Tag Archives: Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain

“Turn up that music, turn up that beat.. Turn up that radio, rhythm concrete, You sing for freedom, we’ll sing for peace.. turn up that music, turn up that beat”

Okay. Back to it… so last night before heading home we stopped by this fine establishment…

… and while the boys were waiting for their LSD’s (Latte Soy Dandes), my sugar cravings kicked in and these cocoa nuggets with guarana in a clear jar called Buzz Balls were looking really appetizing.  As I placed my order the dreaded, tie-dyed, natural beauty leans in and very seriously goes “have you had these before?”.. startled, my brow furrows and cautiously I reply “…..noooo”. Giving me my buzz ball and holding onto my hand at the same time “well, take half now and if you are okay after an hour take the other half!” she heeds… WHHHHAAATT is in this?! Feeling more freaked out than any girl should before indulging in chocolate I broke off a crumb and went home hoping that I could sleep that night. Well nothing happened… booooo, this girl obviously underestimated my caffeine addiction and family history with guarana. So this morning I scoffed the whole thing down and got busy…

…Two days down and one more to go (going to Future Music Festival tomorrow), this is what I have learnt so far; bring a shawl, sitting on moist grass or dusty earth is not ideal in a cream dress. You can happily spend more money on food then you can on booze at WOMAD (think I’ve just solved the nation’s binge drinking problem) and if you’re going to try to jump the fence make sure you’re wearing fake dreads and fisherman pants and they’ll lose you in the crowd…

Notes to refugees coming  into Australia…

…There is no better way to kick off the Sunday with the smooth soundings of the (so-called French Jeff Buckley) Tete.  His set was delightful acoustic Chanson, sounding like a mixture of Tracy Chapman, Ben Harper and Keziah Jones it was the perfect bluesy-soul-for laying back in the grass, eyes closed, ignoring the sunburn and taking it all in…

…Like Keziah Jones he adds delightful elements to most of the songs by including percussive guitar slapping. Tete got comfortable with the crowd and spoke in French and English, admitting that he comes from a village in France with the lowest IQ rate in Europe, explaining why he wrote a simple song titled ‘Love’…

…He gave a great rendition of ‘Blister in the Sun and said the crowd had sexy handclaps which is always nice to hear…

Yeah can’t say I’ve heard that before and not going to lie.. pretty flattered it’s an awesome compliment.

…Roaming around were Ireland’s ponydance theatre company decked out in chav tracksuit attire complete with side ponytails, tilted caps and overtly gay flourishes. They were talented and hilarious performing routines and dividing up the crowd for a dance-off. One woman who unfortunately took a phone call during the crowd participation got picked out by dancer Neil who camped it up and singled her out; ‘YOU… get off the phone what’s more important than this?!” which I thought was hilarious (hey, as long as it’s not me)…

…The Latin, Afro-Cuban, rhythms of Diego Guerrero y El Solar de Artistas had beautiful tango, flamenco and salsa elements but I felt like they would be better seen in some dark, underground red-lit seedy bar in Spain where the passion and vocal power could really be appreciated…

It was really cool seeing this dad dancing with his kids.. listening to Frigg and taking in the gay (as in happy, joyous) vibe as people linked arms, swinging around, hair flying, beards blowing in the wind and…

…Finding a nice spot in the shade we watched Frigg a band of Fiddlers from Norway and Finland who were absolute folk powerhouses of extreme skill, precision and gaiety on their fiddles (with a few other fretted instruments and one stand-up bass). We had a smoke just before they played and it was great to watch something that stems from Anglo-culture for a change, having a touch of tradition which we can hold more of an affinity towards…

…This was the true definition of folk-rock, Nerdy-cool (like the Star Wars of the music world) with all of them in pop colours playing energetically and with amazing precision smiling and dancing at the same time. It was music for the community with people linking arms and dancing around, leaping and spinning. Everyone from the stage to the crowd looked like they were having so much fun; families and friends alike this was the perfect music for jigging. I swear at one point they were playing Supertramp’s ‘Pumping on your stereo’ but I’m told that was not the case…

They totally did I know it!

