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HearManchester.com: An audio guide to the Rochdale Canal

A couple of months ago Visit Manchester, the city’s official tourism website, launched HearManchester.com, a 10-part audio guide to the Rochdale Canal and Petersfield.

Presented by John Robb, the downloadable and streamable guides are entitled inspired, green, en-route, underground, unsung (which I found most interesting), radical, poetic, human, proud and industrial. Each part includes interviews with local experts – ‘ranging from city councillors to body-poppers, psychogeographers to popstars’ – and has a PDF transcript and an associated map, highlighting some of the main points of interest.

The individual guides have a physical trailmarker (such as the one pictured and this one) to encourage people to website, and the project is being promoted as part of next week’s Manchester Science Festival. The guide, produced by Northern Quarter digital agency StarDotStar, has also been shortlisted for a BIMA Award.

Manchester Literature Festival 2008

This year’s Manchester Literature Festival launched yesterday and while my involvement, Rainy City Stories, is ticking along nicely (7,000 views and a very healthy number of stories submitted in its first seven days), there are of course plenty of real-life events worth checking out between now and 26 October:

Past Crimes – Historical crime writers Lee Jackson, Andrew Martin and Anne Perry talk about their work in the ‘suitably gothic’ surroundings of the John Ryland’s Library. Today, Friday, 7pm. Free

Between the Panels – An illustrated discuss with a panel of three graphic novelists. Whitworth Art Gallery, Sunday 19 October, 3pm. £4/£3

School of Manchester – A demonstration of the city’s strength in literature education, as three graduates – including Joe Stretch – talk about their debut novels. The Deaf Institute, Sunday 19 October, 7.30pm. £5/£3

Portico Prize Preview – Featuring shortlisted authors from the biennial Portico Prize for a book set mainly in northern England. Manchester Central Library (pity it’s not at the Portico library…), Wednesday 22 October, 1pm. Free

Manchester Blog Awards – The third annual blog awards, for which Mancubist is nominated, this year feature a new award, CityLife Blog of the Year. Matt & Phred’s Jazz Club, Wednesday 22 October, 7pm. Tickets £3/£2

Comma Film Premiere – Five new films adapted from short stories published in the North West, plus the film-makers and writers explaining the adaptation process. Cornerhouse, Thursday 23 October, 6.30pm. £4/£3

It looks like you’re writing a letter – Ross Sutherland and Tim Clare give a lecture on the relationship between language and mathematics, bizarrely. Followed by Tony Walsh’s Zeroes and Ones, which ‘compresses 14 billion years of science and philosophy into one byte-sized poem’. Museum of Science and Industry, Sunday 26 October, 2pm. £5/£3

And those are just select highlights! Pick up one of the ridiculously bright brochures – or visit the festival website – for the full programme. Well done to Cathy and Jon for putting such a substantial festival together, and for using more than just the usual venues.

Manchester International Festival 2009

At the weekend, a friend was telling me how he thought last year’s Manchester International Festival was an all-round disappointment. Without pausing, I jumped to its defence, listing all the events I enjoyed (The Pianist, Il Tempo del Postino, Manchester Dines, The Rehearsal, the Monkey opera…) and adding that, personally, I thought it was a big success. The reviews were generally favourable too – and an independent report declared that it exceeded expectations.

So how will the festival’s second coming in summer 2009 compare? If the first three commissions – announced last Thursday – are anything to go buy, the scope will be equally wide, with MIF again taking arts to the masses:

J S BACH/ZAHA HADID ARCHITECTS – Zaha Hadid Architects create a unique environment within Manchester Art Gallery for Bach’s solo works for piano, violin and cello; sublime music in a sublime space. Soloists are Piotr Anderszewski (piano), Jean-Guihem Queyras (cello) and Alina Ibragimova (violin).

EVERYBODY LOVES A WINNER – A new theatrical experience created by acclaimed director Neil Bartlett with Simon Deacon and Struan Leslie. The Royal Exchange theatre becomes a Bingo hall, immediately familiar and strange. With added music, dancing and quite possibly a chance to win some cash…

PRIMA DONNA – Rufus Wainwright’s debut opera. A portrait of a fading opera singer; set in Paris and sung in French. Directed by Daniel Kramer, conducted by Pierre-Andre Valadé and designed by Antony McDonald. Soprano Janis Kelly takes the lead role, Madame.

The Wainwright opera was originally commissioned by New York’s Met Opera – but the partnership fell apart following his decision to write it in French and the company’s inability to schedule it during 2009. New York’s loss is clearly Manchester’s gain, and this promises to be one of MIF’s headline events.

It’s also great to see that the festival has ditched Ticketmaster and appointed The Lowry-based Quaytickets as its ticketing partner. All profits generated by Quaytickets go towards funding the venue, so at least those booking fees are staying in Greater Manchester this time round.

These three commissions are the first of 21, which will all premiere next summer. The rest of the programme will be announced in March 2009.

In The City 2008 – Live and Unsigned

We’re less than a month away from this year’s In The City, the first without Tony Wilson, who launched the music conference with partner Yvette Livesey in 1992. And general manager Jon-Paul Waddington has been in touch with details of the live side of the event, which has helped the likes of Mercury Prize-winners Elbow, Coldplay and, er, the Darkness get a record deal.

As well as dozens of fringe shows, the official ITC Unsigned this year features 49 bands you’ve never heard of. Jon-Paul suggests that you check out Jesse Rose, Barn Owl, I Am Austin, Baddies, Flashguns, The Fire And I, Telegram From The Queen, General Fiasco and Oscar Charlie – and I’d recommend The Travelling Band, who I’ve mentioned before. The only other two names I recognise are Nomad Jones and The Paris Riots – but that’s the whole point: hearing something completely new.

Perhaps more importantly for non-industry types, however, are the Live showcases, which invite 22 ITC-related organisations to put on the bands they think are the best in the world right now. Here are some of the most impressive showcases:

Heavenly Recordings: Cherry Ghost, Edwyn Collins, Loose Salute, Romeo Stodart (The Magic Numbers), John Head (Shack), Pete Greenwood

Piccadilly Records: Woodcraft Folk, Beach Fuzz, DA Jaycock Quartet, Magic Arm, Colorama, The Real Dolls, Sophie’s Pigeons, Down The Tiny Steps, Sara Lowes

The Warehouse Project/Eat Your Own Ears (opening party): Reverend & The Makers, Tricky, The Whip, Late Of The Pier, Midnight Juggernauts, Simian Mobile Disco, Four Tet

Fierce Panda: The Spinto Band, Dutch Uncles, Laymar, Airship, Acres Of Lions, Capital

Plus there are plenty of other showcases by the likes of Alan McGee, Drowned in Sound, Twisted Nerve, XFM, Channel M, BBC Introducing and the NME. This information isn’t published online yet, but expect full details to be here soon.

In The City 2008 takes places on October 5-7 and is based at the Midland Hotel.