Thursday, 20 August 2015

Edinburgh Fringe Festival: Trip #1

Although I only live an hour or two from the centre of Edinburgh, and in fact lived on the outskirts of the city for four years as a student, I've never actually attended the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. I've flicked through the programmes over the years and even circled the events that I'd like to attend, but I'd never put my plans into action until this year, when a friend and I put together a little timetable of shows we wanted to see and headed up to Edinburgh for the night. Here's how it went...

The view from North Bridge on Sunday evening


Edinburgh in Fringe Season

As you can imagine, the city is heaving with tourists and performers which makes it difficult to get around on foot. Walking up and down the Royal Mile, Edinburgh's High Street, involves squeezing past street artists, people handing out flyers and holidaying families, which can be infuriating if you're rushing to catch a performance. Some areas are surprisingly quiet, for example the University of Edinburgh campus which houses some of the main venues can be strolled through without bumping into people, and Princes Street (the main shopping street) doesn't feel any more crowded than usual. Public transport runs as normal and we got a seat on every bus that we took and every eatery that we visited, so it wasn't quite as crazy as I'd anticipated.

Getting tickets for the shows we wanted turned out to be the biggest source of stress. We planned to book online before we went to Edinburgh but ended up heading to the box office at the University when we arrived in the city with a list of half a dozen shows that we wanted to see, and the helpful girl on the desk told us apologetically that she could only provide us with tickets for one out of the six. She advised us to go to the venues and check the box offices there, which is how we spent our next hour. Luckily we ended up with tickets to four out of six (of the other two; one was sold out and the other was cancelled for the day, but we're going to see it on our next visit) and visiting the venue box offices gave us a better idea of where to go when it was time for the show. After this debacle we wrote out our wishlist for our return trip and bought tickets for everything we wanted to see before we left Edinburgh, so now we're prepared for next time! If you're planning on going to the Fringe I'd recommend you book online or via their app to avoid disappointment!

The Shows

We attended four Fringe events over the two days that we were there:

Film on the Old College Quad: Heathers ★★★★★



This event killed two birds with one stone for us: I've always wanted to attend an outdoor cinema event, and Heathers is my favourite movie of all-time which I'd just recommended to my friend a few days before we realised they were showing it. The Old College Quad is an area I've walked past so many times but never seen the inside of - it's one of the Edinburgh University buildings with an entrance on South Bridge and it's a gorgeous old building, as you can see from the above Instagram shot. The grassy quad was set up with deckchairs (we were in the front row) with mats available for those who wanted to lie in the grass to watch the movie. They showed a whole lot of films over last weekend, including my other favourite The Lost Boys which sadly was on the night before we arrived, and recent Oscar winner The Theory Of Everything which we almost stayed for but decided that it had gotten too cold to sit outside for another couple of hours. 
I've seen Heathers more times than I can count but never in a group setting like this so it was interesting to see which parts got the biggest laughs - it was the gay jokes, in case you were wondering. Sitting in the quad surrounding by the beautiful architecture made the area feel secluded, like you weren't in the city centre, but the occasional helicopter or siren in the distance were reminders I could have done without. Aside from that I loved the experience and I hope they do more screenings in future, just as long as the sun shines!

Romeo & Juliet ★★

This was a school production of Shakespeare's classic set in the 60s in which the Montague clan were Mods and the Capulets were Rockers. My friend is a big Shakespeare fan and I've never seen a production of this play, but both of us were intrigued by the sound of this adaptation. While it was very faithful to the original script, we were disappointed that they hadn't done more with their theme - the only 60s elements were the costumes, a dining set which was just about the only prop, and snippets of rock'n'roll songs in between scenes. Even then, the costumes were very inauthentic, as if the cast had just thrown something together from their own wardrobes rather than searched out true period pieces (the Mod suits were ill-fitting and the Rockers all wore very modern Primark style leather jackets). We expected a modernised version of the play (think of the way that Clueless interpreted Jane Austen) but the dialogue was still Shakespearean and they still used the Montague and Capulet names where we would have preferred something that matched up with their appearance. The show was performed at The Space on Niddry Street (part of the Radisson Blu hotel) in a room where the audience was seated around all four walls and the play unfolded in the middle, which meant that the actors all delivered their lines in different directions, I'm not sure this staging was successful. The acting wasn't bad and the delivery of the Shakespearean prose was good, but the idea which made it interesting was half-baked. 

