I’ll start with music and the Glade Stage on Saturday –
Martyn Joseph is hosting The Rising there on Saturday afternoon. For those who
aren’t familiar with this it’s where this talented and very established member
of the folk community talks with other musicians about their work and
influences. Both Martyn and the performers he is talking with play a bit too.
One of those Martyn will be talking to is Scott Matthews
who has a smooth yet fairly melancholy voice. If you like Gaz Combes album
Matador my guess is you’ll like to hear this this act.
Later on MOBO award winner Zara MacFarlane takes the
stage with her haunting and beautiful jazz voice. For those who might not have
heard of her if you enjoy the work of people like Leanne Le Havas you’ll love
this.
Then the tempo changes for King Porter Stomp with their
ska based mix of reggae and brass. This is good dancing music made for a festie
stage and will be well worth going along to. These are my musical pick of the
day.
There is a blast from the past when The Polyphonic Spree
return to Greenbelt and the Glade on Saturday evening. They bring their weird and
wonderful sound to the countryside and I suspect that will work well.
If you are looking for a bit of late night folkie weirdness
then go no further than the Playhouse where The Revolutionary Army of theInfant Jesus will be playing some of their dark, haunting tunes. If you like
Jaqui McShee and Pentangle then this will be your sort of thing.
The Canopy is a great stage for just discovering stuff if
you sit there long enough. The only name from Saturday I am familiar with is
Shlomo, the human beat box, who is doing a solo set which will be taking you
back to the eighties.
Best name of the day on that stage are Project JamSandwich. They are a crazy percussion and strings group who mix it up with
influences from all over the place.
Duo Lew-Rey are playing this stage too on the Saturday
evening. The duo play some chilled out modern electronic pop which is pleasant
and will be good to sit and relax with if it’s fine weather.
Generally it appears that a lot of the music on Saturday
will be quite hippy trippy stuff Boat toRow on earlier on Saturday afternoon are another example of the circa 1970 revisited
sound which will be coming from a number of the acts. Digitonal headlining the canopy
stage on the Saturday evening keep this theme but take it in a different
direction and if one listens to the sampler for their Beautifully Broken album
you can hear how the chill out ambient sounds have a link back to the folk
movement.
On Sunday the folk becomes popular as well as traditional
as The Unthanks headline. Expect nothing but the best from them in terms of
musicianship and look out for an interesting song about pigeons. (See my Cambridge Folk Festival Review)
Personally I would say if you want something with a bit
more rhythm and far more exciting and a bit more messy stay up late on Sunday
and go and see Ella and the Blisters who will be following the Unthanks with
high voltage bluegrass. This lot seem like they’ll be much more fun and good to
dance to. These I think are my musical pick of the festival.
Another act well worth catching across the festival is
Tom Butler who is playing the Canopy on Saturday and the glade on Sunday. The lyrics
of this guy are well worth listening to in numbers like Freedom.
Again there is lots more music on across at the Canopy
including Greenbelt regular Iain Archer who is always worth a listen.
Moving on to the music on Monday there is what could be
called a gathering of Greenbelt’s own on the Glade stage as the wonderful young
urban folk singer Grace Petrie preceeds Martyn Joseph. Hopefully there will be a
lot more of the political stuff in her set and a little less of the chat than
last year. Having caught a little of Whatever's Left by Grace and the Benefits Culture, her fourth album, I think we'll hear some great things.
If you have never caught either of these two but you like
the music and lyrics of people like Billy Bragg you must get yourself to listen
to them. Yes, they do the odd “love song” in between but they both kick ass as
political song writers.
It seems that if Saturday is the hippy trippy day then
Monday is the day of the Greenbelt Family protest singer because in addition to
the two mentioned above Garth Hewitt, (who I described back in the early 1990’s
as sounding like a Christian Morrisey he was so miserable whilst being quite
talented), kicks of the Canopy. For those unaware he has been a campaigner and
member of the Greenbelt team one way or another for many years.
On the subject of the Greenbelt Family there has been a
tradition of going into the pub for a sing-a-long every so often. I believe
this may be happening on Monday evening about 7pm.
Moving away from the more familiar Coco and theButterfields who have a really good pop sound are worth a look. Their recent
video for Hello was quite beautiful. They’re also on the Glade stage on Monday.
