Photographer tips!

Your wedding only lasts a day, but the memories will last forever with the right photographer. So my biggest piece of advice, to any couple, is to choose a photographer you are comfortable with. Even the most unobtrusive photographer will be a prominent part of your day and is responsible for your memories in relation to the photos they capture and the album they design and produce.

Us photographers can start talking a foreign language when it comes to our work – so here is my simple guide to point you in the right direction when choosing your photographer and the process involved.

  1. Firstly consider the photographic style you want. These can be grouped into three main areas – traditional, contemporary and reportage/photo-journalistic . All good photographers should be able to do any and all of these so don’t be fobbed off by a photographer telling you it is not his or her style. It’s your wedding after all and they should be able to give you what you want.
  2. Secondly, pick a sensible budget and try to stick to it. Most photographers will throw in a few extras if they can, so you could get a better deal, but shhh! don’t let everyone know. By the nature of the job we are all a little extrovert and definitely fall into the category of being ‘a people person’. We generally want to help you with your plans not hinder them.
  3. Once you have picked your photographer, sit down and map out the whole day with them. They will more than likely take notes of your approximate timings and plans. It will give you a chance to get to know them and vice versa.
  4. A great idea is to collect any photos from the internet or magazines of shots that you like, so you can discuss them and give a copy to your photographer. We won’t be creating exact copies, but we are visual creatures and as they say, a photo tells a thousand words and will help us to realise your vision fully. They don’t even have to be wedding photos, but can be anything – fashion, film etc. A bride once brought me the ‘Reservoir Dogs’ poster which we used as inspiration in one of her shots. You can let your visual mind go crazy!
  5. If you want formal group shots, and let’s face it most people do, make a short list of their names in the groups you want. It is usually better to get the big group shot done as soon as possible, so people can go off and relax rather than hanging around and distracting you by taking their own photos.
  6. Another important thing to consider is MAKE TIME for your own private shots. This is important for both you and your photographer. It can be a relaxing and fun moment with you, your partner and your photographer away from the gaze of your guests. So use this time to really relax and be yourself. A great idea is to stop off at beauty spot or gardens on the way to the reception and get some really super shots with no distractions.

At the end of the day your photographs are important to you and your photographer, but he or she does not want to spoil your day. We are professionals and have a lot of experience doing this. Use us to make sure you get the most out of your day. It’s all about balance, so make sure you like and feel relaxed with your photographer, show and tell them what you want, ask questions and get the right deal for you.

Finally a little quote I like:

“A smile happens in a flash, a memory fades in time, a photo lasts forever!!”

Think about that when you choose your photographer. You need someone with good photographic instincts to get great shots, so that you can just relax and enjoy your day.

This article was kindly provided by Jenny Martin Photography (North West Based)

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4 Piece Rock Bands

The four-piece band is the most common configuration in rock and pop music. Before the development of the electronic keyboard, the configuration was typically two guitarists (one lead guitarist and one rhythm guitarist, with the latter on vocals), a bassist (typically the electric bass guitar) and a drummer (e.g. The Beatles, KISS, Foo Fighters, Weezer, Metallica, The Clash, Creedence Clearwater Revival, The Kinks, The Fray, Sonic Youth, The Smashing Pumpkins, Arctic Monkeys, Franz Ferdinand, Against Me! and the new lineup of Wolfmother[2]). This is popular with bands for its versatility. However, it has been noted the main complaint is that it takes too much effort to keep so many instruments in tune when they are played by every member of the band.

Another common formation was a vocalist, electric guitarist, bass guitarist, and a drummer (e.g.The Who, Led Zeppelin, The Ramones, Sex Pistols, Red Hot Chili Peppers, R.E.M., Blur, The Smiths, Echo and the Bunnymen, The Stone Roses, Creed, Black Sabbath, Van Halen, Rage Against the Machine, The Stooges, Joy Division, U2 and Coldplay). Instrumentally, these bands can be considered as trios. This format is popular with new bands, as there are only two instruments that need tuning, the line-and-counterpoint formula prevalent with their material is easy to learn, four members are commonplace to work with, the roles are clearly defined and generally are: melody line, rhythm section with counterpoint melody, and vocals on top.

