Happy Hour Mixtape - Dubbu and Fidel Cutstro

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In celebration of all the amazing work the Prince Albert have put into the local community and Stroud music scene over the past 21 years local DJ’s Fidel Cutstro and Neil ‘Dubbu’ Wilson are releasing a Happy Hour mixtape with all the proceeds going directly to the renowned venue.

Featuring artwork by Adam Hinks (Good On Paper/Hidden Notes) the mixtape is a throwback to the days when a TDK C90 and a ghetto blaster were all you needed to have a party! The days of the stop/start recording of Top of The Pops off the radio on a Sunday evening and placing sellotape over the tape ends to re-record the following week….“We have created this exclusive Prince Albert mixtape as a nod to those nostalgic times and their own love of this musical format, but more importantly it’s been created as a Thank You to the wonderful work that the Prince Albert have done over the last decade (and more) for the flourishing music scene in Stroud.”explains Neil Wilson.

The mixtape will be available as a limited edition run of cassette tapes as well as a download from princealbertstroud.bandcamp.com on Friday 5th June, “We’ve chosen this date as Bandcamp are again kindly waiving their fees in support of artists during the pandemic which means 100% of the sales will go directly to the Albert.”

Born and raised in the GL5 postcode explains why Dubbu's love for Stroud runs so deep. Having spent his formative years experiencing his parents love for music it was certain that it would feature so heavily in his future. HipHop has always been a mainstay in his musical life and it's where musically his heart lies, although Funk, Soul and Reggae feature heavily in his sets. Having rocked party's all over the country and Stroud for the last 10 years he has also performed at Tramlines Festival in Sheffield and is Keith Allen’s resident DJ for his stage at Latitude Festival in Suffolk, as well as performing at the BBC Cheltenham Jazz Festival.
His now legendary New Years Eve parties at the Prince Albert have always been the highlight of his year and continues to be a sold out event.

DJing since 1993, Cutstro has toured the UK and Europe showcasing his unique and original style. Whether tearing up dancefloors or high level scratch skills, he always brings the funk. In addition to DJing, Cutstro gets busy with production using his trusty MPC and ton of records and recently released his new album Talking in Drums (click here for further info and to read our interview with Fidel) on the Sound The Alarm label to critical acclaim.

To coincide with the release of the Happy Hour mixtape Fidel and Dubbu will also be putting together a special one hour long Good On Paper TV self-recorded-DJ-session this Saturday 6th June playing a selection of tunes from Side A and Side B of the mixtape. Head over to our YouTube channel at 8:30pm for the live premiere and visit the facebook event page here for further info.







Stroud Radio Listings Fri 29th - Sun 31st May

DEEPBED RADIO

Friday
RO OW Love Letters (4:30pm) / Shortback (5pm) / Jazz Stroud Vinyl Connection (6pm) / Moina Moin (7pm) / Mr Mulatto - Situationism / Komodo and Friends (10pm)
Saturday
Simon McCorry: Border Lands (9am) / Aletta Dina (10:30am) / Yama Warashi (11:30am) / We Call It Yazz (12:30pm) / Mahon (1:30pm) / SPW African Express (3pm) / Dom Richardson (4:30pm) / ADG Stella Transmissions (6:30pm) / Yogi Beats Chop Shop (7:30pm) / DJ Cerveau (8pm) / Griz-O - Bars Beats & Bears (10pm)
Sunday
Hidden Notes (9:30am)  / Ruby Kester Sunday Shorts (11am) / Sound on Film (12pm) / Katy J Pearson (1pm) / 10 David (1:30pm) / Mia Coke’s Gospel Ten (3:30pm) / ZuZu (4pm) / Moina Moin (6pm) / Situation Sounds (7:30pm) / Jasper Kirton (8:30pm) / Motz & Joe Show (10:30pm)

Tune in at deepbedradio.org and head to the facebook page here for news and updates


STROUD LOCKDOWN RADIO

Friday
George in the Jungle (6pm) / HarryG (8pm) / Tek Gremlin (10pm) / Henny West (12am)
Saturday
Andy Edwards (10am) / Nick the Jazz (12pm) / Mendoza (2pm) / Juggla (4pm) / Dubbu (6pm) / Fidel Cutstro (8pm) / CrookedStylus (10pm) / GeorgeCore (12am)
Sunday
The Breakfast Club (10am) / Raggamuffin (12pm) / The High Priest (2pm) / Piriquito (4pm) / Robbie Duncan (5pm) / JagP (7pm) / CrookedStylus (9pm)

Follow facebook.com/stroudlockdownradio for updates and links to Mixlr



Deepbed Radio

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By Paul Harper

It’s a sunny Sunday morning and I’m at the breakfast table. Light is streaming in through the open doors. Deepbed Radio is playing.

Since its launch in April, Deepbed Radio has been running a daily programme showcasing DJ’s and audio artists linked to artist-led hubs in Stroud and Gloucester. Today I’m listening to Hidden Notes. The music all has an acute, yearning quality that suits my mood as I read my Sunday paper. The news is all about Coronavirus. Outside, the usual background noise of traffic is stilled, the sky is bright and clear of vapour trails and the birds are singing. Everything is beautiful - but for that undercurrent of anxiety. Nevertheless, I am happy. Every once in a while something on the radio particularly catches my attention – what is that playing now? As I write it’s Steve Reich’s Electric Counterpoint.

To be fair, I gravitate naturally towards Hidden Notes. This is the kind of music that I listen to on record, and the festival was one of my high points from 2019 – a particularly rich year for live music in Stroud. But, over the last few weeks I’ve tuned in most days and it always feels like I’m discovering something new and strange to my jaded ears. When I was a teenager I would scroll through the shortwave band on my old radio. This was an absorbing operation – the radio had a large dial that you would turn slowly and with great delicacy. Hovering within the crackly, hissing ether you would discover unfamiliar, exotic sounds, broadcast from the far reaches of the world. Scroll too quickly and you might pass over some rare gem. The appeal for me was the very randomness of drifting through the airwaves. Listening to Deepbed Radio has reminded me of this haphazard listening. I have realized that I rarely listen to music on the radio anymore – Late Junction occasionally, or Night Tracks, where I know that I’ll find stuff that I like. I’d forgotten that sense of joyful discovery that comes with indiscriminate listening.

It’s great to hear the familiar, half forgotten stuff, but the real pleasure has been the unexpected and, occasionally, the downright eccentric. Chief among the latter is, perhaps unsurprisingly, Sean Roe’s Weird Shit, where I found Slap Happy Humphrey, who play gently lilting Japanese folk songs, sporadically overlayed by discordant, chaotic electric guitar noise. Mermaid Chunky play an absorbing and surprisingly coherent miscellany of sounds, and Orbury Common’s Stoneage Birdsong is…uncanny.

Deepbed Radio has been initiated under the auspices of Stroud Valley Artspace, but Neil Walker, one of the Directors, is keen to emphasise that it has been led primarily by the participating DJs. Dylan Shortback, Griz-o, Situation Sounds and Moina Moin, amongst others, have driven the project forward and have curated the programme. Nevertheless, credit where credit is due, Deepbed is an example of one of SVA’s real strengths, they have been instrumental in encouraging young talent – giving them space to develop ideas and a platform to experiment and to present their work. Inspired by the work of stations like Resonance FM (which now hosts the wonderful Mixing It, since it was axed from Radio 3), Worldwide FM, NTS and Noods, SVA have a longstanding interest in radio as a medium and have intermittently produced their own programmes as Resound Radio.

