
The mystically named Wookalily has been a flowing feast of
musical talent and this album represents the past as the band prepare for the
future. Adele Ingram (guitar, vocals), Louise Potter (percussion), Sharon
Morgan (banjo) and Lyndsay Crothers (lead vocals) are the core of the current
line up but four other lead vocalists appear on this twelve strong collection
of songs entrenched in old time,
bluegrass and roots lore. This does create a flavour of vocal diversity
threaded by a quality that never wanes. The album’s finale see all vocalists
celebrate in full collaborative manner with the gender induced ‘The Devil is a Woman’.
A clever line from this song, ‘Lucy-fare -well-go to hell’
illustrates the sparkling writing of Adele Ingram which illuminates all but one
of the album’s tracks. Adele’s literary compositions court attention and
scrutiny to reveal wit, love, recollection and sadness, ranging from sharp,
cute to downright sassy. For instrumentation description, take your pick from
any type of roots implement and you’ll find banjo, mandolin, fiddle, Dobro and
guitar finding their niche. The album is vibrant with appealing melodies
adorning both verses and choruses with equal measure.

Other notable songs which do make up this superb collection
include the bluesy ‘Black Magic Doll’,
the waltz influenced ‘Got Me on My Knee’
and the evocative ‘Memories of New
Orleans’, assumingly the latter is based on personal travels. ‘Banjo Blues’ sees Adele’s writing at its
cutting best while ‘Johnny Kicked the
Bucket’ is a fun packed number graced with a great fiddle finish. The only
non-penned Adele song is ‘Fire Below’
which comes across as a racy bluegrass standard, while album opener, ‘Hands Pass in Time’, and one of several
sang beautifully by current vocalist Lyndsay Crothers, is rich in string and
sets the tone perfectly.
Like all debut releases, ALL THE WAITING WHILE now gives the
band a tangible opportunity to get heard across the country, roots and
Americana community in the UK, possibly into Europe and in the US as well.
Backing this up with a live presence will also serve the band well and the name
Wookalily will also play its part in growing awareness. Ultimately the ladies
have produced a record true to the core, wide in appeal and aiming straight to
recognisable status. A fine achievement for a debut record.
www.wookalily.com