…This day seemed to be going so, so fast as we were already heading to the main stage to see Gurrumul for a seated performance. This was another moment where you could just lie down with the best of them in the grass with your eyes closed, soaking in the gloriousness…

…His voice was so penetrating and they kept it from being a too serious affair by having Barry Morgan debut with craziness and Natalie from Blue King Brown also came onstage after and sung a duet…

Good people. C**** a guy who paints his nails, has feminine tattoos (including one seriously bad superhero tat), plays gigs in a dress, breaks the mould, makes hipsters uncomfortable, gets laid frequently and is more man than many men I know and J***** who I only met the day before but seems pretty cool and open-minded

…After hearing my companion bag out Blue King Brown throughout the day (he apparently hates being preached to in music), it was great to watch the band and enjoy their music, their messages and their lyrics. The crowd was huge and the vibe was cool but nothing too inspiring…

…or overtly impressive considering all the hype I’ve been hearing about the band over the past two years. Coolest thing was when two newly accepted asylum seekers from West Papua came onstage in traditional garb and danced to a thundering tribal beat before talking about their plight and the 50 year reign of human rights abuses they fled from in West Papua…

…They asked everyone to show solidarity for their cause and raise a fist so they could take a picture to as a beacon of hope to those in West Papua. It all reeked of disingenuousness not from the two men, not from Natalie who asked that the crowd head to the tent and please sign the petition but from the crowd…

…They are calling this moment ‘the biggest public display of Australian support for West Papua’ but how many of this supposed 10,000 went to the tent and actually signed the petition? It’s easy to raise a fist doesn’t mean you can pat yourself on the back and call that your good deed for the day, the people of West Papua can sleep easy knowing that Australians at a music festival flexed some muscle. If you actually do care head to http://www.rizeofthemorningstar.com/ and do something meaningful by signing the petition…

This is the image they took for the movement (sourced from the link above)

I’m to the right somewhere =P.

Thinking about what my friend retorted when Natalie stated that ‘WOMAD was for the people..”

Him: “…yeah the people who can afford it”

Cynical and true. It’s funny how a festival promoting changing the world, caring for the planet, humanity and all fauna alike is only privy to those with money – and it is mostly the people with a lot of money who are f*cking it up. But there are two ways to change the world; with the people, fighting hard and struggling hard from the ground up or educating yourself, making money, gaining status & position and fighting from the inside using capital as power like the arseholes do. If you can have both then that’s wonderful.

…Going for a wander I managed to catch Finnish Kimmo Pohjonen aka alternative accordion playing Viking. It was the most hypnotizing, mesmerizing yet freaky performance I had seen all festival. And by freaky I mean bizarre, amazing and unexpected…

…Involved in numerous musical and creative projects including accordion wrestling (??) this was him, a stool, an accordion and mood manipulating lights. He had the accordion making sounds I didn’t even know could be produced; electric drills, motorbike exhausts and creating sonic theatre music. It was dark, twisted and hallucinogenic, the kind of music that would go with those old German fairy tales that have sinister meanings. Awesome…

…A large crowd was already starting to form by the tiny Zoo stage and we managed to manoeuvre through to be somewhat near the front. The Barons of Tang had played two days before and word had spread like wildfire that they were a band to watch. Don’t know how out of control the first gig was but security was already positioned WITHIN the crowd and when they came out to thunderous applause they announced before playing; “We do not condone crowd surfing and The Barons of Tang have officially sold out”…

…The Barons of Tang are a gypsy death-core band of misfits who are aesthetically pleasing even before they start playing. All of them cut a different figure, four out of seven of them have semi-shaved heads and individual old school punk style, Jules the guitarist looks like he would be suited in Manu Chao’s band with his skinny frame and tumble mop of dreads and Aviva on the bass clarinet with a metallic turban and sensible attire looked like a snake charmer making up this eclectic group…