Rich endowed as Stroud and Gloucester are with all kinds of musicians and DJs it isn’t surprising that Deepbed has been able to put together such a good radio station, but alongside the consistent quality, the diversity of the programming is remarkable. This is true not just in terms of the range of shows, but the playlists are eclectic in a way that is rare on mainstream radio. Will Mendoza is a genius in this regard. He builds his playlists from film themes, mixing genres, with the familiar and the strange coming together in unpredictable juxtapositions – it’s always good to hear Curtis Mayfield, Can and Herbie Hancock, but Bollywood music was a revelation for me.

There are a striking number of women, hosting some of the strongest shows - I’ve mentioned Mermaid Chunky and Moina Moin, but Sarah Phaedre Watson’s African Express has been a joy, We Call it Yazz with Jelly Cleaver and Beth Hopkins, who were one of the highpoints of Stroud Jazz last year, was a constant delight, and it’s been a real treat to hear the very talented Ruby Kester reading her own poetry in such a clear, strong voice.

If I have grumble it is just that not everyone publishes as playlist! The music is all so good, and I find myself constantly trying to remember what the presenter said we were listening to. Weird Shit very helpfully posts a weekly list on Facebook...

The last couple of months have been challenging. Most of us are missing our friends and families. I feel fortunate in that I’ve been busily engaged in trying to deliver a meaningful programme for my students, and to maintain a sense of collective endeavour in the virtual world. But I have felt disconnected. Deepbed Radio has been a regular companion throughout and I’ve been reminded of what a great medium it can be. It is no exaggeration to say that it has renewed my interest in music radio.

Listen to Deepbed Radio live at deepbedradio.org where you can also listen back to previous shows) and follow on facebook and instagram for news and updates

Paul Harper has a wide range of experience of working in the arts. He was a founding director of Alias Arts and is Vice-chair of the Forest of Dean Sculpture Trust. He currently combines writing, research and teaching with consultancy in the visual arts and crafts.














Stroud Lockdown Listings Fri 22nd - Thurs 28th May

A weekly guide to radio stations, broadcasts, YouTube channels, Zoom parties and more coming out of the five valleys…

DEEPBED RADIO

Friday
5.00 Jazz Stroud Vinyl Connection (5pm) / Moina Moin (6:30pm) / Mr Mulatto - Situationism (8pm) / Komodo and Friends (10pm)
Saturday
Simon McCorry: Border Lands (9am) / Aletta Dina (10:30am) / 10David (11:30am) / Dom Richardson (1:30pm) / Sarah Phaedre Watson SPW African Express (3pm) / The High Priest (4:30pm) / Mahon (6:30pm) / Yogi Beats Chop Shop (8pm) / DJ Cerveau (8:30pm) / Griz-O - Bars Beats & Bears (10pm) / Shortback (11:30pm)
Sunday
Hidden Notes (9:30am) / Megan Crua (11am) / Yama Warashi (11:15am) / Sound on Film (12pm) / Roella Jazzisrealmusic Oloro (2pm) / Beth Hopkins & Jelly Cleaver - We call it Yazz (2:30pm) / Roella Oloro's Gospel Ten (3:30pm) / ZuZu (4pm) / Moina Moin (6pm) / Coumba (7pm) / Sleepier (8pm) / The Motz & Joe Show (9pm)
Monday
Sean Roe: Weird Shit Show (9pm)
Tuesday
Motz Workman and  Joe Tate Show (7pm)
Wednesday
123…45s Will Cookson: Mendoza (7pm) / Tom Berry: Bongo Mondo (8pm)
Thursday
Shortback (6pm) / ADG Stellar Transmissions (7pm)  Yogi Beats Chop Shop (7:30pm) /  Griz-O Official Bars Beats & Bear (8pm)

Tune in at deepbedradio.org and head to the facebook page here for news and updates


STROUD LOCKDOWN RADIO

Friday
George in the Jungle (6pm) / HarryG (8pm) / Tek Gremlin (10pm) / Henny West (12am)
Saturday
Andy Edwards (10am) / Nick the Jazz (12pm) / Mendoza (2pm) / Juggla (4pm) / Dubbu (6pm) / Fidel Cutstro (8pm) / CrookedStylus (10pm) / GeorgeCore (12am)
Sunday
Raggamuffin (12pm) / The High Priest (2pm) / Piriquito (4pm) / Robbie Duncan (5pm) / JagP (7pm) / CrookedStylus (9pm)

Follow facebook.com/stroudlockdownradio for updates and links to Mixlr

Apart Together - A Song For Right Now

In support of Mental Health Awareness Week (18th – 24th May), Singing Mamas Choir Network is giving the gift of a song with the release of Apart Together, written by Stroud based musician Asha McCarthy.

Apart Together is a song to help people feel more connected to each other during the lockdown. Asha McCarthy, choir leader and mother of a toddler said “I felt very anxious at the beginning of the lock down; I wrote Apart Together hoping people would feel comforted and less alone”.

Apart Together is a collaboration between choir leaders from the Singing Mamas Choir Network, the women are based all over England. The parts were recorded separately and then produced by Rachel Holmes (Oxfordshire) to create the finished piece. Rachel said “When people listen to the song, I wish for them to hear the courage and hope in our voices and use it as a source of strength to see them through what remains of these troubled times”.

Kate Valentine (East Sussex), Founder and Director of Singing Mamas Choir recently answered the call to return to Nursing on the frontline against Covid-19. Kate said “I have seen first-hand as a choir leader and now in hospitals how important connection, and song are to patients and their loved ones; singing is a medicine and I hope this song goes some way to making them feel better”.

Singing Mamas Choir also launched ‘Songline’, a response the announcement of the lock down eight weeks ago. Since then and three times a week, Singing Mamas Choir Leaders and special guests from the wider natural voice network, including Susie Ro Prater, have been sharing songs as part of our Songline sessions. Songline has brought thousands of people together to sing and feel part of a community. Asha McCarthy will be teaching Apart Together on Songline on Friday 22nd May at 10.30am

For further information visit singingmamaschoir.com and facebook.com/ashacello
Mental Health Week is hosted by the Mental Health Foundation, this year’s theme is kindness. Click here for further info


Aron Attwood: Outside

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OUT NOW:
Outside By Aron Attwood

It seems many of us have had grand plans of using the hours of spare time suddenly thrust upon us during lockdown to focus on musical endeavours. Dusting off the synths, pulling the guitars out of the cupboard and create a mini Abbey Road Studios in our bedroom or set ourselves an ambitious task of learning a completely new instrument. Some of us might have set our goals to high and have had to readjust them slightly, Stroud dwelling multi-instrumentalist Aron Attwood (who can also be found playing drums with The Achievers and guitar/lead vocals in Albino Tarantino) simply writes, records and releases a 10 track album over the course of a few weeks…”Here is a collection of songs written and recorded during lockdown 2020. They vary in style slightly but I feel upon listening to them as an album that they sit together very nicely. I have structured the album to flow in a purposeful arc so if you like these songs please take the time to listen to them in this order at some point. Music has kept me sane throughout this bizarre experience. Well that and my new found love of gardening. I hope you enjoy these songs. See you on the other side. “

Outside is available now and can be purchased and listened to in its entirety via bandcamp here Following their initiative to support artists during COVID19 bandcamp will again be waiving their revenue share for all sales on the 5th June.