This is just a pick of some of the music, there is a lot
to choose from. But Greenbelt is so much more than music in fact many people go
and listen to the talks without ever getting to the music.
As I said previously my Daily Diary appeared to be
missing Friday. I think, if I have it correct from Social Media, this is the
evening Gemma Dunning will be doing a talk. Not sure which of the many topics
she could be covering she’ll be talking about but it will include missional
activity of one kind or another. She’ll be well worth a listen.
Greenbelt tends to get turbulent priests speaking and
this year appears to be no different. Guardian Readers and others will be
familiar with the work of Giles Fraser. He is a good, if somewhat polemic
speaker and love it or loathe it you’ll not be board with what he says.
If you want a gentler yet at times just as radical voice
from another well spoken Anglican priest Lucy Winkett who is talking on Reading
the Bible With Your Feet will be worth a listen.
Both of them are on the Glade stage in the morning.
Carrying on the theme of high profile Anglican clergy the points value goes up
when Kate Bottley joins up with Giles Fraser and pop star turned priest Richard
Coles for a panel on Twitter Vicars and the Sacrament of Social Media in the
Pagoda. I suspect this will actually be worth listening to, if nothing more
than for the fact Kate Bottley is a great woman who says it like it really is
and doesn’t do pretention at all. She has her own slot on the Glade Stage on
Monday morning talking about being the Goggle Box Vicar.
One great thing about Greenbelt is they are never afraid
of dealing with issues which might be considered as too hot to handle by other
conferences and festivals which have a high number of Christians attending.
This year is no different as amongst the events on Saturday in the Treehouse
are Thou Shall Not be Overcome: LGBT People, Our Allies and the Christian
Church which has Ruth Hunt who is the Chief Exec of Stonewall speaking. Her
talk is followed by three people talking about The Real Benefits Street and
that in turn is followed by a talk on Primania: How’s Paying for your clothes
with Katherine Maxwell-Cook.
Sunday provides a couple of interesting talks following
each other in the Pagoda as Katherine Welby Roberts and Matt Haig discuss
reasons to Stay Alive before theologian Marika Rose discusses Angels and
Cyborgs.
Katherine Welby Roberts is also in the Treehouse talking
about Life Doesn’t Come with A Bow. Again it is one of a range of interesting
talks which will be occurring in there facing the issues the church doesn’t
always want to. Asylum and Exile: Voices of Refugees is one of the other talks
in there.
Monday is the day anybody who didn’t catch his great
interview on Radio Two’s Good Morning Sunday a few months ago can hear Magnus
MacFarlane-Barrow talk about the Shed which fed a Million Children. This will
be well worth a listen.
I realise I could through the whole programme but this
gives a flavour and some tips of things I think will be worth catching music
and talks wise.
There are a couple of other things I want to signpost too
before I finish.
The first is American performance artist, theologian and
activist Peterson Toscano who will be bringing his Gender Outlaws in the Bible:
A Theatrical, Theological Expose back to Greenbelt. He is also touring round
different parts of the UK including London, Liverpool, Birmingham and Belfast
and will be well worth seeing if you can, even if you can’t get to Greenbelt. Tenx9
is back on Saturday too. This year people will be invited to tell their own
stories, for ten minutes, on the topic of power.
The other is the worship. There is a lot of worship that
takes place at Greenbelt. Some of it is aimed at specific groups who often come
together as a kind of subset of family at Greenbelt. The Outerspace and Goth
Eucharists are both in the Treehouse this year on Saturday evening. I cannot
begin to explain what the significance of the former has been in my own life –
just to say there is something very moving about coming together and realising
you are not alone.
Whilst I know people have various views on the Festival
Communion service on the Sunday morning down by the main stage, this year the
Glade stage, I have always found it to be moving…although some years conducted
in a way which is better than others in terms of being able to worship to.
So those are my recommendations for the weekend. For the
first time in about 15 years I (most probably) won’t be there because of other commitments.
However, as I’ve written this for you and particularly people who might be
first timers or just thinking about going. Greenbelt is a special place and it
holds an incredibly special place in my heart. As somebody I know once said to
me ‘it’s one of the places as a gender queer, gay, atheist, anarchist I’ve felt
most at home and safe’. That’s not
because Greenbelt, despite what the critics sometimes suggest, is a liberal den
of non-belief but it is because it is a welcoming festival for all of some
belief or none.