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REVIEW: Rainbow Chorus: Songs Without Borders

An evening out with the Rainbow Chorus is more than just going to a concert, it’s an expression of belonging, solidarity and inclusion that defines the very notion of community that many aspire to when they come to live in Brighton and Hove.

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Photo: Nick Ford Photography

When people ask me where is the gay community in Brighton and Hove, I tell them “go to a Rainbow Chorus concert then come back and talk.”

Songs Without Borders, gives Brighton’s only LGBT choir the opportunity to show the improvement they have made in the last year….and they certainly have made major improvements in all areas of performance and production.

The sound they produce has come on leaps and bounds and while they are still short on numbers in the bass section the choral sound they make when they open up is glorious.

As a singing unit they have gained so much confidence in the last two years, performing with a new-found assurance and attack. Musical director Aneesa Chaudhry ably assisted by accompanist Mojca Monte have created a well-drilled unit and this is especially noticeable in the improvement of the confident sound made by the tenor section where the mixture of male and female voices helps create the Rainbow sound.

While some of the items on the programme were old favourites I had heard before, they sounded fresh and current, especially the uplifting rendition of Cold Play’s Viva La Vida, my personal highlight of the evening. Carly Simon’s Let The River Run was sung with conviction and sent shivers up this old mans spine.

Tom Springfield’s The Olive Tree which opened the second half of the concert, was pure and simple in delivery while the performance of Time To Say Goodbye perfectly captured the spirit of the second half of the concert which was to remember Labour politician Jo Cox.

The secret of good program planning is making sure there is something for everyone to appreciate and enjoy. Performed against the backdrop of the Orlando massacres, the murder of Jo Cox MP and the growing plight of refugees and asylum seekers, Songs Without Borders ticked all the boxes and set the tone of the evening to perfection.

Rainbow Chorus chose to raise money for the Brighton based charity Brighton Voices in Exile with a raffle and bucket collection. The charity reaches out to those seeking asylum, refugees and those with no recourse to public funds within Sussex.

Your next opportunity to hear the Rainbow Chorus in concert will be at their Winter Warmer Show on Saturday, December 10.


Finola Brophy
Finola Brophy

Finola Brophy, Chair of the Rainbow Chorus introduced the evening saying: We’re living in strange and disturbing times with change, uncertainty and fear dominating, not just in the UK but worldwide too. It’s never felt a more important time to send a message of solidarity, inclusiveness and hope from the Rainbow Chorus to the rest of the world.

The LGBT choral movement is worldwide and we have no borders. We will challenge discrimination, intolerance, racism and all hate crimes that LGBT, Muslims and many others face. We are lucky to have a voice in the UK and we want to raise it loud and clear in solidarity with our LGBT and Latin American brothers and sisters brutally murdered and injured in Orlando, for Jo Cox stabbed and gunned down in her beloved Yorkshire while campaigning for an inclusive Britain. We must raise our voices for all the refugees and asylum seekers forced to leave their own homes and countries – we welcome you here. And we will remember Jo Cox’s words “we are far more united and have far more in common with each other than things that divide us”.

Next week our music team- Aneesa and Monti- will lead the European Queer Choir in Denver, USA – including a couple of our own Rainbow Chorus members. They will be performing at the largest LGBT choral festival ever to over 7,000 singers and they will be taking our messages of strength and unity with them.

In August the Rainbow Chorus will be in Amsterdam singing with other European choirs and performing during the EuroPride celebrations. Thanks to generous sponsors and fundraising every Chorus member can come regardless of income or ability.

We want to continue developing the Rainbow Chorus, grow RC+ and other initiatives and to support and empower our communities. We need your help to do so. If you can sponsor an individual member or contribute to our ongoing work please get in touch with me.

All proceeds from our raffle and bucket collection this evening will go directly to Brighton Voices In Exile – a local charity supporting refugees and asylum seekers. And we’re delighted to welcome some of them here this evening. Please give generously and check your raffle tickets on your way out later.

A huge thanks to everyone who has made this evening possible – our committee, tech teams, music team, members, our wonderful 5th section of volunteers and all of you for coming.