Stroud Lockdown Listings Fri 15th - Thurs 21st May

A weekly guide to radio stations, broadcasts, YouTube channels, Zoom parties and more coming out of the five valleys…

DEEPBED RADIO

Friday
Jazz Stroud Vinyl Connection (5pm) / Moina Moin (6:30pm) / Mr Mulatto - Situationism (8pm) / Komodo & Friends (10pm)
Saturday
Simon McCorry - Border Lands Mix (9:30am) / Katy J Pearson (11:40am) / CIL (12:10pm) / Dom Richardson (1pm) / SPW African Express (3pm) / Yogi Beats Chop Shop (4:30pm) / CAM (5pm) / 10David (6pm) / Shortback (8pm) / Griz-O Bars and Beats (9pm) / Motz and Joe Show (10:30pm)
Sunday
Hidden Notes: Excuse the Mess Podcast Guest Host (9:30am) / Ruby Kester - Sunday Shorts (11am) / Yama Warashi (11:15pm) / Will Cookson Sound on Film (12pm) / Gloucesbel Gosbel (1pm) / Club Deepbed Guests (1:30pm) / Zu Zu (3:30pm) /Moina Moin (5:30pm) / Mally and Dread (6:30pm) / Aleta Dina (8:30pm) / Jasper Kirton (9:30pm)
Monday
Uta (8pm) / Weird Shit (9pm) / Distant Sounds (10:30pm)
Tuesday
Motz and Joe Show (7pm) / Guest Mix (8:30pm)
Wednesday
Mendoza (7pm) / Monobrow (8pm)
Thursday
Griz-O Bars, Beats and Bear (8pm) / Yogi Beats Chop Shop (9:30pm)

Tune in at deepbedradio.org and head to the facebook page here for news and updates


STROUD LOCKDOWN RADIO

Friday
George in the Jungle (6pm) / HarryG (8pm) / Tek Gremlin (10pm) / GorgeCore (12am) / Henry West (1am)
Saturday
Andy Edwards (10am) / Nick the Jazz (12pm) / Mendoza (2pm) / Juggla (4pm) / Dubbu (6pm) / Fidel Cutstro (8pm) / CrookedStylus (10pm)
Sunday
Raggamuffin (12pm) / The High Priest (2pm) / HarryG (4pm) / Piriquito (5pm) / Dubbu (6pm) / JagP (7pm) / CrookedStylus (9pm)

Follow facebook.com/stroudlockdownradio for updates and links to Mixlr


THE THUNDER MUTTERS

Episode 3
The Thunder Mutters is a poetry and music podcast presented by Adam Horovitz and Becky Dellow. Episode 3 is available now returning with John Clare's Shepherd's Calendar for May. It's a bumper show - the May section of the poem is one of the longer sections in the sequence, so that means extra tunes too. Fortunately Clare had collected a lot of tunes related to May, so Becky had an embarrassment of riches to choose from. It’s available on Spotify and all good podcast apps if you'd like to subscribe. If you're enjoying the show, and would like to help keep it going, do consider dropping a few pesos in the Ko-fi pot here. Catch up on all the previous episodes here and follow the Thunder Mutters on facebook here for news and updates

Stroud Weekend Lockdown Listings Fri 8th - Sun 10th May

A weekly guide to radio stations, broadcasts, YouTube channels, Zoom parties and more coming out of the five valleys…

DEEPBED RADIO

Friday
Motz Workman & Joe Tate Show (3:30pm) / Jazz Stroud Vinyl Connection (5pm) / Moina Moin (6:30pm) / Mr Mulatto - Situationism (8pm) / Komodo & Friends (10pm)
Saturday
10David (10:30am) / Verity Monroe (12pm) / Isobel Ann Joy Harper - Eat my Funk (1:30pm) / Sarah Phaedre Watson SPW African Express (2:30pm) / The High Priest (4pm) Mahon Music (6pm) / Yogi Beats Chop Shop (7:30pm) / Jasper Kirton (8pm) / Griz-O Official - Bars Beats & Bears (9pm) / DeeJay Fade - Late Manoeuvres (11pm)
Sunday
Hidden Notes (9:30am) / Simon McCorry (11am) / Will Cookson Sound on Film (12pm) / Yoshino Yama (1pm)/ Katy J Pearson (2pm) / Beth Hopkins & Jelly Cleaver - We call it Yazz (2:30pm) / Dom Richardson (3:30pm) / ZuZu (5:30pm) / CIL (7:30pm) / Moina Moin (8:30pm) / Aletta Dina (10pm)
Tune in at deepbedradio.org and head to the fb event page here for news and updates


GOOD ON PAPER TV

Friday: Sound Records Sessions - Monobrow pt.7
Tom Monobrow - one half of Stroud based record shop Sound Records - returns for another uplifting mix to ease isolation...
Saturday: Stay Strong Stroud - Dubbu pt VII
45 minutes of 45’s! Dubbu returns for another uplifting set of some of his favourite records to soundtrack your Saturday night house party.

Watch the premieres over on the YouTube channel at 8pm, join the online chat as you watch/throw some shapes with others in the comfort/safety of your own kitchen/lounge/bedroom...Click here for the YouTube premiere link and goodonpaper.info/good-on-paper-tv



STROUD LOCKDOWN RADIO

Friday
George in the Jungle (6pm) / HarryG (8pm) / Tek Gremlin (10pm) / George in the Jungle (12am)
Saturday
Andy Edwards (10am) / Nick the Jazz (12pm) / Mendoza (2pm) / Juggla (4pm) / Dubbu (6pm) / Fidel Cutstro (8pm) / CrookedStylus (10pm)
Sunday
Raggamuffin (12pm) / The High Priest (2pm) / Dubbu (4pm) / HarryG (5pm) / Piriquito (6pm) / Jag (7pm) / CrookedStylus (9pm)

Follow facebook.com/stroudlockdownradio for updates and links to Mixlr

Stroud Weekend Lockdown Listings Fri 1st - Sun 3rd May

A weekly guide to radio stations, broadcasts, YouTube channels, Zoom parties and more coming out of the five valleys…

DEEPBED RADIO
Friday

Jazz Stroud Vinyl Connection (5pm) / Moina Moin (6pm) Mr Mulatto - Situationism (8pm) / Komodo and Friends (10pm)
Saturday
Andreas Steuck - Deep Listening (11:30am) / Komodo & Friends (12:30pm) / Aletta Dino (1:30pm) / SPW (2:30pm) / The High Priest (4pm) / Dom Richardson (6pm) / 10David (7:30pm) / Griz-O - Bars Beats and Bears ( 9:30pm) / DeeJayFade - Late Manoeuvres (11pm) / Shortback (12am)
Sunday
Hidden Notes (9:30am) / Ruby Kester - Sunday Shorts (11am) / Katy J Pearson (11:15am) / Megan Crua - Genuine Psychic Readings (11:45am) / Sound On Film (12pm) / Yoshino (1pm) / Sonic Stew (2pm) / Mermaid Chunky Show (3pm) / Hafsa (5pm) / ZuZu (6pm) / Grove (8pm) / Coumba (9pm)

Tune in at deepbedradio.org and head to the fb event page here for news and updates


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GOOD ON PAPER TV
Friday: Sound Records Sessions - Monobrow pt.6
Tom Monobrow - one half of Stroud based record shop Sound Records - returns for another uplifting mix to ease isolation...Watch the premiere over on the YouTube channel at 8pm, join the online chat as you watch/throw some shapes with others in the comfort/safety of your own kitchen/lounge/bedroom...

