The first Welsh Hula Hoop Convention! Jacob’s Antiques, 6 April 2015

Cardiff. It’s a great city. And it’s only gone and got itself the first ever Welsh Hula Hoop Convention (the fabulously named WHoopC!)!

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For hula enthusiasts or total beginners, get yourselves along to Jacob’s Market on Bank Holiday Monday (6 April 2015) where you can spend the day learning all manner of impressive hooping moves with some hooping greats!

WhoopC – Facebook event
Buy tickets

WHoopC has been put organised by Ellie Pilott of Elliecopter Hoops and Mary Bijou Cabaret and Esther Fuge of NoFit State Circus. Ellie answers some questions for us about what you can expect from the day!

Ellie by Adam Chard

Q. How did you get into hooping?

A. I was inspired by hula hoop when I saw the first Immortal performance by Nofit State Circus in 2004. They had an act where three hoopers would hoop and drink tea. What a perfect combination!

Q. The convention! How did you get the idea to set it up?

A. My friend Esther Fuge mentioned it after a hoop class a few weeks ago.  Initially I wasn’t that interested as I thought it would be a lot of organisation, but then I thought, there are hoop conventions all over the world, from Bali to Bristol and Wales doesn’t have one – so we should do it!

Q. What can people expect on the day?

A. You can expect some amazing workshops from two international hoopers, most definitely some of the best in the World.  Lisa Lottie is exceptional at hooping and is booked all over the World to perform and teach.

Lisa Lottie

We also have Miss Polly Hoops who is also an international performer. She has taken her hoop street show all over the world and is currently the youngest street performer in Covent Garden.

polly hoops

I will also be teaching a beginners workshop (I teach at Nofit State and under Elliecoptor Hoops at The Abacus the last Wednesday of the month). Esther Fuge will be taking a contemporary hoop class (her background is in dance but she has been performing and teaching with Nofit State Circus for a few years now).

We also have electro-swing hop dance workshops from the Kitsch n Sync Ladies, circus workshops (to be revealed), and lunch is included from the wonderful Penylan Pantry!

WHOOPC: the basics

Where is it?

Jacobs Antique Market, West Canal Wharf, CF10 5DB Cardiff

A unique antiques market just 2 minutes from Cardiff’s main railway station. Nestled between newly developed buildings, find Jacobs and you find a delicious treat indeed as betwixt its doors lies treasures, trinkets and a collective of eccentric sellers to tickle your funny bones.

When is it?

Easter Bank holiday
Monday 6th April 2015

11am -8:00pm (arrival from 10:30)

How much does it cost?

Full day all inclusive = £45
This includes lunch, workshops, skill share and hoop jam.

Lunch is provided by Penylan Pantry: a seasonal honest delicatessen and food store that aims to promote local producers, the environment and health lifestyle. Provides vegan, gluten free.

https://www.facebook.com/PenylanPantry

Drop in may be available at a later date to certain workshops.

S is for Specialists in Vinyl. Part One: Spillers Records

Katie Hamer continues her A–Z series of Cardiff with a look at the local music scene. 

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I decided to delve into the exciting events occurring in the run-up to the annual Record Store Day on Saturday 18 April. And where better to start than at Spillers Records, reputedly the oldest record store in the world?

It’s been my great privilege to chat to Ashli Todd, who is joint-owner of Spillers, and to be able to share with you her extensive knowledge of music.

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Q: The music scene in Cardiff is very vibrant. There’s a lot happening. What are you most excited about currently?

A: Oh, good question, it’s the diversity. There are a couple of labels that we stock that have been around for a few years and are really evolving. Particularly I’m thinking of the Peski Records label that centres mainly on alternative electronic music. They’re kind of quite glitchy, sometimes a little crowd rocky, sometimes quite technoey. They are a great label and have been going for a number of years now.

Then there’s another label, Shape Records, who are run by a fantastic local band called Islet. I was at Art College with one of their members.

Both labels have stood the test of time. We can mention them to customers and they will buy things on the strength of those labels alone. It’s always really lovely when a label can generate that kind of support. You know that a label is doing something great when people put their confidence into the releases blindly.

