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| Press ReleasesWhats happening at the Festival this year ? - Read on!One of our Headline acts to open the Festival this year are the very, excellent duo of Cornish Bard , storyteller and musician Mike O' Connor and harpist Barbara Grigg who have written " Return to Lyonesse" - a very exciting story meticulously researched from medieval texts, which tells of lands, once part of Brittany and Cornwall, but now lost for ever beneath the waves. My friend and Artiste musician Liz Crow ( ie: the Fans, Shake A Leg ) went along to the launch of "Lyonesse" to observe, listen and this is her splendid review: Return to LyonesseWhat lands lie beneath the restless waves, and what tales are whispered at the sea strand to those with ears to hear? Lanterns flicker beside the two people on stage. A yearning supple melody on the violin joins a waterfall of notes from the harp; the music changes, becoming charged and expectant. From between the notes comes a voice “Far to the west in the land of sunsets, there is the House of Storms........” and so the Story begins. “Return to Lyonesse” is a superbly evoked and ground breaking new weaving of ancient Cornish, Breton and Welsh folk tales researched and devised by Mike O’Connor, our narrator who also sings and plays violin. Linking and embellishing the narrative sections, Barbara Griggs plays fluid, achingly beautiful harp; she wears a dress the colour of an ominous sunset. It is very much story telling for adults or imaginative teenagers, part of the great Bardic tradition, when grand halls and humble hearths resounded to complex tales of blood lines, romance, battles, and old wisdom. As in all the great epics, the Story resonates on different levels; it follows two Cornish families and their life changing interactions through the generations; they make choices, the dies are cast, and so fate is played out in their lives. Timeless human themes of love and its loss, betrayal, and above all consequences, are eloquently explored using both words and music as the characters weave through the narrative. They are living during a time of great change. The Romans have left, and Saxon strangers from the East are seizing land from the local people. The climate is warming and sea levels are beginning to rise.
"Return to Lyonesse” is a work of haunting beauty and sumptuous richness. If it demands more of its audience than modern multimedia productions, it also has infinitely more to offer the discerning listener. Humans have been sharing stories since our time began; they help us to understand the mutable nature of this shifting, ever changing world which we inhabit and offer insight into our own internal geography. This is powerful oral storytelling at its very best. Do go and see it. Then next time you walk the sunset sand of a western beach, you will remember those long lost lands and their people, and, just maybe, catch the faint echo of a bell tolling from far beneath the restless waves. Friday Evening's Concert in the Main Town Hall opens with the Cornish surf and sea - inspired group, the Grenaways, followed by Cornish group Tyn Daga led by Alan Burton on his Uillean Pipes, followed by the ever popular, multi-talented Stompin' Dave Allen. If you've never seen Stompin' Dave before -then your in for one big surprise and treat!! Do get along to the Festival, as it is really very, good value with our four day, three night Season Ticket pegged down to £50 Adults £25 Children. Along with Camping extra at £9 per night per person set in a luxurious Campsite with its full facilities of showers, toilets, campsite bar, shop and swimming pool. It should also be noted that most of our Festival Venues are indoors in the dry - so you don't need to be too concerned about the weather too much. Give other Festivals a miss in those mud soaked stadium fields and opt for the comforts here!Give us a try and you'll be regulars for years to come!Mike Walford, Festival Co - Organiser, Cornwall Folk Festival.
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