Newcastle April 2017

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April 2017

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CHARLIE SLOTH Tells us UK music is the best in the world right now

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‘We always find ourselves in sticky situations’

Crushed at the home of rugby

Final loss for Northumbria side

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HUNGRY FOR SUCCESS Meet the competitive eater

It was so close yet so far for Northumbria women’s rugby union team, who were crushed by Edinburgh University at Twickenham Stadium in the BUCS Rugby Union Championship final.

Activists bomb in bid to stop uni from buying into arms trade investment categories in the university’s Socially Responsible Campaigners have failed to convince Investment Policy. a students’ union it should push She asked how the university could Newcastle University to divest from honour civil rights campaigner Martin the arms trade. Luther King – the only institution to do The activists accused the university so while he was alive – while investing of hypocrisy for supporting civil rights in an arms trade that ‘sickened him’. while keeping more than £1million Jess Poyner, the Campaign Against of investments in defence-related Arms Trade co-ordinator at Newcastle, companies, in a motion put to NUSU. said: ‘Fifty years ago Martin Luther Cara Brooke, who proposed King was awarded an honorary degree the motion at a students’ council from Newcastle. During his acceptance meeting, called for ‘arms companies’ speech he decried the “three evils of to be added to the list of prohibited war, poverty and racism”. By investing

 IMOGEN WHITE

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ROB DA BANK Gets the party started

The English side put up a valiant fight but could not cope with their rivals, particularly Scotland internationals Megan Gaffney and Rhona Lloyd who both scored hat-tricks in the 48-5 thrashing.

It’s vital we don’t cut ourselves off from the real effects of arms companies

Jess Poyner, Campaign Against Arms Trade

in arms companies the university is running roughshod over his words.’ A list published by Newcastle in 2015 showed it had investments worth more than £1.1million in companies involved in defence. These businesses included Serco, which provides engineering, delivery of ‘military assets’ and other support to forces; Marshalls Group, which specialises in modification and maintenance of defence aircraft and operational support; Leonardo, which designs large artillery guns, smaller weapons and ammunition, including

guided missiles, as well as border security; and BAE Systems, which provides combat aircraft, vehicles and ships, as well as ammunition. Jess said: ‘As a university with one of the best engineering departments in the country, Newcastle should be leading the way through investing in and promoting companies that work for the public good. ‘It’s vital we don’t cut ourselves off from the real effects of arms companies such as [Leonardo] and BAE. These companies profit from Continued on Page 3

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April 2017

graduates Divestment ‘could Business brew up new idea for alcoholic coolharm job chances’ brewed tea liquor « Continued from Page 1

war and conflict around the world, such as in Yemen, where BAE fighter jets are playing a central role in the destruction. ‘[Leonardo] is also one of several arms companies eagerly profiting from the refugee crisis, through selling equipment used in detention centres and to border security forces which guard fortress Europe.’ But speakers at the students’ council meeting highlighted the graduate career prospects offered by companies that make weapons, as well as the non-arms based work they do. One student pointed out

Any recognised union can review our investments Newcastle University

BAE is an ‘enormous source of graduate schemes’. Another said BAE had sponsored her lab and was one of the only companies in the UK offering sub aqua engineering jobs – an area she is interested in. She understood the company had done some wrong – in 2010 BAE faced allegations of corruption from the UK’s Serious Fraud Office and was fined $400million by the US – but said without the university’s investment, students could miss out on career opportunities. A third student said BAE was much more than just an arms company and Chris Duddy, who

FOOD AND DRINK Revolution Collingwood Street

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 Jaymelouise Hudspith Set in a converted bank on Collingwood Street, Revolution

was also at the meeting, said companies may be indirectly involved in the arms trade. James Prowse spoke against the motion, saying he did not think education should be taking an ethical stance, adding companies would be taken to court if they did something illegal. In defence of her motion, Cara said the university should be more sensitive as some of its students might have experienced war. Rebecca D’Andrea also backed the motion, stating defence was not the only field to offer tech jobs. Following the discussion, 61 per cent of voters rejected the call for the SU to raise concerns over arms trade investments with the university. The motions was supported by 29 per cent of voters and 11 per cent abstained. A Newcastle spokesperson said: ‘We take the concerns raised by our students very seriously, which is why the university’s ethical investment policy allows the students’ union, or a recognised trade union, to request a review of the university’s investment in any share or class of shares. ‘This took place last year when the university’s governing council responded to calls from the SU and students involved in the Fossil Free movement.’ BAE Systems and Leonardo were contacted for comment but had not replied as TUP went to press.

 Amy Denman

Newcastle Upon Tyne was an ideal setting for a good meal. The service was some of the best I have ever received. Once my friend and I had settled in we were welcomed with a cocktail. I chose a strawberry fizz and my friend had a short fuse sunshine – both had a fresh, fruity flavour. We then tried six

shots from the handcrafted flavours range – you can chose a single, six or ten shots from a possible 30 flavours, but the staff chose for us. We each necked a fruit salad, jelly baby, white chocolate, chocolate milk, candyfloss, and popcorn shot. The flavors took away the harshness usually associated with shots and the only

Afternoon tea is an activity most of us have little time for – not for a few years, anyway. To get us to fall in love with the 4pm refreshments, two Newcastle University graduates have brewed up a brilliant idea they hope will have everyone itching to get their fingers on a plate of scones and mini sandwiches. Vincent Efferoth and Lukas Passia have created Noveltea - a coldbrewed beverage infused with either gin or rum. There are currently two flavours on sale at Fenwick Newcastle – The Tale Of Tangier, which infuses Morroccan green mint tea with Carribean rum and The Tale Of Earl Grey, which mixes the classic tea flavour with gin and other botanicals. Vincent, who graduated from a masters at Newcastle in 2016, said: ‘To enhance the taste of the teas, we cold-brew them for up to 12 hours to

New tea gives cuppas a kick

Tea-sing tasters: Lukas Passia, left and Vincent Efferoth issue was some flavours were sickly. After the shots, we chose the street food crate starter (£12.95) to share – two mini pepperoni pizzas, mini beef burgers, four buttermilk chicken strips and a pot of barbecue fat chips. The pizza was perfectly crisp and the burgers were succulent. The dish is a perfect group snack to nibble on

CONTACT US EDITOR: IMOGEN WHITE Email your stories to editor@unipaper.co.uk

produce a smooth taste, drawing out the distinctive flavours without causing some of the bitter notes that can be associated with tea. ‘Cold-brewing produces lower levels of caffeine and extracts more antioxidants than hot-brewed processes.’ Vincent and Lucas came up with the idea when studying at Newcastle and secured a place on the Rise Up Founderships programme at the university, which offers work space, funding, advice and support to students who want to launch their own business.

Lukas, who studied international business management at Newcastle, said: ‘When we set up Noveltea, our mentors at Newcastle guided us through many aspects of the start-up stage, from research and development in mixology, to advising us on supply, manufacturing and strategy. ‘We have been very fortunate to have had access to the Founderships programme and have been introduced to some very influential connections as a result. It has been instrumental in getting the brand to where it is today.’

while sipping on a cocktail, or two. On to the main. I ordered the duck frites (£10.95) – crispy duck leg with a burnt orange glaze, a side of fries and a pear, pecan and blue cheese salad. The duck was tender and succulent, while the orange glaze and the pear gave a contrasting sweetness. We moved on to the dessert and

another cocktail – a strawberry daiquiri for me and a woo woo for my mate. The final course was the best: chocolate brownie (£3.50) and New York baked cheesecake (£3.50). The cheesecake became a little too much after a while, but the brownie melts away in your mouth. My sweet tooth was in heaven.


News

How class divides the classroom Wealth and social status still affect young people’s chances of going to university and doing well there

Head of organisation set up to make things fairer says it’s getting better but some top unis still not mixed enough

 Henry Edwards We’ve all heard the chants – ‘Your dad works for my dad’ or ‘I’d rather be a poly than a t***’. If you’ve seen university rivals go head to head on the sports field, chances are you’ll have come across similar sentiments. Class-based banter is often part of varsities and other big clashes, especially if a former poly and a redbrick are involved, and it is usually meant in good humour. But away from sport, the divide between the haves and have-nots is real – the kind of area you’re from, what your parents do and how much your family earns affects your chances of getting into and doing well at university. Just one in five 18-year-olds from the most disadvantaged neighbourhoods in England go to university, according to UCAS. Even fewer – 3.6 per cent in 2016 – go to the universities that require the highest entry grades and are usually the most prestigious. This is compared with the 22 per cent of young people from the richest

We have some universities that are very socially exclusive

Prof Les Ebdon, Director of fair access

Breaking barriers: Prof Les Ebdon, whose job is to make access to university fairer

fifth of the population who get a place at one of the UK’s top 40 universities. We asked the man in charge of an organisation set up to tackle this imbalance what he’s doing about it. Prof Les Ebdon is director of the Office For Fair Access, a public body that lays down conditions for universities wishing to charge £9,000 a year for tuition. To charge the top fee, universities must prove they are working to remove barriers to entry for under-represented groups. They also have to support students from less wealthy backgrounds and help them with their career progression. Each university must come to an individual agreement


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‘I FIND MYSELF HIDING WHICH SCHOOL I WENT TO’ – EXPERIENCES OF CLASS AT UNIVERSITY When it comes to talking about money and class at university, many people feel uncomfortable, whatever their background. While many of the students we spoke to said cash and family background were not big issues, they were reluctant to speak fully on the record about subjects they saw as taboo. Imogen White asked people studying at Newcastle University if wealth or class divides had an impact on life there...

PICTURE: DESIGNED BY ASIERROMERO / FREEPIK

with OFFA on how it will do this, which includes publishing targets for recruiting more students from all under-represented backgrounds. ‘We have a bit of to-ing and fro-ing,’ Prof Ebdon said. ‘We may tell them to try a bit harder [at first] and then we agree the plan. ‘I like to think the plans reflect the context of that university and how far they’ve got to go in creating diversity in their student body and that it addresses what the statistics tell me are their major problems. ‘We have some universities that are very socially diverse and we have others that are very socially exclusive.’ He said universities with less diverse student bodies often struggled to attract applicants from a wide range of communities. ‘I encourage them to do outreach activity,’ he said. ‘Those who don’t have very diverse student communities often put much greater effort in than those who have more diverse student communities.’ He said the more exclusive universities must put up to a third of the money they get from charging the full level of tuition fees into outreach schemes. For example, the University of Birmingham runs Access To Birmingham, which offers lower entry grades to applicants from local postcodes where few go to uni – and whose parents were not in higher education – once they have passed an access course module. This scheme is part of the university’s access agreement, showing its investment in recruiting students from less well-off areas. Prof Ebdon praised decisions by universities such as Bristol to offer lower entry grades to promising pupils from local schools who might not otherwise have applied or got on to a course there. ‘In many cases, universities like Bristol, Leeds, Sheffield or Birmingham were established by the citizens of those cities,’ he added. ‘Over the years those relationships have decayed somewhat so I think they’re now putting a lot of effort into relating more strongly to their cities and recognising they have a responsibility in those areas to work with the schools to raise aspiration and achievement.’ The scrapping of caps on student numbers has also led to more students from less well-off backgrounds getting a place at uni. A report by Universities UK said since 2014, when institutions were first told they could accept as many students as they wished, courses have been more competitive. ‘Greater competition has acted as a driver for institutions to focus on recruiting students from lower participation backgrounds, including students from disadvantaged backgrounds,’ the report said. But it also mentioned fears that only a few universities were recruiting students from poorer backgrounds, narrowing the social mix at those institutions. The report, released in October, found other factors such as ethnicity, gender and whether students lived in rural or coastal areas, make it even less likely young people from

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April 2017

Phoebe, second year, sociology: There are a lot of private school kids who collect in certain areas. It was particularly apparent in halls, especially Castle Leazes, which was catered and therefore more expensive. Everyone seems to know each other, which makes things slightly difficult as halls become quite cliquey. Evie, second year, business: It is quite a taboo subject. I do sometimes feel embarrassed that I went to boarding school.

poorer backgrounds will go to uni. But Prof Ebdon insisted things were getting better. ‘The numbers of disadvantaged students are at the highest level ever,’ he said. ‘There’s been a 72 per cent increase since the

There are a lot of private school kids in certain areas

Phoebe, sociology student

I avoid saying it because it sets you out from the crowd and there is a huge stereotype. It is such an uncomfortable topic and I often find myself trying to hide which school I went to because I know that I will be automatically judged. Adam, second year, English: It’s not really an issue – there’s normally loads of banter surrounding it but it never really causes a problem. People can usually tell when someone is ‘posh’ or wealthy due to what they wear – there are indicators for it, for example signet rings. But in general I find it doesn’t really matter, in my experience anyway. Marina, second year, geography: I wouldn’t say it’s an issue, especially at English universities. I have definitely heard that at American universities it is more prevalent because there are rich families who donate endless amounts of money and get certain benefits, but at English university I don’t particularly see it as an issue.

