for I fully support and love the fact that rather than hosting just local acts which can be seen on our pub and venue circuit, that they source these outside performers moreso. But I also feel room should be made to bring the crowds one thing specifically Devizes. So, I am hoping this will become an annual thing, when we can suggest a local act which we think has had a particularly good year, and present them on that main stage; not everyone there is able to attend our live music scene across the many pubs and venues.
The proof was in pudding; see the featured photographic evidence. With a fanbase predominantly teenage and unable to attend pubs so easily, the age demographic was so varied, the crowd had amassed to near full capacity. The fanbase stood at the front, the more curious further back, but just to wander through the crowds and see the same look of awe and admiration for a young local band on the pinnacle of greatness, was mind-blowingly epic. Nothing Rhymes With Orange smashed it out of the park, that being the Market Place, and to every surrounding village with an absolutely sublime performance to lodge a firm place in the history of Devizes Street Festival.
Nothing Rhymes With Orange at Devizes Street Festival. Image: Gail Foster
Gaps between bands on stage are so because you need to also focus your eyes on the various street theatre and circus acts happening all around, though slighter, it felt, this year, the quality of them was equal to previous years, and something about small acorns for the new coordinators to ponder through feedback. There will always be those few with a preference to hang around the bar and stage area, so perhaps some lower volume music could be added to entertain them while families explore the side-stalls and circus acts, or at least quarter-of-an-hour prior to the next band coming on, so the area in front of the stage can refill.
Nothing Rhymes With Orange at Devizes Street Festival. Image: Gail Foster
It is certainly how it seemed as crowds waned after NRWOโs spectacular set, regaining the momentum and their attention back to the stage was slighter, which was a tiddly shame, because I donโt know about you but Plymouthโs Cabarats were right up my street and knocking loudly at my door!
My favourite outside band bought in for our entertainment, by a long shot, The Cabarats were solid with the perfect balance of folk and reggae, so downtempo offbeat when building, and layers of uplifting folk once roused, it pushed my every button. If reviews are simply opinion-based, itโs my opinion they supplied the exact ingredients we want and need at the Street Festival, and did with gusto, zest and a unity of tightness musically which simply delighted.
And in a review, of kind, it is impossible to summarise every individual happening at such a special occasion, so I rest my case, I think it was slighter in content this year but only so to break the new DOCA team in gradually, but again, the whole shebang hinges on us bonding and helping out wherever we can, and the massive thanks has to go out to all individual organisations and volunteers which go into making this, annually, the best weekend in Devizes. Look, thereโs a giant woman with a stage of devils and circus acrobats under her skirt where on any normal day you are just waiting for a bus with some hoody eating a Greggs sausage roll; what an utterly fantastic weekend, we love you DOCA!
All images ยฉGail Foster It may be a wrap for another successful Full-Tone Festival in Devizes this bank holiday weekend, but talking to conductor Anthonyโฆ
Imagine, it’s only just eight pm on the opening day of Honey-Fest at the legendary Barge on HoneyStreet, and the haystack-filled marquee is already positivelyโฆ
Another wonderful nugget of lonely contemplation from the chillaxed Britpop kahuna, Paul Lappin, formerly of Swindon now residing in the South of France. Unfortunately Youโฆ
Righty-ho then, this weekโs rodeo roundup of all the lovely fings to Scooby-Doo across Wiltshireโs rolling landscape is rather like when you went on holidayโฆ
26th and 27th May 2023 Wharf Theatre, Devizes Performed and written by Lou Cox
Review by Helen Edwards
I will start this review with a trigger warning. The proceeds from this, Lou Coxโs hilarious and devastating show, are being donated to The Grand Appeal, the official Bristol Childrenโs Hospital charity. Whilst the audience laughed loudly at the very funny and clever one liners we also cried our sincerest tears for Lou, for her and partner Jasonโs baby girl, Hattie, and for the mistakes that were made during her delivery….
When I sat down a kind person to my right, noting that I was on my own started chatting to me. She explained that Lou is her daughterโs teacher at Stagecoach Performing Arts and that she is brilliant. My seat neighbour then told me the ending of the play. She did this to protect me. I spent moments during the show, in between laughs, wondering if knowing was a good thing. My conclusion has been that thank goodness I did; I had made a huge assumption from the title of the play that it would be a chuckle-a-minute nodding in recognition kind of thing. But it was so much more.
With knowledge of what was to come, my laughter was a notch quieter but it still erupted unchecked. It just had a different dimension; one of pure admiration that the woman in front of me had found the strength and courage to write, devise and perform this show within a year of her babyโs death.
The stage was simple, a sofa to the left, chair in the middle and a screen behind. It opened with Lou sat in the chair, black leggings on and a pair of pants around her ankles. She proceeded to talk us through top-tips of sanitary protection placement, ensuring that the multi-padded creation would be enough to catch her first period post birth. Her wit was evident from the start; recognition-fuelled laughter came from every woman who had ever had a baby with chuckles from all else. The pace and punchiness of the jokes picked up with Lou, pants discarded now, sharing her experience of the advice that she received whilst pregnant. Judging by the raucous roars in the auditorium there were many identifying with her journey from pregnancy to birth.
Lou described the uncomfortable telling of people that โIโm pregnantโ as akin to shouting, โIโVE HAD SEXโ, the first of many embarrassing personal disclosures that can accompany being an expectant mother. She then ripped through well-intentioned but unsolicited nuggets of advice that she had been given with a sharp, shrewd humour. We were taken on a tour of Lou and Jasonโs comical antics at antenatal hypnotherapy classes, given a blow-by-blow account of morning sickness, told of her migration from โsexyโ to โbigโ pants and the work involved in getting her private area ready for public (midwife) viewing. It was packed with funny anecdotes.
A few lines that stood out in the first half:
โMy biological clock is ticking. Itโs not ticking itโs Big Ben bongingโ
โPerhaps some of us have wizards sleeves down there and the baby will fly out?โ
Whilst teaching a class of year 9โs: โI would simply turn my back on the studentโs mid-sentence to yak my guts up and turn around after like nothing had happened to complete my sentenceโ
And then came the reality of what happened next. The posts that Lou shared on Facebook after giving birth were shown on the screen. We saw hope turn to despair as Hattieโs life support was turned off. Hattie breathed unaided for 36 hours and Lou allowed us to be with her and Jason as they took their baby girl for a walk in the sunshine through a park off St Michaelโs Hill in Bristol. This was where Hattie took her last breaths, five days after her birth, on the 19th May 2022.
The courage that Lou displayed whilst reliving this personal trauma was like nothing Iโd seen on stage before. It was raw, generous and insightful. The entire audience was in tears with many, like me, crying to the point of back racking sobs. If the play was transferred to other theatres I think it could very easily become a catalyst for change. To see the people behind the labouring women in delivery suites and to view the emotional impact of avoidable newborn deaths is an eye opening and heart crushing experience.
Lou explained that the hospital where Hattie was born (not Bristol Childrenโs Hospital) sent a letter that included the line: โThe trust would like to send their sincere apologies for the mistakes that were madeโ. She went on to tell us that an investigation report clarified that Hattie would still be alive if it wasnโt for these mistakes. Lou believes that accountability has been lacking and her anger towards this is evident throughout the latter part of the play. She talked of her post-birth and trauma care; which included receiving a call from a health visitor four days after Hattieโs death to ask how they were getting on with the baby and being told that she didnโt qualify for NHS-funded counselling because she was not suicidal.
