‘The Devil’s Violin – The Beast in Me‘ At Drimpton

There are still tickets remaining for the Artsreach presentation of ‘The Devil’s Violin – The Beast in Me‘ on Sunday, February 20th at 7.30pm at Drimpton Village Hall.
Imagine a world where the lines separating humanity and animals have blurred, in which dark forests contain refuge as well as danger, and where blood is not always thicker than water…
The Beast In Me‘, is a masterfully woven tapestry of stories from long ago about our perception of beauty and the value of kindness. Epic narratives are evocatively brought to life by master storyteller, Daniel Morden, and with sublime stringed accompaniment from virtuoso musicians Sarah Moody (cello) and Oliver Wilson-Dickson (violin).
Expect a charming, chilling and thrilling evening’s entertainment: “A scintillating combination of music, sound and story” – The Times.
  • Tickets £10 (under 18’s £5)
    Available from Francesca Hurrell 01308 867617 or via Artsreach.co.uk.
  • Bar available
#Broadwindsor,#Burstock,#Blackdown,#Hursey,#Kittwhistle,#Seaborough,#Drimpton,#Dorset,#DAONB,#Village,#Music,#TheBeastInMe,#Enjoy,#Artsreach,#BeKind,#BeSafe,#StaySafe

Loshn – An Artsreach Event – Friday, 4th February

Broadwindsor Comrades Hall, together with Artsreach invite you to journey through the origins of Eastern European music through to 1950’s America and beyond!

Loshn are a Klezmer trio exploring the traditional music of Ashkenazi Jewish Culture. Their intimate chamber music style arrangements speak, sing and dance with the tradition’s distinct Yiddish accent and vocabulary.

Collectively bringing together over 30 years of experience, the members of Loshn are an exciting collaboration between some of the UK’s most established and acclaimed Klezmer musicians and the next generation of Klezmorim. Fiddle player Anna Lowenstein and clarinetist John McNaughton are joined on accordion by Susi Evans (She’koykh / The London Klezmer Quartet), performing intimate, chamber music style Klezmer.

Here is a 2 minute taster….


Tickets, which must be booked in advance:

  • £10 Adult
  • £5 Under 18 yrs.

Available from: www.artsreach.co.uk or broadwindsorem@gmail.com or by calling Margaret Wing on 01308 867252.

A bar and refreshments will be available.

Please note – We encourage our audience to continue to wear masks, particularly when moving around the hall.  Hand sanitiser will be available and please be conscious of social distancing during your visit.

 

#Broadwindsor,#Burstock,#Blackdown,#Hursey,#Kittwhistle,#Seaborough,#Drimpton,#Dorset,#DAONB,#Village,#Music,#Loshn#Klezmer,#Enjoy,#Artsreach,#BeKind,#BeSafe,#StaySafe

 

Drimpton’s Summer Show – Saturday 14th August

The Clapton, Wayford, Drimpton and District Horticultural Society are holding their 75th Summer Show at Drimpton Village Hall on Saturday 14th August, starting at 1.30pm.

There will be wonderful displays of prize winning fruit, vegetables, preserves, baked products and artwork from all ages. Many goods for sale. Pebble painting .

When the show is over at 5pm – they’ll offer Sun Downers, music and Chris and Jenna’s delicious Pizzas and Burgers.
Seating available in marquees.

For those taking part:

On Friday 13th, exhibits can be brought to the village hall between 17.00hrs and 19.30hrs.
On Saturday exhibits can be brought to the village hall from 08.00hrs.
Doors close at 10.45hrs.

#Broadwindsor,#Burstock,#Blackdown,#Drimpton,#Hursey,#Kittwhistle,#Seaborough,#WestDorset,#Dorset,#SummerShow,#Food,#Music,#PebblePainting,#BeKind,#BeSafe,#StaySafe

Requests Please! The Sound Of Music Through The Square Window

There was Something in the Air by Thunderclap Newman for The Sound of Music Through The Square Window at 1pm today. Village resident and writer, Margery Hookings has been keeping the faith throughout the stormy weather we’ve had this past week and lifting spirits with tunes every day at 1pm in Broadwindsor Square since this second Lockdown began.