OFFA was established.’ However, he said his organisation was fighting social barriers beyond university. ‘It’s about the whole student life cycle,’ he said. ‘We know kids from

Obviously when you meet people you have an idea of class, but it doesn’t really matter and people aren’t discriminatory. It is easy for people to fall into a clique but people are friends with each other based on whether they like them or not. I guess some people do fall into a group where they have mutual friends or perhaps their families know each other, which is certainly obvious within my own friendship group. My parents didn’t go to university and so I don’t have those links, but it hasn’t affected who I am friends with. George, third year, history: I don’t think it’s a huge issue because university lecturers and faculty members don’t care; it’s more about your interests. I would say Newcastle is a really equal place. It’s non-discriminatory in terms of class and wealth. Also Newcastle as a city is really cheap so it’s accessible to everyone – perhaps it’s different in somewhere like London.

disadvantaged areas start to fall behind in school. Even when you get into university, that’s not the end of the story – we know you’re less likely to get a first or a 2:1. What this is all about is creating

There’s loads of banter but it never causes a problem

Adam, English student

million pounds – what universities spent on recruiting underrepresented groups in 2014-15

Is there a class divide at university? Email your thoughts to editor@unipaper. co.uk

a society where [the place] you’re born, the colour of your skin, what your parents do shouldn’t limit your life chances. People should be able to go as far as their talents, abilities and desires take them.’

unis and colleges have plans in place to improve access in 2016-17


6|Research

April 2017

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Jobless? Voluntary work could make you feel worse Unpaid work no use if other support low  Amy Denman Giving a helping hand to those who need it often results in a feelgood vibe. However, research from the University of Salford shows for the unemployed, taking part in voluntary work can be bad for mental health. Researchers looked at the wellbeing of 2,500 unemployed people from 29 European cities who said they were taking part in unpaid work. They found volunteer work was beneficial to those receiving generous unemployment benefits. However, in countries where financial support for the

unemployed was low, such as Italy and Croatia, volunteering work had a negative impact on the participants’ mental health. Dr Daiga Kamerade, a senior lecturer at Salford, said: ‘Ever since the financial crisis, countries across Europe have seen higher levels of unemployment, or non-standard employment such as zero-hours contracts, and the response in many areas has been to counter this by encouraging unemployed people to take part in voluntary work. ‘We found that voluntary work during unemployment can have positive effects on wellbeing and mental health, which increase with higher rates of unemployment benefit, but volunteering regularly and getting little welfare support can damage one’s mental health.’

The study, which was published in the Work, Employment and Society journal, revealed for people living in countries with an average level of financial support, volunteering made no difference to mental health. Dr Daiga Kamerade added: ‘Unemployed people should be given opportunities to engage in volunteering to enhance their wellbeing, but financial support for the unemployed is far more important. ‘These findings do not suggest unemployment benefit claimants should be pressurised to do voluntary work. The wellbeing and mental health benefits that are generated through voluntary work may not exist at all if unemployed people are forced to carry out Mixed impact: Volunteering is not for everyone compulsory community work or

Fake limbs will use solar power

An extra layer of fat may keep you warm in the winter but it will not cushion the blow of pain, according to new research from Leeds Beckett University. The study looked at the differences in pain response between different groups of people. A group of scientists looked at 74 volunteers who were categorised as obese, overweight, or ‘normal’ according to their body mass index. The participants had pressure, cold and heat applied to their thumbs and waists. They were then asked to report at what point the pressure, cold and heat began to feel painful. The tests found the obese group felt pain from the pressure at a lower point than the ‘normal’ group. There was no significant difference in the point at which the different groups felt pain from the cold or heat tests. Dr Osama Tashani, a senior research fellow at the Centre for Pain Research at Leeds Beckett University, said: ‘Obese people are more likely to experience pain

‘Skin capable of touch sensitivity also opens the possibility of creating robots capable of making better decisions about human safety. ‘A robot working on a construction line, for example, is much less likely to accidentally injure a human if it can feel that a person has unexpectedly entered its area of movement.’

More gain more pain: Higher BMI subjects had low pain threshold

from factors such as the mechanical impact of increased weight on joints than people with a normal BMI. ‘But our study suggests that even in areas of the body which are not bearing weight, obese people are more susceptible to pressure pain.’ ‘The overweight group had the highest pressure pain threshold, which might be because there were more people in this group taking part in physical activities, which could also affect how a person feels pain.’

 Amy Denman While most of us have merely skin and bones in our hands, Marvel character Wolverine boasts retractable metal claws. But non-superhumans have more in common with the X-Men character than we may think, as mamals’ skeletons use metal to form. Scientists from the University of Manchester discovered trace

metals the bones of mamals, including copper, calcium, zinc and strontium. Researchers analysed the tiny bones from mouse limbs using intense x-ray beams ten billion times more intense than the sun. This took place at a specialist centre, the Diamond Light Source in Oxfordshire, which is shaped like a massive doughnut and acts like a giant microscope. Using the facility, the Manchester research team found each step the skeleton goes through as it develops

from softer cartilage into harder bone needs a different trace metal. There are three stages to bone development helped by metal traces, which leave ‘fingerprints’, identifyable by the strong x-ray. Lead author Dr Jennifer Anné said: ‘The reason bone needs to be able to store these metals is that many biological processes rely on the tiniest traces of chemical elements like zinc and strontium. ‘A good example of that is what we are seeing in the developing skeleton of our mouse. You get to

PICTURE: SYASYA_AKEMI

Super x-ray reveals bones’ link to X-Men superhuman Process captured for the first time ever

Spending cuts to sexual health services and help to quit smoking will cost billions in the long run, a review has shown. Government plans to save money on these clinics could backfire, according to Prof Simon Capewell at the University of Liverpool’s Institute of Psychology, Health and Society. Prof Capewell and his team looked at 52 studies into public health measures and found they saved money overall. ‘The recent UK increases in avoidable teen pregnancies, sexually transmitted infections, homelessness and suicides are thus predictable and deeply worrying,’ Prof Capewell said.

off’ brain part

 Amy Denman

Handy work: Dr Dahiya with a prototype

already made significant steps in creating prosthetic prototypes which integrate synthetic skin and are capable of making very sensitive pressure measurements. ‘Those measurements mean the prosthetic hand is capable of performing challenging tasks such as properly gripping soft materials, which others can struggle with.

Health cuts could cost us dearly

Obese people ‘have a lower pain threshold’ GPS ‘turns

 Amy Denman

You can get sun-powered versions of pretty much everything these days, from street lights to phone chargers. But fake skin with solar cells implanted in it sounds like something out of science fiction. That’s what scientists at the University of Glasgow have developed, however. The solar cells will be used to power a thin layer of ‘skin’, made from a substance called graphene, which can help the limb’s wearer detect pressure. The graphene layer conducts electricity, so it can be connected to electronic pressure sensors in parts of the prosthetic and it uses little energy, so can be powered by tiny solar cells implanted under it. Dr Ravinder Dahiya, from Glasgow’s School of Engineering, said: ‘My colleagues and I have

IN BRIEF

see a snapshot of these processes occurring throughout the limb; something that hasn’t been imaged before.’ Although it is well known that certain metals such as calcium can aid bone health, this is the first time a detailed image has been produced of the use of trace metals in bone development. Natural history professor Phillip Manning said: ‘Our work is slowly teasing new information from life on Earth that can be mapped from Claws of steel: Wolverine their mortal remains.’

Using a Sat Nav to get from A to B causes part of the brain to ‘switch off’, according to researchers. The team at University College London found using GPS systems stops part of the brain usually used to think of the correct route from working. The study looked at 24 volunteers who used a sat nav through London’s Soho while undergoing brain scans. Researchers studied activity in the hippocampus – part of the brain that helps memory and navigation – and the prefrontal cortex, which is involved in decision making. The study revealed the hippocampus decreased in activity when the satnavs were in use.

New wheat helps bones Specially bred wheat could help humans fight anaemia and give chickens stronger bones. The crop can be bred to produce high levels of an enzyme needed to help poultry break down a nutrient needed for bone growth, reducing the need for expensive supplements. The Nottingham Trent University researchers who carried out the work said the wheat could also help more than 700million people globally with anaemia caused partly by a diet high in grains and certain types of beans. Dr Emily Burton, head of the Poultry Research Unit at Trent, said: ‘It has been exciting to explore a completely different way of providing meat chickens with the phosphorous needed for healthy bones.’


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Promotional Feature The Interview

April 2016

TELL ME MORE...

 Patrick Hollis

W

E ALL have a friend in our group who is the liability – despite their best intentions, things just seem to happen to them. As I speak to Two Door Cinema Club frontman Alex Trimble, I start to get the impression the incident-prone member of his band is bass player Kevin Baird. Trimble is telling me about the time Baird caused a scare at the Isle Of Wight – the first festival the band played at – when they were 17 and 18. ‘We had no clue what we were doing,’ he says. ‘We just wanted to have a good time. We were drinking a lot and doing other things. ‘Kev passed out in one of the toilets and locked himself inside. He caused a festival-wide security alert – they thought someone had died.’ Trimble turned up with guitarist and backing singer Sam Halliday to find the portable toilet surrounded by security guards and police, all trying to get in. ‘They just found Kev

asleep inside,’ Trimble says. He next reels off a list of mishaps at their first Glastonbury in 2010, the year they released their debut album Tourist History. It’s a memory Trimble ‘always goes back to’. ‘We were basically kids,’ he says. ‘It was mad – it rained all the time and we just lost our f*****g minds. ‘I remember Kev woke up in someone else’s tent because he couldn’t find his way back to the camp. Also, this guy who was travelling with us and was meant to look after all of our stuff left a bag in another campsite. We lost our car keys and passports.’ Trimble also ended up face-down in the mud. ‘I woke up an hour before we had to go and play the Queen’s Head Stage, which was our biggest show

Trapped door: (l-r) bassist Kevin Baird, who locked himself in a toilet at the Isle Of Wight festival, singer Alex Trimble and lead guitarist and backing vocalist Sam Halliday

of the weekend,’ he adds. ‘Our managers went AWOL – it was a true Glastonbury experience.’ The band can also add ‘nearly getting arrested in a foreign country’ to their list of festival experiences. ‘Time and time again we’ve ended up in sticky situations,’ Trimble says. ‘There was another time when we were doing Splendour In The Grass in Australia.’ The 27-year-old tells me the band

I like to come early and watch a few bands, it helps me to get into the vibe of the venue for when you go and perform on stage

The horror buried in undead history

were invited to watch a DJ set on a boat in the middle of a lake. ‘Everyone was on the shore dancing,’ he says. ‘We were on the boat having a good time and were doing some things we maybe shouldn’t have and we didn’t realise everyone could see us. ‘We looked up and the whole shore of the lake was surrounded by security. These two boats started pulling out towards our boat – by this point we were sh****g ourselves. We thought “this is it, we’re going to jail”.

The Transfiguration director Michael O’Shea pays homage to some of the best movies of all time in his killer new vampire flick. Check out thetransfiguration.co.uk for more info

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 Susie Joseph N NEW vampire film The Transfiguration, master of the macabre and director Michael O’Shea demonstrates his love for movie magic with plenty of nods to silver screen classics, past and current. While there’s an extensive catalogue to choose from, we take a look at some of the most important homages made in this muted thriller.