Lou told me afterwards that the objective of the show was to raise money to support Bristol Childrenโs hospital. So far sheโs raised over ยฃ21,000 for The Grand Appeal. She was recently asked by the hospital if they could buy 29 new nebulisers, out of the donations. Her face lit up as she told me this with the knowledge that other newborns will benefit from the money raised in Hattieโs memory.
Lou – the final words in your performance were โHattie McConnell you are beyond specialโ. Iโd like to add to that. Iโm sure I speak for all those in the audiences over the weekend when I say: Lou Cox, you are very talented and very special. Thank you for the laughter with your brilliant comic timing and delivery, and thank you for courageously sharing your story.
Featured Image ยฉAnthony Hunt Photography The team behind Swindon’s popular all-day music extravaganza, My Dadโs Bigger Than Your Dad Festival, have revealed that nearly ยฃ9,000โฆ
Folks at the Wharf Writers’ Group, based in Devizesโ Wharf Theatre, release a new series of podcasts, Where’s The Cat? the first one published todayโฆ.โฆ
Last week I predicted summer 23 had finally arrived, now, well, it doesnโt look smashing now, does it?! Ah, hereโs what weโve found this comingโฆ
So, the Boundary Commission for England’s final recommendations for new Parliamentary constituencies, which carves the Devizes constituency into three unequal parts, was submitted to theโฆ
If I’ve spent some days now, highlighting a wealth of local talented teenagers, forming new bands, and creating a blossoming scene, this isn’t one ofโฆ
It’s the second exhibition at Chippenham pop artist Si Griffiths’s Forbidden Carnival gallery, and if the previous was an overall of the curiosities of alternativeโฆ
Donโt hold your breath, but is โฆ .isโฆis that summerโฆ. coming? Ah, hereโs what weโve found this coming week to do in wonderful Wiltshireโฆ.. Usualโฆ
Looking back over the years of Devizine, Iโve engaged myself with more ‘loco’ undertakings than I care to count, things I wouldn’t have otherwise consideredโฆ
Introducing the rising star of the south west music scene – The Fulltone Orchestra. This dynamic ensemble comprises a rotation of over 90 exceptionally talentedโฆ
If I can, which I think is best after one too many visits to the Stealth bar, sum today in Devizes up in a word, the word would be “balanced.” Perfectly balancedโฆ.
DOCA smashed day one of the 2023 street festival, the sun shone and a brilliant day was had on the Green. We see our town turned into a festival of colour, circus, street theatre, music and dance annually and it never fails to impress and inspire, we’re accustomed to how great this event is. Today in particular, though, managed to pitch that perfect balance in supplying enough for everyone of all ages.
Myself, I bussed it in to find brass nutters Tuba Libres in their civvies busking in the Brittox, making for a grand teaser. The remaining wander to the Green buzzed with anticipation as Devizes was already bustling.
Enter the Green to see folk preparing to be Pac-Man while kids dressed as chaser ghosts and other dads were hit with sponge hammers purely for popping their heads from holes, and other curious video game related shenanigans, but in reality. If there is one thing to distract gamer kids from screens, this was it, and it worked, and it highlighted my point about the perfect balance as others gathered between the willows of a sustainable architectural stroke of genius to hear fantastic upbeat folk duo, Bonnie and Pete encapsulate the audience as Manchester-based Good Habits; they simply charmed and were so apt for chilling in the sanctuary.
With a witty finale folk-disco medley of Those Were the Days and I Will Survive, which worked a billion and one times better than it might sound, Good Habits habitually joined the crowds, while Sustainable Devizes took the mic for a environmental chat, and I sauntered around the site.
Behind us trapeze equipment was proudy erected, but rather than wait for the performance at the end of the day, was being used as a trapeze workshop where revellers queued to give it their best shot. Ten out of ten for interaction, obviously I’d have given it a go, but a food van operated with a virtual queue, and if the mobile device was to vibarate while I was up there my cheeseburger would’ve gone to waste; priorities, see?!
Tuck options aplenty, I confess to a rather splendid cake from the Devizes for Ukraine stall, who had a lovely selection of pastries and cakes you’re unlikely to have seen before.
Jealous because I forgot my sunhat, Welsh-queer mesh dancers plodded to ambient a soundscape, eerily building to a high energy folk dance, here presenting the wild card and receiving mixed verbal reviews from the crowd; certainly had impact.
I say wildcard, I mean, look, there’s a tricycle ridden around by a giant octopus, while its tabletop presents two aquabatic fish-dancers; this isn’t the usual day out in Devizes. But amidst the bizarre Lucid Acid’s Cat Sith was perhaps the most mesmerising, taking the pantomime horse to a whole new level. If it was a botheration to distract my eyes from the genius method of making this acrobatic puppetry appear genuinely feline, it was only to note the toddler next to me completely captivated by it, and my vision circled the crowd to note every person young and old watching in awe.
Miraculous changed into eighties keep fit attire The Tuba Libres blasted their brass at the Willow Sanctuary, and cockney sounding upbeat folk collective The Great Malarkey were as the name suggests, great with a two-tone twist, only to be followed by a spectacular display on the trapeze and now we await day two, which, by the time you read this it will be underway, in the Market Place this time; get your crocs!
OMG, OMG, another bank holiday weekend coming up, whoโs excited, who’s coming out to play?! Hereโs what weโve found this week, find the info and links, and for planning ahead, here, on our event calendar. No prizes for guessing Editorโs Pick of the Week this week!
Obviously more stuff will be added to our event calendar as and when it comes to our attention, this is not comprehensive, so do check in later in the week, and let us know what we missed, we charge one cupcake to add an event, but it must be a chocolate one!
Donโt forget to check out Hail the Curious, the debut exhibit at The Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham, running until 30th June.
Wednesday 24th:
Regular acoustic jam at The Southgate in Devizes.
Skimpy & The Triniti Band at The Bell Inn, Bath, where Little Shop of Horrors runs until Saturday at The Rondo Theatre.
Emmanuel Sonubiโs Emancipated at Swindon Arts Centre, and Gretchen Peters at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
The Mead Community Primary School presents Forever Treasure Island at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford on Avon.
Pierre Novellie and Huge Davies, Comedy Previews at Pound Arts in Corsham.
Thursday 25th:
Shindig Festival opens its doors, have a great weekend to all at Shindig, you lucky lot; have a boogie for me!
Open Mic at Stallards in Trowbridge.
Lady Maisery at Pound Arts, Corsham.
The Soap Girls play The Vic in Swindon, I say, ding-dong! Reverend Ferriday is at The Tuppenny, Jen Bristerโs The Optimist at Swindon Arts Centre, and itโs all soul at The Wyvern Theatre with the Luther show.
Octopus Dream Theatre presents I Love You, Mum, I Promise I Wonโt Die at The Merlin Theatre, Frome.
Friday 26th:
Lou Coxโs n o holds barred one-woman show, Having a Baby and the S**t They Donโt Tell You, at The Wharf Theatre, Devizes for Friday and Saturday; highly recommended from us, but not for the faint hearted!
Meanwhile, 12 Bars Later make a welcomed return to The Three Crowns, Devizes, with the incredible Mark Coltonโs solo show at The Pelican.
John Wattersonโs celebrated tribute to Jake Thackray, An Evening Without Jake Thackray comes to The Bouverie Hall in Pewsey. Billy & Louie at The Castle & Ball, Marlborough.
Running until the 29th, itโs the opening of Chippenham Folk Festival, while the fantastic Triple JD Band plays The Old Road Tavern.
