Sign of Life; The New Single From George Wilding

Am I going to tell you about this new George Wilding tune, or not? Huh? Oh, sorry mate, what was that again?!

Sounds like George is irked with a distracted nomophobe, much less speaks out for everyone ignored when addressing someone permanently glaring at a phone screen and risking causing a hitch in a relationship; I donโ€™t blame him and suspect most of us have been both victim and guilty of violating basic manners while gawking at someone’s lost cat or unappetising supper photo on Facebook.

Maybe this review will make you think twice, maybe it’s hypocritical even reading it, but whatever; it’s the damn good welcoming home song we’ve come to expect from this local legend.

So, pay attention now, because it’s been a while since we’ve been able to say we’ve a new single from the prodigal George Wilding to mention. He’s been enjoying being the human jukebox aboard cruise ships, guaranteeing his bread and butter, and if he’s got some stories to tell, we’re glad to see him back to tell them.

Sign of Life is out across streaming platforms on the 24th October 2024, we’ll drop a link here to it when available, so check back in or follow his socials. Its working title, Canโ€™t Get Through to You, may be more enlightening, but not so punchy.

George Wilding

A medium-paced post-gothic indie rock riff, comparable to those who dared buck the noncommercial ethos of the subgenres of new wave, The Smiths, The Cure both spring to mind, though George’s distinctive and often adventuresome vocal range should be no stranger to anyone locally based and therefore needs no comparables. This is a grower, creeping up on you, and after a few listens youโ€™ll be hooked. But besides, itโ€™s George, and doesnโ€™t divert from the style or excellence of his previous outpourings; fans will be pleased to hear, I reckon.

Double-whammy, as itโ€™s produced by the amazing Jolyon Dixon, renowned for bringing the best out of many artists new to us; weโ€™re delighted to hear of this perfect coupling. Jolyon told me, โ€œit was great fun working with him, canโ€™t believe we hadnโ€™t done so before!โ€

Look out for it on Thursday, just donโ€™t ignore your better half when they complain youโ€™re supposed to be taking the bins out rather than listening to this amazing new song from George Wilding, as that is what ear-pods were invented for!


Trending…..

Rooks; New Single From M3G

Chippenham folk singer-songwriter, M3G (because she likes a backward โ€œEโ€) has a new single out tomorrow, Friday 19th December. Put your jingly bell cheesy tunesโ€ฆ

Burning the Midday Oil at The Muck

Highest season of goodwill praises must go to Chrissy Chapman today, who raised over ยฃ500 (at the last count) for His Grace Childrenโ€™s Centre inโ€ฆ

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Wiltshire Council & English Heritage Gang Up to Ruin Solstice at Avebury

Morning person by default, I get to see the sunrise every morning, ergo Iโ€™ll tell you something you all should know anyway; watching it as a live stream on your phone just doesnโ€™t have the same impact. โ€œYouโ€™ve got a window, use it, hippy,โ€ seems to be the ethos of regulations set by Wiltshire Council, the National Trust and English Heritage, whoโ€™ve ganged up to ruin solstice at Avebury, for the people it means the most to.

Marlborough Tory Councillor Jane Davies republished Wiltshire Councilโ€™s statement on her Facebook page, to receive much frustrated and unanswered replies. The Council will close The Ridgeway from Overton Hill to Hackpen Hill to all vehicles from Monday 13th to Thursday 30th June. It will also close Avebury High Street to non-residents through 20th to 22nd June. Solstice is Tuesday 21st.

Park illegally and it will be towed away they threaten, as a way to โ€œensure people can enjoy the summer solstice safely at Avebury this year.โ€ Yes, with irony on a departed flightpath, that really is their reasoning, reminding folk if they donโ€™t like it the sunrise will be live streamed anyway, so you know where to go.

