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Bio, discography, gigs and blogs from singer-songwriter Leon Rosselson

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Purchasing Tickets Online

Posted on December 29, 2012October 19, 2021 by admin

For some gigs, such as the Anti-Capitalist Roadshow concert in Oxford, you can now purchase tickets in advance from this website. Payment is securely handled by PayPal and tickets will be waiting for you under your name at the door.

Hope to see you at a gig soon!

The Anti-Capitalist Roadshow CD Now Available

Posted on November 8, 2012October 19, 2021 by admin
THE ANTI-CAPITALIST ROADSHOW DOUBLE CD CELEBRATING SUBVERSION IS NOW AVAILABLE.
 
 
Twenty nine songs and one visionary poem on 2 CDs from singers & songwriters Frankie Armstrong, Roy Bailey, Robb Johnson, Reem Kelani,  Sandra Kerr,  Grace Petrie, Leon Rosselson, Janet Russell, Peggy Seeger, Jim Woodland and socialist magician Ian Saville.  
 
Eleven different voices with one aim – to challenge the narrative that says, There is no alternative.
Order it online from Fuse Records
 
 
 

Review in Counterpunch

Posted on September 28, 2012October 19, 2021 by admin

A piece on Leon and the World Turned Upside Down by Scott Borchert was recently published at Counterpunch.org.

“Most of all, he’s thought about what it means to be a radical songwriter, someone who accepts the foolish challenge of channeling their critical perspective on society through their artistic impulses. I say “foolish” because we’ve all seen the sort of aesthetic train wrecks that often result from the best-intentioned “political” art. It’s a risky thing to be a serious, radical artist—but I think Leon Rosselson pretty much nailed it.”

Read the full piece here. 

R2 Magazine review Leon Rosselson

Interview and 5 Star Review in R2 Magazine

Posted on February 12, 2012October 19, 2021 by admin

R2 Magazine recently published an interview with Leon Rosselson as well as a 5-star review of his 4-CD boxed set, The World Turned Upside Down. 

Sean McGhee first interviewed Leon Rosselson back in 1988 for the launch of Rock’n’Reel (now R2) Magazine. 24 years later, following the release of the boxed set, the pair talk again about fame, the art of songwriting, Harry Potter, pop songs and Israel.  

Read the full R2 interview here. 

Click on the image below to see R2 Magazine’s 5-star review of The World Turned Upside Down, or get hold of R2’s January/February issue!

 

 

Reviews for The World Turned Upside Down

Posted on February 12, 2012October 19, 2021 by admin

A selection of recent reviews for The World Turned Upside Down, Leon’s 4-CD boxed set. 

***** review in Songlines January 2012
“It’s the life work of of one of Britain’s finest contemporary writers – not just songwriters but writers in any form…. The World Turned Upside Down concludes with ‘The Power of Song’, to which this magnificent retrospective is a living testament.”

fRoots May 2012

“Sitting here with a four-CD boxed set, including an extensive booklet offering valuable insights into the whys and wherefores of it all…. you not only get the full benefit of his stinging satire , you get a sharp sense of the times for which they were written. This is a remarkable achievement for any songwriter, whether it’s the 17th century stories recounted in The World Turned Upside Down and Abiezer Coppe – sung so powerfully by Roy Bailey – to the modern follies depicted by the likes of They’re Going to Build a Motorway, Ballad of a Spycatcher and The Wall that Stands Between.

…a well-rounded picture of a remarkable artist who’s never taken his eyes off the ball even – or especially – when that ball is bouncing in a determinedly anti-popular direction.” 

Taplas January 2012
” …to my mind, one of the best songs ever written is Song of the Olive Tree, about the fate of a tree and the people of Palestine. It’s a song that is at once beautiful, depressing, anger-inducing and, finally, hopeful and inspiring.” 