Click here for the YouTube premiere link and goodonpaper.info/good-on-paper-tv


STROUD LOCKDOWN RADIO
Friday

Guest Spot (6pm) / Harry G (8pm) /Tek Gremlin (10pm) / G-with-E (12am)
Saturday
Andy Edwards (10am) / Nick the Jazz (12pm) / Mendoza (2pm) / Dubbu (4pm) / Juggla (6pm) / Fidel Cutstro (8pm) / CrookedStylus (10pm)
Sunday
Raggamuffin (12pm) / The High Priest (2pm) / Dubbu (4pm) / Piriquito (6pm) / Jag (7pm) / CrookedStylus (9pm)

Follow facebook.com/stroudlockdownradio for updates and links to Mixlr


THE THUNDER MUTTERS
Episode 1 + 2

The Thunder Mutters is a poetry and music podcast presented by Adam Horovitz and Becky Dellow. Catch up on the last two episodes here and follow them on facebook here for news and updates

Fidel Cutstro

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By Tom Berry

Stroud is fundamentally a rural place. Certain types of music therefore naturally thrive here – folk, singer-songwriters, ethereal electronica and laid back reggae are natural bedfellows of our sleepy but beautiful town. However, urban music too can find a home. Our own Block Party and others have proved that there is a real appetite in these valleys for breaks, hip hop, drum n’ bass and grime and a number of local artists are tapping into these seams.

One such musician and beatmaker is Fidel Cutstro. Since being introduced to Hip-Hop at a young but impressionable age, he has always been about the music. He moved from this area to the musical hotspot of Brighton, where he quickly started making a name for himself with razor sharp scratch skills and deft mixing. Linking up with DJ Ideal he formed The Unemployed Superheroes before joining critically acclaimed scratch band Surgical Cuts who went on to perform across the UK and Europe.

He recently moved back to the five valleys honing his production skills and Dj-ing and has recently released his debut solo mixtape Talking In Drums. Its a great listen, obvious influences are DJ Shadow and J Dilla but it also clearly tells the story of Cutstro himself and his own musical journey. I recently caught up with him to find out more about its making…

So you moved to Stroud from Brighton about a year ago - how's it going?
Yeah that's right, everything's good! I consider myself lucky to be living here now, especially with all the madness which is currently going on. If I had still been in Brighton I would have been stuck in a 5th floor flat with two small children climbing the walls, so I really feel for people in that situation right now. It took a bit of adjusting to a slower pace of life, but I'm originally from the area so it wasn't too much of a readjustment.

How's lockdown been so far? Is it an opportunity for creativity?
It's been ok... obviously a bit weird. It's been quite nice everything slowing down but I do feel for people with businesses and for those whose livelihoods are threatened. I'm more concerned about what happens after lockdown how will the economy be affected and also hoping that it will not be a excuse for governments to implement fascist behaviour and clamp downs on our civil liberties. Creativity wise I've definitely had a spark but I think that may be due to the fact I only just got my equipment and records out of storage after about 8 months! I do think in the coming weeks and months we will see and hear some great music born out this situation…

What's your motivation for making music?
To keep me sane! I just do it because I love it.

For those who've not heard you, how would you describe your music?
Sample based instrumental music. Or the Bronx on angel dust.

Tell us about your process for making a track…
It's a bit like food. I go digging which is the farming, chopping up samples which is the prep, making the beat is the cooking and finally people listening to it is the eating.

What kit do you use?
The MPC Controller and turntables are the main hub of the lab. Everything gets started on there, then I track to Logic so I can mix and edit more, add scratches etc. I also have a few old drum machines which I use, space and echo... Everything goes through a desk. I like old hardware, I've made tracks just using the computer placing bits around but I like the hands on approach of bashing the pads.

How do you go about finding samples?
Pretty much everything I sample comes off vinyl, it's very rare if I get something off YouTube and if I do it's an acapella I don’t have or some dialogue, but generally I try to sample straight off the record straight into the MPC.

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Do you still dig? What are your hotspots?
Yeah digging for records is an integral part of how I make music. That's where I get all my samples from. When I lived in Brighton I used to go out at least 3-4 times a week and I did that for at least 22 years so I've built up a good library of samples. Now my responsibilities mean I can't go out like I used to, I don't need to be out as much. I like charity shops but they're not like they used to be, a lot more people are on it, but I still can't walk past one without going in. Any bric a brak shops, car boots, junk shops etc....Shop wise, Rarekind records in Brighton and of course Sound Records and Trading Post in Stroud.

Given the title of the album I'm guessing drums are a key passion? Have you ever played?
Nah never played the drums, I stick to drum machines! Drums and breakbeats are the foundations of hip hop so it's just a reference to that.

How does production differ from DJing in terms of satisfaction?
With production you have total artistic control. You can make whatever you want, take your time, an empty palette. With DJing you sometimes have to play some bits you might not particularly want to, but I guess DJing is more of instant satisfaction and buzz.

Tell me about the track Sunday Morning at Bhasvic, it sounds intriguing!
There was a car boot that used to take place every Sunday in the car park of Bhasvic College in Brighton. I went one morning copped a few records and came home and made the track with the records I bought that. I think that it was made out of about 5 different records.

Cold Maxxxin has a real jazz feel - is this a genre you have an affinity for?
Yeah for real, scratching and jazz have a lot of similarities, a lot of improvisation, I like the freedom of jazz.

What’s next?
I’ve just started working on an EP with DJ Foly, so that will be out at some point. Also I’m really looking forward to starting a radio show on Gloucester 96.6FM alongside Big Tunes D, Dubbu and Scott Ski Love. It's gonna be called the throwdown, so look out for that!

Any parting words of wisdom?
Don't be afraid to speak your voice and question authority…

Talking In Drums is available now as a 14 track digital album and limited edition cassette via bandcamp here
You can also catch Fidel Cutstro on the recently launched Stroud Lockdown Radio and follow him on facebook here for further news and info.

Tom Berry is a record shop proprietor, DJ and Minnie Riperton obsessive. He can be found propping up the counter at Sound Records, 31 High St, Stroud, GL5 1AJ.





















Stroud Weekend Lockdown Listings 24th - 26th April

A weekly guide to radio stations, broadcasts, YouTube channels, Zoom parties and more coming out of the five valleys…

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DEEPBED RADIO
Friday

5pm Jazz Stroud Vinyl Connection / 6pm Moina Moin / 8pm Mr Mulatto - Stuationism
Saturday
12pm Sunkan Foal Mix / 2.30pm The High Priest Vinyl Orgy / 4.30 Verity Monroe / 6pm Mahon
7.30pm 10David / 9.30 Griz-O Bars Beats & Bears / 11pm Aiden
Sunday
9.30am Hidden Notes / 11am Simon McCorry Border Lands / 12pm Sound on Film / 1pm SPW - African Express
2pm Rowen / 3pm Zuzu / 5pm Comba / 8pm Jasper Kirton / 10pm Moina Moin

Tune in at deepbedradio.org follow on facebook here

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GOOD ON PAPER TV
Friday
8pm Sound Records Sessions - Monobrow pt.5
Saturday
8pm 80s House Party - Stroud District Foodbank Fundraiser
Sunday
12pm Cabin Fever Session - Mendoza ep.4

Subscribe to the YouTube channel here visit goodonpaper.info/events + goodonpaper.info/good-on-paper-tv

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STROUD LOCKDOWN RADIO
Saturday
12pm Andy Edwards: Soul / 2pm Nick the Jazz: World / 4pm Dubbu: HipHop / 6pm Juggla: Reggae / 8pm Fidel Cutstro: Breaks / 10pm Crooked Stylus: Psych / 12am Tek Gremlin: Dub
Sunday
12pm Raggamuffin: Reggae / 2pm The High Priest: Jazz / 4pm Dubbu: Soul RnB / 6pm Piriquito: Brazil / 7pm Scott Graff

Follow facebook.com/stroudlockdownradio for updates and links to Mixlr


Stroud Playlist

A thirty four track playlist ft. current (and previous) Stroud dwelling solo artists and bands covering alt-folk, folk, ambient, classical, indie, electronica, pop, blues, swamp-blues, punk, post-punk, rock, post-rock- every genre under the sun…

We and our partners use cookies to personalize your experience, to show you ads based on your interests, and for measurement and analytics purposes. By using our website and our services, you agree to our use of cookies as described in our Cookie Policy.

