Happy Old Year!

So the final words of my last posting said that i’d hoped to get another one in before 2018! That wasn’t quite the intention, and it’s been far too long, but inspired by the posting of a friend’s blog yesterday, I’m getting back to doing this!

2016 was simply an amazing year, and very welcome, following on from 2015 which was, shall we say, not so good..but that’s the way of life, it ebbs and flows, and we take the bad to appreciate the good! Most notably was the introduction of Mat into my life. Having first met briefly through music, then latterly due to a chance meeting in Ipswich at Christmas 2015, we connected  and bonded a few days later at a party over our shared experiences with Brain Tumours. Not a pleasant subject, having lost dear Tash to the disease and speaking to Mat as a sufferer of one himself, however, if ever there was proof of something great coming from a bad situation, then this was it! Ironically, and most poignantly, it was the presence of Paul Daniels in Ipswich that day that led to mine and Mat’s subsequent meeting, but no-one knew then, not even Paul, about his Brain Tumour. We were very moved and saddened by his death just a few weeks later, and he will always be our magic man, performing one last magical spell that day! This January we joined together to create ‘Mat’s Walk and Talk Challenge’, an incredible month long project to get people to join together to make friends, get fitter, and simultaneously raise money for The Brain Tumour Charity. A separate blog will be created for that, but to find out more visit the Just Giving or Facebook page. So far we have raised nearly £19,000!!

As well as watching Mat’s band ‘The Broadside Boys‘ go from strength to strength last year and supporting them on their journey, in turn Mat has been a huge support and help to me and Kev Walford as we embarked on our own musical journey too. We’ve done wonderful things so far: released two e.p’s ‘Acoustic Sessions‘ 1 & 2, supported Reg Meuros and Russell and Algar, opened the stage at Folk East, played Ipswich Music Day, Cambridge Folk Club and Folk Festival, Ely Folk in the Town, featured in a week long session on BBC Radio Suffolk with Stephen Foster, collaborated with Honey & The Bear ..as well as many many more wonderful gigs and projects that took us all over East Anglia. We finished the year with a fun performance at The Froize for NYE, returning to the venue of our first real gig while joining forces with Mat to create ‘The Max Hayfield Quartet’. Not only was it magical night of music and friendship, but it also marked the first anniversary  together  for me & Mat, a very special time for us.

mat-kelly

Vocally Vintage still makes occasional appearances too, as does Chasing Storms with various different line ups,  but the Jazz has taken a temporary back seat to the original Americana and Folk project with Kev. Stay up to date with mine and Kev’s progress on Facebook, or on the webpage.

So there was a very brief summary of 2016! I have no doubt that 2017 will be just as special, as we write new music, release Acoustic Sessions 3, as Mat embarks on his well deserved first National tour with Eric alongside Richard Digance, as more money is raised for The Brain Tumour Charity and yet more incredible  friendships are forged along the way, thanks not only to the music, but the Walk & Talks, as they continue throughout the year.

I still have Kansas in my sights, and the red shoes will always be there and waiting in the wardrobe; but as for my running shoes…will they be dusted off for one last crack at a marathon next year? Better watch this space to find out!

Kelly x

Kansas Calling

I’m still pinching myself every morning since receiving the news about my place in The London Marathon, and I have to keep the magazine by my bed as a reassuring reminder that it wasn’t just a dream, but this blog isn’t going to focus solely on my running ambition; it’s about another passion of mine too….singing.
I spoke in my other blog about bucket lists, because running the London was always high up on mine, but another aspiration is to one day go storm chasing through tornado alley. When I finally had the chance to put a band together in 2009, we went through the usual lengthy task of deciding on a name. Although a challenging process, it’s a good litmus test for band compatibility and agreeableness! Naturally we passed that one with flying colours, but It wasn’t until after I’d suggested the name ‘Chasing Storms’, that I began to make the connections between the obvious ambition, and the more subliminal influences that inspired it. Joining the dots between them created a thread that stretched all the way back to early childhood, and a little motion picture you may be familiar with…The Wizard of Oz.
Back in the day when we only had three channels on the TV and filming budgets were low, you could rely on the same classic movies being reeled out over again during the holidays. Alice in Wonderland and The Lion The Witch and The Wardrobe foretold the presence of Easter, while Christmas was often heralded by the arrival of Julie Andrews in one of her many guises and of course, the extraordinary Miss Judy Garland and a little black dog called ‘Terry’.
There is something undeniably enchanting about The Wizard of Oz, and it hasn’t lost any of its sparkle since MGM re-created the 1900 L. Frank Baum novel in 1939. I don’t need to list it’s many industry accolades, but for me, every time I see it, I’m just as gripped with wonder, excitement, fear and anticipation as I was the first time over thirty years ago.
As well as the glorious costumes, eye-popping technicolor and fantastical sets, I was completely seduced by the marriage of Harold Arlen’s songwriting and Judy Garlands inimitable voice, and I’m not the only one. Many singers since have recorded their own love affair with ‘Somewhere Over The Rainbow’. Eva Cassidy’s version is well known and has an originality all of it’s own, but more recently I discovered Melody Gardot. Her own songwriting is exquisite, and although her rendition of SOTR is fairly ordinary in comparison to Eva, the tale she tells of how the film came to influence her is really very beautiful. I’ve been asked to sing it several times myself, (as recently as last weekend at a Dinner Party in fact) and I always like to stay as true to Judy and Harold as I can, but it was at a memorial service in November 2011 when the real effect of the film struck me.
As usual, I had not planned my outfit to sing in, (what’s the point…us girls always change our minds at the last minute anyway) but as I walked hurriedly out of the door I noticed that, without thinking, I had donned a pair of Blood Red Shoes from my wardrobe. Was I subconsciously playing Dorothy, or Judy, or both!? (Incidentally next month will be the fourth successive year singing at the same service, this time with Eva’s ‘Fields of Gold’).
And so, inspired by Hollywood Twisters, a lifetime ambition, the awesome power and unpredictability of Mother Nature and the heady mixture of danger and excitement, ‘Chasing Storms’ is the living out of my own technicolor dream. In the final scenes, the revealing of the Wizard is a disappointing moment and a huge anti-climax for the audience and the characters. Many messages come through the story at this point, but the most significant one for me here, is that my singing dream is not a lone destination with a singular defining goal, but that dream is a journey, a brightly coloured path, the lessons to be learnt, and the amazing friends I’m making along the way.

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