Monday, 11 October 2021

Brickfields, monkeys and murder - three folk albums reviewed

It was back in 2018 at the Beardy Folk Festival when I first saw Granny’s Attic - three young men who manage to create the authentic sound of traditional English folk music. Quite how three such young men could make such old music – and yet make it sound new and fresh – was a mystery to me.  The trio – Cohen Braithwaite-Kilcoyne (melodeon, anglo concertina), guitarist George Sansome and Lewis Wood (violin) – have been impressing audiences across Europe since 2009 and have released two previous CDs before this month’s new release The Brickfields.

Produced with a micro-grant from the English Folk Dance and Song Society, The Brickfields was recorded live in just three days in April 2021. It’s a fine example of a recent new phenomenon – the post-lockdown album. Having spent most of 2020 scattered in various separate corners of the UK the band couldn’t wait to get together and play again, and that pent-up energy – and the joy of reunion – comes across in the nine superbly-played instrumentals that make up The Brickfields.

If you should meet an alien from the Planet Zog and they ask you what quintessentially English folk music sounds like just point them in the direction of Granny’s Attic.

Another band who are rapidly becoming festival favourites are Southampton-based quartet Monkey See, Monkey Do. Their debut album The Night Out may have been a little overlooked in the chaos of last year. This is music firmly rooted in the English and Irish folk traditions featuring guitar, fiddle and bodhrán with the unusual addition of clarinet. I haven’t yet had the pleasure of seeing the band live but, judging by the cover art and the choice of material, Monkey See Monkey Do seem a lively, fun-loving bunch, with a suitably salty repertoire, from the tale of a wicked pirate called 'Alexander the Great' to 'The Drunken Sailor' (yes, really, that famous drunken sailor who poses such a quandary to his crew mates, ear-ly in the morning.) 

The clarinet blends well with the more conventional instrumentation, particularly on tracks like 'The Night Out and the Hangover' and 'Superfly' (which is apparently unconnected with Curtis Mayfield's funk-soul hit of the same title.)

Monkey See Monkey Do demonstrate how well they play together as a unit on the reels that make up 'The A & E Tunes' and in their full-bodied rendition of 'Farewell to Erin'. With only eight tracks The Night Out is a fast-moving but thoroughly enjoyable selection of songs and dance tunes.

For a more introspective – and altogether stranger take on folk music – you might want to try David A. Jaycock. David has previously collaborated with Marry Waterson and James Yorkston. His album Murder, and the Birds is a dark, eccentric exploration of British traditional folk, inspired by a Victorian anthology called Ballads and Songs of Lancashire. 'Lord Townley's Ghost', 'Pendle Hill' and 'The Murderous Huntsman' are given the Jaycock treatment: detuned acoustic guitar accompaniment and occasional eerie touches of pre-digital synthesisers. 'The Murderous Huntsman' epitomises the sound - a dreamy gem of a track, reworked so as to no longer celebrate the hunter's life so much as his death, leaving the animals and birds free from fear.

Half the tracks originate from Lancashire, half from other regions. Jaycock's version of 'John Barleycorn' is musically rather uneventful and thus is an odd choice as an opening track. But things get more adventurous and more atmospheric as the album progresses.

Jaycock's melodic sense is very Beatlesque. Everywhere there are shades of John Lennon songs and the double-tracked vocals only add to the Lennon effect.

Murder, and the Birds is a quirky, unsettling reimagining of traditional English folk.

The Brickfields by Granny’s Attic is out now on Grimdon Records. Monkey See, Monkey Do’s The Night Out was self-released. Murder, and the Birds by David A. Jaycock was released by the remarkable Triassic Tusk Records - a small label based in the East Neuk of Fife.

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About me

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Tony Gillam is a writer, musician and blogger based in Worcestershire, UK. For many years he worked in mental health and has published over 100 articles and two non-fiction books. Tony now writes on topics ranging from children's literature to world music and is a regular contributor to Songlines magazine.