Feature: Mila Falls
Live photographs and interview with singer/songwriter Mila Falls
Location: Richmix Theatre – Video Release Party (10/12/13)
How did your musical career begin?
I started DJ-ing garage and drum n bass on pirate radio when I was 14 in my hometown Norwich. When I was 16 I got my first paid work as a session vocalist, and later I studied sound engineering and music production at college in Brighton. I lived in Brighton for a bit, which was amazing. I started doing live shows, sharing the stage with future superstars such as Jessie J. It’s so exciting seeing people blow up, it is very inspiring!
… My first taste of success was when I got my song placed in the film Bring it On, ever since then I’ve thought “Ok! This is a real job now”, so I’ve been writing, writing, writing; doing stuff for Universal Publishing alongside writing tracks for my debut album and playing LOTS of live shows across the UK.
How does writing for yourself vary from to writing for others?
My heart is on my sleeve when I perform my own songs live. Tonight I’m playing my most heartfelt song Empire of Dirt which is about a horrific time in my life. Hopefully it will showcase another side of me that’s not all Party in the Stars, Spaceships and weirdness… As a songwriter I love exploring lots of different genres, concepts and styles…
… I like pushing my limits. I’ve written in so many different styles over the years including pop-rock, r’n’b, hip hop, deep house and straight up cheesy pop! I’m a high energy and fidgety type of person, I have to have fingers in all the pies. One pie is never enough for me!
Do you play any instruments?
I play keyboard and guitar but I get really nervous when I have to play and sing at the same time on stage. I’d love to play piano on tour though, but I need to practice a bit more. In the meantime I’ve got my band – Team MP. They are called this as they all have the same initials “M.P” Milo Pascall, Marius Ptaz and Mike Prince!, they are very talented musicians, I’m lucky to have them!
Are you nervous about your Video release party this evening?
Tonight is the first time I’ve showcased videos and all my new songs as a finished product. It’s taken a couple of years to get to this point. It is definitely scary to get out there and go “These songs are finished, now judge them!”
What are your plans for 2014?
My plans for 2014 include releasing more music videos, making more music, doing lots more live shows and radio sessions. My stylist Jemelia and I will be working with loads of top international fashion designers and showcasing lots of their brand new wardrobes. SO EXCITED!!!!..
… As for the live shows, I’m already booked up for gigs until October next year, so there’ll be lots of live shows around the country and hopefully Europe and America too. We just want to push it, if someone books me somewhere, I will go. I’m SO up for exploring new territories. I’m ready to push as hard as I can in 2014!
For more information about Mila Fallsplease check out her website: http://www.milafalls.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MILAFALLS
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/milafalls
Feature: Meg Mosley
Interview and photoshoot with artist Meg Mosley
Location: Park Land Walk, Crouch End
What inspires your art?
I am inspired by a fascination with the everyday, with the absurd in the ordinary and with the routines and rituals that groups carve out to make sense of themselves and each other. I am motivated to be seriously silly by the inventiveness with which many women use the internet to perform, display, socialise and overshare. I am captivated by the connection between individual and communal identity and how these interact and how they are being modified by our obsession with the internet.
Tell me more about Megastar
I researched Megastar by visiting Las Vegas, Nevada, in search of the glamour and extravagance that is used as a reference point in my hometown. I intended to work as a participant observer but something stirred in my psyche as I experienced just how much people were willing to respond to the project and I was so inspired by their willingness to join in the fantasy that I spent the whole trip dressing up for the occasion and did a shoot at the Neon Boneyard in which I tried to capture the imagined persona of a disenchanted show girl. I started to see the things I filmed as ‘events’ that could be manipulated and learned how to do things ‘for the story’. Eventually, these insights evolved into the creation of my alter ego, Megastar, a full-on Trow Vegas celebrity…
… Megastar is not a character I’m acting out as such because it’s not switched off. Megastar has merged strangely comfortably with me as a persona – meaning she’s not a performance but an extension of myself mostly lived online and through social media. She is a glamour girl maybe from a slightly more bygone era of the 60s, 70s, 80s because she’s influenced by personal ideas of family as well as popular culture. My mum wrote a book, ‘She Who Dares, Wins’ in the 80s and my granny set up the first beauty school in London so I’ve been formed by strong, bold, women who believe in looking glamorous. Megastar’s a kind of homage to my family and to powerful women everywhere.
