‘Raising the Roof’ was a late October musical celebration in a Sussex
village in aid of the Yellowmen of Kadongdong. Loosely a folk night,
it was a joyous and mostly very entertaining evening.
The standard of
performance was initially quite varied, but the second half was almost
faultless, and this in a village hall in the south of
England. A world away from the UKIP froth at nearby coastal towns, the cause
was to aid local men bringing relief to a part of Kenya where death from diarrhoea
is not uncommon. The performers were a mix of folk-based musicians, solo
singers, performance poets, an Andrew Sisters-style act, and a relatively
youthful rock cabaret act with attitude. Two threads ran through the evening: retired
teacher Chris Fisher and members of the family Moses: Brian and his daughter
Karen.
Chris, MC and the evening’s co-organiser with Brian, is
possessed of an impressive traditional singing voice; Carthy-esque but not derivative.
Brian opened proceedings with a spoken tale of winter gloom before Chris joined
in, walking from the back of the hall while singing an acapella version of the traditional ‘January
Man’.
The next act, Robson, a self-styled exile from Northumbria, sported a
white jacket and shades and looked like a cross between Roy Orbison and Los
Lobos, but was sadly possessed of the vocal charms of neither. He also fell
guilty to the mistake of many an intimate, unplugged type event, whether in village
or city centre: too much between song schpiel. When he lifted his singing focus
beyond the childlike to a reworking of ‘Raggle Taggle Gypsy’, things improved
no end.
Next up was a bit of a surprise. ‘JC and the All-Stars’ were
fronted by a young man with real rock star swagger, a Liam Gallagher stance,
and Ryan Gosling looks. Unfortunately it soon became rock star stagger as his
back pocket quart of Scotch dominated more than his stage act, and a voice
relatively well attuned to doing an Oasis cover struggled with (the perhaps
inevitable) ‘Whisky in The Jar’. The band, led by Mark Cole, played well enough,
with some nice lead guitar touches by ‘JC’ (Joshua Cole). Follow that.
Well, Roger Stevens, doing a comedy set, certainly did. I
don’t know if he writes his own jokes, but every one was a winner, and I’d had
less than a pint of a very local brew at this point. Most are unrepeatable
here, but suffice it to say that gags about onanism are still funny.
Dave Roberts was billed as an ‘Old Hippy Sings Old Hippy
Songs’. He did what it said on the tin, and he did it very well. ‘All Along the
Watchtower’ was not just a straight cover, and its climax, segueing into the
last line of ‘Stairway to Heaven’, was a hilarious exercise in self-deprecation. He was followed by a tasteful and highly accomplished instrumental acoustic guitar set performed by Fionn Johnson, not bad for a 13 year old.
Among the stand-out performances of the second half were
Steve Royston, whose ‘Play for England’ juxtaposed British men serving in Afghanistan
with millionaire footballers whose patriotic duty and failings usually
preoccupies the nation more. Chris Fisher’s take on a Ralph McTell song was
performed with a large remembrance candle and poppy as a prop. His performance
likewise successfully trod a careful line between necessary scepticism and
undue cynicism.
The Victory Sisters were performing their wartime favourites
routine for the first time ever. They have fine voices and definitely looked
the part. Their set finished with ‘White Cliffs of Dover’; some of its more
idealistic lyrics somehow sounding more ironic than ever amidst the political notes
others were striking.
Brian Moses has the style and air of one of the Liverpool
Poets. His almost aggressive telling of the kind of name he wished his street was
called– Paradise Lane not Meadow Road - was powerful and funny. Roger Stevens then
returned with Victory Sister Karen Moses to help him out on vocals. The Crowhurst News gave me the impression
that he might be singing with the pulp fiction writer and husband of a Blair
babe, Ken Follett, and the black Tory activist and ‘Play Away’ presenter, Floella
Benjamin. Now they would make for an
interesting duo.
The Collins boys, father and son, did one of the greatest
versions of ‘Mr Tambourine Man’ I have ever heard – a very smart accompaniment
to the passing round of Al Collins’ Bob Dylan hat to raise extra funds for the
Yellowmen. Son Rory was less inspiring on his own as he, by his own admission, went for
the lowest common denominator and regaled us, albeit in fine voice, with some
sing-along Beatles’ and Kinks’ tunes.
Many of the performers were then brought out for one last time as
Chris Fisher led them in finale that featured a funny take on the ol’ Macca standard,
‘Mull of Kintyre’; and, more stirringly, the Shire Horses’ ‘Sit You Down’. A very
moving end to an excellent evening.
4 comments:
Good account of a very diverse and enjoyable evening. Agree that 'All along the Watchtower' was a highlight and was great to hear so much truly original material too. Steve Royston's song about Afghanistan in particular. Loved the folk, the jokes and the constant musical and lyrical surprises. Shame we have to wait two years for another one :)
Many thanks Ms Strikesback. Perhaps i was a bit hard on Robson as a fellow punter pointed out. All gave up their time for the cause after all.
Yes how can you be so mean about a guy who looks even a bit like Roy Orbison???
You're right, but as I also said, "Raggle Taggle Gypsies" was great, in fact it was really good. Sorry Robson, especially as your accent and name made me think of a hero of mine - and I don't even like football that much....
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