Tracklist:

1. Low Chimes: Sleepwalking 2. Katy J Pearson: Tonight 3. Mesadorm: Easy 4. Emily Barker and the Red Clay Halo: Nostalgia (Wallander version) 5. Pete Roe: Counting Backwards Slowly 6. Jacob and Drinkwater: There's A Shadow On the Sun 7. Orbury Common: Ecto's Plasm 8. Body Clocks: Still Life 9. Da Rico: Coyote 10. Near Future: Ideal Home 11. Emily Hall: Mantra 12. Clare Hammond: Impromptu No.3 in G-Flat Major, Op.90, D88913. Diana Yukawa: Home 14. Simon McCorry: Whisperer 15. Andrew Heath: A Break In the Clouds 16. Phonsonic: 4th June 17. Leveret: The Wounded Hazzar 18. Patsy Gamble: Reflection 19. Andy Nowak Trio: Make Me A Pallet On Your Floor 20. Milk Teeth: Better 21. Blurt: The Fish Needs A Bike 22. The Red Propellers: Black Glove White Dove 23. Blancmange: Distant Storm 24. The Pirate Ship Quintet: Companion (ft. Emily Barker, Blythe Pepino, Emily Hall and the Stroud Fringe Choir) 25. Ardyn: Universe 26. Grasscourt: Stones Upon My Chest 27. Faeland: All My Swim 28. Hattie Briggs: Lost and Found 29. Sam Sweeney: Maid of the Mill 30. Jaz Delorian: Rain On A Sunday 31. Thee Ones: 77a 32. The Achievers: Careful Sabrina 33. Lensmen: Folded Heart 34. Russian Flying Squirrel: Let the People Say

From the Archives: Boss Morris

Image: Adam Hinks and James Kriszyk

Image: Adam Hinks and James Kriszyk

By Lara Shingles
Issue 22, January 2017

Morris dancing has long been regarded as the preserve of elderly bearded men loudly banging sticks outside country pubs. But the image of Morris dancing is undergoing a radical change, with an influx of female sides transforming its traditionally male membership. Among them is Boss Morris, an all-female contemporary Morris dancing side based in Stroud.

Boss Morris sprung out of the five valleys of Stroud in September 2015. Its members all met through their day jobs as artists and crafters. Their feisty attitude and playful choreography sheds a new light on the wonderful world of Morris. The group dances Cotswold Morris, an age-old regional version of the Morris, but its repertoire also includes a local broom dance and a 16th century fighting dance.

“The possibilities of what we can do with Morris and where we can take it are endless,” says Boss Morris member Rhia Davenport. “The thing we enjoy the most is the variation, adding our own twists and participating in different events.”

The group’s creativity shines through not only in its choreography but also in its costumes. Gold two pieces with embroidered logos, tennis ball cloth ponchos, bright blue socks, flower crowns (and the list goes on) – Boss Morris’ dazzling attire compliments its members’ vibrant personalities and adds yet another twist on the tradition. Rhia says the group’s costumes are definitely a collaboration: “We have a very skilled seamstress who has been generous enough with her time to knock up our wonderful kit. Everyone else pitches in when they can to embellish and slap a bit of glitz about.” With their signature gold costumes, she reveals the group drew on Stroud’s cloth making and dying history by using a simple printed symbol of the red sheets that were laid out to dry on the hills of the valleys.

Since the group’s inception, it has continued to jingle up and down the country. Last year, they charmed audiences at Port Eliot Festival in Cornwall and Christie’s Lates Festival of Folk in London. They also performed on stage at the Royal Albert Hall alongside the likes of critically acclaimed Glaswegian band Belle and Sebastian and psych folk phenomenon Trembling Bells. Working with Trembling Bells was especially fun for Boss Morris, adds Rhia: “They supported us from really early on in the development of our side. Performing with them, particularly making up our own dance specifically designed to work with one of their songs, was ace.” Boss Morris has made a handful of appearances at local events over the last year-and-a-bit too, including the Stroud Summer Solstice and Stroud Goodwill Evening. “We really enjoy the local gigs in and around Stroud just as much as the higher profile gigs,” . In fact, in 2017, Stroudies could be seeing a lot more of the troupe as it wants to do more community based performances. They are also hoping to expand in the year-ahead by recruiting new female members with a similarly feisty attitude, creative flare and passion for Morris, and to continue giving Morris men a run for their money! Rhia says the group have plans to start playing around with its music and to design some new hopping tracks. It would also like to start up some of its own modern traditions.

If you’d like to watch Boss Morris in action, their next performance will be at Stroud Wassail Festival, which will return on Friday 13th and Saturday 14th of this month. “We’re all really excited about the Wassail. It’ll be the first dance out for some of our new girls and it’s great to see so many other sides performing together,” says Rhia. “It’s also exciting due to our new kit ideas currently taking shape….”

Billed as a ‘celebration of winter folk traditions’, this year’s festival boasts a fun-filled line-up featuring games, plays and performances by local Morris dancers and mummers as well as two family-friendly workshops on the art of rag coats and wassail songs.

The festivities will begin with mummers and wassailing at the Prince Albert on Friday 13th. On Saturday 14th, a great gathering of mummers and Morris dancers, including Boss Morris, Clocs Canton, Fox’s Morris and the Chippenham Morris Men, will be singing and dancing in the streets of Stroud from 10am. There will also be a procession at 12pm, followed by traditional wassailing at Museum in the Park and 12th Night revels in the evening.

A medieval cabaret party of sorts, the 12th Night revels will be presided over by The Chancellor and the Lord of Misrule. The evening will include the election of King Bean and Queen Pea, the Wassail Bowl, The Boars Head Carol and ceilidh dancing for all, among other entertainment.

Guests are encouraged to come in costume, disguise and masks. There will be prizes for the best dressed so if you have a suitable party piece, bring it!

For further info or to get in touch with Boss Morris go to bossmorris.com and visit stroudwassail.com and the music listings for news about this year’s Stroud Wassail festival.

Lara Shingles is a freelance writer with a keen interest in art, lifestyle and culture. Since graduating with a BA Hons in Magazine Journalism, she has written for SoGlos, Inkygoodness and a collection of popular blogs. She also works part-time as an editorial assistant for Stroud-based creative solutions company Carmar Media @larashingles

UPDATE! On Monday 13th April we will be screening Rites - a Boss Morris short film directed by Rhia Davenport with sound by Ed Davenport over on our YouTube channel. Click here to see the live premiere at 8pm.

Still from Rites

Still from Rites


As well as our recent project (Good On Paper TV) following Good On Paper’s current hiatus over the next few month’s we will be putting up articles from our archives for our readers to easily access and share…Community and culture can carry on in different ways. For now….



Stroud Lockdown Listening...

