This Year Has Been Ace So I’m Having A Party

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I have to say this year has been ace.

Here are just a few of the high points.

I spoke at the EFDSS Folk Song Conference about A.L.Lloyd & Ritual in Song. It was a lot of research but the conference experience was excellent. The other papers were really interesting. The discussion about manufactured authenticity was probably my favourite by a whisker.

The Bermondsey Folk Festival was a great success, Martin Carthy, Lisa Knapp, Circulus, Arfur Doo & The Toerags, Ady Johnson, The Embers Band, David Jaycock & myself all performed to the largest turnout yet. The 2019 already has Andy Irvine, Kerry Andrew & Martin Simpson on the bill with more great acts to be confirmed.

My storytelling career has taken off & has become part of my artistic practice. In September I had a sell-out solo storytelling show for adults at Southwark Cathedral (I’m back there in February 2019!) and I also managed to tell stories at St Paul’s Cathedral, the Southbank Centre, The London Eye and on board the Cutty Sark as well as many other places.

I made an album too, which I am proud of. A song from it was played on the Radio 2 Folk Show the other week.

The album is being released on December 12th so I thought I’d have a party to celebrate all this good stuff.

It’s going to be at Shortwave Cafe 100 Clements Road Bermondsey SE16 4DG (5 minutes walk from Bermondsey Underground) from 7pm on Wednesday 12th December.

It’s going to be free & also a free-for-all. I have a bunch of great friends playing small sets: Bity Booker, Kraken Mare, Bromide & Russman. I will play a few sets & we will have a singaround too: so if you want to come for some free folk in the heart of South East London this is the pre-Christmas treat you are looking for.

If you are feeling brave you can try the homebrew too….

Bermondsey Folk festival 2018

I had an amazing time organising the Bermondsey Folk festival again. Firstly I would like to say that it would have been impossible without being in partnership with Bermondsey’s best fishmonger, Russell Dryden.  You can read a bit about him here.

More big thank yous have to go to Pedro and to the pubs and local businesses who got involved- in particular Rob from Shortwave Cafe.

The festival is associated with our monthly Bermondsey Folk singaround. If you would like to be part of it, details are here.

Although rain was promised, it stayed fine all day. The main stage in the Blue Market was packed out for Circulus, Lisa Knapp and Martin Carthy.

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Ady Johnson, David Jaycock, RussmanRussman and Cunning Folk as well as The Embers Band (pictured) played at Shortwave…

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We also had the pleasure of Arfur Doo and the Toe Rags, Bermondsey Voices Choir who sang about magpies, traditional Irish and English dancing and a guided walk of Bermondsey with comedian Arthur Smith!

Can’t wait for 2019- watch this space!

 

Cross Bones Beer

I have had links with the Cross Bones graveyard for over a decade. I perform several times a year either in the garden or at the monthly ritual for the outcast dead. It’s a special place, a potters field, a pauper’s burial ground, a place where the Winchester Geese were laid to rest.

The lovely garden has plenty of hops plants in it so I spent an hour or two choosing the strongest shoots to train on the twine & thinning out the rest. To say that hops is vigorous is an understatement: I intended to come to the garden last week but had to postpone & in the space of 6 days the Dwarf Fuggles went rampant. Heavy pruning was needed. I took cuttings for my garden.

I’ll be returning regularly to prune & care for the hops with the aim of using the hops to brew a Cross Bones Beer!

Bermondsey Folk Club: 3 Months In

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I have been running the Bermondsey Folk Club for 3 months now & it’s growing into a lovely community. The first 3 events have been monthly singarounds which have been well attended even on the very cold February date. On that occasion some sensible souls brought a duvet with them, which is sensible as the space we meet in, Shortwave Cafe (on Clements Road, around the corner from Bermondsey tube), is not the warmest. However the acoustic is excellent, lending itself to unamplified music.

I am adding another regular night. This will be a featured artist night & will be on the third Saturday of each month. This night will have plenty of floor spots & also a longer performance from an established folk act. This will be a lot of fun.

The first club night is Saturday 21 April from 6pm & the featured artists are Ruth & Rupert, who are some of South London’s finest! Follow this link for the facebook event.

Accompanying their close harmonies with delicate clawhammer banjo and guitar lines, Ruth and Rupert play folk songs and tunes from the British Isles and America. Their deep-reaching repertoire includes both traditional and original songs.

Ruth and Rupert run well-loved south London folk club TOOTING FOLK which has been going a good 5 years now, and also perform as The Bara Bara Band.

 

 

1952 Vincent Black Lightning

Richard Thompson released this amazing tune in 1991, as an album track on “Rumor & Sigh”. It’s about Red Molly & a rake by the name of James who charms her with his fine motorbike.

