Showing posts with label Le Grand Mardi Gras Ball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Le Grand Mardi Gras Ball. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 February 2022

Hastings Fat Tuesday Music Festival Returns!


2 years since the last one, and the Hastings Fat Tuesday Music Festival is back (website) so this year we can celebrate Mardi Gras in style again! The festival kicks off on Friday the 25th with a one day music conference, Un-Convention, from 10.00 am to 4.00 pm at the East Hastings Sea Angling Association opposite Hastings Lifeboat Station (website), continuing that evening with Le Grand Mardi Gras Ball, 8.00 pm to 3.00 am, at the White Rock Theatre (website). The festival goes on to encompass numerous venues across Hastings throughout the 5 days of the festival until culminating on the evening of Shrove Tuesday/Pancake Day/Fat Tuesday/Mardi Gras, Tuesday the 1st of March, for the Fat Tuesday Tour 2022 (website), with partying and music galore from 24 bands at 12 venues, plus a Reggae Room at the Sea Angling Club!

Mardi Gras, New Orleans, Spectacle! 

OK, we may not be as spectacular as Mardi Gras in New Orleans (website) which has been going since 1703, originally 60 miles south of New Orleans, at Point Du Mardi Gras, where  French explorers landed a few years earlier, on the day of Mardi Gras, the 2nd of March 1699. New Orleans was established in 1718, with Mardi Gras regularly celebrated there by the 1830s, and by 1875, large floats were being built in New Orleans to celebrate the festival, the year it became a legal public holiday.

Rio de Janeiro Carnaval, Glamour!

Although Mardi Gras in Rio, has been put back for 3 weeks this year, but this too is spectacular, and has been celebrated, initially with feasts, since the 17th century, masquerade balls became popular in the 19th century, but in the early 20th century the culture of African music and dance, introduced by freed slaves and their children, was enveloped within Portuguese Rio de Janeiro, then was founded the dance style of Samba (website). Mardi Gras was now celebrated in Rio together with the development of Samba schools in the 1920s (there are about 200 schools in existence now) the Carnaval (Portuguese for Carnival) festival became centred on the parade of the Samba schools and the glamour that was introduced (website), and since 1933 Rio Carnaval has become the largest Mardi Gras festival in the World, with 2 million people participating every year. 


OK, we may not have as much spectacle and glamour as New Orleans and Rio de Janeiro, although there will be plenty of dressing up, be assured of that, and Mardi Gras and Carnaval have been going considerably longer than Fat Tuesday in Hastings... But what we do have is music galore and we party, for example on Saturday 22nd Unplugged carries on with 60 artists and bands playing 15 minutes acoustic sets at 30 venues across Hastings, for 5 hours from 1-6pm, and from Tommy's Pizzeria in St Leonards to the Dolphin Inn in Rock-a-Nore Road in the old town (if you don't have a programme already, for specific acts and where they're playing, please go to the website), and don't be surprised to find further live music sets at some venues later that evening!

Also there is much more to follow until Fat Tuesday itself (website), and I shall be writing more about that too, but do enjoy yourselves, have fun, and stay safe!

Saturday, 22 February 2020

Fat Tuesday Festival Continues...


As I said in my blog the other day, today sees 40 artists and bands playing 15 minutes acoustic sets for Unplugged, from 1 pm to 6 pm, at 25 venues across Hastings (between 8 and 11 acts at each venue! - website). Not just all that free live music, but today and tomorrow (Sunday) Sonics 2020 (website) is a 2 day "celebration of experimental music, sound art and film." Plus, this evening/night from 8 pm to 2 am, is Le Grand Mardi Gras Ball, costing £22.50 (Tickets can be bought from the website).


Sadly, due to the bad weather forecast tomorrow (Sunday), the Umbrella Parade will not be experienced walking along the seafront this year (website), BUT! Head to the White Rock Theatre anyway, where 'dancers, musicians and lots of umbrellas' will be in abundance from 12 noon to 5 pm for Preservation Sunday (website).

In addition, Sonics 2020 (website) continues for its second day, and Under the Radar will be held, with 4 stages hosting "the best emerging young talent from across the UK, curated by BBC Introducing, Academy of Contemporary Music, Incubate (from The Eggtooth Project) and the Joe Strummer Foundation" (website). Under the Radar begins from 2 pm at The Carlisle, with the last act at that venue planned to come on stage at 7.30 pm, and from 5 pm to 11 pm at The Printworks, where it looks like, from the website, there may be more music on Monday the 24th!

So, plenty of musical fun to come, and even more on Monday, culminating with the Fat Tuesday Tour on the 25th, carry on enjoying Mardi Gras folks!

Friday, 1 March 2019

Fat Tuesday: Already Kicking Off!


You know Hastings Fat Tuesday Music Festival 2019 (website) is kicking off when you see this marker in the town centre! Indeed, this is the 10th anniversary of Hastings Fat Tuesday, which always starts a wee bit early here compared to elsewhere in the world, and kicks off tonight with the Fat Friday Launch Party and The Great Malarkey starting at 8pm in The Albion (website), and encompasses numerous venues in the old and new towns throughout the 5 days of the festival until culminating on the evening of Shrove Tuesday/Pancake Day/Fat Tuesday/Mardi Gras itself...

Mardi Gras, New Orleans, Spectacle! 

OK, it may not be as spectacular as Mardi Gras in New Orleans (website) which has been going nearby since 1703, 60 miles south of New Orleans, at Point Du Mardi Gras, where certain French explorers landed a few years earlier, on the day of Mardi Gras, the 2nd of March 1699. New Orleans was established in 1718, with Mardi Gras regularly celebrated there by the 1830s, and by 1875, large floats were being built in New Orleans to celebrate the festival, the year it became a legal public holiday.

Rio de Janeiro Carnaval, Glamour!

Mardi Gras in Rio, has been celebrated, initially with feasts, since the 17th century, masquerade balls became popular in the 19th century, but in the early 20th century the culture of African music and dance, introduced by freed slaves and their children, was enveloped within Portuguese Rio de Janeiro, then was founded the dance style of Samba (website). Mardi Gras was now celebrated in Rio together with the development of Samba schools in the 1920s (about 200 schools in existence now) the Carnaval (Portuguese for Carnival) festival became centred on the parade of the Samba schools and the glamour that introduced (website), and since 1933 Rio Carnaval has become the largest Mardi Gras festival in the World, with 2 million people participating every year! 


OK, we may not have as much spectacle and glamour as New Orleans and Rio de Janeiro, though there will be plenty of dressing up, be assured of that, and Mardi Gras and Carnaval have been going considerably longer than Fat Tuesday in Hastings... but what we do have is music galore, and not a wee bit of merriment, carrying on with 40 artists and bands playing short sets at 20 venues across the Old Town tomorrow, 2nd March, for 5 hours from 1-6pm, and from St Mary in the Castle in Pelham Crescent to the Dolphin Inn in Rock-a-Nore Road (if you don't have a programme already, for specific acts and where they're playing, go to the website), plenty to enjoy!

Also tomorrow there is Thee Saturday Sonics (website - also on Sunday) at the Black Market from 1-6pm, and, in the spirit of masquerade, is Le Grand Mardi Gras Ball, from 8pm until 2 in the morning, at St Mary in the Castle (website - early bird tickets £15), and, not to forget, plenty of music at the usual Saturday venues, have fun!


Not to forget Saturday 2nd is the final day of the Piano Concerto Competition (blog).