The old saying goes ‘give me a child until they're seven and I’ll
give you the person’. The Maverick Festival is in fact in its eighth year and it’s
safe to say that the evolution into the UK’s premier comprehensive roots music
event is now complete, subject to the ongoing flourishing of this Easton Farm
Park gathering. In excess of 50 acts descended onto this quirky venue which is surely
unlike any other on the festival circuit. Amongst the home grown talent were
the usual guests from Canada and America with this year being joined by a
couple of notable invitees with an Australian background, albeit totally
absorbed in Americana music. It is this complex genre which unites all the
performers as they explore many of its facets with extraordinary depth.
Personally this was a sixth pilgrimage from the industrial
Midlands to deepest Suffolk and there is an unrelenting appeal derived from
taking in a selection of largely unsigned independent artists raising their
game for a dedicated and appreciative audience. The downside of any assembly
of so many acts crammed within a full day, previous evening and following
morning is the inevitable clashes. So before the 2015 analysis is launched, a
commendable mention is offered to Amanda Rheume, Ben Folke Thomas and Miriam
Jones. All have been previously featured and will no doubt cross my path again
in the future. Likewise newly signed Clubhouse Records band The Rossellys just
missed the viewing cut on this occasion, but further coverage of them is lined
up in the near future.
So with a handful of apologies out of the way, attention
turns to reflections on the weekend which contained the most glorious festival
day weather-wise amidst a few minor unwelcome meteorological interjections. In
a slight diversion from previous reviews, the challenge this year was to tie the
event into an A-Z piece which has been pulled off with a touch of stretching
and creative license. Anyhow all acts seen get a mention as this once again-excellent
festival is re-lived.
A is for The Alan
Tyler Show who played a thirty minute set in the Barn on Sunday morning, kicking the
day off with a blend of classic country covers and neatly crafted originals. The
Rockingbirds frontman was appearing in a trio format for his sets which is also
reflected in the new album. Not on the record but delightfully heard in the
Barn was a version of Merle Haggard’s ‘Sing
Me Back Home’ and the scene was set for a laid back collection of tunes to
herald the festival’s shortened final day.
B is for Billy
Bragg who is possibly the festival’s most widely known booking in the eight-year tenure of its existence. A late change to the schedule saw Billy moved to
headline the outside Sweet Home Alabama stage which is the traditional 5 o’clock
slot for Maverick. The set was typical Billy Bragg with an Americana slant to
represent that side of his musical influence which has surfaced more
prominently over the last few years. A Woody Guthrie song, ‘I Ain’t Got No Home’, and a memorable
version of ‘Dead Flowers' punctuated
the old favourites with the inevitable concluding song. This prompted the
thought: when did Billy last sing the chorus of ‘New England’ live on stage. Any concerns about the possibility of
this being a lopsided booking in the line-up was answered by a superb set from
an artist who is perfectly in synch with the roots agenda.
C is for Chastity
Brown who was the pick of artists lined up to play the Barn on Saturday
evening. Chastity came to my attention a couple of years ago with an advance copy
of her album and it was an honour to finally get the opportunity to see her
live. She encapsulates all that is diverse in Americana music and finely weaves
her mixed heritage into a musical style rich in country, blues, soul and folk.
The three highlights from her set were ‘Solely’,
‘Colorado’ (which gave her most exposure in the UK via a TV airing on Jools
Holland) and an exquisite cover of Van Morrison’s ‘The
Sweetest Thing’. In these quarters Chastity transferred all the strength from
her record to the stage leaving a legacy of a desire to catch one of her full
live shows the next time she visits the UK.
D is for Don
Gallardo, Clubhouse Records luminary and the architect of the brilliant new album
HICKORY. Don popped up a couple of times during the weekend, probably most
prominent as part of the Clubhouse curated Peacock stage on Friday evening. Friends’
services may have been borrowed to form the band for the evening, but Don
showed that he is a class act and is fully deserved of the praise that has been
flowing his way since the record’s recent UK release. ‘North Dakota Blues’ was the pick of his set on Friday as he epitomised
the carefully selected American artist who fits the ideals of the Maverick
Festival.
