Caught by the River

Caught by the River Lea

11th July 2013

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Only a few weeks until Caught by the River hosts a stage at the official reopening of the Olympic Park. The Open East Festival takes place at the newly relandscaped and rechristened Queen Elizabeth Park in Stratford on the weekend of July 27th and 28th – exactly one year on from the London 2012 Opening Ceremony. The Caught by the River stage is situated on the banks of the river Lea just where it runs past the Velodrome and down towards the stadium. Over two days we’re hosting talks, DJs, bands and readings as well as a load of interesting booze…

The first bit of new news is that we’re teaming up with the incomparably brilliant people at Sambrooks Brewery to present the Ten Mile Beer Festival. It’s a celebration of London’s finest new breweries (and one not so new) all picked from postcodes within the titular distance… in fact, one of them is actually from the edge of the park itself. Hopefully it should go someway towards putting to rest memories of the extremely overpriced, very average cooking lager that was on sale in there during the Olympics. The breweries involved include: Sambrooks, Crate, Five Points and Tap East… more news to follow next week.

Secondly, regular contributor to the site Emma Warren will be hosting Hear Me Now! on Sunday. This interactive panel mixes archive recordings from the most influential of London broadcasters – the pirates – with the mavericks and characters that broadcast the real sound of the streets. Confirmed panellists so far include Lloyd Bradley from DBC (Dread Broadcasting Co) and Uncle Dugs from Rinse.

As previously announced on this site… Saturday’s line up: Stealing Sheep, the Heavenly all girl trio who play star gazing psychedelic pop music; Charlie Boyer and The Voyeurs– playing ‘primitive, sexy, glamorous rock’n’roll’ (NME); DJ Rhys Webb (The Horrors) – chief music head in one of the most reliably brilliant British rock’n’roll bands around; The Rockingbirds, AKA the greatest country and western band ever to hail from London town; Jeb Loy Nichols – acoustic songwriter, storyteller and soul man, Jeb is a regular Caught by the River contributor and a Midwestern émigré now living in the Midwest of Wales; Trevor Moss & Hannah-Lou, the husband and wife duo who play acoustic songs straight from the heart (of England); Bob Stanley & Pete Paphides in conversation with Pete about Bob’s forthcoming book, Yeah Yeah Yeah, a history of pop music; Michael Smith – a true literary libertine, the Culture Show’s Michael Smith will read from his forthcoming book about London (to be published by Faber later this year) and Travis Elborough – the brilliant pop cultural historian who will be talking about the relocation of London Bridge to the Arizonian desert

Sunday’s line up: Wire, the perennial post-punk band who’ve hit a creative peak in 2013 by releasing an album made up of songs they wrote back in the late ’70s; Le Volume Courbe, a European dream pop band, fresh from touring with My Bloody Valentine; DJ Don Letts, the original Roxy DJ, brings a full on punky reggae party; Viv Albertine: singer and songwriter, formerly of the Slits playing songs from her recently released debut solo LP the Vermillion Border; Emma Warren will host Here Me Now! – a panel discussion about London’s most influential pirate radio stations (guests TBC); Ian Rawes (the man behind the London Sound Survey) will be talking about the sound of the city; Tom Bolton, the author of London’s Lost Rivers will be talking about the capital’s submerged waterways and John Andrews & Charles Rangeley-Wilson with Silt Road meets Babylon Uptown, where the two angling writers talking about the history of the area around the Olympic Park and reading from CRW’s new book Silt Road and JA’s contribution to Caught by the River’s Words on Water collection.

Tickets are only £9.50 per day and are available here now.