Tickets for the 2010 Hogmanay street party in Edinburgh are now on sale and the lineup for the 5 day event has just been announced.
The event headliners Madness joined by Noisettes and Codeine Velvet Club at the Concert in the Gardens. The world famous Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Street Party welcomes headliners The Enemy, MYLO, Frightened Rabbit, The Cuban Brothers, We Were Promised Jetpacks, Stanley Odd plus DJs sets from Gary & Tom (Snow Patrol) and Richard Colburn (Belle & Sebastian) plus loads more…
Also featuring will be some of Scotland’s best new bands. The Waverley Stage will be hosted by BBC Radio Scotland’s Vic Galloway.
“We’re delighted to announce such strong line-ups for the Street Party – great indie music at The Waverley Stage, great party music on The Party Stage at the top of The Mound and fantastic DJs at the West End DJ Stage.”
“Together with one of the UK’s biggest firework display, lasers and the atmosphere and friendliness that you simply don’t get anywhere else, this years Edinburgh’s Hogmanay is shaping up to be the city’s strongest line-up for years.” — Pete Irvine, creative director Edinburgh’s Hogmanay.
More information at www.edinburghshogmanay.com.
News of an exciting charity event taking place on Red Nose Day – Friday 13th March. (Is the fact that it’s taking place on Friday 13th deliberate, we wonder? Is it a cruel Comic Relief prank?)
Zeke Promotions Present:
The Stantons – a septet full of country quirks, songs of love, death, geckoes and how to get ahead in a club at 3am.
Audrey Sings Nico – the songs of oddball chanteuse Nico filtered through a Scottish sensibility and squirted out in a whole new shape.
Caroline Gilmour – a special acoustic set by Edinburgh’s finest new 80’s hitpop-inspired singer.
Espionage, entry via The Cowgate.
Doors 8.30pm, entry £4 (£3 to students with a student card).
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http://www.baby-tiger.net
http://www.verysecret.co.uk
LesMTS has reviewed the recent Doug Stanhope gig at the Jazz Bar in Edinburgh.
A bleary eyed Stanhope, sporting a fledgling mullet, field cap and battered pilot’s jacket, edges his way through the throng at the bar of this tiny, crowded basement venue, politely acknowledging pats on the back and hands thrust out for shaking, and takes the stage to whooping and clapping which treads close to sycophancy. He’s virtually unknown on these shores, yet he boasts a tiny and fiercely loyal fanbase (“My fans are like excessive-pubic-hair fetishists,” he later quips “there’s not many of ya, but you’re a loyal bunch”).
The Edinburgh Mela Festival has kicked off and well under way. Running from the 25th to the 31st of August the festival features a myriad of theatre, dance and music in Scotland’s capital city.
The Festival is Scotland’s leading celebration of cultural diversity through the arts, having been founded in 1995 by members of the city’s minority ethnic communities.
We do this through the form of a Mela, a South Asian festival and a Sanskrit word meaning gathering. In Edinburgh each year we gather some of the finest talent from across Scotland and the UK as well as international artists and present them in a vibrant and exciting environment with interactive opportunities for children and families and a food and craft market.
The event is held beside Ocean Terminal, Leith.
Stars of British Asian music Tariq Khan and Rishi Rich will make an appearance and there is an an outdoor screening of Indian Oscar-nominated Mother India with a new soundtrack performed live.[1]
For more information on performances check out the online programmes.