SKIPTON: Timtone Productions will present A Celebration of the Music of Simon and Garfunkel at Skipton Town Hall tomorrow.

Singer-songwriters Tim Chu and Ian Bailey will deliver classics such as Sound of Silence in a way that honours the original recording. There are no costumes, wigs or make up.

The concert will take place at 8.15pm and tickets are available from the tourist information centre as well as from 01257 450363.

l To mark the end of her stint as artist in residence at Skipton’s Craven Museum and Gallery, Helen Peyton is creating a unique exhibition.

Helen, artist in residence for the past two and a half years, is putting together a social museum and art gallery. The evolving exhibition aims to involve the public, with them being asked to donate, interpret and create the objects. The exhibition will run until Monday, May 26.

l Artwork by people with memory loss or dementia is on display at the Coffee House, off Coach Street.

It is part of Pioneer Project’s Own Now initiative and the exhibition runs until May 30. Admission is free and all are welcome l Singer Sarah Kidman will perform at the Three Links Club on Saturday from 8pm. The gig is part of a week of fundraising for the Yorkshire Air Ambulance.

l Christ Church, Skipton, will hold another of its Bank Holiday organ recitals on Monday, May 5. Guest organist will be Leonard Sanderman, of Chichester Cathedral. The recital will start at 11am, with tea and coffee from 10.30am.

l Brian Peters, a singer, guitarist and melodeon player, will entertain at Skipton Folk Unplugged on Monday. The group meets upstairs at the Narrowboat pub at 8.30pm and all are welcome.

SETTLE: Bayou Seco will take their Victoria Hall audience on a musical odyssey through the American southwest next Thursday, May 1.Jeanie McLerie and Ken Keppeler will perform long-forgotten songs and dances with “wit, warmth and style.” For tickets, visit settlevictoriahall.org.uk or call 01729 825718.

l Two writers with published books will launch this year’s Settle Sessions at The Folly tomorrow.

Taking to the stage will be Sue Vickerman, who used to live in Settle, and Jennifer Copley. It starts at 7.30pm and includes a slot where writers and poets can present some of their own work. Tickets are available from Cave and Crag and The Folly.

l The Folly at Settle is hosting an exhibition featuring the work of six of the UK’s leading contemporary artists and craftmakers who embrace the principles of the “slow” movement.

Their work is craft based, grounded in traditional skills and processes, which are often labour intensive. The exhibition will run until June 29.

l Victoria Hall’s next foreign language film will be the award-winning French movie Comme Une Image (Look at Me). It will be screened on Wednesday at 7.45pm. For tickets, visit settlevictoria hall.org.uk or call 01729 825718.

l Settle Amateur Operatic Society will hold its annual get-together at the Old Courthouse on Wednesday, May 7, at 7.30pm. Everyone is welcome.

AIRTON: Steve Whitaker will give a talk, The Poetry and the Pity, at the Friends Meeting House today, at 7.30pm. It will detail the poetry of the First World War. Everyone is welcome and donations will be received for the Friends’ Meeting House. For more information, contact 01729 830082 or 01729 830263.

BARNOLDSWICK: A Northern Soul night will be held at Rolls-Royce Leisure Club tomorrow. It will feature DJ Roman along with guest DJs from Greenlands Club in Ribbleton, and will take place from 8pm to 1am. Admission £5.

l Revived choir Border Harmony – led by Janet Swan – will perform during St George’s Day celebrations in the town centre on Saturday.

BRADLEY: Bradley Film Club has chosen Sunshine on Leith for its next screening With music from The Proclaimers, the film follows the stories of two soldiers who have to relearn how to live after coming home from Afghanistan. The film will be shown at the village primary school on Tuesday, at 7pm.

CROSS HILLS: Members of Silsden Town Band will reveal their new uniforms this weekend at a concert at St Peter’s Methodist Church on Saturday, at 7pm.

The band – sponsored by the Co-operative Funeral Care – will play modern tunes and old classics. Tickets cost £5 and are available from 01535 634106 or on the door.

GIGGLESWICK: School children will celebrate the 25th anniversary of saving the Settle-Carlisle Railway on Wednesday.

The 15-minute cantata tells the story of the railway in words and music. The children will also sing the famous Settle-Carlisle Song by Mike Donald.

Performances will take place at Giggleswick School’s Richard Whiteley Theatre at 1.30pm and 6.30pm. Tickets cost £2 and are available from the theatre box office on 01729 893180.

GLUSBURN: Family film The Croods will be shown at Glusburn Institute tomorrow.

It is a prehistoric comedy adventure that follows the world’s first family as they embark on a journey of a lifetime when the cave that has always shielded them from danger is destroyed.

Travelling across a spectacular landscape, the Croods discover an incredible new world filled with fantastic creatures.

Doors open at 2pm for the screening at 3pm. Tickets cost £3.50 for adults and £2.50 children and are available from Glusburn Institute and Cross Hills Post Office.

GRASSINGTON: Grassington will hold another film night at the village’s Octagon Theatre on Saturday.

On offer will be the children’s movie The Croods at 4.30pm and Sunshine on Leith at 7.30pm.

Tickets are available from Grassington Hub on 01756 752222.

HEBDEN: A band specialising in hits from the 1960s will perform in Hebden next weekend.

The Heritage Boys will entertain at a charity concert in the village institute next Saturday, May 3 at 7pm.

The group, comprising Andy Burton, Peter Johnson and Ian Whitaker, formed in November 2012 as a bit of fun for a charity fundraising event which was expected to be a “one-off”. However that led to requests for more appearance.

Tickets cost £10, which include a pie and peas supper, and are available from 01756 752025. All profits will be split between Help for Heroes and the village institute.