Great Singapore Arts for Great Britain!

Singapore is set to take the chill out of winter when it brings the UK’s largest Singaporean film festival, [SIN] eFest, as well as the British premiere of a new operatic musical “Raffles of Singapore”, to our shores this November.

London will roll out the red carpet for the inaugural edition of [Sin]efest, Britain’s biggest Singapore film festival, which will take place between 11th-13th November 2010. The independent film festival will showcase five feature-length Singaporean films and several shorts over the course of three days, including the UK premieres of Ho Tzu Nyen’s innovative experimental film Here and documentary Invisible City by Tan Pin Pin.

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Feis Rois Announces 2011 Silver Jubilee Programme

Feis Rois is delighted to announce its Silver Jubilee programme for next year which includes a very special concert at Celtic Connections, a brand new Student Fèis, an expanded and international flavoured Fringe programme at the Adult Fèis and a concert at Eden Court Theatre in Inverness.

Former Fèis Rois Education Officer and award-winning Gaelic songstress, Julie Fowlis, will also take up her role as the first ever Fèis Rois Ambassador and will be involved in several events throughout the year.

Fèis Rois will open its Silver Jubilee year with a unique concert at Celtic Connections in the City Halls, Glasgow on Saturday 22nd January 2011.

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Thousands Attend BrisFest 2010

BrisFest 2010 was a huge success with record crowds of an estimated 18,000 people attending the event and enjoying performances from over 500 bands, dj’s and entertainers across nine stages, two boats and eleven nightclubs.

The new layout of the amphitheatre site was well received with the turfed meadow in the main arena adding to the atmosphere and allowing happy festival goers the chance to relax on the grass and watch the bands.

Other highlights included the RFID dome supported by Fenchurch, with 360 degree visuals from the likes of Anti-Vj, BBC Performing Arts Fund Flash Choir with a 60 strong choir, Rave on Avon, the expanded Early Years Catering Kids Area, the Gala Casino Bus, and the new for 2010 outdoor Lab stage complete with quadraphonic funktion one sound system.

Organised by the Bristol Festival Community group, a registered charity run almost exclusively by volunteers, BrisFest 2010 has set the standard for well organised and innovative events and provides hundreds of volunteers the opportunity to gain experience working in all areas of event management. The accounts are still being settled for 2010 but it’s predicted that a breakeven was achieved with any proceeds ploughed into next year’s events and year round volunteer training from Health and Safety qualifications and fork lift licenses, to fundraising and management training.

Poppy Stephenson, Project Co-ordinator said ‘It’s been a brilliant year, and as with the past two years none of this would have been possible without the hard work and dedication of hundreds of local people, working together to stage this fantastic showcase of local talent. We would like to extend a massive group hug and thanks to all the artists, performers, programmers, stage teams and volunteers involved who have been instrumental in making BrisFest such a huge success, and something to be very proud of. And a big thank you to everyone who came down and enjoyed the spectacular party, which went off without incident. Bristol rocks!’

BrisFest 2010 certainly delivered on the BFCG’s promise to produce an urban spectacular music and arts festival that would bring the excitement of a summer festival to the heart of the City.

SA quartet plays for peace

A group of internationally acclaimed South African musicians – a luthier, four instrumentalists and a composer – have come together to form a Quartet of Peace  that will use the beauty of classical music to promote worldwide the ideals of peace, reconciliation, freedom and hope represented by South Africa’s four Nobel Peace Prize laureates.

Chief Albert Luthuli, Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, and former presidents Nelson Mandela and FW de Klerk are the inspiration behind the quartet’s formation.

The Quartet of Peace consists of David Juritz, also leader of the London Mozart Players; Suzanne Martens, previous concert master of the Cape Philharmonic Orchestra and currently part of the University of Stellenbosch’s music faculty; Gareth Lubbe, principal violist of the Gewandhaus Orchestra in Leipzig, Germany; and Peter Martens, former principal cellist of the Cape Philharmonic Orchestra and currently artistic administrator and director of the Stellenbosch International Chamber Music Festival.