Nosferatu (1922) Widely regarded as ‘the one that started it all’, Nosferatu is a classic vampire film and one of the most referenced pictures in horror’s cinematic history. And, like many before it, The Transfiguration shows its respect to the daddy of the genre. Lead character Milo (Eric Ruffin) has a video cassette copy on a

‘One boat arrived with a policeman in it – we all expected to be handcuffed and everything. ‘The guy said “I’m here to get you guys out of here”. So we jumped in the boat. He raced over to the other end of the lake and dropped us off. ‘We ended up running through the forest and managed to escape. It was a lucky ending to what could have been a terrible disaster.’ His band’s misdemeanours sound pretty rock ‘n’ roll, but the Northern Irish singer says festivals are not as VIP-focussed behind the scenes as

A love letter to the horror genre it may be, but The Transfiguration is far more contemplative than the average fan boy offering Make sure to read our full review of The Transfiguration at www.unipaper.co.uk – it’s got a lot of bite

fans might believe. shelf in his is bedroom and ‘Backstage not always thethe most film gets ahe brief mention when glamorous,’ says. ‘If we can, we’ll hetodismisses onefor of athe it try get to a hotel bittropes of R&R.’

established – that vampires burn up in sunlight. It’s quite hard to even make a movie of this genre without alluding to Nosferatu in some way, it was so groundbreaking. It did shamelessly plagiarise Bram Stoker’s classic Dracula, but it is still viewed as one of the scariest films of all time.

Let The Right One In (2008) Right off the bat, there are some stark comparisons to be made between this Swedish romantic horror film and The Transfiguration. Both make use of the interplay between two young, otherwise isolated, people and the connection that forms between them – overshadowed by one’s dark secret. Director Tomas Alfredson also favours a subtler approach in a genre that is regularly overhammed and heavily concentrated with clichés. Let The Right One In, like The Transfiguration, is a film for those who prefer a more implicit take on bloodsucking, utilising grungy urban scenery over cape swishing.

The Transfiguration follows troubled teen Milo (Eric Ruffin) who hides his fascination When I ask behind what makes backstage vampire sowith unsavoury, helore. says: ‘There’s a lot When the equally of stuff, butheitmeets is difficult to complain alienated Levine), when you’reSophie in that (Chloe position and the the twodream. form a bond that begins living to challenge Milo’s dark ‘The thing which can getobsession, me is blurring his fantasy into reality. when backstage becomes a bit of an A chilling portrait of violence, afterthought. It’s getting better – IThe Transfi guration is an atmospheric think people understand more. thriller setorganisers against thedon’t grit of New ‘But some York City. some bands are doing 30 understand perfectevery for fans of Let The or 40It’s festivals summer. Right One Near Dark, ‘When you In, getMartin, to a festival and Theare Lostno Boys, and Moonlight. there showers and no real place to be comfortable, it can get a bit tiring.’ But the indie threesome have not it’s hard notrevisiting to drawfamiliar comparisons been put off stages

to Moonlight, the film that won the Academy Award for Best Picture this year, as it also makes use of loose storytelling and heavy atmosphere. Aside from the cannibalism, The Transfiguration is quite similar to director Barry Jenkin’s awardwinning flick in many ways. They both focus on the struggles of a troubled protagonist, battling with isolation and self-acceptance. Any fans of the sensitive, moody charisma that made Moonlight a critics’ favourite will appreciate the subtlety of The Transfiguration, intermittently broken by a light stabbing.

Moonlight (2016) Although not directly referenced

LOGO of estate agent

Treble trouble Lead singer Alex Trimble on sticky situations his band have got into


Opinion

9

 Emily Swales I ask for Trimble’s personal favourite and he’s torn. ‘Glastonbury is always the one we try to spend as much time as possible at,’ he says. ‘I try to always make sure we aren’t at any other festival on that weekend.’ But there’s a challenger for his top spot across the Atlantic. ‘We did Bonnaroo festival in

Backstage is not always the most glamorous place

Alex Trimble

Tennessee last year and that was amazing,’ he says. ‘There’s not many festivals that maintain that vibe – it hasn’t been over-commercialised. ‘I would love to do it again.’ And though the band have now been together for ten years, Trimble is getting no less excited about their performances than when they started out. ‘It keeps getting better as we

move up the bills over the years,’ the 27-year-old says. ‘For example, we’re playing on the Lollapalooza tour in America so there are six or seven dates across South America with the same bands. ‘Every night we’re on before The Strokes, which is blowing my mind.’ He says he still has to pinch himself every time he performs ahead of the four-time NME Award winners.

OK to care: Politics may not always be cheery but it is important

Having a view is the in thing Respect us: A campaigner speaks at an anti-cuts demo

PICTURE: MAYA JUNDI

Apathy, ignorance, narcissism and frustration. and performing on new ones. These sometour of the Theirare festival thismany summer, factors to explain millennials’ whichsaid follows the release of latest apparent lack of interest in politics album Gameshow in October, and currenta headline affairs. slot at includes Yet, as someone placed Boardmasters plus showsinatthis Reading, demographic, I feeland suchCoachella. statements Leeds, Wilderness cannot account for every young person who demonstrates little interest in the political climate. Perhaps we need to consider whether not caring is actually a way of conforming to the conventional notions of adolescence. Social media is indispensable and influential for many millennials. I’ve seen countless articles online which give rules on what not to do on a first date, all of which advise people to avoid talking about politics and religion. I can’t help but feel sweeping statements such as this are going to shape an incorrect set of social norms and expectations. Although I enjoy talking about what colour I’ve painted my nails, I sometimes feel people avoid politically fuelled conversations for fear of being labelled uncool. However, it should be deemed cool to care and have an informed opinion about social and political issues. It seems impossible to expect teens to engage in conversations on current events when we’re portrayed as separate entities from the rest of the adult population. Jenni Herd, a 16-year-old from Ayrshire, wrote a letter to The Times replying to an article which looked at how parents and carers can handle their teens. Jenni described these perceptions of teenagers as incorrect and disrespectful and asked the newspaper to ‘stop teaching adults

how to behave around us and instead teach them to respect us’. There are a host of prevalent issues affecting the young people of today – rising house prices, tuition fees, climate change and cybercrime to name a few. The consequences of some will not reveal themselves for years

to come. Therefore, it’s important that we speak up about such issues, not just with the political elite but among ourselves also. This generation should not be discouraged from sharing our opinions with each other and the rest of the world. It is OK to have an opinion. It is OK to care.

Women should not fear subjects

In response to How do we rebalance the scales in our labs? on p4-5 of TUP’s March edition

 Deepa Patel After all these years, you’d think stereotypes and gender roles in society would be pretty much non-existent. However, after reading TUP’s article on women in STEM, it deeply upsets me to realise these ‘traditional’ stigmas still exist and are impacting course choices for prospective students today. A university course should be open and welcoming for anyone, so why are courses such as civil engineering still dominated by men? Abbey Frasi, who studied civil engineering at the University of Brighton said in the article there were about ten girls out of a total 85 Female wonders: Last month, students on her course. TUP spoke to women in STEM Statistics from the Women’s Engineering Society show the UK’s about erasing the stigma workforce contains the lowest percentage of female engineering

25

April 2017

Want to have your say on a current event? Email your comment to editor@unipaper.co.uk

professionals in Europe, at less than ten per cent. Some may say these statistics show that females simply aren’t interested in this subject. However, as electronic engineering student Kristina Grigorjeva said, many women don’t have the confidence or willingness to challenge themselves by studying

It shocks me to think females haven’t got the confidence or don’t want to be a minority on a STEM course

Deepa Patel

STEM subjects at university. It’s not because women aren’t interested, it is because expectations of what female and male students should study still exist. It shocks me to think females haven’t got the confidence or don’t want to be a minority on a STEM course, so they choose a course more suited to others’ expectations of what suits them. Why are female students still restricted by their gender, which

then determines their educational path, and consequently their career paths? I strongly believe gender stereotypes are confining individuals in both life and education. Surely traditional stereotypes should have begun to loosen by now? Both the STEM and WISE campaigns are constantly encouraging female students to pick subjects which were previously male dominated. We live in the 21st century – full of possibilities – and we all deserve the right to make our own educational choices and not feel afraid of being the only woman in the class. Students should not be limited by their gender. Stereotypes must begin to disappear. For more views on issues from food to feminism, visit unipaper.co.uk

April 2017

‘Their first album changed my life when I was a teenager,’ he says. ‘I learned to play every song on guitar and learned every word. ‘That band has played such a big part in my life and the fact that we’re on right before them is hard to believe. It’s totally surreal.’ Trimble says he likes to watch as many bands as possible. ‘I like to come down early and watch a few bands,’ he says. ‘It helps me to get into the vibe of the venue for when you go on stage. ‘Festivals are the best opportunity we get to see other bands – when you’re on tour it’s not viable. ‘You get to see whoever is supporting you or who you’re supporting, but you get the chance to check out so many new bands or the ones you already love.’

Two Door Cinema Club headline Boardmasters on Friday, August 11. Get your tickets at www.boardmasters.co.uk



Your Life

G

11

Students reveal their unique experiences at university.

ROWING up I wasn’t fat, just a little bit on the chubby side. At around 16, I decided I wanted to lose the weight and stick to it, so I did. I ate healthily and exercised regularly and over a couple of years I did manage to slim down. Even though I lost the weight, I didn’t lose my appetite – I still wanted to eat all the time. I’d been watching Adam Richman’s Man V. Food, thinking ‘I’m so hungry, I reckon I could do that’. I found the Gutbuster Challenge up in Newcastle during my second year of uni there. It was a 24oz burger with wedges and a milkshake and you had to finish it in 20 minutes. At the time it was a bit of a laugh and I called up a couple of my friends to do it with me. I was quietly confident beforehand, but I wasn’t sure how it would be because I’d never done an eating challenge before. Twenty minutes later, I’d literally just swallowed my last bite and the bell went. At the end, I was full, but not in pain or feeling ill – it was absolutely fine. I put a before and after photo up on my Facebook, where it got picked up by LAD Bible. They wrote an article on me and that was where it all started. Eventually, my friends convinced

me to start a Facebook page. Towards the end of third year and the start of fourth year I carried on doing eating challenges and videoing them. The more I was doing challenges, the more attention they were getting – it was a snowball effect, which is just so flattering. I did business marketing and management and for my dissertation, I thought it would be interesting to see whether a viral video had a tangible marketing effect – so whether a video of mine would actually bring people to the restaurants. I put discount codes for three restaurants at the end of my videos. They all went viral, with one going stupidly viral, and the pattern of how many people went to the restaurants matched with the views on my challenges. I don’t know how I managed to wing my dissertation on something so fun – it didn’t seem real. After I graduated from uni last June, LAD Bible and I agreed a permanent position was a good idea, so my role is now as a presenter and kind of a producer for them. If there’s a good idea involving London and (usually) food we’ll go out and film it. I do have to do all the boring dieting and exercise stuff which sucks, because I’m naturally a very lazy human being – I’m not one of

April 2017

I don’t know how I managed to wing my dissertation on something so fun

Kate Ovens

these people who are like ‘I love the gym!’ I go because I know I need to do it. I exercise a lot and I try my best to stay in shape. When I do go to the gym I go pretty hard and I love my cardio. During the last session I did a 22km run, so when I say I go hard, I mean I go hard. People only really see that one side of me in the challenges, but if they saw me day in and day out they’d realise I’m not like that at all. I used to work part-time as a children’s entertainer, dressing up as Elsa from Frozen, and after one party the girl who’d booked me came up to me and said ‘Do you have a Facebook page where I can leave a review?’ And I said ‘I have a Facebook page, it’s just not for this…’ I Woman vs food: Kate Ovens takes showed her my eating page and on an enormous eating challenge she just said ‘What?! I would never have expected that!’ That’s what I quite like about it: because people see me eating loads for the challenges they think they’ve got me completely sussed out, but I’m like ‘Nope, you haven’t at all’. I still keep up doing a challenge every two or three weeks, and I’m just trying not to jinx the life I have now because it’s so good.

