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- Liverpool Summer Pops 2008 Line Up
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- Liverpool: European Capital of Culture!
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Liverpool Summer Pops 2008 Line Up
Posted by Stephen
Liverpool’s Summer Pops event will be hosted at the new Liverpool Echo Arena this year. New performers are being announced on a regular basis. This is the lit of events so far:
June
29th - Westlife
July
1st - Mick Hucknall
2nd - Meat Loaf
3rd - Sugababes + Bjorn Again
4th - The Australian Pink Floyd Show (Wish You Were Here/The Best Of The Wall)
5th - Duran Duran
6th - Paul Simon
8th - Counting Crows
9th - Crowded House
10th - Beatles Day: Imagine The Concert
11th - Deacon Blue
12th - Diana Ross
14th - Bill Wyman’s Rhythm Kings and John Martyn
15th - Def Leppard + Whitesnake
18th - The Farm
19th - Michael Ball
20th - Michael Buble
22nd - Blondie & The Stranglers
24th - The Rat Pack
25th - Jools Holland and his Rhythm & Blues Orchestra
26th - The Australian Pink Floyd Show (Dark Side Of The Moon/Animals)
For information on ticket prices please call the Box Office on 0844 8000 400.
Here Comes Another Busy Choral Year!
Posted by Stephen
AFTER a high-profile year which saw them sing for the Queen and take on three overseas trips – including a moving visit to Japan – it is difficult to see what was left for Huddersfield Choral Society to tackle.But the society has found fresh challenges and looks set to have a busy summer in which the world-renowned choir will sing the world premiere performance of a new work, make a return trip to a music festival in Reims, sing in an open-air prom in Huddersfield and make a trip to Liverpool to join in the city’s Capital of Culture celebrations.
Source : The Huddersfield Daily Examiner
Full Article
Author : Val Javin
Culture Project Aims to Bring Out the Artist in Everyone…
Posted by Stephen
A MAJOR art competition open to the public and with potential prize money of £40,000 has been launched, in a bid to “bring culture to the high street”.As part of Liverpool’s European Capital of Culture celebrations, five projects have been brought together under the banner Go Create 08 – Get Involved, funded by Mersey retailer Home Bargains.
Source : Liverpool Daily Post
Full Article
Author : Vicky Anderson
More Information : Go Create 08
Jools Holland to Play Liverpool Summer Pops in July
Posted by Stephen
Jools Holland and his Rhythm and Blues Orchestra are the lastest big name to be added to this year’s Summer Pops festival which is being held at the Liverpool Echo Arena during July.
Jools Holland and his Rhythm and Blues Orchestra have been performing under one guise or another since 1987, when the original Jools Holland Big Band was formed. Through sheer hard work and dedicated touring, the band has gained a thorougly deserved reputation for providing a great night out. Their lively and energetic shows around the UK and Europe regulalry sell out and they can often be found in a town near you close to Christmas time.
People of a certain age will remember Jools Holland from his Squeeze days. He was a founder member of the group which formed in 1974, but they failed to have any chart success until “Cool For Cats” reached number two in 1979. He came to the attention of the nation when he famously uttered the words “groovy f**kers” during a live transmission of a trailer for Channel 4’s Friday night music show, The Tube.
Currently there are 11 confirmed shows taking place under the banner “Summer Pops” and the headline acts include Diana Ross, Meat Loaf, Crowded House, Mick Hucknall, Deacon Blue, The Australian Pink Floyd Show, Counting Crows, Michael Bublé and Michael Ball.
Great Royal Liver Easter Egg Hunt
Posted by Stephen
Everyone is welcome to join in the first ever Great Royal Liver Easter Egg Hunt which takes place over the Easter Weekend (22, 23, 24 March).The free family treasure hunt, will put Liverpool’s budding detectives to the test as participants will have to solve cryptic clues which will lead them to top-secret city centre locations! Successful sleuths will be entered into a prize draw and be in with the chance of winning an exclusively designed silver egg, valued at £1000, kindly donated by renowned fine jewellery designer, David M Robinson.The winner will also be treated to a VIP lunch at Liverpool’s newest restaurant, the highest in the country, ‘Panoramic’ where they will collect their prize.
Further information contact Open Culture on 0151 231 4818 or more details will be available on the Open Culture website at http://open.culture.org.uk from Saturday 15th 2008.
Liverpool The Musical
Posted by Stephen
Liverpool The Musical was directed by Nigel Jamieson and Jayne Casey and took place at the newly built 10,600 seater Echo Arena, which sits on the bank of the River Mersey near the Albert Dock and featured, amongst others, Ringo Starr, Pete Wylie, Echo and The Bunnymen, The Farm, Shack, Ian Broudie and Dave Stewart.Here is a snippet of what some reviewers had to say about the event.
Source : The Guardian
Ten thousand people were on their feet singing along with All Together Now by the Farm, the perfect rallying cry for the second leg of the weekend’s launch of Liverpool’s year as European capital of culture. Even national newspaper cultural elitists who have never knowingly heard the song before were seen to be humming while admiring two blond aerialists in topaz catsuits hanging upside down from stout ropes.
After the singsong, it was easy for Phil Redmond, the laconic soap man who has taken the culture year by the scruff of its sometimes troublesome neck and put it back on track over the last six months. “Well, we did it,” he said. “Tonight’s the start. We’ve got the whole year. It’ll be bigger, it’ll be better. It’ll be deeper, it’ll be wider.”
