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UT Does Didgeri
(Our Adventures Across The Pond)

(last updated Feb. 19/2000)

Wed. Feb. 2 | Thurs. Feb. 3 | Fri. Feb 4 | Sat. Feb. 5 | Sun. Feb 6 | Mon. Feb. 7

Wednesday, February 2, 2000

Thursday, February 3, 2000

Friday, February 4, 2000

Saturday, February 5, 2000

Allison: Woke up to a -free- English breakfast- how nice! Christo, Katy and Anke joined us and it was fun to get acquainted and/or catch up.

Jodi: I confess to giving the fried bread a wide girth. Otherwise, the breakfast was very good. You rarely get anything more than toast and coffee at most North American hotels. Impressive. :-)

Debbie: Hey, I can't believe you said so little about the breakfast, Allison! I loved the breakfast at this place...I tried to make a point of having a little bit of everything, though I discovered that I missed the blood pudding somehow. Broiled tomatoes, fried mushrooms, fried bread, eggs, sausages, bacon, fresh fruit juice, selection of cereals, milk, fruit, toast, jams, lots more. Fried bread is definitely something we don't have in North America. I'm curious, tho...is fried bread a regular staple in an English breakfast, or is it just a hotel and b&b thing? And what do they fry the bread IN? Or maybe I don't want to know.

Allison: The morning featured several more excellent performances. Rachel, Zander, Valerie and Magician were all new to me and I enjoyed their instrumentals and harmonies so much! I especially remember Valerie's wonderful "Following In Valentina's Footsteps" (is this song available on tape?) and their lovely rendition of "Dust In The Wind".

Jodi: We'd heard a lot about Zander but hadn't yet had the opportunity to meet him. Wow. What a sweet guy! I hope we get to see him again some time soon.

Debbie: Their group was called "Just Playin' Folk", by the way. Wonderful performance, the kind that you smile all the way through. I especially loved Rachel's fiddle and her expressive face. Really impressive harmonies in this group, and I also enjoyed the friendly/fun rapport they obviously had with one another.

Allison: Lawrence Dean was one of the finds of the con for me. Great songs, great voice, confident performance style. His concert made me sit up and take notice. I especially liked his Princess Bride song, his pretty Robert Service song and "Good Times", the first song to make me cry at the con (though far from the last :)). I was glad to get to spend some time with Lawrence both at lunch on Sunday and at the folk club on Wednesday night.

Jodi: I didn't have the second opportunity, unfortunately, but it was really a pleasure getting to know him when I could. What a fantastic musician. And he writes such wonderful songs...

Debbie: Lawrence was great! Full of good humour and energy; I loved watching him in concert. Lawrence roomed with Dave Clement at this convention; I ran into him several times while hanging out with Dave, but didn't get nearly enough time to chat with him.

Allison: Minstrel, Neil and the GKs gave an energetic performance as Patchwork that kept us moving, too. Cool to see all the electric instruments being used and the flute. Lots of fun. Great voices.

Debbie: I had hoped to hook up with Andy during the con sometime to maybe jam a bit on our flutes...I -loved- her flute playing! Sometime during the programming today, by the way, I ran into my old friend, Godfrey Joseph. I hadn't seen him in about ten years!!! He had never been to a filk con, didn't read science fiction, had never met anyone else at the convention before. I was a bit nervous for him, but he said he had a wonderful time. :-) He also took a lot of great photos!

Allison: Brian Biddle was a goofy treat. Amazing range of costumes and silly parodies. His Cthulhu costume was quite a sight! Laughed at Brian and FanTom's antics in "Suddenly Igor" as well as Brian's Death reponse to Talis' "Death Came To My Party" (cool bassoon by Simon!).

Debbie: "Death Came To My Party" is one of my all-time favourite Talis songs.

Allison: Really enjoyed the main concert a lot. It was a great way to sample a wide cross-section of DD talent. Too many highlights to mention, but I got a special kick out of Separated At Birth's (the Suttons and the Whitakers) "Eldorado To The Moon"- I've been looking for that song for ages! Was also moved to tears by Annie's "World's Too Big", her tribute to Dave and Tom. My biggest disappointment is that I missed hearing Lissa sing! No fair! I only stepped out of the room for ten minutes...

