About James

James specialises in digital literary heritage projects. He spends most of his time in front of a computer screen writing about life instead of living it. Therefore, do not trust a word he says.

All day and all of the night…

William, it was really nothing… Photo by some random using my phone.

You can forget that last lot of moaning in my previous blog because Sillitoe Day and Evening turned out to be a roaring success in the end. We had around 80-100 people turn up for the day event and the evening event was absolutely rammed.

Sillitoe Day kicked off half an hour late due to a problem at the Contemporary with the chairs not opening properly which meant we had to claw back time. I sacrificed my talk on the Trent to enable this, being the martyr that I am. Experience has taught me that sticking to times is really important as audiences can get restless and I could hardly ask one of our guests to drop out. And if I’m honest, I don’t particularly enjoy public events – unless I’m in the audience.

Our morning session combined a broad range of content which was the right balance to keep the audience stimulated. I split the morning session into two parts after Al Needham’s video as I knew people would be upbeat. The second half started with a 15 minute documentary of Raleigh which meant that the audience could drift in when they were ready without fear of disrupting anyone.

Billy Ivory in matching Seaton shirt. Photo James Walker.

There were six sessions in the morning: five from the Sillitoe Trail and a half-an-hour introduction from Paul Fillingham and I about the project. We stayed up late the night before, ensuring that there were about twenty visuals for each segment which would rotate during each individual talk. The Contemporary has got a massive screen and so it was really important to take advantage of this.

The afternoon session was hosted by David Sillitoe which meant I could finally sit back and relax. My favourite piece was the heartfelt letter to Alan Sillitoe from Michael Eaton. It was beautiful, comparing their respective paths through Nottingham and how the city Michael has remained faithful to throughout the years has become this alien place. It reminded me, in sentiment, of Julian Barnes A Sense of an Ending.

Flyering Goose Fair is just one of the many desperate things I did to promote Sillitoe Day. Can you see it? Photo James Walker.

Sillitoe Evening was presented by the immaculately dressed MulletProofpoet with a fine range of spoken word performers in MotaMouf, Sarah Shrugs and John Marriott. Music came from local favourites Gaffa and Sleaford Mods. Sleaford Mods lead singer Jason Williamson played our Arthur Seaton 2012 and so it was lovely to finally meet him in person. So how to describe Sleaford Mods? Visually, they’re like a demented, dystopian version of Pet Shop Boys. Andrew Fearn replaces the keyboard for a laptop and just stands in front of it, can in hand, nodding at the audience as if to say, who the hell are you lot? It’s like an anti-performance. He’s like Bez…but without the dancing. He does contempt with a smile and kitted out in his trackie he could have stepped right off the set of Shameless.

Jason ‘You fucking fuck’ Williamson. Photograph: Michael Prince

This of course is all part of the act, making Fearn the perfect foil to the enigmatic, raging Jason Williamson who is energy personified. So extreme are Williamson’s lyrics that Michael Eaton said to me, ‘I’ve been told to fuck off once too many times now so I’m off’. If you want to be insulted then you need to get to a Sleaford Mods gig. I’ve never seen expletives executed with such integrity. Every word that comes out of Williamson’s mouth turns solid the minute it’s flicked from his tongue. You literally have to dive for cover as he screams into the mic, less his words take your head off. What better way to celebrate the work of Sillitoe…

 

 

Further reading.

The shitfuckery of putting on an event.

Filming for Inside Out. Photo Paul Fillingham. 

Who would have thought that 27 October would turn out to be so ridiculously busy? It’s the final day of Games City which dominates the Market Square, the Council are holding a Robin Hood pageant, it’s the end of half term so loads of people are returning back from holiday, and it’s also the last Saturday before Halloween and so everyone has decided to dress up as Meg and Mog. There’s also a massive free music event across the city and the ‘thrill of waiting up for the end of the world‘ celebrations featuring loads of artists, writers and film makers. Oh yeah, and it’s also the last day of The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner at the Playhouse. Bugger.

Putting on an event is awful. It’s non stop stress as you worry about whether people will turn up or not. Judging by our sales so far it’s not going to be as many as we would like. Our overheads are around £600 but fortunately this has been funded through the budget for The Space as it’s the launch of our Sillitoe Trail. Considering we’re a voluntary organisation trying to raise funds it would be a disaster not to make money on our biggest event which falls every two years.

Look what you could have won. Photo James Walker.

We had to go for 27 October because it was the latest date in the month we could book. This was so we had maximum time to finish off the Sillitoe Trail for The Space which includes a Mobile App, a free downloadable book and a hard copy of the book. My concentration should have been solely on The Space and finishing off the project but Sillitoe Day has been dominating my waking hours (of which there has been many).

Goose Fair Island. Photo James Walker.

I emailed 300 people offering free review tickets to bloggers etc in search of some online coverage. I got three responses. We had a 21m banner printed to go on the top of the Council House but someone put up the Christmas decorations early and so it couldn’t be affixed. We found a compromise at Goose Fair Island which has turned out to be an excellent location.

The BBC came and tested out the App this morning and will feature a ten minute documentary on Monday 29 October (Inside Out), although it would have helped to have had this in advance to promote the actual day. David Sillitoe went for a natter with John Holmes on Sunday and Paul Fillingham and David Sillitoe were guests on Trent Sound on Saturday 13 October (I was at home tweeting links at the same time to give context and further information to their discussions as they have a live twitter feed on their website). As far as local press goes, The Evening Post ran a feature with Mark Shotter and David Sillitoe and LeftLion has had numerous articles filtered through with MulletProofpoet (who’s hosting Sillitoe Evening) Frank Abbott (who’s done a mash-up of SNASM) and a big feature on Sillitoe Day on the homepage for the last week – in addition to a full page advert in the latest magazine.

The Arts Council featured us on their homepage as did the City Council. The Nottingham Playhouse put a poster in every one of their #LDR2012 programmes which was incredibly helpful. We contacted every college, local universities and creative writing programmes in the region and offered discounted tickets to students.

The event could have been marketed better by filtering through press releases on a monthly basis to build up awareness of the event rather than the last minute bombardment. The website has also been a big letdown, with ticket sales only available from mid-September and also through the design. It is poorly constructed and therefore important content does not stand out. This was resolved with a banner add after endless requests.

Then there is the greed of the ticket issuer Gigantic who charge an extra £3.50 for an admin charge and posting out the tickets. This makes us look as bad as Ryan Air, and will no doubt have infuriated some potential buyers. What really annoys me is that they don’t offer the option of collecting tickets on the day to avoid such hidden extras. The devil is in the detail and this is something which we should have checked out.

The one real positive has been progress made via Twitter. It’s a superb resource and I’ve been able to meet so many new people and share relevant content. I like it so much that I turned my back on Facebook a month ago, which in hindsight was not a good idea as it offered another form of social presence. But I feel much better for it.

I don’t like putting on events because I hate pressurising people to attend. I also hate this worry the night before and I don’t particularly like talking at such events, I much prefer being in the audience. But there’s nothing more that can be done now than ensure that everything goes to plan. Talking of which, I better start writing one.

Sillitoe Day 27 October, Nottingham Contemporary. Tickets available on the door. £10/£5 concessions. The price includes a free book, six months hard graft and snippets of culture.