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Clogs and The
Books - Yorkshire Evening
Press 1 February 2006
The Shed's Greatest Hits - Yorkshire
Evening Press 11 November 2005
Stewart Lee - Yorkshire Evening Press
8 March 2005
Clogs
and The Books at The Shed
REVIEW: Yorkshire Evening
Press 01.02.06 by Charles Hutchinson
CLOGS, please meet The Books;
The Books, please meet Clogs.
This American musical handshake
was arranged by the British champions of the avant-garde, the
Contemporary Music Network, and last week the two improvisational
bands met up in Massachusetts for the first time, leading to
new acoustic-electronic music to open and close a truly uplifting
and adventurous night, played out to a Shed full house.
The stage was equally clogged
up at the start when The Books' Dutch cellist, Paul De Jong,
and Massachusetts guitarist Nick Zammuto swelled the four-piece
ranks of Clogs, with barely enough room to accommodate the ubiquitous
Shed door.
The Books live at The Shed: photo click here:
Led by Australian violinist and
principal composer Padma Newsome and his fellow member of cult
rock band The National, guitarist Bryce Dessner, The Clogs worked
to an ever expanding, intricate template of neo-classical and
post-rock instrumental music that best recalled the Penguin Café
Orchestra.
Dessner's contemplative guitar,
Rachael Elliott's entrancing bassoon and Thomas Kozumplik's chameleon
percussion, steel drum and all, were compliant partners to Padmore's
continuous journey between inner calm and inner turmoil.
Only once did he break into song,
aptly finding a lighthouse haven in Lantern.
Where Clogs were seriously serious,
The Books brought a big, beatific smile with their serendipitous
fusion of folk guitar, classical cello, elliptical vocals, found
sounds and home video images from thrift stores, newly cut up
to look at the world with delicious absurdity and all the unpredictable
spring of a bouncy castle.
Even sharper than Lemon Jelly,
this is strange, beautiful music for when you are lost in space.
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The
Shed's Greatest Hits
REVIEW: Yorkshire Evening
Press 11.11.05 by Charles Hutchinson

Mrs Boyes' Bingo featuring
Mark Sanders
+ Gail Brand / Mark Sanders
duo
UNDER a slice of moon and stars
as bright as American teeth, Hovingham's queue for the Ryedale
fish and chip van's weekly village run was longer than usual.
What's more, the hiss of batter had a musical counterpoint.
There was Alan Tomlinson, serenading
the throng. "Serenading" would be stretching it; whenever
he hit a melodic stride, he stopped, his trombone more often
gurgling, whooshing and whistling like the wind.
Tomlinson had passed this way
before, on Steve Tate's village chip beat in 2003, and on Wednesday
he returned as part of The Shed's Greatest Hits night of improvised
music, his trombone slide fighting for control like Rod Hull's
Emu.
One of each tucked away at £3.10,
the throng was drawn to a second pied piper outside the village
hall: Lol Coxhill, picked out by arc lights, hunched over his
curved soprano sax in a council skip.
Stranger still was the finale
to a night that had drawn Shed-heads from Oxford, Chesterfield,
York and probably Mars too.
Shed impresario Simon Thackray
- the Heath Robinson of Ryedale - has invented performance bingo
or bingo bango, if you prefer, wherein Malton bingo-calling legend
Mrs Boyes does her stern best to ignore the scat-drumming of
Mark Sanders, a sound outlawed under the Punk Reformation Act
of 1976.

The Shed's Greatest Hits - the
grand finale! - Photo: www.davidxgreen.com
Full houses and a full Shed,
fruit, booze and biscuit prizes, and suddenly Tomlinson and Coxhill
added to Sanders' cacophony. "Well, I must be crackers,"
said Mrs Boyes.
Crackers? You would be mad to
miss such delirium.
© 2005 Charles Hutchinson,
Yorkshire Evening Press
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Stewart
Lee, Stand-Up Comedian, The Shed
REVIEW: Wednesday 08.03.05
Yorkshire Evening Press

by Charles Hutchinson
STEWART LEE calls his comeback
show Stand-Up Comedian, perhaps as much to remind himself as
his audience of his first calling.
The last few years, he has been
directing Jerry Springer - The Opera, the runaway train of a
controversial hit that he co-wrote, and he has returned to stand-up
"older, greyer and heavier". He is 37 next month, his
spiked hair is greying at the temples, and he is heavier both
in build and material. Once he "talked about nothing, which
used to be fun"; now he is a social commentator and, like
Mark Thomas and Mark Steel, he is picking holes in national and
international politics and religious bigotry.
There is a quiet authority to
him as he unhurriedly goes about setting up an established prejudice,
countering it with a politically correct response and then deconstructing
both positions with original thoughts. He can do the big themes,
and he can pick on the petty minutiae too, gently mocking George
Bush for his grammar as much as his policies and calculating
that the day after 9/11 must be the 12th of December.
You could call Lee a smart-ass
but he is too clever for that. You laugh smugly as he says he
knew he was Scottish when he had a craving for shortbread, offal
and heroin, and he promptly chips away at English truisms.
He has become a stealthy iconoclast,
but one with his mischievous sense of fun delightfully undiminished.
Tuesday, March 08, 2005
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