LISTEN: Bear’s Den, “Stitch in Time”

Artist: Bear’s Den
Hometown: London
Song: “Stitch in Time”
Release Date: September 14, 2022
Label: Communion Records

In Their Words: “‘Stitch in Time’ is a song exploring the saying, ‘A stitch in time saves nine.’ Based on the idea that if you can sort something out at the right moment in time it will save you a lot more work down the line. I was thinking about that line a lot particularly in relation to trauma, both my own and of those closest to me. This idea of reaching back through time to be with someone in a difficult moment and just being with them and letting them know that it’s not ok. The idea of trying to reach someone before that moment just becomes hidden and then woven into the fabric of their character. A theme of some of the newer songs is fears around parenthood and becoming a dad. Recognising that I don’t want my daughter to inherit some of the difficult things I had to go through or develop any of my unhealthy ways I have of dealing with stuff.” — Andrew Davie


Photo Credit: Bennie Curnow

LISTEN: A Different Thread, “Behind the Curtain”

Artist: A Different Thread
Hometown: Lichfield, UK and Durham, NC, USA
Song: “Behind the Curtain”
Album: Call of the Road
Release Date: September 1, 2022
Label: Same Cloth

In Their Words: “Sometimes you look back over your shoulder at a time or a place and it’s like an old film playing out. Around eight years ago I was living with a long-term partner and we had agreed early on that we weren’t interested in having children of our own. Then one day she let me know that she had changed her mind: she did want kids after all, and soon. It all came to a pitch at the kitchen table and it ended with me walking out the door. I remember her face partly obscured by the net curtain as she watched me walk away, and it was like we were strangers again. I didn’t recognise her at all. Songwriting can be a way to work through things like this, in a powerful and positive way.” — Robert Jackson, A Different Thread


Photo Credit: Artem Golden

WATCH: The Heavy Heavy, “Miles and Miles”

Artist: The Heavy Heavy
Hometown: Brighton, UK
Song: “Miles and Miles”
Album: Life and Life Only EP (expanded)
Release Date: June 1, 2022
Label: ATO Records

In Their Words: “‘Miles and Miles’ is about driving across the country, trying to get from place to place — free and easy but with real energy and motion. It was inspired by the landscapes of Easy Rider and Vanishing Point and this fantasy of racing down the highway. It’s fuel for the listeners’ imagination — whatever that may be. For the music video we wanted to create that feeling, and we were inspired by clips of the Stones and the Beatles on roadsides in the ’60s. It’s sun-soaked and fast-paced, and we wanted it to feel like a dream.

“Joining ATO Records is an insane feeling. So many of our favourite bands are with the label, and to now sit alongside them is a huge honour. We are coming to the states in the autumn (or should we say FALL), playing in New York and LA’s legendary Troubadour which is going to feel surreal. In a weird way ‘Miles and Miles’ being about this fantasy of driving across America is now coming full circle and going to become a reality. We can’t wait to get across the pond.” — Georgie Fuller, The Heavy Heavy


Photo Credit: Holly Whitaker

South of London, Broadside Hacks and Others Radically Reinterpret Folk

The day before Broadside Hacks flew from Britain to the US for their first-ever SXSW appearance last month, their drummer tested positive for Covid. By the time they played, they had not one — not two — but three separate replacements. “We only had 24 hours to find someone for a 50-minute set,” says Campbell Baum. “So we assigned three different drummers three songs each, and just switched them over on stage.” It was, at least, very much in the spirit of the act: Broadside Hacks is not so much a band as an idea, an ever-shifting collective of musicians formed not to spotlight talent but to bring new life to old songs.

Last June they put out their first album, a compilation of unaccompanied folk songs titled Our Singing Tradition, Vol 1, which ranged from 17th century love songs to Ewan MacColl’s 1949 tribute to the city of Salford, “Dirty Old Town.” The tracklist featured 22 different artists who had recorded their contributions on their phones in tribute to the field recording tradition that has preserved so many of these songs. Three months later, Broadside Hacks put out another compilation, Songs Without Authors, Vol 1, featuring songs whose authors are long lost to the march of time.

What’s fascinating about their commitment to the project — which began life as an informal club night — is that the artists collaborating on it have little background in folk music whatsoever. Baum, for instance, is bassist for indie rockers Sorry, a south London band described by The Guardian newspapers as “the febrile sound of city-dwelling, broke 22-year-olds, whose nights are dominated by hook-up culture and casual drug-taking.” His own parents actively steered him away from folk as he was growing up (“they were jazzers”) and he’d never played it before — “I don’t think many of us had,” he admits. “It was because of lockdown we had an opportunity to dive into something brand new, because you suddenly had the time. It’s really hard in an indie band to make time for anything, because you’re just keeping up with the gigging.”

Naima Bock has known Baum since her teens, playing bass for the all-female post-punk outfit Goat Girl. When he came to her suggesting a Friday night folk club to alleviate the ongoing gloom of cancelled tours and creative malaise, Bock was quick to say yes — she’d been quietly nurturing a yen for folk music since her stepdad introduced her to the proggy delights of Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span. Joining them at that weekly gathering were a number of other indie musicians from London bands like Caroline, Pixx, Maudlin and Modern Woman.