Find Castro at The Wheatsheaf, Calne.
The most amazing young soul singer Iโve heard for an era or four, Franki Soul is at Trowbridge Town Hall. While Fly Yeti Fly have a double-bill at The Pump with Alex Roberts and Graeme Ross.
The Karport Collective are the Seven Stars, Winsley, Bradford-on-Avon; fantastic these guys are. Dervish, legends of the Irish folk scene at Wiltshire Music Centre.
Break Cover are at Brown Street in Salisbury.
Tapped at the Theatre Royal, Bath, and The Lynne and McCartney Story Theatre Show at Chapel Arts.
We Were Promised Honey at Pound Arts, Corsham.
Here Come The Crows at The Vic in Swindon, while Rosie Jonesโ Triple Threat is at Swindon Arts Centre, and The Roy Orbison Experience comes to The Wyvern Theatre.
Ultimate Coldplay at The Cheese & Grain, Frome, and The Urban Voodoo Machine at The Tree House.
Saturday 27th:
You know it has to be Editorโs Pick of the Week, The Devizes International Street Festival is free, itโs the best weekend in Devizes, and it starts on the Green on Saturday and continues on the Sunday in the Market Place; see you there!
Street Festival after parties, then, find Jonah Hitchens Band at the Southgate, Devizes, Ben Borrill plays at The Moonrakers, andย Gerry Jablonski Band plays at the Long Street Blues Club. The Snuff Box has an International Craft Beer Festival, and The Exchange hosts guest DJ, Castro.
Direct from the Pump, Fly Yeti Fly, Alex Roberts and Graeme Ross fly over to The Barge on HoneyStreet, while the Chaos Brothers are at The Lamb in Marlborough.
Be Like Will & Band Of Pilgrims are at The Pump in Trowbridge.
End of Story at The Talbot, Calne, while Band-X play The Wheatsheaf.
A fundraiser for Swindonโs Ukrainian community at Swindon Hub, Rave Against The Regime at The Vic, The Black Hole Sons at the New Inn, Walk Right Back at The Wyvern Theatre, and Tom Davisโ Work in Progress at Swindon Arts Centre.
Ma Bessie and her Pigfoot Band at Chapel Arts, Bath, with You Are The Sun at Theatre Royal, running until 29th May, and A Shining Intimacy at The Egg.
Triple JD are at the Sun in Frome, the Cheese & Grain have Lindisfarne while The Burning Hell are at The Tree House.
Sunday 28th:
Devizes International Street Festival continues, in the Market Place this time, too much to mention here, but do look out for our homegrown upcoming talent Nothing Rhymes With Orange on the main stage at 2:30pm.
The Barge, Honey-Street are Celebrating 50 years of Dark Side of the Moon with Atom Heart Floyd.
Jon Amor Trio at The New Inn, Bath, Jolie Blon at The Bell Inn.
Last Call at The Vic, Swindon.
Fromeโs Spring Vegan Fair at the Cheese & Grain.
Monday 29th:
Bank holiday goodness then, arty kids will be pottery painting at Hilworth Park, find Kate and The Unpredictables at The Three Crowns, Devizes.
Swindonโs famous duck race, see poster below.
Mono at the Cheese & Grain, Tryani Collective at The Bell in Bath.
Tuesday 30th I got nought, unless you know better; always tell us if weโve missed something! Mind you, I think thatโs enough for one week, have a day off, stay home and make beans on toast; you can add a little chilli powder to fully clear your system if you so choose! Have a great weekend, stop me and give me grief if you spot me at the Street Festival, I donโt biteโฆ..not on the nipple at any rate!
A drifting retrospection of sonic electronica new wave from Swindon’s purveyors of cool, Atari Pilot, is out today. A single with a Peter Pan fashionedโฆ
Bristol-based The Radio Makers have laboured over their forthcoming album Lucky Stars (Got My Radio) for four years, and it shows; youโll find out forโฆ
August already, Christmas before you know it. I bet youโve done your Christmas shopping already, havenโt you?! Me? I canโt remember what I had forโฆ
Have rally will travel; seemingly the scooterist’s motto, chatting to various friendly clubs nationwide, and individuals too, such as a dapper lone mod who rodeโฆ
With my boat sailing unchartered territory on this voyage of discovery for local talented youth, the rabbit hole continues deeper the further we network andโฆ
Hey you, had one of those weeks so far, and need to blow off some steam?! I know I have, but you donโt need me to get started on my problems, you need to hear about all the events happening this coming week in Wiltshire; hereโs what weโve found, but thereโs always more to come, so info on these, links and further updates can be found on our Event Calendar.
Itโs about this time when you really need to be looking over next month too and planning ahead. So much going on in June, from Pride to Devizes Arts Festival and, and, and, well, just have a sneaky peak HERE.
Ongoing: do check out Si Griffithโs new gallery The Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham. Thereโs an exhibit currently running until the end of June, and it is amazing; see the poster below, and review HERE.
Wednesday 17th: the regular acoustic jam at The Southgate, Devizes. Also, a piano lunchtime recital from Helen Farrar at Pound Arts in Corsham.
The Tight Lipped Combo at The Bell Inn, Bath, and Tiff Stevensonโs Sexy Brain at the Rondo Theatre.
Opening at Swindon Arts Centre and running until 20th May the TinkCo Theatre Group presents Calendar Girls. And Kate Rusby is at the Cheese & Grain in Frome.
Thursday 18th: And The Drystones play The Pump in Trowbridge, with a Comedy Network night at the Civic.
Happy Place at the Rondo Theatre in Bath.
Ghosts of This Town play The Vic in Swindon, Somerset Velvet & James Turner at The Tuppenny, and Luluโs For the Record is at The Wyvern Theatre.
Jon Royon is a Corsham based potter who took up pottery 5 years ago after taking classes at The Pound, and you can meet him at the Pound in Corsham, and itโs free. In the evening thereโs a National Theatre live screening of David Harewood (Homeland) and Zachary Quinto (Star Trek) playing feuding political rivals in James Grahamโs (Sherwood) multiple award-winning new drama, Best of Enemies, set in 1968 America, as two men fight to become the next president. This is also showing at the Merlin Theatre in Frome.
Friday 19th: The Reason, are at The Three Crowns in Devizes, and that is never a bad thing! Sarumโs Lot are at The Barge on Honey-Street.
Thereโs funky jazz and soul from the Shilts at the Civic in Trowbridge.
The Mark Harrison Band at The Rondo Theatre, Bath.
2 Sick Monkeys headline The Vic in Swindon, with Borrowed Time, The Liabilities and Room 10, while The Music of Meatloaf can be found at The Wyvern Theatre with Hits Out of Hell.
George Eggโs Set Menu at Pound Arts, Corsham. The South play the Cheese & Grain in Frome, with A Band Called Malice at The Tree House.
Saturday 20th: Find a 75-minute chaotic journey through the minds of two dudes; Jack & Jordan at The Wharf Theatre, Devizes, Lazy Dog Comedy comes to Devizes Con Club, and some edgy folk from Cauteโs Plastic Army at the Southgate.
The Travis Waltons at Heartwork at The Pump, Trowbridge, the wonderful Strange Folk play Stallards, and Martyโs Fake Family at the Wiltshire Yeoman.
The Hi Fiโs at Melksham Rock โnโ Roll Club, Triple JD Band at The Constitutional Club in Chippenham.
Homer at The Bakerโs Arms, Swindon, The Roughcut Rebels at the Swiss Chalet, Faux Fighters at The Vic, Tim Vineโs Breeep! at The Wyvern Theatre.