Tykes News Winter 2011/2012 
“I’ve sung his children’s songs to my children (and other people’s children) and his grown-up’s songs to my grown-ups (and, more than likely, to other people’s grown-ups) and in the process of singing, have never ceased to marvel at the skill and care of Leon’s writing. We’ll not see his like again, even if we wait for fifty years…”

The Living Tradition May 2012
“And along with the 4 CDs (the first three covering the best of his output in the 60s, 70s, 80s, and the fourth the 90s/noughties) we have a quite magnificent liner booklet with nearly 80 pages of text and photos. Really informative text on the writing of each song, as there was no need to waste space filling it with song lyrics; if there is a better enunciator of song lyrics than Leon, then I’d like to know where that person is. Every word he sings is crystal clear. “

R2 Magazine Interview with Leon Rosselson

Posted on February 12, 2012October 19, 2021 by admin

History lesson

Homegrown singer-songwriter Leon Rosselson is currently celebrating fifty years of songs with a conscience. Sean McGhee leads the tributes

I first became aware of the name Leon Rosselson back in the summer of 1986 when a friend put together a compilation cassette tape of, in his words, ‘radical folk singers’ for me. On the tape, amongst names like Peter Nardini, Dick Gaughan and Alex Glasgow were recordings of a duo, Leon Rosselson & Roy Bailey, performing evocatively titled songs such as ‘Whoever Invented The Fishfinger’, ‘Barney’s Epic Homer’, ‘The Ugly Ones’ and ‘The Diggers’ Song’. I was particularly taken with Rosselson & Bailey.

At the time I was absorbing as much of this type of music as I could, alongside a steady musical diet of Christy Moore, Billy Bragg and The Pogues. In my mind’s eye I’d imagined Leon Rosselson (the songwriter of the duo) as some radical young folk singer, for the timelessness of his songs and the sentiments seemed perfectly suited to the period. A bit of library research (pre-Internet) and asking around revealed that Rosselson was in his early fifties and had, as I discovered, been writing, recording and performing since the late 1950s.

When I decided to set out on my youthful musical evangelical journey with Rock’n’Reel (now R2) back in early 1988, Leon Rosselson seemed a perfect interview subject for the launch issue. I managed to obtain his address via a letter to the press and publicity person at Topic Records (a certain John Crosby, these days a contributor to R2) and duly sent off my hand-typed questions to Leon on a page of A4 paper.

Consequently, Rosselson became one of the first-ever artists to be interviewed, albeit in my own idiosyncratic way, in the pages of a fledgling Rock’n’Reel. Since then, the magazine and its editor consistently kept abreast of developments at Rosselson HQ as he continued to record, perform and occasionally participate with our old friend (and sometime R2 contributor) Robb Johnson.

This year celebrating his fiftieth year of recording, PM Press in America (whose Ramsey Kanaan discovered Leon Rosselson through our pages) and Rosselson’s own label, Fuse Records, have combined to produce an ambitious boxed set, The World Turned Upside Down. Comprising four CDs and a lavishly illustrated eighty-page booklet, the collection contains seventy-two songs that span the years 1960-2010.

The release of the boxed set gave me an excuse to speak again to the man The Guardian described thus: “His songs are fierce, funny, cynical, outraged, blasphemous, challenging and anarchic. And the tunes are good, too.” In the extensive booklet notes that accompany The World Turned Upside Down Rosselson alludes to fame and fortune several times, albeit in tongue in cheek manner. I wondered whether there was a little bit of pride at play … disappointment that he hasn’t (yet) become more widely known.

“Fame and fortune were certainly not what motivated me to write songs, though I guess that in the folk/protest boom of the 1960s, when I was assigning songs to publishers and recording for major record companies, the idea of fame might have been at the back of my mind. But it’s not so much that I want to be better known as that I would like some recognition of what I have achieved in the world of songwriting. But that’s not going to happen in a culture where song is not taken seriously as an art form and where the media’s assessment of songs is based on commercial success. Song in this country is not really valued as on the same level as, say, poetry. So why should taking songwriting seriously garner any popularity? I think that, with better access to the media, my songs could have reached and touched more people. And that’s a regret.”

While recording in the 60s for major labels CBS and Decca, neither seemed too concerned about his more overtly ‘political’ songs of the period and in fact it’s likely they simply considered that the ‘protest song’ was the latest fashion amongst songwriters. Rosselson tends to agree with such a conclusion. “All that [major] record companies are interested in is making money. And if ‘political/protest song’ seems like it might sell, as it did for a time in the 60s, they’re happy to market it. Revolution – or the sound of revolution – also turned out to be quite a saleable product in the 60s for a time. They might have balked at ‘Stand Up For Judas’ or ‘On Her Silver Jubilee’ but I hadn’t yet written them then.”

