Win signed Vic Godard and Subway Sect LP

Comic legend Stewart Lee has curated his own weekend of gigs and comedy, including a very special line-up on Monday 30th May – The Nightingales with support from Vic Godard and Subway Sect. ‘For a couple of seasons, the greatest punk group in the world.’ (Jon Savage on special guests Subway Sect)

To celebrate, we’ve got an exclusive competition to win a signed Vic Godard and Subway Sect LP plus a limited edition t-shirt and 5 Blackpool EP CDs for runners up.

Vic Godard and Subway Sect 'We Come as Aliens' LP

Just answer this question to enter. Which label is Vic Godard and Subway Sect signed to? Email your answer to competitions@southbankcentre.co.uk with ‘Vic Godard and Subway Sect’ in the subject line by 30 May to enter. Please provide a name and contact number. Good luck!

Catch Vic Godard and Subway Sect at Southbank Centre’s Purcell Room on 30 May as part of Stewart Lee’s Austerity Binge. Get tickets here.

The Observer Interview: Ray Davies & Julien Temple in Conversation

Julien Temple, the legendary film, documentary and music video director for act such as the Sex Pistols, David Bowie and The Kinks talks to Ray Davies about the singer’s long-standing relationship with cinema. Ray Davies has acted in, directed and soundtracked films since the 1970s, while Julien Temple’s most recent effort – Ray Davies: Imaginay Man – documents the life and music of Ray Davies.

This unique event takes place at BFI Southbank on Saturday 18 June as part of Ray Davies’ Meltdown. You can buy tickets and find out more information by clicking the link here.

Stewart Lee’s Austerity Binge – spotify playlist

At the end of May, award-winning comedian Stewart Lee is presenting a weekend of his favourite comedians and bands at Southbank Centre as part of his Austerity Binge. Highlights include a night celebrating the alternative comedy explosion of the 1980s in At Last! The 1981 Show. The night features the likes of Alexei SayleNigel Planer (Neil Pye from The Young Ones), Arthur SmithNorman Lovett, Stewart himself and many more. Definitely not one to be missed. More information and full line-up here.

Stewart Lee, photo: Gavin Evans
Stewart Lee, photo: Gavin Evans

The weekend also sees an eclectic mix of music ranging from folk-legend Nic Jones & special guests including Martin Carthy to 1970s punk band The Nightingales via John Cage’s Indeterminacy with Stewart LeeSteve Beresford and Tania Chen. Rounding up the weekend we have Trembling Bells & Mike Heron with Nick Pynn on the Monday night.

We’ve put together a special Austerity Binge SPOTIFY PLAYLIST to give you a taster of the weekend’s music.

Stewart Lee’s Austerity Binge at Southbank Centre from 27 – 30 May. Book tickets and see the full weekend line-up here.

Pied Piper of the Purcell: Arun Ghosh

23 April 2011

The Adventures of Prince Achmed took me back to my first memories of fairytales … bedtime stories that coated morals like ‘all’s well that ends well’ in a gloss of bright lights and pretty colours. I was as easily seduced then as I am now … more than willing to buy into the magic … and rather reluctant to return home …

.

We cut.

Like shadow puppets

on a wall,
black on white.
Old dreams
take shape in dulcet tones,
honeycombs of light,
And once upon a time…

Outlines
of music-makers
play,
pull strings
like faceless pied-pipers,
draw us in
with patterns of promise.

A story lifts on spindle hands:
Long-beaked magic man
shows a king
a magic horse
with unseen wings
who steals a prince
somewhere far away,
where fantails
sweep moons
into lakes of blue
a whisper of names like Pari Banu.

Shapes shift to birdsong,
gestures
trill
cursives in subtle shades
of fanciful.
Desire
turns dark,
heart beats
fill
like footsteps
in worlds
where women
speak spells,
folding wishes
with careful fingers.

We search
until earth spits
flame and fire,
until secrets spill,
forms writhing
torn from mothers’ wombs.

We fall back
like frightened children,
hide our eyes,
from truths cast in myriad hues.

We drown
in the dive and swell,
in the telling of tales
that lower us
into dis-ease,
the frames
of our chairs, four walls and people who pretend
all is well,
shortcut
to a happy end.

Intro to … Susheela Raman

19 April 2011

No amount of YouTubing could’ve prepared me for the ultimate experience of Susheela Raman … raw, gutteral, earth mother, inferno … a night to remember at the QEH …

.

Open
wide,
split belly womb burst
room birth
frees
a gutful
echo,
round vowels
embody
woman
grieving,
heaving song
through landscapes
immersed
in cries divine,
gutteral valleys
cloaked
in arcs of wing
scarlett
beat of heart.
Vows
break over
mountain summits
like suns,
bodies of hope
surrendering sky
and she
all untamed beauty
spun
before me.

Competition – win Syriana’s album ‘The Road to Damascus’

Syriana are playing here tomorrow night and to celebrate we have 5 copies of their 2010 album The Road to Damascus  to give away. Email competitions@southbankcentre.co.uk with ‘Syriana’ in the subject line, telling us your favourite Syriana track and we’ll pick 5 lucky winners by random.