The Archive of Dread at Rondo Theatre, Bath, with Blurt at The Bell Inn, and Ricky Cool and the In Crowd at Chapel Arts.
Mara Simpson at Pound Arts, Corsham.
But Iโm seriously thinking of crossing the border for our Editorโs Pick of the Week, Big Country playing the Cheese & Grain, with Spear of Destiny in support, amazeballs! Meanwhile Muse tribute Muze plays the Tree House.
Sunday 21st: you can find the Madhatterโs Wedding Fayre at Devizes Corn Exchange from 11am-3pm. From 5pm in Devizes, find the Eddie Martin Trio at the Southgate.
Jaywalkers at The Bell Inn, Bath.
All for the kids at Swindon Arts Centre with Grooving with Pirates, and Pop Princesses at The Wyvern Theatre.
Illyria presents Robin Hood in an open air performance at the Merlin Theatre, Frome.
Monday 22nd:
Pasha Finn & The Ellipsis at The Bell Inn, Bath, and Monday also kicks off SparkFest at the Mission Theatre, running until 27th May, thereโs lots going on there.
Tuesday 23rd:
War of The Worlds at Swindon Arts Centre, Liโl Jim at The Bell Inn in Bath, and an Exhibition on screen at Pound Arts in Corsham, called Tokyo Stories.
And thatโs all folks. Big weekend next time, bank holiday again, and Devizes Street Festival with so much other great stuff going on itโs going to take me until next week to type it all out here! Have a good one, big love, Darren.
Rapping on this today, because Devizes young heroes Nothing Rhymes With Orange unleash their latest catchy banger, Monday, tomorrow, which is coincidently or not, aโฆ
Hereโs what weโve found to be doing locally this coming week into August alreadyโฆtake a raincoat for this is British summer time, yay! Hereโs aโฆ
Whatโs four years between releasing new material?! We fondly reviewed Subject Aโs album Writerโs Eyes back in 2019; theyโve a new single out this week,โฆ
If youโve caught either brilliant local soloist, Ben Borrill or Pat Ward performing live in the past, youโll understand what welcomed news it is thatโฆ
Is thisโฆ..is thisโฆ.summer, pray tell?! Hereโs what weโve found to be doing locally this coming weekโฆโฆ Hereโs a thing, all the info and ticket linksโฆ
Samuel Beckettโs existential work is performed in the round this week in Bathโs Mission Theatre, by the Playing Up Theatre Company…..
โGive them enough rope and theyโll hang themselvesโ โฆ. Beckettโs rope is superbly used by the company to great aplomb as it happens. Gogo (Matt Nation) and Didi (Darian Nelson), have no rope to do so whilst wanting to, while Lucky (Sam Fynn) and Pozzo (Jack Strawbridge) do have rope but no suicidal tendencies. Godot naturally never appears although his messenger (Scarlett Nation) delivers his tardy apologies.
These five perform on a traditionally sparse set, with cunning use of lighting for the tree, accompanied by two large rocks and two entrances to frame the action. Heavy winter clothing sets the season. Sophie Brookesโ direction does the rest, ably supported by Richard Chiversโ tech.
โGodotโ is fundamentally a five-person, two-hour โmonologueโ. Itโs word heavy, with little flow โ โNothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goesโ. It has challenging scenes of slavery and abuse. Large parts of it are difficult to fathom. But the company provides a phenomenally slick production that avoids turgidity. This is community theatre at its very finest โ professional qualities abounding. All characterisation is stunning, the gibbering loon of Lucky especially โ disturbingly – so.
โGodotโ ran until Saturday 13th May. The only question you needed to ask is โShall we go?โ. But now like our eponymous heroesโฆ donโt moveโฆ
By Florence Lee. Images by Kiesha Films. Booking Devizesโ most prestigious venue, The Corn Exchange was mighty ambitious for newly formed promoter Lost Monkey Productions,โฆ
Scottish music producer Beskar made our song of the week feature in June with drum n bass doubleA The Prophecy, featuring Devizes vocalist Chrissy Chapman,โฆ
Review by Karen Cannings. Photography by Gail Foster. Market Lavington Community Hall was filled with music and applause on Friday 7th July, as Lavington Communityโฆ
Yeah, not really who youโre thinking of, you history swot! Rather the Cornish Americana/English alternative folk-rock trio of multi-instrumentalists Ruarri Joseph, Naomi Holmes, and Harryโฆ
Okay, the kingโs bank holiday is over, put your bunting away itโs turning into soggy mush now! Onwards to whatโs happening across Wiltshire this coming weekโฆ..
As usual, find info and links on our event calendar HERE. But do check in on the calendar throughout the week as updates will be added when they come in, and are not included here. Itโs the conflict between getting this out there as early as possible for tickets to ticketed events, and balancing this with the smaller venues who will sporadically put up a social media post on Thursday night! So, itโs not comprehensive, just a guide, check a check on the calendar.
Ongoing, lucky you if you have a ticket for the Railway Children at the Wharf Theatre, which is nearly sold out, and running until Saturday. We reviewed it here.
Also find a review HERE for Hail the Curious alternative art exhibit at the newly opened Forbidden Carnival in Chippenham, go see this!
Wednesday 10th, and thereโs the usual Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Anu Vaidyanthanโs BC:AD – (before children, after diapers) at the Rondo Theatre, Bath. Hang Massive at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Broken Robot Production Presents Britainโs Got Talent finalist, Magical Bones at Swindon Arts Centre, and Tony Blackburn brings his Sound of the Sixties to The Wyvern Theatre.
Thursday 11th Spare Snare with Ravetank at The Pump in Trowbridge.
Mark Simmonsโ Quip off the Mark at Rondo Theatre, Bath.
Modern Evils & Cosmic Ninja at The Vic in Swindon, Good Habits at the Tuppeny, with Johannes Radebeโs Freedom Unleased at The Wyvern Theatre.
Friday 12th sees The Four Sopranos at Devizes Town Hall, and The Unpredictables at the Condado Lounge. SynthCity plays the Bear in Marlborough.
Bath Festival starts Friday, running until 21st May, lots to see and do there. Rock the Tots are at the Rondo Theatre with some One Hit Wonders.
ZZ Topped at The Vic in Swindon, Suzie Ruffell at Swindon Arts Centre.
Gary Davis BBC Sounds of the Eighties at the Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Saturday 13th is the annual Stert Country House car boot sale near Devizes, for Cancer Research. Rock Hoppaz at The Three Crowns, Devizes that evening, The Duskers at The Southgate, Ben Borrill is at the Moonrakers, and Slade tribute Sladest at the Cavalier for a Devizes Scooter Club night.ย
Static Moves play The Barge on Honey-Street, Trash Panda at The Lamb, Marlborough, @59 play the Bear.
Scott Doonicanโs Bar-Stewards Sons of Val Doonican is at The Pump, Trowbridge; long since sold out Iโm afraid; youโve got to keep scrolling through our event calendar, and be quick!
The Green Man Festival in Bradford-on-Avon, free, see poster below.
Simon Munneryโs Trials & Tribulations is at Rondo Theatre, Bath
Alasdair Beckett-King at Swindon Arts Centre.
XSLF at the Tree House in Frome, Eric Bibb at The Cheese & Grain.
Sunday 14th sees Avebury Artisans Market, and a Wellbeing Nature Day at West Lavington, and Jack Grace Band is at the Southgate, Devizes from 5pm.
Monday 15th I have nought, nada, let me know if something crops up!
