It started with the cliche before branching out where the music matters. A personal vanity project sharing a passion for country, folk and Americana through live and recorded music since 2012. Give or take the odd hiatus or barren period.
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Thursday, 29 October 2020
Album Release: Sam Morrow - Gettin' By On Gettin' Down
Album Review: Matt Owens - Scorched Earth
www.mattowens.bandcamp.com/album/scorched-earth
While 2019 was a breakthrough year for Matt Owens in terms of striking out as a solo artist, the bulk of 2020 has seen a stalling just like a vast majority of the music world. However, all is not lost and the recording career of this ex-Noah and the Whale band member is still set for a bright future on the back of his second release SCORCHED EARTH. Noted associations with Thea Gilmore and Robert Vincent frequent his bio and were the introductions that led me to Owens' music last year, so it was great anticipation that greeted the new album upon first listen.
Since that first spin, the album has racked up many plays and sits firmly in an elite group of records that enhances the credence of UK Americana. The latter being an all embracing substantive refuge for key progressive songwriting that surfs between established genres of folk, rock and country. Owens is steeped in the first two of this trio and his storytelling acumen has potential to rub shoulders with the best of the third.
SCORCHED EARTH picks off the quality album merits at ease and categorically delivers a talented musician finding his feet as a solo artist. The dozen tracks are awash with tempting lyrical content and numerous catchy numbers that overshadow the occasional lull. Keys and guitar drive the sound with a small element of fiddle detected alongside numerous interludes of harmonica.
The material ranges from the pensive ballad 'Cargo for the Road' that announces the album's arrival, through the funky overtures of 'Strip it Back', to the outright rocker 'When the Stars Align'. If you seek a little influence, the latter sees Owens dip into his 'inner Boss' and reveal a fist pumping anthem ripe for when stadium lights brightly announce 'Matt Owens'. For resemblance closer to home, there is a strong likeness to Scottish singer-songwriter Dean Owens in 'Maccurtain St.', a song with as much Irish feel as the Cork location of the title.
The title track anchors the early stages of the album and for some reason keeps reminding me of a Sting song. Maybe just the musical memory playing tricks. I'll let you know if it comes to me!
For the standout track, you can have one for each day of the week. The catchy melody and twangy credentials will make 'Cactus Flowers' a valid candidate at any given point, while the vivid story telling that accompanies the uptempo 'Another Song About the Devil' has elevated it to the track of extra promotion on the eve of the release. Elles Bailey joins Owens on this song, and while others have obviously lent many hands, the overall album has a very solo feel to it.
'Heal Up Alright', 'Radio King' and 'I Will Be There' may well be tracks that come late, especially when times allow the record to be toured, but for now their lull status may be as much down to the lofty standard of the others rather than any assessed inferiority.
Any album afforded space for a gritty drinking song with a hint of folk 'n' country sensibility is fine in my book, and 'Hungover in New York' heads a trio of songs including the aforementioned '...Stars..' to form the finale. It is fitting that the closing number is pertinently titled 'Last Day at the Festival', and another memorable story song. This was recalled from the two live sets I saw Matt Owens play last year when opening for Thea Gilmore and Robert Vincent.
Admittedly my ears were elsewhere when Noah and the Whale were rampaging through the 'new folk' scene, and when Matt Owens released his debut album early in 2019. Thankfully in late 2020, they are firmly wrapped around SCORCHED EARTH, a release that packs a significant punch and pitches sincere song writing at an exceedingly high level.
Monday, 19 October 2020
Gig Diary: Rodney Branigan - Kitchen Garden, Kings Heath, Birmingham. Sunday 18th October 2020
After six long months of no gigs, it was good to get back on the live music train with the first socially distanced indoor show. While there was ample space on site for Beardy Folk to bring live music back outdoors with their successful three day festival last month, logistics are so much more difficult for a venue like the Kitchen Garden to stage gigs within the current regulatory guidelines.
This wasn't the first gig the venue had staged since an easing of the lockdown conditions and the capacity was far from tested in the turnout for Rodney Branigan; an exiled Texan living in London for the last thirteen years. Those choosing to step back into the world of live music were greeted to a laid back evening, fully conversant and compliant with the regulations that are in a constant state of flux.
