BEANS ON TOAST – A Taste Of Christmas Past
Beans on Toast would be a good shout on a bitterly cold, grey Sunday afternoon in Clapham.
Although a warm mince tart or a nibble of that delicious tomato sauce covered delight would’ve been very welcome, a different kind of Beans on Toast was on offer at the iconic Clapham Grand.
What could be a better way to entertain your little ones than to take them to the theatre? And what a gorgeous theatre this is. Its fabulousness hidden behind an unimposing façade, the cosiness and grandeur of the Grand enveloped us in the warmest of hugs. Huge chandeliers led the way past an enormous and lavishly decorated Christmas tree, next to which stood Santa in his sleigh- and a table full of ‘Little Bee’ merch- to the small but perfectly formed auditorium
Beans on Toast teaches the children how to write a poem, to show them it doesn’t have to rhyme (although all the songs do), or make sense"
A glitter ball, centre ceiling of the stage, twirled around calmly and majestically, sending its tiny red and green stars whizzing across the ruby red theatre, entrancing the families as they took their seats. This theatre has a bar with a quirky vintage vibe to suit its surroundings, and the glasses of pinot, g and ts and cans of trendy ales were selling fast, alongside milkshakes and juices for the children, with matching candy cane straws. This theatre is pure old-school glamour- and the people of Clapham are pretty glamorous themselves. The fair-isle jumper atop a tutu was a dominant look amongst the Boden-clad audience, complete with dads wearing babies in slings and matching mummy and daughter Christmas dresses. The question of “Where’s the singing bee?” was on lots of little lips…
The stage is set simply; stripy fabric creating a circus-style feel, with a piano and various props artfully arranged at the front of the stage. ‘Matt Magic Fingers’ warmed us all up with his fantastic jazz piano set and then the show begins! Folk singer, songwriter and storyteller, Beans on Toast (stage name of Jay McAllister) has diverged from his usual lyrics around politics and love to write a set of inspirational songs and stories for children- ‘The Fascinating Adventures of Little Bee’. This collection of ‘ten beautiful songs’ teach children about values such as patience, curiosity and love of community.
Beans comes out on stage with his guitar, accompanied by Little Bee (Lily) and Jaime to help tell the stories. Asking the excited anticipatory audience, “Who is ready for the first adventure?”, the three take us on a journey through each song, beginning with ‘Little Bee goes to the Sea.’
Lesson one is curiosity- perhaps the most important for children in this age where more and more comes ready prepared and beautifully packaged for them. Skilfully linked to the next song, rockabilly-style “Little Bee goes to the Woods”, lesson number two is all about teaching us patience. The children are encouraged to pretend to be acorns, growing into beautiful trees. This old-school music and movement goes down a treat with the pre-schoolers and I watched as the children were drawn into Little Bee’s magical, musical world with this simple but effective action.
The next two songs tell of Little Bee’s adventures in the town and the city and here the music takes on an R and B style. This is one beauty of the set of songs- each has its own separate style; from synth-pop to country to disco- it’s all here and gently, confidently delivered with Beans’ trademark romantic, optimistic, honest, comfortable flair. These simple yet effective songs and stories have important messages- values even, which echo Beans on Toast’s extensive discography.
The beauty of diversity celebrated in ‘Little Bee goes to the City’ brings audience participation to a new level, with part-singing and beat-boxing enjoyed by all. Little Bee takes us back in time, to learn from the past through the medium of the spoken word, to the rainbow- where we are taught that “to really see the rainbow, you must stand in the rain”. Children are invited on stage to draw each colour of the rainbow on an easel before Magic Fingers Mike whisks us into space with a Mozart-style twinkle on the piano.
Beans on Toast teaches the children how to write a poem, to show them it doesn’t have to rhyme (although all the songs do), or make sense- and he uses their random words (including dinosaur, Spiderman and Christmas tree) to invent a spontaneous verse. Lily and Jaime teach us all a way to remember the order of the planets, and it is this mnemonic that could sum up the whole show- and indeed Beans’ perennial message-
“Many Voices Encourage Much Joy So Unite Now”
The grand finale is soon upon us, and Magic Fingers Mike zooms up and down those ivories, Rachmaninov-style. ‘Little bee goes to a Gig’ is the final song and the lesson is to use your imagination. Huge balloons appear, glitter canons are fired and a storm of confetti whirls as children and parents are invited to join Beans, Mike, Lily and Jaime on stage to boogie the Clapham afternoon away… It is an exuberant, fun-filled party time in the gorgeous Clapham Grand. Joy and love are all around us at Christmas here, as the final Little Bee song segues into ‘Dancing Queen’.