Rosselson has never sat comfortably within any genre: folk singer, singer-songwriter, political songwriter, musical satirist or even, as Ewan MacColl famously labelled him, ‘cabaret’. Where does Rosselson feel is his natural musical home?

“There’s been an attempt to invent an English equivalent to the French category of chanson but it hasn’t exactly caught on. So, like some other songwriters, I’m given labels, because the media need labels, which I think are misleading. I’m a songwriter. I write songs. That’s it. Poets write poems. Nobody thinks to sort them into different categories.”

As a socialist songwriter there are lots of references to work and employment in Rosselson’s songs. In the 60s, and for a time into the 70s, Leon Rosselson taught ‘O’- and ‘A’-Level English three days a week in a tutorial college in Earls Court. “It was pretty flexible so didn’t interfere much with gigs and writing. I’m sure there was some input from it in my writing. Since then, my only job has been writing – plays as well as songs for a time in the 1970s, children’s books in recent years – and performing.”

Rosselson is dismissive of any suggestions that, either from frustration or otherwise, he perhaps could have attempted to pen a pop song or suchlike that might secure radio airplay, in the hope of reaching out to more people.

“Reaching out to more people for what purpose? What can you say in the pop song form? You have to ask yourself how song in the marketplace communicates with its audience. Not surely through the power of the content and the intensity of the words. Words in pop songs are just part of the packaging, part of the overall sound. Having said that, in the folk boom of the mid-60s, when I was with The 3 City 4 and Gerry Bron of Bron Music came looking for songs that might sell, always ready to oblige, I wrote a kind of pop-folk song called ‘Coming Home Again To You’. It was, unlike most pop songs, not entirely unrelated to reality. Gerry Bron was not impressed. Nor were The 3 City 4. I recorded it on The Word Is Hugga Mugga Chugga Lugga Humbugga Boom Chit LP and it’s now preserved on the boxed set.”

As a songwriter with over five decades of composing behind him, he’s not averse to revisiting his recorded canon and occasionally listens to some of his songs after a long absence from them, primarily he says, “to see how they’ve stood the test of time”, although “”favourites change over the years”: ‘Harry’s Gone Fishing’, ‘Postcards From Cuba’, ‘Who Reaps the Profits, Who Pays The Price?’, ‘Not Quite But Nearly’, ‘Bringing The News From Nowhere’, and ‘Barney’s Epic Homer’ come to mind as recordings that still get favourable reviews from the man himself.

As a songwriter who cares so much about the construction, composition and delivery of his songs, unsurprisingly he’s not too forthcoming with compliments when asked about other people’s versions of his songs (of which there have been many). “I like some and not others. Don’t ask me which. I like an interpretation in which the singer re-creates the song to suit his or her own personality and voice.”

Rosselson began his recording career way back in 1958 with two releases, Zimra Ornatt’s Israeli Songs ten-inch album and Stan Kelly’s Liverpool Packet seven-inch EP (both Topic Records, playing guitar on the former and guitar, banjo and accordion on the latter). He has had a prolific recording and writing career that continues today, fifty years after his debut solo record from 1962, the Songs For City Squares EP (Topic). He’s been oblivious in the main to the changing fads and fashions of the music industry, as he explains.

“I’ve never really been in the mainstream … not in the folk world, nor in the commercial world. I’ve never been particularly fashionable, which means I’ve never entirely gone out of fashion. At times – in the 60s, when I was involved with publishers and major record companies, and then in the 80s, the era of punk rock and Billy Bragg – ‘political’ song was said to be in tune with the times and there was a spurt of interest in my work. But mostly I’ve done what I do, which is write songs and sing them, without regard to changing tastes in the music business or in the folk world.”

As a songwriter who has existed chiefly beyond the gaze of the mass media and under the radar of the vast majority of music fans, releasing material many miles away from formulaic commercialism, it makes sense that he founded his own label, Fuse Records, back in the very late 70s, and continues to run it today. “On one level, it’s a time-consuming nuisance since it means doing stuff I don’t really want to do. But it’s essential if you want to keep control of your songs and your recordings. No one can tell me to delete a CD because it’s not paying for the space it’s taking.” 