Juritz is first violin and Suzanne Martens is second violin, while Lubbe is the violist and Peter Martens plays the cello.

The quartet kicks off its international tour with a debut concert in Stellenbosch University’s Endler Hall on 15 October.

Music fosters reconciliation

The remarkable project is the realisation of acclaimed luthier Brian Lisus’ long-held dream – since Mandela’s inauguration in 1994 – to use music to foster peace and reconciliation in the world.

His vision has become a reality as friends with a passion for classical music and string instruments have rallied around him. offering their assistance to get the Quartet of Peace project off the ground.

And since the eminent musicians have volunteered their talents at no cost, the project has developed into a large initiative receiving interest and support from the French minister of arts and culture and the London Chamber Music Society, among others.

Lisus, whose instruments are sold worldwide, is hand-making brand new string instruments, which carry the inscriptions of peace, reconciliation, hope and freedom on the back, for the members of the quartet.

Message of peace

Furthermore, the musicians will take the message of peace to local and international audiences with the music of accomplished South African-born composer, percussionist and poet Eugene Skeef, now resident in London.

Skeef, who also works in conflict resolution, has composed a piece titled Uxolo (an Nguni word meaning “forgiveness”) especially for the quartet’s performances.

Skeef’s involvement in the initiative is interesting since he was a young activist during apartheid who co-led literacy campaigns in schools and communities across South Africa. He currently serves on the board of directors of the London Philharmonic Orchestra, among many other commitments.

The prominent artists have all been inspired by the idea of taking the ideals of Mandela, Tutu, De Klerk and Luthuli to the world.

They are also motivated by the fact that concert proceeds will go towards Musequality projects that uplift and heal children who are disadvantaged and at risk. One of these, the Hout Bay Music Project, teaches 60 children to play string instruments and drums and also offers lessons in life skills. Another, Melodi Music in Soweto, starts children off on the recorder before they advance to other woodwind instruments.

The intention is also to help disadvantaged children and child refugees on the African continent, as music is proving to facilitate healing in youngsters who have experienced hardships early in life.

Working around the clock to complete the cello, the last instrument Lisus is making for the quartet, he says it is has been a long journey to see the initiative come to fruition, but the involvement of “wonderful people” has been overwhelming.

The violinmaker says he is looking forward to hear the musicians play on his handcrafted instruments and to see the concerts supporting music projects for children around the world.

“Furthermore, the Quartet of Peace must make everybody aware of the South African ideals; we want to inspire the world to peace and reconciliation – to walk in the footsteps of Mandela, Tutu, Luthuli and De Klerk.”

Concert schedule

The quartet’s inaugural concert in Stellenbosch will be followed by a performance at the Sans Souci High School in Cape Town on the next day and then the first international concert in Leipzig, Germany, in St. Thomas church where Johann Sebastian Bach is buried.

They move on to London’s Kings Place, a modern recital hall, on 5 December and then to Ljubljana in Slovenia, before giving an intimate performance in the L’Atelier de Picasso in Paris, France, on 13 and 14 December.

According to Skeef’s website, the quartet is awaiting confirmation from the Nobel Peace Prize committee of an 11 December performance at the Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo. The composer is also currently organising a special performance of the Quartet of Peace at the home of Nelson Mandela.

A special fundraising concert takes place on 16 December, South Africa’s Day of Reconciliation.

Bloomsbury Festival Programme Announced

The programme for London’s Bloomsbury Festival has been announced: a weekend of live music, theatre, dance, walks, talks and food this October. Bringing together The British Museum, Wellcome Collection and more than 60 other venues, The Bloomsbury Festival takes over the parks, squares and buildings of the area with a unique programme of more than 100 events and activities, all of which are free to attend.

