Monday, April 28, 2014

Press Release 28th April


With just under a month to go to the Spring Bank Holiday at the end of May, the multi-award-winning Hebden Bridge Blues Festival is gearing up for its biggest ever event with an unprecedented 52 acts across 9 stages over three days.

With all three days being headlined by internationally-known Blues artists, Virgil & The Accelerators, The Motives and Northsyde, festival director Jason Elliott is delighted with the programme and the way this year's event has built on previous successes.

“Having won our category in the British Blues Awards for the last two years has helped us attract some amazing talent to our little town. There are some world class musicians coming to to entertain us, from places as diverse as Texas, Detroit, Canada and Switzerland as well as all over Britain.”

“We have stuck to a policy of only inviting who we feel are the cream of contemporary Blues music, people who are writing and recording new material, moving the genre forward, and it does seem to have gone down well,” he said.

“There is something special about Hebden Bridge the town for people too. It's not just the music. Everything is within walking distance and the wide variety of independent shops is real treat for our visitors from clone-towns elsewhere,” he added.

As well as the increased number of acts playing, new for this year are extra free gigs during the daytime for the locals, an open Blues jam session for the public, a free Blues ukelele workshop with maestro Manitoba Hall at the Town Hall, as well as a dedicated camping area for tents in the park being run by the Hebden Bridge Round Table.

The primary venues are the same as last year. The recently refurbished Hope Baptist Church will host the main stage in the evening, and Salem Mill will house an acoustic stage and an electric stage for events during the day.

The number of external venues hosting free admission “Juke Joint” gigs has increased however, as has the their range of performance times to increase accessibility and choice. This year, the Old Gate, the White Swan, the Crown Inn, Marshall's Bar, the Pennine Club, The Vine and Muse Music are all hosting acts.

In addition, the main stage will also have free admission during Saturday and Sunday daytimes where both Outlaw PR and JHS music will each be putting on three bands.

“It's great the way local businesses have got involved to help bring free gigs to the locals. Residents logically assume and expect that lots of things will be available at no cost during any kind of festival so, as we are completely self-funding, we are very grateful that the local venues are on board with the project,” commented Jason. “We are also very appreciative of the support that both the Round Table and Calderdale Council have shown this year in arranging camping facilities. Having an area of the park usable to counteract the shortage of local accommodation will make a considerable difference to the local economy too, whilst leaving most of the park completely unaffected,” he added.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Finalists - British Blues Awards 2014 - Full List

This is the full list of the finalists in this year's British Blues Awards - which opens for the public vote on May 1st  - with those who have played at the Hebden festival marked out.

As you will see, there are no less than SIXTY nominations for THE HEBDEN FAMILY!

(It's also worth noting that Dani Wilde and Will Wilde, while not having played at the festival "proper" yet, did come and do a warm up gig for us with Todd Sharpville in March, so are also part of the tribe. That would bring it up to 62!)

Male Vocalist of the Year

Alan Nimmo - King King, The Nimmo Brothers
Aynsley Lister (HBBF13)
Bluesboy Dan Owen (HBBF13)
David Migden - Dirty Words / Twisted Roots (HBBF14)
Hugh Coltman - The Hoax
Marcus Bonfanti - Jawbone, Boom Band, Ten Years After plus others (HBBF11, HBBF12, HBBF13)

Female Vocalist of the Year

Connie Lush - Blues Shouter
Dani Wilde 
Jo Harman (HBBF13)
Kyla Brox (HBBF13)
Lorna Fothergill - Northsyde (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Zoe Schwarz - Blue Commotion (HBBF14)

Blues Band of the Year

Brothers Groove
King King
Larry Miller Band (HBBF11)
Northsyde (HBBF13, HBBF14)
The Hoax
The Nimmo Brothers

Harmonica Player of the Year

Alan Glen
Giles King
Giles Robson - Dirty Aces
Paul Lamb - Kingsnakes
Steve West Weston
Trevor Steger - Babajack (HBBF12)
Will Wilde

Guitarist of the Year

Alan Nimmo - King King, The Nimmo Brothers
Aynsley Lister (HBBF13)
Chantel McGregor (HBBF11)
Joel Fisk - LaVendore Rogue, Wolfpack plus Others (HBBF13)
Jon Amor - The Hoax, The Boom Band (HBBF11)
Jules Fothergill - Northsyde (HBBF13, HBBF14)

Acoustic Act of the Year of the Year

Babajack (HBBF12)
Blues Boy Dan Owen (HBBF13)
Half Deaf Clatch (HBBF14)
Kyle and Moore
Marcus Bonfanti (HBBF11, HBBF12, HBBF13)
Wooden Horse (HBBF13)