The music they made was exploratory, and not necessarily primed for public performance. “I was a bit sceptical it would work as a live show,” says Bock, and laughs. “When Sam [Fryer] joined he said, ‘Yeah we can’t play Scotland until we’re really good.’” But after their debut gig was warmly received, the project developed a firmer footing — albeit with a fluid lineup that mutated as the various participants resumed their regular gigging. “It was never going to be a traditional band,” says Baum. “It was just easier to call it a collective.”

Broadside Hacks are part of a musical scene emerging in the south of London which might never have existed but for the pandemic. Around the same time as they were coalescing in the borough of Lambeth, one of their contributing acts, The Shovel Dance Collective, was forming in nearby Lewisham. It began with three friends performing some home experiments with folk tunes, mixing Irish jigs with free improvised drone. “Some of it was weird and terrible,” admits Dan Evans, remembering their first gig. “But it was formative. And we had this vision that it would be good to play with more people, so we did a Facebook call-out.”

The nine members of what is now The Shovel Dance Collective are drawn from a rather different pool than Baum’s crew of professional musicians. They share a decided intellectual bent: a mix of academics and artists drawn to the music by its history and its anthropology. For Mataio Austin Dean, who sings and plays shruti box, their mission to rediscover, reanimate and even repurpose traditional songs is “a very political project.” It’s about engaging with the history of the working man and woman — and recognising that those histories are very different from what we’re taught in school.

For instance, when they sing “The Four Loom Weaver,” an economic ballad from the early 19th century, they are very aware that this is a song about a man losing his job to industrialisation — and that its sentiment is just as relevant to many weathering the post-digital world today. “It’s history done through conversation,” says Dean.

Evans nods in agreement. “It connects you through a chain,” he says. “It seems so archaic but you can still be really moved by it. With contemporary pop music, you have so many big songs authored by a single person that are vague in their specificity, about a general emotion that people can connect to. With a song like ‘The Four Loom Weaver’ we don’t know who wrote it — but we know very specifically what happened. It’s a song about a specific event on a specific day at a specific time, but it’s authored by generations, hundreds of people.”

Despite their early forays with Irish jigs, the group have found a unified cause in English folk song: “for me, it’s a way of understanding colonialism and imperialism throughout the last few hundred years,” says Dean. “It’s a decolonial act to sing English folk song.” While the musical culture of Ireland, Scotland and even Wales continues to flourish both at home and among the diaspora, English folk can sometimes be perceived as more austere, less vibrant, and unfairly linked to the grand narrative of imperialism. England is, after all, the dominant nation of the United Kingdom. “But this is also music about people by people,” says Evans. “We don’t push it aside because it’s connected to the terrible associations of what Englishness can mean.”

Bock, similarly, has found her collaboration with Broadside Hacks helping her “to identify with England in a positive way.” Having grown up in Brazil til the age of 7, she found the country “a horrible dark place” in her youth. “I was living here, but not very much enjoying it, always wanting to leave,” she says, struggling with the country’s “disgraceful history” and idealising her Brazilian home. “But because I was born in Dorset, I would love going back there and sitting on the Tor. It was the only place I felt connected.”

She’s since found a deep fascination with the land through the study of archaeology, which has helped bring some perspective to her view of history. “The first dig I was on, in Kent, we were digging up a Roman site, and I realised that to them, they were living in an eternal empire. And now it was just dust, pieces of broken pottery.” She’s since begun reading thick tomes of British folklore and wading through a collection of ballad books in the library. “There’s the history we hear about in books — colonialism, the slave trade, all done by people right at the top — and then there’s the history of working class people who made the land and communities that we have remnants of today. Singing these folk songs is honouring them and their history, rather than the history of the elite, their money and their wars.”

If there’s a charming earnestness about this new movement’s stated aims, it should also be pointed that they are a bunch of precocious talents. Bock is still only 24, and most of this scene are in their mid-20s. Thrysis, one of the acts that forms part of Broadside Hacks, are still in their teens, but their choral classical background lends an unexpected maturity to both their abilities and their musicality.

 

 

Of course it’s not just their youth that informs their music — it’s also the fact that they come at folk song from such oblique angles. Their great respect for the singing circles and the songs that they themselves have only lately discovered mean that they are quick to distance themselves from any suggestion that they are, themselves, a new wave of the folk tradition itself. They’re more of an offshoot, creating something new, a radical reinterpretation of songs and tunes that cheerfully carries its own influences with it, whether that’s metal, Americana, or Indian indigenous music. Of course, a stated aim is to elevate the queer histories of the music, and to grapple with its racial and gender politics in a modern way.

You’d worry for them that such big issues, among a wide collective of artists, could lead to disagreement and internal strife. But so far, they’ve managed to avoid conflict. “I’ve been in so many political groups,” says Dean of The Shovel Dance Collective, “but I’ve never been in a group where people are so caring of each other’s opinions and feelings and want to make things work.”

