To Thread - Forum Home

The Mudcat Café TM
https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=125359
79 messages

Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A

28 Nov 09 - 12:31 PM (#2775586)
Subject: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Folknacious

It will be a bonanza next week for those who love to whinge. On Wednesday Radio 2 announce the nominees in the Folk Awards, then on Friday there's the final of the Young Folk Awards and the announcement on Radio 3 of who won the Froots Album Of The Year. Can I be the first to complain that I disagree with something, so that I can then take offence when somebody disagrees with me? ;-)

Does anybody want to open a book on how long it'll take before

a) Somebody says that awards are pointless
b) Somebody else disagrees with them
c) A thread on the subject (maybe this one) reaches 100 posts . . .


28 Nov 09 - 12:36 PM (#2775590)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: SunrayFC

what a shame

change your name to obnokshus


28 Nov 09 - 12:47 PM (#2775593)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)

Well this year, will be the first I've even known of them, let alone heeded them, or indeed had the chance to grumble about them! So I guess I'll take note this year, and treat the results the same as I would any other media promotional event ie: not all that seriously.


28 Nov 09 - 01:00 PM (#2775600)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: The Borchester Echo

(a) The R2 Folk Awards nominations are subject to a vote among the industry to determine the "best" in various categories over the past year.

(b) The Young Folk Award is a competitive event for the under-20s.

(c) The fRoots Album of the Year is voted on by (roughly the same?) luminaries as (a).

(a) and (b) labour under the added disadvantage of being under the auspices of the Smoothies.

May I be the first to complain about (b) on thegrounds that the final is being held this year in the theatre at Broadcasting House which holds an audience of around 6 and (at the moment of typing) I have not yet received an invitation and thus may be absent for the first time in 10 years.


28 Nov 09 - 01:09 PM (#2775604)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Lizzie Cornish 1

The Radio 2 Folk Awards are er........................

fRoOtS is er........................................


28 Nov 09 - 01:43 PM (#2775630)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Rasener

Nowt wrong as far as I am concerned.
However, I guess there are many jealous performers who don't get on the list and don't like it.
There are also the blinkered (I won't vote for anybody or listen to anybody who doesn't meet my approval) folkies.

Rather than be negative, lets just put up on here 5 acts who you would like to see in any of the lists. No long splurge on each act, just their names.

Some people I would like to see get in the lists are

Anthony John Clarke
Churchfitters
Kerfufffle
Jez Lowe and The Bad Pennies
Steve Tilston

There are many more, but I did recommend 5.


28 Nov 09 - 01:47 PM (#2775634)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)

Yes please: "a long splurge on each act."
Some of us don't necessarily know...


28 Nov 09 - 01:54 PM (#2775637)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Chris Green

Just a list of bands I've seen this year who've particularly impressed me. Some well-known, some less well-known - but all deserving of recognition!

Spiro
Edward II
Boldwood
Katrina Gilmore and Jamie Roberts
Belshazzar's Feast


28 Nov 09 - 01:58 PM (#2775643)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: The Borchester Echo

(a) FOLK AWARDS
Lifetime Achievement Awards for Leon Rosselson & Wizz Jones

(b) YFA
My best hope (Tom Moore) went out in the semis. Still, he's only 15 . . .


(c) fRoots CRITICS POLL 2009

Perhaps people should look at the nominations:

NEW ALBUM

Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba: I Speak Fula (OutHere)
Jackie Oates: Hyperboreans (Unearthed/One Little Indian)
Justin Adams & Juldeh Camara: Tell No Lies (Real World)
Khaled: Liberté (Wrasse)
Martin Simpson: True Stories (Topic)
Oumou Sangare: Seya (World Circuit)
Spiro: Lightbox (Real World)
Staff Benda Bilili: Très Très Fort (Crammed)
Tinariwen: Imidiwan (Independiente)
The Unthanks: Here's The Tender Coming (EMI)


RE-ISSUE OR COMPILATION

Chris Wood: Albion (RUF)
Franco & Le TPOK Jazz: Francophonic Vol. 2 (Stern's)
Various: Legends Of Benin (Analog Africa)
Various: Panama! 2 (Soundway)
Various: Three Score & Ten: A Voice To The People (Topic)
Woody Guthrie: My Dusty Road (Rounder)


Hard to think of a more representative list.


28 Nov 09 - 01:58 PM (#2775644)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Chris Green

That should of course read 'Katriona' not 'Katrina'. Oops.


28 Nov 09 - 02:01 PM (#2775645)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Chris Green

You're right - it is pretty representative. Not all of it's my bag, but I guess that's kind of the point of it really. Nice to see a little eclecticism! And Tinariwen are one the most exciting outfits around at the moment.