Tell me about Trowbridge and recent art projects/exhibitions
Trowbridge has been the inspiration for Megastar – the two can’t be separate. The project started from my amusement at my hometown being called Trow Vegas by so many locals, which is ironic because it really quite a dull place with a bad reputation. I wanted to make some artwork about this so I developed the story of a west country girl wanting more glitz and pace against the backdrop of a place that somehow just can’t get it right either…
… To make the tv series about #mylife in Trow Vegas, I needed to make relationships with local people. This led to all sorts of interesting and funny interactions as they wholeheartedly joined in and shared their own aspiration and personalities. The ‘Meg’ part of me remained a dispassionate observer but my ‘Megastar’ persona was the force behind all the glitzy events I filmed…
… It was intriguing to discover how far people who didn’t know me were willing to go along with Megastar. I met Vicky on twitter and she became my star struck protégé ‘Mini-star’ and worked with me on many events. I also found other locals dreaming up ideas for themselves with glamorous imaginations; I met 2 boys who have alter egos and many girls aspiring to be like Katy Perry. I discovered some local gym boys who thrived on becoming celebrity bodyguards at my Trow Vegas red carpet event. I worked with the local town crier who puts on his costume and becomes a different person. I even met one local guy who joined in my red carpet event and was so passionate about Trow Vegas he had a tattoo in homage to our hometown, which he photographed and made a video diary of his tattoo day!
Where did you train/study art?
I won a full MA funding scholarship from The AHRC for the Research Preparation Masters Scheme to study for a Masters degree at the Slade School of Art. As my course progressed, the themes of my work shifted dramatically from the personal to the communal and I started to get people involved in my work. My work became more sociable and began to include performative lectures and presentations related to the connection between individual identity and communal identity. How these interact became the premise of my dissertation and final seminar. This culminated into a large scale event I staged on the opening night of the Slade called Friends Family and Flowers. It was ethnographic, performative, playfully unconventional and defined all my subsequent artistic aspirations.
What does the future hold for Meg Mosley?
I am interested very much in being a digital native investigating the possibilities for exciting, female art that this era could engender. I want to be a part in that. As Megastar I’m still on a journey and I continue to strengthen her brand and see her into commercial and popular culture and potential television roles as a comedy character as well as using the persona to perform and I am receiving commissions to be Megastar in various art circles as well as interest in her commercially. This is a treacherous yet exciting balance to forge…
… I also have now teamed up with artist Sarah Maple a very funny and talented artist I admire and with director Ross McClure. We have launched ourselves as the #MeggyAndMapes show where our tag line is ‘the adventures of #MeggyAndMapes two girls on a gonzo mission into the heART of creativity which sees us a tv presenters investigating the artworld, the self appointed Ant and Dec of the artworld. This will be launching this Saturday 9th November 11.30pm at Rio cinema at a late night event ‘At Home With The Ludskis’
For further details please check out Meg Mosley’s website: www.megmosley.co.uk
Follow her on twitter: www.twitter.com/meggymosley
and ‘like’ her facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/megmosley
Info about ‘At Home With The Ludskis’ event on 9th November can be found here: http://grannyludski.wordpress.com/
The Mitch Daniels Band: Live at the Islington O2 Academy2 (Net the Bed)
SOUNDCHECK PHOTOS
On Friday 18th October, the Mitch Daniels Band played an amazing headline show at the Islington O2 Academy2, and they raised a lot of money for charity in the process. Here are some live photos from the show, plus some exclusive pics from the soundcheck. I also interviewed Mitch Daniels after the show to find out how it felt to perform at the venue, and what the future holds for the band.
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| Mitch Daniels at the soundcheck |
How did it feel to headline the O2 Academy2 Islington?
It was an amazing experience. I had been planning it for over 12 months and it was the whole reason I put The Mitch Daniels Band together in the first place. When we walked out on stage the whole room starting buzzing and it felt incredible. We were absolutely blown away by the amount of people there and the response we got. I am still waiting for all the funds to be collected but I think we have raised about £600 for “Malaria No More UK”, enough to send 120 nets out to Africa!
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| Julio Diaz |
Tell me about the day of the gig?
We were up early to pack the gear into the van and were in the venue from about lunch time. Setting up was great fun but tense at times as to whether we would be ready in time. Normally, “if something can go wrong, it does”… but we were pretty lucky and it went very smoothly!
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| Michelle Bisceglia |
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| Tom Triggs |
What are the future plans for The Mitch Daniels Band?
Well we are due a couple of band meetings to discuss that, but I think the next step will be an EP, hopefully before Christmas, and next year we are all keen to get on tour!