Debbie: You missed a treat, Allison! Lissa was great. The main concert was one of the highlights of the convention for me...most of the performers were brand-new to me, and it was wonderful to have the opportunity to hear so many filkers "across the pond".

Allison: We went upstairs to quickly have a buffet dinner before heading out to our Arrangement Workshop. It was enlightening and informative for us. Goodness knows we had as much to learn from the participants on the art of music arranging as they had to learn from us!

Jodi: A very educational experience for us. Lots of very talented people participated and it was a great way to get some insight into arranging for even more folks than three. A big thanks to all those who came!

Allison: Unfortunately, due to tuning and warming up for our own set we missed most of Erica and Phil's set, which was a disappointment to me. I'm glad I got a chance to hear some of their music in open filk as I admire them both as songwriters and musicians very much.

Debbie: I wish we could have heard their entire set, too. :( (brightens) Say, maybe they'll do an album together sometime...

Allison: And we were next. We had a -great- time during our concert, it was a rush from beginning to end. The audience was marvelous, singing along, hand jiving. It was just so much fun! Our guest musicians were a joy- Christo's whistle playing and TechnoNerdboy, Phil's outrageous "guy" lines, Kate's Xena yell, Lissa and Smitty's light saber and Jedi antics ("Don't look at -me- that way!"), Dave's superb playing and singing. We just had a blast :).

Jodi: What more can I possibly add to this? Wow. That was just SUCH fun! What a great audience! Thanks so much to our guest performers who helped make it such an awesome experience. :-)

Allison: The disco incident during our concert has been hashed out in full (see Phil's report for an insider look into that), and it was unfortunate, but it in no way affected the satisfaction we had in our concert or the wonderful response we received from the crowd. The only thing I regret is the extra stress it put on the concom, so short a time before their own concert, and the fact that Annie and Tim had to leave our concert to deal with the hotel. But we will remember the thrill of that concert for a long, long time to come. Thanks, too, to the DD sound team for giving us a recording of our concert! Listening to it this week has brought back some fabulous memories :).

Jodi: I still have yet to hear it but I'm really looking forward to it. Thanks again!

Debbie: That was SUCH a fun concert...the audience was amazingly responsive, and of course their energy just revved us up even more. :-) Some of the Germans taught me a hand-jive thingy over the weekend, and it's way fun; feel free to ask at OVFF, and I'll show you. During our encore ("Gone Filkin'" by Tom Jeffers), I noticed Anne Whitaker at the back of the room doing the German hand jive. I immediately dropped my tambourine (Lissa's tambourine, actually...thanks, Lissa) and followed her lead. Within seconds, nearly the entire room was copying me!!! Very cool to see that...the UK filk audiences are unbelieveably enthusiastic about everything :-). I asked in my Blatherings about the origin of this hand-jive thingy, and Anne Whitaker responded, "Where the 'German Handjive' came from...I started this particular handjive back in the late 1970s when I was a mere nipper, having decided that there were too many variations of the handjive. This was taught to many English filkers at 'Return to the Forbidden Planet' shows, and from there to most of British Filkdom at filk conventions. The Germans picked up on it there and consolidated their handjives into one consistent jive. I have seen an entire German Filk convention handjive to Phoenix! It is an amazing sight!" re: disco controversy. One of the things that really impressed me about the whole incident was how united the convention attendees were in supporting the concom in all of this.

Allison: If every cloud has a silver lining, here it is: the comcon turned around from battling the hotel an hour later and provided the audience with a Phoenix set that was pure inspired rock and roll. Mike, Anne, Lissa, Tim, Phil and Annie, You Rule!!!!! Their concert was fantastic and I loved every minute of it. From the gorgeous harp and harmonies of "Crimson and Crystal" to Lissa's energetic "Robo-man" to the lush energy of "The Lady"

Jodi: Pheonix's version of "The Lady" ROCKS, man! I loved Mike's electric guitar on that. What a thrill. :-)

Allison: to Annie's wanton Ranger song to Tim's over-the-top "Return Of The King"

Jodi: Elvis Lives! (cue groupie screams)

Debbie: (faints)

Allison: to Phil's show-stopping "Thank You For Your Music", UT was just in heavy-duty groupie mode :). Whoooooo! What a party! Can't wait to see them perform again sometime!

