Tuesday 7th October 2025
Blog Page 923

‘We’re going to do it better than Braveheart’

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If your schooling was anything like Tom Fisher’s, who is playing Ross in this new production of Macbeth, you studied the Scottish play in Year 6 for your SATs, in Year 11 for your GCSEs, and again for your AS levels. For me, it was Romeo and Juliet which proved inescapable, which I feel may have been a marginally worse fate. From Hamlet to A Midsummer Night’s Dream, I feel we’ve all had one of Shakespeare’s masterpieces ruined by being compelled to endlessly reproduce points about nature metaphors and biblical imagery. After suffering such banal experiences of Shakespeare prior to university, it was a small revelation when I started seeing student productions which did new things with the plays.

In light of this, I ask director Georgia Nicholson how she plans to make Macbeth fresh. She tells me she is doing something which ‘no modern production has achieved’completely removing modern interpretations and dilutions from the play, and firmly placing it back in its ‘true’ setting in 11th century Scotland.

This historicist take on the play is something which the cast seem very keen to play up too. Ben Kybett, who is playing Malcolm, emphasises that Macbeth is set in a world ‘where a king is near divine’‘There are a lot of really quite intense views on monarchy and primogeniture and patriotism and nationalism. It’s an entirely different world, an entirely different way of conceiving how political and social relations work.’ But can’t these threads still exist in a modern or ‘timeless’ setting? ‘I worry that if you set it in a modern power setting, like Downing Street, these ideas such as the Divine Right of Kings, and guest relations, and soldiering, just won’t really come out.’ Georgia nods in agreement: ‘Yes, I think a lot of the punch comes from the original’.

This method of ‘making it new’ by actually making it really, really old may be radical in that it is decidedly untrendy. From Fascist twists on King Lear at the National Theatre, to 1980s versions of Marlowe’s Edward II here in Oxford, the general trend for directors taking on Shakespeare and his contemporaries seems to be to play with our expectations and experiment with setting.

With the absence of such gimmicks, I ask the director what her vision of a setting so far removed from our own experiences is actually like. ‘We’re in a cold, dark place, especially after the death of the king. We’re in a bizarre placewhen it’s supposed to be daylight, it’s actually dark. It’s like a permanent solar eclipse is going on. It’s cold, there are witches coming out of the marshes. So I think, when people say they want to plunge an audience into the setting, we really mean it. It’s going to be like ice water baths. You are literally taken away from Oxford and modernity and electricity.’

This all sounds impressive, but I wonder how it will actually be achieved in a small student production. ‘Aesthetically, it is going to be sparse and cold’, Georgia tells me. I suppose sparseness is quite a budget-friendly direction to take it in really, and probably true to the aesthetic of a cold Scottish castle. ‘A thing that annoys me about traditional companies doing Macbeth is they set them in lavish Elizabethan palaces with red curtains and gold everywhere. Our set will be minimal: we have thrones in the middle of the room, and torches, and not much else. And everything will be in stone and wood.’ The cast will wear woollen clothing which, as the director proudly tells me, has been woven by the costume designer using authentic 11th century techniques, rather than resorting to ‘just something black from Primark’.

The cast seem to have researched their parts extensively, and offer insightful comments on what they will bring to their respective roles. Hannah Chukwu, playing Lady Macbeth, says ‘I’m trying to imagine what it would be like to live in a castle, on your own, not seeing your husband for months because he’s at war. How would you react when he returns? Lady Macbeth is, to me, the most interesting character in the play. Her ‘unsex me here’ speech at the beginning really reveals how she views everything in terms of power relations.’

Will this Macbeth live up to its bold claims? The director jokes that they are ‘doing it better than Braveheart’, no less. If you want to find out, you will have to act quickly, since opening and closing night have completely sold out.

Macbeth will play at St. Hilda’s JdP 28th February – 2nd March.

Sport thought: The growth of ‘Britball’

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American football has somewhat begun to take-off in England over the last decade. Every university has a team, local clubs are growing, and the NFL International Series is the most popular that it has ever been. The prospect of an NFL team moving or even being founded in London has however, been received with different levels of enthusiasm by British fans. I am most certainly in favour.