Thank you Beans, for such a lovely, happy afternoon. This idea of a collection of lesson-based songs linked and centred around a singing bee sits perfectly among today’s values-based education trend and could run and run.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
w/ https://beansontoastmusic.com
Allen Epley – Stick It On Repeat
Allen Epley (Shiner, The Life and Times) has released a video for the track “The EMT” off his upcoming debut solo album ‘Everything,’ out NOW on Spartan Records.
Of the track, Epley says, “The EMT” was laying around my folders for a few months and was called “Spider Rico Two” because it had been written around the same time and had a similar vibe as “Spider Rico” which I had finished earlier. I remember having a hard time finding my footing on this one until I just stopped fighting it and went with my original intentions and just kind of allowed it to be what it was. It all fell together when Mike Burns put his lap steel line on the song and changed everything.
“The EMT” is a story about a flight paramedic who has a crush on someone from his town that he’s never met. He’s been content to just live in that world until one evening fate intervenes and his crush ends up in a near-fatal car wreck. As he arrives on the scene he realizes who the victim is and instead of being distraught by his discovery of who she is, he’s delighted that he’s able to finally help her and be with her and hold her hand like he’s always dreamed of.
As a child, Allen Epley (Shiner, The Life and Times) spent many more hours than his friends on the block did imprinting his parents’ record collection on his psyche. Giant headphones secure, he would pore over the cover art and liner notes and enter the world wrought by the giants of AM Gold — Bread, James Taylor, Carol King, Three Dog Night, Blood Sweat and Tears, 5th Dimension.
Yet the music he would make in the 90’s and 00’s with his highly influential bands doesn’t reveal these easy-listening origins. Shiner and The Life and Times reflected more opaque images of bands like Swervedriver, Slint, early Smashing Pumpkins and Failure. The smooth grooves and discernable lyrics about love — found and lost — of the 70’s songsters of his adolescence hadn’t come back into view for him.
It wasn’t until he was writing a batch of cues for reality TV in 2018 that he realized these ghosts had never left him but instead had embedded themselves in his subconscious; barely buried in a shallow bed of memories, smells and colors of childhood. One of the cues written caught his attention as being something worth exploring; this song became “Spider Rico” and was the bellwether that pointed the way toward Everything, Epley’s debut solo LP.
The process was simple because there really was no process; lay down a simple drum beat (the only kind a guitarist can play…) and build the songs from the bottom up. They came easily and were as clear as the sunlight on a crisp fall morning walk to school, and each one revealed immediately what it was about: love, lost and found.
But this music does carry the Allen Epley torch of sadness in each song that has colored his work in the 90’s and 00’s. Themes of giving in to excess, unrequited love, giving up on loving someone. In “The EMT,” our hero is a flight paramedic with an undying love for someone he’s only seen from afar, until by (un)lucky fate, she’s in a near fatal accident and he gets to finally hold her.
He enlisted Mike Burns, his friend and co-worker from Blue Man Group Chicago, to add lap steel to one song. Of course, Burns ends up on almost the whole record and informs us that what we’re hearing is actually a new genre known as “Space Country.” Friend and producer Dan Dixon was brought in to mix and realized Allen’s drum parts were good, but these tracks begged for tighter production of the 70’s. Chris Prescott (Pinback, No Knife), Mike Myers (The Life and Times, The String and Return) and Darren Dodd were brought on to finish these pieces beautifully.
The result is a record that begs and rewards repeated listenings, 9 songs and 41 minutes including a reimagined song from his band The Life and Times that dovetails quite nicely. It’s a rich production that echoes the AM Gold of his childhood but reaches into artistic territories that were generally reserved for Elliott Smith and Sea Change-era Beck.
‘Everything’ Track List
Thousand Yard Stare
Evangeline
Spider Rico
The EMT
Everything
Deader Than Dead
All Good Things
I’m The One
The Lucid Dream
THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY – FACE TO FACE
THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY (ICP) PRESENTS FACE TO FACE: PORTRAITS OF ARTISTS BY TACITA DEAN, BRIGITTE LACOMBE AND CATHERINE OPIE.
