Get the number 26 bus to Paraguay with Richard Durrant – tickets only £10!

On Wednesday 23 May, Richard Durrant comes to the Purcell Room to launch his new album Hijo de Hombre. The concert will celebrate Richard’s inspirational musical journey through Paraguay with a mix of his virtuoso guitar playing, beautiful visuals and captivating storytelling. And as a special honour, the concert will be held in the presence of His Excellency  Mr. Miguel Solano-Lopez. C, the Paraguayan Ambassador to the UK.

We are offering a third off tickets – to purchase tickets for only £10 (full price £15), simply quote DURRANT when booking online, by phone or in person.

For a sneak preview, watch this trailer below:

Extra tickets have become available in rows B and C – to book these tickets for only £10 and for more information about the show click here.

RICHARD DURRANT THE NUMBER 26 BUS TO PARAGUAY

Wednesday 23 May, Purcell Room


Caught by the river – Blog Series – #2 Robert Mcfarlane

On Friday 25 May, some of the UK’s best loved writers and musicians form a cracking line-up for the Caught By The River Variety Show.

The show features live music from Diagrams, Tim Burgess discussing his new book, Richard King reading from his account of the history of independent music – ‘How Soon Is Now?’, Culture Show presenter – Michael Smith, and more.

In the second part of our blog series, we have an extract from Robert Mcfarlane’s new book The Old Ways. Macfarlane’s work documents his explorations into British landscapes, mountains, moors, islands, salt marshes, and sea-caves, writing about modern society’s relationship with the wild.

Two Augusts ago, I joined a crew of five sailing an old open boat from the Isle of Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides, to the remote skerry-island of Sula Sgeir, which lies forty miles due north of the northernmost-point of Lewis – far out into the Atlantic.

Sula Sgeir’s form is geological-brutalist. It is a jaggy black peak of gneiss, the topmost summit of a submarine mountain, and it is home to ten thousand gannets and (until recently) the only albatross in the North Atlantic. The sea has bored clean through the southern part of the island to form a series of caves and tunnels. In big Atlantic storms, the waves break over its summit.

The boat we sailed to Sula Sgeir was called Jubilee, she was seventy-five years old, and she was a sgoth Niseach: a class of Lewisian working boat, lug-rigged, clinker-built, double-ended and open, designed for sturdy seaworthiness up there off the Butt of Lewis where the Atlantic currents meet the currents of The Minch. She was skippered on our voyage by Ian Stephen – sailor, poet, story-teller and life-long follower of the sea-roads – and under Ian’s safe steerage we sailed her overnight to Sula Sgeir, up through an ocean of phosphorescence and stars, at last reaching the skerry at dawn.

The story of that unforgettable journey is told in full in a book called The Old Ways. A year or so ago, though, I was fortunate enough to be put in touch by Jeff Barrett with Chris Watson – the sound-artist, natural-history sound recordist, and Caught by the River favourite. Jeff had it in mind that a collaboration might develop, and so it has. At the Caught by the River Variety Show at the Southbank on May 25th, Chris and I will be performing a sound-story of that voyage – the text spoken by me over a bedding track, with Chris drawing on his extraordinary sound archive to respond to and improvise out of the words themselves. Our aim is nothing more or less ambitious than to evoke the profound and abiding strangeness of sailing that old boat up that ancient sea-way into that vast ocean to that lonely island – and to carry our listeners with us.

What you will hear, therefore, might best be imagined as a dream-voyage or wonder-journey – what in Gaelic is called an immrama – and in this sense precedents for it might be found in very early Celtic sea-stories: the lyric accounts of Mael Duin or St Brendan, say, sailing their hide-hulled boats westwards and northwards, out of the verifiable and into the miraculous.

To buy tickets for this events and check out the full line-up, click here.

Audience Reaction – The Vocal Orchestra

 

 

Catch The Vocal Orchestra at E4 Udderbelly Festival at Southbank Centre until Sunday 27 May. Get tickets here. 

Caught By The River – Blog Series – #1 Chris Yates

Popular nature and culture website Caught By The River celebrates it’s 5th year at Southbank Centre with a fantastic line-up of writers and musicians.

Caught By The River began in summer 2007 as a website based solely on a handful of passions shared by the people behind it. Angling, music, books, films, nature and pubs to name a few.

We’ll be posting passages, reviews, competitions and music over the next few weeks in the lead-up to the show.

Chris Yates – an angler, photographer and acclaimed writer will be reading from his new book Nightwalk, raises his gaze from his beloved rivers and ponds and takes us on a mesmerizing tour of the British countryside.

You can read an extract from Nightwalk on the Caught By The River website.

To buy tickets for this events and check out the full line-up, click here.

Eduardo Niebla brings his stunning flamenco jazz to the Queen Elizabeth Hall

Flamenco jazz composer and virtuoso, Eduardo Niebla returns to Queen Elizabeth Hall on Friday 20 April to perform with a wonderful new ensemble – the Pavao Quartet, guitarist Carl Herring and tabla player Dharmesh Parmar.

