Crossover Festival Brings Bluegrass, Old-Time Music to Cheshire

Leading up to the Crossover Festival, a group of three formidable women in northwest England are hanging homemade bunting in trees, dangling fairy lights, ribbons and twizzlers in branches. They’re preening and prettifiying Clonter Farm for its weekend destiny, temporarily the bluegrass capital of the UK.

The Crossover festival is now in its third year, as 21 acts gather this bank holiday weekend for a celebration of everything bluegrass and old-time, with a sprinkling of rockabilly for good measure.

Julie Cross, a former primary teacher, set up the festival in 2017 with her daughters Eleanor and Emily, after the closure of a couple of long-running bluegrass festivals that she’d attended for years. A longtime fan, she thought it was time to pick up the mantle – but where? “Then we found Clonter and there was no excuse anymore!” she says.

Clonter is a quirky gem in the lush Cheshire countryside. It started life as a venue in 1974 when Jeffery and Anita Lockett decided to host an “Operatic Picnic” for charity in the barn on their land. The event was a huge success, was repeated, and in time the owners even bought the entire interior of a theatre — from seats to kitchen — and installed it inside the barn. Over the years, the odd room has been built on the side in a suitably organic way, and the result is a perfect festival venue, with a main stage that will seat 400 and other spaces to jam and sing and teach and craft.

The whole is important to Cross, as the festival is as much about free-form playing, open mic sessions and musicians coming together as it is about the main acts. Arts funding has meant that they can bring big-name musicians in to run tuition sessions for every instrument. Want to improve your banjo playing? You’ll be able to get some tips from none other than Ron Block. Alison Krauss & Union Station’s Grammy-award winning banjo player is headlining the festival along with slide guitarist Tony Furtado, who will also be offering a masterclass.

The Crosses are a musical lot themselves. Eleanor is the bassist for Midnight Skyracer, the first British band to be nominated for an IBMA Momentum award last year. They’ll be performing this weekend — as will Eleanor’s daughter 6-year-old daughter Freya, who you can expect to spot carrying her quarter-sized banjo round the site.

Speaking as she dodges the boxes of equipment piling up inside her house, Cross says bluegrass is slowly changing. “It’s not all traditional old men with beards playing the banjo. There’s contemporary stuff too. There are lots of very, very, talented younger musicians coming through in the UK, making a name for themselves internationally,” she observes.

A lot of those younger musicians will have perfected their trade at the Sore Fingers Summer School, now in its 24th year, which brings together musicians from all over Europe to learn and jam together. It’s an exciting time for bluegrass music in the UK – and the Crossover festival is doing its bit to increase female representation. While Eleanor and Midnight Skyracer are breaking ground with their all-female band, solicitor Emily draws up all the contracts with the acts.

“People keep saying to us, ‘Go girls!’ says Cross. “Last year, we had 50 percent female representation at the festival in all its forms, which was half deliberate and half accidental. It’s always been a male-dominated genre but things are happening for women. Molly Tuttle came to Crossover last year. And Tabitha Agnew [Midnight Skyracer’s banjo player] has also been nominated for one of IBMA’s instrumental awards.”

It all seems a long way from the Cross kitchen table three years ago when the mother-and-daughters team were planning the first festival. They had no budget and asked musicians if they would be prepared to come on the off-chance. They were overwhelmed by the support. “We said to them if we can’t pay you we won’t do it again – and then some funding came through on the first day of the festival. We pay our artists the fair rate and that’s something that arts funding allows us, plus getting quality American artists to come over. We’re very frugal!”

But how did they all get into bluegrass? Cross laughs. “We were travelling to Wales and I saw a sign saying ‘Bluegrass’ and went and had a look. But I got into it properly when I saw some local Appalachian dancers, joined a troupe and danced with them for years.”

She adds, “We’re such a big musical community. I don’t know my neighbours very well but in the bluegrass community a lot of us have grown up together and our children have grown up together and formed bands together. It’s wonderful.” And while the UK bluegrass scene is still small, it’s good at spotting and promoting talent. One of this year’s highlights is Breaking Grass, a group over from the States for their first visit to the UK. Cross heard them a couple of times on the Jason Titley radio show. “We search with our ears as well as our eyes,” she says.

This year’s festival will fundraise for Cystic Fibrosis. It’s a condition Freya has, and the Crosses know what a difference research has made to lives like hers. “She’s fine,” says Cross, “because the treatment’s working really well.”

In 2018 Cross got three hours sleep a night during the festival, mostly because of trying not to miss too much. “I like to see it all, I like to be omnipresent. People share videos and then I see them and say, ‘I didn’t see that!’”

The Bluegrass Situation Expands: Meet BGS-UK

Think of the Union Chapel as London’s version of the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville.

An architectural wonder of a church, it still gathers a congregation for Sunday services. The rest of the week, however, it attracts worshippers of a different kind. The type who want to have a spiritual experience with Townes Van Zandt, Laura Marling, Father John Misty, The Civil Wars and Rosanne Cash.

In 2017, Sarah Jarosz sold out its 900 seats to a British fan base that knows her music well. “I don’t think I’ve ever sold out a venue as big as Union Chapel in the States,” she said at the time. “I’ve been blown away by the reception I get in England, Scotland and Ireland.” This year, she has already completed not one but two UK trips with Aoife O’Donovan and Sara Watkins, touring as I’m With Her. “I love coming here,” said O’Donovan. “We’ve made a home for ourselves here.” “You can actually see the growth,” added Jarosz.

This summer, the UK is awash with the diverse sounds of roots music. It’s as if everyone has suddenly woken up to the special relationship between the British folk scene and its American cousin. Major new festivals – like Black Deer in June, Maverick in July and The Long Road in September – are showcasing the powerful creative influence that Americana music is exerting on a new generation of British musicians: Jason Isbell and Passenger, Iron and Wine and Robert Vincent, Lee Ann Womack and The Shires.

Other fledgling festivals have begun bringing bluegrass and old-time to audiences that never knew they liked it before. In May, IBMA-award-winning Molly Tuttle wowed audiences at the Crossover Festival, which was started by a mother and daughter who wanted to hear and play the music they loved with their friends in Manchester. On the south coast of England, Beer and Bluegrass’s line-up includes The Hot Seats from Washington D.C., and Wesley Randolph Eader from Portland, Oregon, alongside some of the best bluegrass acts in Britain, including The Hot Rock Pilgrims and Midnight Skyracer.

Musicians who have toured the folk clubs of Britain and Ireland can attest to the strength of feeling that people there hold for the music of their native isles. And anyone who has encountered the Transatlantic Sessions, with Jerry Douglas and Aly Bain, has heard just how magical the bond that exists between the musical traditions of the old country and its American evolution. Celtic Connections in Glasgow has been fostering a creative exchange between artists on both sides of the Atlantic for decades, and the opportunities for future collaboration are limitless.

This July, Rhiannon Giddens will curate the Cambridge Folk Festival, an event which is always a highpoint of the summer calendar. Her program brings together women of colour from all over the US and the UK, including Amythyst Kiah, Kaia Kater and Yola Carter. “I love the UK folk scene,” Giddens says, “and I see audiences in the UK embracing the broad spectrum of what Americana really is even more so, sometimes, than in the US. A lot of people know the history of this music so well. I’ve always found a lot of acceptance here.”

So join our BGS-UK Facebook page, and join a community that’s excited to see where the music we love is going next. We’re excited about what’s happening across the pond right now and this is where you’ll be able to find out about all the gigs, artists, festivals and releases happening there. We’re ready for you, Britain!