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Mostly
Spoken: A Monthly Night of Spoken Word and Music
Newcastle Cumberland Arms
Thursday 28th July 2016
This was the second evening of spoken word and music under
the Mostly Spoken banner. In the cosy upstairs bar of the Cumberland arms
people gathered to listen to music and poetry while enjoying a bit of
companionship and refreshment. It had a bit of a “salon” feel and the
juxtoposition of music and spoken word definitely created something greater
than the sum of the parts.
First on the stage was local singer-songwriter Simma with the
unbelievably talented Matt Jackson on second guitar. They played three songs
from Simma’s most recent album Lychnobite:
Happy New Year (to be pushed as a festive release later in the year), The
Drink (an ode to the familiar demon) and the funky Voodon’t (a deep south delta
blues number). This performance from Simma was intimate and full of feeling and
was a great start to the night.
Mandy Maxwell was the first spoken word artist of the night .
She performed pieces about “Little England” (the madness of Brexit), the joy of swearing, misleading “contagious
headlines” and a poem about her mum’s sacrifices to her daughter’s
development. Mandy is very warm and
engaging even when she’s swearing like a trouper, rude words sound so much
better with a Scottish accent I think.
Aidan Clarke had a very different style, a delightfully
surreal about lobsters celebrating winning the vote for Thermidor was another
reference to Brexit. He also spoke about the power of rejection: get on with it
and say no, don’t leave us hanging! His poem about “empty nest syndrome” could
only have been written by someone who had watched 5 children grow up and move
out.
Bernie Christie added a delightful musical interlude with her
slightly folky original songs about love and dreams. She has the most beautiful
voice and I look forward to seeing her with Simma again at the Acoustic Circus
event on 8th September at Newcastle’s City
Hall Concert Bar.
Charlie Reay dished out some marital advice to someone
marrying someone she’d never met, in her poem inspired the book Mr Fox by Helen Oyeyemi. Charlie’s
poems were about love and relationships and very much from the heart.
Photo: Stephen Oliver |
Next on the stage, fresh from Glastonbury, was
“doorstep poet” Rowan McCabe. After a successful run of poems produced from
knocking on people’s doors and asking them what was important, he could give us
the resulting poems. Rowan has definitely been trained in the art of projecting
his voice as the mic was often not needed. Doctor
Dave was a poem about a doctor whose liberal approach to advice could maybe
be questioned as just not firm enough to be effective. Cool Girl is a statement about how Rowan wants to bring up a
daughter who knows her place in the world- is anywhere she wants it to be. I
think he’d make a great dad.
Kate Fox closed the night with her poems about how the North
would respond to an apocalypse. She performed an ode to the child she will
never have. Kate was on the TV recently on Sunday Morning Live discussing how
childless women may be discriminated against. It’s a personal matter to have or
not to have children and it shouldn’t affect how people view you. Her piece
about the Female Bodyguard is
particularly important in these days of body-shaming and self-loathing because
you don’t fit the template. Kate continues to be an important northern voice
for feminism.
Future
Events:
Mostly Spoken will happen again every last Thursday upstairs
at the Cumberland Arms with new and familiar faces from spoken word and music
taking to the stage.
Tickets for August onwards: £5 available from link to appear
on Mostly Spoken’s Facebook event.
This review was written by Joanne Oliver for Jowheretogo PR (www.jowheretogo.com). Follow Jo on twitter @jowheretogo or like
Jowheretogo on Facebook www.facebook.com/Jowheretogo.
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