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| Jesus Gomez Gutierrez |
How can I get a copy of the live album?
I would like to thank everybody who came to #NetTheBed or who has contributed to the pot for “Malaria No More UK”.
I would also like to thank the boys in the band: Tom, Julio, Jesus and Michele. I couldn’t have pulled it off with them. It feels like we are on the cusp of something very exciting and I cannot wait to start the next project with them. They are all great guys and as I have said before… I wouldn’t want to perform without them anymore!
SUPPORT ACTS
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| Torben Tietz |
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| Kaitlyn Haggis |
GIG PHOTOS
Many thanks for visiting this blog and please check out my previous photoblogs about the Mitch Daniels Band:
http://www.besidetheseeside.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/the-mitch-daniels-band.html
And their website: http://www.mitchdaniels.co.uk/
Cheers
Samantha x
Beside the See Side
Reflection
Here are some photographs on the theme of ‘reflection’
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| Reflecting upon 2012 (Photo of the Day book 2012) |
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| Dalston House |
The Mitch Daniels Band
The ‘Mitch Daniels Band’ are definitely going places; headlining iconic music venues such as the Troubadour, and getting ready for their gig at the O2 Academy2, Islington on 18th October.
Here are some photographs from The Mitch Daniels Band’s fantasic show at the Troubadour, and a recent interview with singer/songwriter/guitarist Mitch Daniels. Mitch discusses the transition from solo artist to forming a band, and their up & coming headline gig at the O2 Academy2.
What inspires your music?
I draw most of my influences from acoustic guitar singer/songwriter types, some of my favourites being Jason Mraz, John Mayer and James Taylor. In regards to what inspires the music/songs, that varies from day to day depending on the emotions that are running through my system at the time of writing. I try to avoid writing too many cliché love songs…
…I often feel inspired to write about hope, drive and ambition. Music can be a great source of encouragement when you are feeling down and need the motivation to get back out there to achieve the goals we set for ourselves. Channelling those emotions into songs can be powerful.
How has the transition between working solo and working with a band been for you?
To be honest I was apprehensive at first because I have played by myself for so long. You can become complacent playing solo as you don’t have to worry about what anyone else is playing, the timing, band dynamics, etc… But it really has been the greatest of adventures for me…
…I feel like the band have come together completely out of the blue but it seems to working brilliantly. It has been a great experience for me hearing the songs really come to life from acoustic to a full band set up. More than any other reason though, it is great fun. They are all such good lads and I would’t want to perform without them anymore!
Introducing the band
The first person I teamed up with was Tom Triggs (Drums). I had been looking for a percussionist who could sing for a long time when we met at an open mic night. I got chatting with Tom (who was playing guitar and performing his own material) and soon discovered that he was also a drummer. And so we embarked on a journey as an acoustic duo…
… Next came Julio Diaz-Palacios (bass). I also met Julio at an open mic (they are great networking opportunities). Julio approached me after I had played a few songs, I had heard him playing bass earlier on in the night. On discovering we were both “harmony freaks”… we had found the third member of the band…
…I had known our lead guitar player Jesus Gomez Gutierrez for a while, and had jammed with him on occasions. Having already put the “Trio” together we decided we wanted a bigger, bluesier sound and could not resist the temptation of some guitar solos. So I called Jesus and he was more than happy to get involved…
… The final member to join the band was Micheal Bisceglia (saxophone). The addition of the sax works so well with this kind of music and adds a really jazzy feel to it which I love. Id say we’re now in the “jazz pop” bracket.
What is ‘Net the Bed’?
“Net The Bed” is an important show I have got coming up with the band. It is taking place at the O2 Acadamey2 Islington on Friday 18th October and is known as “Net The Bed – Mitch Daniels Live”. Everything raised from ticket sales will be going to “Malaria No More UK” in order to buy mosquito nets to be sent out to Africa. Tickets are £5 only and every ticket sold will be enough to buy, deliver and hang a net!
How can I get tickets for Net the Bed?
