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Archives for November 2009

Kate Rusby on Christmas and Carols in Yorkshire

Mike Harding | 12:32 UK time, Friday, 27 November 2009

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Kate Rusby writes:

Hello all.

Well, currently I am getting ready to start our annual and I can't wait!

We always have such a lovely time doing this tour as everyone is always in high spirits in the build up to Christmas. I absolutely love Christmas, I have such fond childhood memories of Christmas days past, and I never tire of it, even though I am in my 30s now I still find it as magical as ever.

I never start too early though that just makes it not as special, in fact I was in the shopping centre near here at the end of October and they had Christmas lights up! I had to shut my eyes as I walked about so I didn't absorb any of the twinkley-ness cos that's just stupidly early, I did come home with some very odd purchases due to the closed eyes, but at least I didn't let the twinkles in.

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Molly

Mike Harding | 14:24 UK time, Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Well I have gone and been and done it and am now the owner of a VW Campervan called Molly.

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The Demon Barbers - Simply Fantastic

Mike Harding | 16:25 UK time, Monday, 23 November 2009

I wrote somewhere in my blog a while back that the were one of the best live acts I have ever seen. (I think it was after the Cropredy Festival before last.)

Last night, at the Victoria Hall, Settle I found myself in complete agreement with myself, ­ if you see what I mean.

A night of fire and passion with superb dancing and great music from a band that takes itself seriously but is never po-faced. They play and sing with total conviction and yet keep a warm rapport going between themselves and the audience which last night was composed of everyone from died in the sheepskin folkies to people who had simply come to support the local venue.

Highlights for me were the dance sets which ranged from to various types of including rapper sword dancing. The rapper set really has to be seen; energetic and powerful; it left any doubters in the audience finally convinced that morris in all its forms is not a dance for wimps but is a ritual that has more to do with fertility rites in Pagan Britain than entertaining shoppers in a Christmas Mall.

I also think that the audience were quite amazed when the band nipped backstage (while Bryony sang a calling on song) and metamorphosed from raunchy musicians into brilliant dancers. The whole night flowed beautifully and seamlessly and had the audience howling for more at the end.

My mind is still holding on to the image of several ladies of a certain age sitting at the back of a full house, waving light wands while swaying in time to the music while several small children on the front row stared agog as the cloggers feet moved like the beaks of a half dozen woodpeckers on speed. (Lousy analogy - I know.)

A new album is under way and due some time in the Spring and it's title may well be something like Captain Ward's Technicolour Adventures (it's not settled yet but one of the main songs on it will be Captain Ward And The Rainbow).

I can't wait. Brilliant stuff.

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RIP Mary Asquith

Mike Harding | 16:27 UK time, Wednesday, 18 November 2009

Mary Asquith died last week, after a struggle with cancer.

Many of you won't know her name, which is a shame, because Mary was one of the best.

She never knew how good she was and gave up singing completely in the 1980s.

I worked with her around the North in folk clubs like the MSG Manchester and the Topic Folk Club in Bradford in the late 60s and early 70s and can still see her - a slight but sparky girl who was a feminist before anybody knew what the word meant.

She took no prisoners but was a true and loyal friend to those she loved.

She was also a great guitarist and a fine blues singer whose voice, tuned by the roll-ups and
whisky she had a taste for then, was edgy but tuneful and ­ more importantly - truthful.

She also wrote great songs such as 'When Marilyn Monroe Died Blues', 'In Dreamland Tonight' and a song that I covered myself on one of my serious albums 'Closing Time'.

She only made one album, it was on Saffron Summerfield's Mother Earth label in 1978 and is called 'Closing Time' and though the vinyl edition is a collector's item the CD version is still available. If you get a chance, listen to Mary singing her greatest song 'Closing Time' ­ - it's Mary at her most unpolished and raw, and it is simply wonderful.

Bring in the Clowns

Mike Harding | 13:03 UK time, Friday, 13 November 2009

The other day on the programme, I played a track by .

Many of you will remember Noel as one of the funniest men in the folk world; the man who invented Draught Porridge, and had a banjo player called Shaggis in his band.

He gave a great night wherever he went and I'm more than happy to report that he is fit and well, living down in Cornwall and has a new double CD out called 'The Quality of Murphy'.

Listening to those live CDs set me to thinking about the old folk scene and the present day version.

One of the things that struck me is that, whereas there used to be a mix of trad/contemporary/comedy in the clubs, there now seems to be little or no comedy in the mix.

There is no doubt in my mind that the present generation of singers and musicians are wonderful and I feel that, in their hands, the folk scene has a great future - but I do miss the laughs.

There were always curmudgeons who hated the folk comics - who saw them as the ruination of the clubs. I believe that the comics were needed as much as the trad singers; for every there needed to be a , for every a .

June and Nic are up there in my pantheon of great folkies of all time, but I think both of them would admit that they were never "patter merchants".

(who can chant a trad song as good as anybody) once said he would tear telephone directories in half if it kept the audience happy.

Most old traditional singers had a comic song or two under their belts because they too realised that songs like 'The Manchester Molecatcher' could sit quite happily alongside songs like 'A Fair Maid Walking in Her Father's Garden'.

Yin and Yang, darkness and light all part of the whole.

But where, I wonder, are the Murfs, the Capsticks, the s, the s, the s of today?

They can't all be doing the surely?

War, and the Pity of War

Mike Harding | 10:14 UK time, Wednesday, 11 November 2009

This week's programme is devoted entirely to songs about war. It seemed to
make sense, since the programme goes out on , to play songs
which dealt with what called "War, and the pity of War".

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Emily Smith on the Lifestyle of a Musician

Mike Harding | 15:38 UK time, Monday, 9 November 2009


I love the lifestyle of a musician.Ìý No week is ever the same whether at home or on the road.

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Emily Smith on music and food.

Mike Harding | 11:44 UK time, Friday, 6 November 2009

Last night's trip to the ´óÏó´«Ã½ in Glasgow was fun - the city was aglow with fireworks exploding all over the sky.

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Emily Smith on 'Adoon Winding Nith'

Mike Harding | 16:03 UK time, Wednesday, 4 November 2009

writes:

I'm currently enjoying a few days at home following a run of Scottish dates promoting 'Adoon Winding Nith' the new album myself and husband have made this year as a project to mark the 250th anniversary of the birth of .Ìý

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Music made with love, care and joy...

Mike Harding | 13:28 UK time, Monday, 2 November 2009

I bought three absolutely cracking CDs last week that have put me in a very good mood ever since.

All three CDs are what Irish musicians would call 'the pure drop'.

Unadorned, rootsy and full of life they are what folk music is all about.

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