Viva Acappella Are Top Choir Kent 2011!

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Viva Acappella Are Top Choir Kent 2011! 17 April 2011: Immediate Page 1 of 2 Viva Acappella are Top Choir Kent 2011! The all-women close-harmony choir, Viva Acappella from Orpington, took the title of Top Choir Kent 2011 after a thrilling, hard-fought, final in front of a packed audience (500 people) at Shirley Hall in Canterbury on Saturday. (16th April). The choir, made up of 26 women singers under their musical director, Gaynor Dugay, was the judges' unanimous choice. The chairman of the judges, Dr David Flood, who is Organist and Master of Choristers at Canterbury Cathedral, praised the energy and enthusiasm of Viva Acappella. He said: “Their performance was underpinned by great discipline, great teamwork and great diction.” He added: “They really reached out to the audience”. Viva Acappella were awarded the Brett Top Choir Kent Trophy by Bill Brett, Managing Director of the Brett Group and they will now perform at this year's Canterbury Festival as their prize. Gaynor Dugay, the Musical Director and conductor of Viva Acappella was bowled over at the result. She said: “It‟s been a fantastic evening. The standard of all the choirs has been superb – but to win was beyond our wildest dreams.” She added: “We‟re ecstatic.” The other seven other finalists – who each received £100 for taking part - all received high praise from David Flood. St Edmund’s School Chamber Choir in Canterbury was commended for producing such a high standard with such young performers. UCF Choir from Folkestone sang with passion, joy and great discipline. The Oyster Singers from Whitstable demonstrated what community singing was all about by producing real energy and enjoyment. Just Voices from Bromley gave a very classy performance which demonstrated very good close harmony. m/f… 17 April 2011: Immediate Page 2 of 2 Front Room from Longfield, were very disciplined and received praise for performing without a conductor. The Baroque Singers from Tunbridge Wells were all perfectly in tune and provided a lovely balanced sound with superb contrast and texture. And finally, David Flood described St Stephen’s Church Choir in Canterbury as being the choir any church in the country would love to have with their big bold sound, vigour and determination. The added bonus of the evening was a performance by last year‟s Top Choir Kent winners, Green Street Blues from Sevenoaks who sang whilst the judges considered their verdict. The Top Choir Kent competition is organised and promoted by the Rotary Club of Canterbury and the event is expected raise around six-and-a-half-thousand-pounds for Rotary charities. The President of the Rotary Club of Canterbury, Robert Yonge, paid tribute to the support provided by the competition‟s mains sponsor, Belmont International of Sevenoaks. He said: “Belmont‟s generous sponsorship means nearly all the set-up and admin costs of Top Choir Kent were covered before the event so just about all the money raised will go to charity.” Accompanying Picture (20110417_TCK_Winner.jpg): Bill Brett, Managing Director of The Brett Group presents Gaynor Dugay, Musical Director of Viva Acappella with the Brett Top Choir Kent Trophy Notes to Editors The competition was open to amateur choirs of all ages and styles as long as they are based in the County of Kent, the Medway Authority or the London Boroughs of „Old Kent‟. Contact for Viva Acappella - Gaynor Dugay: 01449 760532 (mob) 07879 604388 Contact names and numbers for the other finalists are: St Edmunds School Chamber Choir – Will Bersey: 01227 451109 (mob) 07956 327177 UCF Folkestone – Kerry Boyle: 0753092821 Oyster Singers - Emily Peasgood: (w) 01227 282556 (mob) 07749 115484 Just Voices - Diane Ebden: 0781 3191945 Front Room - Judi Dixon: 01474 873763; (mob) 07775 553965 The Baroque Singers - Mark Mortimer: (eve) 01892 524315 St Stephens Church Choir - Stephen Barker: 01227 769853; (mob) 07736 0040744 Further Information Martin Ward, Top Choir Kent Press Officer: 07802 213478 Email: [email protected] Ends .