“For me it’s less of a lonesome solitary endeavour as writing songs alone,” says Bock. “And because everyone has their own projects, people aren’t so worried about having their say or being a star. There’s not much ego involved.”


Photo Credit: Holly Whitaker

WATCH: Hannah Sanders & Ben Savage, “Polly O Polly”

Artist: Hannah Sanders & Ben Savage
Hometown: Cambridge, England
Song: “Polly O Polly”
Album: Ink of the Rosy Morning
Label: Topic Records

In Their Words: “Many moons ago I travelled to a storytelling festival in Wenlock Edge and David Holt dropped into the bus for tea and stories and sang this song with his banjo. I was immediately struck by the economy of the storytelling and the dark, menacing melody. He gave me a cassette which I played to death. Some years later I heard him and Doc Watson play this at Newport Folk Festival. I never ‘played it out,’ but Ben immediately knew how to bring it to air.” — Hannah Sanders


Photo Credit: Rosie Hardy

WATCH: Jack Broadbent, “I Love Your Rock ‘n’ Roll”

Artist: Jack Broadbent
Hometown: Lincolnshire, England (now residing in Canada)
Song: “I Love Your Rock ’n’ Roll”
Album: Ride
Release Date: April 8, 2022
Label: Crows Feet Records

In Their Words: “‘I Love Your Rock ’n’ Roll’ was one of the first pieces I wrote for this album (Ride). We had a great time recording it. For me, it summed up the mood and pace of the record, and gave it direction. It’s really a tribute to my favourite music and bands. There’s a little bit of everything thrown in there, it’s really a melting pot of a wide range of influences. It also happens to be very fun to play.” — Jack Broadbent


Photo Credit: Jeff Fasano

WATCH: Dietrich Strause, “Out of Mind”

Artist: Dietrich Strause
Hometown: Boston, Massachusetts / London, UK
Song: “Out of Mind”
Album: You and I Must Be Out of My Mind
Release Date: April 29, 2022
Label: Blueblade Records

In Their Words: “‘Out of Mind’ was the the last song I wrote for my new album, You and I Must Be Out Of My Mind, and it became the artistic center for the project. The track went down easy, spacious, and free. Co-produced by Brian Joseph, Shane Leonard, Sam Kassirer and myself, it captured a feeling I have been struggling to express in a song. I have come to see songwriting as a potentially dangerous personal endeavor. Like walking along a beautiful mountain path with a sheer drop on one side. Through songs I have the power to create icons, symbols, and myths about my experience and point of view over the years. I paint a picture that I find alluring. I worry through singing them night after night, that I might start to believe them and see the painting as real. I worry because what ends up in a song comes from that space between my best recollections and my best rhymes. If a detail from my memory doesn’t fit, I can change it until it does and sounds good. My experience of the world and the people around me is far more complex, and I don’t want to live inside myself in such a way.

“Sam Kassirer and I made the video together. He shot the film on a Super 8 camera, capturing the footage at the recording studio where we made the album.” — Dietrich Strause


Photo Credit: Sam Kassirer

WATCH: Brooke Law, “Millionaires” (Feat. Andy Jordan)

Artist: Brooke Law
Hometown: London, England
Song: “Millionaires” (featuring Andy Jordan)
Release Date: September 24, 2021
Label: Archetypes Music

In Their Words: “‘Millionaires’ is really special to me. It’s also my dad’s favourite song of mine. I wrote it with the first person I ever fell in love with and we were best friends. We always wished we’d be playing the song to millions of people. 🤣 ‘Millionaires’ is about a couple who are struggling to make things work without having a lot of security, but as long as they have each other and have love they can still dream.” — Brooke Law


Photo credit: Lou Morris Photography

WATCH: Billy Bragg, “I Will Be Your Shield”

Artist: Billy Bragg
Hometown: Barking, Essex
Song: “I Will Be Your Shield”
Album: The Million Things That Never Happened
Release Date: October 8, 2021
Label: Cooking Vinyl

In Their Words: “To me this is the heart and soul of the album. I’ve come to the conclusion that empathy is the currency of music — that our job as songwriters is to help people come to terms with their feelings by offering them examples of how others may have dealt with a situation similar to that in which listeners find themselves. After what we’ve all been through, the idea of being a shield, physically, emotionally, psychologically, really resonates.” — Billy Bragg


Photo credit: Jill Furmanovsky

WATCH: Misty River, “Walk Me to the River”

Artist: Misty River
Hometown: London, England
Song: “Walk Me to the River”
Album: Promises
Release Date: October 1, 2021
Label: The Workshop

In Their Words: “Sometimes I think the desire for fundamental change is very like a river; at times its hardly there at all, yet at other times when it’s in full flow it can take your breath away with its ferocity and speed, promising new adventures and transformation. I wrote this song at a time of great change in my personal life. I was questioning if I was to take a leap, who would come along and who would be left behind. I’m a great believer in the power and strength of community and how that helps us to be become more resilient, even during times of great adversity. I am so grateful for the amazing people and new friends I have made on this new musical journey.” — Carmen Phelan, Misty River


Photo credit: Arthur René Walwin
This video is presented by British Underground, filmed at Real World studios by Northern Cowboys Films