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Q: What are the big releases with them at the moment?

A: At the moment, Shape Records have just released an album by a band called Them Squirrels. Them Squirrels have actually been around for a good number of years; they’re members of the main band, Islet. They’ve been recording between other band stuff over a number of years. As always with these musicians, they always have loads of commitments. But now they’ve released this and it’s fab. Graff who works here has been recommending it to lots of people over the counter.

Gwenno is the big release with Peski, which came out the end of last year, and it’s doing fantastically well. She’s an interesting musician who used to be in a band called The Pipettes, a fantastic three-piece girl band. She’s evolved into a really interesting artist with a lot to say, you know, about politics among other things, which adds another dimension to the music.

Q: If you were to live anywhere else, where would that be and why?

I’d love to live in Barcelona. I’ve been there a couple of times, most recently last year. I was impressed by the amount of independent record shops that are there. All the record shops there were absolutely fabulous. And it’s such a culturally exciting city, such a pleasure to walk around. There’s so much art there. I just found it a real inspiration. I can’t wait to go back. So, yes, Barcelona!

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Q: I’ll have to add it to my places to visit. 

A: You’ll love it there, definitely.

Q: Looking around your shop, I understand that you also sell tickets for gigs. Who would you say are the hottest live acts at the moment?

A: Well, last night I went to see a band called Sleaford Mods. That was a sold-out gig, so obviously quite a hot ticket. It was the second time they’ve played Cardiff; the first time was last year at The Moon Club. They played CF10 in the Union to a 300 capacity crowd. It was fantastic.

They are extremely political, they’re kind of a bit Marmite, people either love them or hate them. A lot of people don’t get it or like it. I always like it when a band doesn’t get the reaction of ambivalence, when it’s literally people venomously do hate them or wholeheartedly love a band and I find that split really interesting. I think it’s normally indicative of real talent. They make a social commentary along with electronic beats. They’re very reminiscent to me of John Cooper Clarke and they draw a punk following.

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Q: What are your favourite venues in the city?

A: Club Ifor Bach, it’s the one really. It’s the longest running, most consistently running of the small venues. They’ve got two great floors. And I like gigs in the downstairs even though there isn’t a stage. It can be really very intimate because it breaks down the boundaries between crowd and performer.

The Moon Club opposite is another decent venue, that’s where the Sleaford Mods played before. It’s run by real music enthusiasts, the bar’s well stocked, and again it’s the size that makes it intimate.

The Globe’s another great venue. It’s well established and has great diversity of music. It’s not as cover-band heavy as it used to be at certain times. The layout is perfect, the height of the stage, everything, they’ve just got it spot on. It’s a great venue. It ticks all the boxes. It’s always a pleasure to see a band there.

There are some gigs in interesting places also, that don’t normally get used. For instance, the St John’s Church have been putting on gigs there.

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Q: Wow, sounds interesting! With Record Store Day just around the corner, what events/activities are you most looking forward to?

A: Well, we’ve got shop favourites both sides of the counter. A band called The Lovely Eggs is gigging with us. They’ve got a new release for Record Store Day, so it’s going to be an absolute honour to have them come and play for us. They’re a great duo from up North and they’re full of character, full of charm. We know customers are going to be excited about that one.

We’ll also be scheduling in some DJs. There will be someone from Penarth Soul Club, who started up quite recently, a guy called Liam Curtin. And we’re speaking to people from the Peski label to see if they can come along as well.

Record Store Day is very much about the releases that are on offer which are mass-produced for independent record shops and are stocked across the country. But it’s important to us to link it into the local music scene as well because you know, that’s a very important part for Spillers.

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Q: What new releases are you looking forward to this month?

A: I’m looking forward to the release a new Godspeed You! Black Emperor album (Asunder, Sweet And Other Distress, released on 31 March), which is hot on the heels of their last one. It’s good to have another release so soon as they tend to be sporadic with when they schedule their releases.