28 Nov 09 - 02:47 PM (#2775684)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Rasener

Crow Sister, I think it would be better just to put each artists Myspace A/C link.

My 5

http://www.myspace.com/wwwmyspacecomanthonyjohnclarke

http://www.myspace.com/churchfitters

http://www.myspace.com/stevetilston

http://www.myspace.com/kerfufflemusic

http://www.myspace.com/jezloweandthebadpennies


28 Nov 09 - 06:42 PM (#2775808)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Suegorgeous

Wow, Spiro... my local band.... cool :)


03 Dec 09 - 01:53 AM (#2779221)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: The Borchester Echo

RADIO 2 FOLK AWARDS NOMINATIONS 2010

FOLK SINGER OF THE YEAR
Cara Dillon
Jackie Oates
Jon Boden
Martin Simpson

BEST DUO
Belshazzar's Feast
Damien Barber & Mike Wilson
Megson
Show of Hands

BEST GROUP
Bellowhead
Lau
Mawkin:Causley
The Unthanks

BEST ALBUM
Here's The Tender Coming – The Unthanks
Hill of Thieves – Cara Dillon
Hyperboreans – Jackie Oates
True Stories – Martin Simpson

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
Arrogance Ignorance and Greed – Steve Knightley (performed by Show of Hands)
Home Again – Martin Simpson
One Day – Martin Simpson/Martin Taylor (performed by Martin Simpson)
The Testimony of Patience Kershaw – Frank Higgins (performed by The Unthanks)

BEST TRADITIONAL TRACK
Cutty Wren – Mawkin:Causley
Sir Patrick Spens – Martin Simpson
Spencer the Rover – Cara Dillon
The Isle of France – Jackie Oates

HORIZON AWARD
Hannah James & Sam Sweeney
Katriona Gilmore & Jamie Roberts
Nancy Wallace
Sam Carter

MUSICIAN OF THE YEAR
John Kirkpatrick
John McCusker
Martin Simpson
Saul Rose

BEST LIVE ACT
Bellowhead
Edward II
Lau
The Bad Shepherds


03 Dec 09 - 02:11 AM (#2779232)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Silas

SoH best duo?????

I love 'em, but they are not a duo!


03 Dec 09 - 02:40 AM (#2779240)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: The Borchester Echo

Indeed, they are officially a trio now.


03 Dec 09 - 03:20 AM (#2779246)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Rasener

Cock up there then.

I am pleased to see Saul Rose in there for Musician Of The Year.


03 Dec 09 - 03:21 AM (#2779247)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Folkiedave

Interesting that the nominations for the Horizon Award has 3/4 of Kerfuffle. What has Tom done wrong? :-)

Otherwise I suspect it represents the festival scene rather than (say) the club scene.

And as TBE rightly points out SOH are not a duo.

From the website:

Miranda Sykes has been performing with Show of Hands since 2004, augmenting their unique sound with her powerful double bass and rich harmonies. In this time the band have moved on from their folk duo image, and evolved into a hard hitting acoustic band, selling out UK and European tours and headlining some of the biggest festivals across the world.

Hey ho.


03 Dec 09 - 03:26 AM (#2779249)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Banjiman

I can't remember what the nomination process is R2 Folk Awards. Can anyone remind me?


03 Dec 09 - 04:05 AM (#2779258)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Jack Blandiver

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz


03 Dec 09 - 05:57 AM (#2779333)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Folkiedave

Nomination process.

A number of luminaries are sent a list of POSSIBLE nominations. The number of luminaries varies - but around 150 as a median. Festival organisers, record companies etc. They can add to the list if they like.

They send in a vote for each category (or not as they like) Top four become nominations. Then they vote on those.

Things wrong with it? How long have you got?

It depends how you look at it. It can be great publicity for folk and often is.

Budget has been slashed in recent years.

But for an artist it means the difference between slogging up and down the motorway from gig to gig to finding it easier to get gigs close together. More festival gigs. A sense of worth.

To me the greatest wonder is how they manage to get things so wrong occasionally. The Pink Bunny Rabbit being an obvious one.

And it wouldn't hurt to publish the voting figures.


03 Dec 09 - 06:58 AM (#2779369)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Folkiedave

Some of that might be confusing. Sorry. Let me add some further information....

The list is sent as an aide memoire. It also helps people to remember what was released during that year,(though as we have seen in the past the year has been known to stretch). I am currently putingtogether a radio show of records released this year. That's be a god send to me. To be honest I am going to fudge it.

The panel nominates up to THREE names in each category, not just one, so the breadth of voting is probably a lot wider than people realise.