Tuesday 16th is Poetika 111, The Great Outdoors at The Winchester Gate in Salisbury,
Anton De Beke & Friends at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, and the Pretenders, yes, I said The Pretenders, at the Cheese & Grain; wowzers, every town needs a cheese and some grain, donโt they?!
Looking forward for needy speedy timely ticket takers, Thursday sees folk dance fusion at the Pump with The Drystones, and Lulu come to Swindon, Jack & Jordanโs Sketch Show at the Wharf in Devizes on Saturday 20th, and Lazy Dog comedy comes to the Devizes Cons Club, Big Country at The Cheese & Grain. So much more going on, all you gotta do is keep scrolling, and have a great week.
All Images by Gail Foster One of the fundamental elements which makes Mantonfest such an absolutely brilliant festival, aside its beautiful location and friendly atmosphere,โฆ
by Jess Worrow I confess a few nerves about my first interview, in a coffee shop in Chippenham, however after meeting folk singer-songwriter Meg, itโฆ
Exciting news for Wiltshire Museum in Devizes, who has received initial support from The National Lottery Heritage Fund for an ambitious and exciting project โAssizesโฆ
Hey, busy week this week, hereโs what’s happening across the county. Donโt forget thereโs more info on these, ticket links and irregular updates on ourโฆ
Director Freddie Underwood and the cast of The Railway Children absolutely smashed it last night at Devizes’ Wharf Theatre, and that’s coming from someone who doubted it would be their cuppaโฆ..
Said doubt derived from the social expectations and restrictions of my own childhood; aware of the Railway Children film, it just wouldn’t have done to have watched something I’d deem “girly,” and outdated (the film from 1970;) imagine the teasing from my elder brother, and I’d dread to think what would’ve transpired if my school friends found out! Though, at a younger age I relished in children’s period drama, of Enid Blyton, The Velveteen Rabbit, and archaic representations in The Beano comic where teachers still wore mortarboards. But by the grand age of ten plus, there were expectations of me to rather indulge in “boy’s stuff;” The A-Team, Monkey Magic, and a series with a talking car!
Coincidentally, much of the context of the Railway Children deals with social expectations and reputation, yet in a far stricter Edwardian era in which the book was written and set. A fairly affluent London family is uprooted to Yorkshire when the father is unexpectedly taken away by his employers at the Foreign Office. While the mother deals alone with the grief, the social etiquette of keeping the reasons secret from the children only shrouds the affair in mystery. Dealing with newfound poverty and cultural differences between London and the North, the mother and particularly the three children take a few hard-knocked lessons in the mannerisms of the working class.
Yet it is in the misadventures the children engage in, willfully upstanding by all modern reasoning, which the emotional roller coaster evokes the most prevalence and where lessons are sorely learned, yet in turn, sees their father acquitted from the accusations of spying. Not only dealing with the social ethics of the rich/poor and north/south divides, the two eldest children also contend with the issues of coming of age without a father figure.
But its beauty lies not from the genius plot, rather its point of view taken from a children’s innocence perspective. In this, the three children are the only ones allowed to break the fourth wall, as their excitable narration is so cleverly blended with the happenings. It all makes for a highly emotional ambience and thought-provoking mood. With minimal props or effects, the flow feels as imaginative as in the mind of a child. Of course, this couldnโt be carried off with such precision without the need of some top class acting, and herein is the icing on the cake.
The side characters are played enchantingly, Mari Webster as the emotional mother, the kind hearted well-to-do nature of Wharf boss John Winterton as the old gentleman, and the bubbling pomposity of Jon Lewthwaite as the doctor are all played superbly, but it’s within the comical hard-knock mannerisms of station master Perks and the amusing bumbling of the Russian exile Mr Szezcpansky which this play really shines, played with certain skill by Debby Wilkinson and Ellie Mayes respectively.
The play hinges rather on the three protagonists, the children, and, for me, this made it the breathtaking experience it was, plentiful to revert any preconceived doubts on their head and go for broke that this is the best performance I’ve seen at our wonderful Wharf Theatre so far.
Both the eldest child, Bobbie, and middle boy Peter, played immaculately by fifteen year old Katy Pattinson and twelve year old Poppi Lamb-Hughes, just oozes delight and believability by their dedication to the parts and the divine proficiency in which they carry this off. It is with such utter conviction I had to duck back into my car straight afterwards, because as such talented actors it would be impossible to imagine these two as anything but the Edwardian children they were portraying. Ergo, the chance to meet and witness them chatting as usual twenty-first century kids I feared would’ve broken their perfected illusion!
If Bobbie and Peter deal with the conflict of expectations versus growing up and their confusions between what’s right and wrong while everything they expect praise for seems to be returned with reprimand, and equally, anything they seem to do right is hastily turned on its head by the misunderstanding of working class etiquette, the absolute icing on this performance’s cake is without doubt the comical element of the far more carefree youngest child, Phyllis. Influenced by both older brother and sister, she plays the two against each other, and charms all with gusto, wit, and risk taking, just as the typical youngest sibling tends to do!
The mechanics of the part of Phyllis is where this play could have taken a nose-dive, for this surely needs a certain something, a sheer sparkle. And that star is fourteen year old Jessica Self. Simply put, Jessica’s acting ability is sublime, of West-End/Broadway level already. She cam charm when charm is needed, evoke emotion and amuse at the drop of a cue.
Since returning last night I’ve been pondering two possibilities, the first being this part was made for her, but I’m tendering towards the latter possibility, that Jess has the natural skill to become whatever character she is given. I gave thought to the best movie actors, of Dustin Hoffman, of Tom Hanks; how you cannot imagine the persona of the real Tom Hanks through the character he’s playing in each and every film he becomes. I similarly cannot imagine Jessica as being anything like the cheeky girl of Phyllis, rather an imminent actress of boundless talent.
This combination of genius plot, perfect direction and the wonderful acting of particularly Katy, Poppi and Jessica, makes this a delightful, thought-provoking marvel. But you need to hurry as this is near sold out, as expected and deserved.
Another landmark performance at our wonderfully welcoming and devoted little theatre, the pride of arts in Devizes. And if it’s the family oriented ethos you love about it, note it is director Freddie Underwood’s eighth production here, the first time she’s directing her husband Chris, who plays the Father, and of whom she fell in love with during a performance together at the Wharf, and their nine year old daughter Gigi, who is named after said play, and appears in the Railway Children as the child of the station master, Perks; I mean, unless you’ve a grandad you could find a walk-on for to make it a hattrick, you cannot get much more family-felt than that!
Virtual bouquets thrown, then, to all involved with this fantastic show from someone who, if they had Steven Crowder’s “Change My Mind” Campus Sign meme template in the eighties may’ve added “The Railway Children is soppy girly mush!” As you did change my mind, with bells on!
In strict contrast to the synopsis and setting of the Railway Children, the upcoming Girls Like That is the next production I’m advising is unmissable, my preview here. Find all forthcoming events at the Wharf Theatre on our event guide and at their website.
Dry January, anyone? Well, Lady Nade just plunged into an outdoor 4ยฐC eucalyptus sauna for a social media reel. But whilst I’d require a stiff … Continue reading “Lady Nade; Sober!”