Attendance hasn’t been great this time around, more than likely because of the weather and more people are working but please support Margery sending out her musical joy at 1pm each day in this Lockdown and send in your requests!  Here’s what you’ve missed so far….

  • Singing in the Rain by Gene Kelly. (yesterday)
  • Our House by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.(13th)
  • Make It With You by Bread for Linda Trobe. (12th)
  • Heroes by David Bowie for Tanya Bruce-Lockhart (11th, Remembrance Day)
  • You’re Still The One by Shania Twain for Vikki and Luke Pickering (10th)
  • You’ll Never Find Another Love Like Mine by Lou Rawls (9th)
  • Remembrance Day by Mark Knopfler (Sunday 8th)
  • Shame, Shame, Shame by Shirley & Company for Emilie Kennedy Watson (7th)
  • I Love My Dog by Yusuf/Cat Stevens for Susanne Slater (6th)
  • Here You Come Again by Dolly Parton (5th)

Please send your upbeat requests to Margery: either through her Maddie Grigg Facebook page or by email to margery.hookings@gmail.com.

#Broadwindsor,#Dorset,#Lockdown,#Music,#Joy,#BeKind,#SocialDistancing,#WearYourMask,#TakeYourUmbrella,#StaySafe

Music Through The Square Window Take 2

Lockdown 2 started today and so too did Margery Hookings with her Music The Through The Square Window in Broadwindsor Square at 1pm.

Launched today with Dolly Parton’s “Here You Come Again”, requests are now being taken for upbeat songs to get us through this second Lockdown.

Stay Safe Everyone & See You Tomorrow At 1pm!

 

#Broadwindsor,#Dorset,#Lockdown2,#Village,#Community,#Music,#StaySane,#BeKind,#StaySafe

The Prom Is On!

Prom 2020Parents were informed today that Beaminster School’s Prom has the go ahead and will be on Thursday 27th August 2020 at Haselbury Mill.

Clearly current guidance on Social Distancing is central to their planning and must be followed and adhered to at all times.

This event will be booked through and organised by Haselbury Mill, but there will be school staff in attendance to support a smooth running of the evening.

HOW TO BOOK

  1. Please book your place directly with Haselbury Mill (Tel: 01460 77095).
  2. You will be asked to select one main and one dessert from the following menu:

Main

  • Roast Topside of Beef with Yorkshire pudding
  • Roast Breast of Chicken with creamed cabbage, bacon and tarragon
  • Vegetarian Lasagne

Dessert

  • Sticky Toffee Pudding
  • Somerset Fruit Pavlova

3. Payment of £18.95 must be paid direct to Haselbury Mill upon booking.

4.  In order to organise seating and have a table plan, students are asked to email Mrs Randall on RRandall@beaminster.dorset.sch.uk with your meal choice and who you wish to sit with (tables will be a maximum of 6 people per table).

Please Note: All students are required to remain seated and not move around the barn during the meal.

Haselbury Mill have also advised that students will need to have a face mask. This is for use after the meal especially when there will be music playing, more movement around the barn and increased noise levels.

All bookings must be made by Monday 24th August 2020 at the latest, direct with Haselbury Mill.

On the evening of the Thursday 27th August, arrive from 7.15pm onwards, with a prompt 11pm pick up.

Mr. & Mrs. Randall also commented:
We look forward to seeing you all on the evening and toasting you as you begin the next phase of your journey, whether that is in education, training or employment.
Wishing you all a lovely summer and we look forward to seeing you in August.”

ENJOY!

#Broadwindsor #BeaminsterSchool #PromNight #Celebration #SocialDistancing #SociallyDistancedProm #Covid-19 #2020 #BeSafe #Music #Dancing #Food #Enjoy

Broadwindsor News Back In Publication

Broadwindsor News July 2020The Broadwindsor News is now out – being delivered to households who subscribe and there should be some available in the shop.
Containing lots of updates from village organisations, this edition also includes Margery Hooking’s ‘Broadwindsor in Lockdown 2020′ poem.