In The Pink Acapella Presents Tuniversity Challenge ★★★

This was the one show that we managed to get tickets for and we almost missed it due to an ill-timed trip round Primark! We sped from Princes Street to Surgeon's Hall and arrived five minutes late and found to our relief that nobody had been let in to the auditorium yet, so luckily we were able to see the performance as planned. In The Pink is one of numerous acapella groups who are performing at this year's Fringe and we were drawn to their University Challenge theme, wondering how they would combine the two. We expected at least that they would have the iconic desks and quiz format and were surprised to see the group standing on an empty stage with two teams separated by host 'Jemima Paxman'. The girls did a delightful rendition of the University Challenge theme music before launching into a set which included renditions of Beyoncé, The Temper Trap and the White Stripes alongside medleys of Disney classics and Taylor Swift hits. This was my first aca-experience and I smiled all the way through, even though some of the songs were more suited to the girls than others - there were only 7 in the company and they would have benefited from more voices at times. My highlights were their closing medley of all my favourite Taylor Swift songs and their shameless advertisement for their CD, adapted from the tune of Mr Sandman. If we can find the time next week I'd love to attend another acapella show, I was worried that I would get bored during this one but the time flew by!

Grease ★★★★

Grease is one of my favourite musicals of all time but I've never been able to see it performed on stage, so when I spotted it in the Fringe programme I knew the time had come. This was another youth production, although I think they were closer to my age this time, and as we arrived we were greeted by a fabulous dame playing the role of the Rydell High teacher Ms Lynch. The show itself began conventionally with 'Grease' and 'Summer Nights' and a lovely performance of 'Those Magic Changes' which is performed in the movie by the band at the dance rather than the cast, but after that things started to get a little bit more bizarre. As we were in a small venue without stage exits, Kenickie's car had to be carried up and down the aisle onto the stage, and its Greased Lightning number plate kept falling off. Once we got to the dance scene things became chaotic, with the characters of Ms Lynch, Jan and Cha Cha all being played by males. I don't know if it was a decision by this cast or from the original stage musical, but the absence of Sandy at the dance seemed particularly strange as we didn't really see her and Danny's relationship grow so it didn't make sense for them to get together at the end in the same way that it does in the movie. Despite these moments of confusion the show was a lot of fun, I have to commend the overacting in the Cha Cha role which was laugh-out-loud hilarious, as was the staging of the 'Beauty School Drop-Out' scene. The actress who played Rizzo was also fantastic, delivering a flawless performance of 'There Are Worse Things I Could Do'. Grease was definitely my favourite of the three shows I watched on Monday; even though it was a bit of a trainwreck in places it never became difficult to watch and if you're in Edinburgh I'd recommend you check it out!

The Food/Shopping

It kind of felt like we never stopped eating on this trip, since Edinburgh has so much to offer at this time of year. We stopped off at chains Subway and Nando's and were pleasantly surprised to find that neither was busy in the afternoons, possibly because we went to the Nando's in the Omni Centre rather than the more central Chambers Street restaurant - my tips for a less hectic dining experience are to eat in the afternoon rather than in the evening, and go somewhere a little further from the main Fringe venues like the Omni Centre (which is still only five minutes walk from the Royal Mile) which are much calmer. We also visited Black Medicine Coffee Company on South Bridge which was very busy but makes excellent coffee and cakes, and a crepe stand at the Grassmarket for a street food favourite; sadly I've forgotten the name of the company but they were situated down the bottom of the street and a huge queue formed after us, I heard the two cooks tell each other they'd lost the will to live but the constant stream of irritating tourists would have left me feeling the same way if I'd had to spend much longer in the area! 

