The Sunday Telegraph

Ruling on ‘noisy’ venue sounds good for Holland

Entertaine­r succeeds in getting restrictio­ns on neighbour’s late-night bands and karaoke

- By Chris Dyer Steve Bird

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AS ONE of Britain’s best-loved pianists he has excelled at rock and roll, blues and jazz, while every new year he revels in keeping music fans awake well past midnight with his Hootenanny show.

A champion of live music he may be, but Jools Holland has found it difficult to be entertaine­d at his own Kent home. For a decade he has been locked in a dispute with Cooling Castle Barn, a wedding venue next to his manor house near Rochester in Kent.

In a diary he has listed the “noisy hubbubs” from wedding bands, string quartets and karaoke sessions that have kept him and his wife awake. He has even catalogued how he has found a solitary high-heeled shoe hurled over his garden wall, so far “unclaimed”.

Now he is celebratin­g after Medway council imposed stricter regulation­s over late-night live music at the barn.

Mr Holland, who also leads his own big-band, moved into the area in 2002 and had chosen the venue to marry his wife Christabel in 2005.

The 60-year-old musician complained to Medway council which asked him to keep a diary of the noise for three months last year. He was embroiled in talks with the owners ever since the business began to expand in 2007. His diary reveals that he was particular­ly horrified by karaoke versions of songs including Tom Jones’s Delilah, Marvin Gaye’s How Sweet it is (to be Loved by You), and Queen’s Don’t Stop Me Now, during which Mr Holland noted that “patron noise levels increased”. The musician called for a ban on percussion and brass instrument­s being used for live unamplifie­d music and restrictio­ns on deliveries. He added that conditions imposed as part of the venue’s licence were “ineffectiv­e” and asked for it to be closed four days every week.

At a council licensing meeting last week councillor­s ruled that barn bosses must introduce a noise management policy and set up a screened smoking area which is closed an hour before closing time and where drinks are prohibited.

Access to the garden must be closed by 10.30pm on Friday and Saturday nights, instead of its current 11pm, and 10pm for the rest of the week. Live music is still allowed until 11pm and up to 1am in December from Wednesday to Saturday.

Bosses at the 14th-century barn, which employs 80 staff and has held weddings for nearly 20 years, insist little has changed. Rebecca Collins, the general manager, said the new restrictio­ns were not a victory for Mr Holland, whom she accused of being “so sensitive that any noise is too much noise”.

“Common sense has prevailed and we are extremely happy with the outcome of the hearing,” she said, adding that hundreds of people depended on them for their livelihood­s.

 ??  ?? Jools Holland kept a noise diary with karaoke versions of Tom Jones among his pet hates at the venue next door
Jools Holland kept a noise diary with karaoke versions of Tom Jones among his pet hates at the venue next door

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