Category Archives: The People

Niamh Doyle’s adventures in radioland: Capital South Wales’ Next Generation Scheme

This is the next instalment from Atrium student Niamh Doyle, in her journey into radioland. Today she tells us about the Capital South Wales’ Next Generation Scheme!

I was very fortunate to be invited to be part of Capital FM South Wales’ Next Generation scheme. I found about this event through a fantastic Radio University lecturer at my University, the University of South Wales, where I was able to meet the presenters of Capital South Wales’ breakfast show, explore the office, and learn their great history.

On the day I was offered a place on the tour, I had no idea that on the actual day I would meeting the voices behind South Wales’ favourite breakfast radio presenters. Once I settled in and sat amongst Matt, Polly and Geraint, in between songs and them presenting on air, I was fortunate enough to get to know them and ask questions about how they became radio presenters, and so on.

It was lovely learning each of their different paths to how they got to Capital, which I found so encouraging since although I want to go into breakfast radio presenting, I haven’t actually got a degree in media, but am soon going to be graduating with a Music degree. Therefore, it’s so promising to hear that it’s not only about what degree you have, but also how much work experience you have done in order to make you more and more familiar with radio.

It was fascinating to see how well the presenters bounced off each other and how genuine their friendship was off air as much as it was on. I felt so comfortable in the presenter’s chair, and it really made me realise how desperate I am to become a breakfast radio presenter myself.

After the breakfast show, I was shown around the upstairs office where I met the many different areas that goes on behind the presenting. This included the commercial team, the marketing team and many more that make Capital South Wales possible. It was such a warm atmosphere where you could really see how well everyone got on and thoroughly enjoyed what they were doing.

After a full morning, I was taken into the studio again where I was informed on the history behind Capital South Wales, which was absolutely fascinating.

Over all, my Next Generation day was genuinely one of the most amazing experiences that I have ever been invited on. I was able to see what a day in the life of a breakfast radio presenter is like, how early you have to get up, but yet really how rewarding that early start is, and how much fun you have in the process. I was sceptical whether seeing the backgrounds behind radio presenting would scare me away, but if anything, it only made me hungrier for the profession.

 

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Meet Sarah-Jane Reeeves: multi-tasking mum and mature student

 

For this week’s piece, we’ve invited ultimate multi tasker Sarah-Jane Reeves to talk about her experiences of being a mum of three … and a full time mature student … and mixing with younger folks in the classroom. 

Sarah Jane Reeves

As I open my son’s book bag from school I spot yet another ‘reminder’ letter. It’s usually telling me he hasn’t returned his library book, permission slip, or most likely a ‘donation’ of cash for an up and coming project at school – which, by the way, is never a real ‘donation’ or why would I get a reminder to pay? Anyway, these little slips of paper only serve one purpose and that’s to remind me that I am not the wonder woman I strive to be.

In 2015, at the of 38 I decided to return to university. A year after my eldest child started university herself. I had my daughter when I was 18, and, like so many parents, I put my own dreams on hold. I have no regrets in doing so, I have spent the last 21 years enjoying raising my daughter and her two brothers and they have brought me nothing but joy …well not always joy, sometimes stress, (actually a lot of stress, parenting is hard!) but mainly joy. So, here we are in 2017, I’m in year two of my English and Creative Writing degree and my daughter is preparing to graduate.

The decision to return to education as a mature student wasn’t an easy one. There are the obvious financial implications of student life, and with a family to think of there is no doubt that I feel selfish in my decision. I was also filled with fear and perished the thought of looking, feeling and being so old! How would I cope in an academic setting surrounded by fellow students the same age as my daughter? How well will I take instruction from a tutor who might be younger or the same age as me?

If you’re thinking of returning to education as a mature student, I’m sure these thoughts have crossed your mind too. Well, firstly, I had to stop overthinking. This degree is for me, and hopefully my family will benefit from it too. Secondly, you need to get the issue of age out of your mind. I’m on a course with like-minded people, and that’s the focus – age has very little to do with anything.

Of course, the social side of Uni life is different as a mature student, I skipped Freshers week, for a start! At the same time, I’m more than comfortable going for a drink or coffee with my peers. They don’t make me feel old, they make me feel like me. They’re inspiring and it’s exciting to watch them blossom, I’m always impressed by how much more they know than I did 20 years ago. Likewise, I hope I bring life experience to our debates, not in a ‘know it all’ fashion but a helpful insight into life from a different perspective.

This is all starting to sound a little romantic don’t you think? Think again. I get weeks when I am filled anxiety. I want to be the best possible mum I can be, I need to remember appointments, arrangement, my husband’s shift pattern, and deadlines. It’s chaos, my home ends up looking like a war zone. Before I know it I’m giving the kids chicken nuggets for the second night in a row, buying pre-packed sandwiches from the corner shop on the way to school for lunch boxes and rubbing yesterday’s ketchup off my five year old’s school jumper with a wet wipe. Instead of clearing the kids’ toys off the dinner table before we eat the aforementioned nuggets, I’m clearing away my own lecture notes, whilst apologising for making a mess like a child.

Essay deadline week is a particularly spectacular time. I’m an argumentative, stroppy, chocolate-demanding rat bag who peers from behind the laptop once every five hours just to acknowledge my partner’s existence. He never complains, he brings coffee and waits for Sarah-Jane to return, so normal service can resume. I’m under no illusion that any of what I’m doing right now would be possible without his support. I need to tell him that more often.

And all the time this is going on and I’m seemingly ‘keeping it together’ my mind is thinking up stories. Stories to entertain others with tales of the weird and wonderful as though that’s not really going on in real life. Being a mum, aged 40 and a mature student IS very much weird and yet wonderful.

Sarah-Jane is a mum of three living, what should be, a very ordinary life in Cardiff. However, deciding to become a full time mature student at the age of 40 rather turned life upside down. Sarah-Jane loves to write short stories, flash fiction, poetry and blogs. Sarah-Jane also writes about the local community in her monthly Cardiff Times column. Her ultimate goal is to live and write in a cottage by the sea with her ‘Essex boy’ and three children.

