Wednesday, September 28, 2005

music and dancing

Tone and I have joined Black Dog Molly - a Molly side, a type of Morris dancing. It is such fun...... Tone plays guitar and I play piano accordion when I am not dancing. The dances I have learned so far all involve sticks!! but there are no bells or hankies in sight....

We will wear black and red and paint our faces black when we dance out (perform in public). The next dance out is the 29th October at Shugborough Hall for Hallowe'en. Hopefully we will be good enough to join in!

It is such a huge motivator to me for practising my accordion..... and I am also dead keen to find some local tunes and songs. I am hoping the Boat Band can help. I have found some names of tunes from a search on Mudcat discussion forum and think that the library archives might have something......

The other thing that motivates me, also tends to make me feel very inadequate and like giving up - is listening to amazing musicians like John Spiers (Squeezy) and Andy Cutting. We saw Andy last week playing very sweetly and warmly with June Tabor who has the deepest roundest voice I know and such emotion.

This is one of my favourite photos that I took - it's Squeezy's boxes at Fylde.

John Spiers is my idol along with his musical partner Jon Boden. We saw them first at Fylde Folk Festival in 2004 - twice in one day, and then with Bellowhead their band at Middlewich Folk Festival this year, and with Eliza Carthy as two of the Ratcatchers (wonderful festival, dreadful website...they have asked Tone if he is happy to let them use some of his photos!! which will definitely be an improvement).

Bellowhead are so exciting and I CANNOT sit/ stand still when they play - I HAVE to dance with ALL my soul......but it's hard to hear John's playing in many of the numbers. We saw Bellowhead again at Bridgnorth Folk Festival in August so now it's time to see them alone and I booked today to go to Northwich Folk Club on the 4th November. It's going to be a long wait. I love listening to their CD's. There is a new one due out in 3 weeks - have a listen to three MP3s on their site and see what you think........

Eliza is also fab - and her Mum Norma Waterson is brilliant too. We saw them at the New Vic and it was a beautiful evening. Not so keen on her Dad Martin Carthy but he writes well and he went up in my estimation when on watching a great programme last night about Bob Dylan it turns out they were bestest buddies!! Bob is the most amazing songwriter ever! and his early performances were so moving - I wish I'd seen him.....The new Scorcese film "No Direction Home" is so atmospheric and I can really understand why Dylan opted out of the scene - fame was no fun.

The first year we went to Middlewich was mainly to see Kate Rusby - who had Andy Cutting with her. We have seen Kate play a few times now including in Derby and Stafford. She introduced me to contemporary British folk music - I heard a snippet of Sir Eglamore on the radio one evening as I drove home and rushed into the house to turn it on and find out who she was. I was amazed at the energy and beauty of her voice and playing. She has a fantastic set of musicians behind her.

Having said that I first saw Eddi Reader in Fairground Attraction at the Queen's Theatre in Burslem in about 1986. That was probably my first ever folk gig, but I didn't know the genre. Brian Kennedy supported them and I was knocked out by him. I waited 4 years for his album The Great War of Words to come out! He has now sadly become a famous crooner in Ireland who gets women throwing their knickers at him - eeuugghh!!!

We saw both Eddi and Brian at Middlewich this year. Eddi was ace - she had Boo Hewerdine with her who wrote many of her best songs. We are due to see Boo at Biddulph Folk Club this Friday and he is doing a song-writing workshop on Saturday at Newcastle library that we are going to. The best thing about Brian was his bass player James Blennerhassett.

There are loads of great photos on atypical folk galleries that mostly Tone took - he's getting good at the hand-held low light action shots y'know!!!

So - I hope that's given you some idea what floats my boat musically in the folk scene...... I love loads of other stuff too - but I just had to tell you all about these people and encourage you to have a listen. A good place to get some ideas about what you like is the BBC2 radio website folk pages. The Mike Harding show is available to listen to if you miss it live on a Weds eve. The discussion forums are fairly interesting if a it obsessive! If you really want obsession take a look at the minute detail in which people compare notes about tunes and songs on Mudcat cafe. It is a good place to find out about particular music you are looking for, but can be overwhelming......

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi atypical pen!

Morris dancing is brilliant. This is the first year i've done morris dancing (border style) and its just great fun, and is my token aerobic exercise!

I think I saw Black Dog Molly at Penkridge in July and they were wonderful - I'm sure you'll enjoy dancing out!

I was inspired to buy a melodeon last Christmas and I'm making slow progress at learning some tunes - i'm slowly persevering though!

I got into morris through folk music - especially Waterson: Carthy, Dr Faustus (who've sadly recently split up) and Spiers & Boden. I went to my first Bridgnorth Folk Festival this year and saw Bellowhead too - they were absolutely spectacular - i was in total amazement for the whole set, it was great! Remember to jump up and down at Northwich (Jack Robinson is my favourite track!), and have 'an ale and a wine and a rum punch too!'. Spiers & Boden have got a new album 'Songs' out - i haven't got it yet because i've spent far too much on folk CDs over the summer! I also saw Gjallarhorn on the Sunday night at Bridgnorth, who were brilliant - they're worth checking out!

Keep going on the accordion!

Warm wishes,

Simon

atypicalpen said...

I'll look out for Gjallahorn.
Which side do you dance with then?
What's your favourite tune to play at present?
I love, love, love Dawn Chorus on Bellow written by John. It's so melancholy and sweet (and I can play it slowly! - not quite up to speed with the record yet...)

birdychirp said...

Oh Bellowhead are excellent aren't they? They were great at the Cambridge Folk Festival this year too!

Katrina Ray-Saulis said...

This blog made me think of you...

http://photo-a-day.blogspot.com/

Ghone said...

Have you got your own pig's bladder to batter the crowd with?!?!?
:o)

Anonymous said...

oh GOD, you're going to be doing that in public?

Rob said...

Best of luck. I used to go to Poynton Folk Club (and its associated folk festival) a lot in my school/student days, and knew quite a few of the original Poynton Jemmers. I remember going to a Morris workshop at some festival (probably Poynton) and having a go at a stick dance: great fun but ********hard work.

Martin Carthy is a very versatile and talented bloke. I have a very early recording of him singing "Your Baby Has Gone Down The Plughole". And his guitar work with Richard Thompson on the Watersons' "Bright Phoebus" is amazing.