I came to it after listening to this live version which I may prefer to the album version. There are loads of versions to listen to.

I love this Sean Rowe version. He looks like he might be James.

Bluegrass hero Del McCoury takes it to Knoxville. I like it but I would have loved to hear Del sing it on guitar without band. This song may come out better a little more exposed.

Dick Gauchan’s version really connects for me.

This is a bootleg of Bob Dylan & band covering it. You can hear the audience not knowing the song but getting into it. I would love to hear a studio recording of this.

This Robert Earl Keen version is also worth listening to. You can start to hear this song becoming a bluegrass standard.

Willy O’Winsbury

The first recorded version of Willie O’Winsbury was by Andy Irvine in 1968 on the Sweeney’s Men eponymous album. According to Andy; “This is Child 100. I collected the words from different versions and as the story goes, on looking up the tune, I lighted on the tune to number 101. I’m not sure if this is true but it’s a good story”. It is rumoured that Andy wrote the tune himself. I wouldn’t be surprised as the man is a genius.

Fairport Convention recorded “Farewell, Farewell” in 1969 ,with lyrics written by Richard Thompson, to the tune used on the Sweeney’s Men version.

John Renbourn recorded a version in 1971 on his album Faro Annie.

Anne Briggs recorded a version for her eponymous album in 1971 too. I work part time as a drayman & once listened to this version 6 times in succession & then had to park up to wipe the tears from my eyes.

Pentangle recorded a version in 1972 on their Solomon’s Seal album

Paul Giovanni wrote an instrumental version for the procession scene of The Wicker Man.

This Richard Thompson live performance from 1989 is brilliant.

The song is Child Ballad 100 It is a traditional Scottish ballad that dates from at least 1775, and is known under a number of different names, including Lord Thomas of Winesberry.

There are numerous recorded versions.

 

Dirty Old Town

Dirty Old Town was written in 1949 by Ewan MacColl & is about Salford, Lancashire, where he grew up. It was originally written as an interlude to cover a set change in a play he had written, but gained a life of it’s own as a folk standard. The first recorded version of the song was made by Ewan in 1952. This is the 1956 version made by Ewan with Peggy Seeger, Alan Lomax & the Ramblers.

The song is probably most associated with The Dubliners, who recorded a version in 1968. This is a great video of them performing it in 1976 in Finland.

The Pogues have often performed it too. One of the first gigs I went to was to see The Pogues on their Rum Sodomy & Lash tour. I was 16 & it was one of the best gigs of my life.

Dirty Old Town is such a wonderful song & it travels well.

 

Constant Billy

Last spring my friend Michael, who is a regular at the South East London Folklore Society, sold me a compact disc of recordings of William Kimber. William Kimber was an Oxfordshire Morris Dance & Anglo Concertina player who was a key figure in the 20th century Morris revival. Kimber first met Cecil Sharp in 1899 & they had a long association & friendship.

The CD was of old interviews with Kimber & archive recordings of his playing. I grew up in Wimborne, East Dorset, which has an annual folk & morris festival which was a calendar event when I was growing up. The tune Constant Billy leapt out at me. The song collector Kidson identified this tune as a late 17th century song popular with morris sides & very much a standard.

There are very similar Highland & Irish tunes from the 18th century so it is hard to give a definitive source. I like it very much & am putting an arrangement in my repertoire.

How To Get To Play At Bermondsey Folk Festival 2018

Bermondsey Folk Festival 2018 will be on Saturday 8th September 2018 & is now into it’s 4th year. From small beginnings it is starting to flourish as a calendar event in the London Folk Scene. The headline acts for the day have been booked: Martin Carthy, Lisa Knapp, Circulus, Arfur Doo & The Toerags.

Now is the time to start programming acts who would like to have an opportunity to play on the day. This is why I am starting the Bermondsey Folk Club. Over the course of this year we will be having monthly singarounds at Shortwave Cafe, a lovely licensed venue in Bermondsey. The first singaround is on Sunday January 28th from 7-10pm & all comers will be welcome to play. The singarounds will be on the last Sunday of the month from then on & will be free, though I will pass a hat around with a suggested £3/1.50 concessions for organising & running the session. Regular attendees who want to perform in September will be scheduled a spot.

I will also be starting featured artist club nights from March with floor spots & support slots available. So even more opportunities to play.

I’m a folk musician myself & I get my gigs from people who have met me & I have a relationship with. In my opinion the best way to get booked is to get out & physically meet people & play in front of them. So if you want to come & play in Bermondsey you can: come down to the singaround & say hello!