As a songwriter of biting social comment and concise lyricism, perhaps it doesn’t seem such a natural next step to writing children’s books. I was interested to hear how he ended up as a children’s author, and how that differs from songwriting.

“A friend who was working for a children’s book publisher at the time thought, since I wrote children’s songs, I might like to have a go at writing children’s books. This seemed like an interesting challenge so I wrote ten stories about Rosa and her singing grandfather, who was loosely based on my father with his embarrassing habit of singing anywhere at the drop of a hat. I sent them to the only children’s book agent I knew and, to my amazement, she sold them to Puffin. They came out in two books, the first of which was shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal. So encouraged by that, I carried on for another fifteen years or so, having about twenty books published as well as many stories in anthologies. Then it more or less petered out. I blame Harry Potter.

“At the beginning, I found writing children’s stories a relief after songwriting. Song is such a restricted form, such a tight condensed form, which is why it’s so powerful and children’s stories seemed, certainly at the beginning, to offer more space, greater freedom to say what I wanted to say. And it was fun creating an imaginary world for children. Of course, I soon found there were restrictions, many based on the demands of publishers and on what, it was assumed, children of this or that age could or should read.” 

Rosselson has worked with a wide array of performers: Dominic Behan, Martin Carthy, Sandra Kerr, Roy Bailey, Robb Johnson, Frankie Armstrong, Oysterband and many others.

“Dominic Behan? Oh, yes. I accompanied him on a Topic LP [Down By The Liffeyside: Irish Street Ballads, 1959] in the distant past when I was known mainly as an accompanist on my old nylon-strung Kessler guitar. ‘Thunder and lightning is no lark/When Dublin City is in the dark’. I remember it well. I also worked, futilely as it turned out, on a single with Vanessa Redgrave once upon a time. I bet you didn’t know that.

“But to be accurate, I’ve collaborated long-term, as opposed to collaborating just on studio recordings, with Roy Bailey and Frankie Armstrong, with Sandra Kerr, with Martin Carthy in The 3 City 4 and on pretty well every record I’ve ever made, and in recent years with Robb Johnson. And with Liz Mansfield on a children’s play with songs adapted from one of my children’s stories. And before any of that, with Robin Hall, Jimmie MacGregor and Shirley Bland in The Galliards. They’ve all been, give or take the odd tension, fruitful and enjoyable. More than that, they’ve been essential in keeping my brain active, working on projects, scripting shows, arranging songs for different voices. Performing solo and singing with a group are different. I don’t have a preference.”

Rosselson rarely listens to other performers. “Radio 3 when I’m shaving, and I’ll play the occasional CD.” But asked to recommend any contemporary songwriters or performers, he humbly suggests: “I don’t think anyone needs them [recommendations] from me. I bought Stephen Sondheim’s book of lyrics, Finishing The Hat, which also contains criticisms of many dead songwriters but not, on principle, any living ones. Interestingly, he is hard on song/lyric writers that I like – Noel Coward, Lorenz Hart, WS Gilbert – and praises highly Cole Porter who I think is basically dishonest. He also berates sloppy rhymesters. I have a long note on that in the booklet that comes with the boxed set.” 

It should be no surprise to anyone au fait with Rosselson’s songs and his Jewish heritage that he opposes the criminal acts of the state of Israel, although it may surprise them to know of his youthful interest in Zionism.

“I’ve written seven songs, as well as a number of articles about Israel/Palestine, so anyone who wants to know my views should listen to the CD and read the notes to The Last Chance [subtitled Eight Songs On Israel/Palestine]. This isn’t the place to go into Zionist history. All I will say is that I’m anti-Zionist, because Zionism says that Diaspora Jews live abnormal lives and should all go to Israel and because Zionism is a colonising project predicated on the dispossession and oppression of the indigenous people.  

“I’m also against a Jewish state – though I’m not sure what exactly is meant by that – in the same way that I’m against a Christian state and an Islamic state, because it casts a section of its population into second-class citizenship. As you may know, there is no such thing as Israeli nationality, only Israeli citizenship. This is because the nationality is defined as Druze, Arab, Jewish … not Israeli, and the Jewish state is not for its citizens but for all the Jews in the world. 

