The decision was made for me because of the logistics involved in getting all of the equipment together. On Wednesday evening, I would go the the lock-up and load all of the lighting equipment. On Thursday evening I would fill the van with all of the PA, and then on Friday morning I would add the guitars ready to go straight from work to The George.
On Friday morning it seemed as though I'd been a bit hasty as the sky was clear and the roads to Coventry were mostly clear but as the afternoon wore on, conditions deteriorated and I think it was a wise decision.
The weather struck again for MDF, who were booked to play St Patrick's Day at The Two Boats, Long Itchington. The band and PA made it, but audience members were disapointingly thin on the ground. Well, it was either the snow or the celebrations of Irish Rugby success that saw people head early for home.
Fortunately, the snow had gone by the time of The All Fools' Night Celebration
I started things off as per usual with a reflection on funeral arrangements, 'Be Careful What You Wish For When You Die'. This was followed by a Norwegian Wood parody about a dog with a taste for, well, Norwegian Wood. I started the second part of the evening with 'Twenty Spoons of Sugar'.
Steve Edgar's joke was highly entertaining. With a lengthy preamble the moth told the psychiatrist why it had come into the therapy consulting room - the light was on.
His musical offerings included
Shirley has been bravely tweaking the mic levels, and it made a real difference this evening. With their foot tapping jigs and reels, No Strings Attached sounded fantastic.Frequent vistors to the English Folk website
Their repertoire included 'The Evercreech Hornpipe' and reels Twin Sisters, Morpeth Rant, The High Level Bridge and The Wonder
Sandi & Tugrul presented what I considered to be the
funniest joke of the evening which went along the lines of: “A elderly man
arrives home with flowers on the couples wedding anniversary. In the past he
has been notoriusly lax, and his wife is so pleased that he’d remembered she
told him that as a reward he could have ‘super sex’. The husband though about
it for a second or two and said, ‘I’d like the soup please’.”
With the exception of RD Hunter’s ‘Wait in The Water’, which
he sang in the later part of the evening, Lew Bear's songs were of his own
composition. Mad Old Girl, The Grass grows greener on the other side and A Northampton Rhyme. The audience particularly enjoyed his critique of ‘White Van
Man’ at my expense.
Josh Turner's 'Longer The Waiting', The Travelling Willburys 'End of The Line'
Creedence Clearwater Revival's 'Proud Mary'. What we did in the second half is a blur.
Out On The Mira
Paddy brought the evening to a close, dipping into the MDF songbook and leading the ensemble with Steve Earle's 'Galway Girl.
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