We hit up a few shops on our trip and found out which places to avoid on our next visit. Blackwell's Bookshop on South Bridge was surprisingly quiet and has a brilliant selection of books, my friend went a little wild in there! We also visited Armstrong's Vintage Emporium at both its Clerk Street and Grassmarket locations - the Grassmarket shop is the biggest but both have a great selection and both were full of people (our thinking was to go to the Clerk Street shop in hope that it would be quiet but no such luck). Another place which is busy is Primark on Princes Street but amazingly it's not any worse than any other time of year, probably because customers are rude in that place all year round. Our final stop on Monday evening was at a stall near the Meadows which was selling DVDs, CDs, old books and vinyl, and I picked up a copy of the Cocteau Twins' 'Treasure' LP which had been on my wishlist for a while. They had a lot of cool stuff and the stallholder told me a sad story about how he had a high school girlfriend who loved the Cocteau Twins and he couldn't listen to them after they broke up, so check that place out if you can find it. 

We're heading back to Edinburgh from the 25th until the 27th to catch another round of shows and visit some more cool shops and cafés, so if you have any recommendations for us please leave a comment and let me know! 





A Glasgow shopping trip


A few weeks back I headed up to Glasgow, where my brother now lives, for a change of scenery from the small town where I live. My main cause for a visit was to check out one of Glasgow's museums, but I'd be lying if I said I wasn't looking forward to a little retail therapy while I was in the big city. 
We ended up visiting the Glasgow Museum of Modern Art because it was the most central and after a long morning of buses and trains I just didn't fancy making the trip up to the far more exciting sounding Kelvingrove museum, which is at the top of a very long street. Outside the Modern Art museum is a statue which has become modern art itself; the Duke Of Wellington sitting proud on his horse outside the museum acquired a traffic cone hat somewhere around the 1980s and every time the council remove the cone another soon appears in its place. The cone-wearing statue has become as iconic to Glasgow as the Castle is to Edinburgh! 


The museum itself was far less exciting that I'd hoped it would be, perhaps I'm just not interested in modern art but there was nothing particularly memorable about any of the displays. One was focused on women's art and I found it the most compelling although most of it was, if I'm being honest, rather dull. The main gallery on the ground floor had been taken over by a moving image exhibit which isn't my thing so we quickly abandoned the gallery and headed for the shops.

As you can see from the above Instagram pic the shops suited me better than the art gallery did and I had a very successful trip! I bought a handful of CDs and DVDs in Cex, including 3 movies I loved that I plan to talk about in later blogs (Chappie, Spring Breakers and Pride), and also managed to fit in a Primark shop to pick up a few things I'd been after for a while before I headed home on Friday.

Leather (sort of) jacket, £14

I've wanted a leather jacket for a very long time, probably since I started listening to Green Day and saw Billie Joe Armstrong in one (looking back, Billie Joe has been the inspiration between a lot of my fashion choices, from Converse All-Stars and brothel creepers to black skinny jeans!), but I've never actually owned one until now. At that price it obviously isn't real leather but I'm happy to have both a lower price tag and an animal-friendly garment. I've worn it a few times since I brought it home and I'm really happy with it so I'm really glad I found it in the store!

Indigo Denim Shorts, £3.90

Shorts are one of my wardrobe staples and Primark have pairs in pretty much every colour you can imagine. When I was in store their basic shorts were reduced from £5 to £3.90 so I tried on these and a black pair, but decided to buy the classic blue denim. They're comfortable and not too short; I think they're just as good as the New Look shorts I've been wearing which cost twice as much while on sale. 