Bass Player of the Year

Derek White - Larry Miller Band, Storm Warning (HBBF11)
Ian Mauricio - Northsyde (HBBF13, HBBF14)
John Dawson - Russ Tippins Band (HBBF12, HBBF13, HBBF14)
Lindsay Coulson - King King
Roger Inniss
Trev Turley - Bare Bones Boogie Band (HBBF12, HBBF14)

Keyboard Player of the Year

Bennett Holland
Charlotte Joyce - Ron Sayer Band (HBBF13)
Dale Storr
Paddy Milner - Jawbone, The Boom Band + Others (HBBF11, HBBF12, HBBF13)
Paul Jobson
Steve Watts - Jo Harman and Company (HBBF13)

Drummer of the Year

Dave Raeburn
Hayden Doyle - Northsyde (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Mark Barrett - The Hoax, The Blues Boy Kings (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Martin Johnson - Jo Harman and Company (HBBF13)
Sam Kelly
Stephen Cutmore - LaVendore Rogue plus Others
Wayne Proctor - King King plus Others

Instrumentalist of the Year

Becky Tate - Percussion - Babajack (HBBF12)
Carla Viegas - Percussion - Rabbit Foot (HBBF12, HBBF13)
Kyla Brox - Flute (HBBF13)
Sarah Skinner - Sax - Red Dirt Skinners (HBBF12, HBBF14)
Simon Anthony Dixon - Sax - The Stumble
Yoka Qureshi-Kuiper - Flute and Sax - Little Devils (HBBF14)

Young Artist of the Year

Alex McKown (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Blues Boy Dan Owen (HBBF13)
Laurence Jones
Lewis Hamilton (HBBF12, HBBF14)
Lucy Zirins (HBBF12, HBBF13)
Tom Gee (HBBF14)

Overseas Artist of the Year

Buddy Whittington
Henrik Freischlader
JJ Grey And Mofro
Paul Lamb And The Detroit Breakdown (HBBF11, HBBF13, HBBF14)
Royal Southern Brotherhood
Walter Trout

Independent Broadcaster of the Year

Ashwyn Smyth - Digital Blues
Dave Raven - Raven And The Blues (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Dave Watkins - Blues And Roots (HBBF14)
Gary Grainger - The Blues Show (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Kevin Beale - Blues On The Marsh
Tim Aves - The Blues Is Back (HBBF13)

Blues Album of the Year

Big City Blues - The Hoax
Home - Aynsley Lister Band (HBBF13)
Independence - Trevor Sewell Band (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Shake The Walls - Marcus Bonfanti (HBBF11, HBBF12, HBBF13)
Standing In The Shadows - King King
The Storytellers Daughter - Northsyde (HBBF13, HBBF14)

Blues Song of the Year

A Long History Of Love - King King
Cheap Whisky - Marcus Bonfanti (HBBF11, HBBF12, HBBF13)
Home - Aynsley Lister (HBBF13)
Hipslicker - The Hoax
Just One More Day - Mark Pontin Group (HBBF14)
Train - Trevor Sewell (HBBF13, HBBF14)

Kevin Thorpe Award for Songwriter of the Year

Aynsley Lister (HBBF13)
Half Deaf Clatch (HBBF14)
Jo Harman And Mike Davies (HBBF13)
Lucy Zirins (HBBF12, HBBF13)
Richard Townend (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Trevor Sewell (HBBF13, HBBF14)

Emerging Artist of the Year

Brothers Groove
Gary Grainger (HBBF13, HBBF14)
Half Deaf Clatch (HBBF14)
King Size Slim
Mark Pontin Group (HBBF14)
Thomas Ford

Blues Festival of the Year

Broadstairs Blues Bash
Blues On The Farm
Carlisle Rock And Blues Festival
Ealing Blues Festival
Great British Rhythm And Blues Festival Colne
Hebden Bridge Blues Festival - WINNERS 2012 and 2013

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Full Weekend Timings for Hebden Blues 2014




Running Order

Friday May 23rd

3.00pm - Manitoba Hal - Muse Music, Market Street
4.00pm - Manitoba Hal - Blues Ukelele Workshop, Town Hall
7.00pm - Doors Open Main Stage*
7.45pm - Julian Burdock - Main Stage*
8.30pm - David Migden & The Twisted Roots - Main Stage*
9.00pm - Private Dicks - Old Gate
9.00pm - Alex McKown - Crown Inn
9.00pm - Jed Thomas - Marshall's Bar
9.00pm - The Rainey Street Band - The Vine
9.00pm - Mad Jack & The Hatters - The White Swan
9.30pm - DJ Dave Raven (Raven and Blues) - Main Stage*
10.00pm - Virgil & The Accelerators - Main Stage*
11.30pm - DJ Les Young (Wall to Wall Blues) - Main Stage*
Midnight - The Paddy Maguire Midnight Jam Sessions with the Hebden Allstars*
1.30am - FINISH