The International Center of Photography (ICP) will exhibit Face to Face: Portraits of Artists by Tacita Dean, Brigitte Lacombe and Catherine Opie from January 27 through May 1, 2023. Organized by renowned writer and curator Helen Molesworth, the exhibition presents portraits of luminaries in the arts by three of the most prominent portraitists of our time. Face to Face will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue published by ICP and MACK, London, with essays by Molesworth and writer and curator Jarrett Earnest.
Creating an atmosphere of conversations held just beyond the frame of the images, Face to Face features more than 50 photographs by Brigitte Lacombe and Catherine Opie, and two films by Tacita Dean, with bracing, intimate, and resonant portraits of compelling cultural figures including Maya Angelou, Richard Avedon, Louise Bourgeois, Joan Didion, David Hockney, Miranda July, Rick Owens, Martin Scorsese, Patti Smith, Mickalene Thomas, Kara Walker, and John Waters, among others. The exhibition presents some of the often-overlapping subjects immortalized by Dean, Lacombe, and Opie and investigates the charged genre of portraiture, one that often carries a sense of intimacy and exposure simultaneously.
“These pictures and films offer us formality and intimacy, patience and curiosity, and the thrill of an unguarded moment,” said curator Helen Molesworth. “I see all three artists involved in making pictures that are not only in dialogue with their given subjects, but also with the history of the genre of portraiture and the medium of photography. Art is many things, but for artists it is a way of talking to each other through pictures. It’s a transhistorical game of stealing and borrowing techniques, paying homage to one another’s triumphs—a constant call and response.”
“ICP is pleased to collaborate with esteemed guest curator Helen Molesworth to bring this fascinating look at contemporary portraiture to New York audiences,” said David E. Little, executive director of ICP. “Face to Face is the first focused portraiture exhibition at ICP’s new downtown location at 79 Essex Street. The exhibition offers a unique opportunity to see three of the most accomplished imagemakers of our time approach the subject of portraiture from their distinctly different vantage points, broadening our understanding of contemporary lens- based work. Collaborating with Tacita Dean, Brigitte Lacombe, and Catherine Opie reflects ICP’s commitment to exhibiting imagemakers at the fore of visual culture today, and we are honored that Brigitte Lacombe’s first major presentation in a New York institution is here at ICP.”
Tacita Dean creates films that are studies of time and everyday life as it unfolds before the camera. Notably, she has produced a series of portraits of older artists, including Cy Twombly, Mario Merz, and Merce Cunningham. On view in Face to Face, Dean’s 16-minute film Portraits (2016) captures the artist David Hockney’s approach to art in his Los Angeles studio. The film opens with a shot of the artist standing with his back to the camera, smoking and reading a book. Watching him read and smoke, the viewer is witness to the artist’s working process, appreciating the small moments that make up an artist’s practice. In contrast, Dean’s One Hundred and Fifty Years of Painting (2021) records a conversation between the 99-year-old painter Luchita Hurtado and the 49-year-old artist Julie Mehretu; their combined ages inspire the film’s title.
Brigitte Lacombe’s oeuvre could be described as a who’s who of the second half of the 20th century. On view in Face to Face are a selection of Lacombe’s studio portraits and also portraits of artists taken in their own studios. In the catalogue for Face to Face Molesworth notes how intimate details catch the eye: “the slight gap between Hilton Als’s two front teeth, the way Joan Didion’s left eye is slightly higher than her right one, the sly almost-smile that pulls at th corner of Fran Lebowitz’s mouth.” She also has a long term project of shooting on director Martin Scorsese’s movie sets. Lacombe’s set pictures show artists at work, and her photos depict an ongoing portrait of the director over time, with on-set images from Gangs of New York, The Departed, and The Wolf of Wall Street, among other productions.
Catherine Opie is known for her early images of members of the LGBTQ community, using traditional portraiture to bring underrepresented people into the mainstream of contemporary culture. More recently she did a dedicated series of portraits of artists. Photographs by Opie in Face to Face span three decades, from 1993 to 2019, and include images of Justin Bond, Thelma Golden, Miranda July, Glenn Ligon, Kerry James Marshall, and Rick Owens among others. Often the sitter does not meet the gaze of the camera, such as the silhouetted view of Kara Walker or a shirtless Lawrence Weiner smoking a cigarette. The results are images of artists plunged into their own thoughts, both solitary, melancholic, and slightly magical.
