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Reasonably hot on the heels of  her ‘Your Body' EP, Phoebe Court has dropped another release under the Barnabas artistic identity. It's called "Lucia's Method".

If that onion has a couple of layers already, then as Lucia seems to be another name for the same person, a third could well be in play.

Given that she says "this isn't really a song" there are potential problems writing about it in a music magazine. Luckily (though perhaps not as respectfully as I'd like to be) I disagree: it sounds like a song to me.

So what does Phoebe consider it to be? "Think of it more as an example of Lovely Lucia's healing method: useful for getting things off the chest, developing self-awareness, and working through your inner joys and pains alike!" And it is that as well.

It's a jolly ukulele song with an extended slide whistle solo: maybe if George Formby dropped the innuendo and took up a career as a therapist he might have written songs vaguely like this, though possibly not with quite the same breezy encouraging silliness quotient. (Actually that mustn't be taken as flippancy in his direction: I am not aware of any British musician nor his wife standing up to Apartheid as directly as George & Beryl Formby did. But I digress).

At any rate the triple aspect Phoebe/Barnabas/Lucia seems to be enjoying herself: the song (or not-song) lasts seven minutes. Not that this is problematic: you get to hear plenty of happiness which is no bad thing. Is it improvised at any point? That's tricky to say.. certainly there is a spirit of spontaneity at play but the messages seem worked out and they are more confidently articulated than pure improvisation would normally manifest. I think it's probably a stream of consciousness in terms of what you hear, but one informed & infused with seriously meant notions in her head before starting.

I think you'll enjoy it though & it ought to lift your mood should that be required.

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After the great pleasure I derived from the previous Crypt Sessions organised by Coventry Food Union in the Wyley Chapel under Coventry Cathedral ruins which I reported on, I was massively looking forward to the stunning lineup last night of Reign the Girl Band & Bar Pandora.

The latter anticipation was amplified by Charlie not having played many gigs in 2025 as she worked on her debut album (look out for that) and as you know, I was entranced by the former at Leamington Food & Drink Festival and their recent debut single "She Stayed".

Obviously that performance only really took off for me once their sound was fixed but it was enough to convert me to their cause. Given the intimacy of their style, if you thought they were great on a park bandstand, imagine how magnificent they were in a medieval crypt. To experience them from three to four feet was a privilege. Talk about an immersive experience.

None of the vocalists all evening needed nor employed a microphone & instruments were given the most cursory of amplification. This was a fitting use of the space which must originally have been designed to make the best use of acoustic music.

As suggested in my review of "She Stayed", Sian & Lily invite you to get lost in the enchanting mists of their songs. Which is actually rather pleasant but diverting for a reviewer. Fortunately I was so close to them that I could observe some of their skills from very close quarters.

Anyone watching them will admire the interplay of two voices & two guitars. It's worth thinking that however excellent these are, those four elements include one of the best local vocalists & one of the best guitarists: attributes which I think will be commented on by more & more people as their profile rises. Certainly watching Lily play ("guitaring" as Sian dubbed it and I'll pinch that) was an education: she brought two guitars along with one (strung DADGAD) just for one song (whose lyrics were courtesy of a local poet who was also present) and as someone dubious of tapping techniques in rock contexts, I was bowled over by her acoustic use of the technique on a song called (I think) "Forest". And then as for Sian's voice: you need to hear that for yourselves I can tell you. It's not resistable.

There is however a vital Fifth Element: their taste allows them to incorporate a great deal of space & this contributes as much to the songs' beauty. Vocals & vocal harmonies are added & subtracted all the time. Songs have passages with two guitars, or one or none.

Another reason I especially needed to catch Bar Pandora apart from not having done so for ages was because, inspired by the occasion, Charlie had opted to go acoustic.

I had no idea how this would work: to be the Bar Pandora songs had their electronic instrumentation as an essential part of their being and are based on a cut-up principle. Since I harp on continually about Charlie's artistry and breadth of vision, I really had no grounds for doubt. Conceiving of the apparently non possible is her thing isn't it?

So we got to hear classic Bar  Pandora songs like "Ultramess", "Vice Vice Vice" "Recreate This" & "Dear Man" played on basically an acoustic guitar with Matt Rheeston playing a bare bones "kit" of muffled snare with a suitcase for bass drum.

And all were totally recognisable despite having none of the instrumentation of the recorded versions. So essentially the songs were so strong in their composition that they translated without a hitch.

I used the word "basically" deliberately. Those elements were the framework but Charlie also occasionally reproduced synth lines vocally & perhaps to the greatest delight of the audience, had a tiny piano on which she even more occasionally played the odd note: it provided a very satisfactory synth like "plink" and drew us back to the original like the merest aroma on the breeze.

Like Reign the Girl Band, Bar Pandora's new arrangements utilised space to great effect. Her guitar playing and singing were as staccato as on the studio versions (and retaining the abrupt endings presented with a bit of a dilemma as her customary one legged stance to indicate closure wasn't on from her seated position) and she made tremendous use of the Gestalt law of closure too: inviting our brains to fill in the gaps between what we were hearing and what we were familiar with.