My favourite moment of the NFL season was the hard-fought victory by the Green Bay Packers over the Dallas Cowboys. This game really epitomised the reason I love football. With 15 seconds to go, arguably the most inform quarterback in the National Football League has just been sacked for a big loss by a safety blitz from the Dallas secondary. Aaron Rodgers comes back and doesn’t even call a play in the huddle. He simply tells the receivers to go to specific areas of the field to find the weak areas of the cushioned zone the defence is running. The snap goes off, Rodgers scrambles to his left, under pressure from a defensive end, and throws the ball on the run to the side-line where Jared Cook, the Green Bay tight end, slides with his knees and catches the ball to put the Packers within field goal range. Mason Crosby, the Packer’s kicker, steps up and makes a 51 yard field goal to win the game and beat Dallas in the divisional playoffs for the second time in three years. It’s good.

As far as other exciting moments in my four years of following the sport go, I could point to the Raiders Saints game in week one of the season, or the crazy Dallas-Pittsburgh game with the fake spike and Ezekiel Elliot’s magical game winning run, but this game was in the playoffs—the ‘winner takes all’ knockout round of the NFL. I understand that for a
first time reader, what I’ve described above might honestly make absolutely no sense and for a long time I didn’t know what any of those words meant either, but the growth of ‘Britball’ could mean that this will soon no longer be the case.

American Football in Britain has supposedly “really taken off” according to pundits on Sky Sports’ ‘Sunday Night Football’. More and more people are playing at a grassroots level and there is a new BBC highlights show every week that many people tune in to watch or catch up with on IPlayer. There are going to be a record four NFL games played in the UK next year featuring playoff team the Miami Dolphins and the newly relocated LA Rams.

The possibility of a London franchise is serious: George Osborne, speaking in both 2014 and 2015 has said that it could be achieved in the next “four or five years.” Teams moving is something that occurs fairly regularly in America, though somewhat of an alien concept in this country. For example, the original Los Angeles Rams moved to St. Louis for 20 years before returning to LA and the famous Colosseum stadium for this season just gone. The San Diego Chargers are, this off-season, moving to Los Angles as well and the current Oakland Raiders have, relatively recently, filed paperwork to relocate to Las Vegas.

The team most often cited as being the candidate for London is the Jacksonville Jaguars, owned by Shahid Khan, who also owns Fulham FC. The Jaguars (or Jags) are a young team with some good young playmakers such as Allen Robinson at receiver and first round pick last year Jalen Ramsey at cornerback. Their biggest struggles come at quarterback with Blake Bortles having a regression in performance from, what was a decent showing in 2015. If the Jaguars do move, which I personally hope they do, the sport can surely only continue to grow in this country and guarantees at least eight NFL games to be played in London every year, a prospect many fans in this country can only dream of.

Between the World and Ta-Nehisi Coates

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Ta-Nehisi Coates addresses his autobiographical rumination on race relations in America, Between the World and Me (2015), to his son, Samori. This is how he sums up his advice: “Here is what I would like for you to know: In America, it is traditional to destroy the black body—it is heritage.” It’s Coates conviction that America, founded on the backs of slaves, has been irrevocably tainted by its original sin; institutionally, culturally, all-pervasively racist.

Coates has become the most influential African American writer of his generation, his series of long articles for The Atlantic becoming required reading, from the angry, incisive ‘The Case for Reparations’ (2014) to the moving, ‘My President was Black’ (2016). He is a journalist unafraid to embed his personal experiences into highly detailed reportage. Between the World and Me, his second book, comes after his 2008 memoir The Beautiful Struggle, and won the 2015 National Book Award. Despite such worldly success, Coates’ pessimism runs deep, unconvinced racism will ever be ‘solved’ in the US.

He writes powerfully that “To be black in the Baltimore of my youth was to be naked before the elements of the world, before all the guns, fists, knives, crack, rape, and disease.” Yet this nakedness, its fear and vulnerability, are constants, can never be left behind by Coates or by his son. America is an environment where new
methods of oppression are invented at every stage, from the lash of the slave-owner to the police officer’s bullet in the back. The book is a confession to his son, that he is incapable of protecting him, that he can never be truly safe.

