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  • Man at Lords Cricket Ground checking his cell phone messages and wearing MCC coloured blazer and tie. Colours also affectionately known as egg and bacon.
    20110725mcc coloursA.jpg
  • Roa is a Belgian street artist renowned for his giant black and white animals which can be found on walls and shutters in varying states of decay. Seen here is his pig in a shop doorway on Bacon Street just off Brick Lane. There are also a few Rats and Birds which reside on shop shutters along Brick Lane.<br />
<br />
Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120313street art roa pig_A.jpg
  • Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States sits on his throne watching over this nation's capital as a tourist is dwarfed in scale beneath. Strong but low orange light pours through the East-facing entrance. The Lincoln Memorial stands at the west end of the National Mall as a neoclassical monument to the 16th President. Designed by Henry Bacon, it stands almost 100 feet high, surrounded by 36 massive fluted columns, each 37 feet (10 m) high. The actual statue of Lincoln is 19 feet high and weighs 175 tons.
    lincoln_memorial01.jpg
  • With a further 154 covid deaths reported in the last 24hrs, bringing the total to 43,081 in the UK during the Coronavirus pandemic, two men carry their takeaway coffees past the statues of Adam Smith, John Locke and Francis Bacon outside the rear entrance of the Royal Academy in Burlington Gardens, on 24th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_westend-13-24-06-2020.jpg
  • Roa is a Belgian street artist renowned for his giant black and white animals which can be found on walls and shutters in varying states of decay. Seen here is his Crow in a shop doorway on Bacon Street just off Brick Lane. There are also a few Rats and Birds which reside on shop shutters along Brick Lane.<br />
<br />
Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120313street art roa crow_A.jpg
  • We are looking from behind a group of red uniformed meat market traders who are manhandling joints of pork from the back of a meat wagon at Macau's main meat market, on the Rua Sul do Mercado de Sao Domingos, just off the Avenida de Almeida Ribeiro, in Central Macau. The men have on hooded red tunics that hide the bloodstains of dead animal carcasses, a very practical choice of colour (color). One man has half a pig on his shoulders while another holds a leg in his left hand. The animal carcasses look heavy and they are both struggling under their weight. There is much more meat to be offloaded from the truck and the men queue up to take their turn and remove them for sale inside the market building. Besides historical Chinese and Portuguese world-heritage relics, Macau's biggest attraction is its gaming business. Its gambling revenue in 2006 weighed in at a massive £3.6bn - about £100m more than Las Vegas.  Administered by Portugal until 1999, it was the oldest European colony in China, dating back to the 16th century. The administrative power over Macau was transferred to the People's Republic of China (PRC) in 1999, 2 years after Hong Kong's own handover. Macau's name is derived from A-Ma-Gau or Place of A-Ma and this temple dedicated to the seafarers' goddess dates from the early 16th century.
    RB-0185.jpg
  • Rob Rider Hill, Graham Farnworth and friends playing in the Vintage Emporium / 14 Bacon St, Brick Lane. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys31.jpg
  • Boxcar Joe Strouser playing harmonica in the Vintage Emporium / 14 Bacon St, Brick Lane. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys30.jpg
  • A man holding a take away bacon and egg bap whilst sitting at an outisde bench at a roadside cafe on the 23rd June 2017 in Brome North Suffolk, United Kingdom
    SMP03041.jpg
  • A man holding a take away bacon and egg bap at a roadside cafe on the 23rd June 2017 in Brome North Suffolk, United Kingdom
    SMP03030.jpg
  • The statues of Sir Eyre-Coote, K.B. by Thomas Banks 1788 and   <br />
Marquis Cornwallis, K.G. by John Bacon, Senior 1791 in the Gurkha Stair in the former India Office, which was part of the Foreign and Colonial Office now the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Whitehall, London. on 17th September 2017, in Whitehall, London, England. The main Foreign Office building is in King Charles Street, and was built by George Gilbert Scott in partnership with Matthew Digby Wyatt and completed in 1868 as part of the new block of government offices which included the India Office and later 1875 the Colonial and Home Offices. George Gilbert Scott was responsible for the overall classical design of these offices but he had an amicable partnership with Wyatt, the India Office’s Surveyor, who designed and built the interior of the India Office.