Letโ€™s look at this logically, if I may, rather than the type of wonky perception of English Heritage, who last week saw nothing inappropriate in abusing Stonehenge as a giant projection screen for images of the Queen. The fact remains, while the National Trust carpark is the only way theyโ€™ll make a tidy profit, it simply isnโ€™t big enough, neither will it accept โ€œlive-inโ€ vehicles, or has ample disabled parking spaces, and despite this thereโ€™s rumours floating itโ€™ll also be closed.

One stage away from bricking the village in, I find myself pondering if theyโ€™ve stopped to consider the consequences, or if they really care. Anyone who can read between the fabricated wellbeing and conservational lines will be fully aware this is a calculated attack on our rights to roam, and those who execute that right. Yet it will not only affect them, but the entire community surrounding the stones. Rightfully every farmer will batten down the hatches, close gates and block entrances, because this is necessary arable land and the last thing, they need, is a bunch of hippies hanging about; I get that, but surely, thatโ€™s the point of the Ridgeway in the first place, to give them space to camp, without invading private farmland?

This, and the alternatives will set to infuriate residents and passers-by, perpetuating the negative stereotype of the travelling community, as lorry drivers cannot take a well-earned rest in occupied laybys, and neighbouring villages will clutter with parked vehicles; I get that too, but itโ€™s easily avoided if the Ridgeway offered them a temporary stop, as is the practice. Ha, whoโ€™d a thought it, (not the pub carpark, donโ€™t make it like I put ideas in your head!) but it feels like Wiltshire Council have an agenda, a kind of abhorrence of the travelling community, when we all thought the Beanfields was consigned to historical articles in the Guardian.

For a further point of aggravation; surely, itโ€™s a burden to the Police too, whoโ€™ll have to deal with the frustration these restrictions will cause, and likely face the brunt of the blame? โ€œAppropriatelyโ€ seems to be a word they bounce around regularly in the notification, as in โ€œthis will ensure Solstice celebrations can be managed appropriately,โ€ and โ€œpeople preparing for the summer solstice should take note of these important restrictions so they can plan celebrations appropriately.โ€ Yet by very definition, in a manner that is suitable or proper in the circumstances, these regulations are perceptibly inappropriate. In other words, we have a polarised vision of how to conduct an ancient festivity, and you are forced to follow it; we donโ€™t want too many people to enjoy themselves and it doesnโ€™t include travellers.

With limited space in the pricey National Trust carpark, feels like the Council and EH want just enough revellers to set the mood for their live stream; the local folk they snub but humour โ€œchampagne socialists,โ€ or as I favour to call them; a dying breed of affluent inhabitants with a conscious and basic morals. If lockdown facilitated a culture of watching events online, note, WC, that time is over.

Ha, course you could get the bus, if only the service was adequate. But yeah, Solstice is on a first-come-first-served basis this year, giving locals the upper-hand; This is a local solstice, for local people, thereโ€™s no sunrise for you here.

Shoot me after my conclusion, but all this feels akin to the Christianisation of ancient festivals, like you know, Father Christmas was a wiseman following the star, or the Easter bunnyโ€™s rabbit holes provided excellent support for crucifixion crosses; the very same ethos which tore down Avebury stone circle in the first place (check your history.) Why not go the full hog and Disneyfy the whole shebang, make solstice sunrise only available as a series on Disney+?

Rather, itโ€™s high time for our county to accept and embrace this alternative form of tourism, provide facilities adequate to the need. Do this under the presumption without aggravation caused by such restrictions will go some way to building a trustworthy bond, because, and here is the rock bottom line; the only trouble thatโ€™s EVER happened at Avebury or Stonehenge during Solstice was caused by frustration at such restrictions. Given the right to celebrate, there would be no trouble, there never has been. Make people feel constrained, fraught and segregated, and thereโ€™s nowhere else for them to go but exacerbation.

And donโ€™t be giving me this โ€œprotecting a world heritage site,โ€ crock-of-shite; when theyโ€™re prepared to strip Stonehenge of its world heritage status in order to unlawfully (according to the High Court,) construct a monstrous overpriced tunnel underneath it! Here; take a hint, a row of bushes will do the job of hiding it from non-paying tourists!

