The countdown clock may just have little over three years to
go before the City of Culture tag formally kicks in, but in a buried corner of
Coventry, the ‘c’ word is alive and buzzing. The Big Comfy Bookshop has been
creating waves on the UK’s folk ‘n’ roots acoustic circuit for quite a while,
and this is only likely to gather pace as we move into a new year. While a
venue can make its own mark on a music scene, it is literally just another
building without the artists that illuminate the everyday surroundings. The
presentation that closed the 2017 Comfy and Acoustic twice-monthly programme
worked a treat in terms of representing the breadth and depth of folk music the
length of our land. So let’s focus on the triumvirate of Iona Fyfe, Lucy
Kitchen and Iona Lane, who loosely combined to celebrate the joy of unfiltered
live music.
Iona Lane |
Without edging into judgemental circles, frequent fragments
of individuality seeped out. An age differential led to Lucy coming across as a
more steadfast performer, and perhaps making greater effective use of her guitar.
It was deduced that her set comprised solely of original material, although
there appeared to be a natural tendency to allow the songs do their own
communicating. Without dispute, the set peaked with the final number. Via the
introduction, Lucy revealed that ‘Searching
for Land’ was her favourite track from the latest album and this explicitly
transferred to the way the song was noticeably delivered.
Lucy Kitchen |
Prior to Lucy executing her impressive set, Iona Lane opened
the evening with similar effect, although from a younger perspective of finding
her feet in the professional world. This led to an assertion of being more experimental
combined with an eagerness to embrace inter-song communication. Iona did wander
into cover territory with a version of Sandy Denny’s ‘Who Knows Where the Time Goes’ , but her set was defined with a
batch of revealing songs headed by the life changing ‘Amsterdam’. Essentially, she came across as an unblemished talent that
will surely blossom with the passage of time.
Maybe at this point in the evening a slice of variety was
craved, so cue: the heaven sent Iona Fyfe. First up, it is wise to address the
geographical differences, as we now had to embrace ourselves for an hour of
staunchly traditional Scottish folk music in contrast to two sets with a
particularly English flavour. Whatever the motivation for Iona to leave all
remnants of instrumentation back north of the border for this gig excursion, it
was an absolute blessing to spend a coveted hour in the precious company of her
sculptured voice; effervescent charm and an endearing commitment to share her
passion.
The highest compliment to pay Iona is her ability to reach
out and engage those who are not too au fait with the art of the traditional
song, especially from the north east of Scotland. While folk clubs will soak
this up, though reportedly occasionally in judgemental mode, this setting was
far from that. At the end of the set, folks could start to sort their Child ballads
from their Bothy ballads, alongside generating a further understanding of where
this music is sourced. Not forgetting, all this was accomplished in the
presence of a most captivating voice, plus the odd encouragement to ‘get yer
singing’. The success of the latter was left to ponder, but the enthusiasm of
the advocate was unequivocal. The jaw-dropping backdrop to this segment of the
show, probably highlighted by a version of ‘The
Banks of Inverurie’, was the aura generated by a performer yet to reach the
ripe old age of twenty.
www.lucykitchen.com
www.ionalane.com