Key information
Friday 17 October
Hardye Theatre, Queen's Avenue
7.30pm, doors 6.30pm
£20/£18 members and concessions
Seated
Now hear this y’all:
Legend has it the original Wilbury brothers from Nashville, Tennessee, were plying their trade as
a good ol’ Country band one night in Tootsie’s Bar, when who should walk in but George Harrison
from The Beatles and his old pal Je Lynne outta the ELO. After a few beers, George and Je
decided they loved the Wilbury boys and called up some of their friends, inviting them
downtown to hear for themselves. Those friends turned out to be Roy Orbison, that Tom Petty
out of the Heartbreakers, and Bobby Dylan himself.
The story goes that, after the show, the famous five wanted to hang out with the shy and retiring
Unravelling Wilburys. They all got pretty drunk, and it seemed like the Wilbury brothers had got
their big break when Tom Petty allegedly said they should all work together.
Six months went by and the Wilburys heard nothing. Then one day they was passing a record
store and heard one of their own songs playing on the hi- fi. “Who’s this playing our song?” they
said to the guy behind the counter. “Why, it’s a new supergroup,” the guy replied. “They call
themselves The Traveling Wilburys.”
Yes folks, it seems the Traveling Wilburys became a tribute band to our home-spun originals.
Well, a few years and more passed and finally the Unravelling Wilburys decided to ‘reclaim’
those songs, putting together a set of all the hits and the best stu Dylan, Petty, Orbison, Lynne
and Harrison could muster between ’em. Then they headed for the UK. The folks there ain’t got
much of a clue about Country music and took to ’em straight away.
Pretty soon they was travelling all over the country, from the Orkney Islands to the Isle of Wight;
from Penzance to Perth; from Southwold to South Wales; packing out theatres along the way in
towns whose names they’d never heard of and couldn’t pronounce.
The show features the best of the Wilbury albums (“Handle with Care”; “The End of the Line”;
“The Devil’s Been Busy”; “Tweeter & The Monkey Man” etc.) and some of their supposedly
thievin’ counterparts’ numbers like “Only the Lonely”; Won’t Back Down”; “While my Guitar
Gently Weeps”; “Like a Rollin’ Stone” and “Mr. Blue Sky”. The act even contains the kind of
comedy only a band spending too many nights in Travelodge hotels could dream up.
The Unravelling Wilburys are now so popular they even got to be a question on that TV show
“The Chase”. Now that’s fame…even if it ain’t fortune.
So- Ladies and Gentlemen, turn o your hearing aid, put your Zimmer frame to one side and
prepare for a musical journey with Walter, Blind Melon, Sticky Willy, Thumper and the Reverend
Honky Tonk Wilbury. It’s a journey you ain’t gonna forget in a hurry.
Accessibility
Thomas Hardye School Theatre has wheelchair access and toilet facilities for wheelchair users. If you have specific accessibility requirements (such as mobility, audio or visual needs), then please let us know when booking tickets and we are more than happy to help.
Our bar
Check each show for availability of refreshments.
Booking information
Tickets can currently be purchased online or by telephone. The telephone line is manned between 10am and 4pm Monday to Friday. At all other times please leave your name, telephone number and ticket requirements and we will call you back.
We are not currently able to welcome visitors for advance face-to-face ticket sales.
No booking fees are charged, but a £1 Future Fund levy is included in most ticket prices to support our work. This levy is included in the published ticket price. Concessionary prices (for events promoted by Dorchester Arts): where available, these are offered to under 18s, students, those in receipt of benefits and people on low income regardless of age.