Debbie: I already picked up their CD a while back so already knew these people were talented, but WOW...I was so blown away by their live performance at Digeri-Douze. Everyone absolutely must MUST hear Phoenix live in concert...it's worth the trip to England, really! Rafe, Dave Clement, Chris Conway, Jodi, Allison and I sat in the front row...SO much fun. I had heard rumours that Phoenix was "loud" but y'know what? I found them *exactly* loud enough. I've been to rock concerts which left my ears ringing even when I carefully sat far from the speakers...this didn't even come close; I thought the sound levels were great. These people have so much energy I'm surprised they don't explode on stage. :-) Especially Annie...whoa. (!!!) I had met Annie once before and she came across as a fairly quiet person. HA. The transformation of Annie-on-stage was truly astounding. Wildly teased hair, make-up, heels, painted-on leather look, the way she fairly crackled with energy as she gyrated and danced...this woman was MADE for the stage. All the Phoenix crew were excellent, and you could sense the fun they were having as they performed; it was infectious. The crowd was dancing, cheering, clapping their hands, yelling...it was a great party. Surprise of the concert for us...they did a KILLER version of "The Lady", with a rock guitar solo that had us melting all over the place. Wow...I really, really loved this version. I have to confess that my favourite piece of the concert was Phil's "Thank You For Your Music", which is one of the most brilliant parodies I've ever heard (ABBA tune), and SO well-done. The only problem with the concert, I found, was that my cheeks were in pain by the end...from all the smiling I was doing throughout. And yelling and screaming (esp. during Tim's gyrating Elvis number) and laughing, of course. Lissa was a dynamo on the drums and on stage...I wish she sang more! All the Phoenix crew played many instruments...I was really impressed (and felt hopelessly inadequate, of course). Yes, I'm a Phoenix groupie! I admit it!!! For more info about the group, http://www.altrion.org/phoenix/.

Allison: Loved when they finished with "Mr. Spaceman", too :). "Won't you please take me along, I won't do anything wrong..." So much fun!

Debbie: That was GREAT fun...the whole room was singing by that point. Allison: Finished the evening in the open filk circle, but the eventful day caught up to me relatively early and I called it a night at 2:30 am. After all, the evil concom had scheduled our Kiddie Concert for 10:00 the next morning... No sane filkers get up at that ungodly hour on the Sunday of a con... do they?

Jodi: Who said any of us were sane?

Sunday, February 6, 2000

Allison: Well, the concom had every reason to be smug as they sat in the front row at the start of our Kiddie Concert. Vindication was theirs. Seems we had a roomful of filkers willing to get up on a Sunday morning :).

Debbie: I was floored...we had been expecting, oh, maybe a dozen filkers. Heck, I don't know if *I* would have gotten up for a 10 a.m. concert if I had been filking into the wee hours the previous night!)

Allison: And -what- a roomful of filkers!!! I'm convinced we had to have been just as entertained by the audience during that hour as they may have been by us :). There was Teddy bouncing around with his bright yellow sock puppets during "Banana Slug", Franklin and Tilde flying around the room during "I'm Going To Fly To Florida", Annie's human train winding around the room during "Morningtown Ride", Jared's deafening shrieks during "We Are The Dinosaurs" and we managed to convert another continent to the "Ahhhh, I can't get that song out of my head!!! And it's 1 2 3, the kids love the monkey..." inevitability of "The Hockey Monkey Song" :). The "actual" kiddies helped to hold Debbie's cartoons and danced the rest of the time. I still laugh in wonder when I think about it. The enthusiasm, the sheer joy of it all... man, I miss you all so much :).

Jodi: What a lively audience! For 10am on a Sunday morning - at a FILK con - that's pretty darned impressive! Thanks to all who came and participated. It was *such* a blast! :-)

Debbie: That was the most fun I've had at one of our children's concert, gotta confess. Wow, what a party, and at 10 am on a Sunday morning, too!! I remember Jodi, Allison and I looking at each other several times during that wonderful chaos, shaking our heads in delighted amazement. It's one of the things I've noticed about filkers, to tell you the truth...we're not afraid of having fun and being kids again. :-) I remember another fun kids' concert in the U.S. where Sherman Dorn made a zillion finger butterfly puppets and the whole audience (consisting mostly of adults, of course) waved their 'butterflies' during one of our songs).