…Their music was a riotous mix of vaudeville gypsy, tango, rockabilly and punk rock. Julian on the double bass and Anna on the saxophone were powerfully energetic and captivating and when Annie came out from behind the percussion and sang lead vocals the crowd loved her. It was bedlam from the beginning, two songs in people were crowd surfing you just couldn’t control the crowd and when they had finished the set the loudest encore commenced up until the point where the compare was telling people to leave and getting plastic bottles thrown at her…

…With nothing else as good on and hoping for a different setlist, our prayers were answered when the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain kicked off another amazing performance this time catering for those who may have seen them previously and played Talking heads ‘Psycho Killer’, ‘Rock Around The Clock’, ‘Born This Way’, ‘Le Freak’, ‘Smells like Teen Spirit’ and to my utter elation ‘Life On Mars’ again. Stupidly happy we finished the night, dancing to the deep, atmospheric trip-hop of DJ Krush.

Seriously, this amazing weekend of multi-cultural music, bare-feet frolicking, dreadlocks and fishermen’s pants galore was uber cool and a refreshing change from the cookie-cutter festivals. I know it’s a high price point but if you put away a dollar a day, it’ll totally be worth it I promise*.

So now you can imagine the f*cking awful time I had the next day going from WOMAD (and missing the last day) to Future Music Festival aka Bogans Gone Wild, that’s my next post and my words will not be kind.

P.S. Plus how can you beat a festival where I heard Bowie every single day?

*My review for The Mouth Adelaide interspersed with extra opinions

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“Love has come at last throw your sorrows in the past, dancing in the rain… Two feet in the sand we’re still finding Peter Pan, to make things stay the same”

Day number two at WOMADelaide.. today I had buddies =D not from the beginning and I thought I was destined to spend the next two days in an atmosphere of complete fun without people to share it with. Arriving semi-late in the afternoon and heading straight to the food court I had uncovered an unknown addiction to Mango Lassi. To substitute my morning coffee with something fruity is really alien, but new worlds were being uncovered.

…Second day in and I’m feeling a lot more blended into the crowd. But nearly every single girl aged 13 to 16 is wearing the same pair of printed harem pants, I’m wondering if they keep them in storage for the other 364 days of the year. It’s interesting to try to see who actually lives this lifestyle and who is just playing hippie dress-ups. Bit of a late start today with the first show I see being the Jay Hoad Band at 3pm, everybody is sitting down for this one and I think ‘cool, easy start to the day’…

…Jay being called a multi-instrumentalist is no overstatement as the announcer jokes that the roadie’s are sweating as they’ve had to sound check over 25 instruments. Starting with ‘Home is where the heart is’, this crowd aren’t shy with everyone jumping up second song in and getting into it. With Celtic, Latin, and reggae musical influences and so many instruments onstage it was a good, tight set…

I think WOMAD is fantastic in that it is one of the minimal festivals that encourage and incorporate kids into the music scene without the adults having to miss out on any fun. You expose young minds to fantastic music, exotic food and have them be in an environment that can educate, inspire creativity, promote divirsity and eliminate prejudice.

Though it is my idea of hell being at such an awesome place and having to stay in the kiddie corner

And yet you still had people complaining about the jacked up prices for using the ATM’s, don’t know about you but I’d rather pay Sea Shepherd than the banks.

THEM: “f*cking hell 4 f*cking dollars to take out cash”

ME: “At least your supporting something, seriously what can you buy of worth for 4 dollars these days?”

THEM: “……..(silence)……………. f*cking hell 4 f*cking dollars”

…Wandering off I manage to catch a little bit of passionate and raw West African singer Dobet Gnahore, who was tribal dancing in the most mesmerising way, her long braids swinging…

SUCCESS… standing in the mainly seated crowd, waiting for the next great act to come on I look to my left and I see a familiar face 50 feet away. With giddy excitement I rush over thinking if I waste anymore time they might run away and yes, I now belong to a small wolfpack of three.