Recommended publications
  • Emily Peasgood CV
    Emily Peasgood Tel: 07749 115 484 | Email: [email protected] Artist statement Rubber Chicken House, 2 Kent Kent, Ramsgate, Kent, CT11 8LT Emily Peasgood is a composer, sound artist and visual artist. Her work aims to transform how we perceive our environment by creating invitations to connect with people and places that are forgotten, overlooked, or surrounded by histories that can be remembered and celebrated through sound and music. Peasgood’s work takes place in outdoor public locations, with specific communities of people, and utilises innovative technology and design to serve her concepts and enhance visitor interaction. Her artistic practice is underpinned by an aesthetic belief in creating artworks that enrich people’s lives through embodying the values of accessibility, inclusion and engagement. Peasgood’s work has consistently demonstrated high quality community and visitor engagement in the creative output, through considered community programmes, well-researched accessible concepts, and working with a team that engages with and supports her creative ambition. For full portfolio please visit: www.emilypeasgood.com Selected site-specific and community engagement works | To read more or listen to sound content please Emilyclick Peasgood: the image I Would linkRather adjacent Walk With You to each work Pioneering Places East Kent: West Wing Battery at Fort Burgoyne Dover I Would Rather Walk With You | Pioneering Places, East Kent, 2020-2021 Permanent site-specific public artwork in The West Wing Battery at Fort Burgoyne, Dover. Visitors are invited to experience a sound-world that captures its history and future as a community space. It is a multi-channel choral work and sound installation with spoken word and sound effects record- ed by 180 residents during lockdown.
    [Show full text]
  • Perception Research
    Innovation and Change in Community Music Proceedings of the XV International Seminar of the ISME Commission on Community Music Activity Edinburgh College, Edinburgh, Scotland 19-23 July 2016 Editor Mary L. Cohen i All abstracts presented at the 2016 CMA Conference in Edinburgh, Scotland, were peer refereed before inclusion in the Conference program. Editorial Board Brydie Leigh-Bartlett Flavia Candusso Mary L. Cohen Magali Kleber Peter Moser Mari Shiobara National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication Author: ISME Community Activity Commission International Seminar (XV: 2016: Edinburgh, Scotland) Title: Innovation and Change in Community Music: Proceedings of the XV International Seminar of the Commission on Community Music Activity, Edinburgh, Scotland [electronic resource] ISBN: 978-0-6481219-1-6 (ebook) Notes: Includes bibliographical references. Subjects: Music--Congresses. Music in education--Congresses. ISME Commission on Community Music Activity Dewey Number: 780.7 ©International Society for Music Education 2016 www.isme.org ii The Community Music Activity Commission Delegates are grateful to the following people who provided expert support in the planning and hosting of the 2016 Pre-conference seminar of the ISME World Conference. Seminar Host Institution and contact: Edinburgh College, Jess Abrams Sage Gateshead, Dave Camlin Sound Sense, Kathryn Deane Commissioners 2014-2016 Brydie Leigh-Bartlett, Co-Chair, Australia Flavia Candusso, Brazil Mary L. Cohen, United States of America Magali Kleber, Brazil Peter Moser, England Mari Shiobara, Co-Chair, Japan Mary L. Cohen was an Obermann Fellow at the University of Iowa which provided support for her to complete the editing process of these proceedings in the fall of 2016. Vision We believe that everyone has the right and ability to make, create, and enjoy their own music.
