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DISCOVER BIRMINGHAM AS A DANCING CITY

Birmingham International Dance Festival makes a welcome return this month (17 June - 3 July). The largest festival of its kind in the UK, the event offers an amazing programme of spectacular dance for people to enjoy. As well as performances in Birmingham’s theatres, the 2022 edition of the festival is taking over the city’s public spaces, presenting three FREE-to-attend family-friendly outdoor weekends and providing lots of opportunities to take part. Check out our selection of highlights below...

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BIRMINGHAM IS A DANCEFLOOR

Fri 17 - Sun 19 June The festival opens with dance in Centenary, Chamberlain and Victoria Squares - as well as Brindleyplace - as a programme of FREE family-friendly performances and workshops transforms the city centre into a stage. Be inspired and join in! Attractions include a Midlands talent takeover, a mass tap shim sham, a rave for tots, an interactive queer silent disco, and folk dance reimagined. There’s even yoga!

DANCE AROUND THE WORLD

Thurs 23 - Sun 26 June The festival’s second weekend offers a highenergy line-up of the best of international and UK outdoor dance, presented across the city centre. Attractions include a daring circus performance inside a huge 7m-high rotating hourglass, Contemporary and Hip Hop dance, with four UK premieres from Belgium, Spain, France and Canada.

BIDF FOR HANDSWORTH PARK

Sat 2 & Sun 3 July A weekend of stopin-your-tracks dance activities for all the family to enjoy. Highlights include performances by international dance companies, brandnew hip-hop commissions, live music and a local Midlands Talent Takeover of the stage.

MIRAGE BY CIE DYPTIK

Victoria Square, Fri 17 - Sun 19 June Fences, barbed wire, rusty metal sheets and hanging flags provide the backdrop to an athletic performance featuring traditional dances inspired by the experience of the inhabitants of a camp on the West Bank.

TIMELESS BY JOLI VYANN

Victoria Square, Fri 24 - Sat 25 June Daredevil performers combine dance, circus and theatre on a 7m-high rotating hourglass to tell the poignant story of civilisation’s fragile relationship with climate change. Are we running out of time?

HIPPOS BY ZUM ZUM TEATRE

Centenary Square, Sat 25 & Sun 26 June; Handsworth Park, 3 July Charming and joyful are they humans disguised as hippos or are they hippos searching for their identity? A wonderful show for all the family.

GHOST BY TENTACLE TRIBE

Patrick Studio, Birmingham Hippodrome, Fri 24 June Elements of martial arts, contemporary and street dance are combined in a physical score that echoes the subtle pulse of respiration. From technical feats to dreamlike sequences, Ghost is a welcome breath of air.

BLOOD, WATER, EARTH BY KAHA:WI DANCE THEATRE

Patrick Studio, Birmingham Hippodrome, Tues 28 & Wed 29 June Weaving performance video and music to affirm First Nation womxn’s kinship relationship to all living entities.

BYGONES BY OUT INNERSPACE DANCE THEATRE

Birmingham Hippodrome, Thurs 30 June Ghostly architecture, puppeteering and illusions to tease our sense of reality. Bygones celebrates how we are shaped by what we overcome, and how something challenging can lead to something beautiful.

For all Birmingham International Dance Festival events, visit: bidf.co.uk

Sounds of the city

Birmingham Music Archive’s Jez Collins goes ‘On Record’ to discuss two music-focused elements of Birmingham 2022 Festival - a series of live interviews and a unique album that celebrates the city’s diverse musical past and present...