Chippenham folk singer-songwriter, M3G (because she likes a backward โEโ) has a new single out tomorrow, Friday 19th December. Put your jingly bell cheesy tunes … Continue reading “Rooks; New Single From M3G”
Chansonnier Yorkshireman Jake Thackray is paid tribute in Pewseyโs Bouverie Hall on May 26th by fellow Yorkshireman John Watterson, aka โFake Thackrayโฆโฆโ
An adopted YorkshiremanJohn Watterson, grew up on the Isle of Man, which is where he first met Jake Thackray in 1975. Recalling the performance at his local folk club, which John explains, โhad the audience in stitches,โ chatted with a very modest and self-deprecating Jake at the interval, describing him as โa big man and a huge talent, clearly embarrassed by the standing ovation, Jake preferred to have a pint at the bar with the punters and didnโt really see what the fuss was about.โ
Influenced by the likes of Jaques Brel and Georges Brassens, Thackray wrote and performed unique folk songs recognisably rooted in the English countryside, at times painfully funny, yet often sad, tragic, rude, irreverent, and incisive, and all these things at the same time. His performances in folk clubs led to appearances on The Frost Report, Braden’s Week and That’s Life. In nearly thirty years of performing he made over 1,000 radio and TV appearances ranging from a topical song in magazine programmes to broadcasts of live concerts on both radio and television. His EMI catalogue produced seven albums between 1967 and 1991.
On learning of Jakeโs passing in 2002, John decided that the songs were too good not to be kept alive, so he set about learning more of them. Performing them at a memorial evening in Monmouth, and John is currently researching and writing a biography on Jake with the help of members of the Thackray family. This is where tribute act really takes on a favoured notion of true homage, his appreciation and love of Jake Thackray’s music reflects in this show he has toured with Fairport Convention nation-wide tour, and has performed twenty shows at the Edinburgh Fringe. He has also been delighted to support Ralph McTell, Richard Digance, Vin Garbutt and many more of his music heroes.
Tickets are ยฃ12.50, and include a light supper in the interval. Available from Around the World, Woottons and the newsagent in Pewsey (cash only please) Or call 07876 230 540.
Delighted by winning the Best Theatre/Arts Venue category of the WiltshireโฏMuddyโฏStilettos Award 2023, Devizes Wharf Theatre wanted to thank everyone who voted for them. โWeโฆ
Happy Summer Solstice, Wednesday, sunrise expected at 3:57am supposed to be a drier night than last night, possibly cloudy; have a wonderful solstice everyone; loveโฆ
Last night Wiltshire Councillors voted in Councillor Iain Wallis as the Chair to the Area Board for Devizes. Meaning any grants to community groups, youthโฆ
For the love of Liam Gallagher, you cashless twenty and thirty somethings who cannot resist the intoxicated urge to mount benches and dance your caresโฆ
A quick one from me today, offering our congratulations to our new writer, Helen Edwards from Devizes, who read out her poem โMotherhood,โ on BBC Wiltshire this week on James Thomasโs Upload show. โIt was fun,โ she told us, โexcept my phone started ringing!โ
Listen here from the BBC website, or Soundcloud link, here. I love writing, but poems, hum, something about bacon, not to mention Iโm an absolute bag of nerves on radio! The article on the Bournemouth Writing Festival Helen mentioned is here too, and this one worked both ways, also inspiring Helen to write. Well done you, and we look forward to hearing some more soon!ย ย
Hot Gypsy Jazz Andy Fawthrop Devizes Arts Festival headed into its final weekend with a fine Friday night gig at The Corn Exchange.ย As Clair Figes of the Arts Festival said in her introduction, this was all about the music.ย Whilst there might have been some hesitation to give any Russian music any air-time atโฆ
Elles Bailey at The Corn Exchange, Devizes; part of Devizes Arts Festival. By Ben Niamor. Images by Andy Fawthropย Elles Bailey made a welcomed return to Devizes this week, her sixth appearance in town by my count since local luthier and at that time promoter Mirko Pangrazzi booked this emerging talent some years ago now.โฆ
Bingo, someone came up to me in the Market Place while I was chatting with Devizes Greens chief, Margaret Green about all random matters of climate change, to offer us both a free vegan chocolate tiffin, and that’s plenty to swing this blogger to pen a decent review in itself! Though I didn’t need aโฆ
Right you lot, listen up; I’m fully aware this debut album, Lost to be Found, from Swindon’s Danni W has been out, what, a fortnight nearly now? Reason why I’ve not mentioned it prior, aside from being a busy boy, is I had to listen to it a few times because it’s undoubtedly feelgood popโฆ
Andy Fawthrop The Hot & The Cool Devizes Arts Festival headed towards the end of its second week with a double-dip into the chocolateโbox of goodies. At lunchtime we had some hot folk, and in the evening we had cool jazz…… St Andrews was the venue at lunchtime as Kit Hawes (guitar, vocals) and Aaronโฆ
Andy Fawthrop The Scottish Play Devizes Arts Festival headed towards the end of its second week last night. And here was another highlight….. Clive Anderson is pretty well known household name, being seen on TV and heard on radio as a presenter, writer and interviewer over the past 30 years. Heโs an award-winner, a versatileโฆ
Ben Niamor The format of this, my first foray into this kind of event, seeโs BBC radio presenter Sue Davies chatting with Will, the furniture restorer and woodworking maestro from the Repair Shop on the gogglebox. Apparently his first event of this kind too.. Sue has a dry wit and gentle manner well suited toโฆ
Revolutionary Ride Andy Fawthrop Devizes Arts Festival played a blinder this afternoon by cranking up the outside temperatures to a level suitable for listening to Lois Pryce talking about riding her motorcycle around the heated countryside of Iran in 2013 and 2014. . The talk/ slide show/ video was entitled โRevolutionary Ride โ One Womanโsโฆ
Those cheeky popsters who rocked up at my 50th with a beanie hat present from their own merch range and expected me to parade around wearing it like I was their personified billboard, yeah them, the fantabulous Talk in Code, well, right, havenโt seen them since, say theyโve been busy on the festival scene, whenโฆ
by Ben Niamor with images by Andy Fawthrop Continuing the tradition of great quality Devizes Arts Festival fringe events in the wonderful town centre beer garden of the British lion, Devizes this year we were treated to a cracking bluegrass band…. Hats off to the arts festival for finding outstanding artists in any given field.โฆ
Whoa, decided today, Thursday, Iโd have to start planning this one immediately, because thereโs soooo much going on, and all, or mostly all, because of that King bloke, who I just thought had a pop hit in 1984 with โLove & Pride,โ but apparently itโs a smidgen more complex than that, the guy is royalty or something. So, grab your celebratory mug, wrap it around your bunting, and letโs have it out nowโฆ..
Firstly, I must interject and explain; our article highlighting coronation-related events received criticism from anti-royalist keyboard warriors who either didnโt digest if bothered at all to read the article, just jumped to conclusions, they did. If you think for one second Iโd support a defective archaic institution which uses tax-payerโs money to bail-out nonce family members then you donโt know me at all. I do, however, despite being as anti-royalist as the next anti-royalist, support the Coronation for all the local entertainers and small businesses which will benefit from getting bookings, only a couple of short years after having no revenue at all. So, wind your neck in, and I hope thatโs cleared that up!
Thereโs plenty of stuff to do this coming week, if you want flag-waving or not, so letโs drop the subject and get on with listing them. Donโt forget, all links and info can be found on our event guide, and updates through the week will be added, so keep abreast, and up-to-date; this article is not conclusive.
Ongoing from Monday 1st to 7th May, is the Swindon Festival of Literature; lots happening there worth checking out.
Opening night for Zog at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, on Tuesday 2nd, and running until Thursday 4th, family entertainment based on the book by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler.