In some early rock bands, keyboardists were used, performing on piano (e.g. The Seeds and The Doors) with a guitarist, singer, drummer and keyboardist. Some bands will have a guitarist, bassist, drummer, and keyboard player (for example, Small Faces, King Crimson, The Guess Who, Pink Floyd, Queen, Coldplay, The Killers, The Monkees and Blind Faith).

Some bands will have the bassist on lead vocals, such as Thin Lizzy, Chameleons, Pink Floyd, NOFX, +44, Slayer, The All-American Rejects or even the lead guitarist, such as Dire Straits and Creedence Clearwater Revival. Some bands, such as The Beatles, have a lead guitarist, a rhythm guitarist and a bassist that all sing lead and backing vocals, that also play keyboards regularly, as well as a drummer. Others, such as The Four Seasons, have a lead vocalist, a lead guitarist, a keyboard player, and a bassist, with the drummer not being a member of the band.

(Thanks Wikipedia!)

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Fire Performers and Fire Breathers

Fire PerformersSo, lets talk about something that beats fireworks hands down at entertainment for weddings and entertainment for corporate events…. Fire eating and fire performing!

Fire eating used to be in Hindu, Sadhu, and Fakir performances and was used to show spiritual enlightenment. From here, it developed into sideshow and carnival acts in the 1880s. Skilled fire performers include holder Preacher Muad’dib, Lucifre, Heavy Metal Pete, and Chris Riley all of whom are known as exceptionally skilled performers within the circus and sideshow industry.

Other than sound fire safety precautions and some practical advice regarding the laws of physics there are few secrets to eating fire. Torches do not burn with “cold flames” nor is there any special substance in the performer’s mouth other than saliva. According to Daniel Mannix’s 1951 sideshow memoir Step right up!, the real “secret” to fire eating is enduring pain; he mentions that tolerating constant blisters on your tongue, lips and throat is also necessary. Many other fire eaters dismiss this, claiming that a skilled fire eater should not burn themselves, but since the art of fire eating is kept quite secret it is hard to ascertain exactly how it is done. Fire eating and fire breathing (and all variants) is a skill usually passed on for a skilled master to an appropriate student and almost all teachings include instructions on first aid, fire safety, chemistry and other appropriate skills.

The most famous fire eater in history is Robert Powell who not only swallowed fire but also red-hot coals, melted sealing wax and even brimstone. He performed, often in front of British and other European royalty and nobility, for nearly sixty years and was awarded in 1751 a purse of gold and a large silver medal.

Although not the earliest, the first to attract the attention of the upper classes was an Englishman named Richardson, who first performed in France in 1667. His methods were subsequently made public by his servant.

The most torches extinguished in one minute with the mouth by using only two torches is 83 and was achieved by Preacher Muad’dib on Nov 18 2010 at Potter’s Field, UK.

The most torches extinguished in 30 seconds with the mouth by using only two torches is 53 and was achieved by Preacher Muad’dib on stage at the “Bizarre Ball” in London, UK on 27th MAy 2011. This has earned him the nickname “The fastest fire-eater on earth”.

The most torches extinguished in one minute with the mouth (using multiple rods) is 89 and was achieved by Pascal Ackermann (Switzerland) on the set of Lo Show dei Record in Rome, Italy, on 1 April 2010.[5] The most torches extinguished in 30 seconds with the mouth (using multiple Rods) is 39 and was achieved by Hubertus Wawra alias Master of Hellfire, Germany.

Thanks to Wikipedia for this article… up to now…

So, when booking a fire performer for a wedding or an event the great thing they can do that fireworks cannot is banter! They can really laugh and joke with the audience and providing the laughs is as much a skill as the performing itself. A skilled performer will be able to enchant and mesmerise your guests but also have fun. Fire shows tend to last up to 30 minutes and can consist of one performer or a number of performers. The show can be performed to music or as mentioned, almost as more of a comedy routine.

A fire show will include fire breathing, fire eating, fire juggling and much more…. so, go for it!