There, had my rant, these organisations made their bed, and if this causes issues, theyโ€™ve only themselves to blame. You know closing off the byways isnโ€™t going to solve any damage to Avebury, it will only make it worse, I wonder if you care, or if thereโ€™s a hidden agenda. Feels like WC are an older sibling, continuously slyly poking their younger brother until heโ€™s forced to lash out, and then calling, โ€œmum, he hit me!โ€ Because itโ€™s not relevant in their lives they want rid of it; I say, get over yourself.


Trending….

St John’s Choir Christmas Concert in Devizes

Join the St Johnโ€™s Choir and talented soloists for a heart-warming evening of festive favourites, carols, and candlelit Christmas atmosphere this Friday 12 th Decemberโ€ฆ

For Now, Anyway; Gus White’s Debut Album

Featured Image: Barbora Mrazkova My apologies, for Marlboroughโ€™s singer-songwriter Gus Whiteโ€™s debut album For Now, Anyway has been sitting on the backburner, and itโ€™s moreโ€ฆ

Butane Skies Not Releasing a Christmas Song!

No, I didnโ€™t imagine for a second they would, but upcoming Take the Stage winners, alt-rock emo four-piece, Butane Skies have released their second song,โ€ฆ

One Of Us; New Single From Lady Nade

Featured Image by Giulia Spadafora Ooo, a handclap uncomplicated chorus is the hook in Lady Ladeโ€™s latest offering of soulful pop. Itโ€™s timelessly cool andโ€ฆ

Large Unlicensed Music Event Alert!

On the first day of advent, a time of peace and joy to the world et al, Devizes Police report on a โ€œlarge unlicenced musicโ€ฆ

Fatherโ€™s Day; Keeping Ideas Local

Whether heโ€™s sofa slouching with his one hand down his pants the other clasping a beer, watching classic Euro finals and yelping like itโ€™s happening now, or digging up weeds in the garden, proudly displaying his builderโ€™s butt, donโ€™t forget your Dad this Fatherโ€™s Day…..

ON SUNDAY! I confess, I did one year, and live to regret it now heโ€™s gone; insert sad emoji. Though itโ€™s a man-thing for banter to ride over showing our emotion, if youโ€™re not a dad yourself youโ€™re excused for thinking itโ€™s all a commercial con and your dad doesnโ€™t want the attention, and all they did, after all, was the naughty bit. You are wrong though, Iโ€™m afraid. It does mean a lot to those dadas and father figures, believe me.

Remember we live to embarrass you in public, thatโ€™s why we have those sandals and oversized khaki shorts, but we do it because we care! So, youโ€™ve a few more days to get it together, shops are reopening, I urge you keep it local, but what can you do to show him, through all his faults, you love and respect that balding misunderstood numpty?! Hereโ€™s some ideasโ€ฆ.


Cards and Gifts!

Yep, easy one, innit? Top of the list though. Keeping it local, nip down the High Street, Devizes, and find Expressions Card Shop. They have reopened, and have all the cards, balloons and gifts you could ever want to shower your pops with.

Another cool place to check out, antiques and vintage shop Eleโ€™s Emporium in Seend, they suggest some homemade beer coasters which would save your mum having to moan at him for beer rings on her bespoke coffee table; you know heโ€™ll try to blame it on you otherwise!

eles

Or make something yourself, the Wiltshire Scrapstore & Resource Centreย  have everything the creative need to construct something truly unique. The scrapstore is a wonderful, eco-friendly charity whose aim is to promote learning through creativity. And if it all fails and youโ€™re covered head-to-toe in double-sided sticky tape, gifts can also be found in Bartyโ€™s next door at Bowden Hill, Lacock!


Buy him a Record or CD!

Nip to Vinyl Realm, even if you donโ€™t know what music the old fellow is into; experts Pete and Jacki will be able to advise, and nab yourself a long player thatโ€™ll take your dear olโ€™ pops back to a far off time when he was young; just take a step back if he attempts to belt out Cracklinโ€™ Rosie or show off his dad-dancing; itโ€™s never a pretty sight!

vr


Beer and Snacks!