How I became a competitive eater Newcastle University graduate Kate Ovens tells TUP how she shocks the internet by devouring a massive amount of food

Do you have an unusual story to tell? Email editor@ unipaper.co.uk


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What’s On

13

The Lowdown

April 2017

MELBOURNE

I

 Amy Denman

T TAKES a certain type of person to start a festival – someone who is creative, well versed in music and organised, which is why I was surprised when DJ Rob da Bank tells me Bestival was born from ‘some ideas on the back of a fag packet’. Now a successful annual event about to embark on its 13th year, it’s hard to think of the four-dayer as a splurge of thoughts written on rubbish. Robert Gorham, AKA Rob da Bank, thought up the idea with his wife, known as Josie da Bank in the industry, and a couple of friends. ‘It sounds a bit lame but it was me, my wife and our two partners and we just sat and threw some ideas around,’ he tells me. ‘There weren’t that many festivals around that time – 14 years ago – there was Reading, Glastonbury and a few others. There was nothing to base it on, so we made up our own.’ The exact details for the festival, which was held on the Isle of Wight but moves to Dorset this year, weren’t figured out straight away, but Rob and the team had a vision.

P16-17

MEGA ROUND-UP Who’s playing where at all the UK’s big festivals

P18-19

STARTING THE PARTY LeeFest founder on his garden gathering roots

‘We knew we wanted it to be a I can still magical escape from society so that remember was the driving force,’ he says. ‘We that feeling didn’t want it to be a boring tent and a of being like bar in a field, we wanted it to be a bit ‘wow all these more exciting than that.’ have turned After their not-so-official meeting up for our and finding someone to invest, the festival – this is 43-year-old says there were a lot of incredible’ ‘boring hoops to jump through’, from Rob da Bank meeting the police and fire services to getting a licence and land deal. ‘The Isle of Wight were a little bit suspicious of what we were going to do. I was quite well known as a BBC Radio 1 DJ and probably known for dance music so they probably thought it was going to be some insane rave with drug Party starter: addled teenagers,’ he says. However, once they got through J Ethe S M ORob N Dda Bank admin stages, the Goldsmiths alumnus created Bestival 13 tells me they didn’t have a problem years ago with selling tickets. his wife ‘We sold 4,000 in our first year which was more than we needed to,’ he says. After six months of organising, Rob was ready to show his brainchild to music fans.

It started on a fag packet

CHARLIE SLOTH The Radio 1Xtra DJ on awkward interviews

‘That was one of the most exciting bits, opening the gates on the first one and seeing all these great looking – not great looking – but interesting, cool people turning up to our own festival,’ he says. ‘It was a real proud moment. ‘To stand there on the stage later that day and look out and see – I thought it was a massive sea of people but it was only 4,000 – it felt huge. ‘I can still remember that feeling of being like “wow all these have turned up for our festival – this is incredible”.’ Since the first Bestival in 2004, its popularity has ballooned and it has won a number of awards. It’s safe to say the festival has found its own place on the circuit, with its imaginative fancy dress themes and ambitious structures making it stand out. The event even holds a Guinness World Record for the largest disco ball. I ask Rob which fancy dress

theme has been his favourite. ‘The underwater theme was pretty good, but unfortunately it poured with rain for three days so I got it in the neck for that,’ he laughs. ‘But yeah, there were some great underwater creatures.’ Although turning up at Bestival is already much like stepping into a magical realm, Rob tells me the budget restricts him from creating his dream event. ‘I wish we had an unlimited budget, then we could create the world’s best festival, no doubt about it. ‘I think we’ve got all the brains and imagination for it, but things are very expensive so it’s halfway there but we need a lot more money to make it really special.’ Despite enjoying his enviable career, Rob admits: ‘[Festivals are] a real double-edged sword – they’re an amazing thing to run but they also never get any easier.’

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Promotional Feature

April 2017

Could you be the ultimate baller? Players with deadly accuracy, nerves of steel and great team spirit could net £5k at the Bar Pong UK Championship  The University Paper Standing between you and eternal glory is ten cups, a litre of water and, of course, a whole load of ping pong balls. The Bar Pong UK Championship kicks off this May, and there’s an incredible £5,000 cash pot for the winning team, £2,500 for the runners up and £1,250 for the second runners up. On top of that there will be a nerve-jangling six-cup shoot out with an extra £250 to be won. If you’re brave enough to enter you will need to sign up for the qualifiers which are taking place across 40 venues in the UK, from Edinburgh to Cardiff, Northampton to Newcastle. The victorious team in each qualifier wins £250 and free entry to the grand final, which takes place at Walkabout Bar in Temple, London on Sunday, May 14 from 6pm. And if you live outside the capital, don’t worry, the Bar Pong team will contribute £200 towards your travel and accommodation. Participating teams will only be playing with water directly from sponsor Willow Water, with snacks from Tayto Group, so they have a clear head and straight aim. It will keep them hydrated throughout the night, so they’ve got no chance of running out of steam. But the final is not just going to showcase some cracking pong, there will also be special guest DJ appearances including Capital Xtra presenter Emma Conybeare and a celebrity championship before the winner is announced. So you’re convinced, but what is Bar Pong? The original game is generally played by teams of two in which

SIGN UP TO PLAY HERE

Team spirit: The Bar Pong UK team, are gearing up for a gripping championship this May

players take it in turns throwing a ping pong ball into the opposing team’s cup. Usually it’s played with beer but Bar Pong focuses on the game and social aspects, and plays with various liquids, not necessarily

alcohol. Their philosophy? It doesn’t matter what’s in the cup, as long as you get the ball in. They want everyone to have fun and #PongResponsibly. Bar Pong is a super-thrilling game (and competitive sport) if you are

It doesn’t matter what’s in the cup, as long as you get the ball in

looking for something to do with friends, but not worried about, or wanting to get drunk – it provides enough energy and adrenaline as it is. And when £5,000 is up for grabs, you won’t want to take your eye off the ball. The Bar Pong UK Championship is £30 to enter per person, and you will need a team of two – so grab a mate (you will need to choose carefully). To find your nearest qualifier venue, and to sign up, visit www. barponguk.com. You will find full details about the game, the rules and what you’ll need to take part. Any questions? Drop them an email on hello@barponguk.com Keep track of the championship and new venues on Twitter @BarPongUK, and get involved using #BarPong and #PongResponsibly. They can’t wait to see you there – and you’ll have to trust us, it’ll be bouncing.

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The Lowdown

15 April 2017

Hello

FOUR OF THE BEST

from The University Paper

The smell of summer is beginning to tease our nostrils, which means it’s almost time to bring out the disposable barbecues, sunglasses and – of course – hayfever tablets. It’s also time to splurge the last installment of your student loan on festival tickets. Who needs books and heating when you’ve got good memories and the chance to see your favourite acts – are we right? If you are an avid reader of TUP (which we’re sure many of you are) you will know festival season is our favourite time of year. With this in mind, we have made this month extra special for you, to ensure you will get the most out of the UK summer sun this year. Whether you are a welly

wearing, mosh pit pro or a newbie when it comes to roughing it in the middle of nowhere for the love of music, we’ve got you covered. We have a roundup of every major UK event, with highlights of the lineup and a bit of information to help you decide between Latitude and Leeds, Glastonbury and Gottwood or Boardmasters and Bestival. We’ve also got the dirt on Radio 1Xtra DJ Charlie Sloth’s craziest festival story and his most awkward interview, as well as his tips on which new grime acts to look out for. No one does crazy like Two Door Cinema Club though. We have not one but three stories of the Northern Irish trio’s festival madness in our double-page interview with frontman Alex Trimble. This month we also introduce

ARTISTS TO CATCH THIS SUMMER

Sunny times: TUP writer Alexandra Bullen enjoying V Fest last year

you to Paper Tiger, a freshly formed band from the University of Bristol who have some pretty obscure answers to our questions. With all that and more we would be very surprised if you were not tempted to get online and start shopping for a tent

straight away. However, before you hasten to the nearest camping supplier, take a cheeky peek at the ultimate glamping experience, which will set you back £6,000 for the weekend – small change for the rich and famous who want to be seen at the

world’s best fests but would rather head straight to the VIP bar than spend hours arguing with their mates as they pitch their own canvas. We can all dream. Much love

Stefflon Don’s inventive rhymes and wordplay have caught the attention of rap and grime fans alike. Her rich patois voice has led to comparisons with Nicki Minaj. She will play Wireless Festival.

The TUP team

Mura Masa’s unique musical production and powerful song lyrics have helped to build his fan base and get him a lot of attention from fans and the industry. Catch him when he plays Parklife in Manchester.

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Raye has a stage presence and voice that defies her tender age – she’s only 19. Her distinctive, sultry vocals have quickly attracted high-profile fans, including Charli XCX. She will perform at V Festival.

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Ray BLK’s songs are unapologetically English r‘n’b with a sparse, edgy backdrop. The 23-year-old claimed the BBC’s Sound Of 2017. You can see her at Lovebox Festival. jessjenkins.co.uk

Osazeme Osaghae


Festivals round up

2000trees

Boardmasters

Upcote Farm, Cheltenham, July 6 to 8, Slaves, Nothing But Thieves, Mallory Knox – If you’re sick of getting lost among the mobs, 2000trees offers a more intimate atmosphere with just 5,000 attending. There’s some excellent up-and-comers on show plus local ciders, ales and lagers. John Shaw

Watergate Bay and Fistral Beach, Cornwall, August 9 to 13, Two Door Cinema Club, Jamiroquai, alt-J – You know you’re in for a treat when packing a pair of flip flops is just as important as remembering the wellies. Not only is there an amazing line-up this year but Boardmasters, set on the stunning Cornish coast, boasts a pro surfing competition with some of the best athletes on the globe taking part. John Shaw

Beat-Herder Ribble Valley, Lancashire, July 14 to 16, Sleaford Mods, Trentemøller, Toots And The Maytals – Get your thinking caps on because this year’s fancy dress theme is the letter D. Whether you’re a duck, dinosaur or even Donald Trump there’s loads to do including a prosecco bar and a shack dedicated to Absinthe. John Shaw

Bestival Lulworth Estate, Dorset, September 7 to 10, The xx, A Tribe Called Quest, Dizzee Rascal – New venue and a new start for Bestival. No longer on the Isle of Wight, the four-dayer was moved to the Lulworth Estate – a wooded country plot on Dorset’s Jurassic Coast. It’s a big year for the decade old festival. History will be made. John Shaw

Blissfields Vicarage Farm, Woodmancott, July 6 to 8, Metronomy, The Cinematic Orchestra, Lady Leshurr – In the heart of Winchester’s beautiful countryside lays the wonderfully weird Blissfields. A fusion of creativity and madness awaits all those willing to lose themselves in the blissfulness. From big beats to creative workshops, it’ll be a weekend full of natural frivolity, hardcore skanking and wooden-spoonmaking. Louisa Kendal

Boomtown Fair Matterley Estate, Hampshire, August 10 to 13, Cypress Hill, Dusky, Frank Turner – Now in it’s ninth chapter, Boomtown Fair has been praised as the most immersive and theatrical festival going. Transforming the fields into a surreal city built on revolt and chaos, it offers revellers a weekend of escapism so contrary to ordinary existence. Louisa Kendal

Camden Rocks Camden, London, June 3, The Coral, The Damned, The Rifles – What better place to celebrate great music than the home of London’s rock’n’roll scene? Historic venues such as Electric Ballroom, KOKO and Proud will play host to more than 250 bands and artists (plus a horde of trendy music lovers). Leather jackets are optional but advised. John Shaw

Citadel Victoria Park, London, July 16, Foals, Bonobo, Wild Beasts – A unique oneday festival celebrating the creativity and artistry of London. Centred in the

heart of London’s Victoria Park the event first opened its doors in 2015 and has since gone from strength to strength, boasting past headline acts as Bombay Bicycle Club, Ben Howard and Sigur Rós. Will Green

Cocoon In The Park Temple Newsam, Leeds, July 8, Sven Väth, Adam Beyer, Joseph Capriati – All the best ideas are thought of by friends and that is exactly what happened with Cocoon In The Park. Sven Väth and the team behind Mint Club and Mint Warehouse got together in 2009 and came up with the open air event with one stage which would present music lovers with the greatest DJs, visual effects and technology in the middle of the Yorkshire countryside. Bliss. Amy Denman

Common People Southampton and Oxford, May 27 to 28, Pete Tong, Sean Paul, Tom Odell – What better way to spend a bank holiday than listening to your favourite acts? If that sounds like a dream come true for you, Common People have you sorted. With two days taking place in two separate parts of England, you’ve got every chance to grab yourself a ticket. Amy Denman

