Jump to content

Fourth of July party at the Bussey Building


Recommended Posts

Howdy ya?ll


Peckham Moonshine, the new night at the Bussey Building, which brings the Nashville honky-tonk to South London celebrates American Independence Day on Friday 4 July 8pm-2am.


The rompin? stompin? swingin? singin? Doel Brothers will tear up the Bussey Building with a riotous set of hillbilly and rockabilly blues.


In true country style, there will be lashings of beer and whiskey, including bespoke rye whiskey cocktails ?The Rye?, ?Peckham Moonshine? and ?Bulleit Julep?.


DJs Bobby and the Duke will spin country classics ?til late, expect to hear Americana, alt-country, Appalachian oldtime, country rock and a good ol? dose of Nashville cheese. Yee-ha!



A new bi-monthly night at the Bussey Building, Peckham Moonshine?s first night was in April, featuring hillbilly oldtimers The Biggin Hillbillies and attracting hundreds of plaid-shirt & Stetson wearing country boys and gals, who flat-footed and hoe-downed until the early hours.


Some early bird tickets at just ?4 still remain https://www.eventbrite.com/e/peckham-moonshine-4th-july-party-tickets-11780944121



See you on Friday y'all


www.facebook.com/peckhammoonshine


www.twitter.com/peckhamoonshine

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • What would I do about cyclists?  The failed Tory manfesto commitment to train all kids was an excellent proposal.  Public information campaigns aimed at all road users, rather than singling some out, to more considerately share the road, as TfL have done, is welcome too. As for crunching vehicles.  I'd extend this to illegal ebikes, illegal e-scoooters (I think some local authorities have done this with the latter) but before that I would (a) legislate that the delivery companies move away from zero hours contracts to permanent employees and take responsibility for their training, vehicles and behaviour on the road.   More expensive takeaways are a price worth paying for safer roads and proper terms and conditions (b) legislate to register all illegal e-bikes and scooters so that when they are found on the road the retailer takes a hit, and clamp down on any grey markets.  If you buy an e scooter say from Halfords this comes with a disclaimer that it can only be used on private land with the owner's permission.
    • I know a lot of experts in the field and getting a franchise was a license to print money, that is why Virgin were so happy to spend lots of dosh challenging government ten years ago when they lost the West Coast franchise.  This will not be overnight, rather than when the franchise has come to the end. Government had previously taking over the operator of last resort when some TOCs screwed up. Good, at last some clear blue water between the parties.  Tories said they were going to do a halfway house, but I've not noticed.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_British_Railways   : "On 19 October 2022, Transport Secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan announced that the Transport Bill which would have set up GBR would not go ahead in the current parliamentary session.[15] In February 2023, Transport Secretary Mark Harper re-affirmed the government's commitment to GBR and rail reform.[16] The 2023 King's speech announced the progression of a draft Rail Reform Bill which would enable the establishment of GBR, although it has not been timetabled in the Parliamentary programme.[5] The Transport Secretary Mark Harper later told the Transport Select Committee that the legislation was unlikely to reach Royal Assent within the 2023-2024 parliamentary session.[17]"
    • Can't help thinking that regardless of whether Joe wanted to be interviewed, the 'story' that Southwark News wanted to write just got a lot less interesting with 'tyre shop replaced with ... tyre shop'! 
    • Labour are proposing to nationalise the railways, (passenger trains but not fright)  Whilst it removes them from shareholders control, and potential profit chasing, is it workable or will it end up costing tax payers more in the long run?  On paper the idea is interesting but does it also need the profitable freight arm included to help reduce fares,? 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...