Looking Out, Looking Up - Peter Spafford, Richard Ormrod, with guests
7.30pm Friday 28 March - Heart Centre
Peter Spafford adds:
The Breeze is a song about war, in particular The First World War. It's based on a true story told me by a very old man in the West Country many years ago. Music never stopped a war starting, but it's worth a try.
Images: Lizzie Coombes/Betty Lawless. Ukelele: Richard Ormrod.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gTIE3uEYCQ
7.30pm Friday 28 March - Heart Centre
Audience Comments
Richard Ormrod |
1. A remarkable smorgasbord of literary delights.
2. Brill! Lovely entertainment – varied!
3. A very enjoyable and
varied evening – good to give a space for younger performers to join with more
seasoned professionals.
4. Brilliant evening of live music. Varied and original.
5. Fantastic event. Came to support my daughter who played and I’m so
glad I did. Wonderful venue and great to see some new and very different talent.
Poet Lizzie was inspirational and so insightful for one so young. Peter and
Richard were funny and poignant and their take on nursery rhymes was so
different but made me very nostalgic. The Graham Browning Trio had such
thoughtful lyrics, great harmonies and a fab double bass. For a 17 year old
like Hannah this was a great opportunity to perform to a new audience. An
unexpectedly entertaining and enjoyable evening – and just how many instruments
can Richard play!!
6. Lizzie Hawkins excellent. Music fascinating. Peter Spafford great.
People should not be allowed in late and definitely not mid-number!
7. An odd, but fascinating, mixture of music and poetry (and poetry set
to music). The musicians were inventive and had the audience enthralled.
8. Very good event.
9. Compelling, innovative first part. Wanted more of the young poet. I
didn’t enjoy the trio but people around me said they were in tune with them.
Welcome exciting sounds returned in the third section. Prufrock will never be
the same again but in terms of congruence of words and music Crossing the Bar
worked best for me.
10. A nice variety of words and music. Good to see young people
performing too.
Graham Browning |
11. Very invigorating and heartwarming. Lovely atmosphere and variety of
performers.
12. Extremely exciting music and range of instruments. Quirky words from
Peter and lovely youthful poems from the young poet. The ukulele player had an
exceptionally strong and plangent voice. The Graham Browning Trio – music
pleasantly dreamy, lyrics mediocre. Loved the Browning, Eliot and Tennyson. A
lot more of Peter and Richard would have been good.
13. A great evening, sensitive, exciting and most melodious. Thank you.
14. There were some really exceptional songs from various performers –
brilliant. All of the people taking part were highly talented – I greatly
enjoyed the evening.
15. The sort of evening you would never find in London. A kaleidoscope
of music and words – a joy all round.
16. A truly remarkable evening – the musical skills truly magic, the
singing and ????? Sheer satisfying joy.
Hannah Swalwell |
17. An entertaining and illuminating variety – performance of music and
poetry. More of this kind of event – Headingley LitFest is value, through and
through.
18. Wonderful evening – varied, full of imaginative creativity from a
range of professionals and young performers. Nursery rhymes and T.S Eliot were
a joy.
19. Something for everyone. Varied. Lovely evening.
20. Great evening. Good way to hear poetry in a musical setting!
Peter Spafford adds:
The Breeze is a song about war, in particular The First World War. It's based on a true story told me by a very old man in the West Country many years ago. Music never stopped a war starting, but it's worth a try.
Images: Lizzie Coombes/Betty Lawless. Ukelele: Richard Ormrod.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gTIE3uEYCQ