Wednesday 3rd, is the regular Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Seeds of Memories is a wistful and uplifting show packed to the brim with puppetry and poetry. It offers a gentle exploration of losing a loved one and dealing with grief through the magic of the memories they leave behind, and itโs at the Rondo Theatre, Bath.
Thursday 4th: Sees Derailer & Dangermind at The Vic, Swindon, the Hothouse Flowers at The Cheese & Grain, Frome, and some raw, open and honest but most importantlyโฆfunny comedy at the Rondo Theatre, Bath with Richard Hardistyโs Silly Boy.
Friday 5th: and King Charles Coronation kicks off, with a school art exhibition at St Peters Marlborough, events at Hilperton Village Hall, and the Junkyard Dogs are in Bromham.
The Blackheart Orchestra are at the Pump in Trowbridge, Sack Sabbath tribute at The Vic, Swindon. A homecoming for Will Lawton & The Alchemists at Malmesbury Town Hall. Six O’clock Circus at The Three Crowns, Devizes.
Rock For Heroes at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, and an extra show for John Kearnsโ The Varnishing Days at Rondo Theatre, Bath.
Saturday 6th: Wiltshire Farmersโ Market in Devizes.
King Charles Coronation continues, youโll find live music from 4pm at The Crown, Bishops Cannings with White Horses, Tom Davis & The Bluebirds, and Plan of Action, other events include Urchfont, Picnic in the Park at King Georgeโs Playing Fields in Melksham, Coronation Live Screening at John Coles Park, Chippenham, at Foxham Reading Room, Seend Village Community Centre, The Parade Cinema in Marlborough, The Cooperโs Arms Pewsey have a great music programme, in Westbury Be Like Will are at The Players, and Westbury Cons Club has a party too. Picnic in the Park at The Rec in Calne from 10am-9pm, looks amazing, Coronation Celebrations at Devizes Market Place from 10:30-4pm.
Away from all that, find the Leon Daye Band at The Southgate, Devizes, and Kyla Brox Band at Long Street Blues Club; it’s all too royal with cheese for me, so yeah, Kyla Brox, Long Street you got my Editor’s Pick of the Week, hands down!
Acoustic punk band, Abdoujaparov of ex-Carter USM guitarist Les Carter headline the Pump, Trowbridge, with support from former Browfort frontwoman, Claire Kearley, and โSong for Trowbridgeโ hero Gavin Osborn.
Rammlied at The Vic, Swindon, Sonic Alert at the Queens Tap, Homer at The Sun in Coate, Rosie Holtโs Womanโs Hour at The Wyvern Theatre.
Jah Wobbleโs Invaders of the Heart take the Cheese & Grain, Frome, nice.
Sunday 7th: King Charles Coronation celebrations at Ogbourne St George Primary school, Ludgershall, All Cannings with Alfredโs Tower, Rowde with People Like Us, Parade House Trowbridge, and Spring in the Park at Westbury. Devizes Town Band have a coronation concert at the Corn Exchange, called Animal Magic.
Unmissable monthly jaunt for Jon Amor & Guests at The Southgate, Devizes. Phil Samuelโs The George Michael Experience is at the Bridge Inn, Horton, Devizes.
Open Mic night at the Barge on Honey Street.
The King’s Reggae at The Castle & Ball, Marlborough, with Razah-I Fi; ding!
Courting Ghosts & Becky Lawrence are at The Stallards Inn, Trowbridge.
Sour Apple at The Kings Arms, Amesbury.
Blues Jam at The Vic, Swindon.
Magpie Market at The Cheese & Grain, Frome.
Monday 8th: King Charles Coronation at The Crown in Bishops Cannings with Illingworth, also a Produce Show at The Village Hall.
By the time you read this Iโm predicting it a sell-out, but worth checking, opening night for The Railway Children The Wharf Theatre, Devizes, running until 13th May.
Tuesday 9th: Seven Drunken Nights at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon.
And thatโs your lot, enough for you to do?! Hereโs to the king, let us hope his reign is long and healthy, even if only so I donโt have to type all that for one weekend again for a while!!
By T.B.D Rose The LGBTQIA+ community bravely showed their support for Drag Queen Story Hour at the Wyvern Theatre yesterday, by staging a counter protestโฆ
A Top-Class Comedian At Work Andy Fawthrop The Devizes Arts Festival hit the half-way stage last night with an absolute sell-out performance. Honestly, you couldnโtโฆ
Andy Fawthrop A Lovely Way To Spend An Evening The Devizes Arts Festival continued last night with another one of those difficult-to-categorise items…. โGertrude Lawrence:โฆ
Hey, howโs you? Ah, been better, been worse, thanks for asking. Hereโs what weโve found to be doing over this coming weekโฆโฆ.
All links, info and updates can be found on our event calendar. Other incoming events will be added there when we discover them, so do check in later in the week. For now thoughโฆ.ย
Tuesday 25th April:
Deadlight Dance on the Radio! Yes, Marlboroughโs goth-rock duo Deadlight Dance will be live and chatting to Peggy on Donโt Stop the Music Show tonight, on Swindon 105.
Staying in Swindon, The Cavern Beatles pay The Wyvern Theatre.
And thereโs the regular jazz night at il Fiume in Bradford-on-Avon, with the Graham Dent Trio.
Wednesday 26th:
Acoustic Jam at The Southgate, Devizes.
Sirius Chau at Wiltshire Music Centre in Bradford-on-Avon.
Running until 29th April, opening night for Julius Caesar at Rondo Theatre, Bath.
Also Running until 29th, Phoenix Players presents The Business Of Murder at Swindon Arts Centre.
Thursday 27th:
Open Mic night at Stallards, in Trowbridge.
Alex Lipinski and The Crown Electric & Matt Owens and The Delusional Vanity Project at Chapel Arts, Bath.
Mr Love & Justice play The Tuppenny, Swindon, while thereโs a Chuckles Comedy Club at Meca, and The Diana Ross Story at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon
Friday 28th:
Marillion tribute Marquee Square Heroes play the entire Script For A Jesters Tear for its 40th anniversary at Marlborough Town FC. Laurence plays Motown and soul classics at The Castle & Ball.
Itโs The Final of Take the Stage 2023 at The Neeld, Chippenham, and Mr Love & Justice play The Old Road Tavern.
A Moroccan Banquet at Trowbridge Town Hall.
Billie Bottleโs Temple of Shibboleth – Solarference at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon, while Brake Lights play The Boathouse.
Tribute to Bonnie Raitt at Chapel Arts, Bath,The First Raitt Band.
Oasish & Stereotonics at The Vic in Swindon, The Illegal Eagles at The Wyvern Theatre.
The Big Excuse: Featuring Solcura, Bit Bigger, and Big Dog at 23 Bath Street, Frome, and the Toasters play The Cheese & Grain.
Saturday 29th:
Is Seend Beer Festival, also the start of Urchfont Scarecrow Festival, which is running until Monday.
Mr Love & Justice is at The Southgate, Devizes, Ben Borrill at the Moonrakers.
The Duskers at The Barge on Honey-Street.
Barrelhouse plays The Bear in Marlborough.
The Woodbridge, Pewsey has a hog roast with live music from The Busy Fools.
From Jovi & Dragoneye at The Wheatsheaf in Calne.
The Upbeat Beatles play The Civic in Trowbridge, sold out already at The Pump for Carsick with support from Nothing Rhymes With Orange and Meg.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream Masquerade – The Mayor’s Charity Ball at the Neeld, Chippenham.