Transparent Rain Boots, £10 (and socks, £2.50)

You might remember seeing these boots on my wishlist a few posts back, so you can imagine my delight when I walked into Primark and found the exact pair that I was looking for. eBay has these boots with soles in all colours of the rainbow but I couldn't find a black pair online, and now I guess it's because Primark bought them all up (they're also selling the peachy-pink soles but I thought black would be more versatile). I'm lucky enough not to have had to venture out in heavy rain yet so I haven't actually worn these boots outside,but hopefully they'll be comfortable and waterproof. Either way, it's saved me paying twice the Primark price to have them shipped from China so I'm pretty pleased, I just hope their availability doesn't lead to everyone I know buying them too! Oh, and of course since they're transparent I had to buy a pack of socks in all my favourite colours to wear under them. 


Matte Top Coat nail polish, £1

I've been after some matte polish for a while and I was excited to see that Primark were selling bottles for only £1 so I bought one, not sure whether it would actually work. As you can hopefully see from the above photo of my stubby fingers, it didn't work at all on the silver polish I was wearing - and this was with two coats of the matte polish. It did leave little bubbles on top of my nails but they were as shiny as ever and the thickness of the polish made it chip off really easily. It also has a really weird smell, almost fruity but still artificial and chemical, which I didn't like at all. On the upside it dries really quickly which is ideal for someone like me who constantly smudges my nails, but the finish isn't nearly as attractive as with a fast-drying top coat. I'll try it out with other polishes to see if it has a different effect but in future if I want matte nails I think I'll stick to the Barry M black matte polish I have, or try a more trusted brand.

Although it's definitely not from Primark, you might have noticed in the above photo that the Fashion Conscious Clothing t-shirt that I included on my last wishlist is now in my possession - the package was waiting for me when I got back from Glasgow. I've had it on a couple of times and I love it, plus it was posted really quickly, so if you haven't checked them out yet please do, I can't fault them!






Monday, 3 August 2015

Music, July 2015

I've been struggling for the last couple of weeks trying to decide how I want to write about music on my blog. Music is my greatest love in life and I have so much to say about all my favourites that I'm not sure exactly how to begin to cover everything that I want to explore. Last week was easy, the VMA nominations had just come out and there were a whole lot of music videos that I hadn't seen, and some which I already loved, to review and make predictions on. However, award ceremonies don't come around every week and they only cover a small portion of my interests so they can't be the focus of all my music blogging.

On my old Buzznet blog (rachii.buzznet.com) I tried to write about a band, album or sub-genre that I loved every week and I liked that approach but if I carry on solely doing that I'm going to miss out on all the new songs and videos that are coming out. For now, it seems like my best bet is to alternate between the two, covering new music some weeks and old favourites on weeks when there's nothing new to talk about. I've been making a note over the last few weeks of recent releases that I want to review, so this week I'm going to work my way through them and also share my playlist for the last month.

NEW MUSIC

Lana Del Rey - Honeymoon ★★★


I became a big Lana Del Rey fan a couple of years ago and I love everything she does. Recently she's been soundtracking a lot of movies, including The Great Gatsby, Big Eyes and The Age Of Adaline, which makes sense because her music is very cinematic. Honeymoon is a long, slow song showcasing the direction that Lana's 3rd album is likely to head in. She's backed by a beautiful string section and singing lyrics filled with typical Lana imagery. I'm not sure that I love it quite as much as her other work but I felt the same when her previous album, last year's Ultraviolence, was released so it's likely that this song will grow on me. Even if Honeymoon doesn't become a faviourite, I'm still very excited to hear what else Lana's been working on. 

Alice Glass - Stillbirth ★★★★

Alice Glass, up until recently, was the incredible frontwoman of the electro duo Crystal Castles, who I was spellbound by when they arrived on the scene. Stillbirth is the first song she's released as a solo artist, following the first Crystal Castles single (Frail) to be released without her, and I think the decision to split was a great one because now there's two sets of people making innovative music. 
Stillbirth isn't a long song but it's really memorable. It was released with a statement by Glass explaining her struggle leaving an abusive relationship and this experience shows in her lyrics. All proceeds from the single are being donated to survivors of domestic abuse, so this song is definitely worth purchasing.


