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Gig Review: Courtney Marie Andrews - Hare and Hounds, Kings Heath, Birmingham. Wednesday 25th February 2026

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  “You guys are so quiet.” Maybe it was something to do with a spell cast from the stage. A packed room of hypnotised devotees hanging on every lyric and note. The lure of Courtney Marie Andrews is strong, almost addictive. Her steely gaze captures attention and freezes the moment. Noise would breach the code and nobody in the Hare and Hounds was going to do that. “That’s Valentine folks.” A simple end to what was a minimalist exhibition of an album stirring emotive songwriting affection since surfacing in January. A segment designated as act 1. Unfiltered evidence of a songwriter and musician stretching every sinew of their creative nous came to the fore. Forty minutes when the songs spoke for themselves. You could argue the stage became a studio and the gig a session, however this form is the identity and one honed over the last decade as a prominent solo artist.  Courtney Marie Andrews is at ease with communicating through her music. Reenacting a record in its enshrined str...

Gig Review: Thorpe and Morrison + Darach- Centrala, Birmingham. Sunday 22nd February 2026

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  There is a creative stir at the heart of post-industrial Birmingham. In the dimly lit quarters of backstreet Digbeth, grimy relics are brought to life beneath the surface. Disguised bars, food joints, performing spaces and improvised studios align to regenerate. A single two level unit located in Minerva Works would likely once have been humming to one of the city’s thousand trades, tonight it purred to a brace of fiddles and guitars. Centrala was born from Central and Eastern European culture; on this Sunday evening the sounds were more Western Europe or to be more precise a curved spine from the west of Scotland through parts of England to the Iberian peninsula. Its performing space was commandeered by two duos, similar in set up, different in sound. Thorpe and Morrison were the hosts but Darach were far more than mere guests. Together they filled the air with mesmeric sounds, and hearts with the vibrant beat of grassroots music.  6:45 is a good time to begin a Sunday even...

Gig Review: Kim Richey - Kitchen Garden, Kings Heath, Birmingham. Thursday 19th February 2026

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  “Has anybody been to the Bluebird Cafe?” “Yes,” mumbled two voices from the first row. In a more appropriate environment, the response would have been extended to “yes we saw you” but for now the focus was enjoying another Kim Richey performance ten years on from that Nashville encounter. Midway through the show, the name Don Henry cropped up as the co-writer for ‘ Chapel Avenue’ , the opening track from the most recent album EVERY NEW BEGINNING. Cue another connection with the Bluebird Cafe as he was on the same writers’ round bill in 2016. That’s enough of cafes four thousand miles away, let’s concentrate on one in Kings Heath - a cafe by day; an intimate gig venue by night. By estimation (and personal attendance), this was Kim Richey’s fifth visit to the Kitchen Garden, beginning with a double bill with Ben Glover in 2018. Solo has been the de facto performing format up until this evening when joined by long term guitarist Jez Ashurst. With no new music to present since the la...

Single Share: Luke James Williams - Hollows and Branches

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"Rising English folk artist Luke James Williams announces his second album ‘ Limes Hotel ,’ due this April, alongside the release of his new single ‘ Hollows and Branches’  out February 6th.  Hollows and Branches is the third single from ‘Limes Hotel’ following ‘Seeds’ and ‘Ends.’ Earning widespread praise and airplay from BBC Radio 6 Music, BBC Introducing and Amazing Radio these new songs reveal an artist emerging as one of the UK’s most compelling new folk voices. " Williams equates grief with the natural world in a song getting to the heart of  what a relationship meant. His quintessential English-style folk vocals, almost spoken, give a real life sentiment to the lyrics, all delivered in a passive tone allowing space for the song to impact. 'Rich isn't happy, sad isn't poor' is a lyric to ponder.  Limes Hotel by Luke James Williams www.lukejameswilliams.co.uk

Gig Review: The Lost Notes - Jennifer Blackwell Performance Space, Symphony Hall, Birmingham. Wednesday 4th February 2026

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  After three full length albums and a wealth of gig experience in the locker, the time was ripe for Birmingham-based band The Lost Notes to turn their hand to a live record. The groundwork was done last year with a successful gig in the Jennifer Blackwell Performance Space at Birmingham’s Symphony Hall. This adapted area has all the attributes for effective live music such as excellent sound and lighting as well as a comfortable spacious layout with additional viewing from an upper balcony. With logistics in place, the word went out very quickly that a repeat show was planned to record the live album and over 200 fans snapped up tickets to sell out the event. Their enthusiastic gusto was as much part of a successful evening as a band on a mission to do the project justice.  If the planned live album is a fraction of its source then listeners are going to feel the energy. Heart and soul, the ultimate audience bond and a performance of prime effervescent quality filled a packed...

Gig Review: Dylan LeBlanc - Kitchen Garden, Kings Heath, Birmingham. Monday 2nd February 2026

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  Dylan LeBlanc is an exceptional songwriter. Words are soothly shared in a high planed tone. Tunes coaxed out of an old Martin with minimal effort. He shines a light inwards onstage. Audiences are allowed a peep, taken to the edge and won over with an impish charm. You warm to a candid unveiling and separate the deed from perverse perception. You respect an honesty and accept the rich and varied influences inform the art. Stories broaden the imagination, push convention to the limit and slip into the sublime song.  Dylan LeBlanc is a rebel with a cause.  This was a third appearance at the Kitchen Garden since an amazing full band debut in November 2023. Solo has been the two most recent formats, likely more cost effective and practical but a wonderful opportunity to get close up and personal. Fourteen songs and umpteen stories filled a brace of sets extracting material from Paupers Field to Coyote. He appears to like Birmingham and Birmingham absolutely likes him....

Gig Review: Lucinda Williams - Town Hall, Birmingham. Thursday 29th January 2026

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Clad in black leather, a socially sharp mind and forever anchored where the spirit meets the bone. Lucinda Williams unites the poetry of folk, the  depth of the blues, the meaning of soul and the verve of rock. The stage presence has been re-invented in recent years and the elaborated drawl is still rinsed in east of the Red River sensibility. An icon schooled in the annals of the classic band, settling as a legend who has never abandoned the roots of righteousness. The band and its leader is a mighty entity. She tapped her heart in praise of Brady Blade’s drumming and passively admired the shredding of Marc Ford. The longstanding relationship with Doug Pettibone is sealed when he played pedal steel while she whimsically dreamt of driving an El Camino with a Texan friend around Lake Charles. David Sutton’s adaptable bass playing kept her ear on track. The ills of the world are given the therapy of Lucinda Williams 2026: refreshed, revitalised, recording and still ‘ Rocking in the F...