A guide to radio stations, broadcasts, YouTube channels, Zoom parties and more coming out of the five valleys…

DEEPBED RADIO

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A new project from the SVA, Deepbed Radio profiles DJs and audio projects with roots or threads to artist led hubs in Stroud and Gloucester featuring broadcasts and playlists by Jazz Stroud, Moina Moin, SPW, Situation Sounds, Hidden Notes Festival, Komodo and Friends and more tba…
deepbedradio.org

GOOD ON PAPER TV

Self-recorded-sessions premiered on the Good On Paper YouTube channel ft. regular weekend DJ sets by Neil ‘Dubbu’ Wilson, Tom Monobrow (Sound Records), Mendoza and Pavinyl plus local artists, musicians and filmmakers.
goodonpaper.info/good-on-paper-tv

ISOLATION ROOM

A response to the coronavirus crisis from longtime Sigur Rós co-manager John Best and sound designer David Sheppard, Isolation Room is a community space for artists around the world to share live or pre-recorded work from quarantine, all mixed in binaural audio for maximum listening experience….
facebook.com/donewithless

STROUD GOT SOUL

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DJ Clay Groovara presents Stroud Got Soul every Saturday at 8pm…Get dressed up to get down with a Zoom house party.
facebook.com/thepeoplesrepublicofstroud

STROUD LOCKDOWN RADIO

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Launched on Sat 11th April via Mixlr featuring sets by the High Priest, Dubbu, DJ Juggla, Fidel Cutstro and Threebagsfull…
facebook.com/stroudlockdownradio





I, The Lion: Ghost

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Following last year’s epic track Slaves, today sees the release of Gloucestershire based post-punk trio I, The Lion’s brand new single Ghost. “It's a pretty personal one for us and a feeling shared by so many people out there all about working so hard for something, and still be overlooked when it counts. So we vented that through riffs…” says the bands Stroud dwelling drummer Eddie Evans

Since their inception in 2011 the band have gained a huge following with regular concerts and tours across the UK sharing stages with the likes of Three Trapped Tigers, Gallows and DZ Deathrays.

Ghost is another blistering offering by the group - pounding drums, huge riffs and an anthemic chorus - something they seem to effortlessly deliver with each release…

For news and updates follow the band on facebook here

From the Archives: Emily Barker

Emily Barker.jpg

By Amy Fleming
From Issue 27, June 2017

Emily Barker's shows have become increasingly Tennessee tinged in recent years. 2016 saw the Stroud-based Australian musician bring her country trio Applewood Road home for three beautiful sets. Two were at the Prince Albert, and the third at St Laurence's church - a setting that rendered the three-part harmonies of Barker and her Nashville-dwelling band-mates Amy Speace and Amber Rubarth all the more heavenly.

If you caught her solo show at the Albert last October, you'll have heard her duet with the lovable folk-punk rocker Austin Lucas, who she'd prised away from Nashville for a European tour. And all the while, she was getting ready to release her Memphis soul album, Sweet Kind of Blue, which was recorded at the legendary Sam Phillips Recording Service - the vast studio Phillips designed following his success producing Elvis, Johnny Cash, Howlin' Wolf and many more. The album is finally out this month, and Barker's new sound, complete with Al Greene's horn section, is already a hit with the critics.

Barker's first visit to a hallowed old American studio was across the state line from Tennessee, in Alabama. When visiting Nashville a few years ago, she recalls, "I drove down to Muscle Shoals and went to Fame studios... and it was just amazing. Aretha Franklin is one of my inspirations and she recorded there, and Etta James, so many legends and seeing this old equipment..." It was love at first sight.

As luck would have it, when considering producers for the new record, she was introduced to the Grammy-winning young Memphian sound engineer and producer Matt Ross-Spang. He cut his teeth at the late Sam Phillips' original shop-front studio, Sun, and had recently made his base at Sam Phillips Recording Service. "In America, we don't have ancient churches and castles like you do in Britain," says Ross-Spang, "but we have studios like this that to me are our version of those churches and castles. This place is just like walking into Phillips' brain."

And so last June, Barker headed to Phillips' Tennessee cathedral of sound, with little more than her beautiful 1937 Gibson acoustic guitar and a sheaf of new songs. Invited along for the ride, I arrive just as Barker pulls in for her first day of sessions. "I can't believe it's today - I'm so excited!" she says, smiling broadly under the warm, Southern sun. Sam Phillips' son Jerry, and granddaughter, Halley have swung by to welcome Barker. Unlike Sun, and Stax Records across town (Otis Redding, Booker T and the MGs and Isaac Hayes), this studio hasn't been made into a museum. The tapes have continued to roll here since 1960, which makes the private tour all the more spine tingling. Upstairs there's a tiny bar room with spirographic wallpaper, an atomic light and Johnny Cash's cigarette burns on the Formica counter. "Nothing in here has changed," says Halley. "Elvis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, uhuh, they'd all come and sit here and drink, same stools and everything. Crazy huh?" The white furnishings and red shag carpet in Sam's old office still look brand new, and the sofa that sits outside it is off being restored by rock god and former upholsterer, Jack White.

Downstairs in Studio A, a group of Memphis' finest musicians (many of whom played on Cat Power's record, the Greatest) have assembled. The studio is largely as it was when the Yardbirds recorded Train Kept A Rollin there in the early '60s. There's the same old Hammond organ, Jerry Lee Lewis' session piano and the original cigarette machine (just 75 Cents a pack).

Ross-Spang is riding high after his success with Something More than Free by Jason Isbell (who hails from Muscle Shoals and is a former member of Drive By Truckers) and Midwest Farmer's Daughter, the breakthrough album from outlaw country singer Margo Price. When he is done arranging microphones and cables he declares: "Hot diggety dang we just about ready."

Each take is counted in by drummer Steve Potts, who has played with Booker T and the MGs and Neil Young. "No one else drums like him," says Ross-Spang. "He's so laid back that it makes the whole song sway in this beautiful way. You just can't teach that." Fittingly, Potts' count in is the first thing you hear on the finished album, having been kept on the title track.

Over the coming days, as the band works through Barker's 11 songs, the mutual respect in the room swells to bursting point. Guitarist Dave Cousar tells Barker a few songs in: "your voice is like an iceberg," because every day he hears her do something new and surprising. By day four it feels like they've all known each other for years. When they've found their collective groove for the new song, If We Forget to Dance, Ross-Spang can't tear himself away from the studio floor. "This is some baby-making music," he says, and starts adding his own percussion, drumming the back of a guitar. At some point, Barker struts out of her vocal booth to put lipstick on the bassist, Dave Smith. And the road-trip song Sunrise ends in a spontaneous ten-minute jam, with Barker on mouthorgan.

Low lighting sets the mood for other tracks, and emotions flow accordingly. During a break from No. 5 Hurricane (which Couser describes thusly: "two words: Quentin. Tarantino.") Barker breathes: "I was getting tingly again." To which Rick Steff, on keys responds, "I was tearing up there for a minute."

"All the session guys," Ross-Spang tells me when the record's finished, "it wasn't just a normal session for them. They've all been calling me and texting me about just how wonderful it was for them. A really great moment I think for all of us."

A Sweet Kind of Blue is out now, available on-line and from all good independent records stores. Visit emilybarker.com for further info.

Amy Fleming is a writer and editor for the Guardian, who also contributes to Intelligent Life, the FT, Vogue, Newsweek, New Scientist and more.


As well as our recent project (Good On Paper TV) following Good On Paper’s current hiatus over the next few month’s we will be putting up articles from our archives for our readers to easily access and share…Community and culture can carry on in different ways. For now….