Creamfields Daresbury, Cheshire, August 24 to 27, Andy C, deadmau5, Stormzy - The legendary dance festival returns to the fields of Cheshire, for yet another incarnation of its electronic trailblazing. With its bombastic mix of fireworks and incredible light shows,

dance fans will be in heaven as Creamfields brings the biggest names in the biz together for a boogie over four days. Tom Gellatly

Dot To Dot Bristol, Nottingham and Manchester, May 26 to 28, Sundara Karma, Amber Run, The Growlers – Dot To Dot sees the best new bands from far and wide bounce from Manchester to Bristol to Nottingham across a single weekend. Previous performers include Wolf Alice, The 1975, Florence And The Machine and even Ed Sheeran. So if you want to catch the next best thing, Dot To Dot is the festival to do just that. Joe Cadman

Download Donington Park, Derby, June 9 to 11, System Of A Down, Biffy Clyro, Aerosmith - Taking place at what it calls ‘the spiritual home of rock’ – Donington Park – Download is all about bringing together classic acts and the hard-rocking up-and-comers of today. With an excellent mix of headliners this year there will be something for everyone to air guitar along to. Tom Gellatly

Electric Fields Drumlanrig Castle, Thornhill, September 1 to 2, Frightened Rabbit, Dizzee Rascal, The Jesus And Mary Chain – Secreted deep within a forest in Scotland, Electric Fields combines a plethora of circus-like attractions with some truly unique music. With a diverse line-up, these are woods you’ll want to get lost in. Tom Gellatly

Farr Festival Bygrave Wood, Hertfordshire, July 13 to 15, Todd Terje, Booka Shade, Craig

Richards – You wouldn’t think an uninhabited forest in Hertfordshire would be the place to go to see some of the best electronic music acts doing their thing, but you’d be wrong. Farr Festival features a huge array of the biggest names in the genre, combined with some truly awesome daytime experiences to keep you entertained. Tom Gellatly

FestEvol Invisible Wind Factory, Liverpool, April 30, Wild Beasts, Pulled Apart By Horses, The Parrots – Taking place in the enormous Invisible Wind Factory, this year’s FestEvol sees Wild Beasts gracing the Evol stages for the eighth time. New names to the festival include Madrid-based The Parrots and Ulrika Spacek, who are sure to electrify the crowd with their insane live show. Tom Gellatly

Field Day Victoria Park, London, June 3, Aphex Twin, Lady Leshurr, Mura Masa – Going into its 11th year, Field Day looks set to deliver an even better day of raving than ever with headliners as huge as Aphex Twin and Mura Masa sure to delight the assembled masses in London’s Victoria Park – just in time for Lovebox two weeks later. Tom Gellatly

Glastonbury Worthy Farm, Shepton Mallet, June 21 to 25, Radiohead, Foo Fighters, Ed Sheeran – The big one, the Holy Grail of festivals, the shining light of hippie culture. To be at Glastonbury is to experience the unparalleled energy of happiness that exerts itself from every last person, infant to festival veteran, all around the fantasy farm on which you party. Jack Hobson

Gottwood Carreglwyd, Anglesey, June 8 to 11, Crazy P Soundsystem, Craig Richards,

Famous faces: Jess Glynne, left, will play at Wildlife, while The 1975, right, will appear at Latitude and Parklife

House warming party: The xx, right, will help welcome Bestival to its new venue in Dorset

Erol Alkan – You’ll be hard-pressed not to have your breath taken away the second you step into this magical gathering in the Welsh countryside. Retaining its boutique size despite its booming popularity in recent years, Gottwood features laser domes, live painting, giant owls and all the stages you could want. Tom Gellatly

Isle of Wight Seaclose Park, Newport, June 8 to 11, Arcade Fire, Clean Bandit, Run DMC – This historic shindig is said to have been even bigger than Woodstock in its early days and has seen Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, David Bowie and Coldplay make the journey over to the tiny island in the English Channel. This year, David Guetta, Run DMC, Zara Larsson, Bastille and Clean Bandit will ferry on down to the island to play on its legendary stages. Amy Denman

Kendal Calling Lowther Deer Park, Cumbria, July 27 to 30, Stereophonics, Manic Street Preachers, Franz Ferdinand – Set against a backdrop of beautiful woodland, Kendal Calling has rocketed in size and popularity over the past few years. More than 10,000 people now descend on the Lake District to experience an eclectic line up of well-established acts and exciting newcomers. Who said it was grim up north? Lucy Milburn

LeeFest John Darlings Farm, Kent, August 10 to 12, Annie Mac, Jake Bugg, Wild Beasts – Many of us are familiar with LeeFest’s humble beginnings, as the story featured on an advert for Android two years ago. However, its history is not the only interesting thing about it. Visitors will choose between three tribes, the lostboys, the mermaids and the pirates, with each tribe comes a realm where you embrace fancy dress to the fullest. On top of the childlike fun is a cracking line-up to match any other fest. Amy Denman


17 April 2016

The clock is ticking. If you are still umming and ahhing about which festival to go to, there’s not a lot of time left. Check out our comprehensive guide and let us help you make up your mind... Latitude Henham Park, Beccles, July 13 to 16, The 1975, Mumford & Sons, Fleet Foxes – Latitude’s thick forests and glistening natural lake are entwined with performance spaces for everyone from New Order to the National Ballet, leading Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker to label the site as a utopia – and he’s not wrong. Want to go wild in the woods? Latitude. Want to sip Sauvignon in the Suffolk sun? Latitude. Harry Tidswell

Live at Leeds Leeds, April 29, Slaves, Wild Beasts, White Lies – Live At Leeds is an explosive one day music festival taking place in the heart of the city centre. If you’re wanting to see the next big thing then you won’t want to miss this with bands such as Catfish And The Bottlemen and Royal Blood having played in the past. Live At Leeds is certainly one you won’t want to miss. Laurence Mulligan

outside spa to indulge in. And that is all before the abundance of acts on offer. Amy Denman

Lovebox Victoria Park, London, July 14 to 15, Frank Ocean, Chase & Status, Jamie XX – This inner-city gem originated as a London club night but today, it is an acclaimed weekend festival that attracts some of the biggest names in dance and pop. Appealing to the cool kids of the East End and beyond, Lovebox is one of the highlights of summer in the capital. Lucy Milburn

Love Saves The Day Eastville Park, Bristol, May 27 to 28, Little Dragon, Fat Freddy’s Drop, Kate Tempest – An underrated treasure of a weekend festival, located in the edgiest city of the moment. If you’re into grime, house, drum ‘n’ bass or jungle, this festival is well worth checking out. Ruby Holliday

Liverpool Sound City

MADE

Clarence Dock, Liverpool, May 25 to 28, Metronomy, The Kooks, White Lies – It’s party time in Liverpool. Sound City festival celebrates its tenth anniversary this year with a line-up that boasts the perfect mix of big names and the best of the thriving local scene. So you can expect one hell of a shindig down on the docks. Joe Cadman

The Digbeth Triangle, Birmingham, July 29, Chase & Status, Giggs, Gorgon City – Billed as Birmingham’s biggest music event, MADE showcases live and electronic music, massive, psychedelic murals and street food stalls, all within the outdoor and indoor spaces of the Rainbow Venues. Henry Edwards

Lost Village Lincolnshire, August 24 to 27, Moderat, De La Soul, Dixon – If improv is your thing, this is the ideal weekend for you. Set in a secluded woodland, the event immerses you in a narrative about a Lost Village with a cast of actors hired to make the experience truly convincing. This not the only thing that makes Lost Village stand out from the rest, as the event puts a luxurious twist to the average festival, with some glamorous camping options, fancy food and even an

NASS Royal Bath & West Showground, Shepton Mallet, July 6 to 9, Method Man and Redman, Pendulum, Kano – This action sports festival is definitely one for the thrill-seeker. You can decide whether to catch huge headliners or witness breathtaking skateboarding and BMX displays, or just sit back and enjoy a combination of both. Tom Gellatly

Parklife

Standon Calling

Heaton Park, Manchester, June 10 to 11, The 1975, Frank Ocean, Boy Better Know – Parklife’s eclectic musical lineups and consistent party atmosphere marks this event as a staple on the calendar of any festival lover. The mix of affordability and prominent music from across the world makes it the perfect end of year celebration for any student. Will Green

Standon Lordship, Hertfordshire, July 27 to 30, Orbital, Clean Bandit, Slaves – This intimate event began as a birthday barbecue, making this the coolest birthday ever. Standon Calling was launched in 2001 by birthday boy Alex Trenchard, and is well known for its surprises – in 2005 after the final act, Alex shouted ‘don’t go to bed’ and a number of fairies, who were disguised with cloaks in the crowd, threw off their disguises and led visitors to a surprise all-night party. This year the aristocratic festival organiser brings you Clean Bandit, Slaves and Idris Elba. Also, on another fun note, dogs are allowed in. Amy Denman

Reading and Leeds Little John’s Farm, Reading and Bramham Park, Leeds, August 25 to 27, Kasabian, Eminem, Muse – Despite being best known as a rite of passage for young, curious teenagers, the festival can carry those through their young, angsty years to their twenties. R+L never fails to disappoint the generations of rock fans that flock to its muddy fields every year. Danielle Ursell

Secret Garden Party Abbots Ripton, Huntingdon, July 20 to 22, Crystal Fighters, Metronomy, Ray BLK – Launched as a healthy alternative to mainstream music festivals, Secret Garden Party prides itself on its stylised, boutique atmosphere and offers an immersive experience of art, music and selfdiscovery. 2017 will be the final year for SGP as we know it, so the utopian festival is not one to be missed. Lucy Milburn

Slam Dunk Birmingham, Leeds and Hatfield, May 27 to 29, Enter Shikari, Don Broco, Bowling For Soup – The three day party jumps from Birmingham to Leeds and finishes with a cracking shindig at the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield. There’s also a new mega ticket deal that will give you entry to every day. Is there a better way to see the country? John Shaw

Cap it off: Catch Rag‘n’Bone Man, right, at The Great Escape

SW4 Clapham Common, London, August 26 to 27, Pendulum, Eric Prydz, Sigma – The long-running festival bringing underground house and tech to Clapham Common looks set to feature its biggest headliners yet. Pendulum, Deadmau5 and Eric Prydz are all among the stars poised to entertain the crowds in the capital during the August Bank Holiday. Tom Gellatly

The Great Escape Brighton, May 18 to 20, Cabbage, Rag’n’Bone Man, Ray BLK – It’s said that Brighton’s Great Escape festival is possibly the most diverse festival on the UK circuit and it’s easy to see why. Offering more than 400 of the best up and coming artists in 35 venues every May, it’s the perfect way to kick off your festival season. Joe Cadman

Tramlines Sheffield, July 21 to 23, The Libertines, Metronomy, Cabbage – The jewel in

Sheffield’s crown returns for its eighth year with possibly the best line-up so far. Transforming the Steel City into a bubbling musical melting pot for a weekend, this is easily one of the best inner city festivals around. You’d be a fool to miss out. Joe Cadman

Truck Hill Farm, Steventon, July 21 to 23, The Libertines, Franz Ferdinand, The Vaccines – It may be marketed as a small festival, but Truck certainly does not bring in small acts. Indie bands such as The Libertines and The Vaccines rule the roost this year but there is a diverse mix of dance, rock and reggae too. So, for value for money, and assurance that you won’t lose your friends or have to walk 30 minutes to your tent, choose Truck. Ruby Holliday

V Festival Hylands Park, Chelmsford and Weston Park, Staffordshire, August 19 to 20, P!nk, Jay Z, Rudimental – V Festival is all about the variety. Although the party has recently become renowned for its pop music, last year hosted a line-up for festival goers of all types. If you consider your music taste as a mixed bag then V Festival suits you perfectly. Alexandra Bullen

We Are FSTVL Damyns Hall Aerodrome, Upminster, May 26 to 28, Craig David, Dizzee Rascal, Carl Cox – Just 20 minutes from central London, We Are FSTVL is an award winner and prides itself in combining the biggest names in electronic dance music with some of the world’s leading club brands and labels. This year, Craig David, Basement Jaxx, Dizzee Rascal and Giggs will take to the stage. Amy Denman