Coates’ great rhetorical devices is to term white America ‘the Dreamers’, perpetuating the American Dream, an intrinsically racist construct used to disguise African Americans oppression, blaming their lack of achievement as a lack of effort.This alienation Coates feels from white America leads to most provocative passage in the book. Witnessing the events of 9/11 unfold from his apartment building in Brooklyn, he says, “my heart was cold. I had disasters all my own… I would never consider any American citizen pure.” Coates, despite his atheism, has an almost catholic belief in the original sin of slavery transmitting down through the generations, affecting all. Written before the election of Donald Trump, Coates clearly has no time for the myths of Obama’s post-racial America.

The book however, is not without its faults. The description of the murder of a friend, Prince Jones, is seen as a watershed in Coates’ consciousness; yet his account of the policeman murdering Jones never fully explains the officer being black as well. Perhaps more troublingly, Coates, despite writing extensively on the black body, rarely moves beyond his own masculine viewpoint to consider the double binds of racism and misogyny black women have been subjected to. Nor does Coates give more than a cursory acknowledgement of the racism inflicted upon Hispanic or Asian Americans. In his defence though, Coates makes no claim that his slim volume is an all-encompassing record of US race relations—it is his experiences he writes about, not others. Astute and sharp tongued, it is a major work by an important writer which, even when you disagree with his points, is always engrossing.

Oxford iGEM team goes to Royal Society’s conference

“Take a look at the items on your desk: a lamp, various iDevices and a house plant. Which of these is the most advanced piece of engineering?” asks Dr Jason Kelly, CEO of the synthetic biology company Ginkgo Bioworks. He argues the case for the house plant: a self-sustaining, self-replicating and selfrenewing system. “Imagine what a self renewing iPhone would do to Apple’s profit margins!”

Biology has evolved machines of incomparable sophisitication to manmade devices, however synthetic biology, the fusion of engineering and biology affectionally known as ‘synbio’, is providing tools for scientists to exploit the genetic machinery that organisms use to live and co-opt it for novel purposes. From bacterial perfume to computing DNA, the applications are seemingly limitless, as the Oxford 2017 iGEM (International Genetically Engineered Machine Competition) team discovered when they attended a conference at the Royal Society in London.

The first speaker, Professor Christina Smolke from Stanford University, explained how her group engineered a yeast opioid production line, allowing more efficient production of the poppy-derived pain relief molecule than traditional extraction methods from its natural source. Transplanting the poppy pathway into yeast required knowledge of the protein machinery (enzymes) and genes that encode them in every stage of the natural pathway. From here, the researchers turned to other organisms to mine for alternatives. For efficiency, different stages of the pathway were segregated to different sub-compartments of the cell, much like the specialised buildings of a production factory.

Then came Dr Jason Kelly, whose Boston based company Ginkgo Bioworks is taking advantage of the falling cost of genetic engineering to expand it to new markets in the fragrance, flavour, and food industries. Their latest venture is a microbe produced version of an extinct flower’s scent. Consult Dr Kelly and his team with a product idea and they will endeavour to find a way to make a bacterial device to meet your needs. The innovation takes place in an impressive 40,000 square-foot facility, more akin to a sci-fi film set than a science lab, endowed with the latest robotics and automation. Automation is crucial to synthetic biology’s design led approach to replace time-consuming trial and error experiments. Dr Kelly’s presentation stood out in capturing the ‘blue sky’ thinking of the field, and we were excited to discover that he was part of one of the first iGEM teams.

This same approach has applications in more conventional industries while still retaining this ‘outside the box’ thinking. Dr Jeremy Shears from Shell discussed the potential of a synbio solution to the energy problem, envisioning fuel producing microbes and novel energy carriers made by photosynthesis. Many of these applications are a long way off, yet the urgency of the growing energy crisis makes advances in this field vital.

The importance of drugs derived from natural products highlighted in Professor Smolke’s presentation was revisited by Pfizer researcher Dr Edmund Graziani, who described these chemicals as “privileged” because they have been fine-tuned by evolution. However, he explained that in the past only a subset of these chemicals were suitable to be developed into drugs because they had to be small enough to enable them to be properly processed by the body. Not only did this limit the compounds that could be developed, but also left many diseases “undruggable”. Dr Graziani argues the case for creating a microbial machine that can perform “directed evolution”: the bacteria would take existing natural products, modify them, and spew out only the most promising potential drugs. To realise this approach, however many technical hurdles must be overcome.