“I was in a Zionist youth movement in the 1950s and spent a year in Israel in 1958-59. The turning point for me was the Six Day War in 1967. I might also add that if you’re confused about the rights and wrongs of this particular conflict, it’s probably because you’ve been listening to the BBC. Try Al Jazeera. Or read Noam Chomsky. Or Israeli journalists like Amira Hass, Gideon Levy and Uri Avnery.”

 

Perspectives

“Leon Rosselson is something rare and marvellous, a British performer with stylistic links to the European traditions of leidermacher and chanson. He may not display the emotional intensity associated with such performers, but he certainly shares their gift for making the political personal.”

– Billy Bragg

 

“Leon is a still small voice among the general cacophony. Someone who rages against people ‘filling their ears with music so they can’t hear the screams’ may not sound much like an optimist, but that in fact is what he is. I think that he believes that people are born with the potential to be heroic. I also think that this might make him laugh.”

– Martin Carthy

 

“A writer and performer who has unwaveringly stuck to his principles and beliefs. His writing cuts through all the crap and brings clarity in a time of very muddied waters. He has been a much greater influence on me than he would ever suspect.”

– Dick Gaughan

 

“Discovering Leon’s albums in the early 1980s was possibly the first time I understood that contemporary protest music didn’t have to be rock’n’roll, loud guitars, and barked vocals. I used to get his albums from an anarchist bookshop in Nottingham – I couldn’t find them on sale in any of the normal record shops we had in Leeds. It was powerful stuff … wordy, literate, clever, thought provoking. And he was funny, too – something there wasn’t much of in the protest side of punk. 

When we covered one of Leon’s songs, ‘The World Turned Upside Down’, in 1993, we heard that he wasn’t happy with our version because we changed the line ‘we need no swords’ to a decidedly un-pacifist ‘we take up swords’. That was probably typical of us, switching a tiny but important part to serve our own ends. We didn’t want to be dishonest about our support for armed struggle. Still, we’ve met Leon a few times since then and we’ve always got along. He’s an amazing character and great songwriter.”

– Boff Whalley, Chumbawamba

 

“My foremost response is that he has given me intelligent and powerful songs to sing! Leon and I met some forty-seven years ago when he invited me to join his group, The 3 City 4. For the next twenty-five years we worked together in various formats, as a duo – or a trio when Frankie Armstrong joined us and, occasionally, with Sandra Kerr. We toured in various countries, including the UK, Sweden, Canada and the USA. We managed to record three LPs together: That’s Not The Way It’s Got To Be (1974); Love, Loneliness, Laundry (1977) and If I Knew Who The Enemy Was (1978).

In all the years I have known Leon his songwriting has been extraordinary. Perhaps one of the outstanding qualities of his writing is his consistency over all these years. After fifty years he continues to write great songs that make you laugh or make you angry yet always encourage you to retain the spirit of that ‘voice that lives inside you’. I know of no other writer who can match his enduring ability to give us songs that entertain and educate us.”

– Roy Bailey

 

 

 

 

The World Turned Upside Down – OUT NOW!

Posted on October 2, 2011 by admin

Leon’s new record, The World Turned Upside Down box set, is now available for purchase.

Click here for more information. 

People’s Park Mural

Posted on September 27, 2011 by admin

The words of Leon Rosselson’s The World Turned Upside Down painted on a colourful mural on the toilet walls in People’s Park, Berkeley.

People’s Park was the scene of a famous battle on 15 May 1969 when, on the orders of the University, the police seized the park and erected a chain link fence round it. Thousands demonstrated to take back the park. The police used tear gas and live bullets against the demonstrators. One man was killed and 128 hospitalised. Despite the attempts of the University to make it their exclusive property, the park still remains open to all.

 

Leon Rosselson - The World Turned Upside Down

Leon Rosselson Box Set

Posted on August 15, 2011 by admin
Thanks to everyone who helped with Leon Rosselson’s final tour of Canada & the States: 5 weeks, 2 festivals, 15 concerts, 3 radio programmes, 1 record launch and not enough sleep.  
 