E is for Emma
Swift on her first performing UK visit and the source behind an exceptional
self-titled record which gate crashed the top twenty favourite albums of 2014.
This unexpected booking gave Emma heaps of exposure from a couple of limited appearances.
Among the four songs she played as part of her songwriter circle fixture on the
Clubhouse bill were the superb ‘Woodland
Street’ and the outstanding ‘Bittersweet’
which continues to blossom as her signature track. Emma also joined Don
Gallardo on stage for a song or two and similarly featured in the festival’s surprise
impromptu slot with a duet alongside Robyn Hitchcock, an artist who the
organisers were not going to let leave without the invite to share a few songs
from his considerable back catalogue.
F is the second
part of The Black Feathers name, an inventive and highly active UK duo schooled
in the art of delivering the spine tingling pan gender duet harmony. Ray and
Sian is the couple in question and they continue to grow their nationwide presence
with frequent live dates alongside an EP release which is shortly going to be
supplemented by that ever important debut album. The Black Feathers had the
honour of launching the weekend’s proceedings with a Friday evening Barn performance
among their appearances and kept the audience’s attention right through to a
closing original rendition of the classic song ‘Spirit in the Sky’.
G is the initial
letter of American honky tonk artist Gal Holiday and the Honky Tonk Review who played a rousing set to
close activities in the Barn on Saturday. On a festival where the deluge of
original music towers above the smattering of covers, there is always the exception
of a few old favourites to send folks home happy. You may have heard ‘The Circle is Unbroken’, ‘Don’t Think Twice’
and ‘Folsom Prison Blues’ covered many
times before, but Gal can be excused for a slice of indulgence as an extensive
day of live music drew to a close.
H had to be the
chosen letter for another Clubhouse band in Case Hardin who played the final
and headline band set (if you can call it that for such as egalitarian stable)
on the Peacock Stage on Friday. Incredibly this was the first time seeing the
quartet live as they rarely seem to hit the Midlands and have suffered from clashes
at previous festivals. However there was no such re-occurrence this time as
Peter Gow and the boys let rip with a high octane set. Having only really
listened to PM from their back catalogue, the live rock sound intensified their
impact in surprise portions and it supremely added a ratchetted up finesse to
the Clubhouse offering which was eventually closed by a sadly unwitnessed ‘All
Star’ ensemble.
I is in the title
of Dan Walsh’s new album INCIDENTS & ACCIDENTS and this was the first
opportunity to catch a few tunes live from a record exhibiting some of the
finest banjo playing you’ll see in the UK.
A personal rule of not flitting around during sets was broken to witness
Dan for a couple of songs as he clashed with Chastity Brown. However watching
his mesmerising playing has made it a new resolution to attend one of Dan’s
solo shows which have always seemed to bypass me in the past. There was a few
wrongs turned right at this festival and seeing Dan Walsh for the first time
was towards the top of this list.
J sees a return
to the first name of performers and in particular Joel Rafeal, a veteran US
folk singer flavouring the festival with fine songs and many tales from that
vast land which sources much of the great music on offer. Joel was seen playing
a Saturday evening set in the Peacock and projected an immense aura of a
songwriter highly active in the folk music scene west of the Mississippi.
Flanked by Oklahoma guitarist Terry Ware and the young accomplished UK pedal
steel guitarist CJ Hillman, Joel spun many thoughts and observations from his
lengthy career. He namechecked other stalwarts of the West Coast song writing
community such as the author of ‘Peaceful
Easy Feelin’’ Jack Tempest and shared several songs from his own new album BALADISTA including the
impressive ‘Old Portland Town’ with
the usual accompanying story.
K is for the
album title KIN which has been responsible for transforming the career sound of
the Lovell Sisters and their inspirational band name Larkin Poe. Megan and
Rebecca were returning to Maverick after their inaugural appearance last year.
