SKIPTON: The band, Toploader, will entertain at the Mart Theatre tomorrow night.
It has had a string of top 20 hits over the years and its single, Dancing in the Moonlight, became a global hit in 2000.
Toploader is currently seeking crowdfunding for a new album.
For tickets, visit themarttheatre.org.uk or call 01756 709666.
* Pianist Angela Hewitt - named artist of the year in the 2006 Gramophone Awards - will perform at Skipton Music's next concert on Tuesday.
Born in Canada, she is considered one of the world's leading exponents of Bach.
The concert will take place at Skipton Town Hall at 7.30pm and will be preceded, at 6.30pm, by Skipton Music's annual general meeting.
Tickets cost £17 (£1 for children) and are available from the box office on 01756 799912 or visit skiptonmusic.org.uk
* Chamber choir Pinsuti will give a concert at Holy Trinity Church on Saturday from 7.30pm.
The choristers - conducted by Robert Webb - will perform a selection of choral works, bringing together composers from across the centuries and throughout Europe and Scandinavia.
There will also be a performance of Benedictus by Pinsuti's own musical director Robert Webb.
Admission on the door is £8 for adults and £6 for concessions.
* Craven Museum and Gallery is hosting an exhibition of paintings, prints and drawings by professional and amateur artists based in Craven.
The Craven Open is a Christmas adaptation of the Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition.
Artists aged 16 and over living or working in Craven were invited to submit paintings, prints, drawings and multimedia work, which went before a selection panel. Thirty-eight artists were chosen to show their work.
The museum is located in Skipton Town Hall and the exhibition runs until December 14. Admission is free.
And, from Monday, museum visitors will also be able to see robots, superheroes and exotic creatures created by children from Greatwood School.
The children worked illustrator and puppeteer Vanessa Card to create their own art on the theme of ‘Champions’.
The scheme is a joint initiative between Craven Museum and Gallery, Skipton Library, Skipton Extended Learning for All (SELFA) and Greatwood School, and has been funded by the Arts Council England Museum’s Resilience Fund.
* The Mill Bridge Gallery is hosting a solo exhibition by Skipton artist Carolyn Hird-Rogers, called Lane and Towpath: The Past’s Influence on the Present.
Initially trained as a ceramic designer, Carolyn has developed a digital drawing style and is inspired by the semi-rural environment of Skipton on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales.
The exhibition - which runs until November 28 - features images taken over a period of time along one particular track, which runs alongside the Leeds and Liverpool Canal.
* Country music Western Express will return to the Iron Horse Country Music Club on Saturday.
The club meets at the White Rose Club, Newmarket Street, with doors from 7.30pm and the performance at 8.30pm.
Tickets cost £5 and are available on the door.
* The band, Catch 22, will perform at The Three Links Club next Saturday, November 21.
It will be in action from 8pm.
SETTLE: Settle Orchestra’s next concerts have been designed to appeal to all ages.
They begin with a family concert at Settle College next Saturday, November 21, at 7pm.
It will last about one hour, with the programme featuring Humperdinck's Overture to Hansel & Gretel, Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf, Wagner's Ride of the Valkyries, Bizet's Carmen and Star Wars: Phantom Menace by John Williams.
Admission is free and seats will be allocated on a first come, first served basis. They can be reserved through the Settle Orchestra website, settleorchestra.org.uk
The orchestra's second concert will take place at Christ Church, Skipton, on Saturday, November 28, at 7.30pm.
It will be an extended version of the family concert, with the addition of Dvorak’s Slavonic Dances nos 5-8.
Tickets are £11 (accompanied children free) and are available from Cave and Crag, Bentham Post Office, Skipton Camera Centre and on the door.
* Settle Parish Church will host a screening of the film, The Good Lie, on Wednesday.
It was inspired by the story of thousands of orphaned children who fled the brutal civil war in Sudan. Thirteen years later, the refugees were relocated to the US where they had to adjust to a vastly different culture.
The event has been organised by The Sudan Group of The Diocese of West Yorkshire and the Dales and entry is free.
Doors open at 6.30pm and the film starts at 7pm.
* The Gallery on the Green - housed in a former phone box - is displaying a selection of entries from Settle Stories’ writing competition titled My Journey to the Stars
In a test of imagination, writers were invited to describe their journey to the stars on a postcard and some of their work is on show alongside visuals that try to capture the size of the universe.
The exhibition will run until Saturday, November 28.
* Gavaghan Art is staging its winter exhibition.
Now located at Settle Town Hall, the gallery is hosting The Northern Landscape, which showcases paintings and original prints of Cumbria, Lancashire and Yorkshire.
The exhibition features the work of 13 artists - Heather Cook, David Cook, Norma Stephenson, Jacquie Denby, Alan Stones, Janet Swailes, George Melling, Tony Roberts, Rebecca Scott, Chris Rigby, Mike Pert, Milan Ivanic and Katharine Holmes.
The exhibition will run until December 23.
* Settle Music will hold its monthly guitar session at the primary school tomorrow.
It will run from 7pm to 9pm and admission is £5. All abilities are welcome.
BRADLEY: Bradley Film Club will screen Steven Spielberg's War of The Worlds in the school hall tonight at 7pm.
Admission is free.
GARGRAVE: Gargrave is remembering one of its war heroes at a new exhibition at St Andrew's Church.
The Story of a Village Hero details the life of local man John Gill, who won two military medals before returning Gargrave and taking over the local butchers shop.
The exhibition also includes a Magna Carta display as well as other local topics such as women before, during and after World War One, the Gargrave soldiers who died in Mesopotamia, the history of businesses in Gargrave.
The exhibition will run until Sunday and is open from 10am to 4pm each day.
GIGGLESWICK: Wildlife photographers Tony and Carol Dilger are staging an exhibition in the foyer gallery of the Richard Whiteley Theatre at Giggleswick School.
The husband-and wife team, who are based in Settle, will show photographs from the past 18 months,
Just Two Clicks will conclude on Wednesday, December 2, when the two photographers will give the final Gigg Lecture of the year at 7pm.
The exhibition can be viewed Monday to Friday between 10am and 4pm and on Saturdays and Sundays between 1pm and 5pm.
KETTLEWELL: The Kettlewell film nights return on Saturday, with a screening of the award-winning film, The Theory of Everything.
It tells the true story of one of the world’s greatest living minds, the renowned astrophysicist Stephen Hawking.
The screening starts at 7.30pm and tickets cost £5 for adults and £2.50 for under 16s. They are available from Caroline Hatton on 01756 760378 or Kettlewell Village Store.
LANGCLIFFE: Musicians will stage a concert, Settle Sings for Syria, at Langcliffe Institute on Saturday at 7pm.
There will be a "miscellany" of music from a variety of artistes.
Entry will be free, but there will be a retiring collection, which will be donated to a charity working with Syrian refugees.
To reserve a seat, call 07880 783783 or email settlemusic@gmail.com