    [Show full text]
  • Map, Family Guide and Details of Our Triennial’S Title Double Edge, Focusing on 1 Bob and Roberta Smith 12 Gary Woodley Impingement No
    11 Michael Craig-Martin Folkestone Lightbulb The Clearing – Folkestone Triennial Symposia This image of an everyday object in stylish strong colours picks Visitor Centre at Quarterhouse On the Edge: Time and Truth up formally on the curving façade of the building. Located at the Mill Bay, Folkestone CT20 1BN Sat 2 September, 11am – 6.30pm junction of The Old High Street and Tontine Street, the gateway Open 10am – 5pm daily Folkestone Quarterhouse More information on the artworks and artists is available in the Folkestone to the Creative Quarter, conceptually the lightbulb suggests ideas, 01303 760 750 This year’s commissioned artists talk Triennial 2017 Guide Book (£5 from the Visitor Centre at Quarterhouse) inspiration, sustainable energy, the essence of regeneration. Head here for an exhibition guide and about their projects in the context of this map, family guide and details of our Triennial’s title double edge, focusing on 1 Bob and Roberta Smith 12 Gary Woodley Impingement No. 66 ‘Cube public programme, merchandise, two major subthemes: the edges of truth FOLKESTONE IS AN ART SCHOOL Circumscribed by Tetrahedron – Tetrahedron café, accessible toilets and baby and time. Free, booking essential. This artwork is in four parts: a ‘declaration’ in the streets; twelve Circumscribed by Cube’ 2017 changing facilities. short pedagogical videos; a ‘directory’ of art teaching facilities Cézanne proposed: ‘treat nature by means of the cylinder, the Border and talents; and a teaching programme / exhibition. The artist sphere, the cone’. Woodley’s ‘impingements’ are about the Other Information Points Sat 4 November, 10am – 5pm discovered that everything needed for an art school is already in interaction between ideas and reality, ‘platonic’ forms in dialogue Folkestone Central Railway Station Folkestone Quarterhouse Folkestone – the resources just need to be recognised differently.
    [Show full text]
  • The Fourth Edition of Folkestone Triennial, One of the UK's Most
    ‘Folkstone Triennial, double edge’, Press Release, 31 August 2017 ​ ​ The fourth edition of Folkestone Triennial, one of the UK’s most ambitious art exhibitions, will open on Saturday 2 September and run until 5 November 2017. Internationally recognised artists have been commissioned to create 19 new site-specific artworks to be exhibited in Folkestone’s public spaces under the title double edge. Some of the works will remain in the town to add to its expanding art collection, ​ ​ Folkestone Artworks. double edge refers to the two main axes around which Folkestone’s development as a town has taken ​ place historically and geographically: the seashore and the Pent Stream, an ancient watercourse flowing from the North Downs into the sea, dividing East and West Folkestone. double edge makes use of the ​ ​ specifics of the locality to explore universal ‘edge’ issues, including borders and frontiers; margins and the periphery; thresholds, gateways and the liminal. It will also further develop the inquiry into ‘sense of place’ that guided Folkestone Triennial 2014, Lookout. ​ ​ Lewis Biggs, curator of Folkestone Triennial, said: "We are delighted to have commissioned 19 new ​ site-specific works for Folkestone as part of the 2017 Triennial, titled double edge, the other part being an amazing programme of events. It has been a pleasure to see how these imaginative artists extend their practice to create work outdoors, engaging with the history and fabric of the town, to explore the universal issues that are always their concern. We hope that the artworks will excite and inspire a wide variety of audiences over the next nine weeks and in some cases for many years to come." ​ New works commissioned for Folkestone Triennial 2017 are as follows: Rigo 23 will present Through the Glassworks; Earth’s Oldest Satellite.
    [Show full text]
  • S Pr in G 2 0
    CANTERBURY CHRIST CHURCH UNIVERSITY SPRING 2019 SPRING events exhibitions & screenings 2 music 9 heritage 25 dance & drama 30 word 32 A pull-out section can be found in the centre spread which includes: booking 15 calendar 16 directions 18 To keep up to date with all of our latest events and goings-on, why not follow us on social media, or sign up to our mailing list from the Arts and Culture homepage. /artsandcultureCCCU @cccu_culture @CCCU_ArtsExtra canterbury.ac.uk/arts-and-culture Cover image: Chthonic Kore Soteira, 2015 © Cathy Ward (see page 7) For alternative formats, please email: [email protected] welcome Creative arts – a new era It’s an exciting time for arts and culture at Canterbury Christ Church University (CCCU) with our new creative arts building opening early in 2019 bringing new specialist and other facilities to use and enjoy for students, local people and partner organisations, as well as national and international visitors. The new building takes forward the traditions of music, performance, visual arts and digital media, and engagement with heritage and history, which have characterised the contributions of CCCU and its staff and students to the cultural life of Canterbury, welcome Kent and beyond. The building will expand our potential to showcase the creative work of students and staff year round, as well as to engage local people and businesses in joint events, activities and projects. We will draw on the state-of-the-art spaces and equipment to enhance our teaching and student experience in ever widening ways and to add to our innovative work in arts, culture and humanities.
