Folkstack Lightnin’ are a newly-formed electric folk and blues trio, specialising, as their name suggests, in English folk and American blues music. That in 2017 you
can walk in to The Rodmill (Flaming Grill) pub in Eastbourne on a late Saturday afternoon, stumble
down the opposite end from the football, and find singer Vanessa
Grove, guitarist Kelvin Message and guitarist/singer Neil Grove performing songs
as varied as ‘Hoochie Coochie Man’, ‘Dream A Little Dream’ and ‘The Lowlands of
Holland’ is nothing short of incredible. These three are dedicated to their
craft, preserving the best of what the British music scene has long discarded, affirming these songs’ value for the initiated, and, they hope, converting a few along the way.
Kelvin gets it on |
While the electric guitar-led RnB standards they perform were
once the standard fair of aspiring white boy blues-rock bands in Britain, these
days they’re rarely heard in pubs that put on live music. Their interpretation
of ‘Dust My Broom’ fell somewhere between the Robert Johnson original
and the more renowned Elmore James' cover. On many of the blues numbers a great interplay often
ensued between the old pro Kelvin on rhythm and the solo pyrotechnics of young guitar
gunslinger Neil.
Neil 'Blues Boy' Grove |
Vanessa: folk diva |
Folkstack Lightnin’ also dusted off a few, more contemporary, folk-rock numbers: Jethro Tull’s ‘Mother Goose’, Horslips’ ‘Trouble with a Capital T’, and Fairport Convention’s sublime ‘Crazy Man Michael’. An unexpected, and impressive, jazz-inflected vocal detour occurred when they performed the 1920s song later covered by The Mamas and Papas, ‘Dream a Little Dream’. An inspired idea was to fuse Blind Willie McTell’s folk-blues take on ‘St James Infirmary’ with the jazz song, ‘Summertime’, performing the latter in a blues vein and with vocal duties passing from Neil to his Mum, Vanessa.
The traditional folk songs the trio performed are hardly
ever heard outside of the few folk clubs left in the UK, and even there it is
unlikely that you would find them sung with such passion. On these numbers Vanessa essentially
takes over the show, with the boys providing a relatively gentle accompaniment
to her stellar vocals. Among the performances that especially stood out were ‘All
Things are Quite Silent’, ‘Sheep Dog, Black Crook’; ‘Ramblin’ Sailor’, ‘The Shearin’s
Not For You’, and, the performance that nearly took my breath away, ‘The
Lowlands of Holland’. This song has an illustrious pedigree, interpreted by Sandy
Denny and Steeleye Span among others. Vanessa sung it with force and no less feeling. Its popular
folk theme of being forever wedded to a lover killed in their prime was somehow injected with fresh vigour, before Vanessa militantly ripped into playing the spoons as the boys played the song out.
The penultimate number, this could have ended the show. It certainly got the
strongest response of the set, with some clapping even discernible from among those
who’d only come in for the footie.
For my profile of musician and guitar tech Kelvin Message, click on this link