Graffiti Classics

Touring UK and internationally throughout 2008
The 'stand-up string quartet' have been enjoying ever-larger
audiences at their theatre tours, which have been arranged by us since 2004.
In 2006 and 2007, they played to sell-out audiences across the
country, and returned to the Edinburgh festival for their third visit
with a new show.
Graffiti have entertained
audiences of all ages around the world with their virtuosic musical talents,
combining brilliant playing with amazing dancing, singing and comedy routines.
Not
gypsy, not jazz, not trad, not classical but 16 strings, 8 dancing feet
and 4 voices. Graffiti Classics perform a wide variety of
music
from Hungarian
folk to hornpipes and polkas, with a little Mozart, Bach and Strauss
added for good measure.
Complete sell out - Edinburgh Fringe Festivals 2004, 2005
and 2006.
The Times
On the Fringe, a dazzling
foursome called Graffiti Classics has been packing them in at the Pleasance
Dome. They are basically a string quartet, with
double bass replacing cello. But that classification doesn't begin to
describe their quickfire concoction of dancing, singing and clowning,
all done while they also get their virtuosic fingers around a repertoire
running from madrigals and Mozart to tango - and even a can-can.
The show would
be a wonderful
antidote for those who think that classical music is as staid as
stained-glass. Instead of signing up yet more third-rate stand-up comics,
the legion
of TV executives currently cherry-picking on the Fringe ought
to give Graffiti
Classics a chance.
Daily Mail
Take two pretty girls on viola
and violin; add a blisteringly hot fiddle player dressed like a humbug
in a striped teddy boy suit with
co-respondent
shoes; throw in an Irish primate of the lower order, double
bass: and you have Graffiti Classics, the most sensational string quartet
on the
Fringe.
Bertie Anderson, who is actually female, Alice Pratley,
Bogdan
Vacarescu and Cathal O'Duill combine superb classical music
skills with inventive
comedy and relentless dance energy.
From Cossack dance to can-can,
they caper their way through the popular classics, from Strauss to Bizet
into Irish folk
and Jewish
bar mitzvah
music.
With sharp and lethal bows flashing through the air, the
choreography has to be spot on - one careless Hava nagila
could leave the
primate wearing a Moshe Dyan eye-patch. Instead, he jigs
wildly around
his bass like a
leprechaun
in a gorilla suit, without ever losing total command of
the instrument.
For extra measure, Pratley sings a haunting
rendition of Irish folk classic The Parting Glass, while the skirt-swishing,
fan-fluttering Anderson doubles
as a sultry torch singer, burning up on It Ain't Necessarilly
So.
Vacardscu's glissano is so slippery cool it's red hot
- with such talent, he can be forgiven the suit. I'd
write more,
but the primate
ran into
the audience and confiscated my notebook. I can't rid
my
mind of the image of
him playing the Pizzicato Polka with the bass tucked
crosswise under his chin - God knows, I've tried.
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