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The best Corporate Entertainers and Wedding Entertainers

Corporate Entertainers

Corporate Entertainers

When you look to hire corporate entertainers and wedding entertainers what exactly do you want? The best price? The best act? The best act for the price you can afford? Bingo! In addition to quality and budget issues, you also need to consider if the entertainer you are thinking of hiring is the right style for your event. The following few words offer a little advice to try and avoid a few pitfalls.

OK, so it’s a corporate event or the yearly Christmas party and the boss has said…’You’re in charge of sorting the band and some entertainment to  make it a memorable bash… and, make sure you don’t get anything as bad as last year!’ Great, you’ve now been given a real chance to shine… or, fall flat on your bum! Unless you are a regular hirer of entertainment and know exactly what to do you are going to need some help. The best place to start with entertainment for a corporate event (and, similarly a wedding) is by looking at a reputable entertainment agency. How do you know they’re reputable? Well, in this day and age you can seek reviews, you can see just how much they value themselves and are prepared to invest in themselves via a good website or marketing, and you can even physically telephone them! Yes, not everything has to be done by email… get back to basics. Call them, if they don’t answer you already know that there is a problem and you should move onto the next one on the list. Once you get speaking to them they should be asking you questions about your event. Things like the age range attending, the number of guests, the style of music you think would go down well with the majority, etc. If they are just bothered about your budget, then, again (cue Family Fortunes ‘X’ noise) move on. You want somebody who is genuinely going to be bothered about making your corporate entertainment the best it can be… and avoid you having your head on the block!

The benefits of going via the agency are that the company will have worked with their acts previously and will be in a good position to make assumptions with regards to how suitable they may be for your own event. A sensible agent would for example realise that a corporate event of a wide age range would not require a band that only played the most recent chart or indie music. Unless, the company is very young and requires this. The entertainment agency will also be in a position themselves of having their reputation on the line so it is in their best interest to offer you the acts that will best represent them. Another major benefit of the agency is that if the function band you book get struck down with an illness and cannot make your event you will have help at hand. This is where the agent really earns their worth. So, always check what their policy is with regards last minute replacements and if they are on call 24 hours…. believe it or not but some agents are not! So, always check.

The entertainment agent will also be able to offer you suggestions on unique entertainment or ideas additional to the band. And, there are lots! Anything from fire performers to caricaturists, rat pack singers to magicians, the possibilities are endless. Again, the entertainment agency will be in a very good position to advise you of the best corporate entertainers and offer suggestions that fit in with the theme and also the budget.

Similarly, when organising the entertainment for a wedding, an agency can be a valuable source as they will also be able to help with string quartets, harpists, choirs, DJs and everything else you could possibly need. And, again, they will be able to help should any unfortunate incidents happen en route to the big day.

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Swing Bands – Origins and Now

Jazz Bands

Jazz Bands

1920s: Origins

Styles of jazz that were popular from the late teens through the late 1920s were usually played with rhythms with a two beat feel, and often attempted to reproduce the style of contrapuntal improvisation developed by the first generation of jazz musicians in New Orleans. In the late 1920s, however, larger ensembles using written arrangements became the norm, and a subtle stylistic shift took place in the rhythm, which developed a four beat feel with a smoothly syncopated style of playing the melody, while the rhythm section supported it with a steady four to the bar.

1930: Birth of swing

Compared to the styles of the 1920s, the overall effect was a more sophisticated sound, but with an exciting feel of its own. Most jazz bands adopted this style by the early 1930s, but “sweet” bands remained the most popular for white dancers until Benny Goodman’s appearance at the Palomar Ballroom in August 1935. Swing’s birth has been traced by some jazz historians to Chick Webb’s stand in Harlem in 1931, but they noted the music failed to take off because the onset of the Depression in earnest that year killed the nightclub business, particularly in poor black areas like Harlem.

With the wider acceptance of swing music around 1935, larger mainstream bands began to embrace this style of music. Up until the swing era, Jazz had been taken in high regard by the most serious musicians around the world, including classical composers like Stravinsky; swing on the contrary, with its “dance craze”, ended being regarded as a degeneration towards light entertainment, more of an industry to sell records to the masses than a form of art. Many musicians after failing at serious music switched to swing.