From the floor, Rodney Branigan delivered an entertaining show, using every minute of a creeping curfew to share songs - borrowed and original - improvised guitar playing and oodles of mischievous wit. He was eternally grateful of getting the opportunity to ply his craft in its rightful setting and fully humble to those choosing to spend the evening in his company. The audience was a mixture of the fully initiated and those taking a punt on the first singer-songwriter passing through town as we start the long road to normality.
This evening heralded the dawning of a new era, but decked with many familiar features. Gratefulness and relief was a combined feeling as live music starts to get back on its feet. We may even view this Rodney Branigan show as pioneering. Now with the first one under the belt, let's look positive to a future that will blend familiarity and a new world. Audiences will return in some capacity, and in the words of that famous film Field of Dreams - if you build it, they will come.
Thursday, 15 October 2020
Album Review: Jenny Sturgeon - The Living Mountain
To the growing number of contemporary Scottish female folk musicians catching my ear, Jenny Sturgeon is the latest addition, and a most welcome one at that. Over the last few years the songs and music of artists such as Karine Polwart, Iona Fyfe and Siobhan Miller have travelled far and wide engaging fans in both live and recorded settings. Opportunities for Jenny Sturgeon to take her music on the road have succumbed to the pause button at the moment, but immediate compensation comes in the form of the release of her second solo album.
Submerge yourself into the sheer beauty of THE LIVING MOUNTAIN and the sensory experience brings the heart and soul of a project right to the fore. The undulating roaming feel to an unabated marriage with the natural world makes this record a mesmerising listen as you are transported right into the core of the beauty and barrenness of the Cairngorms region. Sturgeon's soft brogue is the warmest companion you can have during this trawl through the wilderness, and the perfect guide to the unravelling of a freshly discovered piece of sister art.
Field recordings, poem arrangements and self-penned songs sprinkle the landscape as Sturgeon draws inspiration from a book (a title shared with the album name) that lay dormant for thirty years before gaining publication and subsequent renewal as the theme for this musical project. Our protagonist is an acclaimed Shetland based multi-instrumentalist musician active for several years in a series of differing collaborations and prime for rising to the challenge presented in the making of this album. THE LIVING MOUNTAIN is one of your archetypal folk projects where the artist submits themselves to an irresistible calling.
Each song title echoes the book's chapters and names such as 'Water', 'Frost and Snow', 'Birds, Animals, Insects' and 'Air and Light' leave you in little doubt of the journey you are undertaking. However, the true magnitude of this record is the acutely delivered craftwork enabled by Sturgeon blending her gorgeous vocals with the dulcet tones of piano, harmonium, dulcimer et al.
Like so many mellow albums, THE LIVING MOUNTAIN is best enjoyed in a moment of restive solitude when you have no greater desire than to relax, unwind and submit your senses to music of a most cathartic demeanour. When the new world takes shape, there will be a reserved space for Jenny Sturgeon to share the fruits of her craft with audiences far from her northern Scottish base. Not only will the music paint a glorious picture, you will learn more about the book's author Nan Shepherd and her writings. For now take a chance on this record and delve deeper into its inspiration and outcome.
Album Review: Terra Lightfoot - Consider the Speed
Thursday, 8 October 2020
Album Review: Scott Cook - Tangle of the Souls
Album Review: Jeremy Ivey - Waiting Out The Storm
Tuesday, 6 October 2020
Desert Island Discs (with a twist) Part 1: Time for Action - Secret Affair
Secret Affair was at the heart of the mod revival at the time. Straight away, it was also a bridge to the past and how contemporary music is linked to its roots. You couldn't like Secret Affair without wanting to explore sixties soul, Tamla Motown, and iconic British bands like The Who and The Kinks. This curiosity towards roots, influence and the past exists in personal music taste right up to the present day.
It helped that Time for Action was a Top 40 chart hit; a source for so much music as an early teen, and beyond, in the formative years. Perception may be hazy, but the charts of the late '70s/early '80s seemed so diverse, hosting many genres and styles. Of course, music thrived away from the mainstream, but that came later.
Secret Affair did take one other honour in being the first band I saw live when playing Birmingham Odeon in 1980. I can't vouch for exact accuracy, but I also believe their album Glory boys was the first album bought. However, gigs and albums are for another day. This post is about pivotal songs and ones meaningful enough to act as a catalyst. Time for Action by Secret Affair was a true pioneer. The key to open a door. The first inspirational record heard and certainly not the last.
