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Battle Royal by Lucy Parker | Smart Bitches, Trashy Books
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The best pubs in Melbourne to watch the footy
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The best pubs in Melbourne to watch the footy Prince Patrick Hotel - image supplied
Words by Eva Marchingo
Watching the game at the pub is a rite of passage for footy fans.
If you can’t physically get to a footy game, the next best thing is going out to watch the action. When you’re watching from a pub surrounded by other fans or casual watchers, the excitement is palpable. Pubs are also significantly more comfortable – as long as you know where to go. Say goodbye to sleazy sports bars with primitive drink lists and boorish vibes – we’ve got you covered with a list of excellent pubs that incidentally also show your favourite sports.
And then, by the grace of Netflix, I found it – the perfect antidote. It wasn’t a romance; it was a six-part docu-series called Voices of Fire. “Hundreds of singers. Three auditions. One choir,” said the blurb. “Who’ll bring the range, and the change, to carry gospel to new heights?”
Sold.
Bishop Ezekiel Williams and Pharrell Williams in Voices of Fire. Photograph: Antony Platt/Netflix
Voices of Fire is the story of one pastor’s dream of creating the world’s greatest gospel choir, and his nephew’s capacity to make that happen. The pastor is Bishop Ezekiel Williams of Faith World Ministries, in Hampton Roads, Virginia. His nephew is singer, rapper, songwriter, producer, multi-Grammy and Oscar winner Pharrell Lanscilo Williams.
wetlands group marching FOLLOWING our recent look at local mumming, we continue our examination of the ancient, enduring folk tradition, and some of the variations seen in local mummer groups and figures. Past Christmases witnessed a mumming pageantry of drama, music, dance, song and poetry with mummers’ musicians, instruments, dancers, songsters and storytellers adding to the jollity of their nightly forays. Whereas blowing hunting horns announced the mummers’ arrival, the Maguiresbridge Hogmanay men simply used a hairy ned, roped belt with attached empty syrup tin cans, pierced with holes and partly filled with pebbles. Monies scarce, the absence of musical instruments and a good musician was commonplace, so mummers created primitive sounds and rhythms such as ‘combing’ ¬– that is, by pressing lips onto brown paper, wrapped thinly around combs and blowing intensely.
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