As Molesworth notes, “Each of these artists has engaged portraiture—a genre of image-making as old as modernity itself—as a means of connecting themselves to other artists. The results are three bodies of work that play with the historical conventions of the genre while nibbling away at its edges.”
About Tacita Dean
Tacita Dean (b. 1965, Canterbury, England) works primarily in film. She lives and works in Berlin and Los Angeles, where she was the Artist in Residence at the Getty Research Institute in 2014- 2015. Dean has been the recipient of numerous prizes including the Kurt Schwitters Prize in 2009; the Hugo Boss Prize at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, in 2006; and the Sixth Benesse Prize at the 51st Venice Biennale in 2005. Solo exhibitions were recently held in 2022 at MUDAM, Luxembourg, the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; in 2021 at Kunstmuseum Basel; in 2020 at EMMA – Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Espoo; in 2019 at the NY Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen, and at the Serralves Museum, Porto; in 2018 at the Kunsthaus Bregenz, The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh, as well as The Royal Academy of Arts, London, as part of a trilogy of exhibitions held in conjunction with the city’s National Gallery and National Portrait Gallery. Dean designed the sets and costumes for The Dante Project, a collaborative production with the Royal Ballet’s resident choreographer Wayne McGregor and conductor-composer Thomas Adés. Based on Dante’s Divine Comedy, the ballet premiered in October 2021 at the Royal Opera House in London. In 2011 Dean’s work FILM, a part of the Unilever Series of Tate Modern and shown in the Turbine Hall, marked the beginning of the campaign to preserve photochemical film.
About Brigitte Lacombe
Brigitte Lacombe (b. 1950, in Alès, France) is known for her influential and revelatory portraiture. For four decades she has created iconic and intimate photographs of many of the world’s most celebrated artists, actors, politicians and intellectuals. Her work has been exhibited at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC; Phillips New York; Sotheby’s, London; Qatar Museums, Doha; Shanghai Center of Photography; The Museum of the Moving Image, New York; Cinémathèque Française, Paris; and Deutsche Kinemathek, Berlin.
Her books include Lacombe Anima | Persona (Steidl/Dangin, 2009), a retrospective book of photographs from 1975-2008; Lacombe Cinema | Theater (Schirmer/Mosel); Breakthrough Prize, vol. 1, 2012-2016 and Breakthrough Prize, vol. 2, 2017-2019, portraits of top scientists; and Forward 20 Years of TimesTalks, 2019. She is currently at work on a visual memoir. She received the Eisenstaedt Award for Travel Photography (2000), the Lifetime Achievement Award for Photography (Art Directors Club Hall of Fame, 2010), and the Lucie Award for Lifetime Achievement in Travel & Portraiture (2012). “Brigitte,” a documentary film by director Lynne Ramsay, commissioned by Miu Miu Women’s Tales, was shown at the Venice and New York Film Festivals in 2019. Her photography has appeared in publications around the world including Vanity Fair, GQ, Harper’s Bazaar, German Vogue, British Vogue, L’Uomo Vogue, The New Yorker, New York Magazine, The Financial Times Magazine, “M” Le Monde, Zeit Magazine, and others. Lacombe has worked on many film sets, as well as photographing major theater productions and fashion advertising campaigns. She lives in New York City.
About Catherine Opie
Catherine Opie (b. 1961, Sandusky, OH) is an artist working with photography, film, collage, and ceramics who lives and works in Los Angeles. Her work has been exhibited extensively throughout the United States and abroad and is held in over 50 major collections throughout the world. Opie was the Robert Mapplethorpe Resident in Photography at the American Academy in Rome for 2021. Opie was also a recipient of The Guggenheim Fellowship in 2019, The Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art Medal in 2016, The Julius Shulman Excellence in Photography Award in 2013 and a United States Artists Fellowship in 2006. In September 2008, the Guggenheim Museum in New York opened a mid-career exhibition titled, Catherine Opie: American Photographer. She debuted her film, The Modernist, at Regen Projects, Los Angeles in 2018. Her first monograph, Catherine Opie, was published by Phaidon in 2021. Opie received a B.F.A. from the San Francisco Art Institute, and an M.F.A. from the California Institute of the Arts in 1988. She holds the Lynda and Stewart Resnick Endowed Chair in Art at UCLA where she is a professor of Photography and also Chair of the Department of Art.
