Day 2 of Gentle Stranger’s two-day residency
Saturday 19th and Sunday 20th November
Doors: 6.30pm. First set at 7pm.
Tickets: £7 - £15 [sliding scale]
Weekend tickets are also available for entry to both nights [£12 unwaged; £20 standard; £25 solidarity].
Day 2 of a two-night programme of music and performance presented by Gentle Stranger.
LINEUP
Gentle Stranger
Warm London
Motherfucker don’t / remember only / only drip town turnaround / secret safe and sound / sound sound sound / use life / used light / open sight / uptight / don’t / you’re right / won’t / retry
Warm London is Dillon Home, Harry Plomer, and Hannah Taverner
Hot Wood
There is no hot wood! But there is every other variation: warm wood, cold wood, cool wood… hot stone, hot leaf, hot air… the lists go on, concurrently, in parallel, like two plodding feet, perfectly out of sync. But it’s not about the would be or the would was - here the denizens pluck our tongues from the frost and study the wet imprints, carefully, as if any of it had any meaning.
Hot Wood is Sally Plowman, Cailin Cummins, Jessie D’Evens, and Karólína Rós
Daniel Burley
MORTALS BEWARE
‘Hiding, hoarding, deception, flattery, trickery, falsehood, fakeness, invisible, Insatiable, senseless, soulless in sanctimonious, erupting, convulsing, controlling, constricting, consoling, concealing, forsaking, overlooking, underappreciating, unavailable, inconsistent, inconsiderate, inconsolable, incomprehensible, incompatible, inconceivable, unmoving, cursed, stuck, sorrowful, gaunt, sickly…’
Secluded Brontë
‘For entertainment everyone dies…’ never too late too early too right too wrong too high too low too noise too song too busy too quiet too near too far too hard too soft too pop too not too set too spun too dry too wet too short too long too here too gone
Secluded Brontë is Adam Bohman, Jonathan Bohman and Richard Thomas.
Jacken Elswyth
warm machinery / waken workshops / cobwebs: amused whine - who remembers, coffin-maker
Spencer
…the slightest shake or back and forth movement could cause the rim to separate and fall off. There are two tiers of wheels in this tin type exercise tin set. The standard wheel is usually the most well known and also the largest and heavier. There is also a smaller intermediate wheel which will use smaller numbers of teeth, and a smaller, more compact wheel which will only use the largest numbers of teeth, without the rim. By using the smallest and intermediate wheels, much of the stress is transferred to the thread edge. I will show the very small wheel first. There are two small, but effective, ways of working on the small wheel with a tooth puller. The first way is to grind and file the very edge of the wheel. I use the same pliers as I would use to put a splinter under a nail. The pliers have a very sharp cuticle that has a very sharp edge. It is best to use a very small file with a square shaped file head, for the small wheel, as the teeth are quite large. The reason I use the large file to file the small wheel is the file can be sharpened to a very fine edge, which when rubbing on the surface will actually cause the splinter to be sharpened…
Gentle Stranger