Friday, October 19, 2018

Folk Fights Back - Coventry's CVfolk Inaugural Live Event in bid for City of Culture Status.

Folk Fights Back - Coventry's CVfolk Inaugural Live Event in bid for City of Culture Status.


At a time when young Teesside folk acts like Megson, Cattle and Cane, The Younguns are reinventing what folk music can be, filling venues around the country, and getting write ups in the Guardian and Independent, the Coventry folkscene is fighting back and celebrating its own historic and dynamic folk culture that has attracted the likes of Joe O'Donnell, Dave Swarbrick and many others to the City and boasts a range of singer songwriters giggling around the country. With Selecter star Pauline Black as patron, Pete Willow is working hard to put Coventry folk on the map!

Pete Clemons reports from CVfolks inaugural Live event..


Coventry singer Songwriter Kristy Gallacher

Folk music does seem to get a raw deal in the CV area. It has been all but forgotten about by most of the local media outlets. Despite several attempts to get coverage revived, they simply just don’t seem to want to know. It does all smack of being a bit un-cultural like, in my opinion.

So rather than sit around and dwell about it, and in true tradition of the genre, it has taken things into its own hands and began to fight back. A group of big hitters within the scene have set up an organisation called CVFolk with the aim of ‘Promoting Folk Music and Dance in Coventry, the 2021 UK City of Culture’.

Taken from their website ‘CVFolk is a campaign to provide resources and co-ordinated events for folk music and dance in and around the CV postcode area. It encompasses two strands: Legacy and vision’.

And those aims were fully realised at CVFolk’s inaugural live event set in the foyer of the Albany Theatre on Sunday 14th October.

The message I took away from this particular session was that the format will combine the traditional folk scene with the more modern singer songwriters. Enforcing that point, the line-up for the event was The Willow and Tool Band, Poachers Pocket, Kristy Gallacher and Rob Halligan. Shoehorned in between the first and second halves we were even treated to a few minutes of clog dancing.

Rob Halligan and Kristy Gallacher are no strangers. They once recorded a song together for the 2004 Tsunami disaster in Asia that cracked the top 20 indie charts which raised in excess of 13k for the fund. For this evenings session they shared the top billing by alternating with each other. Each tune they played was accompanied by some background information about how the song was arrived at. Kristy’s set included the heartfelt Spinning Plates, Plan B and Fending off the Frost while Rob powerfully performed Hold You Tonight and Wild Horses.

‘Music has the power to tell stories in a way that connects with people’ says Rob on his website. And that is so very true. Rob, for example, mentioned the fact he is originally from Worthing. And a couple of the songs he played were based on his experiences of his time there.

One of those songs was called Dancing with Seagulls. And the lyrics were so vivid. They recalled how, as a youngster, he would visit the beach and terrorise the flocks of snoozing seagulls by running straight through them scattering them into the air. This immediately took me back a few weeks to the balmy summer and when we took our grandson to the seaside. I was like a Cheshire cat as I recalled how he had found it great fun doing the very same thing. Not so sure the seagulls appreciated it though. Similarly, when Kristy sang the incredibly touching and sensitive Beautiful Bouquet, this also found resonance with me. I actually found myself misting up as it transported me back to a whole different time and place. Trust me, not only are these songs so very very good, they are also very powerful.

Despite one or two technical issues with guitar leads, the whole event flowed fairly seamlessly. And given that the event was staged in the 
in the Albany’s new Studio Theatre, and not the main theatre, the sound inside the venue was surprisingly impressive too. 

In a closing statement, patron of this campaign Pauline Black, summed things up perfectly when she reminded us of her own humble roots as a folk singer at the Dyers Arms, some 100 yards from this venue, and how that played an important and vital role in the development of her craft. 


Click to read about Pauline Black's background with Coventry folk clubshttps://coventryfolkclubs.blogspot.com/2013/04/pauline-black-on-coventry-folk-scene.html

Further installments of this venture will take place once a month, with the next live event scheduled for November 11th when Rosie Hood will headline. More details can be found on the link below……….. 


NB Apologies to Loz of the Albany, Pete originally said the event was in the Foyer but was actually in the Albany’s new Studio Theatre, mistake corrected now in the text. Trev (Admin).

Visit CVfolk's website
http://www.cvfolk.com/





Coventry Singer Songwriter Rob Halligan





CV Folk Patron Pauline Black


Pete Willow and Pete Tool







Joe O'donnell's Shkayla 





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1 comment:

  1. Great article Pete! The event was actually in the Albany’s new Studio Theatre (rather than the foyer) which it is a very flexible space and ideal for something like this, showing off these great artists talents in a relaxed setting

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