    [Show full text]
  • Ramsgate Matters Spring 2020
    Ramsgate Matters The Bi-Annual Journal of The Ramsgate Society Spring 2020 Contents P2 Across the Chairman’s Desk P3 A Crisis of Affordability P4 Glass to the Rescue P5 Who am I ? by Terry Prue P6 Iconic Rock Gardens P8 Manston P9 Conservation Across the P10 Spectacular Tiles Chairman’s Desk P12 Talks P14 Radford House CITiZAN P15 The Granville P16 Splendour in St George’s P17 Who I am P18 Diary Notes At the start of 2020, climate catastrophe, drought, deluge, P19 New Members, In Memoriam food, fames and extremes dominated the news. Ramsgate Credits, Committee, Subscriptions Matters set out to offer some reasons to be cheerful. Last autumn we looked at the value of Allotments. The series continues with Chairman John Walker writing on current Land and Property values. His views closely match those of John Stuart Mill in 1885 and Winston Churchill in 1919. It is clear that even when solutions have long been evident, implementation may take time. Professor Jan Pahl of the Canterbury Society and the University of Kent writes on a growing funding crisis for local authorities later this year. Ramsgate Heritage Action Zone advances on many fronts including the High Street, Central Harbour Ward and a new project, Pulhamite and Promenade. Spring will bring Geraint Franklin’s book, Ramsgate, the town and its Seaside Heritage’ part of Historic England’s Informed Conservation series. The Society is about to celebrate its 40th year as a member of Civic Voice. A decade ago, South Thanet MP Laura Sandys and new society committee member John Walker held a litter pick and collected an outstanding two tons of litter.
    [Show full text]
  • Skull Cakes, Seaside Sculpture and a Renaissance Dream Team – the Week in Art | Art and Design | the Guardian
    07/09/2017 Skull cakes, seaside sculpture and a Renaissance dream team – the week in art | Art and design | The Guardian Skull cakes, seaside sculpture and a Renaissance dream team – the week in art The Notre Dame embarks on a gargoyle-rescue mission, Gormley arrives in Kent and a master provocateur comes to Tate Modern – https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2017/sep/01/week-in-art-antony-gormley-tate-modern-notre-dame 1/7 07/09/2017 Skull cakes, seaside sculpture and a Renaissance dream team – the week in art | Art and design | The Guardian Holiday Home by Richard Woods, part of Folkestone Triennial 2017. Photograph: Thierry Bal Jonathan Jones Friday 1 September 2017 16.56 BST https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2017/sep/01/week-in-art-antony-gormley-tate-modern-notre-dame 2/7 07/09/2017 Skull cakes, seaside sculpture and a Renaissance dream team – the week in art | Art and design | The Guardian Exhibition of the week Folkestone Triennial The contemporary art scene hits the seaside in this admired festival of experimental interventions whose eclectic mix this year ranges from sculptor of found objects Bill Woodrow to Turner prize-nominated Lubaina Himid, among an array that also takes in Emily Peasgood, Amalia Pica, Sinta Tantra and more. Read our review here. • Folkestone venues from 2 September to 5 November. Also this week Nature Morte Contemporary twists (from twisted contemporaries) on the still life tradition should make this a highly diverting exhibition. Mat Collishaw, Cindy Wright, Nancy Fouts and Gabriel Orozco are among the emblematists of mortality playing with fruit and bones.
