“Where’s The Cat? Live!” at the Wharf Theatre June 27th 2024

by Mick Brian
Photos by the “Where’s the Cat?” team

Within the walls of Devizes very own Wharf Theatre meets an eclectic group of script writers. And having written scripts and read them to each other, they wondered what to do next. So they recorded themselves performing these short radio-style plays and unleashed them on an unsuspecting world in the form of a podcast series. Having achieved this milestone the group pondered what to do next, and a live show seemed the next obvious step. 

“Where’s The Cat? Live!” is a melange of short plays, written and performed as rehearsed readings by the group, with the assistance of a couple of Wharf actors and a very sound man on sound. The plays cover the main facets of life; comedy and tragedy, often both at the same time. There’s a trilogy of plays about a trio of friends who find themselves in unusual and inconvenient situations. There’s a play about spies, another about therapy, another in a dystopian future where the human race is reduced to two people and some pot snacks. We go to Heaven in one play, a driving test centre in another, and a funeral in another.  We meet an AI doctor, a fairy tale protagonist, a magician, and a mother and son having a row. Essentially all human life is here, just not necessarily as we know it.


The writers themselves have varying degrees of performance experience. Some are familiar faces upon the Wharf’s boards and their stagecraft shows, whilst others seemed less at ease within the performance space. Whilst it is not necessarily a natural thing for writers to be performers also, the rehearsal process has coaxed the hidden actor out of them and it has been a privilege to watch them develop. The direction has been lead by Ali Warren, and a superb job she has done of it too, bringing these short pieces to life, and the group should be applauded for baring their souls and sharing their art with the public, which is no easy thing to do. The mixture of styles and substance is quite refreshing as one can pretty much guarantee there will be something that will stick with you from the evening.



“Where’s the Cat? Live!” plays for one night only and you’ll kick yourself if you miss it.

Tickets available from https://www.wharftheatre.co.uk/show/wheres-the-cat-wharf-writers-group/

Boomers Rule – “The Slambovian Circus of Dreams” at the Devizes Arts Festival, June 14th, 2024.

by Ian Diddams
photos by Gail Foster

Way back in the mists of time (August 2022 – y’know that REALLY, REALLY hot summer?) I saw the Slambovians play at Cropredy festival. A crowd of 20,000 embraced their version of “HillBilly Pink Floyd” as Wikipedia calls it, so moving forward from 2022, the chance to see them play here in good ol’ D-Town was too much to pass up so armed with Phillipa Morgan’s pen Devizine took the tough job of watching them play in front of maybe 2% of that number.

To be fair “HillBilly Pink Floyd”  touches on some aspects of their music, but it’s a far wider demographic than simply that. Certainly, their show at the Corn Exchange last night included elements that certainly sounded very Pink Floyd, but psychedelia, prog, Dylan, Seeger, Tull, Led Zep all played their part weaving into and out of their songs

The Slambovians started a nine gig, eleven day whistle stop tour of the UK last night, having arrived from the Hudson Valley area, NY state, a.k.a. home. They started a tad gingerly, finding their feet but it was soon very apparent that this tight knit, well attuned beat combo was in their groove by their second number, the eponymous “The Grand Slambovians”.  And the night – consisting of two one hour sets – continued in the same vein. Driving rhythms pushed by drummer Matthew Abourezk, with Sharkey McEwan on a mixture of lead guitar and … errr… lead mandolin (brilliantly played Page/Hendrix style) interspersed with calm, beautiful ballads showcasing Tink Lloyd’s versatility especially across accordion, cello and flute (Ian Anderson notes especially in “Step out of time”) took us on a journey through Slambovia. Joziah Longo immersed us in this utopian land’s philosophies and stories from mischievous fairies, to bees, to days before MTV where radio was king. All underpinned by the sublime bass lines of Bob Torsello.


Joziah alluded to “Boomers” throughout the show and Bob Torsello aside that certainly describes the age demographic of the band – and probably much of the audience – some Gen X types slipped through the net somehow, I suppose. Certainly, the underlying feel of their sets was that Boomer era of music – 60s and 70s, a distinct hippy vibe, with tracks and ethos tied in with nature and simpler times (Beez, Radio,). Joziah’s anecdotes and story telling drew us all in with his homely, gentle delivery. All in all a wonderful night of music delivered by a band on the top of their game, delivered by the ever excellent “Devizes Arts Festival



“The Slambovian Circus of Dreams” have several dates on tour in the UK right now and I urge you to catch them again, or for a first time this year if you missed last night – see https://slambovia.com/tour-dates

Alternatively grab some merch if you missed out last night also – https://slambovia.bandcamp.com

And here’s a Spotify playlist to enjoy cobbled together by the wonders of Devizine of some of the tracks from last night

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4ZHHvscjkk77IUk6Vxi3CJ?si=ad36c622355546c6

– but please see them live or buy merch of course.  Even if you are Gen X…