A Gorgeous Re-Issue of June Tabor & Oysterband’s “Ragged Kingdom” 

Commemorative vinyl version of doughty road warriors classic collaboration. June Tabor & Oysterband.

the ice queen and the Folk punks

Not really a review, more a pointer to something early for Christmas, even earlier for Samhain or even just for the hell of it. Not previously easily available on vinyl, give or take an extremely limited run by Stamford Audio in 2012, it has long been overdue this sort of prestige release. But, dial back, vinyl was still then on the way out, if not damn near extinct in 2011, when the original CD was released, with neither much demand and certainly little new capability to play in any other format.

An astonishing and surprising recording, it was built on the back of Freedom & Rain, the earlier and equally groundbreaking collaboration between the frosty Ice Queen of folk and the louche progenitors of a Celtic tinged folk-punk, if arriving long after hopes for any follow up had sunk.


a one off, good job, jolly well done…

Freedom & Rain, back in 1990, had been deemed a one-off, a (good) job (jolly) well done and that was that. But the magnetism and friendship endured, so much so that Tabor became quite the regular guest for subsequent tours. This was best demonstrated by the Big Session project, a tour and an album teaming the band with not only Tabor again, but a whole host of others from the then more conventional wing of the folk circuit. (Steve Knightley, Eliza Carthy, Jim Moray, should you be unfamiliar with the associated album, Big Session, Volume 1, released in 2004. It’s good, featuring also input from the warped Americana of Brett and Rennie Sparks, aka The Handsome Family.) Later tours with Tabor have continued, sporadically, with EPs of other joint material duly collected together for release.


timing…is everything…

The timing of this release is twofold. Firstly it is the 85th anniversary, no, not of the band, but of Topic Records, a still burning beacon of the folk tradition, in all it’s splendoured forms. It was they who picked up the gauntlet for the record, first time. Plus, as may not have escaped your notice, Oysterband are hanging up their Doc Martens, after four and a half decades on the road, often more literally than not. This has led to their ongoing Long Long Goodbye Tour.

The first leg was a farewell to the festivals, and we were at many of those this summer, as they gave thanks to the ones long supporting their presence, playing out to packed fields and marquees. Bromyard was particularly memorable. The second leg, starting soon, rekindles the Tabor relationship, before a final leg, stretching on into Europe and next year, for some final band only shows. They should be exciting and memorable, and ATB hope to be there.


what of ragged kingdom?

So, what of Ragged Kingdom? Like Freedom & Rain, it is a set more of covers than Jones/Prosser/Telfer originals, culled freely both from the tradition and from sources quite different. So, alongside such trad.arr. reliables as Bonny Bunch Of Roses and Son David, you get a Shel Silverstein song, a Dylan and Dan Penn’s exquisite Dark End Of The Street.

Not edgy enough? Well how about a Polly Harvey song, That Was My Veil, transformed into both a smoother and a more tribal process, by virtue of Tabor’s dreamy voice and the forthright drums of Dil Davies. And the jewel in the crown of the set, a gloriously chamber vision of Love Will Tear Us Apart. This was to be a second time the Oysters tackled the Joy Division/New Order songbook, the first being Love Vigilantes, on 1989’s Ride. Arguably the pivotal song on the album, it is possibly the best of the 150 plus other cover versions of this song available out there. Their performance, on Jools Holland’s Later, must remain a high water mark, even for that long running show.


chopper’s finale

At a pivotal stage for the band, it was Ray “Chopper” Cooper’s last album with them, his cello an increasingly integral focus, that saw Al Scott, hitherto “only” the band’s producer, drafted in on additional bass and mandolin for the recording, a position he now fully occupies. Otherwise it is the core of John Jones, Alan Prosser and Ian Telfer, always the heart of the band, with, then, as stated, Dil Davies on their somewhat revolving drum stool. Tabor sings as only she can, her frosty hauteur seeming to melt more than a little.

