Lovely tune, full of little surprises. i've heard about 6 versions now, including my own and everybody seems to time it differently! I was brought up in the small villages around Barnsley (Dad was a manager at Grimethorpe) Other than some brief visits I haven't been back much since 1960, but I do remember being told not to slide down those town hall banisters!
@TuftyVFTA10 күн бұрын
Lovely!
@doc3row10 күн бұрын
Offered this in several online singarounds last year, and again this year. It's a cracker, and when I was 6, my mum wouldn't let me slide down those banisters in the town hall 😉
@beccy538613 күн бұрын
Another great Barnsley gem beautifully shared here - thank you!
@paulhorton561214 күн бұрын
Well sung Teg!
@willsworld199015 күн бұрын
Fantastic stuff! True Barnsley heritage on display!
@rockabillyguitar359618 күн бұрын
Beautiful a wonderful find
@catherinerobinson195718 күн бұрын
A great film, a great story and I love Barnsley, but by gum its not exactly 'catchy' is it? I get the mirroring of ringing bells but it's all a bit too dissonant for me.
@BarnsleyMuseums18 күн бұрын
For more information about the carol, including lyrics and a blog visit our website www.barnsley-museums.com/the-barnsley-carol-christmas-eve-by-arthur-godfrey
@VivinaAlex24 күн бұрын
🥰🥰🥰🤗
@alisonhoy836525 күн бұрын
Amazing thank you x
@emmadawber117629 күн бұрын
This feels so special and what a treasure to have here in Barnsley
@DrStrangelove-w9wАй бұрын
Eeeee, it were well grim up North when ar were a lad!
@puterboy2Ай бұрын
Where?
@4enoyrevetv8623 ай бұрын
Incredible
@s.tranger10743 ай бұрын
Ee Bah Gum! Trouble at Mill.
@kevan18314 ай бұрын
Great project. Such an improvement and also revealing the hidden history. Well done!👏🏻
@KenTayetchi4 ай бұрын
Thank really need it for pta❤
@markiahnadiaries50514 ай бұрын
Omg! How did it end up there? Love it. ❤
@JohnSwindells-zm4sq4 ай бұрын
This is great,l never knew about this, thanks.
@kevan18314 ай бұрын
Well done Barnsley Museums. Brilliant piece of work.
@PatriciaFrancis-m3q4 ай бұрын
Fabulous film and music. Spent such a lot of evenings in the Civic, let's hope the new entrance brings back the nostalgia. Thank you. 3.8.24
@neilstanniland10114 ай бұрын
Wasn't the Three Cranes on Eldon St?
@BarnsleyMuseums4 ай бұрын
The entrance was on Queen Street.
@TheEx3rgj5 ай бұрын
What memories, I used to go to the Odeon on a Saturday morning in the sixties, there was also the Ritz on Peel street did the Saturday morning for us kids then too.
@ernestbailey91945 ай бұрын
What a lovely video. Didn't realise how long the canal was. I remember as a kid fishing for sticklebacks in the canal at the side of the Bridge Inn in Monk Bretton. & I remember the bridge at Royston with the 4 columns. I will have to have a walk where the Aqueduct was, as it looks like a nice pathway.
@meganmorgan80395 ай бұрын
My parents met and married in Barnsley in 1948. It's nice to imagine them window shopping and dreaming of what might be.. but I don't think they would have had the money to shop at Harral's!
@gillianroe99916 ай бұрын
Just as I remember it. Maybe we weren’t as well dressed as the people in the streets and frankly it was a bit scruffy at the edges but a great reproduction.
@alastairmacdonald62236 ай бұрын
Holy Moly, that was awesome to watch. Industrial history brought to life in a fabulous way, congratulations. In fact, I’m going to watch it again!
@susandroger82486 ай бұрын
I remember it well.❤
@ultraviolet7347 ай бұрын
Fantastic!! His work is wonderful! I love his non western philosophy of 'art' Wonderful views about artmaking and culture.✨️🎨
@johnholt26417 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. The Westen art world did look down on non-western art as primitive and inferior for a long time. Now the wonderful art of the East, Africa and indigenous peoples is given a platform in the West which enriches us all. Thanks, John.
@LynnLynn-ve8ol7 ай бұрын
好有温度的石像们❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@BalanceTechDetroit7 ай бұрын
Wow. I will watch this again. So much resonates about this art and this person. Wow. Started with the word FLOW and also got me with the spiral and symbol discussion, spiritual insight, yes, like the other comments; impressive, inspiring, interesting. Awesome young man!
@johnholt26416 ай бұрын
Thanks you so much. It’s nice to share my story and the ethos of my work. John.
@artandnaturediaries99837 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for making this video of John Holt. I shall share it and re watch it over a few times, as this is pure gold and really speaks to that part that knows the truth in the creativity that John mentions. An amazing man. What an incredible soul language he has and warmth of heart. Wow
@johnholt26417 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you so much for this wonderful response to my life and work. Yes, it is "soul language" and that's the key to open people up to their "soul image/code" as James Hillman has it. Thank you again. You have uplifted me. John.