Large orchestras had to reorganize themselves in order to achieve the new sound. These bands dropped their string instruments, which were now felt to hamper the improvised style necessary for swing music. This necessitated a slightly more detailed and organized type of composition and notation than was then the norm. Band leaders put more energy into developing arrangements, perhaps reducing the chaos that might result from as many as 12 or 16 musicians spontaneously improvising. But the best swing bands at the height of the era explored the full gamut of possibilities from spontaneous ensemble playing to highly orchestrated music in the vein of European art music.

The most common style consisted of having a soloist take center stage, and improvise a solo within the framework of her or his bandmates playing support. As a song progressed, multiple soloists would be expected to take over and individually improvise their own part; however, it was not unusual to have two or three band members improvising at any one time.

Swing jazz began to be embraced by the public around 1935. Prior to that, it had had limited acceptance, mostly among black audiences. Radio remotes increased interest in the music, and it grew in popularity throughout the States. As with many new popular musical styles, it met with some resistance from the public because of its improvisation, fast erratic tempos, lack of strings, occasionally risqué lyrics and other cultural associations, such as the sometimes frenetic swing dancing that accompanied performances. Audiences who had become used to the romantic arrangements (and what was perceived as classier and more refined music), were taken aback by the often erratic and edginess of swing music.

In the US, by the late 1930s and early 1940s, swing had become the most popular musical style and remained so for several years, until it was supplanted in the late 1940s by the pop standards sung by the crooners who grew out of the Big Band tradition that swing began. Bandleaders such as the Dorsey Brothers often helped launch the careers of vocalists who went on to popularity as solo artists, such as Frank Sinatra.

Swing music began to decline in popularity during World War II because of several factors. Most importantly it became difficult to staff a “big band” because many musicians were overseas fighting in the war. Also, the cost of touring with a large ensemble became cumbersome because of wartime economics. These two factors made smaller three- to five-piece combos more profitable and manageable. A third reason is the recording bans of 1942 and 1948 because of musicians’ union strikes. In 1948, there were no records legally made at all, although independent labels continued to bootleg records in small numbers. When the ban was over in January 1949, swing had evolved into new styles such as jump blues and bebop.

Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli.

Many of the crooners who came to the fore after the swing era had their origins in swing bands. Frank Sinatra used the swing-band approach to great effect in almost all of his recordings and kept this style of music popular well into the rock ‘n’ roll era.

In country music, artists such as Jimmie Rodgers, Moon Mullican and Bob Wills introduced many elements of swing along with blues to create a genre called western swing. Like Sinatra did, Mullican went solo from the Cliff Bruner band and had a successful solo career that included many songs that maintained a swing structure. Artists like Willie Nelson have kept the swing elements of country music present into the rock ‘n’ roll era. Nat King Cole followed Sinatra into the pop music world bringing with him a similar combination of swing bands and ballads. Like Mullican, he was important in bringing piano to the fore of popular music.

Gypsy swing is an outgrowth of Venuti and Lang’s jazz violin swing, the style emerging in its own right in Europe with Django Reinhardt and Stéphane Grappelli. The repertoire overlaps that of 1930s swing, including French popular music, gypsy songs, and compositions by Reinhardt, but gypsy swing bands are formulated differently. There is no brass or percussion; guitars and bass form the backbone, with violin, accordion, clarinet or guitar taking the lead. Gypsy swing groups generally have no more than five players. Although they originated in different continents, similarities have often been noted between gypsy swing and western swing, leading to various fusions.

