RashDash release new verbatim concept album | Don’t Go Back To Sleep

RashDash release verbatim concept album
Don’t Go Back To Sleep: The Lockdown Album

  • Created during lockdown, the 24 track album is out today on Bandcamp and other major platforms
  • Songs include I Have To Keep Going, an audio/video track developed with British Sign Language and English
  • Live shows of the whole album will take place at HOME Manchester 21-24 October

“RashDash are the punk princesses of late-night theatre” Maddy Costa, The Guardian

Streaming on all major platforms

@rashdashtheatre | #rashdashalbum | www.rashdash.co.uk

When Covid-19 thwarted their plans to make a new show, RashDash looked to the music that has always been at the heart of their work and made an album. Don’t Go Back To Sleep: The Lockdown Album isbased on interviews with people across the globe and draws on musical influences from pop and punk to folk – including a track created in British Sign Language. The title track, Don’t Go Back To Sleep shares its name with a poem by renowned 13th century Persian poet Rumi, which was shared with the company by a Leeds-based poet who is sampled on the album track of the same name.

With three-part harmonies spanning multiple musical genres, RashDash follow 18 people from 12 countries; Argentina to China, and here in the UK through the joys and fears of lockdown following the pandemic. Sampling interviews with strangers set up through friends, and making use of soundscape and song, the album weaves together the voices, experiences and dreams of a global population waking up to the world and taking a second look at who we were before everything changed and who we are becoming. What can happen if we don’t go back to sleep? Is change possible if we all stay awake?

Contributors whose voices can be heard include a man in Mumbai, whose work usually takes him away from home, who spent 26 days with his 26 year old daughter for the first time during lockdown; a Swedish doctor in favour of his government’s no-lockdown stance; a young participant in the National Youth Theatre of Kenya who offered views from Nairobi’s Mathari slum; an anonymous woman in China surprised by the lack of co-operation with rules she saw on the news from Britain and a New Zealander eagerly returning to normal social life as her country declared the all clear.

Trailed by lead single Never Waste A Crisis which was previewed on Bandcamp and released online today across major platforms, the album will receive its live debut next month at HOME Manchester in a series of shows that will bring the songs to real life audiences as part of the venue’s first season of live work since the shutdown. HOME last presented work in March before the venue was forced to close due to COVID-19 and reopened on 4 September after 168 days of closure. 

Speaking about the album Abbi and Helen said “Being stopped from making live theatre has been a huge blow and we’ve missed / are missing it terribly. But in trying to find the ways we might work together remotely, the ways we might create art for different platforms we’ve made a stand alone album for the first time – something we’ve always wanted to do and are really proud of. Speaking to people from across the world about their experiences has been such a privilege and pulled us through this really tricky time for the company and for all of us personally.”

RashDash was formed by Abbi Greenland and Helen Goalen at The University of Hull in 2009. After making several shows together over the years, Becky Wilkie joined the core team in summer 2017. Their work is a combination of radical feminist ideas explored through an articulate physical style in a form that they continue to reinvent. Their work is a combination of radical feminist ideas explored through an articulate physical style in a form that they continue to reinvent, with shows including Three SistersTwo Man ShowWe Want You to Watch and Oh I Can’t Be Bothered. RashDash have won three Fringe First Awards, the Tods Murray Awards for Best Book and Innovation in Musical Theatre, a UK Theatre award for best touring production for Three Sisters. and have received nominations for Total Theatre and Off West End Awards.

Company Information
Lyrics, concept and interviews by Abbi Greenland and Helen Goalen 
Songwriting by Becky Wilkie
Produced, mixed and arranged by Matt Randall 
Performed by Becky Wilkie, Helen Goalen, Abbi Greenland and Matt Randall
Project produced by Andrew Hughes
Good Solid British Common Sense written and performed by Reuben Johnson, with additional vocals and arrangement by RashDash 
BSL song created with and performed by Nadia Nadarajah
Created with and translated by Siobhan Rocks
Interview translated by Lisa Faragher 


Made from interviews with: Christina Catechis – USA | Meropi Papastergiou – Greece | Kgomotso Kiggy – South Africa Alvin Liu – USAElsie Bura – Kenya (but stuck in Texas)Michael Awiti – Kenya Hanif Sama – India Juan Manuel Miron – Argentina Leif Stille – Sweden Lisa Birchall – New Zealand Lynn Sweeting – UKMatthew Watson – UKSeki Lynch – UK | Simona Cretaro – Italy Anonymous – ChinaAnonymous – Iran | Noreen Clarkson – UK | Members of the Newington’s Chill Club in Ramsgate: A poem written by Annelyse, Jake, Hannah, Jordan, Lacey, Demi, Chardonnay, Madison, Summer, Lilly, Jamie, Ella, Alicia + artists and support workers Nova Marshall, Sue Rumsey, Chris Divers, Symone Crouchman & Lisa Payne.

Listings information – performances at HOME Manchester

21 – 24 October

HOME Manchester, 2 Tony Wilson Place, Manchester, M15 4FN

Weds – Sat 7.30pm, Audio Described Sat 7.30pm

£10 | homemcr.org | 0161 200 1500

Supported by Slung Low, Paines Plough, HOME, Allan Wilson, and anyone who donated to the crowdfund set up by Charlotte Bennett – thank you.