concert, life, percussion, sticks and tones, xylophone

We were there at YouAreHere

So on Friday the 22nd of March we had a fun Sticks and Tones gig as part of the You Are Here festival.  You Are Here is a fun Canberra arts festival that runs every year around this time.  They have theatre, music, art, dance, writing, poetry, you name it! 
Our concert was a lunchtime concert in the old Fletcher Jones building in civic.  Sadly, Fletcher Jones (an Australian clothing company) closed last year. But it left this large shop space which was the You Are Here HQ.  They blacked out the windows and set up a stage and lights, so it was like a real exciting night time gig at a venue!  Here are some photos that people took at the festival (taken from Facebook).

These people with their big zoom lenses only got one of us together!

After us, another great band called Fun Machine played and it was super rad.  We were also interviewed by Woroni (the ANU student newspaper) and the sound file can be found here.  Unfortunately they didn’t get any footage of the actual gig!
We had such a lovely time!  We’ve never had such an appreciative audience, they clapped and whooped the whole time!  We really felt part of the scene and actually popular for the first time ^.^

boat, canberra, concert, event, gig, ragtime, sticks and tones, xylophone

Canberra Day concert – on a boat!

On Monday the 11th it was Canberra Day, but not just any Canberra Day that happens every year.  It was the super-celebration centenary of Canberra! Charles and I (AKA Sticks and Tones) were able to do a super-rad gig on a boat!  All the celebrations and festivities were around the lake, which is at the centre of the city.  The organisers hired musicians to do little tours on boats, and there were boats leaving the jetty every 10 minutes for an hour-long cruise. Our boat left a jetty near the Museum and toured around the perimeter of the lake, under a bridge, and back again!  Here’s the website for the day: One Very Big Day.
Ready to go!

Here’s our boat: A huge 140-year-old paddle steamer called Enterprise!  It even has its own page on the Museum website, check it out! It’s quite the famous little boat.
Setting up when we got to the jetty.

We set up our instruments (xylo and marimba) at the front of the boat, so the people on the shore could see us easily!
It was pretty hot (28 degrees C) and we were playing in the very height of the sun. It did get pretty warm out there – there’s no shade on a lake!  We both wore our biggest hats and wore HEAPS of sunscreen.  We played around 15 songs and that took about an hour in total. By that time we were nearly back at the jetty!  The crew were all lovely museum people.  The best thing was that there was a guy inside behind Charles shovelling wood into the fire to keep the boat moving!


A photo my mum and dad took.

 We had a really amazing time going around the lake.  Everyone was really appreciative and we were applauded all the way around.  Finally, a gig where people showed up!  There were literally thousands of people! And everyone on the shore seemed to be having a really good time.  There were lots of activities going on.  Canberra’s lake has an enormous fountain that goes hundreds of metres into the air, and when we went past that it was quite distracting!  It was also distracting when we saw some friends on the shore!

Charles’ parents took a photo of us from the bridge!


After our gig, we were exhausted!  We went home for a little rest and some food, and then we went right back in to watch the Canberra Symphony Orchestra and the fireworks!


And a funny story to round out the day:

After we watched the fireworks on the grass, we walked back to the car. That’s when Charles realised his lens cap was not in his pocket NOR on his camera.  He thought we’d never ever find it and we might as well just go home 😦
But I was determined to find it! It was pretty much an impossible task, because the space was enormous and it was dark and there were still people everywhere. We searched for a while with no result! Then I had an idea of using my camera’s flash to light up the ground.  Charles said “That won’t work, it only lights up the ground for a fraction of a second!” and I said “Yes – but then I’ll have the photo!”
I took 5 photos of grass before finding something that looked a little like a lens cap – a little black dot on the ground.

Found it!
The black thing in the foreground is a drink bottle lid, in the back is the lens cap!  Chrissy’s brains FTW!  I enjoy proving to my husband that he made a good choice 🙂

concert, life, percussion

DRUMatiX Next Phrase Concert photos

This concert was like three months ago! Better late than never!
All the photos are by the lovely Pete Butz.

 This looks like I’m singing but I’m not.  I’m mic testing!

 Still mic testing!  You don’t play drum kit with one mallet.

 Rehearsing!

 This might be concert.

 I only put up pictures of me and Charles really, because I don’t know how everyone else would feel about being on my blog.  But there were like 10 of us.

 Arty shot of mallets and stuff.

The stage setup was pretty massive.  I have never done a concert with so many instruments on stage at once!  It was a fantastic concert.  I hope to do more like this in future!