The Surrey Pumas are live, local and gigging! More information is on the website or read on below. The Surrey Pumas are a group of veteran musicians, based (as you may have guessed) in Surrey. We play laid-back rock songs with tunes, harmonies, tasteful guitar solos and a beat that you can tap your feet to. The sort of beer-drinking music we all enjoy, in fact.
We like to keep it local: playing at pubs, clubs, parties, festivals and events in the Surrey area. We have all our own equipment and between us have played thousands of gigs - from big stages and large venues to small crowded bars and dark cellars. To have a chat about your event, please get in touch. We play a wide range of music - mostly laidback bar-room rock, with a touch of country and blues. Mainly covers - Clapton, Dire Straits, Eagles, J J Cale, Rolling Stones, Tom Petty, Van Morrison, The Who. All good songs to drink a beer to, tap your feet, join in the chorus, maybe even get up and dance. You can listen to us here The Surrey Pumas are: Alex Gilbertson (guitar); Malcolm Brickell (vocals, guitar), Mark Beasley (guitar, vocals), Steve Marshall (bass, flute and vocals) and our new boy: Ray Smithers (drums). We're all experienced musicians, with many years experience and stories to tell! We are fully self-contained and have all the equipment necessary - all we really need from you is some electricity and a stage! We're on Facebook too - click here. Website here.
0 Comments
A review for the local paper of Chris Difford, at St John’s Church, Farncombe, May 11th It’s a long way from Madison Square Gardens, where he has performed a number of times, but St John’s Church provided an intimate and atmospheric setting for Chris Difford’s entertaining and confessional one-man show.
As an award-winning songwriter and co-founder of the band Squeeze, Difford has made a lasting contribution to English music over the past 40 years, building a reputation as a clever lyricist and co-writer of many hit records and albums. His current tour is to promote his autobiography, Some Fantastic Place, and it is from this book that the night’s anecdotes were drawn. From a childhood spent on a south-east London council estate to his success as a rock star and problems with relationships and alcohol, the stories are honest, witty and often raw. Highlights included the postcard in a shop window that led to the formation of Squeeze, early experiences with girls, embarrassing encounters with celebrities and the many support acts who subsequently became more famous than Squeeze – such as Woking’s The Jam. As he said when tuning his guitar, ‘I used to have staff to do this’. Backed by his own acoustic guitar and Melvin Duffy on pedal steel guitar, Difford performed a number of Squeeze hits, such as Cool for Cats, Take Me I’m Yours and Up the Junction. The audience joined in throughout, to his evident pleasure. A number of his solo songs were also played: the moving Battersea Boys, based on the life of a man he met in a hospice, was particularly memorable. In support, Kent-based trio, Arcelia, sang their own well-crafted songs, beautifully and with immaculate harmonies. They also provided back-up towards the end of Difford’s set, notably on the emotional Some Fantastic Place - an apt description of St John’s Church on this highly entertaining evening. (300 words) Read more of my stuff here. Contact me here. |
AuthorMark Beasley Archives
May 2021
Categories |