Allison: Sherman's butterfly song was sung at The Second ConCerto, where we first met Phil and Lissa. Next on was Dave Clement and what can I possibly say? Everything UT knows about performance and connecting with an audience we were learning at Dave's knee when we were mere filk pups. Dave took the Best Performer Pegasus Award this year at OVFF and my only reaction was "It's about time." :). His set was wonderful, as always. Talis' offered hanky came in very handy. We were honoured to be invited on stage to sing "Old Friends" with him and Rika, Katy and Talis at the end of the concert.

Jodi: Hankies were definitely needed. Dave certainly deserved that Pegasus Award.

Debbie: I love Dave. It was SO great to be able to spend some time with him during our stay in the UK...ironic that we have to fly over the ocean to be able to hang out with North American pals like Dave, Brenda and Bill! Though it was tough finding time with Brenda...every time I saw her, she was drooling over Anne and Mike's new baby. :D :D (okay, so their baby made ME melt, too...)

Allison: The filk auction went well and DD broke the record for the most money raised at a con for the filk fund. Congrats to Roger for being such a great auctioneer! Thanks to Lissa for buying both our cross-stitched sweatshirt and our tape. It may be awhile before Phil forgives either Lissa or UT for her financial enthusiasm :).

Debbie: That was a fun auction. Roger was wonderfully efficient! Interesting to compare it to North American Interfilk auctions. Our auctions tend to be more drawn out, with more "schtick". (the runners ham it up, use costumes, etc.) We also have the "Going...going...gone" tradition, which the Brits don't seem to have. And we use dollars instead of pounds, of course, so the numbers don't seem to go up as fast.

Allison: And this seems a good place to say thank you to Interfilk for giving us the opportunity to meet Phil and Lissa at The Second ConCerto in the first place. I have never felt Interfilk's message of bringing filkers from all over the globe together more intensely than I did during my time at Didgeri Douze. Keep supporting those British filk fund and Interfilk auctions, everyone, they benefit us all.

Debbie: Absolutely! I've heard many talented filkers I wouldn't have otherwise had it not been for the generosity of the Interfilk and filk fund auctions. And Allison, Jodi, and I have always been incredibly grateful for being invited to be Interfilk guests at ConChord out in California.

Allison: We badly needed some downtime after the energy of our set and the emotion of Dave's set, so unfortunately we missed Brian Biddle's second performance. We went to the mall for lunch with Christo, Lawrence and Dave. It was a relaxing time to get to know Chris and Lawrence better.

Jodi: I always love "downtimes" like that. Sharing laughter over a drink. I confess that I still haven't *quite* figured out what the English think "potato skins" are though... That mystified me. :-)

Debbie: You mean 'crisp' skins?

Allison: That's when I discovered the English version of lemonade is pretty strange, too. In Canada, lemonade is more a fruit juice, it's not carbonated. The lemonade I got with that meal was more like Seven-up.

Debbie: Fries are chips. Chips are crisps. Elevators are lifts. Things go pear-shaped just before a convention. Godfrey gave me a great little book on how to translate between 'British' and 'North American'. :-)

Allison: We arrived back in time to see most of the performance by NMC. Wow, gorgeous harmonies! A group like that must be so much fun to be part of! -Loved- the clothing and the cross-stitched banners, too!

Mike, Alison, Rick and Miki (Taking The Mic) entertained us, too, with a series of fun and serious songs and some lovely poetry. Sigh, I love listening to the harp :). I have never seen so many harps at one convention before!

All good things must end and the Closing Ceremonies were very emotional. We were given a jar of stuffed puppies, cute vibrating cows (I named mine Brioche, after the notorious dessert at our committee dinner :)) and wonderful wooden DD souvenir plaques made by Sue Mason. Thank you so much! We'll always treasure them.