Desert Island Discs (with a twist) Part 4: Goodbye Earl - Dixie Chicks
Midland is a small town on the banks of Lake Huran, a couple of hours drive north of Toronto, Ontario. The year is 2004 and a first ever holiday in Canada. Before this weird encounter in a karaoke bar took place, the trip had consisted of sightseeing, baseball, watching the Stanley Cup hockey play offs and general tourist things. Little was known at the time, but eyes and ears were drawn to two girls pouring their heart and soul into a version of Goodbye Earl by the Dixie Chicks, a band that I was aware of at the time without really taking much interest. Yet something clicked into place that evening to make me want to explore further. By the end of that trip, a copy of the Fly album had been bought which housed the track, and within a couple of weeks both Home and Wide Open Spaces were in the CD collection.
From that moment, my interest in country music spiralled out of control as it was a mission to make up for the lost years to the extent that I decided to park every other genre on one side for the foreseeable future. Within two years I had seen the Dixie Chicks return to the scene of their crime with a second Shepherd's Bush Empire London gig and bought Taking the Long Way on release day. From then on it seemed I was having a de ja vu moment as the band slipped into a seemingly endless hiatus and The Jam of 1982 was revisited. The latter sadly one hiatus that did become permanent.
When starting this series of Desert Island Discs (with a twist), Goodbye Earl was the first record that came to mind. It has been the most important and influential song ever heard because it spawned a second coming in music, one that was never envisioned as the latter part of the '90s stuttered into the new millennium. Fortunately, the Dixie Chicks hiatus remained just that and in both 2014 and 2016 they returned to the UK to play shows and seemingly never tire of getting even with the ghastly Earl.
I have no idea what that bar was called in Midland, nor have anymore details on the two people singing the karaoke other than they appeared to mean every word in the lyrics! No pivotal list would be complete without Goodbye Earl by the Dixie Chicks. There may never be another song in my life as directional as this one, but you could have said that about many previous records on the day that plane landed in Toronto airport in May 2004. You just never know what is round the corner.
Desert Island Discs (with a twist) Part 3: Barbarism Begins at Home - The Smiths
My first recollection of that night was why on earth was the Hippodrome putting on rock gigs. I can barely remember another gig there. It would have been like The Rolling Stones playing a West End theatre. Secondly, I can clearly recall Morrissey bounding on stage singing William, It Was Really Nothing to open the set, yet I can remember nothing of an unknown at the time Manchester band called James opening the show. For one striking reason though, I can still hear every chord of Johnny Marr leading the encore number of Barbarism Begins at Home.
Up until 1985, the handful of gigs attended had been highlighted by being thrilled about hearing the singles and familiar songs live. Four of the most memorable songs heard live at the time were Chance by Big Country, Hungry Like the Wolf by Duran Duran, The Jam's Start and, not surprising if you have followed this series, Time for Action by Secret Affair at my very first gig.
The big difference between these four and Barbarism Begins at Home was that the former were all hit singles and anticipated pre-gig highlights. The latter came totally out of left field and fuelled to this day a notion that there can be a difference to what you experience on record to what you hear live. The version The Smiths played that night has never left my mind, although I haven't played the album cut for years up until now. Once again, when trying to select five pivotal tracks, this one was not an obvious choice, until we reach the latter years when live music really took hold. In recent times live music has become a staple and it is a regular occurrence when a song rises to the top of the pack once heard in a gig environment. For every song that enacts this moment, they all must take a bow to Barbarism Begins at Home. This was the ultimate live music pioneer and a pivotal moment when the power of the gig shifted the musical plate.
Desert Island Discs (with a twist) Part 2: Man in the Corner Shop - The Jam
When asked to name a Jam song, this track buried on the Sound Affects album would be well down the list. This Desert Island Discs (with a twist) series is not necessarily about personal favourites or perceived best songs. It is about those with a back story and a position that proved pivotal. Man in the Corner Shop may or may not have been written from a pure political perspective, but for me it was enlightening, At the age of fourteen I could recite every lyric from every favourite song. In The Jam's case, it was almost the case of every song. So when I was blurting out 'God created all men equal', while sitting in History lessons learning about Robert Owen and the Chartist movement of the 19th century, a seed was planted that grew and grew.
