Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Friday, 20 May 2016

FOREST VOICES CHOIR: Singing at the Gate (Forest Gate Library)



FOREST VOICES CHOIR
SINGING AT THE GATE

On 16th June 2016, from 6.30 to 8.00pm Forest Voices will sing at The Gate Library and Community Centre, 4 – 20 Woodgrange Road, Forest Gate, London E7 0QH.
Come and join us for a free evening of song and enjoyment!
Light refreshments provided.

Funded by a “Let’s Get the Party Started” grant from the London Borough of Newham


Ruth Rikowski is a member of the Forest Voices choir, and will be singing with them at The Gate on 16th June.

***END***
‘Human Herbs’ – a song by Cold Hands & Quarter Moon: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Au-vyMtfDAs
Posted here by Glenn Rikowski
Glenn Rikowski @ Academia: http://independent.academia.edu/GlennRikowski 
Ruth Rikowski @ Academia: http://lsbu.academia.edu/RuthRikowski



Friday, 11 December 2015

Forest Voices Choir singing 'Line Up' - now on YouTube


Forest Voices Choir
Singing 'Line-up!'




Forest Voices Choir (that I am a member of) sang 3 songs for the turning on of the Christmas lights event. The lights were turned on by Robin Wales, the Mayor of Newham, on 5th December 2015. 2 of the songs were Christmas Carols and the other was a lovely song advocating peace throughout the world. It is called 'Line Up' (by H. Yeomans).

Here are the words for 'Line Up':

Line up, line up
Wo oh
For your place in the peaceable kingdom
Yeh, yeh, yeh.

Line up, line up
Wo oh
For your place in the peacable kingdom
Yeh, yeh, yeh.

Line up, line up
Wo oh
For your place in the peacable kingdom
Yeh, yeh, yeh

Bring your songs of freedom for a brave new world

Let me hear you
Sing, sing now.

Line up!

The rich and the poor
The weak and the strong
The humble and the proud
Won't you sing out loud
The merciful of heart
The sinner and the saint
The forgiven and the wrong
Find your voice in song
No differentiation between black and white
Let the Arab man stand by the Israelite
There ain't no creed, there ain't no colour
But the blood that flow thru your sister and brother.

*Repeat lines up to 'Line Up'.

What great messages!

I have just loaded the video of the Forest Voices Choir singing 'Line Up'  on to YouTube.
This is the first item that I have ever loaded anything on to YouTube! Hopefully, I will be loading up a few more items in the future.

See:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayWOiJdx5bs

Forest Voices Choir also have a website - see
https://forestvoicese7.wordpress.com





Wednesday, 9 December 2015

Open Mic at the 'Plough and Harrow' Pub every Sunday 8pm - 10.30pm


The Plough and Harrow
Leytonstone

OPEN MIC SESSIONS AT THE
 'PLOUGH AND HARROW' PUB

Function Room
419 High Road Leytonstone
Leytonstone
LONDON
E11 4JU


Every Sunday from 8.00pm - 10.30pm


Come and Join Us

Regular house band, regular performers, plus new musicians and performers always welcome. 

Bands and solo artists.

Enjoy live music, local musical talent, as well as some surprise artists from abroad (e.g. USA).

Also provides a support and network for local musicians.

Victor Rikowski performs there quite regularly (playing guitar and singing) and watch this space for other names that you might recognise from this blog.

Rock, rock 'n' roll, folk, blues and much more 

A great night out and great company (and it's all FREE).


The Function Room
Plough and Harrow
Leytonstone

Sunday, 1 November 2015

Forest Roots on 27th Nov 2015





FOREST ROOTS: Country, Folk, Blues and Beyond

Friday 27th November 2015, starts at 8.00pm sharp

Hot Strings Review

Free entry; raffle and whip round.

Performers:
Martin Wheatley on guitar and ukulele

Mike Piggott on fiddle (see www.mikepiggott.com

Also, the Family Flats Band and 

Surprise Guests and Local Performers.

These will include:

Forest Voices (a Choir which I am a member of) and

Victor Rikowski



Venue:  The Forest Gate Hotel, 105 Godwin Road, Forest Gate, London, E7 OLW



Sunday, 18 October 2015

Forest Voices Choir

Come and Sing!