Another new release I’m looking forward to is by Australian singer Courtney Barnett. Her album is out this month (Sometimes I Sit and Think and Sometimes I Just Sit, released on Monday). She has a really great delivery to her lyrics; a naïve but almost deceptively naïve way of song writing. She has a deceptively simple delivery which isn’t necessarily easy to achieve.

Scottish band Errors also have got an album out (Lease of Life, released on Monday). They’re a band close to my heart. We’ve been following them since their first E.P came out. Their sound has evolved a lot over the course of several releases. It’s always nice when you can track an artist and their progress. And they always draw a good crowd whenever they gig with us.

And Bjork has a new album out (vinyl release date for new album, Vulnicura – as stated on the One Little Indian record label website, is Monday) which I’m very excited about. She’s such an innovator. She’s always working with new producers. She’s so experimental and she’s such a maverick.

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Thanks, Ashli, for taking the time out of your busy schedule. I can see you’ve got a lot to organise for the big day! 

You can find more information about Spillers Records and their upcoming releases/events here:

Spillers Records website

Their Facebook page

On Twitter

Invisible Soldiers – Jessica Ventura

Last year, Brazilian photographer Jessica Ventura settled in Cardiff for a few months. We were lucky enough to have her shoot a couple of events for We Are Cardiff. Recently she sent across images of a project called “Invisible Soldiers”.

These photographs were taken here in Cardiff in the (very) early mornings.

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Jessica says: “In the end, the series is about the people that work to get the city ready for the next morning, and also the appearance of the centre of city when most of the people are still in bed and not even left their homes yet. This was the basic concept of my project.”

“I used to enjoy a lot to go out walking around to figure out what there was in different places in the city. I loved the arcades and the cosy coffee shops you can find in them. I also loved Bute Park – that was my favorite place in the city.”

“Another thing I liked about Cardiff was the fact that even being a capital with so much going on, it was still a calm place to live in.”

Big thanks to you, Jessica. We enjoyed having you here in the city!

Jessica’s other posts for us:

 

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Mary Bijou – Hitch! review, by Gareth Pahl

Theatre runs in my blood, it has always been in my life and always will hold a special place in my heart. I am also, as friends may describe me, the most critical critic! Being a hybrid of performer, designer and teacher, high expectation is as much my downfall as it is my making.

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If you expect sharp, polished performance then perhaps Mary Bijou’s ‘Hitch’ is not the show for you. However, what ‘Hitch’ does provide is a good, fun piece of collaborative cabaret style theatre. If, like me, you are excited about the dangers of live theatre then this is an absolute must see. Parts of it were perfect, parts of it were well recovered, and parts of it were just plane crash.

The concept – a series of performances inspired by the most loved films of Alfred Hitchcock, is ambitious but interesting. Mary Bijou have bottled the insanely morbid imagination of Hitchcock and added their own madness into the mix to create this ambitious, yet strangely captivating piece of theatre.
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The performers present with a range of talents – notably in circus, dance, music and comedy and they draw on these skills to create a unique and interesting collaborative performance. The performances are accompanied by the musical works of Tom Elstob, Bethan Cecil and Branwen Munn who created the soundtrack specifically for the show. There were technical issues that were slightly annoying during the first act, although these were ironed out during the interval.

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My favourite musical number was the accompaniment to Anna Sandreuter’s incredible aerial rope act. Not only was the music beautiful, but Anna’s performance on the ropes was flawless and breath-taking. She also made it look easy – and trust me it really isn’t! It’s a shame that Anna’s hula hoop act didn’t go without flaw, however the cabaret nature of the show meant she could recover well and with comedic effect – even adding to the performance.

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Laura Moy’s performance on the Chinese pole inspired by the film ‘The Birds’ was of equally high calibre. The audience were left captivated and in awe of her incredible versatility as she climbed and performed on the pole with a performance that wouldn’t be out of place in the world’s best circuses. One particular drop made my stomach turn as she dropped from the top of the pole, catching it just shy of the ground.

