Andy Fawthrop
The Hot & The Cool
Devizes Arts Festival headed towards the end of its second week with a double-dip into the chocolate–box 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 – 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 UK’s most dazzling, swinging jazz pianists and a composer of wit and depth. The decision to revisit Moore’s music in The Jazz Of Dudley Moore, with sounds from the fabulous 1960s Decca trio albums, the TV show “Not Only But Also” (1965-70) and the brilliant movie soundtracks for “Bedazzled” (1967) and “30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia” (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 “Love Me!”). 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 “another run-out to the spirit of the man’s musical style” – playful, and committed to swing, often with a bossa nova groove.
Chris’s commentary between songs was erudite, yet chatty and witty. His playing was spirited, yet sympathetic, as he led the trio through “Bedazzled”, “Cornfield”, “Song For Suzie”, “Waterloo”, “Sad One For George” and many others. A well-deserved encore of “Good-byeee” 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.
Tickets can be booked at Devizes Books or online at www.devizesartsfestival.org.uk






Trending……
Westbury Town Council Announced Postponement of Westbury White Horse Soap Box Derby 2026
We are saddened to hear Westbury Town Council had to make the difficult decision to postpone the Westbury White Horse Soap Box Derby this week.…
Lady Nade; Sober!
Dry January, anyone? Well, Lady Nade just plunged into an outdoor 4°C eucalyptus sauna for a social media reel. But whilst I’d require a stiff…
2025 on Devizine; Review of the Year; Part 1, Jan-June
If past years seem to be racing by me on roller-skates, now they’re in Formula 1 cars! 2025, in a word, was “average,” though the…
Awesome! Talk in Code Immortalised as Lego Minifigures!
Ah, let’s talk about Talk in Code one more time this year, because we’re secret Talkers here, and everything has been awesome this year for…
Daphne Oram; Devizes’ Unsung Pioneer of Electronic Sound Part 3
Oramics and its Place in the Progression of Electronic Music In 1997 I was a 24 year-old factory worker, keen to learn all tasks on…
Everything Going on For New Year’s Eve 2025!
Ah, I hope you’ve all had a great Christmas, now it’s time for New Year’s Eve, and here’s what we’ve found to do. Wishing everyone…
Ha! Let’s Laugh at Hunt Supporters!
Christmas has come early for foxes and normal humans with any slither of compassion remaining, as the government announced the righteous move to ban trail…
Rooks; New Single From M3G
Chippenham folk singer-songwriter, M3G (because she likes a backward “E”) has a new single out tomorrow, Friday 19th December. Put your jingly bell cheesy tunes…
Wiltshire Music Centre Unveils Star-Studded New Season
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 their…
Daphne Oram; Devizes’ Unsung Pioneer of Electronic Sound: Part 2
Daphne’s Family & Childhood Connection to Devizes Celebrations of Daphne Oram have been building in London since the beginning of December, for those in the…