Showing posts with label Radikal Words. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Radikal Words. Show all posts

Sunday, 23 August 2015

News: Great Northern Slam - Slammers Wanted

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 The Great Northern Slam
Slammers Wanted

In November Radikal Words is running a poetry slam. Sixteen poets will enter the ring, the poets will perform in pairs and the audience will vote on who goes and who stays.
Only one will be the winner and carry away the fantastic prize of £40.00 and the prestigious title of Bare Knuckle Poetry Slam Champion 2015.

It’s slam poetry but not as we know it, it will be brutal, there may be blood, the ring will be littered with the verbs and adjectives of the fallen but from the sweat and spit will emerge one winner to take the prize and the title. Are you big enough to take part? Do you have four poems of less than three minutes in length?

It will be a night of fun and noise and the chance for one person to be  Bare Knuckle Poetry Slam Champion 2015.
email radikalwords@gmail.com or message on Facebook Radikal Words to enter

Bare Knuckle Poetry Slam 2015
Northern Stage
Newcastle
Thursday 5th November

Monday, 16 February 2015

Preview: The Price Of Happiness at Newcastle Live Theatre



The Price Of Happiness
Newcastle Live Theatre
Tuesday 17th March

What's the cost of feeling you have to want the same things as everybody else?

Is it every little girl’s dream to be walked down the aisle feeling like a Disney princess, looking like she’s been swallowed by taffeta? What if you're more Light Water Valley lass than Disney Princess? And are we all wired to be baby-making machines? Would we all be good parents? What if your children got your eczema, your husband’s beard, but was a girl?

Kate Fox is a comedian and poet. She never wanted a big white wedding and got married in a lighthouse in a day that cost about £1000 in total. She's never wanted children either, rather spending her hard earned cash in Mango over Mothercare. The average cost of a wedding now is 24 thousand pounds, and a child a whopping 222 thousand.
What else could she spend that money on - (two thirds of a degree, a round the world trip or a waxwork of Tom Cruise?) Would she want to? Was it going to Girl Guides as a child that has put her off. Is there really such a thing as a maternal or paternal instinct and is there such a thing as the perfect formula for marriage or is it a tradition as outdated as Morris Dancing with only slightly fewer hankies and bells?


In this brand new series for BBC Radio 4, Kate explores some of the things that she definitely does not want to have from the viewpoint of someone who cheerfully fails to meet most of them in many respects, but are things she feels society is constantly reminding her she should. She asks her audience to help her decide whether A Big White Wedding and Babies are things she should actually want.

Tickets:


There will be a recording made at The Live Theatre in Newcastle on Tuesday 17th March at 8pm.
Tickets are totally FREE but must be booked and can be reserved here: http://www.live.org.uk/whats-on-book/kate-fox-the-price-of-happiness

Thursday, 13 November 2014

Review: Radikal Words at Newcastle Northern Stage



Writer’s Paradise

Radikal Words
Newcastle Northern Stage
12th November 2014.


Twice a year Stage 3 of Northern Stage is home to the eclectic spoken word event that is Radikal Words. An evening made up of a mixture of passionate poetry with soothing musical interludes.

During the first spoken word set host Jeff Price waxed lyrically about the issues of age and relationships. Highlights included losing your daughter temporally as she heads off to her first festival and Saga Louts, about how the older folk misbehave. Jeff’s 20 years of experience came across as he entertained the appreciative audience.

Teeside’s Jo Colley loves her rabbits, and not just because they eat their own poo. Hungry was one of 2 poems to elaborate on the furry creatures. Jo also highlighted how careers advice for girls has changed and the suggestion that the pinnacle of a girls ambition might once have been an air hostess.

James McKay increased the pace with shorter pieces like Piccadilly, reflecting upon his experiences of living in London. 300 000 was an extended piece about the chaos of Radio 1’s Love Parade in Leeds as ten times more people turned up than expected. Mixing up the shorter and longer work kept the pace up.

Acoustic music from Ditte Elly started both halves in her third appearance at Radikal Words. Ditte was finger picking her way through numbers on diverse topics from North Sea shipwrecks to winter via her feelings about her brother.

Northern Stages’ own Vinny Boy McHugh clearly loves writing poetry and he articulated the experiences of a young man living in Tyneside who is acutely aware of the history of the region. It is refreshing to hear the writings of a happy poet. His reflection of society’s woes was strongly pulled into focus with the brilliant Bankers.