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The evening’s compere was George Orange who’s crazy antics left the audience either in fits of laughter, utter confusion or completely horrified (Why did I open my mouth and reveal my phobia of frogs?). His version of the film ‘Vertigo’ was very hit and miss – at times making you wonder if the mistakes were deliberate or accidental. George’s most notable performance however was in a dance/contortion piece based on ‘The Trouble With Harry’. His flexibility and convincing ability to ‘play dead’ meant that the two other performers  could drag his body around, fold him up, dance with him, and whatever else one might be tempted to do with a body!

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The performance was interspersed with semi-convincing lip syncs to real interviews with cast members of Hitchcock’s films.  In particular there was an interesting piece, in which cast member Joe Wild perfectly lip sync’s to an interview with Kim Novak. Cue ‘Hitchcock’s Leading Ladies’ – a hilarious dance routine by the cast and crew.

Later in the show we see a rather distasteful stripper routine. Personally I felt this let the show down, it was unnecessary and arguably disrespectful. For a production that seemed to be celebrating the works of Hitchcock it seemed totally bizarre to include such a scene that to me undermined the whole production. It should be mentioned that this scene seemed to be like marmite – there were clearly audience members who loved this moment.

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The production ended with a very evocative and cleverly devised piece based on perhaps Hitchcock’s most iconic scene – the shower scene from ‘Psycho’. I won’t say much about it as I don’t want to spoil it – but it really is good!  If I had to rate this show I would be generous and give it 4 stars, whilst I thoroughly enjoyed it there were lots of things I could comment on to bring it down from perfect 5.

I mentioned earlier – if sharp and polished performance is your bag then ‘Hitch’ may not be for you. They were brave tackling a concept that was ambitious, however, Mary Bijou created an interesting and on the whole, well executed show. It did have its faults, and some of them were epic, but generally these almost added to the enjoyment of the show. It is indeed the danger and thrill of live performance that gives this piece its unbeatable charm (minus naked Hitchcock scene).

Review by Gareth Pahl

Hitch! is currently on tour – find forthcoming dates on the Mary Bijou Facebook page

All photographs by Tom Beardshaw (license: Creative Commons attribution)

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Cardiff: general election check-in

Straw poll. How many people in Cardiff have had leaflets through their doors already from candidates for the general election? What parties are hitting where?

We Are Cardiff HQ is in Butetown, and so far we’ve had Stephen Doughty MP and Jonathan Rees Evans (who? This guy). But that’s been it.

Have you had a leaflet through your door? What neighbourhood do you live in, and who’s campaigning there? Let us know in the comments!

Spring in Cathays Park, Doug Nicholls

 

Photo by Doug Nicholls

City of Sound Launch Event – 19 March, Retro-Vibe Music, Cardiff

Get along to Retro-Vibe Music on Thursday, March 19th, where City of Sound will be kicking off their project off with a sonic boom!

They’ll be showcasing some of their films at Retro-Vibe Music, and they’ll also have live music!

‘City of Sound is a video project which focuses on supporting the local community, with handpicked songwriters and independent shops taking the spotlight. Appealing to the residents of Cardiff and surrounding area, the films will give an insight into the thriving local music scene that makes it such a unique city.’

Free entry, doors open at 7pm!

Facebook event
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Ymuno gyda ni i croesawi City of Sound i Caerdydd ac i dechrau’r prosiect y ffordd cywir!

Ar nos Iau, yr 19fed o Mawrth, fydden ni yn Retro-Vibe Music i dangos rhai o ein ffilmiau!
Fydd cerddoriaeth fyw hefyd!

‘Mae City of Sound yn prosiect ffilm sydd yn ganolbwyntio ar hybu’r cymuned lleol, efo cerddorion a siopau annibynol yn cymryd y llwyfan. Gan apelio i preswylwyr Caerdydd ac ardaloedd lleol, fydd y ffilmiau yn rhoi mewnwelediad i’r sin cerddoriaeth sydd yn creu Caerdydd yn dinas unigol.’

Mynediad am dim (nid y band), drysau am 7yh!

City of Sound launch event

Noise unleashed: Jemma Roper

Local musical experimentalist Jemma Roper was good enough to stop by for a chat about her influences, favourite venues in the city, and where’s good for breakfast (spoiler alert: she’s a night owl!).

Jemma Roper

Hey there, I am Jemma Roper of Earth.