A recent addition to the synbio toolkit, the development of techniques to incorporate unnatural amino acid building blocks into proteins in vivo is proving useful in pharmaceuticals and beyond. Usually cells are limited to using only 20 of these building blocks, so expanding this repertoire by adding phantom amino acids could greatly enhance diversity. What’s more, the scientists can choose the precise site into which to introduce the unnatural amino acids to specifically decorate the protein with chemical labels. These are useful, for example, in making the protein visible under a microscope or in allowing it to be attached to a drug delivery vehicle.

The final speaker, Microsoft’s Dr Andrew Phillips, presented research into “bio-computing”, explaining how knowledge of how cells compute is being exploited to programme DNA and organisms. For example, the “consensus algorithm”, which causes participants to agree to do the same thing, was ‘invented’ and utilised by cells as a means of controlling cell division. There are exciting advances here, but it seems that at the moment the biology is more complicated than the computer science: biology is more unpredictable and noisy than electronics so we must be careful not to overstretch the analogy of “genes as circuits”.

I took a lot away from the diversity of the talks, not only inspiration for iGEM but also a better understanding of the current achievements, future promises, and limitations of the field of synthetic biology. The scope of synbio applications we learnt from the conference certainly hasn’t helped us narrow down ideas for our own project, but we left excited by the fact that we may be able to contribute to this rapidly-expanding area of biology.

Cherwell is recruiting for TT17

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Cherwell is now recruiting for editorial positions for next term. This is your chance to be part of one of the longest-running independent newspapers in the United Kingdom and to follow in the footsteps of past contributors such as Graham Greene, W.H. Auden, Hadley Freeman, and Rupert Murdoch.

We are recruiting for section editors, deputy section editors, broadcasters, and contributors.

Apply to be a Cherwell section editor here or a deputy section editor here. Apply for a position on the Broadcasting team here. Copy and paste the text from the Google document into your own Google or Word document and email all application forms to [email protected].

The deadline for applications is Monday 6 March at 8pm. Please email any queries to [email protected]

Cherwell is also looking for cartoonists, illustrators, and photographers—all interested contact [email protected] with details of any relevant experience.

Candidates will have a short, informal interview with the editors. Interviews will be held during 8th Week.

Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter for recruitment updates and news.

Our Business team is also always looking for new recruits. Cherwell provides some of the best business experience in Oxford and provides excellent preparation for any media, consulting or banking career. We’ll train you on all relevant parts of the business and teach you to raise £10,000 independently. Email [email protected] to express interest.

Editorial job descriptions:

News:

This term, Cherwell news has reported on Oxford’s Trump protests and Iffley Open House, as well as exposing fake news. Our latest front page even resulted in the withdrawing of funding from a major political event. Our stories have been reported in the Telegraph, the Guardian, and the Independent. To apply for News Editor, fill out the Section Editor form. It’s very easy to become a News Reporter (and you can still contribute to other sections of the paper too): just send an email to [email protected], come along to our weekly meetings, and you can be at the forefront of student journalism (maybe even literally on the front page).

Comment:

The Comment section has a well-respected tradition of printing cutting-edge opinion pieces from students on a range of Oxford and national issues. Our best debates and opinion pieces are read around the University and online, frequently attracting several thousand hits.

Joining the Comment team also allows you to interview leading political figures and celebrities. In the last year, Cherwell has interviewed Michael Gove, Fiona Bruce, Mary Beard, Jeremy Paxman, Richard Dawkins and Slavoj Žižek.

If you’re passionate about a subject and want to share your views and spark debate, join us. You can be a Deputy Comment Editor even if you haven’t written for us before—Deputy Comment Editors are intended to form a permanent core of reliable writers who can called upon regularly to write for the section. If you just want to write on an ad hoc basis as a contributor there’s no need to fill out a form, just email [email protected].

Satire:

Satire is one of Cherwell‘s newest sections, but it’s already giving Private Eye a run for its money. This term, its pieces have ranged from international politics to college politics featuring the likes of Trump, May and Corbyn. Each week our Satire Editor writes and sources a number of articles and cartoons. Fancy yourself as the next Hislop? Then this is the position for you. Fill in the Section Editor form to apply for the role of Satire Editor.