About Helen Molesworth, Curator of Face to Face
Helen Molesworth (b. 1966,Buffalo, NY) is a writer and a curator based in Los Angeles. Her new podcast “Death of an Artist: The Story of Ana Mendieta and Carl Andre” has just been released by Pushkin and Sony Entertainment. She also recently hosted a podcast series called “Recording Artists” with The Getty, and is the host of Program, streamed interviews with artists and writers hosted by the David Zwirner gallery. Her major museum exhibitions include: One Day at a Time: Manny Farber and Termite Art; Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College 1933–1957; Dance/Draw; This Will Have Been: Art, Love & Politics in the 1980s; Part Object Part Sculpture; and Work Ethic. She has organized monographic exhibitions of Ruth Asawa, Moyra Davey, Noah Davis, Louise Lawler, Steve Locke, Anna Maria Maiolino, Josiah McElheny, Kerry James Marshall, Catherine Opie, Amy Sillman, and Luc Tuymans. She is the author of numerous catalogue essays, and her writing has appeared in Artforum, Art Journal, Documents, and October. The recipient of the 2011 Bard Center for Curatorial Studies Award for Curatorial Excellence, in 2021 she received a Guggenheim Fellowship and in 2022 she was awarded The Clark Art Writing Prize.
Exhibition Access
ICP is open every day except Tuesday from 11 AM to 7 PM, and until 9 PM on Thursdays. Admission: $16 for adults; $12 for seniors (62 and over), students (with valid ID), military, and visitors with disabilities (caregivers are free); $3 for SNAP/EBT card holders; free for ICP members, ICP students, and all visitors 16 years and under. Admission is by suggested donation on Thursdays from 6 to 9 PM. Tickets can be reserved online at icp.org/tickets. Visitors are asked to arrive during the 30-minute window of their timed ticket to help ensure a safe flow in the lobby. For more information, read ICP’s updated Visitor Information and Accessibility guidelines and policies.
Exhibition Support
Exhibition support is generously provided by DIOR and ICP’s Exhibitions Committee. Exhibitions at ICP are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.
About the International Center of Photography
The International Center of Photography (ICP) is the world’s leading institution dedicated to photography and visual culture. Cornell Capa founded ICP in 1974 to champion “concerned photography”—socially and politically minded images that can educate and change the world. Through exhibitions, education programs, community outreach, and public programs, ICP offers an open forum for dialogue about the power of the image. Since its inception, ICP has presented more than 700 exhibitions, provided thousands of classes, and hosted a wide variety of public programs. ICP launched its new integrated center on Manhattan’s Lower East Side in January 2020. Located at 79 Essex Street, ICP is the cultural anchor of Essex Crossing, one of the most highly anticipated and expansive mixed-use developments in New York City. ICP pays respect to the original stewards of this land, the Lenape people, and other indigenous communities. Visit icp.org to learn more about the museum and its programs.
Images: Catherine Opie, Jerome Caja, 1993. © Catherine Opie, Courtesy Regen Projects, Los Angeles and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong and Seoul and Thomas Dane Gallery, London and Naples; Tacita Dean, Portraits, 2016. © Tacita Dean, Courtesy the artist, Frith Street Gallery, London and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York / Paris; Brigitte Lacombe, Maya Angelou, New York, NY, 1987. © Brigitte Lacombe
KiaRa – A Classical Look Back
KiaRa is a symphonic metal band founded by Anna KiaRa (singer of Imperial Age) in 2019 as her solo project and then formed into the full band when Anna’s friends and colleagues on music stage joined her.
The Band’s music style is based on classical female fronted symphonic metal but also combines elements of different metal subgenres like symphonic black metal, modern metal and folk metal.
The debut album “Storyteller” was released in 2020 and got plenty of positive reviews from metal fans all around the world.
The presentation of “Storyteller” was performed as an online stream show due to COVID lockdown and later was released as “Online Winter Show” on DVD.
The second album “Archangel” was released on October 14th, 2022. The band describes the album as experimental and far more heavy than the previous one.
The first single from the album called “Last Goodbye” was released on September 29th. The official “Last Goodbye” video was published on October 7th. Now the second official video for the song “Nostalgia”is out!
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