…I didn’t know what to expect going to see the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain, but I didn’t expect pure awesomeness that’s for sure. All eight of them dressed nicely in standard orchestra attire, tiny little ukulele’s and a great, entertaining funny set of songs and puns. Glad to have company today my friend observed to my amusement that the Ukulele was a male dominated instrument with only two female members in the band. And you have to love a band that is cheeky enough to start the set with “hello New Zealand we are really happy to be here, we’ll be playing in Australia soon and they’re a really difficult crowd”. Songs like ‘Anarchy in the UK’, ‘Teenage Dirt bag’, the ‘Shaft’ theme song and ‘Life on Mars’ just sounded so cool on the Ukulele but hilarious at the same time. You just can’t take it seriously and they were having a lot of fun onstage. Dick Dale & The Deltones ‘Miserlou’ was absolutely AMAZING stripped down and played slow but beautifully and Ennio Morricone’s ‘The Good, The Bad & The Ugly’ was impressive. They had great harmonies and I think the Ukulele is in for a comeback, this is the second time I’ve been impressed by a Ukulele this year (GROUPLOVE was the first)…

Seriously loving this look…

..but honestly where do these boys hang out I have never seen anyone looking like this around Adelaide. Embroidered vest with nothing on underneath? I don’t know whether to take this seriously do people have a designated WOMADelaide section in their closet where they keep awesome pieces like this counting down until the next year?

…Jinja Safari were eager to please coming onstage to a mocked crowd from the announcer ‘So you guys must listen to Triple J, how many of you are over twenty?’ Small sound issues plagued the set, too much feedback coming through the speakers during ‘Moonchild’, Marcus’s mic not working sporadically throughout but it was still great being with all the under twenties and I am pretty sure I was witness to some boy’s first time on another’s shoulders from how overexcited he was, bless…

If I’m quiet honest they seemed a little bit out of their depth in the beginning. Although it was a good performance they seemed nervous, especially Marcus who repeated the same joke he told me when I interviewed him – didn’t flow as smoothly. I’ve heard their live gigs are something to behold but WOMAD left me disappointed. The only guy who seemed to let go and was extremely captivating was ‘Nugget’…

…this guy

…All the favourites were played ‘Hiccups’, ‘Peter Pan’, the sitar was brought out for ‘Scarecrow’ and Cameron joked with the crowd that he shouldn’t be playing the keytar at WOMAD. Alistair the percussionist was incredible the whole time, the most energetic out of the lot who climbed the speakers towards the end and gyrated like a man possessed, along with Cameron who did the same and tried to outdo him by climbing a tree, before changing his mind. Highlight was ‘Stepping Stones’ which had the most amazing vocal crescendo and you’ve gotta love a xylophone solo…

A moment chilling with good company and Tereré

…Dinner time was around six and probably the worst idea ever, as the lines were crazy. The shortest line got my vote and Lebanese food it was… again. The crowd was huge for Melbourne Ska Orchestra and ready and roaring to dance. The tiny stage was filled with a 26 piece ensemble including the energetic Nicky Bomba from John Butler Trio, young and old all had their shoes off, dancing joyously barefoot…

Notice anything?.. ^^^

Barefoot.. at last

…Paying homage to the Ska movement, Skatalites, British two-tone Madness and guaranteed crowd pleaser ‘A message to you’ by The Specials this was a super fun show. Looking around everyone was having a ball, a man with a beard so long it was dreading was Ska-ing and it felt great being in that energy. Nicky Bomba gave an impressive drum solo and singer Rebecca Ari a newbie on the singing scene came onstage to sing a few songs including ‘My Boy Lollipop’…

…Taking some time to chill out and have a smoke, rebel-fighter Malian band from the Western Sahara; Tinariwen were playing just the right groove when we re-joined the masses. Another band that have come from desperate situations, two of the band members couldn’t make it safely out of war-torn Mali to join the band on tour, stuck in refugee camps caught between the cross-fire of the ongoing battle between the Malian Army and the MLNA (Mouvement de Liberation National Azaward) rebels…