This time they were upgraded to headlining the Barn on Friday night and, with
the new sound firmly bedded in, they thrilled a packed venue with an energetic dose
of southern gothic rock. All the now-becoming old favourites from KIN were
included in the set such as ‘Don’t’, ‘Jailbreak’
and ‘Jesse’, alongside a haunting version
of ‘Bang Bang’ as the encore number.
The sisters from Atlanta Georgia continue to grow their presence in the UK via
a multitude of diverse tours and with each gig seen live seem to raise the bar
of accomplishment.
L has a dual
purpose in this feature as it is the shared initial surname letter for cross
Atlantic duo Lewis and Leigh as well as the effervescent and gutsy US artist Sonia
Leigh. Al and Alva sublimely blend the Celtic sound of Wales with the Deep
South to reflect their respective homelands in a presentation of outstanding
folk influenced music. In contrast to many artists over the weekend, Lewis and
Leigh only played a single set in the Barn on Friday, but it was an appearance
on the ‘must see’ list as their two EPs have provided endless listening
enjoyment and the live experience didn’t disappoint. On the other hand, Sonia
kept popping up all over the weekend with two Barn sets and an involvement with
the Alabama tribute on the outside stage. Sonia has impressed before with her moving rootsy vocals in a band format and this time she transferred her skills to a
solo presentation. A slight adjustment to the vocal sound paid dividends for
her second set on Saturday as this did not overpower her guitar. Sonia is the
real deal in this house and that raw southern voice was heaven sent for a
festival fixated with the sound emanating from the dirt of the American roots. Legends
of Country are squeezed into this category by virtue of both their tongue-in-cheek
name and outdoor stage set on Saturday lunch time delivering their very English
take on alt-country music to a basking audience beginning to accumulate a red
tinge in the heat of the day.
M is the surname
of the second Aussie to flourish at the festival after Emma Swift. Anne McCue
was making her first visit to the UK in eleven years and played an acclaimed
band set in the Peacock late on Saturday night alongside a stunning solo
performance in the Barn on Sunday lunchtime. Having only seen the final live
song on the evening, a similar mistake was avoided the following day as Anne
presented a selection of tunes from her new album BLUE SKY THINKIN’. Supplementing
her top songs mainly delivered via guitar, was a piece of inventive loop work
involving her lap steel as Anne showed what a talented artist she is and why
others such as roots icon Dave Alvin have worked alongside her, She was
definitely one of the finds of the festival.
N sees a slight
diversion from the artists on show and refers to the Newport Folk Festival, of
which the fiftieth anniversary of the infamous plugging in of Dylan was being commemorated.
The documentary from this 1965 event was shown on Saturday morning and was subsequently
followed by a Q&A with Joe Boyd who was involved on the day of this monumental event in folk circles. Another US folk icon in Tom Paley was also
present to share some memories and this was another example of the festival
being fully versed in treasuring the immense history of roots and Americana
music.
O is the probably
the most tenuous link so far, but Oxford is famous for its dreaming spires and subsequently
the inspiration behind the name of the Bennett Brothers, Robin and Joe’s,
latest and most high profile venture. Armed with a tremendous new album
SEARCHING FOR THE SUPERTRUTH and now blessed by the powers of the BBC after
their performance on the Andrew Marr Show, The Dreaming Spires are central
figures of the Clubhouse Records project and shared their vision of
indie-driven alt-country rock to an enthralled Peacock crowd on Friday evening.
It is now approaching two years since ‘Dusty
in Memphis’ was first heard live and it gets better with each listen.
Another outstanding song from this set worth mentioning is ‘Easy Rider’, but anything The Dreaming
Spires do at the moment is turned to gold.
P has to belong
to Paul McClure who acted as compere, host and performer during the Clubhouse
Friday night extravaganza. Known for his alluring dry wit and endearing take on
honest observational songs, Paul launched the Peacock’s proceedings as
co-ordinator of the song writing circle featuring himself, Emma Swift and Simon
Stanley-Ward. The popular Rutland Troubadour continues to blaze a creative
trail on the folk, roots and Americana circuit leaving a memorable experience in
his path. As he is a keen observer of the written word, a little message is: keep it up Paul, your presence and work is always appreciated.