Wildlife Festival Brighton City Airport, Shoreham-bySea, June 9 to 10, Fatboy Slim, Jess Glynne, Dizzee Rascal – Taking place at Brighton City Airport, Wildlife Festival brings a tropical twist to the south east with its forest-themed decorations and floral vibe, ensuring you truly feel like you’re partying in the middle of a safari. With genrespanning headliners like Fatboy Slim, Stormzy and Jess Glynne, there’s something for everyone at this year’s iteration. Tom Gellatly

Wireless Finsbury Park, July 7 to 9, Chance The Rapper, Skepta, The Weeknd – Not only because of the variety of acts you’ll see there but also because of the all-round good vibes. Listen to local, upcoming artists as well as the old school ones. Who wants to be stuck in mud while camping when you can enjoy your favourite music all in a day in London town? Osazeme Osaghae

Y Not Festival Pikehall, Derbyshire July 27 to 30, Stereophonics, Two Door Cinema Club, The Vaccines – In the heart of the panoramic Peak District, Y Not continues to flourish with its small, community ethos. It has won the hearts of festival veterans and first timers alike with its cheap ticket prices, huge headliners and diverse selection of emerging talent. Lucy Milburn

Redemption: Dave Grohl and Foo Fighters will have a second shot at headlining Glastonbury after they pulled out in 2015 when the frontman broke his leg


Festivals

How to start a MeFest

A

 Tom Gellatly S TEENAGERS, most of us will probably have thrown a house party we then tried to hide from our parents. For the majority, this ended with us being grounded for several weeks and our allowances being docked. But Lee Denny found a genius way to get around his parents’ ‘no house parties’ rule by founding his own garden festival, imaginatively called LeeFest. See? Technically not a house party. Although many of us have

We’re 11 years into LeeFest and we’re still getting everything wrong all the time

Sick of the same old summer events? The founder of LeeFest tells us how you can craft you own

Brainy businessman: Lee Denny founded LeeFest in 2006

escaped our parents’ strict rules, it’s not too late to do the same – if you’ve yet to find a festival that ticks all your boxes, why not create one that does? We caught up with Denny to get some tips on running your own successful event. ‘The number one most important thing – the mantra we always had – is just to make things happen,’ he said. ‘It’s too easy for ideas to just exist in people’s heads and never make it into reality, because they are anxious about that first step, or they feel like it needs to be perfectly planned. While planning and

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19 April 2017

learning is important, it’s nowhere near as important as just doing it and seeing what happens.’ Denny said wannabe party planners should not let the fear of making a mistake hold them back. ‘Once you actually just get down to making your idea a reality, you will learn a s**tload, because you will inevitably get it 100 per cent wrong,’ he added. ‘We’re 11 years in and we are still getting everything wrong all the time, because we’re always trying something new and pushing boundaries for ourselves and the festival market. ‘Those things can only really be done by taking risks and stepping into the unknown.’ Although the successful twodayer has grown in a number of ways over the years, Denny claims not much has changed about the creative process. ‘We still have that same mindset of “right, here’s an idea, let’s go, let’s do it, let’s not hang around too much in the planning phase”,’ he says. ‘The team is now really huge and everybody’s creating their own little worlds within the big universe of the festival. ‘It’s nice, because what the festival was about was giving people opportunities to play music and create things they wanted to create, or experience new things, and that shouldn’t all come from one or two people’s heads. ‘It works best when it comes from everybody involved.’ Although the creative freedom has remained the same since the festival began, it is almost unrecognisable from its humble yet rebellious beginnings. In 2006 Denny’s parents went away for the weekend and left their 16-year-old son home alone in their house in Beckenham, London, banning him from having any parties in the house. He and his friends saw an opportunity to get around his parents’ warning on a technicality, and instead of a house party, invited friends round to Denny’s garden for the very first LeeFest. ‘I was really scared at the first one, thinking “oh my god, what are we doing, this could all go horribly wrong”,’ he said. ‘It’s exactly the same now – but you just get used to

NOW

THEN FROM A BACK YARD BEGINNING, HOW HAS LEE FEST CHANGED? LeeFest founder Lee Denny reveals how he has seen his event grow. Then: The inaugural LeeFest pulled a crowd of 150 Now: This year, the festival will host 5,000 party people Then: It all started in the ‘tiny suburban back garden’ of Denny’s parents’ house

those higher stakes.’ More than a decade down the line and LeeFest has grown into one of the best loved festivals in the country, with crowds continuing to grow year on year. So is there a moment as a festival organiser when you realise you’ve stumbled on something special?

elation, and then relief,’ he laughed. ‘Afterwards there’s this partly adrenaline-fuelled, partly tired session where we sit down and say, “so guys, next year, bigger and better, yeah?”.’ He said many of his creative ideas and inspiration over the years had come from these post-festival

We’re always trying something new and pushing the boundaries – that can only be done by taking risks ‘It’s normally after every festival,’ Denny said. ‘After you’ve gone through all these crazy and stressful bits beforehand and people actually start to come and the festival begins, you start to think “oh my god, wow, it’s working – people are here, they’re smiling and they’re having an incredible time”. ‘That turns into a feeling of

debriefings. ‘The ideas just start flowing out and it’s our most productive time,’ he added. ‘I guess that’s the moment where I think “we could be on to something here” – just after we’ve spent time with those people having an amazing party and experiencing the festival for ourselves.’

Spellbinding stages: Lianne La Havas during her gig at last year’s LeeFest in Edenbridge, Kent, below

For more on music, go to www. unipaper.co.uk

Now: The festival now has its own site with camping in Kent Then: The original lineup was made up of 11 bands and two comedians Now: LeeFest 2017 has 11 stages and more than 140 bands and DJs Then: The first budget was £500 Now: ‘We’ll spend £750,000 this year,’ Denny says

Pep talk over: How do I set myself up? If you’re feeling inspired by Lee Denny’s story, he has even more great advice to share. The LeeFest founder has given TUP a few practical steps for anyone who fancies setting up their own festival – in a back garden or beyond.

1» Recruit some help Your team are everything. You have to build and run a small town that will only exist for three days, and you need that town to have the most amazing atmosphere ever, but you can only do that if you have some brilliant people to work with. The LeeFest team inspire me every day with their energy and effort – I love them dearly.

now – they are not even stages anymore, it’s a whole immersive world. You don’t have to start that big, but you can start with the same creative approach and make something out of what you’ve got available instead of just going for a traditional idea. Our first stage was made from an old trampoline. My favourite one is the Goldmine – a 1,000 capacity rave in the woods, which is in the entrance to an old mine.

5» Get bands and other acts on board Try to work with artists you are really passionate about – promoting their work is a lot easier when you are in love with it yourself.

2» Think of a name

6» Food, drink and toilets

Naming it after yourself might seem funny when you are 16, but it gets embarrassing when someone asks you what your job is – you look like a narcissistic, crazy fool.

Choosing the food is my favourite part – although staring at pictures of amazing street food while you are stuck in an office can make you feel quite hangry.

3» Get permits and licenses from the authorities

7» Health and safety

We didn’t do this for the first few years, but we got in a fair bit of trouble for it. It’s fun to break the rules, but it does catch up with you. I guess everyone will have to make their own call here.

4» Stages We really go to town on our stages

Don’t skimp on this stuff. When we invite 5,000 people to our parties we feel very responsible for their welfare and work extremely hard to ensure they are completely safe and cared for on site. We are one big family.

8» Tickets and marketing We’re very lucky that word about LeeFest has spread organically to a

group of really awesome people, but communicating with everyone still takes a lot of time and resources. Don’t underestimate the volume of the marketing work to be done – this is where festivals live and die.

9» Security This is always a tricky balance to achieve. Their job is to protect the special atmosphere for the majority by ensuring that a minority can’t ruin it. They need to be firm but fair. We attend any key security briefings and incidents ourselves to ensure that everything is being handled within our guidelines.

10» Keep the artists happy Their job is to make people feel a sense of wonder and awe and the reason we have booked them is because they can do this so well. Our job is to support them in doing that by making sure they have exactly what they need, be it a bottle of whiskey or the world’s biggest confetti cannon.

11» Cleaning up after

everyone's gone home

It’s way too easy to ignore this. Many, many times the clean-up has completely broken the team. It’s easy to think ‘we'll sort that after the event’ when you are in the heat of the stress beforehand. But you will regret it when there are only five shattered mates staring at 20 acres of mess.


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23

Music

RITISH music is the best it’s ever been. And if you don’t believe that coming from me, take it from DJ Charlie Sloth, who has hosted stars from Kano to AJ Tracey on his Radio 1Xtra show. ‘In terms of home grown music we’re in the best place we’ve ever been,’ Sloth says. ‘There’s so much talent over here that has been slept on for years. Musically, creatively, artistically – I think were on top of the world right now.’ The presenter has championed UK grime acts including Stormzy and Giggs, whose track Of Course he produced. And he says there’s plenty more talent on the rise, tipping Not3s, who’s already had more than three million views on the YouTube video for his song Addison Lee, and Yxng Bane for big things this year. And he is the right person to ask. The Radio 1Xtra DJ has been involved in the music scene for nearly 15 years. He started off working on pirate radio in ‘lift shafts in a tower block in the middle of east London’ and pulling himself up the career ladder. ‘It’s been non stop,’ he says. ‘On the come-up I was working seven days a week – 18 hour days with no holiday.

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 Amy Denman

April 2017

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asking questions I was told I wasn’t allowed to ask and she was like “stop the interview”. ‘I was like “why?” and she was like “stop the interview”, so we stopped. ‘Her management came in and the interview got cut short, then they told us what could and couldn’t go out. ‘It was really, really awkward.’ It’s not the first time his big personality has given interviews a bit of an edge. ‘I’m quite an awkward guy anyway,’ he explains. ‘Some people don’t know how to take me, especially if they don’t know who I am. ‘They come into the studio and there’s this loud, larger than life person shouting in their face and they’re like “OK, who is that?”’ But his extroverted nature – he calls himself ‘the best looking fat guy in the universe’ – is what attracts so many listeners to his shows on Radio

Ayia Napa to Leeds Festival to Creamfields and then onto Ibiza. After a hectic couple of days, Sloth had just finished playing a set at Ushuaia in Ibiza with Tinie Tempah, when his manager told him to get ready to leave as they were planning to catch a flight back to the UK in the next five minutes, before going on to Zante in Greece. ‘The next thing I know, I wake up and it’s 9.30am,’ he says. ‘I wake up on this beach and I’m like “where am I?” I can’t call anyone, my phone’s dead and I’m just like “whoa” and I’m proper burnt from the sun. ‘I go and charge my phone and turn it on and hundreds of messages start coming through.