Late 1990s: Swing revival

Although ensembles like the Count Basie Orchestra and the Stan Kenton Orchestra survived into the 1950s by incorporating new musical styles into their repertoire, they were no longer the hallmark of American popular music. In the late 1990s (1998 until about 2000) there was a short-lived “Swing revival” movement, led by bands such as Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, Cherry Poppin’ Daddies, Royal Crown Revue, Squirrel Nut Zippers, Lavay Smith & Her Red Hot Skillet Lickers, the Lucky Strikes, Hipster Daddy-O and the Handgrenades, Speakeasies’ Swing Band!, and Brian Setzer. Many of the new bands of this period played a style of music — oftentimes referred to as neo-swing — that combined swing jazz with contemporary styles of music such as Rockabilly, Ska, and Rock music. The style also accelerated the revival of swing dancing, both in a traditional style, and in hybrid approaches which blended 1930s dancing with 2000-era dance styles. A similarly hybrid approach to musical genre can be seen with superswing music, a style that can be seen to have its origin in The Fabrics’ 2002 classic 12″ single on Switch Music, Cassawanka.

In 2001 Robbie Williams released his fifth studio album consisting mainly of popular swing covers titled “Swing When You’re Winning” which proved to be popular in many countries selling more than 7 million copies worldwide.

In 2006, the singer Christina Aguilera released her studio album “Back to Basics” when she mixed several different styles including swing, jazz and blues. The album was another commercial success for Aguilera’s career.

Early 1990s to early 2010s: Swing House and Electroswing

Another modern development consists of fusing swing (original, or remixes of classics) with hip hop and house techniques.

“Swing house” was particularly popular during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Influences incorporated into it include Louis Jordan and Louis Prima.

Electroswing is mainly popular in Europe, and electro swing artists incorporate influences such as Tango and Django Reinhardt’s Gypsy Swing. Leading artists include Caravan Palace and Parov Stelar

Both genres are connected with a revival of swing dances, such as the Lindy hop.

Thanks to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swing_band) for this article.

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Double Wedding Treat with Swing Bands and Fire Performers

Fire Performers

Fire Performers

When you are planning a wedding, it is imperative to hire wedding entertainers to keep your guests amused and in good spirits at all times of the day. Between thinking about the dress and who will be sitting where it is sometimes forgotten that guests can sometimes be left at a bit of a loose end. For example, when the photographs are being taken many will be hanging aound for over an hour with nothing to do… well, except drink.

Wedding entertainment should without a doubt be fun in order to compliment the theme of the occasion. Whilst there are literally hundreds of entertainment options the 2 that I will focus on here are Swing Bands and Fire Performers. The reason I am choosing these 2 is that they are slightly unusual wedding entertainment ideas, and, as everybody wants to make the day their own and unique to themselves, it may well spark some brain creativity for you.

A fire performer is a fantastic alternative to fireworks, which whilst becomming more popular these days are still expensive and not very interactive. A fire performer adds personality to the WOW factor that fireworks just won’t do. A typical fire show will include fire juggling, fire breathing, fire eating, and somtimes fire hula-hooping. There is also often a finale involving a pyro… and, this is fantastic and will leave your wedding guests in awe. As mentioned though, a fire show can be interactive. A good fire performer will be able to chat with the audience and provide banter and humour to help them get into the mood of the performance. On occasion, fire performers will also sometimes involve a guest in the odd move or two. In addition, a fire performer can provide mix and mingle to greet your guests as they arrive for the evening reception. Fire performers can be great fun, but you will need to check that your venue allows them and what they would require with regards the health and safety aspects.

Swing bands are usually made up from professional musicians who are extrmely talented. They will have been performing for years at events such as weddings and so will be able to guarantee you quality music delivery. One of the main benefits of a swing band is that they are able to cover many genres of music, albeit in their own swing style. For example, they can provide classic crooner and rat pack songs by great such as Frank Sinatra, or, they could even play modern swingers such as Michael Buble. In addition, many swing bands also perform popular soul and pop classics. The main advantage of a swing band for a wedding proves to be that there is something for everyone. Classics for the older generations and modern songs for the younger audience. Plus, a swing band adds a touch of class and elegance to a wedding that a general rock and pop band may not.

Finally, if you are having a large wedding, then you need a large band… and, they don’t come much bigger than Big Swing Bands! The line up can include anything from male and female singers, rhythm section, brass, guitars and much more!

Given these options, you should never think about wedding entertainment or wedding entertainers the same. This means you have no excuse to ensure that your friends and family who are attending your wedding will have the best time ever when celebrating your special day.

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