Picture: Rhyl Pavilion A 1980’s tribute concert show will wind back the years at Rhyl Pavilion. 28 chart-topping artistes from the 80’s will be authentically recreated to look and sound as they did back in the day with a full live band, awesome dancers, mind-blowing lasers and light design combined with huge video projection complete the production together with over 150 costumes! Kim Wilde, Duran Duran, Adam Ant, Boy George, Wham, Erasure, Soft Cell, the Human League, Dead or Alive, Nena, Madonna, Cyndi Lauper, Gary Numan, and Tony Hadley are just some of the stars you will witness in this high energy, fast paced, party style show.
Welcome to another episode of A Touch Of Pink, your one-stop shop for rainbow pop. As usual, all tracks tonight have rainbow content. Tune in this Saturday on JOY 94.9 from 5-6 pm for a whole hour of wonderful explorative listening.
14 new or recent tracks tonight featuring rainbow artists from the USA, England, Canada and Australia. Wonderful new tracks from Aussies Prudns, Larry Macqueen and Dirty Versachi, plus remixes from Pet Shop Boys and Soft Cell, plus interesting covers from Art d’Ecco (The Jam) and Minute Taker (Kate Bush).
Playlist for Show 721 to be broadcast on 29th May 2021
Prudns
Listening to
Jehnny Beth’s collaborative album
Utopian Ashes is to hear both artists as never before – a Scottish-French union that, in its exploration of classic male-female dynamic sees Gillespie channel the emotional articulacy of the 70s songwriters he loves and finds Beth confronted with a newfound revelation of melody. If you like the sad country soul of Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris’s
Grievous Angel and
We Go Together, you’ll like this. And that’s not the algorithm talking.
Taking the guise of a fictional relationship, these songs of experience, teased by the gorgeous, sweeping
Remember We Were Lovers, are a push-pull of contrasting perspectives across love, loss, disconnection and redemption, with Primal Scream’s Andrew Innes on guitar, Martin Duffy on piano and Darrin Mooney on drums, while Jehnny Beth’s musical partner Johnny Hostile features on bass. Time and time again, we’re reminded that emotional music often reflects on things that, in wha