Life:

The Life hosts a number of Cherwell’s most popular features, including our Letter from Abroad and the (in)famous Blind Date.

We also have a Food & Drink page, which you can additionally apply to edit, or to write for. It features a wide variety of reviews and recipes. If you want to review college meals, or Oxford’s extensive number of bars or restaurants, this is the place to look.

Deputy Life Editors are intended to form a permanent core of reliable writers which can called upon regularly to write for the section. If you just want to write on an ad hoc basis as a contributor there’s no need to fill out a form, just email [email protected].

Investigations:

We are extremely proud of our Investigations section, otherwise known as C+. This is where some of the most in-depth, investigative journalism is done, tackling some of the biggest issues in Oxford today. This term, C+ has investigated, amongst other things, the problems surrounding homelessness, race, and suspension in Oxford. If you want to test the waters of investigative life before becoming completely in charge of it, apply for Deputy Investigations Editor.

Features:

Appearing in the paper every other week, this term’s new Features section has included some brilliant pieces on January’s women’s march, travel and the freedom and empowerment of drag. If you’re a fan of the New York Times‘ long form articles, want to interrogate and explore subjects in more detail and fancy reading (or writing) an article longer than the standard comment piece, Features is the section for you. Fill out the Section Editor form to apply to become Features Editor.

Culture:

Culture is our largest section, with pages dedicated to Film & TV, Stage, Music, Books & Lit, and Visuals. We’re one of the first ports of call for reviews of all the student plays, as well as all the other cultural delights which Oxford offers.

If you’d like to edit the whole Culture section, please fill in the Section Editor form. If you’d like to edit any of the Film & TV, Stage, Music, Books & Lit or Visuals pages, please fill in the Section Editor form. If you would just like to contribute to Culture occasionally, there’s no need to fill in a form—please just email [email protected] expressing your interest.

Fashion:

Our Fashion section has gone from strength to strength this term. If you want to organise weekly photoshoots, or you’ve got opinions on fashion and fancy being the next Sartorialist, this is the section for you.

Deputy Fashion Editors are intended to form a permanent core of reliable writers which can called upon regularly to write for the section and to help with the weekly fashion shoots. If you just want to write on an ad hoc basis as a contributor there’s no need to fill out a form, just email [email protected].

Science & Tech:

Science has only recently found a home in our weekly paper, but the section, which started in Michaelmas 2016, now publishes regular, focused and cutting-edge articles in Cherwell. Covering Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Medical Sciences, Engineering, and everything in between, the section allows a thoughtful scientist to publish musings on any new research that has been dumbfounding them, or even interview their favourite scientist. Recent articles have included a piece investigating why quantum physics is invading biology, a discussion surrounding editing genes, and an interview with Sir Paul Nurse. This term, we’re opening out the page to include the world of technology too. Fill out the Section Editor form to apply to edit our Science & Tech section.

Sport:

We report on many major sporting occasions in Oxford—whether your interest is rugby, swimming or lacrosse, there are opportunities for objective analysis of the big games, or not-so-objective match reports from those involved in college matches. Get involved with the Sport section to continue this trend and expand high quality coverage to other sporting fields.

Apply to be a Deputy Sport Editor if you would like to be part of a permanent team of reliable writers which can called upon regularly to write for the section. If you just want to write on an ad hoc basis as a contributor you don’t need to fill out a form, just email [email protected].

Broadcasting:

Our Broadcasting section has produced fantastic content over the last term, from our weekly news round up to covering TedxTalks Oxford and various sporting events. If you have experience in production and editing, or are just keen to learn about being either behind or in front of the camera, then apply to join the broadcasting team.

Squatters leave Iffley Open House for University building

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The Iffley Open House (IOH) occupiers claim to now be squatting in a University-owned building, following their eviction from the Volkswagen garage owned by Wadham College in which they had been living.

Today the group secured the power station at Osney Island, an unoccupied space owned by Oxford University, which they claim has been left “unutilised” for several years.

The building was used as a physics faculty by Oxford in the 1970s, but has stood empty now for seven years. The space had reportedly been considered for use by the University’s Said Business School.  

In a press release IOH said that they “hope to stay for two months, and work with local residents to create a safe space which is just as successful as the original Iffley Open House”.