Operation 77 at the Westbury Cons Club, Local Heroes Inc at Prestbury Sports Club, Warminster.
The Lost Trades return to Wiltshire after a national tour, and play the Hop Inn, Swindon. Meanwhile itโs emo night at The Vic with Black Parade. Paul Young – Behind The Lens at The Wyvern Theatre.
Lucis Choir at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon, Pop-Up Bowie at Chapel Arts in Bath.
The Cheese & Grain in Frome has Peter Hook & The Light, and Greg Lake tribute Lucky Man at the Tree House.
Sunday 30th:
Dr Zeboโs Wheezy Club will be at The Southgate, Devizes from 5pm.
May Day Musical Mayhem at The Talbot Inn, Calne, raising funds for Campaign Against Living Miserably, they have Six O’Clock Circus, Peaky Blinders, One Chord Wonders, Red Light, Absolute Beginners, The Killertones Underground and The Daybreakers.
Family Concert at Wiltshire Music Centre, Bradford-on-Avon,Noisy Nature with the Magnard Ensemble.
Devil’s Doorbell are live in session at The Electric Bar, Bath
Raver Tots comes to Meca, Swindon, while The Wyvern Theatre has the Ministry of Science.
Monday 1st:
Running until 7th May, Swindon Festival of Literature opens.
Monthly album listening club, The long Player at The Vic, Swindon.
And thatโs it, do check out Zog with the kids at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon, opening Tuesday 2nd, and running until 4th May. Then we have the Kingโs Coronation next weekend, lots going on to do with that, and lots happening if you wish to avoid that! Do keep a check up on the calendar.
Classical Comes Calling Andy Fawthrop The Devizes Arts Festival continued to deliver its wide-ranging programme yesterday. Following tango, folk, opera, talks and drama, Wednesday andโฆ
Henry VI by William Shakespeare, Rondo Theatre, July 5th-Sat 8th, 7.30pm. A Preview โ by Ian Diddams……. Shakespeare wrote three plays about Henry VI โโฆ
โฆ..and other niggly countywide troubles doner meat and chips from Chick-o-Land will stop me ranting aboutโฆ.. Speculation arises if the entire additional ยฃ3.6m awarded toโฆ
CSF Professional Wrestling returns to Devizes, on Sunday 25th June for a very special edition of CSF SHOWDOWN! Following multiple sellouts of the venue, Theโฆ
Last time we mentioned local Jamaican-born artist Clifton Powell, he was commissioned for the English Heritage exhibition, โThe African Diaspora in England.โ This time heโฆ
Andy Fawthrop Free Fringe Frolics Another day, another venue, and the Devizes Arts Festival is now getting into its stride. ย Thisย afternoon was the first ofโฆ
Pride of the arts in Devizes, The Wharf Theatre say,“if you love the story of The Railway Children, first serialised in The London Magazine in 1905 and published as a book in 1906, before being made into the classic 1970 film; then we can assure you that the stage play will not disappoint.“
Being honest, it’s a story I’m unfamiliar with, believing, if memory serves me well, there was also a popular TV series of it in the early eighties, but at the time I was cosumed rather by Monkey Magic and The A-Team! I think today, though, I can look upon this with matured eyes and be equally as intrigued by its genius synopsis as those the Wharf deem “lovers” of the story.
Therefore, I’m pleased to highlight that they’re proud to present this renowned story of a prosperous Edwardian family from London, forced into near-penury in the rural north of England, after their Father is falsely imprisoned. Come and meet โBobbie, Peter and Phyllis as they adapt to their new life in the cottage by the railway and join them as they meet someone who might just be able to help them get their happy ending.
Under Freddie Underwoodโs direction, this stage adaptation perfectly captures the anxieties and exhilarations of childhood with great tenderness and insight. Adults and children will be enthralled by the heart-warming story and the clever use of imaginative theatricality. This is definitely one โnot to be missedโโฆ
Running from May 8th to May 13th 2023 @ 7.30pm. As you might predict, tickets are selling well on this already, so I encourage your urgency to snap up a seat.
Tickets can be purchased by ringing 03336 663 366; from the website and at the Devizes Community Hub and Library on Sheep Street. For group bookings, please contact hire@wharftheatre.co.uk
Writer, poet, TV & Film producer, founder of the Manchester Poetry Festival (now the Literature festival) and co-founder of the Nottingham Poetry Festival, Henry Normal brings his new tour, Collected Poems and Other Landfill, to The Assembly Rooms in Devizes on Friday 3rd November.….
In June 2017 he was honoured with a special BAFTA for services to Television, credits roll like the ultimate rรฉsumรฉ. He co-wrote and script edited the multi-award-winning Mrs Merton show and the spin off series Mrs Merton and Malcolm. He also co-created and co-wrote the first series of The Royle Family. With Steve Coogan he co-wrote the BAFTA winning Paul and Pauline Calf Video Diaries, Coogan’s Run, Tony Ferrino, Doctor Terrible and all three of Steve’s live tours and the film The Parole Officer.
Setting up Baby Cow Productions Ltd in 1990, Henry executive produced all and script edited many of the shows of its 17-and-a-half-year output during his tenure as MD. Highlights of the Baby Cow output during his time include the Oscar nominated film Philomena, I believe in Miracles, Gavin and Stacey, Moone Boy, Uncle, Marion and Geof, Nighty Night, The Mighty Boosh, Red Dwarf, Hunderby, Camping and Alan Partridge.
Since retiring in April 2016, Henry has written and performed eight BBC Radio 4 shows combining comedy, poetry, and stories about family. His tenth show A Normal Home will be recorded on the 18th November 2022 for transmission on the 20th December.
In April 2018, Two Roads publishers released his book of memoirs ‘A Normal Family’ which was written with his wife Angela Pell, drawing on his family experience. It immediately became a best seller on Amazon and has already been reprinted.
Henry performs poetry at Literature Festivals around the UK and has eleven poetry books available from Flapjack Press including the latest entitled Collected Poems Vol.2.
He was recently given an honorary doctorate of letters by Nottingham Trent University, another by Nottingham University and has a beer and a bus named after him in Nottingham!
Support for Henry Normalโs show comes from very special guest British actor, comedian, musician, novelist, and playwright Nigel Planer, perhaps best known for his role as Neil in the BBC comedy The Young Ones and Ralph Filthy in Filthy Rich & Catflap. He has appeared in many West End musicals, including original casts of Evita, Chicago, We Will Rock You, Wicked, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Doors at 7.30pm, on Friday 3rd November. Tickets (ยฃ17.50 + booking fee) are available now HERE.
With the happenings at the Arts Festival taken care of, and twenty/thirty something’s pilgrimage to The Three Crowns for the delights of our most famedโฆ
Bass Baritone Brilliance Andy Fawthrop It was time last night for The Devizes Arts Festival to roll out its first big-hitter of the 2023 programme, andโฆ
Perhaps..PerhapsโฆPerhapsโฆ Andy Fawthrop Images by Gail Foster The Devizes Arts Festival kicked off its 2023 programme with a real bang last night, and perhaps thisโฆ
by Helen Edwards For those that are too busy to read this film review and to help our tech-conditioned โkeep-it-quickโ minds please see the one linerโฆ
Explosive new EP from Liddington Hill released tomorrow, Edge of Insanity, begging the question, have they created a whole new subgenre? As an impressionable Essexโฆ
26th and 27th May 2023Wharf Theatre, DevizesPerformed and written by Lou Cox Review by Helen Edwards I will start this review with a trigger warning.โฆ