I spent a good part of the first day of the year asleep in the hammock under the tree. I struggled out of it to make my way to Singing up the Women, then wandered down to Lisa’s stall to chat, then to Spiritual Sensations to talk to the witches and wish them happy new year and finally up the long road to the amphitheatre and dress rehearsal.
That all went well, although I should have realised then how little of the fire event I would see since we were actually on the stage instead of in front of it as usual.
Afterwards, I went up the hill and rang Matt, had a much calmer conversation, went into ‘town’ for sushi and coffee with Jonathan S then back up to the amphitheatre ready for the main event.
This year was all about the cosmos: sun, stars, moon. It began with “hope and inspiration, let it flow”, which is one of those lovely songs I like to sing the chorus to, and hadn’t noticed how much of the verse related to the theme. One of the traditional owners started the fire very quickly, stick twirling swiftly under deft fingers, smoke rapidly appearing, then taking the leaves into his hands and blowing until orange flame appeared to rapturous applause. (Supposedly there were about 30,000 in the audience this year.)
A man lit a brand from that and then lit a firework that went off overhead while Kristina Olsen sang that “from a distance, there is harmony” song. The lantern parade did its thing, little kids with their hand-painted creations, and then we went up on the stage and hardly got to see a thing from there. I know there were fire dancers on the hill, and I really liked singing the chorus to this Celtic song (couldn’t tell you what the verses were about because they were in Gaelic, but I’m guessing we were translating the chorus because she would sing her Gaelic line and then we sang “Listen to the old ones” and then she sang a Gaelic line and we sang “Listen to the old ways”) and there was didjeridu accompanying this too, which was a lovely way of musically uniting both the old ways of the white and black cultures of this land. While we sang our song about Mother Earth, I saw a procession of an enormous turtle lantern and a huge whale and dolphins and fishies swim by under an enormous helium-filled Earth balloon which was amazing.
Then the Spooky Men’s Chorale sang their song about raising the rafters which I’m sure would have pissed off a lot of Christians because one of the lines is “no messiah, hearts on fire” and “what we sing is what we are”. I love the “raise the rafters, raise the rafters, we don’t care, if the roof’s beyond repair”. I also loved our bit of that, which was the final verse and the coda: over hills and over valleys, over mountains, over seas, nations shall sing unto nations, until nations cease to be.
Then there was crazy fiddling as the old man with the brand approached a trebuchet and lit a flare that was flung with great gusto into the pyramid of stars. We hurriedly were moved off the stage so we could see and got back to the hillside just in time to see the huge Catherine Wheel spinning on the front of it and then it went up in conflagration, the wild fiddling began in earnest and we all danced on the sand in front of the stage. I went and stood near the bonfire after it collapsed, communing with the flame a little, talking with an English woman I’d made friends with during one of the bellydancing classes. Then went down to the Big Top to dance to Red Eyes again and from there to one last chai tent fling, a Linsey Pollack jam to beat all jams, marimba and djembe and other instruments weaving around each other.
And then to bed! A lovely night but not mind-blowing in the way that previous years have been, mostly I think because I couldn’t see what was happening.
All in all a wonderful Woodford, though. Another year of music and lovely people, light and love. Happy New Year!