@johnholt26417 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! Yes, I once wrote a chapter for a book I titled "Creativity as the immune system of the mind and the source of the Mythic" in which I argued that creative fluidity is both healing and revealing. I also believe, as James Hillman argues that creativity reveals the "souls code" the daimon (guiding spirit) if allowed to "flow". Of course language has to be developed and yet allowing unfettered creative development will facilite the development of language. I once had Psychiatrists in a High Secure hospital challenge my belief in allowing free development of patients visual language development saying that it "fed delusion" . I believed the opposite that creativity through its natural reconnection with the disconnected aspects of the psyche in fact re-connected and began to heal the damaged mind. Cheers, John.
@artandnaturediaries99836 ай бұрын
@@johnholt2641Hi John, I have taken note that your work can be seen at the Ceramic Collection at Cannon Hall Museum and have ordered a second hand copy of James Hillman's The Soul's Code. The image of a key on the front-cover beautifully affirmed how creativity is the key to unlocking the soul as has: "The Art of Flow and the Flow of Art" above. Could you share which book you wrote the chapter for ? Are you reworking these ancient symbols into clay as 'soul making' ? Is Art the key that balances Science and Religion and Creativity flows through all ? just a few questions I'm pondering over and feel inspired, affirmed and creative.... Thank you John.
@johnholt26416 ай бұрын
@artandnaturediaries9983 Jung spoke of archetypes of the collective unconscious which were timeless and lodged deep within us all. I feel that these ancient symbols were truly archetypes but, in some ways they remain dormant until brought to life again in contemporary art. That is what I am trying to do. Paired with my notions of "flow and fluidity" which relates to the healing aspects of creativity that I employed in my activism in education and health. I hope I am rediscovering this timeless visual languages.
@suzannemarshall74587 ай бұрын
Wonderful insights and gorgeous art. What a valuable way to use art in hospitals and prisons. So impressive and inspiring
@johnholt26417 ай бұрын
I sued my insights into the values of the creative process in Schools, Colleges, Universities, and secure Psychiatric hospitals. I would say that my tools to help people in hospitals was creativity (non-judgemental) and silence (meditation). Thanks, John.
@redwing39697 ай бұрын
What an interesting and inspiring man John is, and I love his ceramics. I've always been fascinated by ancient symbols, and back in the day went on a motorcycling camping trip visiting some ancient sites in Scotland. And I agree that creating art, in whatever medium, even with the stumbling blocks along the way, is so healing and satisfying . It saddens me when I hear folk say they can't draw, and I try to encourage them. They can do it for themselves and not show anyone if that helps😊💜💫
@jan-martinulvag19627 ай бұрын
symbols dont mean anything you fool, they are symbols for something else
@niallwildwoode73737 ай бұрын
What a wonderful man, and an eye-opener as I am also incorporating paleo and neolithic symbols into my cob building in Cumbria, where we have a plethora of examples in the landscape. I did textile art decades ago, based on Celtic knotwork, zoomorphic and anthropomorphic designs. Goosebump stuff! I agree with the 'elitism' of Fine Art. I had a partner who has been a low/mid level impressionist (?) landscape artist for years. She eventually was inducted in Manchester Academy of FA, and soon after proclaimed "you don't appreciate fine art" before dumping me and getting in with another MAFA artist. I've also met brilliant artists who are blanked by FA collectives and organisations, yet much art touted as 'fine', is a case of Emperor's New Clothes.....don't get me started 🙄
@johnholt26417 ай бұрын
Naill, thanks you so much for your response to my blog and video. I was artist in residence for a year at Creswell Crags Museum where in the caves at Creswell are Ice Age and Apotropaic carvings. I have incorporated neolithic and Celtic symbolism in my work for many years. I think Jungs notion of "archetypes of the collective unconscious" always made sense as the same symbolic language exists throughout the world and is timeless. Cheers, John.
@VFX4DESIGN7 ай бұрын
This is Awesome work. Congratulations Martin Moss. Proud this is only up the road from me.
@gooderspitman80527 ай бұрын
Nice film, emotional, nostalgic soundtrack, but doesn’t portray real life as lived by the working classes. Working in the foundries, mills and pits of that era was hell, as were the slum living conditions of nearby Sheffield, Barnsley and Rotherham. And if you got injured or maimed whilst at work, you were left destitute, because there was no workers compensation act till 1897.
@FormulaProg8 ай бұрын
Will this be coming back?
@chriswhitwood28588 ай бұрын
Incredible! Easily one of the best local history films I've ever seen
@fionakarayianni22008 ай бұрын
Thank you. A very interesting presentation :)
@gstephenwoodcock86449 ай бұрын
Corrections: The building shown at the junction of the Barnsley Canal and Dearne and Dove Canal was a lengthmans house and not a pub. The phrase was corn up, coal down. Charles Waterton (3 June 1782 - 27 May 1865) was a naturalist and not a historian. A slip of the tongue.
@catherinerobinson19579 ай бұрын
Very nostalgic, I was brought up on Twibell street and have a photograph of myself and 2 friends on the stone block at 44:20. My father worked at Redfearns , mother had worked at the Star Paper Mill,and great grandmother decades earlier kept the barge horses just by the Keel Inn. I have spent many a happy hour catching Sticklebacks, tadpoles in the canal and watching newts in the boggy section (Ponderosa) between the canal and the Dearne.
@kevinellam18709 ай бұрын
Stan sent a letter to my mother, Emily Ellam when he heard she was recovering from the removal of a brain tumour, this meant a lot to her and the family.
@kevinellam18709 ай бұрын
My Uncle, Colin Ellam would cover for Stan in the Grey Horse when he was not able to play.