I only came to Cardiff to do an art degree, but liked it so much I bought the whole place. I arrived from Yeovil, Somerset, which allows me to talk like a pirate when I’m drunk. Or aroused.

I’m attracted to a very dissonant sort of racket. My default setting is post-punk but the door is open wide, genre-wise. As long as its interesting. I favour interesting above all other things. I think hearing The Birthday Party and Velvet Underground really young changed the way I think, but I didn’t have any co-conspirators or people to share my passion or hunger with until I moved to Cardiff and met my first band Sammo Hung. Previously, I had taught myself guitar and saxophone in my bedroom and was terrified of unleashing my noise onto the world of soft pink ears.

Clwb Ifor Bach has always been a favourite to play and I’m very privileged to have a Saturday night DJ slot there also. I’ve also seen so many incredible bands there, up close and intimate: Liars, Thee Oh Sees, Super Furries, Foals, Health, Telepathe, White Fence, and soon to be iceage, too many to remember really…. Cardiff might be a bit short of venues but the ones that we have are very unique: Gwdihw, Undertone, Chapter, The Moon Club, Porters, Buffalo. They each have a special thing about them that you wouldn’t find anywhere else. I played the Sherman Theatre Octa event last year and I’m praying that it becomes a regular venue.

I used to have the pleasure of working at Barfly while it was open. I saw all of the huge bands there before they got big: Franz Ferdinand, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Kings of Leon, Killers, Amy Winehouse, Libertines… It was a dream job and I have many fond memories, although I thought they were all crap at the time.

At the moment I’m Grangetown-based in a weird, lovely flat with two floors and a spiral staircase. The building is so old it shakes every time a bus, or even a large car or cat goes past. I’ve loved living in Canton and Riverside too. Cardiff’s small enough to cycle anywhere in ten minutes or so.

In terms of local gigs, Shape Records put the From Now On Festival at Chapter Arts Centre, which was magic. It was specifically for acts that are on an experimental journey right on the seat of their trousers. My band and I took part and I felt like it was a weekend of music like no other.

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Q&A:

Q. What was the last book you read?
A. I’m re-reading Dostoevsky’s The Idiot at the moment because it was named after my fave Iggy Pop album. Before that, I read Viktor Pelevin’s Omon Ra about the Soviet space race. It’s very dark and claustrophobic, which is really my bag.

Q. Tell us a secret
A. I’m scared of Scottish Terriers. Their tiny black eyes remind me of prawns.

Q. What’s your favourite place for breakfast in Cardiff?
A. What is “breakfast”?

Q. What’s your local pub?
A. I spend a lot of time in Chapter Arts Centre as I work on the café/bar and gallery, so my social life tends to revolve around there. The place is a hub for Cardiff musicians, actors, artists and film-makers. The beer and food is awesome and the fridges are rammed with German Weiss Biers of marvellous strength. I often find myself in the Urban Tap House, or The Landsdowne for darts, though.

Q. Tell us about a hidden part of Cardiff that you love
A. Grangetown is ripe to blossom, regenerate, and not be known as Strangetown, Stabtown, or Rapetown. It’s got a lovely community spirit in the part where I live. It needs a bit of love.

Q. If you had some friends coming to visit for the weekend, where would you take them?
A. We’d begin at Café Minuet, on to culture and art at the National Museum of Wales, then there will be a hazy bit where we think we’ve gone to Dempsey’s to see a mate’s band, but we’re actually asleep across someone’s legs in the Urban Taphouse. That, by the way, is my ideal date.

Q. If people want to see you live, when’s their next opportunity?
A. 24 March 2015, at Clwb Ifor Bach we’ll be supporting Kiran Leonard. It’ll be a night to remember.

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Jemma Roper is a marvellous sonic being who currently lives in Grangetown. You should go and check her out on March 24th at Clwb Ifor Bach.

Photographs by Noel Dacey

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Support local! Eat chocolate! For charity! At Penylan Pantry!

Holy moly, could life get any better? Our friends at Penylan Pantry have just started a new initiative to try and promote local producers, by choosing a ‘product of the month’ to support.