Saturday May 24th

12 Noon - The Mustangs - Salem Electric Stage*
1.00pm - Dan Burnett - Salem Acoustic Stage*
1.00pm - Forty4 - Outlaw Stage (at the Main Stage)
2.00pm - Katie Bradley - Salem Electric Stage*
2.30pm - Bare Bones Boogie Band - Outlaw Stage (at the Main Stage)
3.00pm - Angelo Palladino - Salem Acoustic Stage*
3.00pm - Trevor Sewell (solo) - The Pennine Club
3.00pm - Open Blues Jam for all playing public - Marshalls Bar
4.00pm - Zoe Schwarz & Blue Commotion - Salem Electric Stage*
4.00pm - Makuini & The Hoodoo Men - Outlaw Stage (at the Main Stage)
4.30pm - Flock of 3 - Old Gate Bar & Restaurant
5.00pm - Dave Arcari - Salem Acoustic Stage*
6.00pm - Nat Martin Band - Salem Electric Stage*
7.15pm - Blues Boy Kings - Main Stage*
8.30pm - Paul Lamb & The Detroit Breakdown - Main Stage*
9.00pm - Little Devils - Old Gate Bar & Restaurant
9.00pm - Killer Bees - Crown Inn
9.00pm - Clare Free (acoustic) - The Vine
9.00pm - The Hexmen - The White Swan
9.00pm - Greasy Slicks - Marshalls Bar
10.00pm - The Motives feat. Matt Taylor - Main Stage*
11.30pm - DJ Dave Watkins - Main Stage*
Midnight - The Paddy Maguire Midnight Jam Sessions with the Hebden Allstars*
1.30am - FINISH

Sunday May 25th

12 Noon - Richard Townend - Salem Acoustic Stage*
1.00pm - Half Deaf Clatch - Salem Acoustic Stage*
1.00pm - Tom Killner Band - JHS Stage (at the Main Stage)
2.00pm - Tom Attah & The Bad Man Clan - Salem Electric Stage*
2.30pm - Gav Coulson Band - JHS Stage (at the Main Stage)
3.00pm - Red Dirt Skinners - Salem Acoustic Stage*
3.00pm - Gary Grainger - The Pennine Club
3.30pm - The Terry Logan Band - Crown Inn
4.00pm - Marcus Lazarus Band - Salem Electric Stage*
4.00pm - Hannah Rickard & The Relatives - JHS Stage (at the Main Stage)
4.30pm - The Revelator Band - Old Gate Bar & Restaurant
5.00pm - Dove and Boweevil - Salem Acoustic Stage*
6.00pm - Tim Hood - Salem Electric Stage*
7.30pm - Gwyn Ashton - Main Stage*
8.30pm - Mark Pontin Group - Main Stage*
9.00pm - Tom Gee Band - Old Gate Bar & Restaurant
9.00pm - Lewis Hamilton - Crown Inn
9.00pm - Bonnie Mac Band - The White Swan
9.45pm - Russ Tippins Electric Band - Main Stage*
11.00pm - Northsyde - Main Stage*
Midnight - The Paddy Maguire Midnight Jam Sessions with the Hebden Allstars*

* Entrance with wristband only

The Full Line Up - 52 Acts!!!

We are delighted to bring you the full confirmed line up for our biggest ever Hebden Bridge Blues Festival 2014!

And all without a penny of taxpayer or ratepayers money!


Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Ukelele Blues Worksop with Manitoba Hal at HBBF14

Photo by Ed Sprake

We are delighted to announce that the legendary Manitoba Hal will be joining us at the Hebden Bridge Blues Festival this year and will be putting on a special free Blues Ukelele Workshop in the Town Hall on Friday May 23rd between 4pm and 6pm.

He will also be doing a short set at the world-famous independent record shop, Muse Music in Market Street at 3pm.

The workshop is open to HBBF ticket holders and the general public alike, thanks to some canny grant funding, and will operate on a first-come-first-served basis. There will be some ukes available to borrow, but feel free to bring your own.

For those who don't know, Manitoba Hal is one of the top ukulele players in Canada and he loves playing the blues on his ukulele. He has been a featured performer at ukulele festivals around the world and recently appeared in the ukulele documentary The Mighty Uke.

He has two international ukulele endorsements and is one of a handful of authentic blues performers performing with the ukulele today. “People often think of the ukulele as a happy instrument and they're not wrong, but it is also capable of delivering the mojo that makes the blues so interesting” says Hal.“There are many blues performers like Edgar Winter and Otis Taylor who began on the ukulele before migrating to guitar and I believe the instrument certainly can carry the weight of the blues.”