I admit some Batman socks once got me a tad excited, but usually socks are a clichรฉ yawn. Beer, thatโ€™s what he wants, and snacks to go with it. The Vaults in Devizes and Piggy Bank in Calne offer Fatherโ€™s Day boxes of such necessities, and theyโ€™ll deliver them on Saturday or Sunday. Order on their respective websites and you can benefit from the amusement of watching Dad get sloshed.

The Southgate is also available to get take-outs, might be a plan; check with your favourite boozer to see whoโ€™s also doing take-outs; Dads are raring to get back down the pub, so you could be onto a winner with this idea. Mathematically the equation is thus: Dad + Beer = Happy Dad.


Tea for Two!

I don’t know about you, but I’m happy with any food, and I’m a dad; must be something in that notion. The Happy Food Company of Devizes have put together a special afternoon tea for Father’s Day, fresh delivered to your door on the day.

Cake selection, Coffee and walnut cake, Guinness and chocolate cake, large pork sausage roll, scone, jam and cream, loose tea from teainc and at ยฃ20 for 2. Mum will love it too, even if it’s not her special day!


A Takeaway Roast Dinner!

Whoโ€™s got one of those Dads who is always in the kitchen? Yeah, thought not! Still, might benefit him if mumโ€™s in a good mood; get a takeaway roast dinner from the Pelican in Devizes; wink, wink, nudge, nudge. Best way to a manโ€™s heart. Roast pork, chicken or stuffed Portabello mushroom with blue cheese sauce and lovely home made desserts. Vouchers can be redeemed for up to one year, and they have Take Away Mid Week Specials from around the World!

pelly1


Sweeties!

While weโ€™re on grub, Dads love โ€˜em, simple as. Savannah’s Sweets in Devizes have reopened, and still do takeaway orders for home delivery. Itโ€™s an idea, save him nicking your Haribo, after all.

savannah


Picnic!

Every Dad is, in some way, like Yogi Bear, and love a pic-a-nic. Over at Lower Farm, home to Rowdey Cows and Spotty Dogs, theyโ€™re having a socially distancing picnic; the shop has everything you need to make it as swanky as you like, and the cafรฉ is open for teas, coffees, and of course, it goes without saying; ice cream! The Spotty Dog also has a male grooming gift sets as a secondary idea. So, if your dad has adopted the Planet of the Apes look over the lockdown, this might be the very idea.


Have a BBQ!

Dad and barbeque, like horse and carriage. Butchers HF Stiles in Bromham have a mixed grill pack especially for Father’s Day

Aveburyโ€™s Gourmet Goat Farmer have some gift bags for a delicious goat-based barbeque. Complete with a goat-themed greetings card, and goat burgers, brioche rolls, goatsโ€™ cheese, and a selection of locally sourced salad items, the first 10 orders get a FREE bottle of Ramsbury Brewery beer thrown in too!

goat


Crafts!

Amelia-Rose Creations in Trowbridge has lots of nice ideas, including some brilliant framed worded pieces with Lego superheroes on, get in faster than a speeding brick train though.

Sugar & Spice Bows is another great online crafter with some idea for Fatherโ€™s Day, their keyrings might not get to you on time, but would be make a great belated gift!

sugarspice

And never forget our Naz at Cositas Bonitas, crazy little craft shop in Sidmouth Street, Devizes. While I cannot see theyโ€™ve anything specific for Dads, theyโ€™ll guaranteed to have endless ideas in there.


Get a book from a local author!

No point in doing this article without a shameless slice of self-promotion! Buy a paperback or Kindle version of the five-star rated sci-fi comedy, White Space Van Man by yours truly; it’s right up his street, lots of rude words, and itโ€™ll keep him quiet for weeks, save for a perpetual bout of belly-laughs!

whitespacevanman


Let him eat CAKE!