Follow her: awomaninthemiddle.wordpress.com  |  thecwtchytraveller.wordpress.com  |  Twitter @nearlymrso

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My Cardiff Geography: Geraint Clarke, Magic Consultant

Have you ever sat in a coffee-shop opposite a man with a laptop on a Tuesday afternoon and wondered what he does for a living? Your guess was graphic designer, your friend guessed fireman… We decided to accost one of those men to find out, and you won’t believe his answer. Meet Geraint Clarke, Cardiff-based freelance magic consultant. And no – we had no idea what that was either, until we grilled him about it …

Geraint Clarke Magic Consultant

Q. GERAINT, WHAT ON EARTH IS A MAGIC CONSULTANT?

A. Essentially, I sell secrets.

My main job is creating tricks and designing campaigns for an American online business called Ellusionist. They sell the secrets to magic tricks online and I craft their campaigns for them, as well as coming up with some original tricks to publish.

Magicians on TV or at events all around the world use these secrets to blow the minds of their audiences.

The easiest comparison I can give is that Beyoncé had five songwriters for ‘Run the world’. Magic Creators are the songwriters to the Beyonce’s of magic.  

Sometimes magicians learn the secrets from other creatives to allow themselves to be the best performers. Like Jonathan Creek… except I don’t solve murders.

Q. HOW DID YOU GET INTO THAT? WE DIDN’T EVEN KNOW THAT WAS A THING

A. I have a background in marketing, and I created magic on the side. My friend Rory and I filmed product trailers and sold the secret to the tricks to magicians all over the world.

We split royalties cheques each month. I felt like a rockstar (or some sort of struggling songwriter), cashing in cheques for US dollars to the bank. Although this is actually way less glamorous than I imagined it was.

My tricks sold so well, they hit #1 in the bestseller list. Some magicians used them at their private events and some popular names have even used them on TV (and no – I can’t say who!).

I was lucky enough to gain the attention of some bigwigs in the industry and was offered an exclusive contract with Ellusionist.

I use my marketing background to develop their business as well as giving them exclusive rights to my original ideas. They’re the perfect client. It allows me to do other freelance work like voiceovers, blogging or consulting for other companies.

The only problem with being freelance is that both your postman (and your Mum) will think you’re unemployed, being at home during the day…

Q. DO YOU KNOW DYNAMO?

A. Yes.

Q. REALLY?

A. Yeah I was with him in London last month. He LOVES magic. You think he’d be sick of it by constantly being in the spotlight, but we sat down and he couldn’t stop performing.

He’s actually the one who inspired me to start magic. I saw him on MTV Base, back in the day. The next day I was in a book-store picking up a magic book. Ten years later, I’m lucky enough to know him. Great guy!

Q. IT LOOKS LIKE YOU’RE JUGGLING THE CARDS, WHAT IS THAT?

A. Everyone has seen fancy shuffles and thought “I’m not playing cards with that guy”. This idea of manipulating a deck of cards to flip, spin or spring them through the air is called ‘cardistry’.

It’s an artform in its own right, with tournaments, conferences and award shows.

This year I got to fly to Berlin as a sponsor of Cardistry Con and witness the best in the world at this art form. Nothing is more soul-crushing than being at an event where a 13 year old kid is better than you at something you’ve spent 10 years perfecting. I mean, I’m only 26, but even I felt old there.

To the We Are Cardiff readers out there that love to fidget and keep their hands busy, I’d definitely recommend cardistry as a hobby. You can practice in front of the TV, or pass time waiting for the bus.

My advice – start with the ‘charlier cut’ and work your way up to the harder stuff. It’s so addictive.

Q. IS IT SOMETHING YOU STARTED WHEN YOU WERE YOUNG?

A. Actually, I didn’t start magic or cardistry until I was 16. Before that I didn’t really have a fixed hobby.

I played rugby throughout primary school, took up boxing in my teens and quit karate after one lesson. I think there’s a lot of pressure on kids to determine what they love instantly. Or to dive all in on their first ever swimming lesson for example (excuse the pun!).

The truth is I didn’t love anything as a kid. I discovered my passion late, after trying a myriad of different hobbies.

I think everyone needs a hobby though, a creative outlet to forget about the stresses of everyday life. Something that’s 100 per cent yours, and can’t be determined by your job, girlfriend, boyfriend or parents.

Q. WHERE DID YOU GROW UP?

A. I grew up in Newport, with Cardiff being an adventurous train-ride away. My mother would take us to the old ‘Toys R Us’ by the station to spend any pocket money I’d earned. It’s been knocked down since – it used to be on the site where John Lewis and St David’s 2 are now.

It was back then I realised then the importance of hard work, as I could never afford that RC Hovercraft.

They say home is where your heart is, but sometimes you connect with a place that isn’t where you were born. For me that’s Cardiff. It’s where I do my socialising, nights out, shopping, filming… everything.

Q. WHAT’S YOUR FAVOURITE PART OF CARDIFF?

A. In the winter it’s Coffee Barker or Tea Barker (Royal Arcade in the City Centre), but in the summer Cardiff Bay is unbeatable. A mellow atmosphere and incredible choice of things to do.

My serious drinking days are over now. I think I took my liver hostage in university, but I used to love summer evenings on Mill Lane.

Q. WHAT PART OF CARDIFF DO YOU LIVE NOW?

A. I recently moved just outside Cardiff to Llanharan. It’s a quaint barn conversion that has the convenience of a CF postcode, but without the noise of a student party in the apartment above me… like my old place.

Q. ANY FINAL WORDS OF ADVICE FOR THOSE WANTING TO GET INVOLVED IN THIS WEIRD UNDERGROUND HOBBY?

A. If you see me around Cardiff and want to ask me a question on any of the above, don’t hesitate to come over and say hi.

Incase you don’t see me round the city, feel free to get in touch if you’re interested in learning magic or cardistry. I’ll point you in the right direction. You can follow my Geraint Clarke lifestyle blog or find me on social media @geraint_clarke.

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Women of Wales in music: Chloe Jackson-Nott investigates

Photojournalist Chloe Jackson-Nott recently completed a project on women in music in Wales, about the lack of women in the industry and how we can address it. Take it away, Chloe!

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Niamh Doyle and Rebekah Price, presenters on Dragon Radio. All photography by Chloe Jackson-Nott.