Oxford University said in a statement to Cherwell: “30 people moved into the Old Power Station building owned by the University of Oxford. Around 20 of them are homeless and are using it as a squat after vacating a former car showroom from which they had been given notice to quit.

“Ten volunteers working with the homeless are thought to have joined them. The University sympathises with the plight of these homeless people who need somewhere safe to live and has been speaking with their representatives about how to resolve the situation.

IOH squatters were given notice from Wadham two weeks ago that they would have to leave the old VW garage owned by the college by yesterday.

This notice came despite tthe group’s claim that in January the leaseholders of the ground floor of the building, the Mid-Counties Co-Operative, had negotiated a lease to allow the squatters to stay until 10 April.

Since New Year’s Eve the group had being using the building to house up to 20 homeless people. They had been providing cooked meals and washing facilities, as well as skills to help the residents find new work.

Oxford University students, including the ‘Hertford for the Homeless’ campaign, have worked alongside local volunteers to aid IOH’s homeless residents. Students today assembled in Radcliffe Square to take photos to express their solidarity with the project.

IOH say that since opening the shelter, two residents have been rehoused, one has been accepted into University, a further two have started new jobs, and several others are awaiting responses from job applications.

Sandra Phillips, an IOH voluntee, said: “We fully intend to respect the Power Station and the surrounding community for as long as we stay here, we hope match the level of understanding and support that we’ve received at Iffley Road

“Ultimately, this is about providing housing for those who need it most – and we truly believe that the residents of Oxford believe in this cause as much as we do”

Cocktail of the week: Lemon drop

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Who didn’t love sherbet drops as a kid? Those hard lemon sweets filled with sherbet that you would always find at your grandparent’s house. This cocktail is the adult equivalent of that childhood favourite. It combines citrus, orange liqueur and vodka for the perfect blend of tart and sweet. It’s also incredibly cheap, with vodka and triple sec being two of the cheapest spirits you can buy. Thanks to the small measurement sizes, you can also make quite a few of these from your litre bottle of vodka, saving even more money in the long-term.

Ingredients:

50 ml Vodka
15 ml Triple sec
25 ml Fresh lemon juice
Lemonade
1 tbsp sugar
Ice cubes
1 fresh lemon

Method:

1. Wet the rim of the glass with some lemon juice and then dip this in some sugar to rim the glass. Do this a few minutes ahead of time so the sugar can dry and adhere well to the glass.

2. Place Vodka, Triple Sec, and lemon juice into a cocktail shaker with four-five ice cubes. Sugar can be added to your taste, although 1 tbsp should be about right.

3. Shake this vigorously for about 30 seconds and then strain into your glass.

4. Top up with lemonade to help stretch the alcohol and provide you with a bigger drink.

5. Garnish the drink with a lemon twist by cutting a circular slice of lemon, and then detaching the peel from the pulp. Cut the peel into a single strip and then twist it into a spiral and place it in the glass.

Underground and boxed inside

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The London Overground ploughs through Shoreditch, and beneath the railway arches lies Village Underground. It’s a fascinating venue. The tight tunnels and narrow passageways give way to a monolithic brick wall which towers over the side of the stage—a stage where Boxed In stand.

This concert is the band’s largest to date, although given frontman Oli Bayston’s nack for a nifty melody and tight production, it would not be surprising if they went onto much bigger things from here. Their sound, somewhere between dance and alt rock, fills the cavern.

Everything the band do has a real sense of urgency tonight—cymbals are smashed, bass strings are plucked, strobes flash, all with a ferocious intensity which invigorates some of the more plodding songs from latest LP, Melt.

The final minutes of ‘London Lights’ are transformed from a pretty dull breakdown into a frenzy—synths soar like organs around the venue, while Bayston yells “Take you back for love!” The added pace doesn’t always come off as well as the band might like. On their more reflective tracks, not that there are many, it’s all a bit too much. The power of Bayston’s most restrained and beautiful song to date, ‘Open Ended’, is lost: the climactic bridge—during which he sings of Icarus—flies too close to a beat-driven sun, has its wings melted, and dies.