Another improvement I think would be useful is if the BBC published on their website a list of everyone who got even one nomination, as fRoots does with its critics poll. Then you would get a sense of just how wide the original range of nominations were...


03 Dec 09 - 07:43 AM (#2779407)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Lizzie Cornish 1

Strange, isn't it....that The Music of the People isn't allowed to be voted for, by The People themselves.

And the reasons for that are........?


03 Dec 09 - 07:46 AM (#2779410)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Banjiman

Thanks Dave.

As you say, an imperfect system.

Though I do think some of the nominations are very good!


03 Dec 09 - 07:47 AM (#2779411)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Howard Jones

One anomaly which strikes me is the nomination of The Testimony of Patience Kershaw for "Best Original Song". Nothing wrong with the song of course, but it was written 40 years ago. So are they voting for the song or for the Unthanks' performance of it?


03 Dec 09 - 08:25 AM (#2779451)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Ruth Archer

It is a non-traditional song which, if more than a year old, must have had a significant interpretation or performance in the past 12 months to qualify.

So the panel votes for both the interpretation and the song.

Jim Moray's All You Pretty Girls (an XTC cover) won last year largely because of his highly original arrangement.


03 Dec 09 - 08:27 AM (#2779454)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Chris Green

Re my previous post - three out of five aint's bad! Nice to see Kat and Jamie up for the Horizon, although there's some stiff competition. And if EII don't get best live act there really is no justice in the world.


03 Dec 09 - 08:43 AM (#2779464)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Dave Hanson

Smooth Ops have different definitions than normal people, after all, it is about money, nothing else, and this is why if they say a trio is a duo for their purposes, it is, and likewise a newly written song is traditional and a 40 year old song is original.

Dave H


03 Dec 09 - 08:46 AM (#2779467)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Dave Hanson

Incidently, I was served By John Spiers in The Music Room in Cleckheaton this morning, really nice bloke.

Dave H


03 Dec 09 - 09:08 AM (#2779490)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Derek Schofield

To clarify my friend FolkieDave's comments ... the judging panel are sent a list of albums that have been released in the period appropriate to the award - so when FolkieDave writes:

<<>>

...this only applies to one of the categories - best album. There is no suggested nominations for any other category.

The judges this year have had to sign a document stating that they have no professional interest or relationship with the people they have nominated. That is different from previous years.

Derek


03 Dec 09 - 09:16 AM (#2779495)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Lizzie Cornish 1

Yes, but they're still not 'us' are they, Derek....


03 Dec 09 - 09:23 AM (#2779504)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: evansakes

"The judges this year have had to sign a document stating that they have no professional interest or relationship with the people they have nominated"

Ah, but who knows how many back-scratching alliances are forged in the bar during the AFO Conference in Nottigham? (which invariably coincides with the Folk Awards voting period)


03 Dec 09 - 10:15 AM (#2779543)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Derek Schofield

The bit in the brackets in my posting above was omitted ... the quote was intended to be:
A number of luminaries are sent a list of POSSIBLE nominations. The number of luminaries varies - but around 150 as a median. Festival organisers, record companies etc. They can add to the list if they like.

As I said above, that is not the case apart from the ciculation of a list of albums released in the appropriate period.

Show of hands still a duo? well, perhaps that's how the judges perceive them ... just think if they had been disqualified because of this ... the response would have been worse ("Smooth ops are anti-Show of hands" for example) ... and what is Smooth operatiosn supposed to do? Tell all the judges in advance that Show of hands are not a duo? That would have been construed as favouritism by mentioning one act, but not others.

Back-scratching alliances at AFO? I didn't see any taking place?

No voting system is perfect.
A public vote would probably lead to a lot of encouragement to vote for bands and singers with large mailing lists, fan sites, Facebook groups, websites and MySpaces. So that's not perfect either. For a public vote for best album, someone could look at CD sales for the year? And didn't those untalented twins keep winning XFactor or whatever on the telly? That was a public vote!

Derek


03 Dec 09 - 12:34 PM (#2779701)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Tom Bliss

Last year, a semi-official Committee, containing at least one well-respected, independent artist, two senior BBC suits and the original Smoops team, was established to vet the nominations, and check that there were no anomalies. (The Committee was referred to in last year's output). In the past this vetting had only happened informally, which is how the White Hare thing happened. When I suggested the use of a vetting layer, I made a strong case for the committee members to be named, so they would be accountable to a certain extent. Sadly that part of my suggestion was not taken up.

I don't know what's happening this year.


03 Dec 09 - 12:58 PM (#2779726)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Lizzie Cornish 1

"No voting system is perfect."

But 'secret society' voting systems are the least perfect of all.


