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Dry Cleaning to headline Suffolk's Brighten the Corners festival
Dry Cleaning to headline Suffolk's Brighten the Corners festival

BBC News

time13-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Dry Cleaning to headline Suffolk's Brighten the Corners festival

A Suffolk multi-venue music festival has announced its first wave of Brighten the Corners festival will return to Ipswich on 13 and 14 June, with multiple acts performing across five stages. English post-punk band Dry Cleaning will be one of the headline the Corners festival programmer Marcus Neal said his team were really pleased to be announcing the fourpiece. The festival was previously known as Sound City Ipswich but has been running independently since London-based Dry Cleaning are described by the organisers as "one of the most exciting names in alternative music".Marcus Neal continued: "The programme as a whole continues our tradition of showcasing a broad spectrum of emerging artists across a wide range of genres."Other artists who have been revealed include Lime Garden, Gruff Rhys, and JD Cliffe. Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Young gig promoters urge support for Ipswich's independent venues
Young gig promoters urge support for Ipswich's independent venues

BBC News

time27-01-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Young gig promoters urge support for Ipswich's independent venues

Young people taking part in a project to learn how to put on music events said support for independent venues was Up, a programme run by Brighten the Corners in Ipswich, offers ten free weekly sessions for 16 to 25-year-olds that cover music production, programming, marketing and event participants will host a gig to mark Independent Venue Week (IVW), which runs from 27 January to 2 February and celebrates independent music and arts venues and the people that own, run and work in Wright, 17, one of the current participants, said: "The gig scene in Ipswich is probably one of the best in East Anglia, it's something we should be really proud of." On 16 January in the House of Commons, Lisa Nandy, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, said: "In Ipswich, an entire ecosystem is being created that equips young people with those skills and that love of music at school, and goes all the way through enabling them to perform at smaller and larger live music venues, and to get the skills that they need to work in the music industry. "We would like to replicate that model around the country."The number of small music venues in the UK declined by 13% in 2023 - accounting for as many as 30,000 fewer shows - according to the Music Venue Trust (MVT), which said the sector had taken a "battering".MVT has been campaigning for £1 to be added to tickets for arena and stadium shows to subsidise the pubs and clubs where many headline acts start May a cross-party report, from the Culture, Media and Sport Committee, suggested a cut in VAT to help grass roots venuesMr Wright added: "There are downsides to Ipswich, there are downsides to every town, but what we've achieved here, and Tune Up is a small piece of that puzzle, it's truly impressive." Hux Josecelyne, 18, is another Tune Up participant and said he was surprised at how much work was involved in hosting a music event."We had to look through the budget side of things. Even for a gig at small grass roots venue you still have go through a formal process, contacting agents and finding artists," he event, organised by young people taking part in the Tune Up programme, will feature Sophie the Great, Arthur Black, HeadCheck and Helix at The Baths, Ipswich, on Friday 31 January. Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

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