My photography mainly focuses on music. There aren’t many female music photographers around, so within my work I wanted to photograph and talk to women in other parts of the music industry: whether that be, in a band, solo artist, radio presenter, photographer or enthusiastic gig-goer.

I found eight young women in different parts of the industry. They all do different things within it, and they agreed to speak to me and allowed me to photograph them.

Firstly, Daniele Lewis is a singer-songwriter from New Quay, West Wales. I stumbled across her at Sŵn Festival when looking through the schedule for female artists. Unfortunately, I didn’t get the chance to speak to her on the day but I did see her perform and she has a lot of friends and family around supporting her. Her performance had a calm vibe to it but at the same time you could see all of her enthusiasm and that she loved being up on stage.

I then spoke to Fenne Lily just before her show at Sŵn Festival in Clwb Ifor Bach who had travelled from Bristol to perform in Cardiff. She has strong views about how to get to where you need to be in the music industry and how you need to fight your way to the top, especially being female.

Before I started to find women to talk to about this, I knew I wanted to speak to Katie Hall from Aberdare as I have worked with and seen her band Chroma play live multiple times. She’s incredible. When she performs, she’s lost in performance – she doesn’t care what other people think about her. She’ll be dancing around the stage, giving enthusiastic facial expressions. You can tell she is very passionate about her music and take advantage of being the lead singer of a band with two other male members. She’s a great role model for young girls who want to make it big one day in music.

I also spoke to Dani Hewitt from Treherbet and Samantha Bull from Aberdare who volunteer with Young Promoters Network where they have worked with many women, including myself, who want to take the next step in music. They realised that all of the girls were coming to them for advice noticing that there were no other female role models for them, so decided to create a community called WOMEN (Women of Music Events Network.)

I then went to the students of all music courses at University of South Wales and found Ellie Strong from Cardiff who aspires to be a successful drummer, which is someone I had yet to come across so jumped at the chance to speak to her. She performs at Café Jazz every Monday to practice her skills and perform to a small crowd. Finally, I was asked to photograph two radio presenters from Dragon Media at University of South Wales who happened to be both female so spoke to them to get a different view as they were not in a band or aspire to be artists.

Women of Wales in music

Samantha Bull, 26, Aberdare, W.O.M.E.N

“There aren’t enough women in the music industry, progress is being made but it is slow. There is so much could be done and must be done to counteract the inequality that we as women face in the industry. From the culture that surrounds us and society it has been ingrained in us from a young age that all girls are in competition with each other. Take that thought and push it out of your brain. We need to come together and start supporting each other and celebrating each other’s achievements.”

Dani Hewitt, 26, Treherbet, W.O.M.E.N Cofounder

“There are a lot of men working in the music industry that I could look up to but not a lot of women that I could identify with and follow in the footsteps of. I volunteer with the Young Promoters Network and a lot of the girls starting coming to me and looking up to me to help them. It became a community where we supported each other with developing skills. As there aren’t a lot of female role models, I decided that I should be one for now for young girls who want to achieve their dreams and goals.”

Samantha Bull, 26, and Dani Hewitt, 26, running a W.O.M.E.N panel (Women of Music Events Network) panel at Swn Festival 2016 to inspire young girls to achieve their dreams in music.
Samantha Bull, 26, and Dani Hewitt, 26, running a W.O.M.E.N panel (Women of Music Events Network) panel at Swn Festival 2016 to inspire young girls to achieve their dreams in music.

 

Fenne Lily, 18, Bristol – Singer

“I think there are enough women in the music industry but not women who are actually doing what they want to do, because it’s quite easy to see a girl with an acoustic guitar and tell her she’s can be the next ‘Taylor Swift.’ I think it should cater to women more instead of having men setting up their career and choosing for them. I’ve been brought up by a lot of music as I was attending festivals at a young age so I knew this is definitely what I wanted to do with my life and have decided to build a career out of it. If it’s something you want to do, don’t let society’s opinions stop you.”

Fenny Lily performing downstairs in Clwb Ifor Bach on Saturday 22nd October.
Fenne Lily performing downstairs in Clwb Ifor Bach on Saturday 22nd October.

 

Danielle Lewis, 21, West Wales – Singer

“In the 10 years I have been performing live from school, my local scene at home, playing in Australia to moving to the city in Cardiff, I have seen a lack of women in music in all areas of the industry from playing to sound engineers and producing. It still seems to be a very male orientated business and as a female artist myself I have felt looked down at numerous times. I recently recorded my latest CD with a female producer for the first time and she herself agrees on the shortage. I do think we are becoming more aware of this and I look forward to a new wave of more females in the industry.”

Singer Danielle Lewis, 21, from New Quay, West Wales, performing on the Horizons stage at O'Neils on Saturday 22nd October.
Singer Danielle Lewis, 21, from New Quay, West Wales, performing on the Horizons stage at O’Neils on Saturday 22nd October.

 

Singer Danielle Lewis, performing on the Horizons stage at O'Neils on Saturday 22nd October.
Singer Danielle Lewis, performing on the Horizons stage at O’Neils on Saturday 22nd October.

 

Katie Hall, 21, Aberdare – Singer

“There are definitely not enough girls in the music industry. It shouldn’t be the defining feature of you band that a girl is the front woman. There are so many talented and inspiring musicians that are girls. I think the way to inspire more girls to work in the music industry is to shatter that glass ceiling that’s oppressing women everywhere. The way we do that is challenging promoters attitudes towards women in bands so they give them more gigs. We need to inspire girls from a young age to get involved or pick up an instrument, and support the women who are currently involved in music to reach their full potential as artist.”

Lead singer of Chroma, Katie Hall, performing in Undertone, Cardiff on Sunday 23rd October.
Lead singer of Chroma, Katie Hall, performing in Undertone, Cardiff on Sunday 23rd October.

 

Lead singer of Chroma, Katie Hall, performing in Undertone, Cardiff on Sunday 23rd October.
Lead singer of Chroma, Katie Hall, performing in Undertone, Cardiff on Sunday 23rd October.