"A public vote would probably lead to a lot of encouragement to vote for bands and singers with large mailing lists, fan sites, Facebook groups, websites and MySpaces.So that's not perfect either."

Actually, it is as near perfect as is possible...because yes, even folk bands/singers/musicians only get to have a large following if they're excellent.

Of course, we all know, because Smooth Ops told us so, that the only reason they had to change the Public Vote from 'Best Live Act' to 'Best Obscure Non-Show of Hands Category to Vote For' was because if they'd left the public vote as er...'Best Live Act' Show of Hands would have kept winning it.

Now that tells me the bleedin' obvious....which is that Show of Hands are er....The Best Live Act....yet they are NOT allowed to be voted for, under that category, by the public.

Of course, the JUDGES got to vote on The Best Live Act, the year after Show of Hands won it, and they voted for....Bellowhead....who'd er...only been out there as a Live Act for a handful of occasions..but never mind, 'cos they're full of the Luvvies favourites, and many of the Luvvies are....er....JUDGES!

Yes, it's not Rocket Science, is it!

The Music of the People, forbidden to be voted on BY The People.

It could only happen in the Controlling Intelligensia PsuedoIntellechewall World of English Folk Music...


"For a public vote for best album, someone could look at CD sales for the year? And didn't those untalented twins keep winning XFactor or whatever on the telly? That was a public vote!"

Er...isn't this the Folk Awards? Or did I miss something. Are the XFactor twins up for Best Live Act then?

Probably, if the Judges are Judging!

;0)


03 Dec 09 - 01:21 PM (#2779760)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Folknacious

Great to see Nancy Wallace getting a nomination. What's surprising is not that there's folk life outside the central folk clique, but that enough of the central folk clique noticed. Will this be a defining moment or a "blip"? I'd have liked to see her version of I Live Not Where I Love in the trad songs too, but it's a start.


03 Dec 09 - 01:30 PM (#2779778)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Ken J.

Pretty much anyone could hang up a shingle and collect votes on albums. I did it for about 8 years back in the era when the Usenet folk group was vibrant, and I only gave it up because I got to be too lazy to manually run the tallying as the voter pool got near 100. There's probably software for vote counting now.

There is nothing in the way of the Mudcat Folk Awards or the Lizzie Folk Awards.   You might want to figure out how one would limit voting to real people, one vote each.

fRoots used to have a readers' album poll in the long ago days, but my vague recollection is that it was gently put to sleep because it always returned the predictable UK folk-rock winners, year after year.


03 Dec 09 - 01:55 PM (#2779803)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: evansakes

"Back-scratching alliances at AFO? I didn't see any taking place?"

If you didn't see it I take it back, Derek...it obviously couldn't have been taking place. :-)


03 Dec 09 - 02:45 PM (#2779858)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Herga Kitty

Young Folk awards next Wednesday...

I heard Tri at Bedworth last weekend, and thought they were great, but it's only Niamh who's a finalist.

Kitty


03 Dec 09 - 02:46 PM (#2779859)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Ian Anderson

fRoots used to have a readers' album poll in the long ago days, but my vague recollection is that it was gently put to sleep because it always returned the predictable UK folk-rock winners, year after year.

It was a general poll, with various categories like the Folk Awards, not just albums. But yes, that's exactly what happened. There was obvious encouragement to vote by people with big organised fan bases, there was obvious multiple voting by individuals, and of course its inevitable that the albums which had sold the most (which was already known) got the most public votes. So it was very predictable. We went to a "Critics poll" because we were then asking people who in the course of their work (and play) heard a larger and wider range ofwhat's out there, which then provides a service to readers and the musicians by highlighting the less well-known, the less publicised and sold, which might otherwise be overlooked.

Back-scratching alliances at AFO? I didn't see any taking place

Nor did I. People have much better things to do at AFO, which is a very inspiring, thought provoking, buzz-creating event. There was far more enthusing to each other about new artists worth checking out than about people we already knew. I know this doesn't fit very well with conspiracy theories, butt hereyou go!


03 Dec 09 - 03:08 PM (#2779875)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Cats

I will be keeping everything crossed for James Findlay. Those of you who know Jacqui Ross [his Mum] will realise where he gets his immense talent from. Add to that a very down to earth guy who is really genuine and has depp love and understanding of his music... Good Luck James


03 Dec 09 - 03:15 PM (#2779881)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Spleen Cringe

Nice to see a feral folkie like Nancy Wallace getting in there. Hope she wins!


03 Dec 09 - 03:20 PM (#2779883)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Folkiedave

And I have been to the last four or five AFO conferences (though not this year). I never saw any conspiracy in action either.

But then the people who do see them probably weren't there.