Boxed In choose not to look back to their first, eponymous LP, and it’s a move that pays off —in retrospect their earlier songs quite understandably don’t demonstrate the same nuance as their later tracks. Despite this, it’s one from Boxed In which is the standout track of the night—’All Your Love is Gone’. Perhaps it’s just that the song’s venue is appropriate—after all, the line about “rusty railroad tracks” and the stabbing train-like piano chords remind the crowd of what’s going on above the gloomy shadows in the rafters of the venue.

Still, as the song reaches its finale, the crowd are really moving, and Boxed In leave the stage, their big gig a success. But before they go, Bayston informs the audience that he and the rest of the band will come and meet everyone at the exit. It’s a nice touch—but trains have to be caught, so it was a transfer from Underground back to Overground before Boxed In had a chance to say goodbye.

Pembroke appoints first-ever meme reps

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Pembroke College has passed a motion to add the role of meme rep to the JCR committee.

The meme rep will create and run a Facebook page called ‘Memebroke’, posting weekly memes and providing memes for bops and other college events. The motion, proposed by Freshers Rebeccah Williams and Hazel Ellender, noted: “College spirit and memes are both highly important, and particularly difficult to promote.

“The addition of recognised meme reps will encourage both of these simultaneously. Meme reps will be a valuable and cherished extension to the Pembroke community.” Williams told Cherwell, “Hazel and I decided to introduce the position of meme reps as we thought it would help boost morale around college especially around fifth and sixth week.

“We think it’s important for the college to stay current and that it would help Pembroke preserve its friendly and fun atmosphere. We intend to use the memes to help promote Pembroke events such as bops and also sporting events in which Pembroke are competing such as Torpids.”

An amendment to the motion requires second-year student Francesco Pozzetti to post one of his memes weekly on the JCR Facebook page following the failure of his motion “To officially consider Juventus an immoral and an illegal organisation, and to therefore discourage any member of this college from supporting them”.

Pozzetti told Cherwell: “After an intense thirty minutes debate my motion regarding Juventus mafia in Italian football narrowly failed. My attention turned to the meme motion, and I managed to include an amendment that allows me to inform people about the Juventus mafia by posting a meme once a week on our JCR official Facebook page. Luckily, students still believe in memes as a way to get relief at 2am in the middle of an essay crisis, and so the meme motion passed: Pembroke is proud to be the first college to include a meme rep in its committee.”

OxFolk reviews: ‘March Glas’ by Elfen

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It isn’t often that a folk music album seems to resonate with joy and life—when the ending of each track seems to reverberate on long after the final note has died away. Elfen’s debut release March Glas has this quality in buckets, seeming to simply emanate from this trio. With each track leading effortlessly into the next, it is a finely constructed piece of art that spirits the listener away into a world of laughter and song—and almost forces you on your feet to dance along. The group’s embracing of their Welsh language and tradition serves to root this music in a strong sense of place and belonging, with each new tune soaked in a celebration of ‘Welshness’.

Like all good folk music, this album is infused with stories and history, making each individual listening a journey into the depths of Wales. Each tune represents a different route into the music: the slow instrumental track ‘Adar man y mynydd’ (small birds of the mountain) is a beautifully slow, ambling old tune that gradually glides into a rich, full sound, helped by the addition of low and high whistles. Elsewhere on the album, the title track is a gloriously foot-tapping, rollicking song with a driving fiddle from Helina Rees. Stacey Blythe’s rolling accordion line underlies each track and carries the music forward, whilst Jordan Price Williams’ fantastic performance on bass and whistles gives each track its own distinctive feel. Indeed, the sheer breadth of style and emotion this trio manage to evoke is quite astounding—a set of jigs are given a jazz twist that manages to pleasantly surprise the listener again and again, whilst the slow, nostalgic singing of ‘Chwarae’, a poem by one of Wales’s great poets Waldo Williams, evokes lazy summer evenings as the listener is washed away on waves of gorgeous harp playing (Stacey Blythe).

Named fittingly after the Welsh word for ‘element’, Elfen’s music is not only carefully built out of ancient Welsh stories and poems and is beautiful to study—it is also simply a joy to listen to. It’s so much fun. Hearing it, you can’t help but smile. It’s the kind of music that would be even better, if that is possible, when heard live (head to those tour dates!) March Glas is a wonderful album, injecting colour and life into the world of Welsh folk music—a veritable musical ‘cwtch’ you can return to again and again.