    foreign_office-12-17-09-2017.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey tuning up in the Old Boys Club, Dalston. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys38.jpg
  • Jez. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys35.jpg
  • Adam Beattie playing in the Finsbury. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys33.jpg
  • Ewan crowdsurfing in his pants, Stoke Newington Old Church. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys27.jpg
  • Mojo Hand on the lineup at Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys26.jpg
  • Theo Bard, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys25.jpg
  • Mojo Hand playing at Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys23.jpg
  • The Turbans, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys21.jpg
  • Crowd shot, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys19.jpg
  • Rebekha Bouche and Mojo Hand playing in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys18.jpg
  • Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys15.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey playing in St Pancras Old Church, Euston.  At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys11.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey playing in St Pancras Old Church, Euston.  At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys10.jpg
  • Into the moon playing at The Harrison, Kings Cross. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys04.jpg
  • Blues musician Graham Farnworth on his boat in East London. Many musicians and artists have taken to the waterways for residence due to the extremely high and still increasing cost of living in London, UK. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys03.jpg
  • Crowd listening to music in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys02.jpg
  • Tankus the Henge playing in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys01.jpg
  • A full English breakfast on a plate in a 'greasy spoon' cafe. Also known as a caf, these places provide breakfast and cheap food all day. This meal and these cafes are somewhat of a British institution. Breakfast normally contains the following: Egg, bacon, sausake, tomatoes and baked beans, and always comes with toast.
    20101009full english breakfastA.jpg
  • Poached egg and bacon on a paisley blue plate at the Newcott Chef on 06th June 2008 in Yarcombe in the United Kingdom.
    SM_RoadsideBritain_070.jpg
  • The charming Orchard Cafe sign on the 28th June 2008 in Hounslow in the United Kingdom. On the fringes of Greater London, lies the Orchard Cafe, serving since the 1930s. Where a cup of tea cost’s 50p and a bacon sandwich will see change from £2. The original proprietor owned the surrounding land and when the A30 was constructed the owner demanded a lay-by be installed to enable the passing traffic to stop and use his cafe.
    SM_RoadsideBritain_001.jpg
  • The statues of Sir Eyre-Coote, K.B. by Thomas Banks 1788 and   <br />
Marquis Cornwallis, K.G. by John Bacon, Senior 1791 in the Gurkha Stair in the former India Office, which was part of the Foreign and Colonial Office now the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Whitehall, London. on 17th September 2017, in Whitehall, London, England. The main Foreign Office building is in King Charles Street, and was built by George Gilbert Scott in partnership with Matthew Digby Wyatt and completed in 1868 as part of the new block of government offices which included the India Office and later 1875 the Colonial and Home Offices. George Gilbert Scott was responsible for the overall classical design of these offices but he had an amicable partnership with Wyatt, the India Office’s Surveyor, who designed and built the interior of the India Office.
    foreign_office-11-17-09-2017.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey lyrics in the leaves. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys36.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey and band playing in London Fields. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys34.jpg
  • Brooke Sharkey and band. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys32.jpg
  • John Langhan, Ally Caplain and Dakota Jim in the churchyard of Stoke Newington Old Church. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys29.jpg
  • Mojo Hand playing at Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys24.jpg
  • Crowd shot, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys22.jpg
  • The Turbans, Stoke Newington International Airport. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys20.jpg
  • Rob Rider Hill and Mojo Hand playing in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys16.jpg
  • Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys17.jpg
  • Fred Stitz of Ravorlight playing in Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys14.jpg
  • Ewan and friend, Jamboree, Cable Street Studios, Limehouse. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys12.jpg
  • Chats Palace, Homerton. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys08.jpg
  • Graham Farnworth in The Harrison, Kings Cross. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys07.jpg
  • Jamming in The Harrison, Kings Cross. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys06.jpg
  • Garance LouLou playing in Stoke Newington Old Church. At the moment there is a quiet musical revolution going on in London - the city that has spawned so many important styles and movements, now has a bubbling experimental blues and folk scene, with many musicians independently recording and distributing their own albums through crowdfunding and social media without the need of large record labels and restrictive contracts. They play week in week out in a pleathora of small, independent, underground and makeshoft venues that have sprung up such as Jamboree and 14 Bacon Street.
    London Speakeasys28.jpg
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