In the first half of the concert we are wearing rainbow ribbons to honour the Orlando victims.

In the second half we will wear the white rose of Yorkshire for Jo Cox and for peace.

Please welcome our wonderful Sign Language Interpreter Marco Nardi, Our talented accompanist Mojca Monte and last but not least our inspirational Music Director Aneesa Chaudhry.”

Greens choose local activist to stand in East Brighton

Activist and campaigner Mitch Alexander has been selected as the Green candidate for the by-election in East Brighton ward on Thursday, August 4.

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The by-election was called following the decision of Labour councillor Maggie Barradell to stand down from the seat she won at the 2015 local elections, citing personal reasons.

Mitch is an active campaigner from Bevendean for what she believes is fair and right for all the city’s residents and she was one of the leading campaigners in the fight to stop the Labour controlled council putting up council tax bills for those on benefits and low incomes.

More recently, she led the campaign to stop the Willows GP Surgery in Bevendean from closing down, and has fought for better bus services to and from city estates, including her current work with the people of the Bristol Estate in East Brighton who are suffering with a very infrequent bus service.

Mitch said: “I love living in Brighton and want every single person who lives here too to enjoy all that the city has to offer, which is why I am campaigning hard for better public transport, accessible healthcare, stimulating community parks, affordable and free involvement in the Arts.

“I want Brighton and Hove to become a place where no resident feels left out of the city’s well-known vibrancy because of a low-income.   Before starting a family, I worked in Drama and theatre and am currently in the process of setting up an organisation which will run free weekly drama workshops for children, teens, adults and the elderly in Whitehawk, Moulsecoomb and Hollingdean.”

Mitch moved to Brighton seventeen years ago when she was pregnant with her first daughter. She spent her early years in the city bringing up her three daughters while running a baby and children’s shop in the North Laine.  She currently lives with her family in Bevendean.

 

LGBT sector leaders speak out post EU Referendum

Following the outcome of the EU Referendum, LGBT Sector Leaders from across the UK who are members of The Consortium of LGBT Voluntary and Community Organisations, have put their names to a joint statement.

WEB.600The statement reads:

The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans sectors are strong, resilient and passionately believe in equality for all. It is important this is the first message we send—one of positivity, one of strength and one of solidarity not only with our own communities but with all diverse communities—at a time when hard fought freedoms could be at threat.

The result of the EU Referendum has sent shockwaves across the United Kingdom and beyond, and we as LGBT leaders in the sector have concerns about the future of equality, diversity and inclusion.

We are collectively resolute in our vision for the future of society in the United Kingdom, whatever happens politically and economically. We refuse to allow inequality to creep in further, for diverse communities to be marginalised or for the protections we have fought hard for diminished in any way. We want to remain part of a society that is built on fairness, equality and inclusivity, and which values and cherishes diversity.

LGBT Leaders from organisations across the United Kingdom call upon all politicians to stand up for the following commitments in order to maintain a strong and resilient voice for LGBT people:

Protection of the Equality Act

The Equality Act 2010 is an Act of the UK Parliament but has its roots in requirements from the EU. We want to see the Equality Act, and the distinct equality legislation in Northern Ireland, not only protected but strengthened and improved to fully include gender identity and intersectional discrimination.

Tackle Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia

An immense amount of work has already been undertaken to tackle homophobia, biphobia and transphobia across a range of platforms including hate crime and bullying within education. We want to see continued commitment to investment in this area in all parts of the UK to increase awareness, raise knowledge levels and foster understanding of what it means to be LGB and T.

Remain bound by the European Convention on Human Rights

Current government policy is to remain a signatory of the European Convention on Human Rights, even when outside of the EU. We want all parties to commit to remaining as a signatory, respecting the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights, and promoting the positive work it undertakes.

Defend the Human Rights Act

Alongside remaining a signatory to the ECHR, we want to see the protections within the Human Rights Act protected for future generations, as well as the ECHR protections in the constitutions of the devolved administrations of Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. In particular it is critical that the UK Courts must retain the power they have now under the Human Rights Act to take the European Convention into account when determining UK cases.