    [Show full text]
  • Ideas Test Cpp3 Business Plan 2020
    IDEAS TEST CPP3 BUSINESS PLAN 2020 - 2023 Photo: Take on Me - Dante or Die Hoo Leisure Centre December 2018 CONTENTS Ideas Test Mission, Vision, Goals Introduction Core values Governance and staffing Programme (SMART objectives) Audience Engagement Finance & Fundraising (SWOT) Appendices 1. Story of Change 2. Governance and staffing chart 3. Ideas Test governance handbook (decision making) 4. Development timeline 5. Workplan 6. Budget 7. Fundraising strategy and timeline 8. Audience engagement plans 9. Equality and Diversity policy 10. Risk register 1 Vision Ideas Test works to create a vibrant arts ecology in Swale and Medway that involves the full diversity of local communities and brings new opportunities to celebrate the area.1 Mission Our mission is to enable and support communities to live more creative lives. To do this Ideas Test works to: ● Encourage productive partnerships and sustainable networks that support community cohesion and ongoing creative development ● Enhance the quality of people’s lives using collaborative commissioning and co-creation models to inspire, empower and celebrate the rich diversity and history of the area ​ ​ ● Remove barriers to participation in a creative life, regardless of class, economic background, race, sexual orientation, neurodiversity or disability of any kind ● Develop the creative workforce and the potential of individuals as artists, participants and organisations Goals: Over the next 5 years we will work to: ● Consolidate our reputation as a trusted strategic organisation for place making,
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Ignacio Agrimbau, SOAS, University of London
    Ignacio Agrimbau, SOAS, University of London 'Tomorrow We Will Go Fishing': Exchanges Between Memory and Imagination in Two Different Verbalizations of a Dagara Xylophone Proverb In this paper I will examine two discrepant accounts of the meaning and origin of a Dagara xylophone (gyil) proverb (zukpar) in relation to the practical, discursive and ideological exchanges that occur between two different notions of competence among Dagara musicians: one that praises the imaginative creation of new gyil zukpar and another that conceives the preservation of old gyil zukpar as the key to the transmission of Dagara ancestral legacy (saakumu). During a trip to the Upper West Region of Ghana in 2010, I recorded a rendition of the Dagara funeral song-cycle (bine) by the 85 year-old Dagara gyil player Dumeh Balsab. This was followed by a series of feedback interviews in 2013-14 in which collaborators in the field stated different verbalizations and interpretations of one gyil zukpar. The findings obtained during a third period of data collection in 2015 provided an explanation of this inconsistency, but also indicated that the same individuals who expressed regret at the disappearance of old gyil zukpar – and the local history and social commentary that they transmit – had unanimously missed the original meaning conveyed by Dumeh Balsab. Following the approaches to the study of orature developed by Bauman (1975), Finnegan (1970, 1991, 2015) and Hymes (1996, 2003) and recent research on Dagara gyil zukpar by Woma (2013), Bodomo (2007) and Kuutiero (2006), this reflective ethnographic record will illustrate how the performativity of oral traditions enables different relationships between competing notions of competence and the politics of preservation of Dagara saakumu.