For a taste of the music, you can watch Eduardo perform on the BBC here:

And download the following tracks for a sneak preview of Eduardo’s unique sound:

Rosie

Para Margarita

Saber Caminar con mi Soledad

Hailed as one of the world’s greatest guitarists, the Spanish musician is renown for fusing his flamenco gypsy jazz roots with Arabic, Indian, classical and modern jazz influences to produce technically brilliant, unique and evocative music, and has collaborated with diverse artists from across the globe such as jazz saxophonist Lol Coxhill, sitar maestro Nishat Khan, George Michael, Craig David, and trance group Juno Reactor.

Inspired by his gypsy upbringing, his adopted Yorkshire homeland and tours to India and the Middle East, Eduardo presents material from his latest album My Gypsy Waltz, released in January 2011, alongside music from his acclaimed 40 year career. Accompanied by his formidable trio, this is a chance to hear exquisite and world-class guitar playing at its’ best.

Eduardo Niebla, Friday 20 April, Queen Elizabeth Hall

For more information and to book tickets visit the website here.

Low at Royal Festival Hall – exclusive track, video and Guardian webcast

American indie legends, Low perform at Royal Festival Hall next week Tuesday 3 April. The Minnesota three-piece comprise of band founders – the husband and wife songwirting team of  singer/guitarist Alan Sparhawk and drummer Mimi Parker – and bass player Steve Garrington, who joined in 2008.

Low’s most recent record C’mon was released in April last year, and garnered positive reviews across the board with Drowned In Sound praising it’s ‘impossible beauty and spellbinding drama’, while The Observer‘s 5 star review describes the band as ‘exquisite’.

Their last outing in London was a sell out show at Barbican Hall in April 2011, and was deemed a triumph by critics and fans alike, see Music OMH‘s 4.5 star review for proof.

You can hear a beautiful acoustic rendition of C’mon opener ‘Try to Sleep’ on the Soundcloud link below, exclusive to Southbank Centre.

Low also performed ‘Witches’ for The Guardian‘s ‘How I Wrote’ series, with Alan Sparhawk discussing the inspiration behind the lyrics and the instrumentation used in the song. Click here to watch now.

And if that’s not enough for your ears and eyes, here is a video of Alan and Mimi performing ‘Point of Disgust’ at Sacred Heart Music Center in Duluth, Minnesota.

 

Low perform at Royal Festival Hall on Tuesday 3 April, with support from Lanterns On The Lake. Click through to the website to buy tickets.

 

 

BRIT Award Nominee Carleen Anderson performs as part of Sing Inspiration! 2012

Carleen Anderson comes to Royal Festival Hall next Tuesday 13 March to perform solo material alongside young and adult choirs from across the UK.

Anderson was nominated for a Best International Newcomer BRIT Award in 1995, she went on to tour alongside the hugely popular pop-funk-jazz group, The Brand New Heavies in 2000, and has worked with the likes of Paul Weller and 2008 Meltdown Festival directors, Massive Attack.

Sing Inspiration is put together by iGospel and has fast become the UK’s most dynamic soul & funk choral festival. Sing Inspiration Festival 2012 features 4 amazing concerts at Royal Festival Hall with over 3,000 young people and adults.

The two videos below should give you a little taster of what to expect.

You can buy tickets for the event by visiting our website.

 

MICACHU TALKS ABOUT SAWING WOOD FOR HER NEW COMPOSITION IN HARMONIC SERIES

The second concert in Southbank Centre’s Harmonic Series, on Sunday 26 February, features new compositions from Micachu, along with the music of Thomas Adès and Micachu’s performance of Alvin Lucier’s classic meditative tape work I Am Sitting In A Room.

In this intriguing clip, Micachu explains some of her innovative composition techniques…

Harmonic Series is curated by cellist Oliver Coates. The second of these concerts features the beautiful chamber music of Thomas Adès, complemented by the compositions and performance from Micachu. The concert is performed by Oliver Coates along with Micachu, Alexandra Wood, Tom Hankey, Max Bailie, Tom Lessels and Danny Driver.

Sunday 26 February, 7.45pm, Purcell Room

For more information please see the webpage here.

A pulsing jungle is created live on stage

During our Music Nation Weekend (3-4 March 2012), enter an urban jungle in an extraordinary mix of sampled sounds, texts and music brought to life by a young vibrant orchestra in Surrogate Cities.

Listen to our Music Nation podcast giving you a taste of whats in store for Surrgoate Cities:

Also during the Music Nation weekend, experience a musical mash-up of jazz and classical with The Nu Civilsation Orchestra or enjoy a relaxed late-night concert plus DJ in the OAE’s The Night Shift.

If you thought you knew what orchetras were about, think again.

Vieux Farka Touré comes to Southbank Centre

On Sunday 12th February we welcome Vieux Farka Touré to Southbank Centre. This will be the only London date of Vieux’s UK tour, and is set to be a really exciting show. Following in the footsteps of his father, the legendary Malian guitarist Ali Farka Touré, Vieux’s music combines funk, reggae and jam music with the desert-blues genre.

Living up to his father’s lofty reputation is no mean feat, but Vieux’s latest album The Secret has established him as an important artist in his own right. Often referred to as ‘the Hendrix of the Sahara’, Vieux heads up a new generation of contemporary West African music.

You can buy tickets for Vieux Farka Touré at Queen Elizabeth Hall by visiting our website.

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