Retain equalities as a key function across the UK’s Governments

In England and Wales, the Women and Equalities Minister holds responsibility for LGBT policy development, whilst in Northern Ireland this lies with the Minister for Communities, and in Scotland the Cabinet Secretary for Communities, Social Security and Equalities is responsible for LGBTI equality. We want to see Cabinet-level Ministers across all parts of the UK retain responsibility for equalities and to promote LGBT policy development.

Continued engagement with LGBT communities

Government engagement with diverse communities is vital as we continue to fight for a society based on fairness, equality and inclusion. We want a commitment that UK government will continue to engage effectively with LGBT communities in matters of policy development, and that our communities will be listened to and have greater opportunity to raise our voices.

Respond to the Inquiry into Transgender Equality and take action

The sector has warmly welcomed the Women and Equalities Select Committee Inquiry into Transgender Equality. We now call upon the UK Government to release its response to the Inquiry and work with our communities to take action on its recommendations. In Scotland, we expect to see the Scottish Government honour its manifesto commitment to reform gender recognition law.

Equality in Equal Marriage

We are proud that a form of equal marriage now exists in England, Wales and Scotland. However, we are concerned that this is not the case for Northern Ireland and that some key issues remain in order to make it truly equal marriage. We urge the UK’s Governments to support each other to remedy the inequalities that still exist in this area.

Advocate for LGBT rights internationally

The UK has been an important voice in the global fight for LGBT rights. We want the UK to maintain its positive stance in this regard and to show strong solidarity with those LGBT communities in other countries who are unable to live free from fear, prejudice and risk of persecution. The UK should also fully honour its obligation to protect LGBT asylum seekers and refugees.

Address cross-cutting community issues

We recognise that LGBT communities do not sit in isolation. Our own communities are diverse and intersect with all other parts of society. We want equality, diversity and inclusion to be seen through a cross-cutting lens and for an integrated approach to tackling these issues, involving all communities.


Signatories to the statement:

Paul Roberts OBE, Chief Executive—The Consortium of LGBT Voluntary and Community Organisations

Tim Sigsworth MBE, Chief Executive—Albert Kennedy Trust

Steve Williamson, Director—Cara-Friend

David Spence, CEO—centred

Jonathan Charlesworth, Executive Director—EACH

Sarah Humphries, Chair—ELOP

Tim Hopkins, Chief Executive—Equality Network Scotland

Nik Noone, Chief Executive—Galop

Emma Roebuck, Chief Officer—Gay Advice Darlington and Durham

Terry Reed OBE, Trustee—GIRES

Bernard Reed OBE, Trustee—GIRES

Matthew Hodson, Chief Executive—GMFA

Lewis Turner, Project Manager—Lancashire LGBT

Paul Martin OBE, Chief Executive—LGBT Foundation

Monty Moncrieff, Chief Executive—London Friend

Greg Ussher, Chief Executive—METRO

Helen Jones, Chief Executive—MindOut

Lukasz Konieczka, Director—Mosaic LGBT Youth Centre

Tor Doherty, Chief Executive—New Family Social

Alice Wallace, Manager—Opening Doors London

Amelia Lee, Strategic Director—Proud Trust

Tony Fenwick, CEO—Schools Out UK

Lara Jaffey, Executive Director—SexYouality

Bob Green, Chief Executive—Stonewall Housing

Michael Halls, Executive Director—The Intercom Trust

John O’Doherty, Director—The Rainbow Project

Salim Khalifa, Director—Trade Sexual Health

Helen Belcher, Trustee—Trans Media Watch

Andrew Davies, Chief Executive—Unity Group Wales

Tom Doyle, Chief Executive—Yorkshire MESMAC

 

George Street barbers to raise money for HIV charity

O/S Barbers in George Street Kemptown will be raising money once again for the Sussex Beacon on Friday, August 5.

George Oakley (left) Joe Steven (right)
George Oakley (left) Joe Steven (right)

For the second year, George Oakley and Joe Steven will donate all money made from haircuts at the salon to the Sussex Beacon.