    [Show full text]
  • PDF Document Created by Pdffiller
    1 POW! Festival of Arts 7-11 March 2018 Marking the centenary of female suffrage in Britain POW! Thanet is funded by Our partners Our supporters Thanks to all the venues and artists for their support of POW! 2018 03 Welcome to POW! Thanet POW! Thanet is a festival of arts and culture celebrating and exploring issues around feminism, women and girls. The third POW! Thanet is packed full of performances, cabaret, exhibitions, workshops and even a conference! As you browse through this brochure you can choose from more than 55 events taking place across Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate and we are delighted to be partnering with even more venues this year including, for the irst time, the Cliftonville Lido, Ramsgate Music Hall and Broadstairs Pavilion. New to the POW! programme this year is a series of major events, one for each night of the festival; these will include an evening of music and song by internationally renowned singer Barb Jungr who will be performing the works of Bob Dylan as seen from a female perspective. There will also be an all-female cabaret night, an intergenerational women’s music night and, for our grand inale, a play at the Theatre Royal, We Are The Lions, Mr Manager, which tells the remarkable story of Jayaben Desai, the inspirational leader of the 1970’s Grunwick Factory Strike. In 2018 we celebrate the 100th anniversary of women gaining the vote and we have a thread running through the Festival linking suffrage and speaking out with issues in contemporary society including harassment in the workplace, gender identity, consent and women gaining a voice.
    [Show full text]
  • A Musical Installation Artists Such As Roger Daltrey and Squeeze, and Is Currently Working with up and Coming Artists As a Producer and Songwriter
    Emily Peasgood, Artist, Composer, Librettist Emily Peasgood is a conceptual artist working with sound and music. For the past three years her practice has focused on creating musical works inspired by exhibitions and artworks to explore how music can act as an entry point for accessing and responded to art. Her practice is currently focused on creating works for performance in non-traditional performance venues and contexts. Recent commissions include: Jeremy Deller’s English Magic ft. Melodians Steel Orchestra and The Big Sing (Turner Contemporary 2014), Landscapes choral work for the JMW Turner and Helen Frankenthaler exhibition (Turner Contemporary 2014), and Collective Spirit (The Boat Project, Margate 2012). Emily is passionate about working with and composing music for community choirs and is currently undertaking a PhD in composing music for amateur singers. Emily is also a freelance music journalist and choral director. Kate Harwood, Librettist Kate Harwood is a London born singer-songwriter. Kate has worked extensively in the pop world with A musical installation artists such as Roger Daltrey and Squeeze, and is currently working with up and coming artists as a producer and songwriter. by Emily Peasgood Performers Alice Clements Claire Galbraith Jonathan Moxey Rhiannon Binns Amanda Howard Debbie Hickman Joy Fowkes Richard Meares Amanda Manclark Elli Rudd Julia Owen Robert Hamment Amelia Rose-Hamilton Eloise Scotchbrook Julie Howell Rose Donnelly Araxi Utidjian Emma Witts Karen Lewis Sadie Hennessy Arleen Paton-Smith Francesca
    [Show full text]
  • Emily Peasgood Portfolio (2017-2019)
    EMILY PEASGOOD, 2019 EMILY PEASGOOD: RECENT WORK My practice is documented with audio recordings and film. This document accompanies the recording titled ‘Emily Peasgood Recent Work.mp3’. The short film of Halfway to Heaven (2017) exemplifies my practice: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XPvFuBeaDoA Smack Boys (Ramsgate Festival of Sound, 2019) Smack Boys is a sound installation and musical composition that pays homage to the smack boys of Ramsgate. The smack boys were child apprentices on Ramsgate fishing smacks in the 19th and 20th centre. Sent from the workhouse in Minster, boys as young as 10 ears old were offered a new life at sea. From 1878 the smack boys lived above the Sailor’s church when ashore. Smack Boys creates the sense of a time we know little about. It invites us to remember that they were young children, living a harsh existence away from the security of a traditional family. Smack Boys features the voices of local boys and schools, including Ramsgate Sea Scouts and Cadets who are based in what were previously the smack boys dormitories above the church. It is installed through 11 speakers hidden in and around the church. Never Again (Ideas Test, 2018) Never Again is 9-part song cycle for choir and archival recordings to commemorate the WW1 centenary. It premiered on Southeastern train network in moving trains and stations. I created period-style postcard sets for audience members, featuring WW1 propaganda and the song lyrics. Illusion of Conscious Thought (Coastal Currents, 2018) The Illusion of Conscious Thought is sound installation for Hastings’ East and West Hill funicular lifts.
    [Show full text]