…The music was an extremely hypnotizing and a smooth electric blues, really influenced by their Touareg nomadic culture, the intoxicating tende drumming throughout was powerful as the lonely four dressed in traditional covered dress played on. Two members from the French band Lo’Jo came onstage for a few songs in amazing showmanship and joined the band filling in for the moncord violin and banging on percussion. What made me laugh was one of the Lo’Jo members had thrown a large silver scarf around his neck in an effort to blend in. It was a mesmerizing and beautiful performance…

…Trip Hop UK legend Bonobo had a massive crowd and this was the only time over the weekend where the crowd was annoyingly pushy. It’s funny though how used to rudeness we are when we go to festivals, it’s only coming to WOMAD and (here comes the inner hippie) that you realise it doesn’t have to be that way. WOMAD has ruined me…

…This was also one of the most extreme encores and cheers at the end of a set. Bonobo had his signature set-up of electronics with a live band and he had brought along singer songwriter Andreya Triana (who contributed many songs on Bonobo’s Black Sands album) which the set just wouldn’t have been the same without supplying her amazing vocals. It was also her last performance with Bonobo and she took out her camera, taking a picture of the cheering crowd…

…To try and explain the magnificence and utter insanity of the Dirty Three’s front man and violinist extraordinaire Warren Ellis is impossible in one paragraph. Because I could fill that with all the insane yet profound wisdom* that he shared onstage like;

  • “This song is about that feeling you get like if God was farting in your stomach and lighting it”

  • “Have fun, one day the bread baskets will be empty so make the most of it”

  • “You blow my mind… there is hope in the youth, ladies and gentlemen”

And my personal favourite; ‘‘When the moon is chilly like this, take your clothes off and start making babies, we’d love to watch just bear with us if we have technical problems… and please dance”.

…If Meatloaf is Rock Opera than Dirty Three is Rock Symphony, correction; psychedelic-punk-rock-symphony. People like to call them folk-rock but that would be purely because they have a violin in the band, they played about six songs the entire hour and a half set each one was intense and experimental with epic violin, drum and piano solos throughout, to put it into perspective Lynyrd Skynyrd’s ‘Free bird’ just doesn’t compare. Their music is so powerful and so transcendent(ly awesome) you could tell who was high or stoned as the crowd was full when the gig started and then people just started dropping off because it was so penetrating and full-on…

The following photos are blurry and raw and totally describe (visually) the vibe, the intensity, the ferocious movement and vivacity of his performance. Plus it’s as blurry as everything was to me at that exact point in time and so freaking fantastic.

…Minds were literally being blown, I actually had to turn away a few times and focus on something else for a few minutes to cope with what I was feeling, all my senses being assaulted at once. Dirty Three are the coolest thing I have ever seen, Ellis playing the violin with veracious and ferocious alegria, rocking the guitar power-stance violin style, side kicking sporadically, so bad ass, so punk-rock!…

…To take a classical instrument and truly make amazing rock-symphony music he was like Beethoven’s great-great-great-great-great- punk-rocker grandson thrusting his thin frame forwards, head thrown back shaking his long hair, long beard and arms flailing, getting off on the music. HE PLAYED THE VIOLIN WITH HIS TEETH!!…

And this was that glorious moment ^^^^^^^ … this guy is the don!

…Their music certainly isn’t for everyone but if you get the chance to see them live and take in Ellis’s crazy/genius/… you’ll be stepping into the rabbit hole…

Hilariously juvenile, big Cheshire cat smiling everytime I heard them shout out “LSD for Jim, Extra strong LSD for Margot”

…To finish the night – our minds completely blown – we all got Chai Lattes to try and regain our sanity and chill out.

Bring on Sunday.

*The Wisdom of Warren Ellis – “if Oprah and Bono gave all their money there would be no poor”, “Share the love, but not in the hippie way, but spread it around”, “A lake… with no water… the swans” (!!??), “I’ve been a boil on Gina Rinehart’s bum and this song is about being in places weirder than that”            

I’ve never been so in love with a festival before        

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