03 Dec 09 - 03:28 PM (#2779888)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Ruth Archer

With the greatest of respect Spleen Cringe, Nancy may have been "feral" at one time, but the exposure that she and Ian King et al have had through their features in fRoots and the related CD and live show on St George's Day have given them a level of exposure that would bring anyone into the mainstream.

Now we need to find more of these supposedly feral creatures - the ones who are still on the fringes of the mainstream folk community, maybe through choice or maybe not.

I found out about these guys recently:

trevor moss and hannah-lou


They run this in London:

The Lantern Society

Ian: when are you putting them in the magazine? :)


03 Dec 09 - 03:48 PM (#2779905)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Smedley

Folknacious, you have excellent taste - Nancy Wallace is fabbo (not a very Mudcat word, sorry) and I Live Not Where I Love is her best track.


04 Dec 09 - 03:10 AM (#2780259)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Spleen Cringe

Hey Ruth, I mean feral as a compliment not an insult! I like feral! Nancy is feral in so much as she's on a record label that exists outside of the mainstream folk scene and largely plays gigs and festivals outside of the mainstream folk scene. And Ian Anderson has an excellent track record of promoting off-piste folk music in fRoots. It's one of the reasons I buy his mag, to confirm what I already know about my own excellent taste...

Nice link, BTW!


04 Dec 09 - 04:34 AM (#2780301)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Graham Bradshaw

And still they whinge!

No Ruzzer, no Jim Moray, no Waterson or Carthy, and not even a Julie Fowlis/Karine/Emily or any of the Scottish bands like Peatbogs, Shoogles etc.

Despite SOH, Bellowhead, Simmo & co being there to hold the fort for the 'Old Guard', this is largely the start of the New Wave emerging.

This can only be A GOOD THING, and exactly what all the whingers have been campaigning for over the past few years.

Are they never satisfied?


04 Dec 09 - 05:35 AM (#2780321)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Folknacious

It is the very nature of whingers that they are never satisfied. It's traditional, is it not?


04 Dec 09 - 06:06 AM (#2780339)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: matt milton

"I found out about these guys recently:

trevor moss and hannah-lou


They run this in London:

The Lantern Society

Ian: when are you putting them in the magazine? :)"

I've been along to the Lantern Society and played there a couple of times. There's a bit of an incestuous scene there: the same people play at Easycome Acoustic (run by Andy from the Hankdogs in Nunhead for about 20 years), and the Basket Club in Brixton and the Snake Mountain Revue (also at the Betsey Trotwood). Basically the younger wing of musicians who used to (and still do occasionally) go to Easycome.

There are some interesting performers there. I think Trevor Moss & Hanna-Lou are alright, but I don't think they're the best in that little scene. Have a listen to the extraordinary Boycott Coca Cola Experience, Trent Miller, and The Lorcas. You might like Benjamin Thomas and Jason McNiff too, although for me both of them are a bit too in thrall to early Dylan at the moment.

If any magazines out there would like to commission an article on it, I'd certainly be happy to knock one out. :)

For my money, that bunch are about the most interesting things happening in folk/acoustic music in the UK. With the sole exception, that is, of the rather amazing Leeds/Yorkshire scene, which has more of an Americana slant (Michael Rossiter, David Broad, Liz Green, Benjamin Wetherill and co)


04 Dec 09 - 06:06 AM (#2780340)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Vin2

Do hope 'The Young 'Uns' get a mention. Their harmoies and arrangements are amazing.


04 Dec 09 - 06:38 AM (#2780355)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: IanC

Guest: KenJ

There is (or was) a Mudcat Awards. Last run in 2007 as I haven't had the energy to run it the last couple of years. Voting in March for the traditional awards day of 1st April.

:-)
Ian


04 Dec 09 - 07:26 AM (#2780380)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: TheSnail

I'm intrigued to know what the "mainstream folk scene/community" is.

Is it Mike Harding and the Radio 2 Folk Awards or New Roots? Is it Steve Heap and the FAE or the EFDSS? Is it Smooth Ops? Is it the folk clubs and, if so, which ones, the ones full of puritanical traddies, the ones full of navel gazing snigger/snoggers or the ones full of people singing Beatles songs from a school exercise book? Is it the Morris Ring or the Morris Federation or the Inter Varsity Folk Dance Festival? Is it Cambridge Folk Festival or Sidmouth or Cropredy or Tenterden or the John Harvey Tavern (1st Tuesday of the month 8:00)? Is it fRoots or The Living Tradition or Mustrad or Properganda? Is it the Newcastle degree course or Hands on Music? Is it Topic or Wildgoose or Free Reed Records or a self produced CD recorded in someone's living room?