Tickets are £5 and can be bought online at: www.mitchdaniels.co.uk
To keep up to date with the Mitch Daniels Band please ‘like’ their facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/mitchdanielsmusic
And follow Mitch on twitter: https://twitter.com/mitchdanielstwt
Thanks for visiting my blog
Samantha x
Beside the See Side
https://www.facebook.com/samantha.edgley.arts
Athletics: Anniversary Games – Olympic Stadium
I loved the Olympics last year, so I was excited to return to Olympic Park on 27th August to watch the athletics at the Anniversary Games. I was unsuccessful in my attempts to get into the Olympic Stadium last year (although I was extremely lucky to see some other Olympic events live) so it was fantastic to see some athletics in the stadium in 2013. I had a great day with my sister – cheering on sports stars including Mo Farah, Jessica Ennis-Hill and Usain Bolt. Here are some of the photographs I took whilst at the event.
Art Couture Festival
The annual Art Couture Festival in Painswick is vibrant, eclectic, and very colourful. It included – catwalk shows, live music, a Battle of Britain flypast, body paint artists, Dali inspired fashion… and Keith Allen in a speedo!! The festival showcases designers and artists from across the country.
This year’s fashion themes included Metamorphosis, World Where You Live, and Well Suited, whilst the inspiration for the body artists was Magic. These are some of the pics I took whilst at the festival.
This year’s fashion themes included Metamorphosis, World Where You Live, and Well Suited, whilst the inspiration for the body artists was Magic. These are some of the pics I took whilst at the festival.
For more information, please check out their website: http://www.acpfestival.co.uk/
Simon Lawrence
Simon Lawrence is a talented jazz singer and multi-instrumentalist. Last week I photographed Simon during a sunny afternoon at Kensington Gardens. Please see the photographs and full interview below.
What inspired you to start playing music?
I’ve loved music for as long as I can remember. In our household we were always singing. On long car journeys we’d listen to countless cassette tapes of different artists. Also there was a piano which, even as a toddler, I would plonk around on! So my biggest inspiration to start singing professionally was just a natural transition from singing all the time at home anyway.
First time on stage
The one I remember most clearly was a school Christmas production. We all sang “The Twelve Days Of Christmas” but each day had been changed. My day was “On the third day of Christmas my true love gave to me, three disco dancers…”. I then danced as Michael Jackson to “Smooth Criminal” whilst two others did a disco dance in the background. It was hilarious! I think my Mum still has the video. I was even dressed in a little white suit and white hat just like the Michael Jackson music video, haha!
Musical instruments
I play piano and guitar. I took piano lessons for a few years but had a pretty awful teacher. I wanted to play jazz songs but they were insistent I played classical, so I gave up on lessons and just played what I wanted to play. With guitar I’m self taught and like to play finger picking style on an acoustic guitar. I also write most of my songs on guitar too.
Musical background
I got a choral scholarship to Wells Cathedral School, and that was really the start of my professional training. Even though I was very young I was lucky to have a Doctor of music teaching me how to sing. The many times a week the choir had to sing in the Cathedral, plus travelling the country to sing at different venues really taught me discipline and tenacity in performance…
… After Wells I went to Mountview drama school, which has some exceptional musical theatre teachers and vocal coaches. There was one singing teacher, Phil, who I learnt so much about the science of how the voice works. His techniques have been extremely useful. I occasionally give one to one singing lessons and it’s thanks to teachers like Phil that I am able to do that.
What attracted you to jazz music?
My Mother is a massive jazz fan, particularly Sinatra. So she is always playing those great crooners of the past. On car journeys we would all sing along. I knew all the words to so many jazz standards off by heart and I would try and copy the way they sang…
…Then one day, I guess when I was about 15 or 16 and my voice had started to develop into a baritone, I was singing along in the back of the car and my Mum spun around in her seat and said “You sound just like him!” So I guess the next logical progression was to start singing Sinatra songs at gigs. But that professional leap didn’t happen for a few years, until I was about 20.
Current involvement with music
I divide my time between singing jazz standards at corporate events and Weddings to my other passion which is writing and performing songs on guitar. It’s totally different from the jazz work I do, it’s much more laid back singer/songwriter material. However, I am now getting back into composing jazz songs again…
… I’m about to release an acoustic EP, but I think my next project will be working on some original jazz songs. I already have a jazz album on amazon (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Streets-And-Bars/dp/B002N9A5SI/ref=sr_shvl_album_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1374048300&sr=301-1) but that was mainly other peoples songs. I’d like to do an album of all my own material. I wrote a jazz song recently and had forgotten how much I enjoyed writing songs in that style.
Current musical influences
It goes without saying that Sinatra is my biggest influence, but also Dean Martin, Vic Damone and Bobby Darin. I love Bobby Darin, the man could sing in any style, he was incredible. And as for Sammy Davis Jnr? The man was a phenomenon. Out of the whole Rat Pack he was the most multi-talented. I also have modern influences for my acoustic songwriting material. David Bowie, Paul Simon, The Smiths, Radiohead, Muse and Jeff Buckley.