Jodi: Wonderful momentos of an AMAZING con. Thank you!

Allison: Then Zander got up to sing a beautiful rendition of "Sam's Song" and we all sang and cried and hugged. It was a very moving way to end the con.

Jodi: I needed more of Talis' hankies, I'm afraid...

Debbie: We were all hugging and crying; it was quite the weepfest. "Sam's Song" will always have a special emotional significance for me now...apparently they always try singing it at the end of the convention. I suspect this end-of-con ceremony was more intense than the North American equivalents also because there is only one major filk con in England a year. This also helps explain why their conventions tend to run a bit longer than ours...many attendees stayed overnight through until Monday morning, for example.

Allison: From there we went to the traditional concom/guest meal in the hotel restaurant. Thanks to the concom for the dinner and the good times. The food was great, even if the slow service caused us all to get rather giddy and loud :).

Jodi: It was the slow service? Don't UT dinners *always* go like that? ;-)

Debbie: That was a fun dinner. :-)

Allison: Down to our last open filk circle after that and it was a perfect way to end the con. Phil parodied both "Starsoul" and "Puppies Cooked In Brine". Zander filked "The Hockey Monkey Song".

Jodi: Hee! We have successfully propagated!

Debbie: It was so cool seeing people start to sing the Hockey Monkey song independently. Also cool that it got filked by Phil and Zander.

Allison: Paul and Zander sang in Mongolian. Tajo and Rika sang more lovely songs in German (I want UT to learn a German song!). The good music went on and on. We lingered very, very late. We didn't want to leave... but at least we got to sleep in :).

Monday, February 7, 2000

Allison: The first few hours of Monday were spent lingering in the hotel lobby gathering good-bye hugs and promises to meet again from many, many new friends. Some of my most poignant memories involve saying good-bye to new German friends with them saying, "Come to FilkContinental." and us saying, "Come to FilKONtario." and the bittersweet awareness of how hard it can be to make friends who are half a world away. Still, an observation Talis made to me Friday night rings so true- it may be months or years before we all see each other again, but we -will- see each other again and it'll be as if we were never apart. Filk bonds tend to be that way :).

Jodi: I'm getting misty-eyed just thinking about it, actually. While I know it'll be difficult for us all to get together again as soon as I'd like, I'm still looking forward to it happening at some point. Time will tell.

Allison: I feel so privileged to have gotten to know so many of you at Didgeri Douze. I'd like to also invite you all to bookmark the "Blatherchat" board on the UT website (http://www.inkspot.com/ut/blatherchat.html). Please come post and join the fun and help us miss you all just a little less :). And do check out the FilKONtario website (http://www.bserv.com/community/fkoa.htm)... Toronto is a lovely city to visit...

My last thought in this -very- lengthy report has to be for the DD concom. Lissa, Phil, Smitty, Annie, Tim- thank you for making our extraordinary time in England possible. Thank you for all your hard work and for running such a great con. Thank you for your friendship, your warm hospitality, the loud parties, the quiet nights of music, for guiding this wide-eyed tourist through London, for tea, Cheerios, fish and chips and brownies. I miss you more than I can say.

Jodi: Again, Allison has said it all. I can't really add to that except that I feel the same way and want to say "Thank You" too. It was an *amazing* trip and it wouldn't have been possible without you guys. We greatly appreciate the confidence you showed in us two years ago and we hope to see you again as soon as is humanly possible. We miss you TONS...

Debbie: To Lissa, Phil, Smitty, Annie, and Tim...THANK YOU. Thank you for inviting us in the first place, for all your incredible behind-the-scenes work, for your friendship. For giving us the opportunity to enjoy the music of a close-knit filk community across an entire ocean, to share some of our own. I also want to thank the UK filk community for making us feel so welcome. I feel as though I've left a small part of me over there across the pond, and hope to come back to collect it eventually (though I suspect I'll just end up leaving another piece :-)). Hopefully we'll all run into each other someday soon. (fingers crossed very very hard)

Allison: You know, I loved England so much I suspect I won't be able to stay away for long. Being a teacher, getting to the filkcon may always be difficult for me, but I bet summers in England are really nice. Someday, John and I intend to find out :).

THE END