Events on Friday 13th July
“Join us at The Robin Hood for the launch of our newest pop-up kitchen, Uncle Ho's Vietnamese! Starting at 12pm and cooking up a storm throughout the day and into the night Uncle Ho will be serving his delicious Vietnamese street food. Alongside your panko prawns and house loaded fries you will be able to enjoy a pint or two of fine ale from our friends at Electric Bear brewery. Taking over our 5 keg lines and our 6 cask hand-pulls, Electric Bear will be providing us with their newest and tastiest brews - that's 11 fantastic beers available for you to sample! It's shaping up to be quite the party. Open and serving food from 12pm 'tll 10pm.”
From:
Uncle Ho's Launch Night
“Combining dance, sound, and installation, Deepspace is a mesmerising, intimate performance that examines our curiosity for the unknown. Playing at the intersection of art and science, the body is taken to the extremities of remoteness and proximity, connectedness and isolation, certainty and uncertainty.”
From:
DANCE | Deepspace
“before pride comes shame: that mirrored terror of ourselves. for too long we suffered as our gaze was brought forever back onto that which is forbidden. but without our shame we can never find ourselves, our people. those who will drink the pus that oozes from our boils, lick the gangrene from our wounds and pick the nits from our fur. let us follow the trail of blood into the forest and be healed. let us shine a light into our darkest corners and make out with what we find there. let's welcome our most vulnerable selves, gimp-masked and butt-plugged, fursuited and piss-stained, onto the dancefloor. shame is where you have been hiding. and SHAME is where you'll find yerself.”
From:
SHAME
“Although born in Nebraska, Rouse moved to various cities throughout his childhood and subsequent musical career, driven at first by his father’s military career and later by his desire to take inspiration from different environments. He paid tribute to his birthplace on his 1998 debut, Dressed Up Like Nebraska, and explored the influence of his adopted home state, Tennessee, with 2005’s Nashville. Rouse later settled in Spain and explored the country’s musical traditions, although his songwriting continued to exhibit the summery, rootsy appeal of his earlier work.”
From:
Josh Rouse
“Hailed as “a talent to outrank Ryan Adams or Conor Oberst” (Uncut), veteran singer-songwriter Josh Rouse returns to Bristol for an evening of “persistently gorgeous” (Entertainment Weekly) Americana.”
From:
An Evening with Josh Rouse