 

Ellie Strong, 20, Cardiff – Drummer

“I think there’s a common misconception that there aren’t a lot of women, but there are plenty of women in music; just not enough making grungy rock and shredding guitar! But then there are some gems like jazz and rock drummer Cindy Blackman, currently killing it in the band Santana.. I think what the current women in the industry need to realise is that ‘music’ isn’t a term to be taken lightly; it’s not always about image, which seems to be the case nowadays. So my advice to singers is that they should listen to Jill Scott’s raw vocals instead of whatever is in the charts, and to instrumentalists – keep doing your thing. Prove that we can do it just as well as the boys.”

women_in_music-08 women_in_music-09

 

Niamh Doyle, 20, Cardiff, Radio Presenter

“I believe that there are a few women who are extremely big at the moment, but that’s only a fortunate few. The advice I would give is to keep up their YouTube platforms, as this is a platform where anyone; gender, age, or race is welcome and as it is such a large platform, it is accessible to everyone around the world. We are also at a time in our lives where society is beginning to change the status levels between men and women; women are beginning to become more noticed and taken seriously. My final advice to women would be to never give up and to just keep their end goal in mind.”

Niamh Doyle, 20, student at USW and radio presenter at Dragon Media
Niamh Doyle, 20, student at USW and radio presenter at Dragon Media

 

 

Rebekah Price, 22, Cwmbran, Radio Presenter

“Music is an incredibly important thing in my life. I’ve always loved talking about it, listening to it, as well as making it. But I will admit that there has been times where I have stood back and questioned whether realistically, as a woman, I would be able to move forward in the industry. Negative thinking I know, but this was partly because I’d recently become aware of the gender divide within music festivals. When we look at festivals in particular, which essentially provide a platform for a large collection of artists and musicians, we can see that typically there is only a small percentage of female acts being seen.”

Rebekah (CORR) Price, 22, student at USW and radio presenter at Dragon Media.
Rebekah (CORR) Price, 22, student at USW and radio presenter at Dragon Media.

 

 

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Finding direction – Niamh Doyle finds the joy of radio in Cardiff

We would like to welcome you to the first instalment from student Niamh Doyle, who’ll be talking to us about a passion she discovered while at university here in Cardiff.

Niamh Doyle

My name is Niamh Doyle and I am a third year Contemporary Music Performance Student at the University of South Wales, The Atrium and like some of you who will be reading this, I, myself and under six months away from graduating my three year degree. Who knew that the term ‘if you blink you’ll miss it’, was actually true, right?

So this particular post is for all of you third years out there who may or may not be panicking about what their future path may be, whether you’ll be able to pursue it, or whether you’ll be able to make a living out of it!

Consequently, this article (arranged in three musical quavers) contains my secret ingredient to how I escaped such anxiety and worry, how I found my new passion and ultimately, how I discovered my intended future career path.

However, my story begins at the very beginning of my second year here, where I remember regretting not 1) attending the fresher’s event fair in my first year and 2) ultimately ending in lacking in participation in an acceptable amount of extra curricular activities (excluding ballet, contemporary and guitar teaching, which with each, I only took up for a short amount of time).

Consequently, at the beginning of second year, I ended up dragging my flatmate (at the time) to the fresher’s fair, where I made the first step into radio.Less than a week later, I was notified with an email informing me on the dates and other information that was required for the interviewing process and only two days later, I became a co-host to the chart show at Dragon Radio. ‘The Rebekah and Niamh Chart Show’ continued solidly for a full academic year, where so many treasured memories and friendships were made.

Whilst this show was continuing to grow however, at this point in my life, I was adamant that I was to go into Music Therapy. However, after venturing into a wonderful three months of work experience at a college in South Wales that summer, I soon discovered than Music Therapy just wasn’t for me. It was from that day on that I looked into other radio shows that I could throw myself into in my third year, which is where my second show at Dragon Radio started; £1 Wonders. It was also at this time that I found GTFM. On this station, I own my show, leaving me with two shows where I co-host, and one where I present and run the desk on my own.

All in all, radio saved me. At the beginning of third year, I had unfortunately discovered that I wasn’t so passionate for music anymore.

So what I’m saying, is if you’re still struggling for a career path and you’re sick of your parents asking you how you’re going to be making your money, take up a hobby that you’ve always wanted to take up, because quite frankly, that could end up being your muse!

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The elastic band effect – in conversation with Meryl Cubley

In this week’s person to person, we sit down for a chat with Meryl Cubley, Cardiff-based journalist and writer.

meryl_cubley_by_lorna_cabble

Cardiff is my home – despite not being born here. I’m originally from a very small village located on the Staffordshire Moorlands (very Heathcliffe) but I spent much of my childhood growing up on the coast of west Wales.

You could say that that particular part of the Welsh coastline is intrinsic to who I am – it certainly makes up a good 70 per cent of my childhood memories. It was a very special time for me and the friends who I grew up alongside in west Wales: mainly Welsh, though two or three of us were English. These were dark political times – significant tension existed between the local Welsh and the English interlopers who had holiday homes – but never used them: basically pricing locals out of their own areas of birth because they could no longer afford the house prices.

It was also a time of miners strikes, huge unemployment and a change in the cultural landscape of Britain that we have never recovered from. Yet despite these difficult times, tucked away in a tiny part of the world seven coves long, we enjoyed a halcyon childhood that many will never experience. I know that I feel incredibly lucky to have such amazing and special memories of that west Wales coast; and whenever I go back now, I immediately feel all the stresses and strains of everyday life disappear as soon as I smell the sea air, or look at the different play of light there, or look up to see a canopy full of stars. It is a very special place – and I simply wouldn’t have those memories if it weren’t for Cymru – the people and the place.

Being a country girl at heart brought up pretty much on horseback; I knew I’d have to move to ‘the big smoke’ if I wanted to live the exciting kind of life I dreamed of and read about in the countless novels and biographies I often had my head stuck in. So I left home at a very young age; and over the years lived in London, Manchester and Bristol among others; and leaned my street smarts the hard way. Each city had its charms, its time ‘on the map’. There’s no question that they have influenced my passion and love of arts and culture, music and society. There were incredible music scenes, new political ideas, a change in style, culture and fashion: we’re talking about in particular the scenes in Manchester and Bristol here – London always seemed like a rat trap to me.

