Sunderland Echo

BRASS is back with a bang

- BY KATY WHEELER

Durham’s BRASS Festival is back with a bang for summer 2022.

A double MOBO Award winner, a Mercury Music Prize and Brit Award nominee, a band fronted by the current British Poet Laureate, and arguably the most famous brass band in the world will headline the popular music festival when it returns this summer, after being cancelled in 2021 due to the pandemic.

Tickets for a range of live performanc­es at Durham’s BRASS festival, which takes place from Sunday, July 10, to Sunday,

July 17, go on sale on Friday, March 18, at 10am, with Richard Hawley, YolanDa Brown, LYR and The Black Dyke Band and Sunderland’s own Field Music among the line-up.

The festival, which is one of the summer highlights of Durham County Council’s annual events programme, will also feature a host of community workshops, free concerts in communitie­s, schools and care homes around the county, and a full programme of lively street bands.

Cllr Elizabeth Scott, Cabinet member for economy and partnershi­ps, said: “BRASS is a key part of our festivals and events programme, so we were massively disappoint­ed that we had to postpone it last year. We can’t wait to welcome back fantastica­lly talented acts and enthusiast­ic audiences for the hugely anticipate­d event this summer.

“Our festival line-up has it all, celebratin­g brass music in its many forms, from traditiona­l big band music to inspiratio­nal artists taking brass in a new direction. As well as boosting the economy and raising the county’s reputation as a cultural destinatio­n, BRASS aims to bring communitie­s together to create unforgetta­ble experience­s for people of all ages.

“It’s a perfect example of the diverse artistic offering and commitment to cultural-led regenerati­on that makes County Durham such a strong contender to become UK City of Culture 2025.”

FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS

On Friday, July 15, in the first of two performanc­es at the iconic Durham Cathedral, LYR together with The Easington Colliery Band will premiere Firm As A Rock We Stand: A Commemorat­ion and Celebratio­n of County Durham’s ‘Category D’ Villages.

The band, comprising of author and current British Poet Laureate Simon Armitage CBE, musician Richard Walters and multi-instrument­alist Patrick Pearson, will perform for the first time live and in full, this incredible EP specially commission­ed by BRASS Festival in partnershi­p with the Durham Miners’ Associatio­n and the Redhills Charity.

In a memorable one-off gig, Richard Hawley will perform a Saturday night headline slot on Saturday, July 16.

Hawley, who found success as a member of Britpop band The Longpigs and then as Pulp’s guitarist, earned a Mercury Music Prize nomination for his breakthrou­gh soulful solo album Cole’s Corner. He has gone on to record seven more critically acclaimed albums and worked with Arctic Monkeys, Texas, Manic Street Preachers, Elbow and Paul Weller. Hawley will be accompanie­d by one of County Durham’s most popular bands, the NASUWT Riverside Brass Band. The band, which was founded in 1877, rehearse in Pelton Fell, Chesterle-Street, and are concert and contest veterans.

Gala Durham will stage a night to remember on Thursday, July 14, when Ibibio Sound Machine present their unique sound-clash of Western African funk, disco and electro, and the wonderful vocals of Nigerian singer Eno Williams.

On Friday, July 15, tweed-clad brass powerhouse­s Old Dirty Brasstards will wow audiences with a contempora­ry brass makeover of exhilarati­ng party jams, indie favourites and rock and roll classics. The quirky 10-piece will perform their unique interpreta­tions at Gala Durham.

Family favourite and double MOBO Award winner YolanDa Brown treats fans of all ages to two special performanc­es at Gala Durham on Saturday, July 16.

Little music-lovers and their grown-ups can enjoy all the fun of YolanDa’s Band Jam, in a live version of the saxophonis­t’s acclaimed CBeebies TV show.

Often lauded as the most famous brass band in the world, the multi-award-winning Black Dyke Band will perform at Durham BRASS festival for the first time on Sunday, July 17, at Gala Durham.

An array of local talent will also be showcased at the festival, beginning with Sunderland duo Field Music on Sunday, July 10, at Gala Durham.

Brothers Peter and David Brewis have gained a reputation for an ambitious and intellectu­al approach to making music, with eight full albums, Mercury Award nomination­s, plus numerous commission­s and side projects under their belt.

Their show, Binding Time – Songs & Stories from the Durham Coalfields, has been commission­ed by BRASS in a new partnershi­p with the Durham Miners’ Associatio­n and the Redhills Charity, funded by Arts Council England.

Fellow Mackem, Ben Lunn, will reflect his North-Eastern heritage, how disability impacts the world around him, and his working-class upbringing in his appearance at Ushaw College on Wednesday, July 13.

Conductor, musicologi­st, teacher and composer, Ben is one of three exciting artists chosen to create work for the festival’s Bold as BRASS, an inclusive and accessible programme which champions the talent of disabled artists, inspired by brass music.

Also returning and coinciding with the BRASS festival, is the ever-popular Durham City Run, on Friday, July 15, and Saturday, July 16. The festival will see hundreds of competitor­s race through the city centre, accompanie­d by live music from BRASS’ street bands.

For tickets and further informatio­n, visit www.brassfesti­val. co.uk

'Our festival line-up has it all’

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 ?? ?? The multi-award-winning Black Dyke Band. Main picture, Back Chat Brass at a previous Durham BRASS Festival.
The multi-award-winning Black Dyke Band. Main picture, Back Chat Brass at a previous Durham BRASS Festival.
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 ?? ?? Top, Richard Hawley found success as a member of Britpop band The Longpigs and then as Pulp’s guitarist. Above,doubleMOBO­award-winnerYola­nDaBrown.
Top, Richard Hawley found success as a member of Britpop band The Longpigs and then as Pulp’s guitarist. Above,doubleMOBO­award-winnerYola­nDaBrown.

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