You can download the poem to your computer in PDF format: BROADWINDSOR IN LOCKDOWN 2020
or you can read it below . . .

BROADWINDSOR IN LOCKDOWN 2020 

Nature, you were never lovelier,

when the world stopped, but the Earth kept spinning.

And then the world turned upside down, freedom could not be found

We all became experts at social distancing – no grandparents would be visiting.

Sunshine, birdsong, a much quieter life but life still went on.

Thursday night clapping for our hard-pressed carers,

a ripple of applause from one end of the village to the other.

The Sound of Music every day at one o’clock.

Business booms at the community shop

as sales of fruit, veg and alcohol go pop.

Takeout drinks from the pub

and Vikki’s quiche and coleslaw in the shop.

The Tuesday night chip van at Comrades Hall,

Friday morning Post Office, chairs six feet apart.

Anxiety calmed by WhatsApp and Zoom, meeting family and friends by the touch of a button.

People chatting with new friends while standing next to bollards in the shop queue.

Heart attacks, cancelled operations, masks, gloves and Perspex screens.

Food deliveries for the vulnerable.

Our church went blue for the NHS.

The Sound of Music every day at one o’clock.

And we had time to just be with the one we love without duty or obligation stealing the day.

Doing all that we can to keep a company viable,

sorting wages and furlough staff, all reliable.

Farmers cut the fields for silage and tractors trundled through the village.

Up on Lewesdon Hill, bluebells didn’t know about coronavirus.

VE Day flags and afternoon tea outside our homes.

Socially distanced wildflower planting – digging, sowing and watering.

A beautiful sight to welcome visitors to our village when all this has passed.

The Sound of Music every day at one o’clock.

Lock down with the family – fantastic at the start, learning through the struggles, stresses and worries, tears, laughter and love.

Dusting flour from my hands, I pick up my book;

to bake or read, my lockdown dilemma.

There’s only one village in the west for me, Broadwindsor is the place I love to be.

It’s music at one and clapping at eight to rid us of the virus we love to hate.

Virtual Bananagrams, with gin, on Skype; virtual birthday parties on Zoom; virtual running – for medals – on Strava.

Virtual life.

The village roads, now used much less, speeds traffic onward faster;

too fast for the slowworm outside the shop, who is now not just slow, but flatter.

The sun beckons and mocks. Enjoy what you have, count your blessings.

The Sound of Music every day at one o’clock.

The church buildings are silent, dusty, locked, empty, paused.

God is active, loud, renewing, unrestricted, present, recreating and filling us every day.

Time to listen to the birds, watch the flowers grow, to smell the air, walk up the hill and to be still.

The warmth, love and friendship uncovered and blossoming as we all work together through this strange, uncertain  time.

House quiet, headphones on, five laptops glowing, each immersed in our own virtual business and learning,

waiting for the next punctuation point in days we can’t name.

Then kettle on, frisbee out, meals prepared, conversation flows, reconnected again.

The Sound of Music every day at one o’clock.

Free loo rolls from the village shop. The kindness of strangers.

And then a huge blue ball hurtles down the road, like the ever-present Rover bubble in The Prisoner.

A small army of tireless volunteers, stacking, selling, delivering.

Painting, writing, reading, decorating – my furniture has never been so upcycled.

The village phone box becomes a book exchange, tales of a community bound up on donated shelves.

Take-outs from the pub, food and drink, got to keep it going.

The call of rooks from their satellite rookery at the Old George,

while the parish councillors discuss village affairs over Zoom.

The space station goes over, the sun’s fading light makes it glow for all to see.

Endless sunshine, we will never see this blue a sky again.

The Sound of Music on the World Service and Desert Island Discs.

Slippers or flip flops worn all day.

The garden glorious in all this sun.

A tank of petrol lasts for months.

A time of reflection for the things that really matter. The birdsong and beautiful countryside.

Teaching the children, online bitesize that doesn’t bite back.

A fish van arrives in the Square at half past eleven, a shoal of customers in single file down the road.

Gardens and allotments provide solace and colour.

The Sound of Music at one o’clock

Afternoon briefing, highlight of the day.

What day is it, by the way?

– Margery Hookings, June 2020