Sunday, 22 September 2019

GETTING FRUITY IN THE CITY | #2


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NYC is back baby and this time it’s in the form my little floral sundress number that has been my go to for my city break, a festival,  shopping trip and just about everything in between (and she’s coming with me to Gran Canaria in a few weeks too - she’s gonna need naming at this point).

The weather may not have been on our side for the most part of the trip, but at least the Saturday was a scorcher and allowed for 2 Empire State Building trips, both morning and night, finally seeing the Flatiron, visiting Kleinfeld (mum and I tried so hard not to freak out seeing the main showroom that we’ve seen a billion times on Say Yes To the Dress), my first rooftop bar experience at 230 Fifth Rooftop Bar and meeting up with one of my best friends. Day well spent? I’d say so.

The rooftop bar may have been more impressive had it not been a luxurious Saturday afternoon that brought visitors to it in their droves, and they hadn’t misled us with their ‘great deal’ $30 menu downstairs. Either way, you get a lush view of the ESB.

Sadly, there were zero theatre trips this time - I know, seriously, I can barely recognise myself after that - but next time I’m just gonna have to make up for it at least five times over. I did however go Playbill scouring which I mentioned in this post here which proved vv successful and everyone was so lovely at the theatres despite me appearing at the busiest flippin’ time of the day.

The second to last evening we took a trip to the Top of the Rock which was even more magical than the last time I visited, I’m pretty sure that view never gets old and it’s on my NYC To Do list for every vacation I take there. And another first was seeing Rockefeller Plaza, I’m really not sure how I missed it last time but it’s heavenly even at night, so next time I’ll see it by daylight and appreciate it all over again. Don’t even get me started on the Kate Spade store in the Plaza that I swooned at through the window (and those yellow cab flats!).

A lot of downtime was spent wandering the neighbourhood that we stayed in, due to the astronomical hotel prices in NYC, we stayed at an Airbnb out in Astoria, Queens which was sweet little area (just a shame about the ten million flights of stairs to our shared apartment) and a special shout out to the $1 large sodas from MCDonalds that kept my Sprite appetite sated at least three times a day. I definitely had too much sugar.


Jacket - Next (Old) (Similar 123)  //  Dress - Miss Selfridge  //  Shoes - Converse  //  Bag - Primark (Old) (Similar 123)  //  Sunglasses - Primark  //  Necklaces - Primark

I know I mentioned that there weren’t many tips for me to dish out after my last trip, but I cannot recommend the 9/11 memorial enough, it was the most humbling, heartbreaking and incredible experience that gave me the shivers start to finish. The way the whole museum is constructed is fantastic, the artefacts on display and the interactive elements are so well thought out - I just wish we’d had more time to explore it. TIP: Give yourself a good three hours to look around, we allowed ourself around two and were then rushing to finish it before it closed for the night.

The top of my list for next trip is the High Line, eight days and we still didn’t get through everything! 

S xo
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Sunday, 15 September 2019

THE JOY OF LIVE MUSIC

*This post contains affiliate links that, when clicked, may result in myself earning a commission from that click and/or purchase. Please do not click any associated links in this post if you are unhappy with this. Full disclaimer here.*

Everyone’s teen years differs from others, some have the best years other life, others can’t wait to hit their twenties and never think about their high school years ever again. One thing we can all agree on, though, is that they’re some of the toughest years you’ll ever go through and nothing quite prepares you for the change in hormones, awkward experiences, and starting to understand who you are as a person.

To be blunt, I was the girl with a tonne of friends, a massive friendship group and a relatively stable home life, yet I was also a total loner. My friends and I didn’t really have anything in common, everyone was keen to star relationships, they didn’t have the same taste in music as me and I felt I had nothing to bring to my circle of friends. So, if there was one thing I was thankful for at that stressful time, it was travelling the country for live shows.

It was back in late 2006 when my mum started listening to My Chemical Romance, I’d been banging on about them for a good year and a half, but she wasn’t having any of it, and then she saw Gerard Way and life started to change. By that Christmas, she’d already booked a trip to Paris for us to see them live.

I suppose should take it back a bit further though, first. I was almost six when I attended my first concert, mum told me some BS lie to keep the secret and before I knew it we were at Manchester Arena (then MEN Arena) and she told me to poke my head through the door and look at the stage because I’d be seeing Steps on it in a few hours. That was 1999.

To follow that, I saw Busted a few times, McFly a few more and Darren Hayes (Savage Garden’s frontman) and I’d fallen in love with how cool it was to see my idols on stage in front of me, the artists whose albums I’d had on repeat for months on end, the people that only seemed real on the other side of a television screen. I actually cried at the. Steps show because they walked down the aisle beside where I was sat bandit really hit me how real they were.

Around 2007 was when I really started to going to shows more frequently, I was surprised with tickets to Decaydance Festival in London where Fall Out Boy, Panic! At the Disco, The Academy Is…, Cobra Starship & Gym Class Heroes were on the bill, I attended my first 30 Seconds to Mars show and saw My Chemical Romance live five times that year.

I’ve become lax the past few years, I don’t queue for fifteen hours like I used to, I don’t brave all weathers to make sure I’m at the barrier and I rarely make it into the venue for the support bands, but I highly recommend people dedicate a bit more time into watching the support acts. I’ve lost count of the number of bands I started following, became friends with, promoted, through seeing them support someone else. You Me At Six, Kids In Glass Houses, Funeral For A Friend, Attack! Attack!, Save Your Breath, Tonight Is Goodbye - the list is endless, bands I couldn’t imagine my teens/early twenties without, yet I wouldn’t have known them if I hadn’t been at the shows early enough to see them.
Over the past decade, some years have averaged out at about 45 shows per year, we’d fit 2 or 3 partial tours in there (mostly Kids In Glass Houses, how do you think I managed 59 of their shows in less than 7 years?) and somehow I still managed to pass my GCSE’s even though I spent the most of May touring the country for KIGH. Touring and followings bands felt comforting, like a place where I really belonged, and I know that feeling rings true for so many others out there, I was making friends in every city I visited, seeing the same faces and planning shows with them for other bands too. Each band has a community, a fanbase, a family, but live music in general has the same thing, I can go to a show of one band in Manchester, but know I’ll see familiar faces for another band, at another show in London.