I asked Amber Rose questions I was told not to and she stopped the interview – it was awkward I thought that once I got to where I wanted to be it would change, but if anything it’s just got more intense.’ The 29-year-old is far from work shy, and has dabbled in a number of different projects which have all contributed to his success. ‘I’ve done everything involving new media to get where I’m at,’ he says. ‘We could be here for a day talking about my actual journey, but what it all came down to was self belief and hard work. As long as you believe in yourself and are willing to put the hours in, you can achieve.’ But some parts of his job have not come naturally to the north Londoner. ‘I’ve had quite a lot of awkward interviews’ he says. ‘I think the most awkward interview I’ve ever done was probably with Amber Rose. ‘Generally what happens when a big name comes in is you’re told what you can and can’t ask, but I never abide by that – if you come to the studio I’m gonna ask you what I wanna ask you,’ he tells me. ‘I started

1Xtra and fans to his live giggs and festivals sets. And he’s had some good interviews. ‘Roll Safe was really fun,’ he says of the parody character, played by Kayode Ewumi. ‘He’s a genius. He didn’t step out of character once.’ He’ll be appearing at Lost And Found and MADE Festival, which is held in the old industrial spaces of the Rainbow Venues in Birmingham’s Digbeth Triangle. ‘I’ve played at the location before but not MADE,’ Sloth says. ‘The line up is sick so to be on the event gases me.’ Other festivals he has played at include Reading and Creamfeilds, and he has some stories to tell. As he begins to tell me about a tale from Glastonbury last year, – which was apparently a ‘mad one’ – he interrupts himself. ‘I’ve got a better story actually.’ He recalls how he travelled from

‘I call my tour manager and say “bro, I’m on this beach I don’t even know where I am” he’s like “bro, I went and reported you missing to the police” I’m like “oh my god”. ‘I sent him my location on WhatsApp and he came and picked me up. The story became legendary. Everyone was like “rah you got sand in your shoes Sloth” I was like “ah leave it man”. That was a crazy one.’ Despite last year’s shenanigans, Sloth is excited to play live again this year and he seems to have a natural talent for picking the perfect tunes. I ask if he has a secret to getting an audience pumped. ‘Just play big records and play them well,’ he says. ‘It’s not what you play, it’s how you play it.’ Charlie Sloth will be performing at MADE Festival on Saturday, July 29


The Interview  Patrick Hollis

W

E ALL have a friend in our group who is the liability – despite their best intentions, things just seem to happen to them. As I speak to Two Door Cinema Club frontman Alex Trimble, I start to get the impression the incident-prone member of his band is bass player Kevin Baird. Trimble is telling me about the time Baird caused a scare at the Isle Of Wight – the first festival the band played at – when they were 17 and 18. ‘We had no clue what we were doing,’ he says. ‘We just wanted to have a good time. We were drinking a lot and doing other things. ‘Kev passed out in one of the toilets and locked himself inside. He caused a festival-wide security alert – they thought someone had died.’ Trimble turned up with guitarist and backing singer Sam Halliday to find the portable toilet surrounded by security guards and police, all trying to get in. ‘They just found Kev

asleep inside,’ Trimble says. He next reels off a list of mishaps at their first Glastonbury in 2010, the year they released their debut album Tourist History. It’s a memory Trimble ‘always goes back to’. ‘We were basically kids,’ he says. ‘It was mad – it rained all the time and we just lost our f*****g minds. ‘I remember Kev woke up in someone else’s tent because he couldn’t find his way back to the camp. Also, this guy who was travelling with us and was meant to look after all of our stuff left a bag in another campsite. We lost our car keys and passports.’ Trimble also ended up face-down in the mud. ‘I woke up an hour before we had to go and play the Queen’s Head Stage, which was our biggest show

Trapped door: (l-r) bassist Kevin Baird, who locked himself in a toilet at the Isle Of Wight festival, singer Alex Trimble and lead guitarist and backing vocalist Sam Halliday

of the weekend,’ he adds. ‘Our managers went AWOL – it was a true Glastonbury experience.’ The band can also add ‘nearly getting arrested in a foreign country’ to their list of festival experiences. ‘Time and time again we’ve ended up in sticky situations,’ Trimble says. ‘There was another time when we were doing Splendour In The Grass in Australia.’ The 27-year-old tells me the band

‘One boat arrived with a policeman in it – we all expected to be handcuffed and everything. ‘The guy said “I’m here to get you guys out of here”. So we jumped in the boat. He raced over to the other end of the lake and dropped us off. ‘We ended up running through the forest and managed to escape. It was a lucky ending to what could have been a terrible disaster.’ His band’s misdemeanours sound pretty rock ‘n’ roll, but the Northern Irish singer says festivals are not as VIP-focussed behind the scenes as

I like to come early and watch a few bands, it helps me to get into the vibe of the venue for when you go and perform on stage were invited to watch a DJ set on a boat in the middle of a lake. ‘Everyone was on the shore dancing,’ he says. ‘We were on the boat having a good time and were doing some things we maybe shouldn’t have and we didn’t realise everyone could see us. ‘We looked up and the whole shore of the lake was surrounded by security. These two boats started pulling out towards our boat – by this point we were sh****g ourselves. We thought “this is it, we’re going to jail”.

fans might believe. ‘Backstage is not always the most glamorous,’ he says. ‘If we can, we’ll try to get to a hotel for a bit of R&R.’

When I ask what makes backstage so unsavoury, he says: ‘There’s a lot of stuff, but it is difficult to complain when you’re in that position and living the dream. ‘The thing which can get me is when backstage becomes a bit of an afterthought. It’s getting better – I think people understand more. ‘But some organisers don’t understand some bands are doing 30 or 40 festivals every summer. ‘When you get to a festival and there are no showers and no real place to be comfortable, it can get a bit tiring.’ But the indie threesome have not been put off revisiting familiar stages

Treble trouble Lead singer Alex Trimble on sticky situations his band have got into


25 April 2017

and performing on new ones. Their festival tour this summer, which follows the release of latest album Gameshow in October, includes a headline slot at Boardmasters plus shows at Reading, Leeds, Wilderness and Coachella.

I ask for Trimble’s personal favourite and he’s torn. ‘Glastonbury is always the one we try to spend as much time as possible at,’ he says. ‘I try to always make sure we aren’t at any other festival on that weekend.’ But there’s a challenger for his top spot across the Atlantic. ‘We did Bonnaroo festival in

Backstage is not always the most glamorous place

Alex Trimble

Tennessee last year and that was amazing,’ he says. ‘There’s not many festivals that maintain that vibe – it hasn’t been over-commercialised. ‘I would love to do it again.’ And though the band have now been together for ten years, Trimble is getting no less excited about their performances than when they started out. ‘It keeps getting better as we

move up the bills over the years,’ the 27-year-old says. ‘For example, we’re playing on the Lollapalooza tour in America so there are six or seven dates across South America with the same bands. ‘Every night we’re on before The Strokes, which is blowing my mind.’ He says he still has to pinch himself every time he performs ahead of the four-time NME Award winners.

‘Their first album changed my life when I was a teenager,’ he says. ‘I learned to play every song on guitar and learned every word. ‘That band has played such a big part in my life and the fact that we’re on right before them is hard to believe. It’s totally surreal.’ Trimble says he likes to watch as many bands as possible. ‘I like to come down early and watch a few bands,’ he says. ‘It helps me to get into the vibe of the venue for when you go on stage. ‘Festivals are the best opportunity we get to see other bands – when you’re on tour it’s not viable. ‘You get to see whoever is supporting you or who you’re supporting, but you get the chance to check out so many new bands or the ones you already love.’

Two Door Cinema Club headline Boardmasters on Friday, August 11. Get your tickets at www.boardmasters.co.uk


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April 2017


Student band of the month

27 April 2017

Blood, Queens Of The Stone Age, The Sonic Dawn, Arctic Monkeys, Gary Clark Jr and Red Hot Chili Peppers. Who are your favourite artists right now? Royal Blood, Gary Clark Jr, Tame Impala, The Sonic Dawn, Hiatus Kaiyote, Guthrie Govan, Connan Mockasin. What are the main topics of your songs? Love and politics and drugs, or whatever lucid dream we feel like having. If you could do a collaboration with one band or artist, who would you pick and why? Portishead, because it would be interesting to mix trip hop and psychedelic rock.

Each month we talk to the best new musicians from UK campuses. This time we chat to Bristol’s Paper Tiger...

We’re off to a great start

 Tom Gellatly How would you describe your music? A combination of blow your mind hypnotic visions and chest shaking riffs with magnetic wah sounds getting involved from time to time. Who are your major influences? Led Zeppelin deffo, Cream, Royal

Wild animals: (l-r) Paper Tiger’s Fin CharltonJones, Harry Brazier, Lewis RennieCampbell, Adam Taylor, and Toby Panatti

Competitions: Festival special

Where is one place you’d really like to play live? 100 per cent Thekla, for now. What are you working on now? We’ve got off to a good start. We’ve won the unbelievable opportunity to play at a small music festival in France called D’orFest and we’d like to thank the lovely people at UoB LiveSoc and the crowd who voted for us (we had a brilliant time playing at the LiveSoc-organised battle of the bands a couple of

weeks ago). Right now we’re taking our time to write some original tunes because we haven’t been together for long (we only really met last month) and that is a must for us. During this period, we will still be gigging, so you can keep your ears pricked for news. Where do you want to be in ten years’ time? Settling down, paying an appropriate amount of tax, staying out of trouble, eating our five a day, becoming increasingly conservative, forgetting lefty Bristol, and potentially joining an aerobics class. What do you enjoy doing outside of music? We don’t like Trump or smooth peanut butter (doesn’t have that godly crunch) or push doors with handles. We enjoy not poaching tigers. Sleeping. Hunting in the forest. Being made entirely out of paper… and occasionally roaring. If you had one philosophy your band lived by, what would it be? Life is better barefoot, as long as there’s grass and no needles. For more from other student bands, go to www. unipaper.co.uk

To be in with a chance of winning any of our competitions visit www.unipaper.co.uk/competitions

WIN! Summer is unlocked

2000TREES

2000trees is set in the beautiful Cotswold hills. Headliners on July 6 to 8 include Slaves and down the bill are acts such as Frank Carter & The Rattlesnakes. We have a pair of tickets to give away.

NOZSTOCK Subtitled The Hidden Valley, this Herefordshire bash combines music with art and film. We've got two pairs of tickets to the event on July 21 to 23.

FARR FESTIVAL This event brings lovers of electronic music from Farr and wide to a forest in Hertfordshire. We've got one pair of tickets to the July 13 to 15 fest .

WE ARE FSTVL

BESTIVAL

It may be short on vowels but it still vows to wow. Carl Cox, Giggs and Sigma play this May 27 and 28 festival. We're giving away two pairs of tickets.

On page 13 we introduce you to the brains behind Bestival – Rob da Bank. This year he's taking the four-dayer, which runs from September 7 to 10, from the Isle of Wight to its new home in Dorset. We've got one pair of tickets.

EXIT Liam Gallagher and Years & Years are among the lineup at this Serbia festival on July 5 to 9. We've got a pair of tickets for our lucky winner.

BALTIC WEEKENDER Liverpool is culturally vibrant, and what better way to celebrate this than with a festival? 24 Kitchen Street and Abandon Silence are teaming up to bring you house, grime, techno and reggae from June 2 to 4. We've got a pair of tickets with your name on.

SZIGET

BEAT-HERDER

COCOON IN THE PARK

LOVE SAVES THE DAY

LIVERPOOL DISCO

COMMON PEOPLE

Fancy dress and Sleaford Mods as headliners – skipping this festival would give you serious fomo. We have a pair of tickets to the party on July 14 to 16 to give away.

Combine the minds of two music scene pros and what do you get? One amazing day, with seven DJs on one stage in Leeds, that's what. We have a pair of tickets to the July 8 event.

This festival is packed with acts to suit diverse tastes – from Jamie Jones to Kano. We have a pair of tickets to give away to the weekender, which takes place on May 27 and 28.

If you like to boogie, this dancefloordedicated shindig is perfect for you. D Train and Ultra Naté will perform live at the May 6 festival, joined by a host of DJs. We have a pair of tickets.

Rob da Bank has created another cracker. Wild Beasts and Sean Paul are on the bill from May 27 to 28. We have a pair of tickets for each of the venues – Oxford and Southampton.

This island fest will light up Budapest once again on August 9 to 16. P!nk, Kasabian, Major Laser and Wiz Khalifa headline. We have two tickets.

LOWLANDS This Netherlands festival features acts including Mumford And Sons, The xx and Editors. We've got a pair of tickets to the August 18 to 20 bash.


Jobs

April 2017

It is the dream career for millions, but how do you make it as a music journalist?

W

ALSO ON JOBS. UNIPAPER.CO.UK

 The University Paper HILE punk passed, glam gave up the ghost and Britpop burned out, one name has survived

them all: NME. The titan of music journalism has gone where others dare not, starting in 1952 by becoming the first British paper to include a singles chart and more recently relaunching as a free publication in 2015. Behind the continued success are highly talented and dedicated music journalists. But what does it take to become a writer for the prestigious magazine? Journalists from The University Paper probe NME’s deputy editor Tom Howard, digital editor Charlotte Gunn, commissioning editor Dan Stubbs and senior news reporter Andrew Trendell for some answers...

