Monday 20 June 2011

Tickets on sale: A NIGHT OF THE NEW OLD-TIME...

Tickets for A NIGHT OF THE NEW OLD-TIME... are on sale at
The Here Shop, Stokes Croft, Bristol
Bristol Ticket Shop, Broadmead, Bristol (online/telephone sales also)
and from me in person

The Scout Hut is a small venue, so recommend buying tickets in advance.

Thanks

Saturday 11 June 2011

shieldshaped presents: A NIGHT OF THE NEW OLD TIME... Tuesday 28 June, The Scout Hut, Bristol



Very excited about this evening. Please come along...

Shieldshaped presents: A NIGHT OF THE NEW OLD TIME...

with live music from

The Dust Busters
From Brooklyn, New York, the Dust Busters are the sound of the old weird America. Freewheeling, high-energy resurrectors of scratchy 78-rpm ballads, backporch fiddle stomp and dusty jug-band blues.

The Dust Busters met while playing music with the legendary John Cohen (of the New Lost City Ramblers), and have since gone on to record albums both with Cohen and with Peter Stampfel (of the Holy Modal Rounders and The Fugs). Alongside their recent self-released Prohibition Is A Failure album, The trio have another LP due on Smithsonian Folkways as well as an album-length collaboration with Stampfel and Michael Hurley (a follow-up to 1976's seminal Have Moicy LP).

The Dust Busters are hardcore aficionados of American primitive musics, devoting much time to the study of old 78s and field recordings, and channeling the wild energy of these records into their own performances. Just like the old time string bands that inspire them – the Skillet Lickers, the Mississippi Sheiks, Dykes Magic City Trio, etc – the Dust Busters know how to set the music on fire: this is old music stripped-down, raw, and made young again.

“Three of my favorite people to play and sing with ever, kicking musical ass all over the landscape. If you like your  trad/roots benter and hotter than normal, you’ll love this!” - Peter Stampfel of the Holy Modal Rounders and Fugs.
 

Boxcar Aldous Huxley
One might hear Balkan melody, old-time banjo and brass band pomp wrapped up in Tin Pan Alley melodrama. These are songs that speak of such esoteric topics as abandoned funeral trains, Messianic visions in the Canadian wilderness, and ill-fated amateur space exploration.
 
On stage, Boxcar Aldous Huxley are a cavalcade of dapper tweeds, inaccurate historical lecturing and rattertrap musicality, trading rickety banjo clatterings one moment for ornate choral refrains the next. The harmonium wheezes; the clarinet shrieks; Stephen Foster revolves slowly in his grave.

This is music rooted in the past, but not a past that ever actually happened. 

“Like people from some grim future trying to figure out what Broadway sounded like.” – Curtis Eller

Plus
Shellac Sounds gramophone DJs
members of Crescent and Movietone playing old 78s on wind-up gramophones

Thursday 28 June, 7.30pm
at The Benjamin Perry Scout Hut, Redcliffe Parade, Harbourside, Bristol (brown wooden building across the water from the Thekla
£5 ADV  BYO Liquor

 records, CDs and original letterpressed posters available for purchase on the night