The show finished with a performer who blast though like a fast moving steam train. Through strong personal experiences working with young people Joelle Taylor passionately presented the issues of self-respect and self-esteem of a troubled generation. Poetry about the young carers on the Isle of Skye and the harsh nature of coming of age on the council estates are presented without judgement or prejudice.  Joelle ensured that the evening finished with an energetic conclusion.

Poetry should be presented live and the evening’s performances, and the fabulous word craft, were a joy to behold. 

This review was written by Stephen Oliver for Jowheretogo PR (www.jowheretogo.com). Follow Jo on twitter @jowheretogo, Stephen @panic_c_button or like Jowheretogo on Facebook www.facebook.com/Jowheretogo

Friday, 7 November 2014

Preview: Radikal Words at Northern Stage



Radikal Words @ Northern Stage

Featuring:
Joelle Taylor and James McKay
Jo Colley
Jeff Price
Vinny Boy McHugh
Music from the amazing
Ditte Elly 


Another jam-packed night of spoken word with headliner Joelle Taylor, former UK slam champion, playwright, novelist and Poet in Residence at the Leonardo Da Vinci exhibition in Buckingham Palace last year. James McKay performs his own published verse and recitation classics usually heard in warehouse parties and medieval churches. Other acts include Jo Colley and Vinny Boy. Music comes from the wonderful Ditte Elly.

Joelle Taylor is a spoken word artist, slam poet, playwright, novelist and cultural terrorist. She has performed across the UK as well as internationally for the British Council (Zimbabwe, Botswana) taking in a diverse range of venues from Dingwalls, the 100 Club, the 02 Arena, the Royal Festival Hall and Ronnie Scott’s to the Royal Court, the Globe, the ICA, Buckingham Palace and both Pentonville and Holloway prisons. She is a UK Slam Champion


James McKay is welcomed back to Newcastle. James started writing and performing in his late 20s and was one of the founders of Homecooking an exciting open-mic cabaret night that started out in someones living room and still pops up in unusual venues across the North. James traces his roots back to a "classical beatnik" aesthetic nutured in his student days studying the classics by day and Ginsberg and Frelinghetti by night. James brought performance poetry with a new look at classical poetry to the Edinburgh Fringe in 2012. 


Tickets:
Wednesday 12th November 7.30pm
Tickets £8:50
Box office: 0191 230 5151

Wednesday, 2 April 2014

Review: Radikal Words at Newcastle’s Northern Stage



Radikal Words at Newcastle’s Northern Stage
2nd April 2014


If your patter was watter than we’d all drown


Musician Ditte Elly and her band opened the bi-annual eclectic feast with her delicate melodramatic songs. She skilfully flies around the fretboard of her guitar whilst gently describing the moods of winter. The host Jeff Price then treats us to one his own canny poems before Rowan McCabe springs onto the stage. The Hebburn lad had a musicality to his ditties about being the bookish lad who is brought up and not accepted as a true Geordie. He announced that he has a play coming in the Autumn which will be worth seeing based upon tonight’s lively performance.  Charming Arabella Arnot covered a number of topics from predatory males, adolescence, old age and life in the West end of Newcastle.
David Lee Morgan returned  to the region he studied in to put the performance into performance poetry with a provocative take on love, Santa and revolution.  His energetic delivery was highly stimulating. Mandy Maxwell brought amusement to the stage with her suggestions on how to get rid of problem people and her flatulence tales. At the core of Mandy’s  act are tales about the young people that she has got to know in her work. Such anecdotes are a mixture of hope and despair.
The evening concluded with a solo performance from Bristol’s Dizraeli who can normally be found fronting the hiphop band ‘Dizraeli and the Small Gods’. He mixed music and poetry seamlessly. He was absolutely correct to point out that the evening was full of talented acts who would be given greater exposure if there was justice and yet our radios are full of bland diversion. Dizraeli exposed a strong folk influence in his material.
The evening was a treat in an intimate venue. Radikal Words returns to Northern Stage in November.

This review was written by Stephen Oliver for Jowheretogo PR (www.jowheretogo.com). Follow Jo on twitter @jowheretogo, Stephen @panic_c_button or like Jowheretogo on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Jowheretogo