Frederiks is proud to present Jazz Fest. A three day event showcasing the best and most exciting Jazz bands in the city.
Tuesday: 8 PM Till Late
Wednesday: 8 PM Till Late
Thursday: 4 PM Till Late
Get ready to get your groove on and celebrate the Jubilee, Frederiks style.
Frederiks has also announced that they will have Jazz on live every Wednesday commencing from the 1st June.
For all booking enquiries head to the Frederiks website.
Salt The Snail are playing a live show in a wrestling ring.
What do you mean you want more information? That’s all there is to it.
Salt The Snail are bringing a wrestling ring in to the Future Yard live room and will play a live gig in the ring, while you stand around and watch and clap and wave your ‘Wildcard 3:16’ placards. There will be commentators. It will be a Friday night at the end of May. You will pay £10 and you will have lots of fun. Somebody will take the belt home and will receive all the glory; lots of people will leave crying.
The Utopia Strong, the self-professed ‘semi-modular trio, delivering medical grade music to the visionary music head’, come to town on 4th June to bring their experimental and revelatory improvised live sessions to the Merseyside masses.
The psych prog collective – comprising Kavus Torabi, Mike York and seven-time world snooker champion Steve Davis – are set to release their second LP, International Treasure, via Rocket Recordings in June. The show also features a live performance from fearless Manchester-based noise collective Holy Scum, an offshoot of Gnod.
Twenty years ago a group of musicians from the North West came together to form a big band. Since then, Dr Jazz and the Cheshire Cats have given acclaimed performances across the country.
Directed by the University of Liverpool’s own Professor Catherine Tackley, the band brings a programme of classic swing with a British twist to The Tung Auditorium. Expect to hear the swinging sounds of Ted Heath and Jack Hylton alongside numbers from Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, Ella Fitzgerald and Frank Sinatra.
Manchester Collective and soprano Ruby Hughes present a set of ethereal music for voice and string orchestra.
Listeners will be transported to a world of incredible fragility and exquisite beauty – from Britten’s sparkling Les Illuminations to vigorous, life-affirming music by Olli Mustonen. At the heart of this programme is a new song cycle from Edmund Finnis featuring poetry by Alice Oswald.
My Iris is an intense and thrilling band that represents the front rank of the contemporary UK jazz scene.
Lauded for her imaginative approach to improvisation and composition, saxophonist Trish Clowes provides her bandmates with a unique platform for individual expression, delivering driving grooves and lingering melodic lines, seamlessly morphing between earthy restlessness and futuristic dreamscapes.
Ayanna Witter-Johnson is a multi-talented singer, songwriter, pianist and cellist.
She has a phenomenal mastery for seamlessly crossing the boundaries of classical, jazz, reggae, soul and R&B, to imprint her unique musical signature with her virtuosic tap, strum and bow with her cello into her sound and vibe.
As a performer of extraordinary versatility, Ayanna’s live shows are intimate journeys that chronicle her experience as a female artist in the 21st century. Due to her musical prowess, mesmerising vocals, non-compromising lyrics, and ability to deftly reinterpret songs on the cello.
For over 30 years Boo Hewerdine has been considered one of the UK’s finest singer-songwriters.
As lead singer of seminal band The Bible, through to his subsequent solo work and long-time collaboration with the incredible Eddi Reader, Boo has become something of a national treasure.
Over a hundred of his songs have been covered by the likes of KD Lang, Kris Drever, Chris Difford,Heidi Talbot and Hannah Rarity. An in demand writer, producer and performer, his last album Before garnered multiple five star reviews. Since then he has released a lockdown EP and started to work on his new album.
Boo will be singing songs from his brand new album and his extraordinary back catalogue – a naturally gifted raconteur his gigs are always total joy.
Calling all Supermen and Superwomen: put on your Superhero suits, capes and masks and fill the fabulous Liverpool Philharmonic Hall for a fantastically Super-Powerful afternoon of sensational sounds for caped crusaders, masked, mysterious men and wonder women.
The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra will be using their super-ability to play superheroic themes for Batman, Spiderman, The Incredibles, Superman and many more.
There will be some superheroes in the foyer before the concert, so you might just get a picture with your favourite!
The whole family is invited to experience the power of a full symphony orchestra at this lively, interactive concert. Fidgeting is allowed and fancy dress is positively encouraged. The concert will last about an hour.
Tickets for children under 18 months are free. Family concerts are most suitable for children aged 4-10 years.
Ye Vagabonds comprises of harmony rich folk music, influenced by Irish traditional music, Appalachian singing, and the 1960s folk revival.
Brothers Brían and Diarmuid Mac Gloinn grew up playing music together around their hometown of Carlow, a small town in the southeast of Ireland. After moving to Dublin in 2012, they quickly became a staple of the live music and session scene in Ireland, playing their own original songs as well as folk songs from Ireland, the UK, and America.
Their debut EP Rose & Briar was released in 2015. Since then, they have been busy touring Ireland, the UK and Europe opening for acts such as Villagers, Roy Harper and Lisa Hannigan, as well as playing sold out headline shows in Ireland, France, Switzerland and the UK.
They have made numerous television and live radio appearances in Ireland, and were also part of Imagining Home, a live broadcast concert in the National Concert Hall of Ireland, curated by Glen Hansard, Philip King and Gary Sheehan.
In 2017 they launched their debut, self-titled album to great acclaim. Ye Vagabonds comprised of harmony rich folk music, influenced by Irish traditional music, Appalachian singing, and the 1960s folk revival – its ten mellow tracks weaved thoughtful lyrics, thickly layered with strings and droning harmonium. Their second album The Hare’s Lament was released in 2019 to critical acclaim.