But Cardiff had me hooked from the start. I was living in Australia, pretending to be a surfer chick, on a gap year before they were called a gap year; after a particularly nasty accident left me in a wheelchair for eight months. I got a phone call from my Mum at home in west Wales, to say I’d had an unconditional offer from Cardiff’s School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies – one of the top rated institutions in the UK for media training. I think it’s significant to note that I was seriously considering studying in Sydney at the time – but I knew immediately that I wanted to study and live in Cardiff.

After three years of hard graft and like many students, I decided to stay and work in Cardiff after I had graduated. I’ve worked for all of the Welsh media institutions at one time and another – and learned a lot – and had a lot of fun doing so.

When I did leave in 2003, to edit a graffiti publication in Bristol; I honestly didn’t think I’d be back – but lo and behold – nine years ago I did come back to live and work in Cardiff once more. It seems I just can’t stay away!

Since coming back I love the range of things on offer here. If I had friends visiting for the weekend, this would be our weekend itinerary:
  • Friday night – local drinks – which ranges from the Albany pub to Milgi to all the choices on Wellfield Road.
  • Saturday – brunch at Porro or Cameo – or one of the greasy spoon cafes if it was a really good night! Then follow that by a walk around Roath Park Lake or Bute Park. In the summer it’s great fun hopping on the little boat docked near the Bute Park entrance; and zipping down to Cardiff Bay. A walk across the barrage to Penarth is a must, blows away the night before, feels like a million miles away – and is an awesome spot for collecting marine fossils. Grab the train back to Cardiff, have a brief siesta; then the fun starts all over again! Dinner at Il Pastifico, Potted Pig or Cafe Citta, followed by cocktails at Dead Canary; and dancing over at Gwdihw. Then on to an after party wherever that happens to be …
  • Sunday involves, bed, cat, papers and ordering in!

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Meryl Cubley is an Editor, Journalist and Writing Consultant. You can see more of her work at merylcubley.com or follow her @merylcubley. She currently lives in Roath.

Meryl was photographed by Lorna Cabble at Cameo Club on Wellfield Road.

Mark, Odd Jobs Cardiff: “I’m fed up with people being ripped off”

We don’t usually promote businesses on We Are Cardiff. But Mark (aka @oddjobscardiff) is our exception.

Processed with Snapseed.

Mark pitches himself as an ‘honest man for hire’, and both of us at We Are Cardiff have been super impressed with him and his work. In a Facebook post, he describes his frustration at seeing people being ripped off for odd jobs, and vowed to provide a better service to the people of Cardiff:

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He provides window cleaning, gardening, gutter cleaning, hedge trimming, airport pickups, power washing, house painting, home security… basically anything!

Mark’s unique business operates on a pay what you want policy – ie. you give him whatever you feel is appropriate. He doesn’t quote for jobs, and he’s really honest about payment. He spent 4 hours clearing my garden and trimming a huge hedge – when I tried to pay him he gave me half of the money back ‘because it was too much’!

Alongside his great attitude to business, he’s reliable, punctual, fast, clean, works in any weather, very scrupulous and thorough in his work. Check out his Twitter account for examples of great before and after photos.

If you want to hire Mark, get in touch with him on Twitter or phone him on 07801 432 863 – you won’t be disappointed!

Halloween 2016 – Cardiff Style!

Photojournalist Sam from Samuel Bay Photography was roaming the Cardiff streets over this Halloween so you didn’t have to … happy Halloween, all!

A man in fancy dress celebrates Hallowe'en- 1st November 2016 - Queen Mary Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
A man in fancy dress celebrates Hallowe’en- 1st November 2016 – Queen Mary Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe'en celebrations. The police arrived to make sure everyone was having enough fun- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe’en celebrations. The police arrived to make sure everyone was having enough fun-  2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers in fancy dress pose for a photo during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers in fancy dress pose for a photo during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

A man plays music on the street while others dance during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
A man plays music on the street while others dance during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

A person in fancy dress takes a moment to pose for a selfie- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
A person in fancy dress takes a moment to pose for a selfie- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers dance to the music during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

A person in fancy dress takes a moment to pose for a selfie- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
A person in fancy dress takes a moment to pose for a selfie- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers in fancy dress during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Revellers make their way from the City centre during Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Revellers make their way from the City centre during Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

 

Litter left in the street after Hallowe'en celebrations- 1st November 2016 - Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay
Litter left in the street after Hallowe’en celebrations- 1st November 2016 – Queen Street Cardiff, United Kingdom. ©Samuel Bay

Thanks to Samuel Bay Photography for the snaps (Samuel Bay Photography website)

***

Talking the Rules of Play with Ian Davies

Cardiff is a playful city for sure – look no further than the city’s hub for gamers, the Rules of Play. We caught up with co-owner Ian Davies for some insight into how the shop was set up, and more about their gaming events.

rules of play

I’ve lived in Cardiff since 31 December 1999. I remember the exact day because I moved to Cardiff, from London, for a Manics gig. We drove everything up, unpacked the van and went straight to the show. I’m from Pontypool originally. I lived in Cardiff for a short time, about a year, in my early 20s so I knew Cardiff before I moved down here permanently.

I went to university in London, to Goldsmiths College, and stayed living and working in sales and marketing there until I moved back. When I first moved to Cardiff I lived in Roath, but we bought a house in Canton and that’s where I live now.

I grew up in Pontypool – some people say its a rubbish place but I had a great childhood there. Everything was a lot freer back then, so there was a lot of mucking around in the park, exploring the canal, taking your bikes up to the common, going and watching Pontypool Front Row play rugby. Most of my childhood in Pontypool was spent outdoors hanging out and exploring.

Kids aren’t as feral as they used to be and, in some ways, they need to be a little bit more feral – but it’s just not the way things are now. My boy is 10 and he goes to the park but he has a phone with him and he has to let us know what time he’s coming home and ring us if he’s coming home late. When I was his age I was jumping on trains to Bristol, or cycling to Usk 10 miles away. And my dad was telling me that at the same age he would be cycling to Gloucester.

Me and my mate Steve, who is one of the other owners, were gamers when we were kids. We always talked about owning a game shop ‘when we were adults’. In 2010 we found out that the old game shop in Cardiff – Cardiff Games – was closing down. We thought ‘if we don’t do it now it just ain’t going to happen’. We made a few phone calls, put a business plan together and we just decided to go for it. We had wanted to do it for a long time and this opportunity came up.

