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Barney Porter, Valerie Vet & Mark Jervis |
The pub is a stone-built village pub, the only thatched
building and the oldest pub in the town of Shipston-on-Stour. The pub
licence dates back to 1540, and the lounge is cosy and welcoming with a large
inglenook real fireplace.
The Open
Mic session was run by Barney Porter and a range of local talent turned up to
play from the small garden stage to large appreciative audiences, who were
enjoying the real of real ales, wines and other drinks from enigmatic
proprietor Baggy Saunders.
This
included a trio of Barney Porter (guitar), Valerie Vett (vocals) and Mark
Jervis (beat box) sang several songs including the Stevie Wonder classic
Superstition, with strong female vocals from Valerie.
Next up
was singer and guitarist with his powerful voice with renditions of Blue Suede
Shoes (Elvis Presley), Strange Brew (Cream) and Poison (Alice Cooper).
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The Shambolics |
Then up
on stage ambled a more mature trio called the Shambolics, featuring Alan
Thompson (Guitar), Mark Dudfield (guitar) and Colin Beckett (washboard &
harmonica) with renditions of Sea of Heartbreak (Johnny Cash), Gypsy Woman (Don
Williams) and Teenager in Love (Dion and the Belmonts).
Next our
pub proprietor Baggy Saunders told up a few humorous short poems, one of which
he had submitted to Beano magazine and had won 10 shillings as a winner.
Then two
of Third Dimension took to the stage, George Scholes (guitar) and Laura Furnell
(vocals) with the help of Mark Jervis on beatbox. The full group (with Jez
Walker) are playing again on Saturday night as part of the Proms. Their set
included She’s Not There (Santana), Smooth Operator (Sade) and China Girl
(David Bowie).
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Charley Mack |
Then we
moved to a more jazz/folk style with two of 16 Strings and a Dead Goat with
Eleanor Stanley (violin) and James Thomas (guitar) with there versions of That Man, Galway Girl (Steve Earle), Over The Waterfall
(Henry Reed) and Sweet Child Of Mine (Guns ‘N Roses), so a bit more rock
in there too!
Next we had on stage singer/guitarist Becky
with her rendition of I’m not Perfect (Missy Elliott) and finished off the
evening with had Barney Porter (guitar), his Dad and Shipston Proms organiser
Tim Porter (harmonica) and Mark Jervis called into action again on beatbox.
They gave us renditions of Take a load (The Band), the Theme from the BBC2 show
Old Grey Whistletest and a version of The Eagles Desparado with Tim’s harmonica
rather than vocals. This was the second time this evening that Tim had performed
that as he had played this with The Vale Musicians at their Proms gig at Cherington.
The next night it was the turn of Stratford
Folk Club comes to Shipston, run by Tori Rushton, as part of the Shipston
Proms, again hosted at the Black Horse’s garden stage area.
This included a selection of Irish (and
similar) songs played and sung by Roger Reed, Battered Soul lead
singer/guitarist Ben Bryan with a rendition of Travis’s Why does it always
Rain, which at 1994 was a part back as he wanted to go songwise, which got a
large laugh from the slightly more mature audience than 16 year old Ben!
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Roger Reed |
Next up was Battered Soul’s singer Charley Mack
playing her guitar with her versions of Atlas Hands (Benjamin Francis Leftwich)
and Mine (Beyonce) before she introduced and debuted her own song Kisses in the
Rain.
Next up was a much more mature singer Bill
Pulham, with a selection of old favorites and historic songs some just with
vocals and the final song with harmonica. This included Bling George, Whose
Horse is That? And Earnie Ford’s 1956 song Muscle and Blood.
Back up again was Roger Reed, this time with
guitar, with a version of Lindisfarne’s Fog on the Tyne.
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Jon Bird & Tori Rushton |
Next up we had the guitarist from Daisy Chain
Quartet Jon Bird and singer Bill Pulham with a duet. Finally host Tori Rushton
with her cello (and also a Daisy Chain Quartet member) and fellow band member
John Bird (guitar) gave us there version of Kissing on a Knife edge.
At the end after great audience appreciation,
the Shipston Proms and its future events were plugged with events up to and
including the big finale on Saturday 4th July in Shipston’s main
square.
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