What inspires your own songwriting?
Personal experience and storytelling. They are the two key things for me. It’s not that I believe the saying “write about what you know” because I believe in imagination and you can write and feel about things out of your own sphere…
… But I generally prefer to write about things that I have experienced. I like to write about relationships and what they mean, and the complexities of how we feel about one another. For example my jazz ballad, “I don’t love you (but my heart does)” was about a time when I fell for a girl I was acting on stage with. I had a girlfriend at the time and she had a boyfriend, so nothing happened. But I was torn between the “I can’t love you because we’re both in relationships” and the “my heart is saying another thing”…
… The storytelling side is also important to me. Two of my favourite songwriters, Paul Simon and Neil Hannon (of ‘The Divine Comedy’) are genius storytellers. They paint a picture, you see it moving in your mind as you listen, like a movie on the big screen. My indie pop song, “Salesman Smith” is very much a story. It tells the tale of a travelling salesman who has a dull life at home but seeks excitement when he’s on the road. He meets a tragic end, so the song has a narrative to it.
Future plans
I’ll be releasing my solo acoustic EP, “Gunslinger” in the next month or two. I am also trying to get on the books of a big entertainment agent for my Sinatra singing. At the moment I mostly get corporate gigs and Weddings off my own back, but I want to increase the amount that I am working, and so I think I need a busy entertainment agency for that. One that has a large turnover of events…
… It’s my dream to one day move away from just piano/singer duo and small jazz band gigs, where it’s just a trio or maybe a quartet. They are fun to do but I’d love to sing with a 16 piece jazz orchestra, singing a mixture of jazz standards and original compositions. With a band that big then you can really swing and do true justice to those wonderful jazz standards…
… If there are any jazz musicians out there who’d like the adventure of starting up a fun, larger than life swingin’ big band, then get in touch and let’s raise the roof off every venue we perform at!
Please check out and ‘like’ Simon’s fb page for more details of gigs and recording activities:
The Damsels Most Daring
Some people are just too talented, and Emily Murphy & Maya Levy (aka The Damsels Most Daring) definitely fit into that category. Their show is brimming with originality, and their delivery is faultless. We were treated to a performance of their full Edinburgh Fringe show at the West London Synagogue at Marble Arch on 27th June.
The Damsels Most Daring’s use of music, props, accents and ingenuity make this hour long show zoom by. Their show is lively, original & really entertaining. Photographs from the performance and an interview with Maya & Emily can be found below:
What inspired you to start performing?
Emily: I’m not sure I can pinpoint a particular moment or event that inspired me to start performing, I just remember always being thrilled by it. My first experiences were in school plays, and it was a passion that grew and grew. I was taken to see the musical ‘Fame’ when I was about ten and I thought it was the most amazing thing ever. Everyone was so glamorous and talented and I couldn’t imagine anything more fun to be part of.
What inspired you to start performing?
Maya: I started off as a musician. This was something my parents, who both had studied music to quite a high level, really understood. I started playing piano when I was 7 and taking singing lessons when I was 11. I decided I wanted to be an actress when I saw Kenneth Branagh’s Henry Vth, I think I was 11…I kept it a secret from my parents though, cause I didn’t think they’d understand that as much as they understood music. It meant that I didn’t get to properly act other than making up dramatic lines and whispering them to my bedroom mirror until I got to university.
First time you appeared on stage?
Maya: I went to music school every Saturday and performed onstage from the age of 8, playing piano recitals and vocal recitals, and doing ‘opera scenes’ (so that was a bit of acting really, but I had to force the opera scenes teacher to let us stage it and not just sing the parts).
How did the Damsels Most Daring meet?
Emily: Maya and I met on the first day of drama school, well, before the first day really as Central had arranged a ‘meet-a-flatmate’ event. We hit it off and have been friends ever since, but the Damsels only formed properly in spring last year, about eight months after our first performance together at Open Arts Cafe, a night that Maya runs at West London Synagogue.