[Read more…]

Mambazo’s golden anniversary

South Africa’s beloved Ladysmith Black Mambazo (LBM), the Grammy-winning isicathamiya group, have embarked on a countrywide tour to celebrate their 50 years together.

Ladysmith Black MambazoIsicathamiya (from the Zulu word meaning “to walk softly”) is a style of singing that focuses on deft harmonising. Isicathamiya choral competitions are popular in South Africa.

The Back to eKasi (slang, meaning “home”, from the Afrikaans word lokasie, meaning “township”) tour sees the globe-trotting group going back to their roots and taking their unique a cappella sound to townships around South Africa between 16 and 24 September 2010.

Fans in Bloemfontein, Thokoza in Ekurhuleni municipality, Rustenburg North, Atteridgeville, Ermelo, Bela-Bela and KwaMashu near Durban are in for a treat, with performances from LBM and two local curtain-raisers at each venue. [Read more…]

Jazz greats at inaugural Tzaneen fest

Tzaneen – Jazz lovers in Limpopo can look forward to performances by the likes of Jonas Gwangwa and Maduvha at the inaugural Jazz in the Garden festival in Tzaneen on Saturday.

The festival, which will be held at the Letaba show grounds from 5pm, will also serve as the opening ceremony for the Southern Africa Inter-Municipal Games starting on Sunday.

“Jazz in the Garden will provide a safe and inviting setting for music lovers to set up their camping chairs, socialise and enjoy some of South Africa’s finest jazz in a spectacular setting,” said Tzaneen Mayor Othaniel Jambasa Mushwana.

“The jazz genre was chosen because of its ability to entertain people across all racial, cultural and age spectrums. Jazz transcends social class and standards, touching many hearts in multiple ways.”

The festival is expected to bring in much-needed support for local businesses, especially those in transport and hospitality, and help the area diversify its economy, which is mostly agriculture-based.

Limpopo Premier Cassel Mathale said in future, people will not speak about jazz in the country without mentioning Tzaneen. “This event is the beginning of a new era for the province.”

Other acts that have been confirmed include Selaelo Selota, DJ Cleo as well as a line-up of some of Limpopo’s most talented musicians and deejays.

Food and drinks will be sold at the hospitality marquees and visitors will not be allowed to bring their own onto the premises.

Tickets cost R160 from Computicket and Shoprite outlets, and R180 at the gate. – BuaNews

Nomfusi reaches out to Aids orphans in Malawi

On 11 October Nomfusi and her band, The Lucky Charms, will be spreading their wings into Africa, to play at the Lake of the Stars Festival in Malawi. Sharing the bill with Oliver Mtukudzi and UK indie band The Noisettes, they are looking forward to three sun filled days on the palm fringed shores of the third biggest lake in Africa.

While in Malawi, Nomfusi and her band will be spending two days teaching music workshops at The Jacaranda Foundation in Blantyre, a school for Aids orphans. Nomfusi will be addressing the school in three 45 minute presentations, talking about her experience of rising above her circumstances, and liberating herself from what she calls “the poverty of the mind.” The song she wrote about the topic, Nontsokolo*, will be performed at Lake of the Stars with a group made up of students at the school, The Jacaranda Band. The project is being made possible by the Belgian NGO, Art Moves Africa.

Nomfusi will also be collaborating with Khethi, a Joburg based cross-over hip-hop afro-soul singer, to present a Mother’s Day concert in Blantyre on 14 October, that will be attended by Malawi’s First Lady, Madame Callista Mutharika.

photo credit:  NOMFUSI PHOTOGRAPHED  IN MONTREAL AT THE FESTIVAL NUITS D’AFRIQUE BY JEAN-SEBASTIEN JOSSETT/MONDOMIX.