Of course, those, who have seen the Tabor fronted band previously, know just how much a false impression that perception is, revealing herself to be much feistier than expectation might offer. As to whether it is any better than the earlier Freedom & Rain, always a moot point amongst the fanbase; it is certainly different and is a more polished beast. The best answer is to have ’em both!

Source: June Tabor & Oysterband – Ragged Kingdom: Re-issue/Vinyl Release – At The Barrier

‘No one else is saving it’: the fight to protect a historic music collection

The ARChive of Contemporary Music, which houses more than 90m songs and is supported by names such as Martin Scorsese, is in need of a new home

By David Smith

It all started in a loft in Tribeca, New York, long before it was a trendy neighbourhood. “I had 47,000 records and nobody wanted them,” recalls Bob George, who had just published a discography of punk and new wave music. “That led a lot of people coming to me and saying you have to save this stuff; no one else is saving it. That got the ball rolling in my loft in what is now fashionable Tribeca, which was an incredibly unfashionable war zone in 1974 when I was first there.”

George turned his record collection into the ARChive of Contemporary Music (Arc) in 1985 with co-founder David Wheeler. The non-profit music library and research centre now contains more than 3m sound recordings or over 90m songs, making it one of the biggest popular music collections in the world. Donors and board members have included David Bowie, Jonathan Demme, Lou Reed, Martin Scorsese and Paul Simon.

The Arc is not open to the public but has been a vital resource for film-makers, writers and researchers ranging from Ken Burns looking for a song for his series Baseball to the new Grammy Hall of Fame and Museum in Los Angeles needing cover art for its inducted recordings. Now, however, this unique treasure trove is under existential threat.

The Arc cannot remain at its current Hudson Valley premises indefinitely and is in need of a new and bigger home. “We have to move and we don’t know when we’ll have to move and the collection is really at risk because it’s all on pallets,” says George, who dreams of a patron like James Smithson, the British scientist who left his estate to the US to found the Smithsonian Institution. “We’re looking for someone to help us buy a very wonderful property or for us to build a new building on vacant land in upstate New York.”

After growing up in Youngstown, Ohio, George moved to New York in 1974 as a visual arts student and started collecting records as a DJ. In 1981 he released Laurie Anderson’s first single, O Superman, which sold nearly a million copies worldwide and made it to number on the UK singles chart. He was a guest on John Peel’s beloved BBC radio show, sneaking in little-known records from New York, and took music to European broadcasters too. People kept giving him records that other collections turned down.

Some of the 18,000 recordings in the Keith Richards Blues Collection
Some of the 18,000 recordings in the Keith Richards Blues Collection. Photograph: Arc NYC

“I was doing the book and then doing Peel shows and it accidentally became this large collection that nobody wanted. They kept saying, oh, we collect classical, we collect Broadway, we collect ethnic music. I said, well, I have funk, reggae, African and hip-hop and they said, oh, no, we don’t collect any of that. Forty years later, I say, you put all those together and that’s what music has become.”

The simple goal of the archive, which has always had a peripatetic existenceis preservation. “We have no interest in quality,” George cheerfully admits. “It started that way from the very beginning because there’s no way to tell what’s valuable in the future. Everybody brings their own criteria and tastes to things in their own time. But the future is quite different, as we hope.”

The archive has never received aid from any city, state or federal organisation but its scale gives the Library of Congress a run for its money. It has absorbed major collections from musicians and fans and is home to most of Rolling Stone Keith Richards’ extensive blues inventory.

George dispatched two semi-trailers to a condemned house in Boston sinking under the weight of Jeep Holland’s set of more than 125,000 recordings and over 2,500 signed albums from the likes of the Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Bob Marley and the Sex Pistols. “Going towards the bathroom, he has a gas stove, the pilot light is on, there are records in the oven. It was just a storage space … His car had become so full of records that he abandoned it and rented a car.”

George has made repeat trips to countries such as Brazil, Cambodia, Colombia, Cuba, Japan, Jordan, Laos and Thailand. The Arc contains Demme’s personal collection of Haitian albums. More than 150,000 pieces of world music have been catalogued; there are plenty more to do. “We’ve tried to get as much of that material as possible so that collection is just fabulous.”

