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Contributor Ian Ravenscroft blogs from the 4Talent stage at Gigbeth festival on the 8th November and would like to note he was not paid to say all the nice things he says here.

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Exchanging indie haircut bands for an eclectic line-up of unknowns is a brave move for an up-and-coming festival. I went to find out if the gamble paid off on the 4Talent stage at Birmingham’s Gigbeth festival.

Thingamagoop has a new friend

Thingamagoop has a new friend.

Photo c. Pete Ashton

Following a hectic Friday night with Hot Monocles after they raucously opened Gigbeth’s unsigned bands stage, I made my way once again to the Dragon Bar at the Barfly to check out the eclectically-assembled 4Talent stage. Exciting, innovative acts were the name of the game and in the event the billing did not disappoint.

As I entered the room I was greeted by Pete Ashton’s bleeping, blooping, buzzing boxes, also known as the Film Dash-winning Thingamagoop and new addition, Thingamakit, tentatively named King Tubby. Confused? Let me explain…

Pete’s hi-tech toys are light-sensitive synthesizers, which he manipulates using the bots’ built-in light stalks, an ingenious LED glove and any source of light within reach. The result being a cacophony of piercingly ambient electronic bleeps and bloops, which visitors to the stage found equally intriguing and inexplicable, especially once given an opportunity to have a go themselves.

After all that frantic commotion, the unassuming Rich Batsford settled into his seat to sooth our bleeping brains with his emotive classical piano compositions. Playing to a crowd of incredibly-attentive leather-clad metal fans added a hint of the surreal to his set of hypnotic melodies and powerful, booming chords, but this could not distract from the calibre of his musicianship. A brave choice for a festival crowd maybe, but a worthy stage for such artistic talent.

The act that really marked out the eclectic nature of the evening however, was 4Talent award winner, Iain Woods & The Psychologist. Melding grimy hip-hop beats with soaring gospel and soul vocals and strings, Iain strutted provocatively into his first gig with the group - which included a DJ, two violinists and live painted visuals - with ease, trying in vain to disguise his sheer excitement. His stage persona may split opinions in the wider world, but his raw enthusiasm and originality will surely gain many admirers.

Dancing of the night goes to The Keyboard Choir, whose enthusiastic lead key-basher pioneered some ingenious leg-bending moves, twisting and turning to keep his Casio firmly planted through the group’s synthesised hip-hop tinged epics. At times I felt like I was peering in on a team of prog-scientists trying to crack some musical cypher as their conductor fought to maintain control of the chaotic, frenzied fingers of his team.

Finally, Einstellung took to the stage purposefully, arming themselves with weapons of guitars, bass, amps and drums. And what an assault we were in for. Starting off with an upbeat two-chord progression, the Krautrock five-piece built and built the volume and distortion to a wall of crashing noise and pounding rhythm, layering screaming slide guitar and crunching riffs to create a scorching, tumultuous soundscape. One track, two chords, and half an hour later, I felt like asking the band politely for my eardrums back, but I fear it may have been too late.

As 4Talent stage curator Catherine Bray admitted, it would have been very easy to populate this stage with safe, carbon-copy indie bands, which would have been an easier sell. But in the end, artistic innovation won a minor victory that night in the tiny Dragon Bar.

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Film Dash

As a judge of Film Dash, I was hugely excited to watch the films that resulted from the 48 hour film challenge. Perhaps as interesting as the finished product is the journey that the filmmakers themselves went on as they made their films. Here’s just one of those stories, from filmmaker Ian Ravenscroft, who with only a few no-budget sketches under his belt, set out with Dice Productions to tell their story.

With no camera, sound equipment or lighting, and our only actor delayed on his way back from Cheltenham, I sat awaiting the brief for Film Dash: Digital Galore!, Birmingham’s latest 48-hour film competition, wondering what I’d let myself in for.

My cohort Louis arrived after a brisk run through Birmingham just as organiser Chris Unitt was kicking off proceedings. Soon, each team had a line of dialogue to include in their 5min film and a film title to reference in any way we could. Before we knew it we were outside, walking on auto-pilot, brain-storming as we went.

“I don’t believe the world has been in such a terrible mess since the flood,” I said, repeated our line in hope of some inspiration. “The Cruel Sea,” Louis chanted, hoping the same. It was at this point I realised how much of a challenge we had taken on.

Despite the stuttering start, we were soon cooking on gas. With a last-minute favour of a camera from @Warblefly productions and our actor and writing partner Tom back in the picture, we collected our thoughts and picked an idea off the crammed whiteboard.

“A young couple move into a flat only to meet their crazed and sexually-confused landlord” someone suggested. “Why not?” we thought, “we’ll get the line in, no problem.” By 9:30pm we had the whole thing written on two sides of a big sheet of paper, possibly our biggest achievement of the weekend.

Having set up our limited gear, typed up the script, recruited a much-needed female to the cast and planned each scene, we set out on Saturday morning for the shoot. Tom seemed to relish the job of playing such an odd character and everything seemed to go pretty smoothly and everyone was having fun, so by 3pm we had the first batch of editing to do. Then we shot the night scenes and retired to the pub to unwind after a hectic day.

On arriving back to base we found, as expected, that there was way too much footage. The only option was an all-night editing session to cut back the cinematic undergrowth. Louis and I broke the back of the editing overnight, checking our plot progression and using every shortcut we knew. After three hours sleep, a re-shoot of the final scene and some hasty sound editing we were finished in every sense.

Although there were bits we could have fine-tuned with more time and expertise, we were happy with our ambitious effort (for us, in the time) and could overlook the odd bad cut for how it had come together.

We felt we covered the brief well, and with a few nods to Hitchcock we felt we had forged links with the screening of ‘Into the Light’, a celebration of Birmingham born film producer, Sir Michael Balcon, which the winning film would be shown before the following Sunday.

Not that winning should be on any of the teams’ minds. Film Dash was a great laugh to take part in and taught us a lot about our own abilities. If it was intended to inspire new filmmakers like ourselves it certainly worked, we’re already planning more film projects and eagerly awaiting the next Dash!

The winner of Film Dash will be announced Sunday 26th October.

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