Those who were unable to buy the 4 CD Box Set on the tour, can buy it from PM Press. Click on https://secure.pmpress.org/index.php?l=product_detail&p=353
         
The 4 CDs in this box set contain 72 songs, covering 5 decades of songwriting, from the sparky sixties to the curdled present, and encompass a wide variety of song subjects and song forms. They have been written out of hope, anger, love, scorn, laughter and despair.  And because they have something to say about the times in which they were written, there is an 80 page booklet containing copious notes on the political and personal environments that formed them, along with some pointed observations on the craft of songwriting. 
Frankie Armstrong, Roy Bailey, Mark Bassey, Steve Berry, Billy Bragg, Martin Carthy, Howard Evans, Clare Lintott, Chris Foster, Sue Harris, Paul Jayasinha,  John Kirkpatrick, Elizabeth Mansfield, Janet Russell, Ruth Rosselson, Fiz Shapur, Dave Swarbrick, Miranda Sykes, Roger Williams, The 3 City 4, The Oyster Band, and The Sheffield Socialist Choir all contribute.
The release date for the box set in the UK is 3rd October. It will be distributed by Proper Music Distribution Ltd. 
 
In the U.S.A. & Canada, this CD can be bought via the PM Press website 
 
 
The Liberty Tree CD

New Double CD – The Liberty Tree

Posted on November 15, 2010 by admin

DOUBLE CD RELEASED IN THE STATES NOW AVAILABLE IN THE UK 

The Liberty Tree CD is now available in the UK.  The Liberty Tree: A Celebration Of The Life and Writings Of Thomas Paine tells the story of Tom Paine’s extraordinary life.

Click for more information and how to mail order

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Posted on August 25, 2010 by admin

New Gig – Benefit Concert 11th June

Posted on May 11, 2010 by admin

Talking Democracy Blues

Posted on April 12, 2010 by admin

Talking Democracy Blues, an antidote to the posturing of platitudinous politicians pleading for your vote.
Words, music and video: © Leon Rosselson 2010.

The Last Chance CD cover

New CD – The Last Chance

Posted on March 4, 2010 by admin

CFCD 008
Unapologetically challenging and provocative, The Last Chance weaves eight finely-crafted human stories around one of the burning issues of our times: the Israel/Palestine conflict. Songs to move the mind and the heart.

The Song of Martin Fontasch/ Song of the Olive Tree (sung by Janet Russell)/ The Last Chance/ They Said…/ Yafa! (lyrics by Mahmoud Salim al-Hout, music by Reem Kelani, sung by Reem Kelani)/ My Father’s Jewish World/ The 3rd Intifada/ Loyal Soldiers.

Distributed by Proper Music Distribution but it may be too controversial for most record shops.
Official release date is in April but available now by mail order. Send a cheque for £12 made out to Fuse Records to 28 Park Chase, Wembley, Middlesex HA9 8EH.
All profits from the sale of this CD go to Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP).

The Three City Four CD cover

New CD – Smoke & Dust / The Three City Four

Posted on March 4, 2010 by admin

CFCD 068.
Straight from vinyl heaven, a set of sparkling songs from the folk and protest boom of the early 60s; powerful performances from a group featuring Martin Carthy, Roy Bailey & Leon Rosselson, compiled from The Three City Four (Decca 1965) and Smoke & Dust (CBS 1967).

Distributed by Proper Music Distribution. Release date March 15th but available now by mail order. Send a cheque for £12 to Fuse Records, 28 Park Chase, Wembley, Middlesex HA9 8EH.

All Means All - A night of Comedy and Music

All Means All – A Night of Comedy and Music

Posted on February 8, 2010 by admin

A night of Comedy and Music

  • Gig Listing
  • See Flyer

Starring:
POETS John Hegly & Michael Rosen
COMEDIAN Liz Carr
SINGER/SONGWRITER Leon Rosselson
JAZZ GREATS Tim Whitehead & Julian Joseph
The London Community Gospel Choir
The HEYA Houseband
Compered by Mik Scarlet
Presentation by Micheline Mason

Parents for Inclusion and the Alliance for Inclusive Education

Parents for Inclusion and the Alliance for Inclusive Education are national charities based at 336 Brixton Road, London SW9 7AA.
The main aim of our organisations is to become effective allies to young people who are in danger of exclusion, from ordinary schools, from play, even within the family. We train professionals, help empower parents, and give the young people a voice. They are grass-roots organisations run by disabled people and parents themselves, and as such are largely unfunded. www.parentsforinclusion.org