Is it a monolithic organisation surrounded by impenetrable walls? Am I inside or out and why has it suddenly become trendy to be "on the fringes" (wherever they may be)?


04 Dec 09 - 08:00 AM (#2780407)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: matt milton

I'd say you covered pretty much everything I would describe as the folk mainstream there.

As your description shows, it's not a monolithic organisation surrounded by impenetrable walls – it's actually quite heterogenous. But it's still the mainstream.

I wouldn't say it's *suddenly* become cool to be on the fringes. It's *always* been cool to be on the fringes.

And let's keep things in perspective here. We're talking about one particular album (Nancy Wallace's 'Old Stories') being nominated for a Horizon award. It's a bit less Smooth than the usual. Nancy W isn't as much of a regular on the folk circuit as most. But it's hardly a 'difficult' album: it's quite mellow and pretty, in fact.


04 Dec 09 - 09:03 AM (#2780461)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Spleen Cringe

The Snail, you're missing the point. Nancy Wallace and plenty of other people like her (see some of the names on Matt's list as examples, but there are plenty more) haven't built up a following or reputation via any of the routes you mention and primarily play to an audience that isn't particularly engaged with the mainstream folk world that you so accurately describe.

All leaps of logic around "monolithic organisation surrounded by impenetrable walls" and what many or may not be "trendy" (a wonderfully vintage word from an earlier era, that!) are purely your own inferences from things that haven't been said. Liking an off-piste artist does not imply that everything on-piste is rubbish.

Personally, I think the fact that there are people outside of the known and established folk firmament playing folk music to largely non-folk (in the on-piste sense) audiences, is in every way a good thing. If certain sections of the folk world (such as fRoots - which has one foot in and one foot out anyway - and now, tentatively, the BBC Awards) are showing signs that they recognise there are interesting things afoot out there, good for them.

I'd imagine a lot of the people who are part of the mainstream folk world would really enjoy Nancy's album - it's warm, woody and beautifully done and she has a wonderful singing voice.

Stuff like this is surely a cause for celebration not prickly defensiveness?


04 Dec 09 - 09:37 AM (#2780482)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: matt milton

well I think it's very telling that an album like Nancy's would be considered in any way a fringe album. It uses conventional folk instrumentation (accordions, melodions, acoustic guitar, fiddle), you can her clear influences like Sandy Denny, Anne Briggs, maybe even a smidge of Neil Young circa Harvest. It's from the fringes of the folk scene only in terms of 'political geography', not in terms of music one.


04 Dec 09 - 09:49 AM (#2780487)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: matt milton

One of the things that always strikes me as a little absurd is that, in today's musical climate, an album like 'Love, Death & the Lady', by Shirley & Dolly Collins, were released today, it would probably be considered to be on the fringes. Or even, say, Ewan MacColl & Peggy Seeger's 'Two Way Trip'. (To name two albums I happen to have been listening to a fair bit of late.) I don't think either of them would have made a Radio 2 playlist.


04 Dec 09 - 10:11 AM (#2780503)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Folkiedave

One of the things that always strikes me as a little absurd is that, in today's musical climate, an album like 'Love, Death & the Lady', by Shirley & Dolly Collins, were released today, it would probably be considered to be on the fringes.

I am not so sure this is true you know. Why would it be considered to be on the fringes? Maybe I am missing something. I genuinely would like to know why a genre of music (however defined) that has accepted the Watersons, "Old Routes, New Routes", Steeleye Span, Demon Barbers, Bellowhead, Glorystrokes etc has difficulty accepting change!!

I like to think that although I am 60+ years of age my tastes are very broad. BUT experience and history tell me that as folk gets a higher profile the mainstream press tend to pick up on people simply because they are different. Not because they are especially good.

They are hailed as the greatest thing since sliced bread. They are said to be upsetting "the old fuddy duddies" who are into "hey nonny no type folk music" and worst of all "the Aran Sweater Brigade" (though they usually mis-spell it "Arran") who are said to "..constitute the Folk Police".

It's horlicks of course but it saves them knowing anything about that of which they write. The problem is some people believe it.

My experience in this world is that people vote with their feet. (CD sales, folk clubs, festival appearances). If they really are any good they will get booked more than twice.


04 Dec 09 - 10:57 AM (#2780538)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: matt milton

I don't disagree with you really, in that I'm sure that plenty of folk listeners who dig the Watersons, Steeleye Span or the Folk Roots, New Routes album would enjoy listening to Alasdair Roberts, Nancy Wallace, Meg Baird, the recent folk material by James Yorkston, or Benjamin Wetherill.

But they won't find out much about those particular artists via the traditional folk music media (fRoots mag being a notable exception).