This month it’s Coco Caravan chocolate, made in Llandaff by Jaques. Handmade, organic, vegan, raw chocolate. And it’s damned tasty! And get this – throughout March, 10 per cent ALL sales from Coco Caravan will go to the Welsh Refugee Council!

It has literally never been such a good time to eat chocolate.

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So throughout this month, Mel and Jolene are promoting Jaques and his amazing chocolates, helping to spread the word about his ethos, his passion and telling you about a great local producer and raising cash for a great charity.

Want to taste what all the fuss is about?

This Saturday (14th March) 11-3pm, the gals will be holding a FREE tasting/meet the producer event at the Pantry with Jaques.

Iona will also be around to talk about the Pantry’s chosen charity for March, The Welsh Refugee Council.

Every month the Pantry will be promoting a different local producer and supporting a different charity.

Get in touch to nominate a charity! (melissa@penylanpantry.com)

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Hitch! No-one is innocent … RWCMD, Thursday 12 March 2015

One of our favourite Cardiff cabaret groups, Mary Bijou Cabaret are on tour, and you can catch them THIS THURSDAY, 12 March at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama!

Mary Bijou Hitch

“No one is innocent!” snarls the compere. At a cabaret based on the work of Alfred Hitchcock, these are the only words we can trust. Mary Bijou Cabaret and Social Club presents HITCH. Walking the line between hilarity and horror, the cabaret includes a singing Mrs. Danvers, extolling her beloved Rebecca; a Vertigo victim walking a wire in high heels; Tippi Hedren on a Chinese pole, beset by Birds; Marlene Dietrich, prowling the theatre, looking for an accomplice or victim – she’s not picky.

With music by Tom Elstob (The Idol Rich), Bethan Cecil, and Branwen Munn, the cast sing for their lives. Someone will lose their life tonight…perhaps more than one.

Mary Bijou Hitch

Mary Bijou Cabaret and Social Club pushes cabaret to new frontiers. Created by a troupe of international circus and cabaret artists, veterans of NoFit State Circus and the underground live art scene of London, HITCH was originally commissioned for the Wales Millennium Centre and Blysh Festival. HITCH is also funded by the Arts Council Wales.

Mary Bijou Hitch

Fancy dress is optional but highly recommended. Come as your favourite Hitchcock character … victim, villain or hapless innocent. Or maybe you fancy yourself as the ‘master of suspense’ himself.

“This is beyond cabaret and into the realm of high dramatic art. If I could give it six stars, I would. A triumph” – John Christopher Wood

Hitch was originally commissioned for the Wales Millennium Centre and Blysh Festival. Hitch is also funded by Arts Council Wales.

BUY TICKETS HERE: http://www.rwcmd.ac.uk/whats_on/events/hitch.aspx

Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/839589639416291/

Mary Bijou Hitch

Photos by Tom Beardshaw

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Cleaning up the Coal Exchange! #SaveTheCoalExchange

This weekend, a jolly group of excellent citizens gathered together to help clean up the Coal Exchange.

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We’ve posted before about the plight of this amazing building, which recently won itself a reprieve when a new not-for-profit company was formed, their mission statement being to “preserve the historic integrity of the Coal Exchange and turning it back into a sustainable business that will re-engage with the local communities and the wider City region.”

We also had a nice story from Henry Blunt about his early days promoting gigs around Cardiff, with a nice photoshoot in the Coal Exchange before it was closed down.

Nice idea, right? Well, to kick things off, the group have held a couple of public meetings and this past weekend invited volunteers in to go and help clean up.

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Lisa Power, one of the Directors of Save The Coal Exchange, was good enough to answer a few questions for me about the initiative …

Q. Tell us about this project (saving the Coal Exchange) overall. What’s the aim for the Coal Exchange?

A. Save The Coal Exchange does what it says on the tin – it’s a campaign set up to save the Coal Exchange, which was increasingly neglected and in danger of falling down. Legally we’re a not-for-profit limited company and we intend to become a charity. We were formed out of a public meeting called for Butetown and other local residents by Stephen Doughty MP after the last owners of the Exchange, property developers, went bust and handed the building over to the Crown. We have quarterly open meetings and a number of working groups addressing specific needs.