Author : David Ward
Source : TimesOnline
What saved the show from turning into an all-singing dog’s dinner was its high-tech slickness. From the surreal, Pythonesque cartoons of the 19th-century segment (a monstrous Queen Victoria swallowing cargo ships whole) and the rope-dancers twisting 30ft in the air, to the spectacular deployment of the excellent Royal Liverpool Philharmonic in dozens of little boxes stacked six storeys high (the conductor, Vasily Petrenko, keeping time from a crow’s nest high above the stage), the visual element was brazen and breathtaking.
But it was the music that gave the show heart and soul. Hundreds of amateur singers and brass players came and went. Connie Lush belted out I Put a Spell on You with a voice like a 3am whisky and enough electricity to power the national grid.
Errors and omissions? The absence of You’ll Never Walk Alone — anthem of the Anfield Kop — seemed odd. One disturbingly weird film sequence showed people appearing to throw themselves off buildings. And, as in Friday’s opening ceremony, everything stopped for a sentimental procession of schoolkids carrying illuminated boxes — I know not why.
But these are quibbles. If the other 360 events planned by the Capital of Culture have a fraction of this show’s infectious exuberance, Liverpool will have a year to remember.
Author :
Source : Music.Guardian
The launch event for Liverpool’s tenure as the Capital of Culture begins with a giant video screen declaring the city “the centre of the creative universe”. The audience respond not with thunderous applause, but a ripple of unmistakeably sardonic laughter. It is an early sign that the evening is not going to go entirely according to plan.
There are some areas of rock and pop that Liverpool has never mastered, including hip-hop - midway through the show, a Scouse rapper is brought on stage for the specific purpose of proving this - but, even leaving its most famous export aside, has plenty to celebrate musically.
Author : Alexis Petridis
Source : Liverpool Echo
THE challenge, spectacularly realised, was to encapsulate the story of Liverpool past, present and future in 100 minutes of high- energy music-led performance with a Beatle thrown in.
Though nothing much happened for the first six centuries after the granting of the royal charter in 1208 it was still a gargantuan task.
If the purpose of turning the image of Queen Victoria into a Monty Python-style animation was meant to be the start of a guilt trip about the city’s imperialist past, it failed.
The kickstart singing of Rule Britannia, Jerusalem and Land of Hope and Glory had a place beyond the realms of cynicism and political correctness.
If it had not been for the merchant princes – silk-hatted ghosts today – there would be no wider city stage on which to enact Capital of Culture.
And certainly no St George’s Hall to provide a backdrop for Friday’s more succinct People’s Opening.
The rich have a deserved place in the progress of things.
Full Article
Author : Joe Riley
Source : New Statseman
The best views at the People’s Opening of Liverpool’s Capital of Culture year were had by some of my students, who occupy the housing association flats opposite St George’s Hall, the roof and steps of which formed a makeshift stage for the event. I heard later that some of the more enterprising among them hired out their rooms to TV companies for sums that would make a useful dent in any undergraduate overdraft. If I had got my act together, I could have blagged the best seat in the house.
Instead, I viewed the People’s Opening with the rest of the people - stuck down a side street with a restricted view of the big screen and thirty-odd thousand bodies blocking my way to the stage. At times I felt like one of those onlookers at the Sermon on the Mount in Life of Brian, mishearing the PA system and exchanging baffled looks with the strangers pressed against me.
Full Article
Author : Joe Moran
Source : BBC
Above the stage hung a large banner lit with the words “Liverpool 08”, the first letter of which began to flicker as showtime approached so that one of the ‘construction workers’ crawled out along the top of it and with a bang fell pulling down the ‘08’ section to start the show.
The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Vasily Petrenko, were innovatively arranged vertically in boxes on top of one another silhouetted behind a backdrop on to which images of Liverpool’s history were projected throughout the show.
The performance began like the Last Night of the Proms with fanfares, Rule Britannia and Jersualem.
Carl Jung’s vision of Liverpool as the “pool of life” was quoted as the city was declared ‘Centre of the Creative Universe’.
The show took a musical journey through Liverpool’s history with images of the past shown alongside live and recorded music.
Author : Paul Coslett
Source : Manchester Evening News
MORE than 48,000 people were out in the Liverpool at the weekend to celebrate the city’s year as the European Capital of Culture.
There were 38,000 in the street for the People’s Opening on Friday and another 10,000 in the new Echo Arena on Saturday, joyously celebrating the past, present and future of Liverpudlian culture at Liverpool - The Musical.
Full Article
Author : Unknown
Source : The Independent
Despite a reprise of “Liverpool 8″ with Eurythmics’ Zelig-like Dave Stewart – from Sunderland, but an honorary Liverpudlian for the occasion – Saturday’s Liverpool the Musical worked better to remind the world how much it has been shaped by the Mersey. It started with a corny gag involving a loose plug fusing the dangling Liverpool 08 sign – a nod to the event’s troubled gestation, and to the fact that half the city remains a building site.
Full Article
Author : Pierre Perrone
We Did Look For Videos…
We had a look on YouTube for some high quality videos to showcase the event, but I am afraid we couldn’t find any. We would have opted for some average videos without distorted sound and okay picture quality if we could have found them, but I am afraid we didn’t find them either. The only video we could find that is worthy of reproduction is the official video to Ringo Starr’s single Liverpool 8. Unfortunatley EMI America Records have disabled the embed feature, but here is the link if you would like to see it.
