Sing Along with the Yoots
Sorry, this event’s been and gone
When:
| Fri 16 Dec ’11, 7:00pm–12:00am |
|
Where: St Peters Hall, Cnr Beach Rd and Ames St, Paekakariki Show map
Restrictions: All Ages
Ticket Information:
- General admission: $15.00
- Booking fees may apply
Holy woolly singlets, Kapiti! Fast breaking news! The Yoots are comin...
To celebrate the end of a great year, and as a warm up to playing WOMAD and Rippon festivals next year, the Yoots are blessing us with their particular style of Pacifika-Ska.
This one is for the family! Get in quick with tickets on sale from the usual outlets-updates comin soon. Strictly limited sales!
Start time is 7pm for the little ones with special guest DJs playing classic ska and soul sounds till late for the not-so-oldies.
During 2011, the Yoots released Sing along with the Yoots! to critical and popular acclaim.
In 2006 the notorious Hopepa (Joe Lindsay, trombonist for FFD) ceased his outlandish antics for a brief moment and formed his own group, The Yoots.
He enlisted his younger brother Sam Lindsay along with colleagues Iain Gordon and Toby Laing. Then he summoned Mike Fabulous, the Yeabsley brothers and P.K. Hoskin. Still not satisfied, Hopepa called in favours from the likes of Craig Poll, Lucien Johnson, Will Ricketts and Adam Tijerina; and finally the ensemble was complete.
With Ho at the helm, the new group set out to navigate a musical passage somewhere between calypso-ska and country-soul.
The Yoots took the stage at The Cuba Street Carnival, a series of outdoor festivals, as well as late night appearances too numerous to enumerate. Wild excitement and heaving dance floors followed The Yoots at every turn and the air crackled with the strains of the finest party music, songs from distant corners of the globe, from East Africa to the Caribbean.
Early in 2010, The Yoots began to chart a slightly different course. Along with the rocksteady rythms of Don Drummond and The Skatalites, other sounds, famous melodies from Aotearoa began to feature on the programme. A new era had commenced.
Songs such as Hine E Hine and E Papa Waiari were heard alongside strains of Calypso Boogie and Creole Compa. Instead of hunting through rare records to unearth musical gems from distant lands, The Yoots searched through their own experiences and earliest memories to draw on the rich musical tradition of these islands.




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interfunk 6 months ago