I think being someone who has always enjoyed playing different types of of games has helped the growth of Rules Of Play, along with the boom in the board game market in the last four or five years.

I also think being in Cardiff really helps, as the city is full of people who are interested in playing table top games, but wouldn’t consider themselves ‘gamers’ (such as students and families).

Playing games is an important part of life. There’s been a recent boom, boom not necessarily with board game enthusiasts – more with people who like to play games but wouldn’t call themselves hobbyists. It’s just become more acceptable. You can invite friends over to play a game, you don’t have to play on your own. Or you can go down to Chapter Arts Centre or the Lansdowne and it’s not unusual to see somebody playing a board game there.

Games are now are in popular culture. You have Jan Vertonghen, a Tottenham Hotspur player, tweeting about playing Settlers Of Catan.

I think the gaming industry has also realised it has to grow up and appeal more to the mainstream. So there are party games, games like Ticket To Ride which you can easily teach to people who don’t play board games. Or games like Dixit, which are gorgeous and imaginative.

My hopes for the next few years is to have more shops, both in Cardiff and other place, and to host more events. More school, library and mainstream events that everyone can get involved in and enjoy. I would also love to have a board game cafe, I think that would be a natural progression for the shop.

I guess my favourite past time is spending time with my kids. They’re 10, 8 and 6 and I enjoy spending time with them, taking them to football and taekwondo and – obviously – playing board games with them. At the moment my youngest one loves playing Tally Ho! and UNO. The middle one’s favourite is Forbidden Island and Ticket To Ride. Me and my eldest boy, whose 10, play lots of Star Wars X-Wing together. As a family we’ll sit down and play the best ‘pick on dad’ games.

I love being in Cardiff. I love any of Cardiff’s green spaces! I’m lucky because I have Victoria Park, Thompsons Park and Pontcanna Fields all within a couple of minutes walk from me. With three kids you can do anything in Cardiff and there’s no excuse not to. There’s Roath Park, going to Cardiff Bay, going into the museums, visiting the castle. You can go swimming, white water rafting, rock climbing, trampolining, horse riding. Anything is available for kids now and that’s not even including sport! If you want to play rugby, football, cricket then you’ve got some of the best facilities in the country right in Cardiff city centre.

Ian’s Cardiff picks:

Favourite shop: “I don’t have a lot of spare time to enjoy Cardiff’s shops but it’s always fun going in the lego shop because you can be a big kid in the Lego shop!”

Favourite place to eat out? “I really love Chai Street Cafe at the moment. I enjoy having a street foodie feel in a restaurant setting.”

What’s good about your neighbourhood? “Canton has everything that I want so close to town. I can cycle into town, take the kids to the park, go down to the Lansdowne for real ale pint, go to the theatre and cinema in Chapter. That’s what I like about where I live, it’s got everything I want.”

If you had friends visiting Cardiff for the weekend, what would you suggest they do? “Usually when friends visit they have kids so we’ll take them to Techniquest, grab some coffee in Penarth or get the bikes up and cycle up the Taf trail.”

Ian Rules Of Play

Thanks Ian! Make sure to visit The Rules of Play at 29 Castle Arcade, Cardiff, CF10 1BW.

Rules of Play website

Rules of Play Facebook

Rules of Play Twitter

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Spread the news- we have a new good news editor!

We have a new writer and editor over here at We Are Cardiff! The wonderful Cat Johnston is going to be curating our good news, seeking out the goodness in our community and spreading it around like melted Nutella.

10897036_1082703905079654_5102542298178946618_nSo that referendum happened, and the result came out, and a whole lot of reaction came after it. There has been so much hate and anger, from both sides, and we want to change that. Whether people voted leave or remain, whether they regret their decision now or stand by it, is irrelevant compared to that reaction. The media has not helped, with negative and sometimes spiteful and hate-inducing stories dominating our screens. In an age where news stories and peoples’ opinions are so readily available through multiple outlets, whether we want to hear them or not, that negativity can feel overwhelming.

There is so much more good going on in the world though, and right here in Cardiff. We want to claim back that good, we want to claim back nice (a massively underrated word) and we want to share it.

We don’t want to be overwhelmed by the negative: we want to highlight the uplifting, inspiring and heart-warming, and if we can inject a bit of humour in along the way then all the better! Whenever there is something bad in the world, look for the good: it’s always there. Look for the helpers, they are always there but not always seen. Look for the people who are turning the situation into something positive. Look for the love. If you can’t find it, then be that good yourself.

This blog is about us being that change, sick of all the negativity and wanting to focus on the more important things. We want to bring you wonderful, amusing, joyful stories of goodness, niceness and humanity (and sometimes animality!). In our own small way we will be fighting this negativity and hatred, through smiles and togetherness. We are together, We Are Cardiff!

For today, it seems like a good place to start our sharing of good news stories on the positive outcomes people are bringing from this referendum, irrespective of how they voted. The Cardiff for Europe event in town on Tuesday 28th June is a brilliant example of this. This was not a protest at the result: it was a positive celebration of Europe and our togetherness. The event included speakers from a variety of organisations talking about the impact of the referendum and sharing the message of hope not hate. A glance around the crowd that had gathered in The Hayes was inspiring: from the young to the older; fluWP_20160628_18_46_50_Proent Welsh-Speakers to those who felt the need to clap along even though they didn’t understand the language; commuters who had joined on their way home from work, to people who had planned to be there; French, Polish, and no doubt many other nationalities, all listening to messages of positivity, of hope, and of cohesion. All there for a common goal: to celebrate our differences as much as our commonalities.

In true Cardiff style, the rain joined in the party with vigour, but that didn’t deter people. It was like an urban Glastonbury, minus the mud and face paint. There was even a performance from Gruff Rhys from the Super Furry Animals, but the real musical treat was a spontaneous burst of Mae hen wlad fy nhadau by the crowd at the end as people started leaving, proving the Welsh really are all beautiful singers!

The entire event was put on at the last minute by a small group of impassioned people who wanted to do something good and positive and to share that message. We are going to continue to share good news stories like this with you, but also letting you know what you can get involved in Cardiff, to create your own good news. We’ll be keeping this page updated but if you have a story you want to share, or something you’d like us to write about, then let us know.