We know it’s going to take millions of pounds and many years to bring the Coal Exchange back into full use, but someone needs to start by stopping the rot and bringing the building back to life. We’re currently setting up ways in which anyone can support this and the weekend was one of these.

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Q. Tell us about the clean up weekend. How was it organised?

A. The weekend was intended to help bring the South West wing of the building, which already housed some small businesses, back into general use. The structure is sound there and many of the rooms only needed clearing and cleaning, but some had been locked up for years. We put out a call on social media, set up a Facebook event page and asked people to come and use any relevant skills to help. We registered everyone and will invite them to future events.

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Q. How many folks turned up? What did you get them all doing?

A. Just under 50 people turned out across the weekend to do the work and a few more stopped by to tell us stories of the old Exchange or take photos. We had building contractors, an electrician, a locksmith, heritage experts and people who just cared about it. People brought cleaning materials, wallpaper strippers, vacuum cleaners, home made cakes and crisps to share. They cleaned up 13 rooms, including some that were previously locked and Glenys Kinnock’s old office. We found a small stage and lots of recyclables, including a whole stationery room full of stuff. Mostly people cleared and cleaned, but they also checked the fire extinguishers and lights, found keys for locks, did runs to the tip – everything. They were amazing and worked really hard. We’ve found marble window surrounds and the original Victorian air vents.

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Q. What kind of state is the building in inside?

A. It’s very variable. That wing is largely useable now and businesses are moving in; you can go into the main Exchange Hall and bar but we can’t use it for events until we can clear more fire escapes. Parts of the roof and other wings, like the one that had a big fire back in the sixties, are in a worse state and some areas are no-go for now. We know it’s a major, long term undertaking.

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Q.What hopes for the future? How can people get involved?

A. Since we started work there’s been a real buzz about the future of the Coal Exchange. The Welsh Government have commissioned a conservation review of the building and we are talking to the Council, and to people who’ve brought places like Penarth Pier and Insole Court back into use. We know if we can turn the Exchange into a living place again it will massively benefit the local economy of Butetown as well as contribute to Cardiff’s pride in its heritage.

People who want to help should start by liking and following our Save The Coal Exchange Facebook page. They can offer services there, too. We hope to shortly get a “Friends of” scheme set up so that people can join from all over the world and support us. After all, Tom Jones just told all his fans on Twitter to help save the Coal Exchange!

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All photos by Tony Lloyd

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‘Look Up’ street art project in Bridgend – artists wanted

Okay, so it’s not strictly Cardiff, but our friend Dan Green is co-ordinating a street art project in Bridgend called Look Up.

He’s looking for an array of creative talent to get involved and decorate three large exterior walls and an outdoor gallery area in the heart of the town: graffiti/mural artists, photographers, illustrators, painters, poets, sculptors, graphic designers and any relevant artists.

Dan likes the idea that the artwork displayed has roots in the area – either directly about Bridgend and its history or simply that the artist comes from the town. So if you’re from or know artists in Bridgend, read on!

The Venue

Bad Habits skate shop and The Star pub on Market street, Bridgend. This includes a large corridor space between the two buildings, which will be transformed into the outdoor gallery.

Installation dates

Monday 23rd March until Friday 3rd April 2015.

Dan will be on site to assist installing the work. He’s handy with paste ups and a drill! Following the 12 day installation time, there’ll be an official open day on Saturday 4th April for the general public – all welcome.

Application process

Please email your proposed ideas/photos/designs etc to dan@dangreenphotography.com

The last entry date is Monday 16th March 2015.

Here’s Dan. We love him. Go check his Dan Green Photography Facebook page

street-scene-dan-green-web

 

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St David’s Day Parade – Cardiff, 2015 – photoblog by Peppe Iovino

On St David’s Day, photojournalist Peppe Iovino hit the streets of Cardiff to watch the St David’s Day Parade.

Were you there?

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Cardiff, you’re looking beautiful!

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A blog about Cardiff, its people, and the alternative arts and cultural scene!