Monday, 7 April 2025

Festival Review: Ramblin' Roots Revue - Bucks Student Union, High Wycombe. Friday 4th April to Sunday 6th April 2025

 


Ramblin’ Roots: a time of the year when spring gains momentum. A gathering of likeminded music fans bound by a love for something different. An event tightly run offering outstanding quality and kindness to the pocket. A festival not afraid to throw in a few curveballs. A revue where lighter moments jostle with darker songs. You can tell your friends but experience speaks louder than words. 

Artists need an audience; an audience needs a performance. A fragile bond without effective organisation. Ramblin’ Roots is strong on all three fronts. The organisers deliver; musicians seize the opportunity; fans reap the rewards. 

Country in all its various guises, Americana and roots music can be tough to explain to outsiders. Inside a welcoming wide tent, the converted require no explanation. 

Sometimes music only needs a few accompanying words. In the spirit of the Japanese haiku, succinct on the spot reflections from an extensive weekend of superb performances are the flesh of this year's review. Enjoy!

Jonny Morgan
Charismatic act
Blending bass and sax
To connect with folks 
Sorrel Nation

Stylish band panache
Adding folk rock aura to
Sultry layered songs
The Marriage
Majestic duo
Sharing music and song
Across the border
Ward Thomas

Sibling harmonies
Presenting bright country pop
To keen open ears
Savannah Gardener and the Recovering Good Girls
Outlaw sass wooing
A party crowd up for a
Friday finale
Hannah Scott
Blissful songwriting 
Enabling emotive themes
To reach other hearts 
Malcolm Charles Moore
Resourceful singer 
Pitching songs to new bodies
Grasping the mantle 

The Rosellys
Finding a roots seam
Through inspired musicianship
And authentic sounds
Jol Rose
Right out of the blocks
Firing folk shots from the stage 
With guitar in hand 
Ren Harvieu and Romeo Stodart
Immersive duo
Exude theatrical vibes
Oozing style and craft
Sarah Jane Scouten
Talented exile
Melting aching country hearts 
With pedal steel tears
Peter Bruntnell
Alt country rocker
Feeding off a top notch band
In time honoured style
Elaine Palmer
Atmospheric roots
From the chimes of twin guitars 
Evokes a sweet mood 
Annie Keating
Band for all seasons
Excelling in unison
Fronted by a star 
Southern Fold
Mid tempo rock band
Purveying Kilkenny roots
Gifting rhythmic guile
The Dreaming Spires
Reviving Spires
The supertruth still not found
But boy they’ve got soul
The Breeze
Introspective band
Jamming around the edges
Leaving folks to seek
Danny and the Champions of the World
Born to headline shows 
Cutting innovative grooves
Champs for a reason
Susannah Clegg
A voice to die for
Showing our future is safe
In capable hands 
Katie Whittaker
Gutsy performer
Using fiddle to great effect
Sharing sincere songs
Roseanne Reid
Quality artist 
Bouncing back with song beauty
One to believe in
Bobby Lee
Music to chill to
Three Players finding their groove
Ambience abound
Trevor Moss & Hannah Lou
Acoustic delight
Two voices melt into one
Moving when solo
Simeon Hammond Dallas
Sharing joyous flair
Shining a powerful light
Leaving an impact
Jerry Leger
Stylish songwriter 
Exploring several themes
Acutely stripped back
Rachel Laven
Lone Star State Ramblin' 
Reclaiming country music
Boots and songs to suit
Orphan Colours
Guitars and sax rock
Homegrown Americana
Soundtrack as night falls
The Autumn Saints
Enigmatic front
Stacked with deep dark southern vibes
As alt as you get
The Hanging Stars
Full on charisma
Jangly roots rock bands for life
Fitting finale

If you're still here, thanks for the indulgence. You can't churn hundreds of this stuff out for years without mixing it up from time to time. 

That's the wrap on Ramblin' Roots 2025. Twenty nine invited acts and the infamously entertaining Clubhouse All Stars. Anyone up for 2026! 

Wednesday, 2 April 2025

Gig Review: The Delines - The Glee Club, Birmingham. Monday 31st March 2025

 


What is Americana? Gatekeepers, tastemakers, bedroom bloggers and media movers all grapple with a definition. Some expand it from music to wider culture; others philosophically pinpoint it as a 'state of mind'. Artists are often oblivious to it, rejecting the boundaries of genre constraints. Whatever your take, Americana is a living breathing entity, flowering far from any hinterland. If there's room for one more assimilation, embrace the literary imagination of Wily Vlautin, absorb words from the grounded tones of Amy Boone and let the soundtrack ferment in a combo of instrumental maestros. Maybe the answer lies in The Delines. 

Characters from the gritty lanes of real America are given a voice in the songs. Three minute story tellings are a microcosm of a Wily Vlautin novel. Often female and always the underdog, the themes are stark. When The Delines launch into any song from a tight album catalogue, a hush descends on the audience. Honing in on the lyrics goes hand in hand with laying your money down for a show. It helps they are delivered with mesmerising clarity. Blend in a soundtrack reverberating around delicate rock and soothing soul enhances a musical punch. All these ingredients came to the fore in The Glee Club.

Bands that curate an identity sound possess a formidable selling point. The Delines are never going to smash the ceiling of populism, yet there appears an optimum engagement in the numbers they deal in. 

Growth has accompanied the band's activity in the UK. Using Birmingham as a barometer, a cosy gathering in the Hare and Hounds' small room greeted a new name in 2014 stated at the time as 'nailing the sound of country soul'. When returning to the venue post-pandemic, it was the large room playing host. Three years down the line a packed main room in The Glee Club doubled previous turnouts putting the talent on a suitable pedestal.

The Delines excel as a unit. Vlautin and Boone interact innately, Sean Oldham and Freddie Trujillo shore up the bass and drums backfield with consummate ease, while Cory Gray magnificently multi-tasks on keyboard and trumpet. The latter's timely blasts ignite any room. The ease of the tempo aches with cultured elegance. The odd raising of guitar intensity is respectful. Boone almost owns the vocal space allowing sufficient room for harmonies to frequently bloom. For an hour and half, The Glee Club left its comedy facade behind filling the air with fragrant sounds of country soul and, yes, Americana.

From the progressive hotbed of Portland Oregon, The Delines chose the southern English roots of singer-songwriter Peter Bruntnell to open on this tour. If the main course is a delicious serving, ensure the starter matches the pedigree. A combination impeccably honoured. 

Whether it's the fertile imagination, wondrous vocals or esteemed musicianship that seal the moment, take a step back and savour how all the ingredients make The Delines tick. They are a band turning real life travails into a genre defining moment.