Andrew Trendell

Tom Howard

Dragons’ Den star Deborah Meaden reveals how you can survive a tough interview

Charlotte Gunn Dan Stubbs Reggae Reggae Sauce’s Levi Roots talks about his difficult route to success

What experience/qualities do you look for when taking on new journalists? asks Hannah Dodd Tom: They live the life – always at

gigs, know about all the new artists, have an opinion on everything. Experience isn’t as important as talent. If you’ve got a fresh perspective on things, we’re keen to hear from you. Good, but not perfect, writing is essential. It doesn’t have to be perfect because if you’ve got raw skills, it’s easy to improve. Working at NME is loads of fun, but it’s also tough. It’s a busy place and you need to be able to keep up. Having good ideas is the most important thing. Dan: As commissioning editor, I’m responsible for putting together the content on the website and in the magazine, so I’m looking for clever, funny, brilliant writers who put together amazing pieces that will chime with our audience – ideally after pitching something I could never have thought of myself. People who write lively, clear copy and meet deadlines make my life easier. Andrew: Above all else, dedication – it takes an incredible amount of perseverance to be a successful journalist in today’s climate. So that combined with a willingness to learn, an eye for detail and a hunger for their chosen field. Anyone is lucky to sit at the desk in a journalist’s place so they need to prove that they want it and deserve it, and not take a moment for granted. What would be the best way to get your foot in the door at a place like NME? asks Joe Cadman Tom: Prove that all of the above

applies to you. Do work experience here. Write for anywhere that will take you and send us examples. Charlotte: Pitch us an idea! Take

Former Dragons’ Den investor Kelly Hoppen speaks of her incredible journey

How to score a job at NME

Living the dream: (l-r) NME’s Charlotte, Andrew, Dan and Tom have all made successful careers as music writers

Fancy more interviews with industry titans and business magnates? Head on over to jobs. unipaper. co.uk where you will find heaps of great articles on offer

a look at the type of features and blogs we’re running on the site and pitch ideas that would fit. Dan: We still have people here who started out on work experience, so that’s one good way. People who’ve got experience working on other websites are invaluable too. Andrew: Proven testimonial that you know what you’re doing. Coming in as an intern helps, usually helped by having a strong body of work in your portfolio.

For budding music journalists, what would you say are your top tips for getting your name out there?

asks Katura Barrows-Robotham

Charlotte: Meet people, build up a

social media presence, engage with other journalists, network – [social networking site] Meetup is a good way to meet other people in a similar boat. Dan: I started out on the student paper at Manchester University, and

that’s still a great way to get going. Self-publishing, pitching to online publications, doing work experience and engaging in a little shameless networking and self-promotion on social media are a good idea. Andrew: 1. Write, all the time. 2. Pitch colourful and original opinion pieces – check they haven’t been written 1,000 times before. 3. Have a distinct voice and writing style. 4. Don’t turn down any opportunity. 5. Grow a thick skin. Learn from the changes made to your work when edited. When first starting out as a journalist what’s the best way to get contacts and grow your network?

asks Caroline Linnea Østergaard

Tom: Go to gigs, talk to people.

Write for people. If you’re good, editors will recommend you to other editors. Charlotte: Definitely work experience.

It takes an incredible amount of perseverance to be a successful journalist in today’s climate

Andrew Trendell

Looking for a graduate job? Go to jobs. unipaper.co.uk

as important to cover lesser known/newer artists as established ones? How do you decide which bands/artists are worth covering?

asks Jessica Ginting

Dan: Talk to people! If

you want to be a music journalist, go to lots of gigs. Make sure you spot the opportunities when they’re presented to you – if you meet someone who could give you work or experience, ask them about it. It helps to be in London, where most magazines are based, but it’s not essential – I was living in Manchester for the first ten years of my career. Andrew: I started at a local news level and through student magazines and blogs. If you work your way through there and persevere, your reputation and contacts book grow naturally. When building your portfolio as a music journalist, is it just

Tom: Absolutely. If you’re good at writing, you’re good at writing. It doesn’t matter who you’re writing about. Charlotte: People will be looking for well-written original ideas – less about whether you’ve got access to Rat Boy or Rihanna. We decide based on audience interest. With breaking bands, we look for artists we think have a shot of making it big, are doing something unique or different and have an interesting story to tell. In all areas, we test posts and see how they go down with our audience as a way of gauging interest for future coverage. Dan: If you’re a music journalist it’s pretty much a given that you’re hungry for new music. Artists in the early days of their careers are more likely to agree to an interview, too. You need to know your stuff too – knowledge and passion will shine through in your writing. Andrew: Both – as long as they’re relevant and have a story to tell.


Digs

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www.unipaper.co.uk | 020 7580 6419

April 2017

M

OST festival-goers’ accommodation will be a £20 pop-up tent, a cheap sleeping bag and a pillow made from balled-up clothes. However, the rich and famous don’t have to put up with that. Camp Kerala Mademoiselle at the Isle of Wight Festival offers the ultimate VIP package – but it will set you back £6,000 plus VAT. On arrival guests will be met by the ‘Pretty Girl’ Team who will be waiting with a cocktail. The ‘Naughty Boy’ Team will deal with the luggage – taking it to the tent. Guests will sleep in a bespoke Shikar tent which houses two guests and includes either a king-sized bed or two singles, Egyptian cotton bed sheets and sumptuous throws. They will also be treated to all drinks, lunch, dinner and late night snacks in the premium VIP area plus breakfast at CKM. Residents can also allay fears of queuing for stinking toilets and washing themselves down with a wet wipe, opulent loos and showers are provided. When it is time to watch the acts, VIPs can be transported in buggies and to top it off they get access to the raised viewing platform which overlooks the main stage – giving them the best seats in the house.

PICTURES: CAMP KERALA MADEMOISELLE

 John Shaw

The £6k glamping experience

Luxury living: VIPs sleep in a bespoke two-person tent

For more amazing festival stories go to www.unipaper. co.uk

High life: From above clockwise, last year’s Camp Kerala

Bottoms up: The Pretty Girl Team greet guests with a cocktail


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Sport

Champions with Hart

College claims BUCS rugby final at Twicks

H

 John Shaw

IN BRIEF

Glas acts net seventh win in a row

Glasgow University proved they are the driving force in the city after claiming The Glasgow Taxis Cup for the seventh time in a row. The team in black and gold comfortably held off Strathclyde and Glasgow Caledonian in the three-way varsity tournament by taking big wins in the athletics, women’s football and swimming. Second-placed Strathclyde scored important victories in the men’s rugby and football plus the men’s and women’s basketball, taking them above GCU. More than 800 athletes took part in the annual tradition, competing across 17 sports. The last team to win it other than Glasgow was Strathclyde in 2010. John Shaw

Sheff still the city’s finest

PICTURE: BUCS

ARTPURY COLLEGE came from behind to secure a dramatic victory over the University of Exeter in the men’s final of the BUCS Rugby Union Championship. In a pulsating match at Twickenham Stadium, Super Rugby winners Hartpury edged the reigning champions, 27-24. Seb Negri, Hartpury’s captain, said: ‘It’s a bit of a blur to be honest, but I couldn’t be prouder of the boys. The amount of heart and character we showed, not just in this final but throughout the whole season — it’s been a long journey and I just couldn’t be happier.’ Exeter started stronger, making the perfect start as Aaron Bagwell went under the posts. BUCS Super Rugby’s top points scorer Ted Landray calmly converted, putting his side 7-0 up. The reigning champions resisted Hartpury well, only conceding from a penalty before Matt Eliet scored his team’s second try of the game, which Landray converted again, giving Exeter a 14-3 lead. Hartpury managed to claw their way back into the game just before half-time. Maliq Holden scored their first try of the match which was converted by Sam Leeming, leaving the score 14-10 to Exeter at half-time. The restart saw Hartpury’s fortunes change, as Holden was shown a yellow card and sent to the sin bin. Exeter scored the resulting penalty and put themselves 17-10 up and facing 14 men for the next ten minutes. But the reigning champions were unable to capitalise on their numerical advantage, as Hartpury’s

31

April 2017

I don’t think I’ve ever been involved in such a special team before

Hartpury College captain, Seb Negri

Jonus Mikalcius scored in the corner, with Leeming converting again to level the scores at 17-17. Hartpury suffered another setback as captain Negri was stretchered off with an injury shortly after Leeming missed a penalty. They reacted well, though, as Harry Randall sped through the Exeter defence and went over in the corner. Leeming was unable to convert, but Hartpury were still ahead for the first time. Randall had his second of the game mere minutes later, with Hartpury slowly working their way to within two metres of the try line before the England U20 international bundled it over. Leeming missed the resulting

conversion, leaving the score at 27-17 to Hartpury. With ten minutes left to play Exeter would need to conjure up a comeback of their own if they were to retain their title, and on 76 minutes Callum Roberts gave them hope as he scored his team’s third try, which Landray converted. Four minutes left to go, and it was 27-24 to Hartpury. Exeter knew they only needed to get some sort of score to level or win the match, but despite their passionate push in the game’s dying minutes they were unable to produce the points they needed. Hartpury’s victory sees them finishing a superb season on a triumphant note, as their win at

Twickenham sealed the double of the BUCS Rugby Union Championship and the BUCS Super Rugby League title. Randall’s late brace to help his side to victory earned him the player of the match award. Captain Negri said: ‘I don’t think I’ve ever been involved in such a special team before, from the coaches to all the medical staff to the players, and I couldn’t be prouder to wear the Hartpury shirt. ‘Twickenham’s the best stadium in the world and to play here is something very special. It’s a memory that will remain with me for the rest of my life, for sure.’ You can watch the full match at www.unipaper.co.uk.

Seeing red: Hartpury College look to smash through the solid Exeter defence

For more sport, go to www.unipaper. co.uk

Sheffield University held off a spirited Team Hallam to claim victory in Varsity 2017. Last year’s winners showed their mettle in the Steel City to beat their rivals 45-35 overall, exactly the same score as in 2016. It’s the fifth year in a row that the team in black and gold have lifted the trophy. However, valiant Team Hallam tweeted: ‘No matter the Varsity score we always showed passion, pride and spirit. Huge thanks to all the athletes, spectators and staff involved.’ Hallam managed to take the final match up of the event, winning 6-3 in the ice hockey at Sheffield Arena. John Shaw

Eleven-year

Dramatic golden goal secures Bath victory in Wales reign ended

Series goes down to the wire after rugby  Tom Gellatly

A golden goal in the men’s rugby union secured a Varsity victory for the University of Bath over hosts Cardiff Metropolitan University. The English side levelled the overall scores in the series with a win in the final event of the day, the rugby union. To decide the overall champion the two teams were forced into sudden death. Bath struck first scoring a breakaway try to seal a second Varsity win since its inauguration last year. Will Galloway, Bath’s SU’s sports officer, said: ‘It was a fantastic end for the spectators. ‘After this second win, [Cardiff

Triumphant: The University of Bath celebrate their Varsity victory

Met] have got to come back and prove they’re better than us.’ In the closely-fought contest, which took place on March 29, Cardiff Met began well, winning the day’s first three events. ‘We didn’t get off to a flying start,’ Will said.

‘We lost the women’s basketball, the women’s rugby and the men’s basketball, but we did manage to get two really important bonus points in those games.’ The reigning champions began their comeback with a 7-0 win in the women’s hockey, followed by a

win in the netball. After a tense 3-3 draw in the men’s football, Cardiff Met led 25-21 going into the final event of the day, the men’s rugby. Cardiff Met made an excellent start, pulling into a 7-0 lead, but the visitors managed to claw their

way back into the game, eventually winning 22-14 and tying the overall points for whole series to 26-26. ‘It was very unlikely it ended up as a tie, but it did and it was great for spectators. ‘In extra time it was very tense,’ Will said. ‘But as nervous as I felt, I was really pleased to see the number of Bath students there and the support they gave those rugby players after such a long day.’ And once the tournament had been settled on the pitch, any lingering animosity between the two sides dissipated. ‘Once we got to Score, the students’ union night, it was all good,’ Will added. ‘It was a very happy atmosphere.’ ‘There are certainly some worse for wear faces around campus [the next day].’

Northumbria ended Leeds Beckett’s 11 year BUCS Rugby League dominance, despite a dramatic fight back from the former champions. At 24-0 up with 30minutes to play Northumbria seemed comfortable and heading towards victory. But a rousing 18-point comeback from Beckett, made for a nail biting final few minutes. However, the Northumbria defence held firm and claimed the title, 24-18. It’s the first time since 2005 that Beckett have not won the national tournament. Elsewhere, Nottingham University picked up the BUCS Rugby League Trophy for a secondyear in a row. They held off the challengers Bath University taking the game 14-6. John Shaw


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