The Arc preserves copies of every recording in all known formats. It has electronically catalogued more than 400,000 sound recordings and digitised 200,000 with the Internet Archive – more than any other public university or private library in America. It also contains more than 3m pieces of material including photos, videos, DVDs, books, magazines, press kits, sheet music, ephemera and memorabilia.

Andy Rourke of the Smiths at ARC looking at Smiths LPs he’s never seen
The late Andy Rourke of the Smiths at Arc looking at Smiths records he had never seen. Photograph: Arc NYC

 

George says: “We catalogued 105,000 singles just recently; we have another 200,000 or 300,000 to go. This is the first way a band at one time got their feet in the water. They put out one or two or three singles. If they did hits, they got the chance to do an album and so much of this material does not exist on LP or CD. Little by little more of it might be streaming because of YouTube, as people can get away with murder on YouTube, which is great, but YouTube will disappear. Everything commercial will disappear.”

Among those who have turned to the archive is the Oscar-winning director Ang Lee, who wanted records by the singer Bert Sommer for his film Taking Woodstock. “The archive is amazing because we don’t know what we have until somebody needs it. We’ve been into the stacks and we found five LPs by Bert Sommer. For me, it’s like I have no idea who this guy is and what he did; he’s sort of a folkie. For Quincy Jones, we just sent him a list of the 8,000 things that he’s either produced or on.

“Research was how we basically stayed alive along with the largesse of the rock stars or celebrities that we had hooked up with. The idea was never to open to the public but that’s what we want to do now. I don’t think it’s untrue that we’re one of the largest in the world and that we want to make that available. We’ve tried to save two copies so there will always be a listening copy and then that would then become a listening library.”

George hopes the new archive will be open to students, educators, historians, musicians, authors, journalists and the general public. An anonymous donor has come forward with a million dollars to help realise that dream but more money is urgently needed. One possible new home is an abandoned IBM campus spanning 34 acres, although that would cost $8-10m. George is considering partnering with an upstate university and has plans to offer residencies for scholars.

“People could come in and produce a work, and that would go out into the world. It could be a blog, essay, tape, compilation, new recording, whatever. We’re really quite un-academic. I’m against it somewhat and I’d like people to have ideas and bring those ideas and put them back into the world as opposed to making it an interactive experience for everybody. I don’t want to be Disney World. It’s nice to have seminars. It’s nice to have listening parties. It’s nice to have dances.”

Source: ‘No one else is saving it’: the fight to protect a historic music collection

Wallets at the ready! Join our tour of the UK’s greatest record shops 


As Record Store Day returns, we hit the streets on record store crawls around four UK cities with the country’s best new DJs, to find the bricks-and-mortar gems that keep pushing the culture forward

It’s Record Store Day on Saturday, a juggernaut that is still picking up pace in its 11th year, with many exclusive special-edition records released as a way to focus music fans’ attention on bricks and mortar. And now there’s a new way to take it all in: in the US, the Record Store Crawl initiative has been set up to explore the wealth of stores in each city. With RSD looming, we thought this could be a model for a survey of the health of record shops in British cities: so, four writers have gone round four cities with some of the UK’s most exciting new DJs and producers, picking out their ultimate record-shopping routes [ . . . ]

Full Story, Maps to Stores at: Wallets at the ready! Join our tour of the UK’s greatest record shops | Music | The Guardian

 

UK Vinyl Sales At 25-Year High

Sales of vinyl released by labels reporting to the BPI were at a 25-year high in 2016, according to new figures.More than 3.2 million records were sold in the UK last year, the BPI reports, which suggests a 53% rise on 2015. The most popular record was David Bowie’s Blackstar which sold more than double the copies of 2015’s biggest seller, Adele’s 25. [ . . . ]

Read entire story at: The Quietus | News | UK Vinyl Sales At 25-Year High