Stroud on Bandcamp

UPDATE! Following their initiative last month Bandcamp are again waving their fees to support artists this Friday 1st May from 9am…We’ve also added a few more artists to this list!

From today (Friday 20th March) until midnight Bandcamp are waving their fees to support artists during the global COVID-19 pandemic which has seen venues closing and tours cancelled both locally and across the world.

We’ve put together a list below of Stroud dwelling musicians’ bandcamp pages and strongly recommend that you support (and listen) to them!

BLANCMANGE
blancmangemusic.bandcamp.com

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LUKAS DRINKWATER

lukasdrinkwater.bandcamp.com

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EMILY HALL

emilyhall.bandcamp.com

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LITTLE METROPOLIS

littlemetropolis.bandcamp.com

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ELVIS MCGONAGALL AND HIS RESURRECTORS
elvismcgonagallandhisresurrectors.bandcamp.com/releases

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ORBURY COMMON
orburycommon.bandcamp.com

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THE PIRATE SHIP QUINTET
thepirateshipquintet.bandcamp.com

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SAM SWEENEY
samsweeney.bandcamp.com

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Music Listings: Weds 11th - Sun 15th March

Don Letts, The Sub Rooms, Sat 14th

Don Letts, The Sub Rooms, Sat 14th


ALE HOUSE
Fri 13th Limelight

Classic and progressive covers. 8:30pm Free


THE CROWN AND SCEPTRE
Thurs 12th BYO Vinyl

Bring your own vinyl! LP’s and singles and the Sceptre will play them…8:30pm Free
Fri 13th Howlin Mat
Flaming hot blues guitar…8:30pm Free
crownandsceptrestroud.com


Biscuithead and the Biscuit Badgers, The Prince Albert, Sat 14th

Biscuithead and the Biscuit Badgers, The Prince Albert, Sat 14th

THE PRINCE ALBERT
Fri 13th The Magpies

The Magpies formed in their hometown of York, initially a duo project between Bella Gaffney and Polly Bolton, until the line-up expanded to a quartet joining forces with acclaimed cellist Sarah Smout and fiddle ace Holly Brandon. They each draw on their transatlantic influences to create a unique blend of Celtic and bluegrass folk, transporting audiences to distant lands and capturing imaginations with their enthralling live show. 9pm Free
Sat 14th Biscuit Head and the Biscuit Badgers
Faster than a speeding puffin, more chocolatey than a chocolate labrador, descending from apes (if they are tall enough) Biscuithead and the Biscuit Badgers release your ears to play backgammon undisturbed. Tuba, piano, drums, ukulele, tickling and rubbing your senses into a fun stew. Enjoy yourselves, if you can; they are greater than you think. 9:30pm Free
Sun 15th Katey Brooks
With her new album Revolute newly released, the mercurial songstress is more determined than ever to do things her own way. Revolute isn’t just an album – it’s an awakening for both artist and listener. The wider music scene will be watching the rise of this once-a-generation talent. 8:30pm £12 from ticketweb.co.uk
theprincealbertstroud.co.uk


STROUD BREWERY
Thurs 12th Bagelites

Local folk talent playing traditional English folk and gypsy tunes…All acoustic, the traditional way! 8pm Free
Sat 14th The Whiteshillbillies
The Whiteshillbilles return to the Brewery for another night of high-energy bluegrass, country and rock'n roll. This six piece enjoy their music and as we know from the last time they played here, the audience certainly does too. 8pm Free
stroudbrewery.co.uk


Steve Davis and Kavus Torabi, The Sub Rooms, Fri 13th

Steve Davis and Kavus Torabi, The Sub Rooms, Fri 13th

THE SUB ROOMS
Fri 13th Steve Davis and Kavus Torabi

World Snooker Champion Steve Davis comes to Stroud for a 2.5 hour DJ set! Steve will be playing an eclectic blend of psychedelia and techno assisted by his DJ partner Kavus Torabi from Gong. “One of the joys of the last few years in the music industry has been the rise and rise of Steve Davis as one of the most well-loved and respected DJs and radio hosts in the country.” Drowned in Sound 9pm £11.50-£13.50
Sat 14th Trading Post Presents: Don Letts
Don Letts’ reputation has been firmly established in both the film and music world by a substantial body of work from the late 70’s through the 80’s, 90’s and well into the millennium. In 2003 he won a Grammy for his documentary ‘Westway To The World’. He came to notoriety in the late 70’s as the DJ that single handedly turned a whole generation of punks onto reggae. It was whilst as a DJ at the first punk club ‘The Roxy’ in 1977, that Don adopted the punk D.I.Y ethic and began to make his first film ‘The Punk Rock Movie’. Shot on Super-8mm, it is the only documentary on the U.K punk scene with Sex Pistols, The Clash and many others. 8pm £15.50
thesubrooms.co.uk


Yama Warashi, SVA Goods Shed, Sat 14th

Yama Warashi, SVA Goods Shed, Sat 14th

SVA
Weds 11th Funk-In Sessions

Best live Funk Jam in town ...FUNK Only...Nothing but the Funk! All are welcome to listen or perform! Every Wednesday night. 8pm £1otd (John Street)
Weds 11th Flamenco Workshop
Open it to anyone interested to learn about flamenco in general so anyone can join either clapping, playing cajon or singing. Contributions welcome. Every Weds (term time only) 7:30pm (John Street)
Thurs 12th Stroud Jazz Sessions: Dom Franks
This month Stroud Jazz Sessions presents Dom Franks as their jazz-smoking special guest!! With saccharine bebop licks edging into funky dives and samba sways, Dom is a jazz-fine sugar-fine saxophone hero from Cheltenham. With his 3rd album being pressed, come hear him effortlessly channel Strayhorn, Coltrane and Shorter. 8pm £5otd/£3musicians (John Street)
Fri 13th John St Social
Come and watch Izzy Martini turn those beans into creamy espresso martinis at the John Street Social. Happy hour specials from 6pm. Plus an eclectic vinyl and visual mix by guest DJs. 6pm
Sat 14th Round up #4: Yama Warashi
A new monthly event at The Goods Shed Round Up sees Bristol group Ishmael Ensemble team up with d&b audiotechnik for a unique 360 degree soundscape experience. Formed by Bristol-based Japanese artist Yoshino Shigihara, Yama Warashi create a dreamy evocative sound, inspired by Japanese folk, dance music, free jazz and African music with a slice of electric psychedelia. With a sound that is rooted in jazz Ishmael Ensemble combine brass, beats and a “swirling blizzard of electronics” (Clash) to create mesmerizing soundscapes. The brainchild of multi-instrumentalist & producer Pete Cunningham a.k.a. Ishmael, the band have quickly caught the attention of influential tastemakers such as Gilles Peterson, Tom Robinson and just about everyone else. 8pm £10-£20 (Goods Shed)
sva.org.uk


TRINITY ROOMS
Sat 14th Stroud Sacred Music Festival Presents: Susie Ro and Ravi Ji – Sound Journey
Join two talented world musicians for a deeply nourishing and uplifting evening of original heart songs, improvised creations, prayer and celebration! Delicious refreshments before and after by Juciful. 7pm £12adv from eventbrite.co.uk/£10concs/£15otd
sacredmusicfestival.org.uk


MINCHINHAMPTON COTSWOLD CLUB
Thurs 12th Minchinhampton Folk Club

Minchinhampton Folk Club meets every Thursday evening at the Minchinhampton Cotswold Club, 11 High Street, Minchinhampton. Folk, Country, Blues, pop, anything goes. Regular spotlights, guests and theme nights. Check website for up-to-date listings. 8pm £2 (donation)
minchfolkclub.org