Working together
Maya: A few years ago, I had an aching dream to write a Western. I had done a few short pieces where I played the piano, underscoring some narration, but knew it would be too difficult to do something more complicated with lots of characters all by myself, so I asked Emily if she’d like to do that with me and perform it at Open Arts Café. She did, we did and it went down a treat…
…A while later I told her I had another idea for an OAC theme that was about madness…and wrote Celeste: A Gothic Thriller. After that one, our friend Nadia told us we should go to Edinburgh with these stories, which seemed a grand idea, and that’s when Emily and I started working harder, finding a title for ourselves, getting a third story together, getting invites to festivals, buying lots of props that looked a certain way, etc.
In the beginning…
Emily: Once we had a name, it was amazing how quickly the whole project really began to take form. I think that having a defined aesthetic helped: people were intrigued by the idea of these Victorian ladies, and we were booked for a couple of festivals.
…We were given a slot at the PBH Free Fringe in Edinburgh last year, which was a fantastic experience: the Free Fringe allows audiences and artists alike to take risks that they otherwise might not. We would chat to people in costume, and basically bring them in off the street and hopefully charm them with a few delightful stories, pass round a hat for contributions, and send them on their way. We found that the show had a very broad appeal to a wide range of ages, and it was very gratifying to see three generations of a family enjoying one show.
The Edinburgh Fringe experience.
Maya: Going to Edinburgh was so much fun and so much work. Emily and I worked really well as a team, each taking on administrative duties and pushing each other to do the stuff that felt tedious and difficult. And that hard work paid off, as our 7 day run in Edinburgh was just great. We hit the jackpot with PBH Free Fringe venues, playing in a lovely cosy room at The Voodoo Rooms…
… I sewed us a Damsels Most Daring banner (very daring of me) and we would cruise the royal mile for an hour before the show, looking a bit like suffragettes. We had good audiences for the 7 days, and got some nice reviews, so overall, a fantastic experience that didn’t put us too much in debt. What more can one ask for?
What inspires your acting?
Maya: I really like telling stories. I think that’s my main inspiration for acting, and certainly for creating new pieces. I love performing, of course, and I suppose some part of that is ego, while another part is the feeling of sharing an experience with an audience. I always want them to have a good time, even willing to bake complicated cupcakes to put them at their ease! There are no limits to where I’ll go for them to enjoy their time watching me perform (that’s not true, I think cupcakes might have been the limit).
What does the future hold for the Damsels?
Emily: It’s hard to say exactly what’s next for the Damsels; we’d love to take the existing show to some venues and festivals in the UK, and there’s a new adventure set in Australia that needs another outing. It’s a format that I think really works and it’s so much fun to perform with a great friend. There are so many aspects to putting on a show when it’s just the two of you, so it’s great when you can share that and go ‘right, this part scares me- can you do that?’
What does the future hold for the Damsels?
Maya: The Damsels are focusing on getting a good filmed clip so we can start to promote ourselves to festivals and venues. We’ve had such a good response from pretty much all ages, it would be nice to bring this to a broader audience outside of Edinburgh and London.
Other creative pursuits & projects
Emily: I’m really fascinated by clowning right now, and hope to do more improv too. I also recently tried storytelling for the first time as well, and I’d be interested in doing more of that. I love theatre that really includes the audience, is playful with them, and brings them along for the adventure, and that’s certainly what we’re aiming for with the Damsels.
Maya: As for me, I have some ideas floating in the air about some new theatrical projects I’d like to start getting some gigs for my singer/ songwriter stuff, and trying to sell my children’s musical ‘Menagerie’!
To find out more about the Damsels Most Daring, please check out their website & ‘like’ their fb page
Meg Mosley: Private View at the Jerwood Visual Arts Gallery
The private view for Meg Mosley’s ‘My Life’ exhibition took place on Tuesday 9th July at the Jerwood Visual Arts Gallery. There was lots of boozing, schmoozing, and fans being signed by the artist! 😉 Here are some pics from a fun evening. I will be doing a photo shoot with Meg soon, watch this space for further details! In the meantime check out Meg’s website for details of art projects & exhibitions: http://www.megmosley.co.uk/


















































































































































































































































