Changing Tides - Benfleet

Changing Tides - Benfleet

Live music, events and sailing journeys presented aboard Thames Sailing Barge Raybel.

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By Estuary Festival
51 followers
Lots of repeat customers 📈

Select date and time

Wednesday, June 25 · 7 - 9pm GMT+1

Location

Benfleet Yacht Club

Canvey Road Canvey Island SS8 0QT United Kingdom

About this event

Changing Tides is a public cultural programme aboard Sailing Barge Raybel inspired by the cultural diversity of the heritage and communities of the Thames, and celebrating social movements and expressions of rebellion, freedom and joy.

It nurtures critical discussions about the uneven historical legacies of maritime trade and the manifold consequences of post-industrial decline in contemporary Britain.

The programme has been devised by artist and musician Benjin, in collaboration with Raybel Charters.

This is a series of live music events aboard Thames Sailing Barge Raybel at Queenborough Harbour and Benfleet Yacht Club.

Benjin: The Last Days of Sail

Benjin is a multi-instrumentalist, artist and story teller. His solo compositions use classical guitar, cello, harp, clarinet, vocals, nyckelharpa, field recordings and found sounds. Aside from regular concert performances, benjin's music has been featured on BBC Radio 6 Music, Radio 3 and at the TATE Galleries.

He will perform ‘Last Days of Sail’, exploring the multiple ways in which his instrumental compositions, song poems, and dense sound collage improvisations have been informed (and quite literally formed) through a lifetime of working on the Thames Estuary. Drawing upon pieces written for cello, classical guitar, nyckelharpa and voice the programme will highlight the importance of immersed 'authentic' perspectives within folk music traditions.

Mataoi Austin Dean

Mataoi Austin Dean sings folksong primarily from the South of England. He is best known for his work as a member of the nine-piece folk group, Shovel Dance Collective. He sees his singing of folksong as part of a decolonial process: centring notions of locality, class solidarity, and international exchange, and rejecting totalising, imperialistic structures of Britishness and whiteness. Born in 1996 to a Guyanese mother and an English father, and educated at the Slade School of Fine Art, Mataio’s practice extends across visual art, poetry, music, and activism. He creates images, often intaglio prints, which explore England and Guyana’s darkly intertwined histories, throwing light upon moments of resistance whilst unearthing stories of coloniality and rebellion embedded in English landscape and architecture.

Mataio will perform work specifically developed and produced for Estuary festival, based on his artistic research and ground breaking work on sea shanty songs and their African origins. Expect acapella, critical discussion and poetic reflections on the politics of folk music in contemporary culture


David Nettleingham

Dr David Nettleingham is a sociologist and multidisciplinary artist from the Isle of Thanet. In his social research, community facilitation work and creative practice, he is interested in how the power of storytelling, collective memory, and ideas of ‘heritage’ shape our actions and understandings in the present.

David is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Kent and has been a guest tutor at a number of local arts institutions, emphasising both an arts-led approach to sociology and a sociologically-led approach to the arts. He is Co-Director at Hold Creatives Spaces gallery and studios in Ramsgate, and founder of Thanet Experimental – a scheme to promote experimental art practice through funded exhibition opportunities. He runs regular workshops for community oral history training, and local map-making (and countermapping).

David will be presenting specially commissioned work for Estuary Festival, casting a critical eye over the politics of heritage work in North Kent, and discovering if there are parallels in South Essex. Also, how post-industrial decline has forever changed our relationship to class, traditional skills and the sense of community.


Cirenne

Cirenne play new, experimental music at a cross-cultural intersection of klezmer, chamber jazz and free improvisation, Cirenne is a singular combination of violin, viola, trumpet and electronics. Playful and cinematic, deadly serious and sometimes pretty silly, Cirenne’s music reflects upon borders, real-world conditions and explores imagined utopias. They weave scenes and soundscapes that are at once dense, rich and mellifluous, spacious, dancing and angular. Hailing from Bristol, UK, the duo brings together Celeste Cantor-Stephens (TORU, Shabbos Ranks) and Caelia Lunniss (Spindle Ensemble, Terra Coda). Cirenne won the Bubbe Award's People's Choice Award for Best New Klezmer Composition (2022), and have been featured on BBC Radio 3.

“Their air of dancing humour recalls the compositions of New York avant-garde street musician Moondog or the spaciousness of American string group the Kronos Quartet” –Benny Dart, Cafe OTO

Based in Bristol, the duo comprises Celeste Cantor-Stephens (trumpet / electronics / toys / compositions) and Caelia Lunniss (violin / viola).


Goblin Band

Goblin Band formed from sessions of the same name run out of the HobGoblin Music shop in central London, organised by a collection of young queer folk obsessive friends and shop employees looking to forge their own way into folk music. This gave rise to a band of multi-instrumentalists firmly rooted in the folk music of Britain, interpreted via the leftist tradition concerned with folk’s relationship to the history of the working classes, capitalism, and colonialism. Through a fusion of harmony singing, fiddle, squeezebox, hurdy gurdy, recorders and more, Goblin Band deliver a charismatic alternative expression of English traditional culture in a way which is at once riotously joyful and deeply sincere.

Sonny Brazil

Sonny Brazil is a Folk singer and Squeeze Box Player from the south east of England. Sonny lives entrenched in the world of english folk culture, working as a crew member on Thames Sailing Barges and living on the Canals; they are one of the founding members of the folk collective Goblin Band described by Martin Carthy as "The band we've been waiting for".

Sonny's unique style of folk performance stems from the Queer folk scene in south London. In keeping folk music alive and viewing it through a queer, anti colonial, anti capitalist lens, Sonny does their bit to carry on the living tradition in a way that sparks new energy into the old songs.


EVENT SCHEDULE


Benfleet Yacht Club:

Wednesday 25 June, 7pm, David Nettleingham Artists Talk
Thursday 26 June, 7pm Goblin Band
Saturday 28 June, 2.30pm Cirenne / Benjin / Goblin Band
Saturday 28 June, 7pm, Benjin ‘Last Days of Sail’ / Cirenne


Project Image: the barge Raybel photographed by Michaela Freeman.


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51 followers
Lots of repeat customers

Multi-arts festival shining a spotlight on the Thames Estuary region.