SKIPTON: Skipton Building Society Camerata will perform in the town hall tomorrow night to mark the building’s reopening.

The musicians will be joined by Nicholas Daniel, leading oboist and conductor, for a programme which includes play Handel’s Water Music, Richard Strauss’s Oboe Concerto and the first of Mozart’s final trilogy of symphonies.

The concert starts at 7.30pm and tickets are available from 0333 666 3366.

lChrist Church will hold its second Bank Holiday organ recital of the year on Monday.

The organist will be Andrew Cantrill from the Royal Hospital School, Ipswich.

The recital starts at 11am and there will be a retiring collection.

lMark Dowding - stalwart of the Lancashire folk scene - will entertain at Skipton Folk Unplugged on Monday.

The group meets at the Narrow Boat pub at 8.30pm and all are welcome.

SETTLE: Megson, described as the most original duo on the British folk scene, will headline at the First Sunday Folk at Victoria Hall.

The group comprises Stu Hanna (vocals, octave mandola, tenor banjo and guitar) and his wife, Debbie (vocals, accordion and whistle).

Sunday’s folk evening will be introduced by singer and presenter Mike Harding and will start at 7.30pm.

And, on Monday, the hall will play host to the Celtic Fiddle Festival which will celebrate the violin in all its globe-trotting variations.

Fiddlers Kevin Burke (Ireland), Christian Lemaître (Brittany, France) and André Brunet (Quebec, Canada) will showcase international and individual styles.

They will be joined by acclaimed guitarist Nicolas Quemener from Brittany.

lSix Impossible Things - a show featuring conjuring, acrobatics and live music - will be staged at the Royal Oak, Settle, next Thursday, May 7.

It had been due to be performed at the town’s Victoria Hall, but the building is being used as a polling station so a change of venue was necessary.

The show - sponsored by Rural Arts - unites filmmakers, sculptors, taxidermists and magicians in a comic theatrical spectacular.

It starts at 8pm and tickets are available from 01729 825718.

lThe Lime Gallery, in The Courtyard, is hosting an exhibition, Drama in the Dales, by Kate Bentley.

Kate’s paintings capture the landscapes and weatherscapes of daily life around Yorkshire’s Three Peaks and the Eastern Dales.

Accompanying the exhibition are excerpts from Great War poet Laurence Binyon’s poem Inheritance, in which he reflects the awe and majesty of Ingleborough.

Drama in the Dales runs until Monday, May 11.

lThe Museum of North Craven Life is hosting two exhibitions.

Community Skills tells the story of the potteries in Burton-in-Lonsdale, which were fired up in the mid 18th century and showcases around 60 pots from the museum’s collection.

The second exhibition, Reality Hits Home, focuses on the First World War and contrasts the frontline experiences of the volunteers with life at home where people were fearful of enemy attack from the skies.

lPhotographers Paul Rogers and Roger Taylor have joined forces to explore and speculate on the public’s preoccupation with photographing themselves.

They are staging a joint exhibition, entitled Click, at the Gallery on the Green - housed in a former phone box. The exhibition will run until to June 27.

lSettle Music will hold one of its popular guitar sessions next Friday, May 8.

It will take place at Settle Primary School from 7pm to 9pm and the cost is £5.

ADDINGHAM: Addingham Drama Group delves into underhand dealings in political circles with its latest production.

The group is presenting the Eric Chappell comedy, Up and Coming, at Addingham Memorial Hall.

The play focuses on political hopeful Philip Conway, who is attending a party conference where he intends to make his thrust for power. However, his position is compromised by various visitors.

There are performances tonight, tomorrow and Saturday at 7.30pm and tickets costing £7 are available from 01943 830640.

GRASSINGTON: The award-winning Jay Walkers Theatre Company is on tour again - and its first stop is Grassington.

It will perform A Month of Sundays, by Bob Larbey, at the Octagon Theatre tomorrow.

The play tells the story of Cooper and his friend Aylott, who live in a care home. It is alternately funny and immensely poignant.

Further performances will be given at Skipton’s Christ Church on Saturday, Cononley Village Institute next Friday, May 8, and Gargrave Village Hall next Saturday, May 9.

All performances start at 7.30pm. For more details, visit thejaywalkers.co.uk or ring 01756 760302.

INGLETON: The Roughshod Theatre Company will bring death-defying stories of hope, courage and resistance to Ingleton tomorrow.

It will stage its new show, IrRESISTible, at the village’s Methodist Church at 7.30pm.

Five young actors will depict inspiring stories through a mix of bold drama, music and comedy.

The play is suitable for those aged 12 and above.

Tickets cost £10 for adults and £5 for concessions and are available from 07966 151924 or email studio42arts@gmail.com SILSDEN: Silsden pop and rock band The Look will headline at a charity event to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Bradford City fire disaster.

A Night To Remember will be staged at the Sunnybank Social Club next Saturday, May 9, from 7.30pm.

Tickets cost £5 for adults and free for children. Proceeds will go to the Bradford Plastic Surgery and Burns Research Unit.

To buy tickets, email 56adaytoremember@gmail.com