Peace House Concert

Posted on November 3, 2009 by admin
PEACE HOUSE 50TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION AND BENEFIT

Saturday 14th November 2009 – 3pm to 2am

  • Songs from the frontline with JOE WILKES
  • IAN SAVILLE conjures his Magic for Socialism
  • Celebrating his 50th year of performing, political folk from LEON ROSSELSON
  • The unstoppable all-female five-piece FREYLEKH KLEZMER DANCE BAND
  • Bold, beautiful folk from SEIZE THE DAY

Followed by DJs till 2am.
+ more to be announced
Tickets £9

www.housmans.com/peacehouse.php

George_Frederic_Watts_portrait_of_William_Morris_1870

Morris 175 Weekend

Posted on August 18, 2009 by admin

4 to 6 September 2009

Come and celebrate the 175th anniversary of William Morris’s birth in the magical setting of Kelmscott House, Morris’s home for the last 18 years of his life. It was here that Morris developed his skills in carpet weaving and printed the Kelmscott Chaucer and Jane and May, his wife and daughter, produced beautiful embroideries.

Our festival will take place in the Coach House, where Morris once held meetings of the Socialist League and speakers included George Bernard Shaw & W B Yeats.

The weekend will include music, song, theatre, talks, a local Arts & Crafts walk, as well as fun and party food.

Read More for the Full Programme and ticket prices

 

Weekend tickets (Friday evening, all day Saturday & Sunday): £50 members & concessions; £63 non-members.

Friday evening only: £10 members & concessions; £13 non-members.

Saturday only: £36 members & concessions; £45 non-members.

Leon Rosselson performance only: £10, includes glass of wine

Hilary Watkins, storytelling performance only: £10, includes glass of wine

Sunday only: £24 members & concessions; £30 non-members. Priority will be given to those booking weekend tickets.

To book tickets: please send a SAE to the William Morris Society at Kelmscott House, Upper Mall, Hammersmith, London W6 9TA, stating whether you have any special dietary requirements. For further information please e-mail [email protected], or telephone 020 8741 3735 on Tuesday, Thursday, or a Saturday afternoon.

FULL PROGRAMME

Friday 4 September

18.00 Reception & Welcome with drinks and finger buffet
19.00 Talk by Lord Tom Sawyer on his project to support designer bookbinders
20.00 A special production of the play Kollontai in London, performed by The New Factory of the Eccentric Actor

Saturday 5 September

10.30 Helen Elletson (Curator WMS) will display and talk about items from the Society’s collections
11.30 Coffee & biscuits
12.00 Talk by Professor Ruth Levitas on Warwick Draper the Hammersmith Historian
13.30 Sandwich lunch
14.30 Traditional Celtic storytelling with tea by performance artist and storyteller Hilary Watkins, accompanied by harpist
16.30 Demonstration of Morris’s printing press by Anne Hickmott
18.00 Drinks and finger buffet
19.30 An evening of music performed by Leon Rosselson

Sunday 6 September

10.30 Talk by Peter Cormack on William Morris as a Craftsperson
11.30 Coffee & biscuits
12.00 Start of a local Arts & Crafts walk
14.00 Sandwich Lunch
15.30 Tony Benn, our guest of honour, will speak on The Legacy of William Morris, followed by tea
19.00 Buffet supper & drinks
20.00 Musical performance by Trio “Zadok Baroque”
Byron Mahoney – flute, Philip Yeeles – violin & Bridget Cunningham – harpsichord, will be playing on period instruments chamber music from Georgian England.

Venue Change for Komedia Gig

Posted on June 24, 2009 by admin

There has been a last minute change in location for the gig in Brighton on the 1st July.

This gig will now be held at the Latest MusicBar on Manchester Street.

Please check out the gigs page for the address and more information. 

Leon in the Guardian

Posted on June 12, 2009 by admin

On the 5th of June the Guardian marked Leon’s 50th anniversary with an article from Iain Aitch, who interviewed Leon about his years of “artfully stirring things up”. If you missed the paper copy, read the full article online at the guardian.co.uk

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Leon Rosselson is a singer, songwriter and children's book author.
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