Every Thursday, 7.15pm - 8.45pm with

Forest Voices Choir

Contact: e7forestvoices@gmail.com

https://forestvoices7.wordpress.com

Join us for:

      Singing for Switching on of Christmas lights, opposite Forest Gate Station, at 5.30pm.

      Forest Gate Christmas Pub Crawl, Thurs 17th Dec, 7.00pm - 9.00pm (more details to follow
      shortly)




Friday, 16 October 2015

All Saints Chorus & Orchestra



Beethoven

ALL SAINTS CHORUS & ORCHESTRA

The All Saints Chorus and Orchestra are celebrating their 20th anniversary concert season starting this year. Formed in 1994, the Chorus is a community choir. Membership is open to all and there are no auditions. The choir have a reputation for performing concerts of the highest standard in Newham, the area in which they rehearse and perform.
They have an extensive repertoire of music ranging from the 15th century to today. Included are the great works of composers such as Bach, Handel, Mozart, Haydn, Brahms, and Verdi. The chorus enjoys a good social life outside the rehearsal room and the annual weekend away provides the perfect opportunity to rehearse, socialise and relax.
The All Saints Orchestra is a mix of seasoned professional players featuring instrumentalists from many of the major London orchestras. Together with the Chorus and our dedicated group of acclaimed soloists they give a wide audience the chance to experience great music in the historic setting of West Ham Parish Church.

Next Event: West Ham Parish Church (All Saints), Church Street, E15 3HU
Saturday 21 November 2015
7.30pm
Vaughan Williams: Towards the Unknown Region, and Antiphon: Let All the World
Beethoven: Symphony No.7
Brahms: A German Requium

Margaret Feuvoir Soprano
Stephen Alder – Bass
All Saints Chorus
All Saints Orchestra
Jon Cullen – Conductor

Tickets: Adults £17; Concessions £10. On the door or in advance – Telephone: 07513 414665

***END***
‘Human Herbs’ – a song by Cold Hands & Quarter Moon: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Au-vyMtfDAs
Glenn Rikowski @ Academia: http://independent.academia.edu/GlennRikowski 
Ruth Rikowski @ Academia: http://lsbu.academia.edu/RuthRikowski
All that is Solid for Glenn Rikowski: http://rikowski.wordpress.com



Thursday, 9 July 2015

Transforming Homes into Creative Places

I have been taking pictures of a variety of creative works (other than our writing) that my son, Victor Rikowski and I have undertaken over the years.

Victor has always been very creative, from when he was a very young child of just 3 years old, when he drew a great picture of a duck!

There will be a number of blog entries on my ‘Serendipitous Moments’ blog showing samples of Victor's models, his embroidery, his book covers and his pictures.

Let's hope that there will be lots more to come from Victor during the years ahead!

Currently, Victor is playing guitar and singing at a nearby Open Mic session - but more about that, perhaps, on another occasion.

There will also be some blog entries with samples of my creative works. This will include samples of my embroidery, my crochet and my knitting. I find these creative outlets very relaxing, especially if they are accompanied by listening to music. Earlier this year, I watched the whole of Richard Wagner's 'Ring Cycle' (several times in fact!), whilst learning to crochet and making some crochet pieces. Now, that was certainly a big challenge that I set myself! But all very enriching.

Finally, there will be an entry for 2 of our books (one of Glenn's and one of mine), which Victor designed the covers for.

So, what inspired me to do all of this?

Well, a number of factors have all come together over the last few months for me. Over the years, I have created embroidery and knitting pieces, but this was largely done just for pleasure and helping me to relax. Then, this year, we had a lodger to stay with us who was a professional in knitware and crochet design - and she taught me how to crochet. So, that was great! And many thanks to her. 

This happened at the same time as we were visiting various galleries and museums (leading on from Glenn leaving his demanding lecturing position at the University of Northampton). I started viewing my dreams for a different and better world within this broader context. Now, William Morris really inspired me here. Morris was incredibly creative, but also became a socialist when he was around 50 years of age, as he hated all the inequality and poverty that he saw around him. He thought that people should be able to make their own creations and drape their houses in their own creative outlets, but of course, that is not largely possible for the poor. Morris was born into an extremely comfortable family (which became even richer), so he was very fortunate in that regard. I visited the William Morris Gallery in Walthamstow, where he lived as a teenager, which is near to where I live.  I was very moved by it all. The beautiful wallpaper, tapestries, prints, book covers etc etc. The other 2 homes where Morris lived - Red House and Kelmscott Manor, in Oxford are also both now museums and shows how he turned his homes into works of art. He wanted to go back into the medieval period (he was very inspired by that period, where people made creative products, from the beginning to the end of the process). Morris thought it would be wonderful if people could do more of that, and hated the industrial revolution, where things were going the other way entirely, with the sausage factory process, the breakdown of tasks and strict demarcation. But as he got older Morris realised that it was rather naïve of him to try to go backwards in this way, so instead, he moved forward and became a Socialist and read Marx’s ‘Capital’. So, he combined socialism with producing creative and artistic works. He even designed a beautiful book jacket for his copy of ‘Capital’.

This got me thinking about how nice it would be if I could adorn our home with more of our own creative works - rather than having shop stuff all over the place. You know, display Victor's ornaments prominently, for example, rather than shop bought ornaments. All very good for one’s soul! How much better off everyone would be if they could do that and were more at one with their creative side and their 'species being'.

Then, by coincidence, our youngest son Gregory, was working temporarily at the Leighton House Museum in High Street Kensington. Gregory fell in love with the museum. We had never heard of it before. I went to visit it and wow - I was amazed. Sir Frederick Leighton was a good artist in the Pre-Raphaelite period.  He was also the President of the Royal Academy of Arts. He turned his home (which is now the Leighton House Museum) into a work of art. He visited various places throughout the world, bringing back a selection of creative works, and adorning his home with them. In particular, upon entry into the museum, one quickly finds oneself in the Arabic Hall, which is a truly amazing room, with a little pond in the middle of it, and a piece from a mosque. There are samples of Iznic art and mosaics. I sat there for ages, looking around the hall, absorbing it - I was totally mesmerised and intoxicated by it all. Leighton and Morris were both part of the Pre-Raphaelite Movement and indeed, the wallpaper in Leighton’s bedroom is one of William Morris's wallpaper designs.

So, these 2 men turned their homes into works of art. Morris was an architecture as well, of course, so he could really see the process through from beginning to end.
He also ran his own firms in very worthy ways, aiming to involve his workers in the whole creative process in a non-exploitative way.

Thus, I too wanted to change our home a little; to change our home into a work of art in some small way. I have a long way to go (certainly compared to Morris and Leighton - well I will never reach their standards - don't have the money, apart from anything else), but I am enjoying what I am doing. And hopefully, it will provide some creative inspiration for us, and for our visitors, and help us to think about life differently. The blogs also include some items of clothing that I knitted.

To think, in a different way, of moving towards something beyond the capitalist, marketisation agenda, and where we are more at one with ourselves and our creative energies and where we can celebrate life more truly and healthily and wholly. Celebrate art and aim to recraft our homes in this way and to recreate life, in general, artistically in some way.





Friday, 11 November 2011

Social Dancing at the Guildhall




Social Dancing at the Guildhall Catholic Church, High Road, Ilford

Nearest station: Ilford (overground).
10 min walk from station, or catch 86 bus which stops right outside.


Every Thursday, 8.00pm - 11pm


£4 entry

Raffle (£1). Drinks from the bar.


Ballroom and sequence dancing, with a little bit of disco and line dancing.


Very friendly group of people.

Everyone welcome.


Party night with free nibbles on the last Thursday of every month

Come and join in the fun.


Great variety of dances, nice and interesting people to talk to, good atmosphere, lovely music, wonderful for your health. Beginners welcome. What more can I say.


Life is for living, and all that!

Friday, 3 December 2010

Music

I love music; I can't live without music; it is my lifeblood; it is like bread and water to me.

My love of books is fairly well-known now, I think, but not so much my love of music. Well, in essence, music is just as important to me as books. I just could not carry on/live without either. Books and Music - the essentials of life, as far as I am concerned!!

I have been a little reticent about talking about all this publicly; when I first got published, I took the professional approach; then the political and Marxist theoretical approach.

It is only over the last year or so that I have started making my love of literature and music more public. And as I say, the focus has still been very much on the novel (apart from my long piece about Michael Jackson - as I was so beside myself over his sudden death).

Anyway, I now feel that it is time to rectify this anomaly, and to say something more about my love of music. As with books, I have loved music for as long as I remember. But I guess the big difference is that with books, reading books, it was all very much my decision (well reading a book has to be doesn't it - it is such a personal, individual experience). As a child, I took myself off to the local public library; I choose which books to borrow; I went home and read them. Then, of course, there were the books that I got for presents. But even then - one chooses whether or not to read them, what order to read them, whether to read all or some of them, whether to re-read them etc. And of course, this love of books has remained with me forever. When some people say that they never read a book I am very puzzled - however, do they get by in life, I think? But of course, that is only my way of looking at it all. We are all very different, when all is said and done. I love getting into the minds of different people; or at least, people that think, that have things to say and express; and that can do this well - i.e. getting into the minds of published authors. This is so, whether it be fiction or non-fiction, but of course, fiction was my first love.

As a child, music, in contrast, was all around me (it was not something that I decided to do on my own in the way that reading books was). My mother loved to sing and dance; I sang hymns at church; I was in a choir; my mother was in a choir; I went to concerts (I remember being very keen on Gilbert and Sullivan, for example); I listened to music on the radio; and I learnt the piano and the recorder (although I wasn't so keen on the 'learning the piano fiasco' - the cold front room and all that - no central heating in those days). Anyway...But then in my mid teens I started buying some records of my own. Cat Stevens was one of my first loves here.

Then, when I went to university I bought myself a record player and lots of records (certainly did not want a TV). Lovely! I also used to go to university discos about 3 times a week and danced very energetically and enthusiastically; I was in heaven. I absolutely loved it. Lots of wonderful music used to waft across the campus as well; Pink Floyd's 'The Dark Side of the Moon' was the ultimate; it was brilliant. The sounds of that wafted across the campus, from student's rooms, more than any other album or artist. We all loved it. The sun shone, and Pink Floyd sang.

And so, this love of music has continued ever since - always looking out for the next interesting album, the next artist etc. These days I borrow lots of CDs from my local library in Ilford - that way I can get familiar with a large repertoire of music without it costing me too much. Great. I love it.

So, I read, I write, I listen to music, I dance, I sing etc. Truly wonderful; I am in seventh heaven as long as I have all this. Take it all away from me and I would be doomed. But I certainly don't intend to go down that path!

Although I had private piano lessons as a child (and also learnt the recorder actually), I was not properly classically musically trained. This is one of the problems with music. It can still be very much a class/elitist thing, when all is said and done. You know, middle class parents having the money and inclination to send their children to private music lessons (particularly important given how poorly resourced music departments in schools tend to be). Breaking out of that mould is very difficult. And can folks make a living/make money out of music? Well, very difficult. So, folks often choose the 'safer' career options; but without music we are all the poorer. What an impossible life it would be without these wonderful creative outlets. Dear oh dear! But it is wrong that, once again, those that are not so well off can tend to suffer.

In regard to music and libraries, whilst we all know that libraries are for borrowing books, we can sometimes forget, or at least look over the fact, that they can also be very good for borrowing music!I have gone through various phases with this one; well, I go through phases with my library-usage anyway, but more so with music....

When I was on maternity leave with our eldest son, Alexander, I used to borrow a lot of music records from our local library in Coventry - yes, it was still records in those days!

Then, on and off over the years, I have borrowed music CDs from the local library - and of course, this was easy when I worked in the public library service myself. Furthermore, our middle son, Victor, worked at Kensington Central Library for a couple of years. They have a wonderful music library there -with lots of music CDs but also lots of music scores and books about famous composers etc. Anyway, he borrowed lots of CDs whilst he worked there; some of which I liked but quite a lot of which did not appeal to my tastes all that much. Still - it was all an interesting experience!

Then, last year, after my father-in-law died I picked it all up again. The music selection in my very local library was useless; but Ilford Library (not far away) has a wonderful collection I discovered. Now, months later, I am borrowing music CDs again on a regular basis. It means that I can listen to a large repertoire of music without it costing me too much. I also like the physical thing of going into the library - so, no I don't want to get it all from the Internet, if anyone asks. I have heard some wonderful music by this method. I love listening to new music as well - so this is a great way in which I can keep cheerful, listen to and absorb a lot of new music, sharing music with others, as well as having a great time dancing around, relaxing etc - without it all costing a lot of money. Winners all round - until the cuts start biting. Whatever is Cameron and his crew doing to the public library service, and indeed, to our public services and way of life, in general. But I try not to think about it all too much; it is too depressing, and just all to dreadful. Why did people vote in all this rubbish? But then again, whilst the electorate can be blamed for voting in Thatcher, they can't be blamed for voting in Cameron in the same sort of way. Cameron does not have a mandate from the people for this right-wing government; but still, he continues, never-the-less.

I love such a lot of different types of music; I could not begin to say where it begins and ends. A lot of the time, these days, I prefer the softer artists over the heavy rock and metal ones, it has to be said; but then again, I/we go through phases with music, and a lot of the time, it can depend on one's mood, can it not. It is the continued freshness and the difference that I love; and the ability that music has to reflect your mood - I put on a certain type of music when I am in one mood; and a different type of music when I am in a different mood. One can express oneself through music in ways that it is not possible to in any other way. And we need a variety of ways in which to be able to express ourselves.

But certainly, I love listening to new music; to music that I have not heard before. I am not one of those that likes to keep listening to the same thing time after time after time.

At the moment, there are a number of strands to all of this music for me: listening to music (CDs etc); dancing; singing in a choir; going to concerts; seeeing live bands (including our local folk night, 'Forest Roots'), watching music programmes on the TV and DVD; enjoying our middle son Victor's band, 'Cold Hands & Quarter Moon' and all the excitement around watching them grow, develop, listening to the new songs that Victor writes etc. etc.

Perhaps, I will write some other blogs about particular artists and albums that I enjoy/have enjoyed. Have to see.

But for now, let's sing and dance, and enjoy all the wonderful things that music can offer and bring to us.

Saturday, 16 October 2010

Elton John supporting talented Musicians

Elton John is another musician that I have always very much liked and admired; he has a lot of natural musical talent, I think, and I enjoy a lot of his music.



So, it is wonderful that he is now trying to help young up and coming talented musicians. He seems to be disillusioned with the music industry today, in many ways, with programmes such as 'Pop Idol' and the 'X-Factor', which does not provide very much opportunity for real musical talent to be able to shine through in.



The Sunday Times of 10th October 2010 included an article about the help he is giving to some of these musicians (p.3). The article, by Dalya Alberge is entitled 'I'm still spending - on complete unknowns'. The article reports that Elton John has spent over £1million financing dozens of students at the Royal Academy of Music, London personally financing 42 students to train there. Elton John enrolled himself at the Royal Academy as a classical music scholar over 50 years ago, when he was just 11 years old. He won a scholarship to the academy in its scheme for talented musicians and studied Bach and Chopin there for 6 years, although he dropped out before his final exams. Elton John received a doctorate from the college in 2002. He says that the training that he received at the Academy was 'vitally important' to his career. I think he is very thankful for it, and wants to try to pay something back in some way.

Elton John told the Sunday Times:

"I am so proud to be able to support the academy in any way I can and will always be grateful to them for opening the doors for me and so many other young musicians to develop our talents and live our lives in music."

Next, he is planning a second concert; this time at the Royal Opera House, in order to raise a further £600,000 for the Academy.

Elton John has also helped various other people in the past. Michael Jackson thanked him for helping him to stop taking prescription morphine, for example, and he helped Princess Diana to deal with her bulimia.

I read the newspapers these days, and my heart sinks. The government is 'putting the boot in' here, there and everywhere, and young people are suffering really hard, I think, with the huge proposed increases in tuition fees, along with debt, the recession and a lack of jobs, and unaffordable housing. But anyway, amidst reading all this gloom I suddenly read this wonderful, uplifting article. I think that we should start putting more of our faith in musicians and less in politicians.

Our son Victor Rikowski is doing very well on the music front; his musical talent is really starting to shine through in Bangor in a significant way. Quite a lot of new, good things have already been happening to him on this front, following on from the local Bangor radio programme that he was on a couple of weeks ago, with his band, 'Cold Hands & Quarter Moon'. The person that interviewed them, James McAllister, really rates them, I think, and is doing his best to try to promote them more.

How wonderful it would be if 'Cold Hands & Quarter Moon' could somehow or other be brought to the attention of Elton John!