Grupa Mocarta – The Mozart Group

Is something more than a classical string quartet. The names that make Grupa MoCarta are: Filip Jaslar _ first violin, Michal Sikorski – second violin, Pawel Kowaluk – viola, Bolek Blaszczyk – cello. They are all well educated instrumentalists who graduated from prestigious academies of Music in Warsaw and Lodz, but they decided to play classical music in a humorous way. What is more, they created something like musical cabaret, one in which the music, not the words were the source of laughter.

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As they explain: ” We exist despite the solemness of the great concert halls, despite the boredom of the everyday life of the classical musicians, despite the fanatic lovers of classical music, despite the fans of rock, rap or pop who are afraid of classical music. We treat our Mother Music with a humorous irony and we are sure she will have nothing against it”.

The second program of the Group, in which they took Vivaldi a their patron, was entitled “The Four Seasons According to Grupa MoCarta”. Later on however, it runs freely in the direction of various Polish and world songs about spring, summer, autumn and winter. The piece provides the listener with over 70 minutes of a sophisticated perfectly arranged and played fun!

In 2007 Grupa MoCarta has published their first DVD ever – “Grupa MoCarta at the opera” – a live concert recorded at the opera in Wroclaw.
Grupa MoCarta appeared on many stages all over the world, and received many prestigious prizes.

On the 18th and the 19th of September we will give a spectacular and a very unique show in Polish Cultural Centre – Hammersmith, W6.

Les Nuits Capitales – Paris Live Music

From the 17th to the 21st November 2010 several hundred musical venues in Paris will offer a variety of club and concert events with a special pass-style ticketing system.

Les Nuits Capitales (the Capital Nights) is being promoted nationally and internationally with the sponsorship of the Paris Town Hall, the Paris Tourism Office and the Regional Committee for Tourism.

Les Nuits Capitales will illustrate the wealth and diversity of events in Paris with concerts from 8 pm – midnight and club events from midnight – dawn.

Each event will be composed of quality programming. The ticket pass offers concessions and other advantages in all participating venues. The ambition is to showcase Parisian evening events as the epicentre of European nightlife for one week.

Les Nuits Capitales event is a positive response to the recent debate on Parisian nightlife and will hopefully register itself as a regular event in the calendar and will be a continuation of the vision set out by the Etats Généraux de la Nuit taking place on the 12th – 13th November 2010 looking at the organization of Nightlife in Paris. The strong synergy between these two events will assure that there is strong media coverage in the specialised and non-specialised media in France and in Europe.

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Venues
The venues participating encompass everything from the grand and prestigious to the smaller music
cafes, the famous mythical clubs to the cult underground ones. Large or small, new or historic, Les
Nuits Capitales will bring together this vast diversity and unveil the richness of the night culture and
musical practices in Paris.
Altogether the venues will have the capacity to offer entertainment to 20,000 guests every evening.
Live music venues
• ACP Manufacture Chanson (50 places) : french songs
• Alimentation Générale (300 places) : contemporary music
• Baiser Salé (80 places) : jazz
• Cabarand Sauvage (1200 places) : brasilian music
• Café de la Danse (500 places) : electronic music (Telerama Dub Festival)
• Crazy Horse (250) : cabaret
• Duc des Lombards (140) : jazz
• FGO (300) : contemporary music
• L’Entrepôt (460) : contemporary music
• La Dame de Canton (150 places) : contemporary music
• La Maison des Métallos (400 places) : world music
• La Pêche (150 places) : hip hop
• La Reine Blanche (120 places) : contemporary music
• La Scène du Canal (150 places) : hip hop
• Le Réservoir (400 places) : rock
• Le Sentier des Halles (120 places) : contemporary music
• Sunsand / Sunside (100 places) : jazz
• Le Triton (180 places) : jazz
• Les Trois Baudands (130 places) : contemporary music
• Mains d’oeuvres (500 places) : contemporary music
• Maison Populaire and Théâtre Berthelot (240 places) : music & dance
• Le Studio de l’Ermitage (250 places) : jazz, tango, bal