The Birmingham 2022 Festival, a six-month celebration of local culture and creativity, is now well under way, with a wide variety of projects and events timed to coincide with the city’s hosting of the Commonwealth Games. The festival has huge ambitions, not only to unite people from around the Commonwealth in tandem with the 11-day sporting spectacle, but also to entertain and engage with more than 2.5 million people in person and online, as well as embrace local culture and provide a creative legacy for Birmingham and the wider West Midlands. It’s a ridiculously tall order, but with more than 200 projects across the region embracing art, dance, theatre and more there should be something for almost everyone, and with virtually all events being free to attend, no excuse not to join in. One of the festival’s musical components is a series of live podcast recordings featuring conversations with local musicians and other people connected with the music industry. Another component is a multi-artist, multigenre concept album of songs built around the theme of Birmingham. Both are helmed by Jez Collins, founderdirector of Birmingham Music Archive, an online resource that documents and celebrates all aspects of music activity in the city. The two projects are designed to reflect Birmingham’s diverse communities, as well as the range of music the city has produced. The live interviews, conducted by broadcaster Satnam Rana and radio journalist Adrian Goldberg, are also aimed at inspiring the next generation by showing the range of opportunities the music industry can provide. “The idea was to have people in the room so we could document everything from bhangra music to sound systems to punk, through to managers and people who have really contributed to our music culture,” explains Jez. “We wanted to make sure we capture the past but also celebrate the contemporary nature of music making in the city, because it’s a great city and so much amazing music comes from here, and is coming from here.” Despite running the archive, Jez says he doesn’t believe in nostalgia. He reels off the city’s musical icons without taking breath Andy Hamilton, The Move, Spencer Davis Group, ELO, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Steel Pulse, UB40 and Duran Duran were just some of the acts namechecked in our conversation - but Jez has as much, if not more, enthusiasm for contemporary artists such as James Indigo, Bambi Bains and Elle Chantelle. “We don’t amplify these people and what they’re doing enough, so we wanted to make sure it wasn’t just about looking back at the good old days. It’s good to look back, but what I’m interested in is how do we learn from the past and how does it influence our future.” Chantelle is one of 22 people featured in the podcasts, on a list that includes promoters, managers, venue owners and entrepreneurs as well as musicians, all at different stages in their careers. Recorded at Symphony Hall, the events are free to attend (though tickets must be booked in advance) and Jez has been surprised at how open the guests have been. “All the conversations have been really revealing - I’ve been taken aback a bit, so I think we’ve got the pitch right. Personal experiences are what it’s all about, as the connections and background all feed into it. And their background is Birmingham they’re all from here or live here. “We go right back to their school days, how they first got interested in music, what their parents were like, what they listened to as a teenager… all those issues. So you get a real richness of where that person has come from, where their influences and inspirations came from and their journey, I guess. That tells the story of the individual, of the community, of the city and our music. Because music doesn’t just exist in a vacuum - people don’t just wake up and make it, it’s a product of their environment. “It’s all about connecting it all and saying there are people who look like you, talk like you, went to school where you did, worked where your parents worked, who have gone on to have a career in music. You don’t have to be a multi-million-selling artist - there are many different ways to work in music, whether that’s as a manager, working at a venue or being in a band, and we’re just trying to connect that. This is a city of music, and here are some of the people who have had amazing careers in that industry.” Jez’s enthusiasm for the project, for Birmingham and for the city’s music scene is simultaneously boundless and infectious and there’s clearly a chip on his shoulder about the way in which the city is often ignored in national conversations about music. “People say Manchester’s a great music city, or Liverpool’s a great music city, or London, but for me this city is the best… it creates music of all different kinds,” he says, claiming that the variety is a strength, and more important than having an identifiable (and often mono-cultural) sound: “There’s never a sound of this city - there are multiple sounds in the city.” The latter is perfectly encapsulated by On Record, a unique all-star concept album that features 11 original songs written and recorded by artists from a diverse range of genres - from Afrobeat, Asian electronica and trip-hop to folk, garage rock, jazz and reggae. “We’ll probably get a little bit of stick because there’s no metal on there!” The task of reflecting music from across the city, as well as making a coherent album, was a challenging one. “The hardest part of putting the album together was who to leave out, but all the artists represent Birmingham’s incredibly rich and brilliant music past, present and future, as well as the many and varied cultures and communities of the Commonwealth and beyond who call the city home.” All the artists were tasked with providing a musical response to the word ‘Birmingham’, and Jez says they all responded brilliantly. “What we’ve had back is what we’re calling a sonic love letter to Birmingham, because the songs and the lyrics have really highlighted how important Birmingham has been to these artists. You might not like all the music, but I think the album gives an insight into the city and its incredibly diverse communities, and I think that’s what’s really pleasing about it. “We really believe in it, and the festival organisers really believe in it too. I think it’s the only dedicated music project for the festival, so they want to get the music played in stadiums when spectators are there, during ceremonies, medal presentations and so on. “When people hear it, (a) I think they’ll like the music, and (b) they’ll also have this small window into who we are, and I’m hoping that will start to shine a spotlight on our contemporary music making, which is incredible.”

On Record is released on 17 June in physical and digital formats. For more information, visit birmingham2022.com/festival and birminghammusicarchive.com

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