CARPENTERS ARMS Miserden
Weds 11th Wildwood Jack

Wildwood Jack are a totally unique acoustic guitar and ukulele duo from Kent. Having sold their home in 2013 to hit the road and tour the world they bring a heart-warming and adventurous spirit to their music and to audiences wherever they play. Enjoy wonderful interplay between guitar and ukulele. 8pm Free
thecarps-miserden.co.uk


UNDER THE EDGE ARTS Wotton Under Edge
Fri 13th SCJC Jazz Jam

Bringing the benefit of jazz as an art form to the local community and to multiple levels of ability. All instruments/vocalists will be made welcome. If you can play the blues and want to have a crack at jazz – this is for you! If you want to come and just listen that is fine too. 8pm Free
Sat 14th The Charlton Blues Kings
A 5 piece rhythm 'n' blues band from Gloucestershire, the Blues Kings serve up an energetic mix of Jump & Swing Blues that will soon have you out of your seats and dancing the night away. 8pm £10.50/£8.50concs
utea.org.uk

Music Listings: Tues 3rd - Sun 8th March

Sefrial, The Prince Albert, Thurs 5th

Sefrial, The Prince Albert, Thurs 5th


ALE HOUSE
Fri 6th The Rockers

Authentic sounding rockabilly, dismantling and re-arranging some of the biggest chart-toppers and pop classics they could think of, stripping them down and hot-rodding them just as back yard mechanics did to '32 Fords in the 1950's. 8:30pm Free


THE CROWN AND SCEPTRE
Thurs 5th Open Mic Night

Hosted by Stroud’s own Americana troubadour the Rev. Stretch. All welcome! 8pm Free
crownandsceptrestroud.com


LITTLE VIC
Sun 8th Barny’s Live Music: Alden Patterson Dashwood

Monthly music night, special guest Alden Patterson Dashwood with MC Kieran Archer. Floor spots available! 7:15pm £4(suggested donation)
facebook.com/BarnysLiveMusic


Orphic, The Prince Albert, Sat 7th

Orphic, The Prince Albert, Sat 7th

THE PRINCE ALBERT
Thurs 5th Sefrial

With influences as diverse as John Zorn, Medeski Martin and Wood, and Tin Hat, Sefrial is the brain-child of rising star Sophie Stockham. With a saxophone-heavy front line featuring the energy and lyricism of Sophie's alto, complemented by the unmistakeable sound and brilliance of Jake McMurchie on tenor, groove and invention is provided by the chief composer Matt Brown on drums, under-pinned by the warm sound of Greg Cordez on bass. The band is completed by the distinctive Joe Wilkins on guitar, who blends the blues and energy of Jimi Hendrix with the subtlety of Bill Frisell or Marc Ribot. 8:45pm Free
Sat 7th Orphic
New acoustic jazz quartet based in Bristol, UK. Includes members of Sefrial, Get The Blessing, Dakhla Brass, Modulus III, We Are Leif. Playing tunes by the likes of Johnny Dyani, Joshua Redman, Thelonious Monk and the Art Ensemble of Chicago. 9pm Free
theprincealbertstroud.co.uk


Thee Ones, Stroud Brewery, Fri 6th

Thee Ones, Stroud Brewery, Fri 6th

STROUD BREWERY
Tues 3rd Open Mic Night

Stroud Brewery’s weekly open mic night. Poets, comedians, jugglers, ventriloquists, mimes, magicians and (statistically) musicians are welcome to take the stage! 15 - 20 minute sets depending on time. If you're not a performer then clap loudly, sing along, laugh at the jokes and have a blooming good time. Family friendly(ish). 7:30pm Free
Fri 6th Thee Ones
Legendary Stroud favourites Thee Ones play in Stroud Brewery’s balcony bar, playing original soul, jazz, R&B and 60s hammond beats. This energetic live band has been known to whip crowds into a serious party with their Latin rhythms and incredible dance moves...Not to be missed! 7:30pm Free
Sat 7th Bob Porter Project
Stroud based Americana group - a fine blend of mellow Alt Country and gritty Roots Rock…Often described as music with a ‘growl and twang’ the Project offer up a mix of originals and covers. 8pm Free
stroudbrewery.co.uk


The Rat Affair, SVA Goods Shed, Weds 4th

The Rat Affair, SVA Goods Shed, Weds 4th

SVA
Weds 4th Funk-In Sessions

Best live Funk Jam in town ...FUNK Only...Nothing but the Funk! All are welcome to listen or perform! Every Wednesday night. 8pm £1otd (John Street)
Weds 4th Flamenco Workshop
Open it to anyone interested to learn about flamenco in general so anyone can join either clapping, playing cajon or singing. Contributions welcome. Every Weds (term time only) 7:30pm (John Street)
Weds 4th The Rat Affair Presents: RAT
The Pied Piper of Hamelin reimagined through live music and shadow puppetry. Amidst a musical score that shifts between sensationally boisterous Eastern European folk and sparse reflective piano works, RAT tells the tale of a curious man who offers to rid a corrupt town in crisis by driving its vermin infestation away. It questions the very nature of theatre by removing speech from the narrative, choosing instead to adopt the use of exquisite puppetry and projection to present a powerful spectacle of light and sound. Suitable for audiences 10+ 7:30pm £7adv from SVA/£8.40(plus booking fee) online (Goods Shed)
Fri 6th John St Social
Come and watch Izzy Martini turn those beans into creamy espresso martinis at the John Street Social. Happy hour specials from 6pm. Plus an eclectic vinyl and visual mix by guest DJs. 6pm
sva.org.uk


MINCHINHAMPTON COTSWOLD CLUB
Thurs 5th Minchinhampton Folk Club

Minchinhampton Folk Club meets every Thursday evening at the Minchinhampton Cotswold Club, 11 High Street, Minchinhampton. Folk, Country, Blues, pop, anything goes. Regular spotlights, guests and theme nights. Check website for up-to-date listings. 8pm £2 (donation)
minchfolkclub.org


PREMA ARTS CENTRE Uley
Fri 6th Songwriters Circle w/ Greg Hancock, Alex Seel and Madeleine Harwood

Three prominent UK singer-songwriters take to the stage to share their compositions. Greg Hancock has a solid reputation as one of the UK's most original songwriters and skilful guitarists. Alex Seel's songs go right to the heart of the matter. Whether he's exploring themes of love, life or modern society, he weaves his deceptively gentle lyrics around subtle and sophisticated melodies and song structures. Madeleine Harwood impresses audiences with her beautiful and expressive voice and emotive song writing...7:30pm £12/£9concs/£10friends/£8concs/£16otd
prema.org.uk


CARPENTERS ARMS Miserden
Weds 4th Bill Taylor and Martin Vogwell

Bill Taylor will be joined by Folklaw's Martin Vogwell performing traditional and contemporary songs and ballads. Rich vocals and harmonies with guitar and mandolin accompaniments. 8pm Free
thecarps-miserden.co.uk


RSVP Bhangra, Under the Edges Arts, Sat 7th

RSVP Bhangra, Under the Edges Arts, Sat 7th

UNDER THE EDGE ARTS Wotton Under Edge
Sat 7th RSVP Bhangra

RSVP is spearheading the renaissance of live Bhangra in the UK. From massive stages at Glastonbury (12 years) and Womad (4 years), to concert venues across the UK and Europe, they're always guaranteed to get everyone dancing. 8pm £10.50/£9.50concs
utea.org.uk