For those who have yet to go to their first show, I urge you to do it as soon as possible, there’s nothing quite like the feeling of standing in a room, arena, stadium with tens, hundreds, thousands of people who are all there for the same reason, all singing along and losing themselves in the music. I’m getting goosebumps just thinking about it.

This past weekend my mum and I took a road trip to London for Gunnersville Festival, we were both shattered, wondering why the heck we were travelling all that way when a large part of us really didn’t want to go anymore (no matter how excited we’d been when we first booked the tickets), but standing in that big top tent with a few thousand other people, I cried and realised how important it was to be there, amongst all these other people that loved live music just as much as me. The prospect of missing my favourite band live (after cancelled busses, Uber’s, and the general shit show of travelling) filled me with such anxiety at 3:10pm, that I just wanted to go home and cry because I was so sure there was no way I was gonna make it to Gunnersbury Park for 3:50pm. As it worked out, I walked up to the tent just as their intro music came on and all the negativity and stress I’d been feeling just buggered off, nothing else mattered because I was there, watching my favourite people in the world standing on stage and playing to such a large crowd.

That night mum dragged us up front for You Me At Six, eleven and a half years after I’d seen them play a support show at Manchester Academy 3 (a venue capacity of about 300), they were playing their biggest headline show to date. That really knocked sideways, they’d been about 17/18 when I first saw them, and now they were fully grown adults, performing to this enormous crowd and I felt so proud of them, it was utterly unreal. Being in the heart of the crowd made me feel the happiest I’ve felt in weeks, I’ve hit some low points since graduating but I forgot about everything just for that day, and I couldn’t keep the smile off my face.

We spent the drive down there reminiscing on past shows, hilarious experiences with bands, memories that we’ll treasure for the rest of our days, because music given us both so much and we wouldn’t have much else without it.

Live music is far more than just seeing a band live, it’s an experience, an escape route, a few hours (or weeks if you’re touring) where you can forget about everything going on around you. It’s a reason to make new friends, to find new bands to love, to travel the world for, and in my case, it’s just strengthened my relationship with my mum, and that’s the most important thing live music have given me.
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Jacket - Topshop (Old)  //  Top - New Look  //  Skirt - Primark (Old)  //  Shoes - Vans  //  Sunglasses - Marks & Spencer  //  Bracelets - Thomas Sabo & ASOS
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What shows have you been to that really stand out to you? What bands do you still want to see? Have you got any social memories that you want to share? Leave me a comment below or reach out to me on social media because I always love to chat music!


I’m off to plan more of The Maine’s Europe/UK tour next February!

S xo
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PS. I shot these photo's at Gunnersville Festival last weekend whilst Deaf Havana were playing Sinner, most content was scrapped because I was too busy singing along. Sorry not sorry.

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Tuesday, 10 September 2019

GETTING FRUITY IN THE CITY | #1

*This post contains affiliate links that, when clicked, may result in myself earning a commission from that click and/or purchase. Please do not click any associated links in this post if you are unhappy with this. Full disclaimer here.*

It’s beginning to feel like a lifetime ago since I last visited NYC, when in reality it was only 3 months ago. I’ve over talking about how fast time is going. The majority of the 8-day trip was spent revisiting all the main places, tourist hotspots, Times Square about 12 times and even deep, deep Brooklyn to show my New York first timer mum. There were a few new sights thrown in that I hadn’t done before, but there’s still a bunch more to do so I’m just gonna have to go again, aren’t I?

One of the major things I got to tick off my NY bucket list this time though was the Brooklyn Bridge, something I’ve wanted to walk across for gosh knows how many years. Let’s not forget
that iconic street in DUMBO (a tonne of photographic evidence below because why not?). It’s pretty busy on the bridge but we crossed there at midday so earlier in the morning or later at night might be the best bet if you’re after some photos. Clearly, I wasn’t fussed. The corner of Water Street & Washington Street is where you’ll find that iconic, and highly Instagramm-able, hotspot with the Manhattan Bridge ready to photobomb you, it’s always heaving though so unless you get there for sunrise, you’re gonna be fighting off people so take it with a grain of salt and don’t stress about too many people in the background of your shot.

Later on we just wandered the streets of Brooklyn with no destination in mind, it was so calm, and relaxing. A far cry from the busy and crowded streets of the city just over the bridge. Finding out the next day that Sebastian Stan had been spotted by fan in Brooklyn the same day was a real kick in the teeth though.

If you're in Times Square, and love theatre like I do, there's a little Broadway van selling stickers, tickets and all sorts of bits and bobs with a bit light up sign beside it (see below) which is well worth checking out.

Last time I visited the city I made extensive posts about it and talked in great length about my experiences, so this time I’ll spare you. Just know, I had a tonne of fun.

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Jacket - Next (Old) (Similar 1, 2, 3)  //  Skirt - Topshop (Old)  //  Top - Miss Selfridge (Old)  //
  Bag - Primark (Old) (Similar 1, 2, 3)  //  Shoes - Converse
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S xo

Follow me:  Bloglovin  |  Instagram  |  Twitter  |  Tumblr  |  Pinterest

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