04 Dec 09 - 11:05 AM (#2780543)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: matt milton

and I suppose, also, that I'm not talking about 'innovation' per se, so much as that elusive quality known as 'attitude'. I mean, the Demon Barbers and Bellowhead are all very well, but they're not really the kind of thing I'm talking about.

I hear more of a continuum back to the classic albums of the folk revival (and even, to an extent, to the 'source singer' recordings) in the fringe folk of today than I hear among the kind of 'young professionals' folk acts that tend to win awards and headline festivals.


04 Dec 09 - 11:18 AM (#2780551)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST

Matt

what is "traditional folk music media" other than the various A5 regional bulletins?


04 Dec 09 - 11:37 AM (#2780563)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: matt milton

I'd say the last comment from TheSnail above defines it quite well.


04 Dec 09 - 11:44 AM (#2780571)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST

Yup its pretty indefinable really, I'm not sure theres such a thing as a traditional folk media that is excluding or including certain people in any meaningful sense of the word anyway.


04 Dec 09 - 12:10 PM (#2780596)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: matt milton

as in..

"Mike Harding and the Radio 2 Folk Awards or New Roots... Steve Heap and the FAE or the EFDSS ... Smooth Ops... the folk clubs .... the Morris Ring or the Morris Federation or the Inter Varsity Folk Dance Festival ... Cambridge Folk Festival or Sidmouth or Cropredy or Tenterden or the John Harvey Tavern (1st Tuesday of the month 8:00) ... fRoots or The Living Tradition or Mustrad or Properganda ... the Newcastle degree course or Hands on Music ... Topic or Wildgoose or Free Reed Records"

That's kind of what I was referring to (with the exception of some coverage in fRoots)


04 Dec 09 - 12:49 PM (#2780627)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Guest

Yup but i genuinely think its hard to lump the above together as some kind of exclusive mainstream (and apologies if this isnt what you meant), all of whom have their own differing roles.


04 Dec 09 - 02:44 PM (#2780732)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Dave the Gnome

What! No category for best fusion? Should go to the Quo doing 'All around my hat'!

:D eG


04 Dec 09 - 02:48 PM (#2780737)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Dave the Gnome

...or was it Steeleye doing 'Down down'?

I forget.


04 Dec 09 - 05:59 PM (#2780896)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,folkandroots

James Findlay won the young folk awards this evening
very promising sets from all the finalists


04 Dec 09 - 06:18 PM (#2780914)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Ruth Archer

"It's a bit less Smooth than the usual. Nancy W isn't as much of a regular on the folk circuit as most. But it's hardly a 'difficult' album: it's quite mellow and pretty, in fact. "

Agreed: fringes in this context are not defined artistically. It's just who happens to hit the radar of the mainstream folk scene, and probably has more to do with marketing than music. Of course, Ian rectified that by giving Nancy and her compatriots lots of coverage, so they are presumably not on the fringes anymore. So now we have to find the Next Big Thing that's lurking in the fringes. That's fine - I think it's very good that we make an effort to look beyond the usual suspects. But like Dave, I think we also need to remember that novelty doesn't always equal quality.

:)


04 Dec 09 - 09:26 PM (#2781019)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Derek Schofield

Mat Milton wrote:
I don't disagree with you really, in that I'm sure that plenty of folk listeners who dig the Watersons, Steeleye Span or the Folk Roots, New Routes album would enjoy listening to Alasdair Roberts, Nancy Wallace, Meg Baird, the recent folk material by James Yorkston, or Benjamin Wetherill.

But they won't find out much about those particular artists via the traditional folk music media (fRoots mag being a notable exception).

Actually, English Dance & Song has reviewed, favourably, albums by Alasdair Roberts and James Yorkston (and will review the new Ian King album in the next issue), and we reported on the St George's Day concert featuring some of the new singers that were featured (Nancy wallace included) ... and that concert was held and hosted by the EFDSS! I'll get Nancy's CD reviewed as well if someone sends it to me! In fact, I'll go and ask for it myself!
Derek Schofield
Editor: English Dance & Song


05 Dec 09 - 05:37 AM (#2781172)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,guest Alan Whittle

Warm congratulations to James Findlay from myself and Denise . James is a remarkable young gentleman, a quite excellent guitarist and fiddle player.

As many of you know, I'm not the geatest fan of 'the tradition', and that has forced a parting of the ways between me and the cat. However round Dorchester (where I live these days) James is most definitely 'the man'. A shining example of creative energy and commitment.


05 Dec 09 - 05:40 AM (#2781175)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Cats

Congrats James. Yes!!!