Before we go though, here’s a lovely uplifting video to give you the serious warm and fuzzies today. Hope it makes you smile and be thankful for all the good people and animals in the world making their tiny corner of it that much brighter. This is, after all, the point of our good news initiative.

“Wales is a good place for tribes to thrive”: talking music with Lucy Squire

Today I am super, super excited to publish this interview with a long time hero and pal of mine. Lucy Squire: entrepreneur, stalwart of the music community and passionately supporting the local alternative dance scene for longer than anyone would care to remember. Lucy ran dance music store Catapult up until a couple of years ago, put on raves in bank vaults (amongst other locations) and today talks to us exclusively about Catapult, soundsystems, Castlemorton, innovation in dance music and the courses she now teaches at USW. Hero klaxon!

lucy_squire_web

You’re not from Cardiff originally – tell us about where you grew up.

Weston-super-Mare: invaded on bank holidays by punks and mods, booming with old age people homes and rehabs, dead in the winter but NUTS in the summer. People are drawn to seaside resorts for a variety of reasons, but a sense of community was lacking. Against that backdrop, a strong youth culture thrived.

At what age did you start really getting into music?

At junior school I was identified as musical because I could clap to a beat – violin, piano, guitar and a European tour with a Youth Orchestra followed, which I loved.

As a teenager I got into reggae, dancehall, 2tone, punk and a biker’s nightclub there called Hobbits had a big impact on me too (still love Lynyrd Skynyrd  “Freebird”). We used to catch the bus to Bristol and buy wooden crates full of Jamaican 7” imports with no middles. But it was when I first visited Glastonbury Festival, aged 12, I committed there and then to a life of music.

Can you tell me about the original rave scene back then?

In 1989 I went to the Sound Factory in New York, it was life changing. From there I was lucky enough to witness some of the early raves around the M25: Sunrise, Energy, and so on, where the only info released was the phone number to call for directions that took you on road trips often involving hundreds of miles and many wild goose chases.

Things changed with the prevalence of soundsystem culture in the UK. The free ethos and scenic locations overtook the commercial propositions for a while as the youth invaded the countryside. I attended Castlemorton 1992 and totally immersed myself in the culture. I kept a scrapbook of what was happening at the time. There was a DIY ethos where people were getting together and doing innovative things, which perpetuated a creative culture of positivity where anything felt possible. There was also a strong warehouse scene in the north – Blackburn, Manchester, and in Sheffield, where I was studying Law at University.  

A new music emerged that fused with Chicago’s disco scene; a multitude of subgenres were born and suddenly everyone was producing electronic music. The Summer of Love and Acid House are legendary chapters in the rich tapestry of British popular music. I am overjoyed that my youth took place in the 1980s/1990s, it was a lot of fun and inspired me to take the next steps in my life.

When did you move to Cardiff, and why did you move here?

As a postgraduate in 1993 to study a PGCE at Cardiff University.

Tell me about Catapult. Why did you decide to set it up? Give us the background to the shop – where was it first, then about the various places it moved to?

Catapult Records started from my car boot and grew organically from there. Friends had a record shop in Exeter; they supplied me with stock, which I brought to Wales. With support from the Prince’s Trust in 1993 I launched Catapult from a stall in the Castle Arcade Emporium, with a Sony music centre and weekly rental bill of £15. People liked the selection, the ability to listen to records and the general social vibe. We quickly outgrew the space and moved to a unit in the High Street Arcade (via Sidewalk/White Doves basement).  

There were 10 people servicing the Catapult counters at the shop’s peak, crawling over one another grabbing vinyl in a confined space which often felt like a big game of Twister. A broad customer base traveled from far and wide in search of specialist dance music; there was a real community feel that supported the shop. The priority was on service, including the provision of 10 technic 1210 turntable listening posts for customers to trial records before purchase, often for hours, and this is what helped set Catapult apart. Much of our trade came from “regulars”, many of whom became and still are close friends. There’s a book in me somewhere about all the colourful characters we had in over the years.

At the time, Catapult won the Western Mail Welsh Small Business of the Year Award, and become ambassadors for the Prince’s Trust. I went to St James Palace to meet with Prince Charles, which was an experience. Start-up support, especially mentoring, was key to the shop’s success; it was a great shame that the Trust lost its ability to fund new businesses around this time. Today they remain a pioneering charity supporting young people, which I still endorse and support.

It was around this time that I met Simon Thomas after being introduced by Iestyn George who I was curating music for at Union-Undeb, a members’ club, opened by the manager of the Manic Street Preachers. This meeting was a real catalyst as anyone who knows Simon knows how driven and full of amazing ideas he is, coupled with an almost incomprehensible thirst for knowledge.

I love a new project and Catapult provided abundant  opportunities to diversify and explore new territories. Over two decades, Catapult developed multiple sub-brands, expanding the product proposition from retail into fashion, events, label management & education.

The company launched record label “Catapult Records” as a direct response to the lack of physical electronic releases available for Independent Record Store Day. The label focused on Welsh artists and the vinyl format, which became a unique selling point amongst a growing committed audience. To date, there have been nine sold-out releases, one of which (Catapult 007, Earl Jeffers “The Goose”) was signed to Fabric London. The label’s artist Organ Grinder was in demand for remixes/live appearances/radio (Gilles Peterson) expanding the original proposition into artist management and agency.

Our homegrown clothing label “Youth of Britain” was designed, manufactured & distributed in the UK, and 2012 saw ventures into new categories, co-ordinating events, fashion and hospitality with the launch of a series of pop up street food propositions with the collective Street Food Cardiff.

As technology disrupted the vinyl world we moved to a bigger store in the Duke Street Arcade in 2011 stocking production equipment, clothing and a growing DJ School after hours. Cardiff’s Arcades provide a fertile ground for independent businesses, we are lucky to have such central, affordable space: it’s just not the case in other cities.  It is positive to see young businesses like Rock-Ola, Blue Honey & Crates thriving in the centre today.

We finally closed the doors with a heavy heart on New Year’s Eve 2014; the world had moved on with many people perceiving the value of music as “free” and it was time for a change. Retail in this climate is a real challenge.