Q is the first stumbling
block on the A-Z highway, so we’ll go no further than to offer the word ‘quality’,
of which the high version was in abundance all weekend and is a prime reason
why the Maverick Festival is an integral event of the British Americana
circuit.
R is for Robert
Chaney, a young highly rated singer-songwriter who was added to the ‘must see’
list when the line-up was announced. The weather may have been warm and spirits
high, but this was not going to deter Robert and his dark murder folk ballads
on a sunny afternoon. There is always room in a festival named ‘maverick’ for a
little left field deviation and the world is a better place when a couple of
folks meet a grizzly ending in a song. The
appetite has been whetted from this initial listen to Robert and hopefully it won’t
be the last.
S is a double
entry for the talents of Simon Stanley-Ward who is the final part of the song
writing circle which opened the Peacock on Friday. Possessing the most
authentic voice in UK country music whilst steering clear of false stereotypes
is the trait that can take Simon a long way in the industry. He also matches it
with fine songs and like so many artists this weekend, the opportunity to see
him live for the first time was relished. It may have only been four songs, but
hopefully the fruitful journey of seeing him many times has just begun. Under
the commission of something –old, new, borrowed, blue – ‘Please Excuse Me (While I Feel Sorry for Myself)’ from the new
album perfectly fitted the new bill.
T is for the
unmistakeable surname of Luke Tuchscherer and his appearance on the outside
Sweet Home Alabama stage on Saturday afternoon. Whilst in a phase from taking a
break as drummer in the Whybirds, Luke is forging a decent solo career and for
this gig he was backed by his band The Penny Dreadfuls. The set was a good
mixture of songs from his latest solo record, old Whybirds numbers and a couple
of popular covers, notably The Band’s ‘The
Weight’ and Steve Earle’s ‘I Ain’t
Ever Satisfied’. Acclaim and recognition for Luke as a solo performer is
growing and an appearance at the Maverick Festival did not do this surge of appreciation
any harm.
U can only be for
the nation that inspires so much of the music on show at Maverick and this year
the Saturday centrepiece of the festival happened to be July 4th. So
it was a case of Happy Independence Day to all artists who travelled from the
USA to play at this year’s Maverick Festival. Full apologies to The Ugly Guys as their set was not seen.
W is for the splendidly
named Welfare Mothers and their top rate frontman Bob Collum. Having reviewed
Bob’s latest album at the start of the year and thoroughly enjoying it on many
repeat plays, listening to the songs live proved to be the icing on the cake.
His duet with Marianne Hyatt on ‘It’s a
Good Thing We’re in Love’ is one of the songs of the year and the live rendition
on the Sweet Home Alabama stage on the most perfect summer’s afternoon was a
joy to behold. At this point the resistance to quote the glorious line ‘I do
the jumping when you holler frog’ is withered away and hearing it live brought
out an extra smile.
Debbie Bond |
Finally V and X have proved a bridge too far, but there was
an artist named Vincent Cross who appeared on the Moonshine Stage on Friday
night and could have met the criteria. Alas he was not seen, so that just
leaves the letter Z and always the most difficult fit in any A-Z list. Zydeco is the
word that comes to mind when considering Americana music and there was always
the Zimmerman connection to fall back on. However this concept has probably
been exhausted now which leads into the concluding thoughts.
When the long journey was made to Suffolk for the 3rd
Maverick Festival in 2010, there was little thought that this would become an
annual pilgrimage and the first entry in the summer gig calendar. Five years
and six festivals later, Maverick has grown up as a festival without growing in
size. Long may this status continue and the first weekend in July become the
fixed date for the most comprehensive gathering of Americana and roots music in
the UK.
www.maverickfestival.co.uk
www.maverickfestival.co.uk