Events on Friday 20th March
“This month Hellfire Video Club is diving headfirst into the beautifully comforting waters of the 1980's, with a thematically-overloaded double bill of"Night of the... " movies. Main feature is the grossly under-heralded"NIGHT OF THE CREEPS" (Fred Dekker, 1986), where Tom Atkins investigates some grisly goings on involving brain-eating alien parasites and horny teenagers. "Thrill me! " This cheeky gem delivers everything you could possibly want from a genre drive-in flick, including a perfect tagline: "The good news is your dates are here. The bad news is ...they're dead" !!!”
From:
Hellfire Video Club
“The Supers are a superb, five-piece funk and soul band who cover hit classics to a high standard. Their repertoire covers everything from 50s favourites to modern day No1s, including fantastic names such as James Brown, Aretha Franklin, The Killers and Pharrell Williams, so there is something to get everyone's juices flowing!”
From:
The Supers At The Steam Crane
“Dunblane born troubadour Aaron Fyfe is a 26 year-old singer-songwriter (and skateboarder-surfer) currently on his own never-ending'Grass Routes Tour' in a beat up customized camper van playing wherever he can, connecting with real fans of real music.”
From:
Aaron Fyfe + Emily Teague
“Few post-Baroque Passion settings can be said to reach the heights of Bach's masterpieces, the St Matthew and St John Passions, but the'Passio' of Estonian composer Arvo Part is an extraordinary work that undoubtedly ranks as one of the greatest composed in recent times. Against a slow moving tide of hypnotic musical undulations the suffering at the heart of the Easter story gradually unfolds, connecting with the listener in an intensely powerful way. Performed in the stillness and contemplative atmosphere of St George's this promises to be a profoundly moving and affecting experience.”
From:
A Late Night Passion
“Jim Evans is a folk singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist who, with a lyrical approach to the genre, draws in elements from a vast scope of roots music. He has firmly set up camp in a tradition of songwriters who discover, borrow and then take the genre to a new place, often with vivid imagery and the British disposition at its centre.”
From:
Jim Evans And Jack Old Dog