05 Dec 09 - 06:03 AM (#2781183)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Capo da Monty

Well done indeed!
I'm with you all the way on that one Al.
I saw him at Bournemouth Folk Club earlier in the year and he was fantastic.
The performance was full of energy and passion for his music. Just what is needed in the folk scene.

CdM


05 Dec 09 - 06:12 AM (#2781188)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Terry McDonald

Excellent news. I was lucky enough to be part of a session with James and two others (Jerry Bird and John Bullock) at a pub near Dorchester during the summer and was amazed by his sheer talent and enthusiasm.


05 Dec 09 - 06:29 AM (#2781192)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: TheSnail

Spleen Cringe

The Snail, you're missing the point.

Indeed I am. The point of my string of "Is it...?" question was to illustrate what a diverse, disorderly and disconnected business the whole folk scene/community was. It consists of braided streams, isolated creeks and a few stagnant pools. Some of its factions overlap and interact, some deeply loathe each other. To talk of a "mainstream" seems to me to be meaningless.

Nancy Wallace is clearly a talented young woman but, from listening to her MySpace page, a fairly conventional singer/guitarist. Her current (slightly out of date) gig list consists of two folk clubs and an arts centre.

She has appeared at The Magpies Nest who said of her -

Nancy Wallace was born a folk brat, and spent far more of her formative years than is healthy in the back rooms of Suffolk pubs, singing and playing her little heart out. In her teen years - and possibly as a result of a concussion caused by a stray morris stick - she joined an electric barn dance band playing the trombone.

(See http://www.themagpiesnest.co.uk/artists/nancy-wallace for the full article.)

All pretty normal. What makes her "outside of the known and established folk firmament"? (Your emphasis.) What makes her an "off-piste artist"?

matt milton

We're talking about one particular album (Nancy Wallace's 'Old Stories') being nominated for a Horizon award. It's a bit less Smooth than the usual.

I don't think either of them would have made a Radio 2 playlist.

So does being "mainstream" mean meeting with the approval of Smooth Ops and Mke Harding? I think that's about 98% of the folk scene. Great! We're all on the fringes.

It looks to me as if this "outside the mainstream" business is just a piece of marketing hype cooked by journalists (or one journalist in particular) to feed their own agenda whatever that may be.


05 Dec 09 - 06:34 AM (#2781194)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: TheSnail

Congratulations to James Findlay who gave us an excellent night when we booked him at the Lewes Arms (as we were then)last year.


05 Dec 09 - 07:30 AM (#2781212)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Lizzie Cornish 1

Erm......

Can I just ask something, please....

WHERE is the Duncan McFarlane Band?

For years these guys have been performing excellently, bringing traidtional songs into the present day with some amazing arrangements.
They send people absolutely wild with their music.....and they also play acoustic versions of their folk rock traditional songs, as well as Duncan playing solo, too.

Even Diane has sung Duncan's praises, in fact, he and his band are one of the few acts that we agree over. His arrangements of Nic Jones songs are brilliantly done, both acoustically and with his electric band. I've seen the band live several times now, and have never ceased to be amazed at the reaction they get from their audience. And their audience is all ages..

Anyway, that's my bit....and yet another reason why the public should be allowed to vote, because bands like Duncan's would be voted for by many, many people.

But hey, I'm just a peasant, not to be trusted with 'musical knowledge' despite watching The DMcF band blow the roof off Sidmouth's Ham Arena when they supported the Battlefield Band on the last day of the first Sidmouth Folk Week, and knowing that this band is something special!

Prepare to be Reviatlised about The Tradition!
The Duncan McFarlane Band - Myspace


And here is James: (very nice, James)
James Findlay - Myspace


05 Dec 09 - 07:32 AM (#2781214)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: Lizzie Cornish 1

Or, you could even be Revitalised About The Tradition, by Duncan's band... (oops!) :0)


06 Dec 09 - 04:44 PM (#2782349)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: TheSnail

I said -

So does being "mainstream" mean meeting with the approval of Smooth Ops and Mke Harding? I think that's about 98% of the folk scene. Great! We're all on the fringes.

Of course I meant "I think that excludes about 98% of the folk scene."

Any comments?


08 Dec 09 - 06:37 PM (#2784160)
Subject: RE: Folk Awards, Young Folk Awards, Froots A
From: GUEST,Niamh Boadle (guest)

In reply to Kitty,

I entered the Young Folk Awards Competition on my own as I am also a solo performer and really wanted to have a go. I am 15 but the boys in Tri aren't old enough to enter yet!

It was a great experiance being in the finals and I had loads of fun. Everyone got on really well. James Findlay is a great mate and I'm really pleased he won. He deserved it and I'm sure he'll have a great year to come!

Niamh