Showing posts with label Doncaster Concert Band. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doncaster Concert Band. Show all posts

Sunday, July 7, 2019

Hickleton, Bilham, Hooton Pagnell Village Fete, Pickburn, and Woodlands

There's a limited bus service to Hooton Pagnell six days a week, but it doesn't run on Sundays...so I caught the X19 bus to Hickleton and then from there walked along the road to Hooton Pagnell.

To begin with though I'd  spend a few minutes in Hickleton taking photographs.








I arrived at Hooton Pagnell at ten past ten; things had only just got started and so I hadn't missed any of the entertainment.























The first musical event I attended was the Doncaster Ukulele Group; I also got the opportunity to see the Frumptarn Guggenband, the jazz quartet, the Doncaster Concert Band, the Tudor minstrels, the Wath Morris Dancers, and one of the two solo singers.

I took this photograph at the start of the ukulele group's first performance, later on in the afternoon there were many more people there, and several dogs, one of which was joining in, nonchalantly barking perfectly in time to the tune when the group was performing 'Proud Mary.'  I can't remember what the next song was but the dog didn't like it, it just kept on continuously yapping. Next up was 'Rocking All Over The World' by Status Quo and the dog absolutely loved this tune and took over as the lead singer, enthusiastically barking in tune and in rhythm...it even seemed to have several different barks of  differing tone and amplitude.



I kept on taking plenty of photographs as I wandered around the village.













The queues for cream teas at the church were too long and so I didn't bother.















Of course my favourite performers were the Frumptarn Guggenband from Barnsley. I was amazed when I saw them for the first time last year and so really wanted to see them at the fete again this year. Their music and style of performing is very unusual and entertaining, their garish bright purple and yellow costumes featuring skulls and god-knows-what-else are a sight to behold and the enthusiasm, jollity, and energy they display as they paraded along the main street playing a musical blend of samba, brass band music and hints of a military marching band surely must have lifted the spirits of everyone...many people, myself included, were clapping, dancing, jumping up and down and singing along to the words. The leader of the band was absolutely shattered at the end after his frantic over-the-top performance...and finally, what they did to a Taylor Swift song was astonishing.

So...here they are!








The man on the PA system said that they wouldn't look out of place in a Day of the Dead (Día de los Muertos) celebration in Mexico...especially since some members were wearing sombreros.







Here are the minstrels playing in the churchyard.


The queues for cream teas were still quite long with no room to sit down, and elsewhere there wasn't really much choice of ice cream.












After the guggenband had played for the final time I left the village and headed across the fields to the shops at Woodlands from where I caught a bus back to town.



A perfect day out in the nice sunny weather, even better than walking all day - I did end up walking about five miles though.

Sunday, July 1, 2018

Hooton Pagnell Village Fete 2018

I've also seen it advertised as 'Hooton Pagnell Summer Fete' or just 'Hooton Pagnell Fete' - as it is on the official programme.

I caught the bus to Hickleton as usual and walked the couple of miles down the road to Hooton Pagnell.




The fete had only been open for about ten minutes when I arrived and so there weren't many people around yet - it got a lot busier later. I took the opportunity though to rush round the village and take some photographs without anyone being in the way.








The earliest cream teas of the day were already being served at the church before 10:30 and I accepted a free taster sample of Yorkshire parkin myself a few minutes later from one of the stallholders.









It was getting busier all the time and by this time I was ready for my sandwiches, which I ate in a quiet corner of the churchyard - I still had room for a cream tea at The Hostel a couple of hours later though.


























There was plenty of music to enjoy; the Doncaster Concert Band, 'Essential Jazz', the Doncaster Ladies' Choir, and Doncaster Waites [Mediaeval musicians]...but my favourite, by a long way, was the Frumptarn Guggenband from Barnsley. Described by the DJ as they walked past him as looking like part of the opening sequence of a James Bond film. I really liked them; their music was very catchy, tuneful, well-balanced and humorous, incorporating influences from a New Orleans funeral band, a German oom-pah-pah band, a samba troupe..with some outrageous costumes and oversize Mexican sombreros thrown in to the mix which was then finally sprinkled with a bit of voodoo and black magic. Absolutely wonderful!

















After three hours under the hot sun I set off for home, still facing more of the sun though, and walked across the fields to the shops at Woodlands from where I caught the bus back into the town centre...to arrive home and find out that my landline telephone isn't working and so I've had to make arrangements for an engineer visit. Damn.