Moseley Folk Festival has been an enigmatic fit since landing into my live music domain in 2011. While other festivals have become ingrained fixtures in the gig calendar, the one closest to home is frequently subjected to competing demands and music channels that are often misaligned. Its aesthetic virtues have been championed since day one and the glorious setting in Moseley Park has been the backdrop to some unforgettable sets over the years. There is a strong chance that this relationship will continue into the future, though nothing would please me more to be in a position where the schedule is clear and the draw is strong to park myself in this suburban treasure land from Friday lunchtime to Sunday evening (give or take the 12 mile commute home).
2023 eventually become the third year where circumstance and choice settled on attending the Sunday only. Up until the eleventh hour, a dilemma surrounded the other days, while the final day was set in stone early on. During previous visits to Moseley, Billy Bragg had been a highlight, while The Proclaimers were a disappointment. There is little more to add to the latter pulling out late on to be replaced by the 'Barking Bard'. The scheduling for the main stage on Sunday evening was spiced up by Billy Bragg being afforded the penultimate slot before American super giants Wilco closed the whole event. A little bit of collaborative history there that posed a question.
Wilco and Billy Bragg |
The artists booked by the organisers for this day were a mixed bag from what usually fills my gig and listening sphere. Billy Bragg goes back a lifetime, while Wilco have flickered in the background without be given the chance to get any closer. Kirsten Adamson was my most recent delve with an album and gig review this year. Amelia Coburn was close to getting some coverage last year, so the perfect opportunity to check her out. The rest ranged from sampling awareness to no idea. However, aren't festivals all about exploring? You can't fault Moseley Folk for not exploiting that notion.
Amelia Coburn |
Sophie Jamieson's Moseley Folk experience started off on the wrong foot with a lost luggage incident leaving her guitar-less ahead of being grateful for a loaned instrument. Airlines are regularly the curse of musicians. Wand in hand, she soldiered on with a dark and intense performance that may have been more conducive to a different environment than a lunchtime festival set. Merit could be found in her music especially the songs she played from her recorded content. Perhaps a little more confidence in this material may have helped, but sometimes there may just be better days ahead. Introducing your music from a 'tangled mind' can narrow the transmission at a festival where casual attenders may have yearned for a little more connection.
Kirsten Adamson and Band |
When the dust settled on this eventual eventful day at Moseley Folk, the set by Kirsten Adamson solidly nestled on the podium of those performances most enjoyed. The scheduling of her set on the Kitchen Garden stage invoked the one real clash of the day. The choice was the safe haven of Kirsten Adamson or check out in-person the furore around Angelina Morrison's acclaimed folk album shedding a new light on British history. The regret of not following through on the latter as experienced by my partner was tempered by the satisfaction of seeing Kirsten play for the first time with a full band.
The slogan that sums it up |
Jon Wilkes was the final call on the Kitchen Garden stage. Bringing folk songs from the Midlands is always going to go down well with a folk crowd in Moseley, albeit the artist is open about making a return to the area's heritage after many years away. A healthy gathering on the slope greeted an artist who has been accruing celebrated acclaim recently. From a personal angle, there is still some connection work to fully feel in touch. There is an opportunity later in the year when Jon hosts a show with Martin Carthy at the MAC in Birmingham. Perhaps the connection will become a little stronger than what occurs in a festival field.
Billy Bragg x 2 |
Time to switch back into the way festivals work for me. The phrase 'tired voice' has been banding around my brain recently. You could substitute with the word 'familiar' to describe Billy Bragg alongside the ultra positive addendum of 'renewed'. There is still a distinctive tone, theme and aura when he stands in front of a festival crowd. Those aligned stand in awe, get revved up and depart suitably refreshed to continue the fight in whichever way they see fit. It might as well have been 2011 again when he stood on the very same stage spilling his rhetoric, calling to arms and conducting the timeless singalongs. A dozen years on flanked by the on-off stage presence of CJ Hillman on guitars/pedal steel and a keyboard player whose name escapes me is one change, while the theme for solidarity is now right behind the trans and gender identity community. As per usual, the fervent unravelling and simplified advocation rang true. A few new songs with a familiar sheen were also thrown into the set. Practise has perfected the art of extensive banter and precision allowance to enable the communal yell of 'I don't want to change the world' before curtain call. The echo chamber of a folk festival is fine, but the hard yards of the issues are done elsewhere.
Jeff Tweedy of Wilco |
Pride should always be attached to the musical journey taken and choices made. On the other hand, the opening of new channels is the spirit of revitalisation. Wilco have always been largely dormant on my radar. No shame just a discovery in waiting. From 9:00 to 10:30 (with a sweet spot explosion at 9:15), they put on a monstrous demonstrative show that blew me away. Guitar craft - solo and in unison - interacting keys, clear songs built on a firm substance and a band delivery that aced all the key components of selling your music to fans old and new. Clearly a Moseley highlight from my time spent in the park and up there with the spine tingling performance delivered by Alabama Shakes at a festival in Louisville Kentucky in the wake of Ali's death. The Wilco radar lies dormant no more. Just 30 years of catching up, starting with the 13th studio release due out later this month.
So there, a rather top heavy festival day. Fairly unique in reception and how it was approached. Away from the personal input, Moseley Folk Festival appears in radiant health. Mild expansion, wide praise, seemingly good numbers and an ambient experience that is like no other on the scene. Moseley Folk may just be a festival for the folk of Moseley, although openly extended to Birmingham, the Midlands and any place where folks want to travel from. The same challenges and dilemmas will not doubt still be present for me in 2024. Nothing would be more pleasing for the festival to beat them all off and lay on a three-day extravaganza with my name tagged onto it. Let's not depart in the future but the present, and the moment the radar of Wilco pointed finally in my direction.