Devizes-based TrayCake will deliver a Fatherโ€™s Day treat box to a five-mile radius and, mate, Iโ€™ve checked their website, only browsed the photos, but Iโ€™ll be dribbling for the foreseeable future.

Secretly though I know what Iโ€™m getting, thus is the plight of being father, the invoice was emailed to me! I wasnโ€™t going to mention it, because within half-hour of going online they were sold out. The good news is though, The Gourmet Brownie Kitchen at Poulshot Lodge has a new batch of Fatherโ€™s Day Treat boxes. OMG and other such exclamation abbreviations, had some of these at the Devizes Food Festival; see, my kids know how to push my buttons. Although Iโ€™ll probably have lock myself in the downstairs loo if I think Iโ€™ve any chance of stuffing them all!

brownie

My work here is done. For the good of all Dad’s out there, the ones who deserve more than a Lynx deodorant set, but probably need one, have a great day! See you down the pub soon, alright?!


Solstice, or What-Christians-Macallit?

Summer Solstice is on Friday 21st June and English Heritage provides free Managed Open Access to Stonehenge as usual, under the conditions: no amplified music, no drones, no alcohol, no drugs, no drunken or disorderly behaviour, no camping, no sleeping bags, no large bags, no chairs, fires, Chinese lanterns, fireworks, candles, tea-lights or BBQs, no glass, no sharp or pointed objects, and, of course, no climbing on the stones; something weโ€™ll return to in a bit.

You will be searched, and anything deemed unsuitable will be confiscated, other than that, have fun.

I appreciate this reasoning, our nanny-state concludes you are not to be trusted; you should be immune to this concept by now. Have no concern, they will create common sense for you and write it on a fluorescent signpost.

With workshops and bands, thereโ€™s a four-day pay-festival; setting you back ยฃ125 to camp per person, ยฃ325 for a campervan pitch, or ยฃ490 for glamping. Yet through a pastel illustration, its rather deceiving website shows an idyllic festival with the ancient monument just a hedgerow behind. What may be the closest festival to Stonehenge for Solstice, is actually over two and a half miles away in Winterbourne Stoke. That said, I believe they bus it up to the stones in time for sunrise; road closures and traffic jams worked in, Iโ€™m hoping.

Cashing in on our desire to recapture ancient ideologies is not exclusive to this festival, English Heritage hides the hiked-up parking charges in small print, on another section of their website, away from the main Conditions of Entry page. Hardly surprising, after last yearโ€™s dispute, the opposition headed by the Loyal Arthurian Warband, and as Titular Head and Chosen Chief of what has become known as The Warrior/Political arm of the modern Druid Movement, Uther Pendragon.

Devizine spoke to Arthur last year, when the heat was the parking charges. Seems English Heritage will not compromise, while it costs tourists just a fiver anyother day, on the one day guaranteed to pull a crowd of homegrown visitors, they triple the tax. Deemed a โ€œpay to prayโ€ policy, Arthur persists on this mission. The most bizarre twist in this fiasco is this yearโ€™s EH website designers, whoโ€™ve decided to use a picture of St George slaying the dragon to advertise. One may appreciate the reasoning for rules, but the reasoning for using Christian symbology to advertise a pagan feast? The only possible explanation I conjure is itโ€™s a veiled satirical stab at Arthur, who declared, he is one dragon they โ€œwill not slay.โ€

The notion theyโ€™re suggesting Christianity should convert solstice is so absurd I blocked it from my mind. Yet, I was shocked at what research churned up. Despite the impossibility of Mary, with child, travelling across Israel, and shepherds off -season during winter, Christian websites maintain Jesus was born at Christmas, and that the sun mimics the death and resurrection of him. If the idea the Earthโ€™s solar orbit never occurred until after the birth of Jesus isnโ€™t a hard-enough pill to swallow, they now continue to suggest summer solstice is actually St John the Baptistโ€™s birthday bash.

Justified by the verse of John 3:30, declaring, โ€œhe [Jesus] must increase, but I must decrease,โ€ this reflects the sun at the summer solstice trailing its forte, while the winter sun gains, it is no new theory, however outlandish.