We are also hoping that Hal will join us at the Paddy Maguire Midnight Jam Sessions later in the evening too.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

An open letter of thanks and explanation

From the wrong side of the tracks
Dear friends, supporters, British Blues Awards panellists and residents of Hebden Bridge,

In the light of our recent nomination as finalists for the third year in a row in the BBA Festival of the Year category, we wanted to express our gratitude for your support, explain our commitment to, and motivation for what we do, and to give you our promise to continue to improve and evolve the event.

As a pair of gung-ho, can-do, but quite naïve guys, the original idea to set up a Blues festival in Hebden Bridge was actually taken quite lightly, albeit with the permission of our long-suffering partners, Kate and Jenna.

While both of us had been putting on gigs for many years, on and off, we didn't really have much of a clue about the scale of what were doing, nor the impact it would have on other people. We just had a “wouldn't it be cool if...” moment after a couple of drinks and just decided to roll with it.

Inevitably, the Blues Police were in touch once they heard, to advise us of “how it has always been done”, who gets free pitches to promote their stuff, and so on, so we're sure it won't come as a surprise to you to hear that that got our backs up. But, in truth, we owe them a debt of gratitude for hardening our resolve to do things our way, not theirs.

We set out with a deliberate policy to promote contemporary Blues music from people who were at the cutting edge of the scene, and with it, to run our festival in our own particular way that ignored prevailing traditions.

Although we just made it up as we went along to start with, we soon found that we had six pillars to start to base our philosophy on, so, in no specific order, here they are.

Firstly, who we invite to play. 
We will only put on artists who are currently doing their bit to help the Blues genre evolve and remain relevant. Inevitably, the main criteria for this is that they are writing and recording new material, but we also need to see commitment from the artists that believe in their mission and are doing their best to reach a wider audience, so the lack of a decent website drastically limits the chances of an invitation.

Secondly, our approach to the social side of the festival.
We found that having artists, audience members and organisers all mixing together was one of the most popular aspects of the event with all concerned, so we have killed off the “Green Room” concept completely. Of course, we still feed and water the acts and the crew, and they have somewhere to change, but everyone rubs along just fine when we're all using the same spaces and we're all as “important” as each other.

Thirdly, our community involvement.
We believe it is essential for a festival to give something culturally to their local community, beyond the normal economic impact.
Many festivals of this type have interest and support from their local councils to enable free gigs for the residents. In our case, we've not had a bean, nor until this year from Calderdale, even a word of support. But thanks to the partnership of some fantastic community-spirited local businesses, by the end of this coming festival, Hebden Bridge Blues Festival will have had put on 47 free gigs for local people since 2011.

Fourth, act as a family
There are only two of us so, of course, we are reliant on the help and support of a wide network of people who help us of their own choosing. We love our Hebden family of volunteers. They are the blood, the sweat and the tears, and the festival would immediately cease to exist without them.
Part of this family too, are the musicians who play here. They could probably be being paid more to play elsewhere but they are with us and supporting the HBBF project through deliberate choice.

Fifth in this list is the creative side of the festival, the “magic dust” sprinkled on the top of the cake.
What generally happens at festivals is that acts turn up, play their sets to the audiences, then go.
In our view that is a huge waste. If we have selected some of the most creative and talented musicians on the block, lets get them being creative together!
Hence, the most eagerly anticipated part of the festival, by the participating artists and audiences alike, has become the Paddy Maguire Midnight Jam Sessions. This delicious blend of talent then bounce off each other, taking the music to new places and making nuggets of history in the process.
We are flattered to see that this is a practice now widely and rapidly being adopted by many other festivals.

The sixth and last in this list is financial independence.
It's a big ask to finance a festival, and yes, it has cost us money each time to do, (sorry Kate and Jenna), but nobody yanks our chain. We can do what we want, how we want.
Financial support for festivals can be brilliant, consider taking it if you're offered it, but it comes with all sorts of other people's opinions, prejudices and political baggage.
Oh, and if you're wondering why we're still running a loss-making event, don't worry, we intend to break even this year!

As organisers of a festival that came out of nowhere to win Festival of the Year at the British Blues Awards for the last two years, we are very aware that what we've created has now taken on a life of its own far beyond us as two individuals, and that our responsibility is to nurture it and help it grow.
We have made it into the awards process again this year as finalists, so we give you our whole-hearted promise that we will do our best to win it, by simply providing the best ever Blues festival experience we possibly can.

Thanks for your help and support, and for joining us on this magical ride,

Jason and Paddy

Related Links

Partner Links