Syriana

See Syriana as part of These Lands are Your Lands on Saturday 7 May at Southbank Centre’s Purcell Room. Get tickets here

Breaking Boundaries! Kosmos, Paprika & She’koyokh

This weekend we have a very special gig with music from around the globe. Here’s a sneak peak at the three bands. Let us know your favourite!

Catch Breaking Boundaries! Kosmos, Paprika & She’koyokh at Southbank Centre this Sunday 8th May as part of These Lands Are Your Lands. Get tickets here

Raghu Dixit Project – Queen Elizabeth Hall

Raghu Dixit Project – Queen Elizabeth Hall

Raghu Dixit Project  is an Asian folk and world music experience brought to you by the Bangalore-based singer and musician Raghu Dixit. This performance was an especially commissioned concert that brought together Dixit and his band with South Bank artists-in-residence Bellowhead – or rather, with the British folk collective’s fabulously louche horn section and angular percussionist, Pete Flood.

With little knowledge of Dixit or his band I was intrigued to disocover what all the hype was about. But as soon as Raghu Dixit opened his mouth it was easy to see why…

The singer has a voice of a star, with a depth and raw quality to his voice Dixit’s magnetic tone brought silence upon the whole room. His unique brand of folk-rock fusion blends tradition with urban grit and techno-friendly savvy brings energy and excitement to the hall.

The lyrics are a combination of  Hindi and Kannada-language which took inspiration from 18th century Indian poetry and philosophy.  The tracks performed included The Girl From Mysore, which became frenzied Asian-Celtic reels; Brendan Kelly’s saxophone slalomed and skidded through Rain Song, a new number that saw Dixit strumming flamenco-style and the Kathak dancer Gauri Sharma Tripathi putting her own modern spin on centuries-old folklore. A full house sang, danced and cheered throughout. And with Dixit addressing the crowd in a conversational way throughout, thre was something very warming and personal about this performance.

Raghu Dixit’s remarkable rise has been nothing short of spectacular. The former Bharatnatyam dancer’s rousing folk rock is not only the symbol of metropolitan India’s blossoming alternative music scene, but is also making waves internationally. As Raghu recounts, the music that The Raghu Dixit Project makes is a true representation of today’s India – ethnic and rooted at the core, but at the same time global in its outlook.

At the beginning of the night Dixit modestly reveals to his audience that “A year ago I was unknown”. As I look around at the roaring crowd one hour in, bellowing out the lyrics of song after song, I find it hard to believe that this was ever the case.!..

By Sumitra Upham

Susheela Raman

Susheela Raman

Susheela Raman has been brought up between two cultures which is reflected in her South Indian classical (Carnatic) music sensibility against the sounds of funk, jazz, soul and pop. She has been mysteriously quiet since her experimental versions of western rock songs four years ago, but she releases an album next month, and this live preview at The Alchemy Festival showed a welcome new focus.

As she walks on stage the crowd instantly roars. Raman, looking dramatic as ever, with her big signature afro-like hair and rock’n’roll attire, surprises us all when she opens her set with a soulful hymn in ode to the Indian God Ganesh. Alongside her on stage is her partner Sam Mills who accompanies Susheela through out with the sound of gentle wash and a flurry of tabla. Her seven-piece band featured master musicians from Rajasthan, with four percussionists – including Nathoo Lal Solanki, an exponent of the stirring nagara drum – and the singer Kutle Khan, who also contributed jew’s harp and castanets.

There is something personal about this performance as though Susheela is rediscovering for herself some of the South Indian songs that she had grown up with. Occasionally music that has travelled from India contains a spiritual and somewhat phoney ‘ethereal’ edge, but here we have a sound that brings out the earthy sensuality that more typifies Indian culture, and more specifically contemporary Indian Culture.

Raman’s sound is honest and gutsy and exciting. There is a raw quality to voice that complements the accompanied chords, riffs, and grooves that transport the music from its strictly classical setting into a whole new arena of possibilities.

For many musicians, attempting to approach the music of the Carnatic world with its technical and critical levels, would be a challenging and nerve-racking process. However with her mixed, second-generation migrant background, Susheela Raman sings like a natural and resonant in hers sound is the singer seeking confluence between the musical and cultural streams of her life.

Raman’s band reworked traditional and often religious Indian pieces. Paal started as a slow, thoughtful ballad backed by violin before building to a frantic climax, driven on by the drummers and Mills’s fusion of Indian styles and R&B. Highlights included ‘Raise Up’ and a wildly original take on Hendrix’s Voodoo Chile, dominated by the Indian drumming and a more conventional ballad in English, Magdalene.

This was a spectacular and artistically ambitious comeback performance by Susheela Raman. With the singer dancing around stage to the drive of the Indian drumming, there was a rewarding feeling amongst the audience that she thought so too!

By Sumitra Upham