Last year the pair raised £305 for the Beacon and hope to top that amount this year.

Haircuts will cost £14 and £10 for students. Opening hours are from 10am-6pm and you will find the salon at 52 George Street, Kemptown, BN2 1RJ.

To make a reservation telephone: 07548 351901

 

BRIGHTON PRIDE FESTIVAL: Sheila McWattie Women’s Performance Tent line-up announced

The Sheila McWattie Women’s Performance Stage at Brighton Pride is a fitting tribute to a much-loved local women’s rights activist, campaigner and pioneer.

Sheila McWattie
Sheila McWattie

Fine performances, enchanting sounds and a unique community atmosphere will ensure Sheila’s legacy remains at the heart of Brighton Pride’s celebrations.

This years eclectic line-up of performers and artists will deliver a unique vibe to the Pride celebrations with wonders 23 Degrees South, the one part hip hop and one part urban/folk brilliance of M3me, songs to captivate you from singer and guitarist Travis Eddie, Folk Punk protest singer songwriter Chuck Sjhay, power house performer  Nicolette Street and the psychedelic rock goddess Z-Star.

Add comedy from the giggle queens Rebecca ShortallBryony No and Debs Lennard plus the ever welcoming compere MC Lucy Bee and you have a line-up promising a day filled with love, laughter and mighty fine live music.

A.J.Paterson
A.J.Paterson

Organiser AJ Paterson said of this years Pride plans “I am so excited and humbled to put together acts for The Sheila McWattie Women’s Performance Stage, a very important space at the heart of Brighton Pride. Respect to the women who have gone before! We have an eclectic mix of folk/punk, singer/spitter of rhythms, a comedy hour and an amazing headliner whom Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin described as “a force of nature”. I am very passionate about female fronted acts, women’s rights and thankful that Pride continue to have the space for the performers, women and their friends. My hope and vision for you is for a day of fun, love and togetherness. Here’s to a Happy Pride everyone”.


1.00pm: – 23 Degrees South
1.30pm: – M3me
2pm: Travis Eddie
2.30pm: Comedy–Lucy Bee (MC): Rebecca Shortall: Bryony No: Debs Lennard
3.40pm: Chuck Sjhay
4.15pm: Nicolette Street
5.00pm: Z-Star

The Brighton Pride Festival, is on Saturday, August 6, 2016.

To book tickets online, CLICK HERE:

Callington and Afghans win Exeter City FC community trophies

Callington and Afghan United came out champions in Exeter City’s community football tournament held at the weekend (Sunday, July 3).

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Callington ladies who won every match they played in beat Tedburn St Mary based Inter M’Ladies 5-1 in the final.

In the Men’s competition Afghan United became the first team to win the title three times, having previously won the tournament in 2008 and 2009. They beat Kurdish side Azad Turkan 9-1 in the final.

Callington and Afghan United
Callington and Afghan United

The 5-a-side competition was organised by Exeter City Supporters Trust’s One Game One Community Group and Exeter City’s Football in the Community team. The tournament which included more than 200 players, took place at the University of Exeter’s Streatham Sports Complex.

The tournament, now in its 12th season, encourages participation from local community teams and especially those for black and minority ethnic players. The event attracts players from many different parts of the world and this year saw Trinidad and Tobago, D R Congo, Togo, Ivory Coast and Nigeria amongst those represented.

Devon’s gay friendly team, the Devon Lions also took part.

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L to R: Peter Holland (Deputy Lord Mayor), Mark Goodwin (Deputy Vice Chancellor), Ollie Watkins (Exeter City One Game One Community Ambassador), Suaad Genem George (One Game One Community Group), Paul Farley (Exeter City), Julian Tagg (Exeter City) and Jamie Vittles (Exeter City Football in the Community)

The tournament was officially launched by Exeter’s Deputy Lord Mayor, Councillor Peter Holland. He was joined by University of Exeter Deputy Vice Chancellor Professor Mark Goodwin, Exeter City Chairman Julian Tagg, Exeter City Club Director and Supporters Trust Trustee Paul Farley and Exeter City’s One Game One Community first team ambassador Ollie Watkins.

