“She has a string of live dates lined up throughout the
summer and onwards, with hopefully the intention to keep writing and
interpreting new songs to one day, be in a position to add to her catalogue of
recordings.” These were the words that closed our review of Kim Lowings back in
May and it was great to catch up with her and the band on this Birmingham date
after a busy summer period. This included a prestigious opening slot at the Warwick
Folk Festival, a residency at an Edinburgh Fringe venue and some extended recent
coverage on Genevieve Tudor’s Sunday Folk show on BBC Radio Shropshire. The
good news is also that new songs are taking shape and hopefully some of these
will begin to surface in the New Year.
For this show at Birmingham’s eclectic Ort Café in the inner
city suburb of Balsall Heath, it was very much business as usual for Kim as she
served up her regular offering of intriguing interpretations of traditional numbers
and plenty of innovative originals. One enhancement following that Stourbridge
gig in the final days of spring was the return of Ami Oprenova on fiddle to
give the Greenwood collective a more complete feel. She joined the usual combo
of Andrew Lowings (guitar/bouzouki), Tim Rogers (cajon) and Dave
Sutherland (double bass) with Kim confining herself to her favoured mountain
dulcimer on this occasion. Together they produce a tight knit sound to present
authentic roots music at its soul searching best.
A niggling minor ailment curtailed a few of Kim’s more vocal
experimental songs on an evening promoted by Best Seat Sessions which presented
local singer songwriter Malc Evans as the opening act. Kim soon hit her stride
for a set lasting just over an hour with any temporary impediment being
disguised in true professional style. A trio of her finest originals, ‘The Allotment’, ‘Off to Sea’ and ‘Deepest Darkest Night’ sounded as good
as ever along with her memorable renditions of ‘The Devil and the Ploughman’ and ‘The Bonny Labouring Boy’.

While this interim feature is designed to keep the flame
flickering for Kim’s tried and trusted material, anticipation is growing to file
some column inches on the next phase of Kim Lowings and the Greenwood. In the
meantime there are still a number of Midland dates before the winter sets in
including a support slot at the Kitchen Garden Café opening for BBC Radio 2 award
nominees Josienne Clark and Ben Walker. Whether catching one of their live
shows or sampling the recordings, marking the card of Kim Lowings and the
Greenwood is a choice well worth making.
www.kimlowings.bandcamp.com