Midway through this gig, the penny dropped on what makes The
Black Feathers one of the most precious duet harmony acts on the UK
folk and acoustic circuit. Apart from the impeccable timing, a sweet sound surrounded
by a dark wrapping and dovetailed voices, it is the way they interject the
golden moment of anticipated silence so effectively into many of their songs.
The dramatic effect leaves the listener hooked on where the piece is heading and
is borne out of an inherent talent to harness the beauty of the duet.
It took a while for this Gloucestershire based duo to hook up with the Kitchen Garden Café and now sealed, it is a union made for the idealistic music listener. To comment that their debut performance at Birmingham’s premier listening venue was a resounding success is a dramatic understatement and surely a trend set for subsequent visits. Right from the irony of opening track ‘Goodbye Tomorrow’ through to an inclusive rousing unplugged cover of ‘Big Yellow Taxi’ to bring down the curtain, Sian Chandler and Ray Hughes consistently showed the finesse of their craft.
It took a while for this Gloucestershire based duo to hook up with the Kitchen Garden Café and now sealed, it is a union made for the idealistic music listener. To comment that their debut performance at Birmingham’s premier listening venue was a resounding success is a dramatic understatement and surely a trend set for subsequent visits. Right from the irony of opening track ‘Goodbye Tomorrow’ through to an inclusive rousing unplugged cover of ‘Big Yellow Taxi’ to bring down the curtain, Sian Chandler and Ray Hughes consistently showed the finesse of their craft.
There is no element of doubt that their multiple American
excursions are playing a significant role in forming The Black Feathers. There
are definite southern sensibilities creeping into their sound as well as a certain
bias towards the sad song genre. Long may this influence remain as the whole
aura around The Black Feathers soaks up the mystique of a sound attracted to the
male-female harmony duet orchestrated by a single acoustic guitar.
SOAKED TO THE BONE, their debut full length release, hit the
market earlier this year and has refused to be budged from playlists by
likeminded peer acts. This evening the album was fondly delved into by Sian and
Ray with ‘Arclight’ soaring above the
rest with its atmospheric majesty, pushed to the limit by ‘Down to the River’, ‘Homesick’
and ‘All For You’. On this record the
duo braved the wrath of bandwagon jumping by covering a version of the
Dylan-Adele populist piece ‘Make You Feel
My Love’ and pulled it off with spine tingling excellence. The only food
for thought is that maybe future covers should be in the re-interpretative
mould that they dealt with the classic ‘Spirit
in the Sky’. Lofty praise for the work of The Black Feathers though is
stating that the only difference between the covers and the originals is a sense
of familiarity.
On the topic of originals, we were served a couple of
newbies in their brace of gig sets, one hot off the notepad with the title
recalled from a significant memorable chorus ‘The Ghost Has Eaten Well’. The other fresh song had its origins in
a Pennsylvania log cabin, with ‘Holy
Water’ leaking out as one of the most personal songs to date from the duo’s
brief repertoire. The good news is that both sounded great and re-assurance
that one day SOAKED TO THE BONE will have a worthy follow up. Before we leave
the track analysis, a quick word on two songs picked from their initial EP
including the sole love composition ‘You
Will Be Mine’ and the lyrically smart ‘Open
Book’.
Prior to The Black Feathers entertaining a respectable
Kitchen Garden Café debut turnout, Birmingham based band (in a slimmed down
trio format for the show) The Lost Notes opened proceedings with a similar acoustic
sound and thriving mixture of duets, three part harmonies, memorable guitar
pieces and a batch of songs that held your attention. Mutual respect was interchanged
between both acts and recognition that grass roots music requires supportive camaraderie.
The grass roots may not be the long term home of The Black
Feathers when judgement day arrives and the re-alignment of music justice sieves
out the crap. Until then the enlightened few will revel in an act that makes
music the right way and does it rather well. The grass roots may not be such a
bad place when unfiltered music is there to be enjoyed.