Support for the tournament came from the University of Exeter, Devon FA, Tesco, Kick it Out, Exeter City Football Club Football in the Community and Exeter City Supporters Trust.

Exeter City’s One Game One Community Group is part of the national Kick It Out campaign which aims to address all types of discrimination in football including race, disability, gender, age, religion and sexual orientation.

Martin Weiler for the One Game One Community Group, said: “This was our biggest ever tournament and once again a flagship for diversity and equality” 

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Czech court annouce same-sex partnership adoption decision

The Network of European LGBTIQ Families Associations (NELFA) welcomes recent decision by the Czech Constitutional Court to extend the right to apply for adoption to individuals in same-sex registered partnerships.

nelfa Q_AISBL_LGBTQI_2016The Court’s argumentation, following a lawsuit brought by a gay man in a registered partnership, stated that the previous ban was discriminatory because a gay man outside a registered partnership met the requirements to apply to adopt, but was denied the same possibility once he entered a partnership. However, according to the ruling registered partners will not be able to apply to adopt jointly.

Maria von Känel
Maria von Känel

Maria von Känel, President of the Board of NELFA, said: “The decision to lift the ban on adoption against individuals in same-sex registered partnerships is a just decision, and one that recognises what experts have been saying all this time, that a person’s sexual orientation is not a criterion of good parenting. The capacity to be a good parent is linked to a person’s ability to love and educate a child, as well as to a person’s reliability. The Czech authorities should go much further and allow registered partners to apply for adoption jointly; only then will all legal discrimination be erased”.

NELFA is the European platform of LGBTIQ families associations, bringing together LGBTI parents and parents-to-be from all over Europe. NELFA currently represents 27 organisations in 18 European countries with more than 25 500 members. NELFA is a member of ILGA-Europe and Transgender Europe.

For more information about NELFA, CLICK HERE:

 

CD REVIEW: Grace Jones: Warm Leatherette – Deluxe Edition

No Bulls**t, Jones is the drug.

Grace Jones
Grace Jones

Grace Jones is often lauded as an icon of grandiose style, almost a caricatured great-aunt to the somewhat clumsy niece Ga Ga, her music often taking a back seat in our distant memories of “didn’t she do…”. Her current run of album reissues should go some way to cementing her place in the hall of music legends , a piece in the jigsaw of substance alongside the post modernist style.

Jones emerged from the world of modelling into the late seventies crowded arena of Disco as a darling of the New York club and gay scene with her trio of albums Portfolio, Fame and Muse.  With Disco creeping back into the shadows in the wake of the Disco Sucks movement, Jones retreated to The Bahamas and returned in 1980 with her first collection of recordings as part of the Compass Point triology so named after the studios in which they were recorded, now reissued here as Warm Leatherette – Deluxe Edition.

Often seen as the warm-up act to her seminal release Nightclubbing, Leatherette is certainly worth investigation on its own merits. Leaving the Studio 54 ‘camp’ in the dressing up box amongst the discarded feather boas, Jones’ Leatherette performance across the eight original recordings (there are a staggering 27 tracks on this reissue) introduced us to her dark theatricality on both the albums artwork and title track. Her half spoken, half sung lyrics rolling between seduction and threat in equal measure, a performance style still echoed amongst her more recent release Hurricane.

Those familiar with Jones’ greatest hits will here recognise both The Pretender’s Private Life and Roxy Music’s Love is the Drug from this collection, although the original album versions appearing here in their original form are in much simpler form.

As expected with a deluxe edition the magnificent (and superior) 1986 remixes of Love is the Drug feature here, still a mainstay of Grace Jones the 21st Century live experience.

Other highlights include her unique take on The Marvellettes The Hunter Gets Captured by the Game, A Rolling Stone, and the almost intimidating Bullshit.

For a true collectors item; splash out on the four LP vinyl. If you don’t, Miss Jones will come for you. Probably in the night.

Warm Leatherette – The Deluxe Edition is out now on Island/UMG. Available as 4LP/2CD/BluRay pure audio/Download.

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