Through that sound (my secret was made known)
Eliza Carthy
Hent dine bestillinger på dit foretrukne bibliotek
Sammensæt din søgning
Afgræns yderligere
Musik / folkemusik
Through that sound (my secret was made known)
Eliza Carthy
Airs and graces
June Tabor
An introduction to Eliza Carthy
Eliza Carthy
Through wind and rain
Cathie Ryan
Rooted
Martin Simpson
To the awe
Rachel Newton
The silent majority
Greg Russell
Perspectives on tradition
Stick in the Wheel
A more perfect union
Pete Seeger
Fugitives
Moriarty
d. 16. nov. 2017
af
af
Thomas Blake
d. 16. nov. 2017
"Kerr and Fagan have formed a longstanding creative partnership: her fiddle playing and vocal skills are uniquely offset by his bouzouki - still one of the most underused and underappreciated instruments in folk, in my opinion. Add to this the sheer range of Richard Arrowsmith's talents (he is a member of Morris side Pecsaetan and metal/ceilidh crossover band Glorystrokes) and Jess's ability as a singer, musician and a songwriter, and you've got a mouthwatering concoction".
d. 19. nov. 2017
af
af
Mike Ainscoe
d. 19. nov. 2017
"Kerr & Fagan follow up their Fifty Verses debut with another musically and vocally impressive collection ... Dominion is a diverse album that rolls and tumbles in a collection that rounds off with Jess' Raise Your Voice, a call for communal hope and togetherness and a commendable vision and one that will stir the heart and gird the loins in troubled times".
2018 Jan/Feb
af
af
Colin Irwin
2018 Jan/Feb
"Three years after their debut with "Fifty Verses", Sheffield neighbours Jess and Richard Arrowsmith, Nancy Kerr and James Fagan return brimming in harmonies and a lively mix of fiddles, melodeon, bouzouki and guitar to drive them along. Blending traditional material with modern songs and uplifting tunes, it sounds a far more relaxed affair than its predecessor and, to these ears, far superior. An unaccompanied Appalachian song kicks it off into a brave arrangement of "Dominion Of The Sword", part-written by Martin Carthy and one of the most powerful things he has ever recorded, with potent additional words from James Fagan. The just about get to grips with the quickfire wordplay, but it's the vigorous instrumental blast of the glorious Breton tune which Carthy set it to that really knocks it out of the ground ... Indeed, the instrumental interplay is perhaps the album's greatest strength (...), [yet] Jess Arrowsmith offers wearied wryness and wit in the heartfelt "Anthem OfAWorking Mum" (...) and, as ever, Nancy Kerr soars both as a singer and songwriter at strategic moments".