Is this whatโ€™s happening now, I shudder? Are English Heritage supporting the idea that summer solstice be replaced by a Christian celebration, or just condescendingly mocking Arthur? Is the winter solstice (Christmas) and the spring equinox (Easter) not enough for them? The final nail in the coffin for ancient faiths; here, have Beltane too while youโ€™re at it. Perhaps they think, I ponder to myself, that if solstice was Christian no one would attempt to climb the stones, as youโ€™ll never see the congregation of Salisbury Cathedral drunkenly jeering on daredevils halfway up the spire!

Itโ€™s what it all boils down to, this ill-conceived stereotype of pagans; those wild and reckless heathens. And, if Iโ€™m brutally honest, clambering up an ancient monument that youโ€™re supposed to be worshipping, while bits of crumble beneath your muddy CATs is the only part of the ritual which bothers me. I did ask Arthur how he felt about this in our interview last year, he didnโ€™t get back to me prior to its publication, but did afterwards, and hereโ€™s what he had to say:

(Thereโ€™s) โ€œnot nearly as many โ€˜climbersโ€™ as there were, and this little tale is how and why,โ€ he said. โ€œA few years ago, there was a โ€˜climberโ€™ and the guy in front of me was yelling โ€˜get off the bloody stones!โ€™

โ€˜Thatโ€™s rich coming from youโ€™ I said, โ€˜you were up there last year!โ€™

To which he spun around and very indignantly said; โ€˜No I wasnโ€™t, that was the year before.โ€™

In fact, he had been pictured atop of the stones in the Guardian, which is why I made the remark, but think about it; the first year heโ€™s up there, the second heโ€™s not and by the third heโ€™s part of the โ€˜self-policingโ€™. Like I say, they may come for the wrong reasons, but they return for the right ones.โ€

So, if the druids strive for an awakening in us, may be the Christians could accept paganism has its place in modern society. The Earth is really what we need to worship after all, in this era of looming ecological doom. Our ancestors could teach us a thing or twenty about conservation.

Radical I know, best we can hope for I guess is a peaceful solstice at our countyโ€™s most famous landmark, try our best to ignore just why EH would choose Christian symbolism to represent a pagan feast. The mind boggles; hope they donโ€™t fall off of our flat Earth!

But, as a wiseman once said, for want of a peaceful solstice, try Avebury. The National Trust website has the details for this slighter, more tranquil solstice gathering, and takes a far less religious approach in its design too! The car park will be open from 0900 on Thursday 20 June 2019. Parking here is ยฃ7 all day (0930 to 1830 in summer) ยฃ4 after 1500. Motorbikes can park for free, but the carpark gets full very quickly. NT advise public transport, which is doable from Devizes, Marlborough and Swindon.

There is no on-road parking in Avebury itself or Beckhampton, West Kennet and Winterbourne Monkton. The villages are patrolled regularly by Traffic Enforcement Officers and if you park illegally you may be fined or even find your vehicle is removed. Silbury Hill car park will also be closed overnight during this period.

The only campsite in Avebury has only space for under 100 tents. It opens at 9am on Thursday 20th and closes and must be cleared by 2pm on Saturday. You can camp for free, but donโ€™t forget to have a valid parking ticket, and no dogs unless theyโ€™re assistance dogs. Other official campsites nearby: Postern Hill Caravan & Camping Site, nr Savernake Forest – 0845 130 8224 or 01672 515195 http://www.forestholidays.co.uk Blackland Lakes, Calne. 01249 810 943 http://www.blacklandlakes.co.uk or Bell Caravan Park and Camping, Lydeway nr Devizes, 01380 840 230

Me? Oh, Iโ€™ll be working on solstice; Iโ€™ll stop to see the sunrise, probably between Lavington and Urchfont somewhere; despite I see it every morning and never grow tired of it. Might even take a tea-light with me, stick that in your pipe and smoke it EH!