The Radio 3 Boards Forum from myforum365.com
10:20:15, 03-12-2008 *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
News: Whilst we happily welcome all genuine applications to our forum, there may be times when we need to suspend registration temporarily, for example when suffering attacks of spam.
 If you want to join us but find that the temporary suspension has been activated, please try again later.
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register  

Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: Alistair Anderson  (Read 323 times)
IgnorantRockFan
*****
Gender: Male
Posts: 794



WWW
« on: 09:38:48, 15-05-2008 »

I don't know how much interest this is to the R3 crowd, but last night I saw a superb concert at the Sage, Gateshead -- Alistair Anderson's 60th birthday celebration concert.

For those who don't know, Anderson is a near-legendary figure in folk music around these parts. He plays concertina and Northumbrian pipes, learned his songs from the old generation of Northumbrian pipers, and he's worked with just about everybody in the business over the last 40+ years. So when he decided to have a birthday party and invite a few old friends, an unmissable array of musicians turned up. Anderson acted as MC for the evening and joined in with each of the guest acts, as well as doing a couple of solo spots.

To be perfectly honest, I didn't know much about Anderson himself. It was the list of special guests that convinced me to go to the gig...

Martin Simpson -- fabulous guitar player, not terrifically flashy but has a beautiful tone.

Katie Docherty -- a young local singer, has a beautiful voice and sings in a Geordie accent (how cool is that?)

Kathryn Tickell -- I think she's stalking me, I've seen her three times in the last six months. Northumbrian small pipes... best sound in the world.

Richard Thompson -- nothing needs to be said...

But the other guests, the ones I didn't know in advance, were equally impressive:

The Farne Ensemble -- a young folk group (two violins, cello, harp, penny whistle/oboe).

A string quartet drawn from Northern Sinfonia (led by Bradley Creswick) who joined for part of a suite Anderson had written for concertina and string quartet. Classical concertina! Who would have though it would work? But it was superb. One day I want to hear the whole suite. After that piece, Creswick and Anderson played a Teleman canon for recorder -- on violin and concertina! Again, amazing...

Two ladies whose names I forget joined Anderson for some jazz numbers on guitar and trombone. Yes... jazz concertina... who would have thought it would work...?

And finally, "Clog on the Tyne" (how cool is that name?) -- clog dancers! And rapper dancers! Rapper dancing is amazing... I have analysed the physics of it and concluded that it is not actually possible in three-dimensional space!

The whole evening was tremendous fun, even better than I imagined it would be. The only complaint is that with so many guests nobody was on stage for long enough. I would happily have sat through a full show from any of them.

I can't imagine anything like this happening again, so I'm really glad I was there for it.

Logged

Allegro, ma non tanto
Ron Dough
Admin/Moderator Group
*****
Posts: 5133



WWW
« Reply #1 on: 10:37:41, 15-05-2008 »

That would certainly have worked for me, IRF, sounds like a wonderful night.
Logged
BobbyZ
*****
Gender: Male
Posts: 992



« Reply #2 on: 11:46:36, 15-05-2008 »

The lady jazz trombonist would have been Annie Whitehead IRF. Check out the cd Northern Lights by her and Alistair Anderson, much played on Late Junction four or five years ago. Also features Chris Stout on violin.
Logged

Dreams, schemes and themes
IgnorantRockFan
*****
Gender: Male
Posts: 794



WWW
« Reply #3 on: 12:04:04, 15-05-2008 »

Annie Whitehead was the name, thanks!

I wish there had been a programme so I could remember all the performers and music played.

Logged

Allegro, ma non tanto
iwarburton
***
Posts: 139


« Reply #4 on: 16:06:31, 15-05-2008 »

This sounds like a super concert and I'm sorry that I couldn't attend.

Alistair Anderson is indeed something of a regional treasure.  Can he really be 60?  Then again, I'm only a few months behind him!

Ian.
Logged
IgnorantRockFan
*****
Gender: Male
Posts: 794



WWW
« Reply #5 on: 21:54:29, 15-05-2008 »

I am reliably informed that the forgotten guitar player was Jennifer Maidman.

Logged

Allegro, ma non tanto
Pages: [1]
  Print  
 
Jump to: