Brass
Monkey
Wednesday 13 February
7.45pm
Gulbenkian Theatre,
Martin
Carthy – vocals, guitar, mandolin
John Kirkpatrick – vocals, button
accordion, anglo concertina, melodeon
Martin Brinsford – mouth-organ,
saxophone, percussion
Roger
Williams – bass trombone, tuba, euphonium
Brass Monkey have reformed as a four
piece band featuring Martin Carthy,
John Kirkpatrick, Martin
Brinsford and Roger Williams.
Messrs Carthy and Kirkpatrick
naturally lock into one another’s playing with an ease and precision that can
only come of playing together for over thirty years. Sharing the vocals, and
sometimes singing together in unison, they bring the fruits of years of
experience to this band with an explosive freshness that is clearly driven by
the excitement they all feel by playing together.
Roger
Williams, who has already proved his insanity by tripping effortlessly through
the fastest of tunes on the bass trombone, also brings along the euphonium to
add a softer melodic touch to the gentler pieces. Martin Brinsford can add
sweetness or punch on his mouth-organ as required, and amongst his numerous
accomplishments on the various instruments of percussion, he can create more
drive with the knuckle of one finger than most drummers can muster on a whole
kit.
Don’t miss this rare treat to see
four masters of their art combine with such open hearted enthusiasm to reach
such tremendous heights, at the Gulbenkian Theatre.
Tickets
£15
Concs £13
Booking Office 01227
769075
On line bookings www.gulbenkiantheatre.co.uk
Ends.
For images contact Frances Moran,
Marketing Manager, F_dot_Moran_at_kent_dot_ac_dot_uk
Press Contact: Sue Webster; sue_at_speakingvolumes_dot_co_dot_uk
Notes to the
Editor.
Brass Monkey – the five-piece band
that started in 1980, sputtered to a halt in 1987, and burst back onto the scene
with renewed vigour in 1997 – looked all set to build on the buzz of a
re-energised come-back with regular new albums and annual tours. They had a
unique sound, nobody else remotely resembled them, every live appearance was a
wonderful success, and every new recording was greeted with joyous
appreciation.
Tragedy
struck when trumpet player Howard Evans was taken ill on stage during the band's
tour in May 2004. The band continued the tour as a four-piece, hoping that
Howard's illness was temporary and that he would be back in the fold at any
time, but the eventual diagnosis was cancer, and he never played again. After a
couple of years of intensive treatment, when occasional rehearsal sessions
always had to be postponed, Howard passed away in March
2006.
To honour
Howard's musical legacy, and to keep his memory alive, Brass Monkey will tour
again as a four-piece band. Nobody could replace that wonderful trumpet playing,
and it would be mad to even try. But to the band's relief, and the audience's
delight, they discovered on that last tour that, with a bit of tweaking, the
arrangements could still work, and that they could still make a more than
reasonable noise.