Alongside the shop, you also put nights on. Can you tell me about those?

Events are exciting; the way the music and those shared moments connect people. I like to DJ and have been involved in an array of wondrous happenings over the years, promoting, mixing, and enjoying!

It is good to connect with the community and see the records that have been bought in Catapult working on the dancefloor. Djing is a highly skilled craft that I will never tire of. The Catapult DJ school was one of my favorite projects.

Having been inspired by my global ramblings, when I moved to Cardiff I was keen to set up some club nights in the city, especially after going to Clwb Ifor Bach (Juice Joint), which became home to Catapult’s first nights in town, a deep house affair called Overdrive. From there we moved to work with Tim Corrigan at the Emporium for a few years, a highlight being when we brought LTJ Bukem (amongst others) to the city in 1994.

We started putting regular events on again in the last few years when the Vaults venue came up. It’s such a unique space, we couldn’t resist. The time was right to introduce a wild drum’n’bass party that fed off the ethos we had with the shop. Experiencing DJs perform at the Vaults with the booth on the dancefloor is as interactive as it gets; there’s nothing tame about it. Cardiff has a wealth of musical talent, there’s an enormous energy and community spirit that comes together.

Today the Vaults is being compared with some of the UK’s most infamous night holes, like London’s Fabric and Bristol’s Motion. It’s been an amazing project to be involved with, people just love it there.

You had a lot of famous DJs do in-stores in the shop. Which were the most memorable of these?

Instores were my favorite thing to do at work. Bonobo, Drop Music, High Contrast, Vibes, Blame, Netsky, Nic Fancilliu, LTJ Bukem all came to the shop to meet their fans and drop tunes. They were all brilliant experiences. At first I couldn’t see how it was going to work in my small shop, outside a club environment (I was really worried about the crowds), but then I experienced the most unique, intimate sets: a real sense of being in the present with a small collective of hardcore enthusiasts. Music translates very differently in different spaces and anyone who attended knows how special those gigs in a small basement in Cardiff were.

Can you tell me about Cardiff’s music scene? What makes it different?

Wales is full of opportunity, often presenting unchartered territories to explore and incubate. There’s a special uniqueness about the culture, it’s a good place for tribes to thrive.

The music scene can be a hard place to operate. what’s it been like, being a music entrepreneur in Cardiff?

The music business is an unpredictable path, it’s a “people” industry, full of colorful characters, and this has been one of the greatest joys. I have worked with many talented, unique individuals who provided good company, new music, untold banter and left inspirational marks. Partnerships and collaborations have been key. I wouldn’t have been able to achieve half the things I have without a great team and this is where much of the pleasure lies. 

There’s been a whole heap of success stories from Catapult employees who made it to the top of their game: most notably High Contrast and his Olympic Opening Ceremony production in 2012. Then there’s Raeph Powell and Richie Vibe Vee at 1xtra, Cally with a glittering international DJ/Production career, Neil Cocker Dizzyjam Founder, Adam Corner music journalist, Stu Grady Graphic Designer, and Helia Phoenix who runs We Are Cardiff. This legacy makes me sincerely happy. Record shops are a great place to discover new music and people; Spotify and Amazon can’t create this kind of community.

Essentially, experience had showed me that the DIY approach works: just grasping the mantle and going for it – I’m wired that way. Today’s landscape is wholly different. The industry is unrecognisable and routes to carve your own niche are never prominent. No-one really knows how things will look in the next decade, as an exciting shift in focus has been brought about via digital culture and the possibilities are endless. 

Tell me about the courses at USW. What makes it different from other colleges? What can students expect to get out of studying here?

Today I am lucky enough to have a new career that I love with equal passion, working as part of a team at the University of South Wales in the Creative Industries sector.

At USW we offer an immersive, creative and practical grounding in music business, developed and delivered by industry experts.

Students are surrounded by artists and get involved with crafting real world projects from day one. Inspiration levels are continuously boosted with master classes and events, there’s loads of collaboration opportunities and an active community environment.

I would have relished the opportunity to study Music Business at University; these courses offer academic routes to the market that just didn’t exist 10 years ago.

***

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Deep and funky with The Organ Grinder

Many years ago, I used to work as the Saturday help in Cardiff’s much missed dance music store, Catapult Records (RIP). I met a load of interesting and talented people while I was working there, and one of those was Cayne Ramos – aka, The Organ Grinder.

the organ grinder cayne ramos

He’s released a clutch of cracking underground house tracks in recent times, with Graft Volume 1 hitting into the Juno House top ten. As well as producing some fabulous music, he’s also djed around the world. I grabbed Cayne for a quick Q&A.

Q. Graft went into the Juno house top ten! Have you got plans for any other releases this year?
A. Yes I’m planning Vol 2 for Graft now and hopefully Volume 3 for the end of the year. Also a few other releases with other labels, so stay tuned!

Q. Any DJing plans coming up?
A. I have a monthly residency with Memorex, and we got some serious parties planned for this year. Plus a few overseas dates which are being confirmed in the next few weeks.

Q. What artists are you listening to a lot at the mo?
A. I have a few artists that are doing it for me at the mo: house, Pascal Viscardi (Switzerland), Frits Wentink (Holland), Diego Krause (Germany). For techno, it’s Uvb (France), Fjaak (Germany) and Kamikaze Space Program (UK).

Q. What’s the best night out in Cardiff?
A. Ha! I’ve got to be a bit bias here and obviously say Memorex, but there are a few good nights in Cardiff which are booking serious artists like Delete, CityBass, Groove Theory, Blue Honey, Rotary Club … if you haven’t already I’d strongly suggest you check out any of the events above

Q. If you had some friends coming down to Cardiff for the weekend, what would you do with them? Where would you take them?
A.
I’d take them to Caroline Street, Clark’s pie and chips and then a pint of Brains Dark at the Old Arcade … proper Kaardiff!

Then I’d take them on a little tour around Tiger Bay, explaining the rich history that Cardiff holds.

Find out more at:

The Organ Grinder Facebook page

Listen to The Organ Grinder – Crack mix

The Organ Grinder – Resident Advisor page

Memorex club night, Cardiff

organ grinder records

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