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Get Knitted - Sir Jack Lyons Concert Hall, York
23.11.01
Yorkshire Evening Press
There really must be magical
properties in the Hat.
On the Wednesday, it was the
lead item of Radio 4's Front Row arts magazine, ahead of all
things London; on Thursday, women marched on Newcastle's Millennium
Bridge, so buoyed by that night's performance. On Friday, a new
musical sound filled the Sir Jack Lyons Concert Hall air; a grasshopper
symphony of knitting needles.
Hat was the brainchild of The Shed alternative arts impresario
Simon Thackray, of Brawby, and it had begun with somewhat woolly
thinking about creating a new woollen hat to celebrate the birth
of the new millennium.
More than a year later, as can be the case with a piece of knitting,
something rather different from that initial pattern emerged:
a warming piece of performance art that would knit together four
monologues written and told by Barnsley bard Ian McMillan with
pastoral music composed by South London blues and jazz guitarist
Billy Jenkins. Former James member Andy Diagram would contribute
the suitably northern brass sound of the cornet and a sonic landscape
of samples; Hallé Orchestra musician Angela Harrison would
play viola and... knitting needles.
The audience could attend pre-show
knitting classes with Hat sponsors Sirdar, the Wakefield wool
firm and knit contentedly in the shadows of the performance:
rather less sinister than a similar practice when execution was
all the rage in France. Simon Thackray would shear his hair to
a crop for that sheep-in-summer look.
The hat trick of Hat performances
in Halifax, Newcastle and York had a woolly, unfocused first
half, a show-off showcase for the four participants to introduce
their skills. McMillan gave an amusing guided tour to Wool In
History, a sort of If I Wooled The World piece of Glen Baxter
surrealism in which, for example, a ball of wool rather than
an apple landed on Isaac Newton's head. Jenkins went through
his dazzling guitar repertoire, in the company of an equally
playful Harrison, and Diagram's one-man factory band performed
what probably should be called Fanfare For The Woollen Man.
Hat itself was much better. Comic
poet Ian McMillan revealed new skills as a spinner of yarns (aptly
on the theme of yarn spinning) in the spooky story-telling tradition
of Grimm, Dahl and Saki, and Jenkins introduced subtlety to his
normal manic repertoire. Knitters clicked away contentedly, in
shear pleasure.
© Charles Hutchinson
Read: Ian
McMillan's Wool Facts
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