My left of centre politics emerged not from family influence, but from the lyrics of Paul Weller as he bemoaned the capitalist system in Man in the Corner Shop. To put this in context, I was a Thatcher child who despised everything she stood for. From following every husting of the '83 election while studying monetary Economics at college, though the optimism of '97 to the darkest hour of 13/12/2019, my support for the left has been resolute to the extent that it is there for life. Paul Weller has certainly got something to answer for, although I prefer to say thanks for.
When putting together this short list of pivotal records, Man in the Corner Shop by The Jam didn't come straight to mind. However, it didn't take too much additional effort for its worth to project to the fore. Its influence and meaningful existence was identified at the time and has never waned in the intervening years. Yes, other political records have landed since, but none with the impact on the curious mind of a fourteen year old in 1980 as this buried album track.
Desert Island Discs (with a twist)
Desert Island Discs (with a twist) Part 5: Three Chords and the Truth - Sara Evans
The song quickly became a firm favourite, but it was still far from legacy status. The first move securing that was a decision to launch a music blog in January 2012, one that was founded to cover live music which by now was a firm fixture in the gig diary. I had previously toiled with a few sporting blogs, but none had really taken off. While seeking a name, thoughts turned to the famous Harlan Howard quote, or from another angle - a popular and very good Sara Evans song. Amazingly, this name had been taken on the blogger platform, so the only way forward was to add UK to the name, which at least reflected the side of the pond the blog was from.
The rest is now history. Three Chords and the Truth UK went onto run for eight years, comprising of around a 1000 original-word reviews and accruing over half a million page views (give or take the odd Russian spammer). There was a brief rumour of its demise earlier this year, but they were unfounded and it is has burst back into life. The phrase, or cliche, still brings a smile to the face, whether seeing it scrawled on the walls of Nashville's Country Music Hall of Fame, on the pop up site at the UK's Long Road Festival or in the title of music recorded by Chase Rice and Van Morrison, and even multiple lyric inclusions such as American Aquarium's 'Crooked + Straight'.
But the biggest smile is when I play the Sara Evans' song or check out the video recorded at the British Country Music Awards in the '90s. Wow that was a fine guest in those days. So alongside the other four choices that make up the Desert Island Discs (with a twist) series, Three Chords and the Truth by Sara Evans can stand proud with its pivotal status and legacy intact. At least in the mind of yours truly.
A recap of the five songs that are cemented in history and would be worthy of Desert Island Discs inclusion, in chronological order of discovery are:
Time for Action - Secret Affair
Man in the Corner Shop - The Jam
Barbarism Begins at Home - The Smiths
Goodbye Earl - Dixie Chicks
Three Chords and the Truth - Sara Evans
Friday, 2 October 2020
Album Review: The Marriage - Imagining Sunsets
Armed with the ultimate name to call a recording duo, The Marriage have reached first base in the promotional stakes and set the scene for the music to do the rest. IMAGINING SUNSETS takes the art form of the duet and the harmony into a fertile territory to spin eleven tracks that gently hover in an acoustic haze of melded voices. Add a touch of pedal steel and themes of loss, love and life, and you start to get the feel that inroads into the UK's country and Americana scene are about to be made.
Dave Burn and Kirsten Adamson may be making a smart move in the positioning of their new duo project, but it really is just another productive avenue since they first worked together in the band Ahab well over a decade ago. Burn has crossed the radar recently as a member of Orphan Colours and on this album he tones things down a touch to co-drive a class tutorial in how to curate a heartfelt and majestic duo record. Adamson will always likely have the tag of being the daughter of late Scottish rocker Stuart in her professional life, but she has continued to plot her own musical path, and in the latest venture has taken the infectious influence of classic country to heart.
Male-female duos are ten-a-penny in any realm of country-Americana pretence and it takes a delicate mix of the sources to avoid some kind of formulaic construction. The Marriage pull this off over the course of the half-hour tuning in time they politely request of a listener, albeit without the appearance of a crackerjack track that punches its way through the project's ceiling.
However some records gradually inch their way into a listener's inner periphery and IMAGINING SUNSETS succeeds while others often fail from the angle of possessing an over demanding persona. Dave Burn and Kirsten Adamson know the ropes, have acquired some useful accomplices and understand what floats a listener's boat. It's probably in their DNA to be able to turn out such a tempting and advocative release. Let's avoid the inviting puns in conclusion and just anoint The Marriage as a welcome inclusion into the satisfying world of duets that thrive with a sense of cohesive unison.
Album Review: Andrew Farriss - Love Makes The World (EP)