PVRIS - Fire ★★★★

PVRIS' album, White Noise, has been out for a while so this isn't a new song but the video just came out a couple of weeks ago and the song is on the BBC Radio 1 playlist so I needed to include it. I don't really know how to describe their music, at times the lyrics are aggressive and accusatory but the electronics and the vocal delivery of Lynn Gunn stop the band from being easily classified as a hard rock group. Fire is a great song, like every song on the record, and the video fits in nicely with the band's aesthetic - my guess is that they'll put out videos for every song on White Noise and they'll form a complete story, but until then Fire is a great introduction for anyone who isn't already on board with one of my favourite new bands.

New Found Glory ft. Hayley Williams - Vicious Love ★★★★

Vicious Love is a typical summer pop punk New Found Glory song: catchy, sweet and over in three-and-a-half minutes. It also features Hayley Williams, the fiancée of guitarist Chad Gilbert who's probably best known for fronting Paramore but has also had big summer hits as a featured guest on BoB's Airplanes and Zedd's Stay The Night. The video sees the band playing incompetent tattoo artists who manage to ruin romantic tattoos in a number of funny ways, parodying all those reality shows set in tattoo shops. Vicious Love probably isn't going to become one of those all-time classic pop punk songs but that doesn't mean it isn't good, and I bet the video gets a lot of airplay on the rock music channels for the next while.

Bring Me The Horizon - Throne ★★★

Bring Me The Horizon were a band I loved to hate in high school, and I'm pleased to say that they've improved vastly since then. Throne is a huge atmospheric rock song accompanied by a video filled with the kind of dark imagery you see all over album artwork and Tumblr blogs. I do have one major issue with it that's prohibiting me from giving it any more stars though, and that's the fact that the chorus is lifted almost word-for-word from Wolves, a single released by The Blackout last year - in fact the still images that appear on YouTube for the two videos are similar too... 



Marina & The Diamonds - Blue ★★★★

I haven't enjoyed the most recent incarnation of Marina as much as I liked the aesthetic of her previous album, Electra Heart, so I didn't expect to be a big fan of her new video for Blue but I was pleasantly surprised by it. In the clip Marina is the only girl at the carnival, playing with classic American imagery like her contemporaries Lana Del Rey and Taylor Swift but adding a sparkling 70s disco spin on things. Her voice is stunning, the colours are gorgeous and I feel bad for assuming that I wasn't going to love this - it's not as huge a departure from the Electra Heart collection as I had anticipated and it probably won't be long before I'm watching it again.


MY PLAYLIST - JULY 2015

When summer comes around I often find myself listening to a lot of chart pop music and hip-hop. Recently on repeat: Taylor Swift, Kanye West, PVRIS, Nicki Minaj and Die Antwoord. Here's a playlist of the new music I've been listening to, and a few old favourites too: 





1. Major Lazer & DJ Snake featuring MØ - Lean On
2. Lana Del Rey - Honeymoon
3. Rihanna & Kanye West featuring Paul McCartney - FourFive Seconds
4. Rihanna - Bitch Better Have My Money
5. Alice Glass - Stillbirth
6. Sigma featuring Paloma Faith - Changing
7. Kanye West featuring Theophilus London, Allan Kingdom and Paul McCartney - All Day
8. Years & Years - King
9. Kanye West featuring Lupe Fiasco - Touch The Sky
10. Sia - Elastic Heart
11. Jessie J + Ariana Grande + Nicki Minaj - Bang Bang
12. Little Mix - Black Magic
13. Omi - Cheerleader (Felix Jaehn Remix)
14. Romeo Santos featuring Nicki Minaj - Animales
15. PVRIS - St Patrick
16. Dr. Dre featuring Jewell, Lady of Rage, Tha Dogg Pound and Snoop Doggy Dogg - Bitches Ain't Shit
17. David Guetta featuring Afrojack and Nicki Minaj - Hey Mama
18. Taylor Swift featuring Kendrick Lamar - Bad Blood
19. Nicki Minaj featuring Drake - Moment 4 Life