- Aug 7, 2003
- 8,093
This is a genre that I've never really been into, but in the last issue of Songlines magazine I saw that two English Folk albums had made it into the World Music chart.
I decided that I'd give them a listen and ordered them online, the first being Seth Lakemans "Poor mans heaven" which has the following review on Amazon
"Seth Lakeman's fourth solo album, Poor Man’s Heaven, moves him ever closer to the mainstream, his frantic fiddle playing backed with a small, tight band fully aware of the power they generate. But the Dartmoor-based folk singer still digs into local folklore for material. The pounding opener "The Hurlers" refers to an ancient stone formation in Cornwall, while "Solomon Browne" commemorates the more recent loss with all hands of the Penlee lifeboat - Lakeman knew some of the bereaved as a schoolboy. The jaunty "Race To Be King" features maybe the loudest Jew’s harp ever recorded, while Kathryn Roberts' haunting backing vocals on "Cherry Red Girl" add depth . The title track though is the giveaway, a blatant and undeniably effective reminder that Led Zeppelin defined the heavy folk-rock crossover decades ago. Lakeman yelps like a West Country Robert Plant, sounding like a man with stadia in his sights"
Seth Lakeman
The second album was the incredible "The Imagined Village" with the following review in Songlines;
"It's a brilliant idea - to reinterpret traditional English folk song for a multicultural 21st century society... Almost everything on this bold and ambitious album works... A breathtakingly imaginative record that is sure to become an English folk-rock landmark... The Imagined Village finally offers English roots music a meaningful new destination"
The Imagined Village
I can honestly say that I haven't been so moved by music for a long, long time. The opening track on Imagined Village features a short monologue about the Copper Family from Rottingdean and how songs have been passed from generation to generation. It's probably the first time I have heard a true Sussex accent.
If would be great if anyone can recommend other albums in this genre.
I decided that I'd give them a listen and ordered them online, the first being Seth Lakemans "Poor mans heaven" which has the following review on Amazon
"Seth Lakeman's fourth solo album, Poor Man’s Heaven, moves him ever closer to the mainstream, his frantic fiddle playing backed with a small, tight band fully aware of the power they generate. But the Dartmoor-based folk singer still digs into local folklore for material. The pounding opener "The Hurlers" refers to an ancient stone formation in Cornwall, while "Solomon Browne" commemorates the more recent loss with all hands of the Penlee lifeboat - Lakeman knew some of the bereaved as a schoolboy. The jaunty "Race To Be King" features maybe the loudest Jew’s harp ever recorded, while Kathryn Roberts' haunting backing vocals on "Cherry Red Girl" add depth . The title track though is the giveaway, a blatant and undeniably effective reminder that Led Zeppelin defined the heavy folk-rock crossover decades ago. Lakeman yelps like a West Country Robert Plant, sounding like a man with stadia in his sights"
Seth Lakeman
The second album was the incredible "The Imagined Village" with the following review in Songlines;
"It's a brilliant idea - to reinterpret traditional English folk song for a multicultural 21st century society... Almost everything on this bold and ambitious album works... A breathtakingly imaginative record that is sure to become an English folk-rock landmark... The Imagined Village finally offers English roots music a meaningful new destination"
The Imagined Village
I can honestly say that I haven't been so moved by music for a long, long time. The opening track on Imagined Village features a short monologue about the Copper Family from Rottingdean and how songs have been passed from generation to generation. It's probably the first time I have heard a true Sussex accent.
If would be great if anyone can recommend other albums in this genre.