Posts Tagged ‘unthanks’
Reviews and News
Posted on August 26th, 2012 in News, Recent Posts by Alexandra Petropoulos.
Here are some of the recently spotted reviews and news that we’ve enjoyed.
The Guardian‘s review of the latest Unthanks album
The Arts Desk‘s review of the Ondatrópica and Konkoma gig at the Hackney Empire
Clash‘s review of the Green Man Festival
The Arts Desk‘s review of Karine Polwart’s new album, Traces
The Guardian‘s feature on Django Reinhardt
News piece on Clash about Africa Express
Drowned in Sound‘s review of WOMAD Charlton Park 2012
News piece about Bellowhead’s upcoming album on Music-News
The Arts Desk‘s review of the new Noisettes album
The Guardian‘s review of the Africa and Americas stages at BT River of Music
Ry Cooder calls Mitt Romney ‘dangerous’ and ‘cruel’ on the Guardian
Listen to a tUnE-yArDs’ African music mix on Pitchfork
Cambridge Folk Festival – Saturday July 28
Posted on August 3rd, 2012 in Recent Posts, Reviews by Songlines.
Words by Kevin Bourke
Photo of The Unthanks by Philip Ryalls/Redferns
Nanci Griffith called it “the finest festival in the world.” Just as heartfelt, if a little less decorously, Keb Mo reckons it’s a “bad-ass mo-fo” but the love for the Cambridge Folk Festival is obvious.
Opening the Main Stage at noon on a Saturday isn’t the most enviable of tasks but Louisiana’s Pine Leaf Boys, riding a wave of acclaim for their show on Stage Two the previous night, rocked the house with an exuberant set of Cajun, creole and zydeco that combined respect for their roots with a desire to breathe new life into dancehall standards and more obscure tunes by old masters.
From Louisiana to West Yorkshire. Fay Hield, acclaimed for her solo debut Looking Glass, brought her English folk supergroup The Hurricane Party, including Andy Cutting, Sam Sweeney, Rob Harbron and her husband Jon Boden, to Stage One. Her amusing links were nearly as impressive as the powerful playing and Hield’s emotive voice.
After her own set the day before on Stage Two and guesting with John Prine, Gretchen Peters brought her own surprise guest, legendary bassist Danny Thompson, to join her and keyboard-playing husband Barry Walsh for her compelling set on the main stage. Her sophisticated new album Hello Cruel World, perhaps the best of her career, was well represented and, as she pointed out in her intro to old favourite ‘On A Bus To St. Cloud’, the success of a song can more accurately be judged not by “how high in the charts, but by how deep in people’s hearts” it goes.
Lau, with guitarist Kris Drever, Martin Green on piano accordion and fiddle player Aidan O’Rourke, proved as joyous and wildly inventive as ever, before Keb Mo and his impressive band took the stage. His sturdy blues boasts a funkier edge these days and a wholly unscientific period of observation at the CD stall indicated that he’d won over a lot of new friends.
With due respect to all the other fine musicians who graced the stage, the real event of the weekend had to be The Unthanks with Brighouse and Rastrick Brass Band, one of those “No, I really was there” gigs. The official launch of their joint Diversions Volume 2 album and featuring possibly one of the largest aggregations ever on Stage One, the first tune, the sublime and moving ‘King Of Rome’, was greeted with such a sustained wave of applause that Adrian McNally had to mock admonish the crowd, “We’ve got a lot of music to fit in, so no more clapping like that, okay?” Gracious and deeply moving yet rippling with humour and mutual affection between the Unthanks and the brass band players, it was topped only by the way the brass band, doing what they know best, marched through the crowd afterwards, playing as they went.
Nanci Griffith’s show by comparison was the sort of intimate affair that encourages you to lean into it. Accompanied just by guitarists Pete and Maura Kennedy with longtime sidekick Pat McInerney on percussion, a lot of it was drawn from her very personal Intersection album. The set-closer was a real surprise, though, a rollicking take on ‘No Expectations’ by the Rolling Stones. Coincidentally, Gretchen Peters had delivered a wonderful version of ‘Wild Horses’ the day before. Is there some sort of new relationship being forged between female singer-songwriters and the craggy old rockers?
Speaking of craggy, old Roy Harper graced the stage for the first time in 26 years with a set that might well have been the same as the last time he played there! I’m a sucker for his barbed delivery of the likes of ‘One Man Rock’n'Roll Band’ and the absolutely non-confrontational ‘I Hate The White Man’, and so were an impressively vociferous section of the crowd. Others were less impressed by the splendidly unrepentant Roy but they might have been more taken than me with the decorous Clannad. Another band who’ve reformed after many years, they are at least recording new material but their set leant heavily on their popular 80s soundtrack work.
The Proclaimers proved what adept, if cheeringly uncynical, popular entertainers they’ve become in front of a packed audience on Stage One, while over on Stage Two Justin Adams and Juldeh Camara’s new collaboration JuJu, now a four-piece with bass and drums, provided an intoxicating mix of improvised trance grooves. Lost in the music, yet still professional enough to finish dead on the curfew deadline – how impressive is that?
BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards 2012 nominees announced
Posted on November 20th, 2011 in Recent Posts by Alexandra Petropoulos.
BBC Radio 2 has announced their Folk Awards 2012 nominees and folk lovers are now looking forward to the February event. For the the first time, the awards show will be held outside of London at The Lowry, Salford.
And the nominees are (drumroll please)…
FOLK SINGER OF THE YEAR
Jon Boden
Jackie Oates
Emily Smith
June Tabor
BEST DUO
Tim Edey & Brendan Power
Jonny Kearney & Lucy Farrell
Spiers & Boden
Marry Waterson & Oliver Knight
BEST GROUP
Bellowhead
The Home Service
June Tabor & Oysterband
The Unthanks
BEST ALBUM
Last – The Unthanks
Purpose & Grace – Martin Simpson
Ragged Kingdom – June Tabor & Oysterband
Saturnine – Jackie Oates
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
‘The Herring Girl’ – Bella Hardy
‘Last ‘– Adrian McNally (performed by The Unthanks)
‘On Morecambe Bay’ – Kevin Littlewood (performed by Christy Moore)
‘The Reckoning’ – Steve Tilston
BEST TRADITIONAL TRACK
‘Bonny Bunch of Roses’ – June Tabor & Oysterband
‘Lakes of Ponchartrain’ – Martin Simpson
‘Maids When You’re Young’– Lucy Ward
‘Sweet Lover of Mine’ – Emily Smith
HORIZON AWARD
Megan Henwood
Lady Maisery
Pilgrims’ Way
Lucy Ward
MUSICIAN OF THE YEAR
Andy Cutting
Tim Edey
Will Pound
Martin Simpson
BEST LIVE ACT
Bellowhead
The Home Service
Peatbog Faeries
The Unthanks
BBC RADIO 2 YOUNG FOLK AWARD
Sunjay Brayne
Blair Dunlop
Ioscaid
Graham Mackenzie
For more information, please visit the Radio 2 website.