At this point, I need to confess. with the stripped back arrangements, I revisited my engagement with the lyrics (on the recorded versions, the processed vocals blend into the arrangements so perfectly that I possibly didn't discern them as clearly as I might) and concluded that some of my interpretations in my original reviews might not be what I'd now write. I have apologised to Charlie & now you.

It wasn't all old material either: she unveiled two new songs (presumably they'll be on the album), both of which worked really well. The power in concert of one of them even took her by surprise and she now feels it needs henceforth to close the set (though in fairness it was the penultimate one yesterday).

Inspiring as the two sets were, we need next to swing back to why these musicians gave of their talent and the audience their time.

The Crypt Sessions help subsidise Food Union activities (including large free events such as the Harvest Festival) and in their own words "these gigs are very special. When we founded the Food Union in 2014 we didn't envision this, but our whole ethos is based on cultivating new opportunities and connecting people, and music is the best vehicle for that".

I completely agree: just like plants, ideas like the Food Union grow & can put out the most unexpected & vivid blossoms: I think building sustainable communities for those who care & reject the ideologies of division could easily encompass many linked strands: ecological, altruistic, artistic: they are all part of the cool web.

The next Crypt Session is on December 19th with Stylusboy and there is a Bonfire Special Song and Soil event at Sherbourne Valley allotments on November 1st with Donnelly and South.

More immediately, Charlie & Lily are hosting a jam/meet-up for local female musicians of all abilities today (Saturday) at Talking Birds: which sounds like a great idea.

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CHARM OF FINCHES

MELBOURNE SISTER DUO ANNOUNCE 2026 UK TOUR DATES

NEW SINGLE ‘METEOR' OUT 14th NOVEMBER
TICKETS ON SALE NOW

"Wonderful Oblivion is a triumphant indie folk effort – nostalgic yet fresh, haunting, but at the same time serene. " - We Found New Music

"Melbourne sister duo Charm of Finches are perched for stardom. For lovers of tight sibling harmonies, chamber folk, and those who long to be carried-away by a lullaby..."  – ArianaMorgenstern KCRW Today's Top Tune

"music that tugs at the heart and stirs the imagination" - THE AUSTRALIAN

Australian folk-pop duo - CHARM OF FINCHES - have announced an extensive UK tour for 2026. 

Sisters Mabel and Ivy Windred-Wornes are currently mapping out what will be their fifth studio album and will return to the UK for a stretch of intimate shows and scenic songwriting sessions. 

Kicking-off at London's The Grace on 18th February and concluding at Glasgow's Glad Cafe on 4th March, the run will see them play at towns and cities everywhere in between on this fourteen-date tour.

Of the upcoming visit, Charm of Finches explain:

"Since our last UK tour in 2024, we've toured all around Australia, and it's given us a chance to be inspired by new parts of the country we've never been to like northern Queensland, where the oldest tropical rainforest meets the Great Barrier Reef. Then over to New Zealand, hiking up volcanoes. Immersing ourselves in nature is integral to our artistic practice, and we're excited to share new songs and stories infused with the wonder of these landscapes. On our last UK tour, we connected with so many people and we can't wait to visit again - singing in old churches, stuffing ourselves with English breakfast and patting highland cows. Then we'll be writing songs by the windswept coasts and rugged mountains of Scotland, creating our fifth record."

Ahead of their fifth studio album, standby for the release of a brand new single "Meteor" on 14th November. Inspired by the powerful forces of nature that reflect a tumultuous inner world, the track was recorded by the ocean in Victoria, Australia, and mixed in Canada. Blazing a trail of future music to come, "Meteor" is the first of a series of planned releases due to impact in the coming months. Charm of Finches invite you to help them create their fifth album in Scotland via the Australian Cultural Fund

******
Australian sister duo Charm of Finches create intricate folk-pop that is simultaneously graceful and darkly bewitching. Their seamless blood harmonies traverse melancholy and wonder in equal measure. Winners of the Australian Folk Music Awards Best Folk Album (2022) and Music Victoria Best Folk Act (2021), the band have also been nominated twice for the Australian Music Prize. 

With four acclaimed studio albums released to date, their most recent was 2024's ‘Marlinchen In The Snow'. Recorded in rural Nova Scotia with acclaimed Canadian producer Daniel Ledwell (Jenn Grant, Good Lovelies), it was inspired by the frozen beauty of the landscape, Grimm Fairy Tales from their childhood, and their transient life on the road with their music. Watch the video for "Middle of Your Mess" here. 

Touring extensively throughout the UK, Europe, and Canada in 2022, 2023 and 2024, Charm of Finches will return to the UK in February and March 2026. Catch them at these dates as follows: 

FEBRUARY 2026

MARCH 2026

*****

FOR MORE INFORMATION

w/ https://charmoffinchesband.com

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We are extremely pleased to announce one more 'Hot Music Live Presents' fundraiser for The Tin. With a really exciting lineup of Deathsex Bloodbath, Banoffee, The Illusion and DANE-O, Friday March 20th 2026 will be another night to remember.

Tickets are available via:

https://www.universe.com/events/hot-music-live-deathsex-bloodbath-banoffee-the-illusion-dane-o-tickets-GMTBLH

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Noah Seleno fans will I'm sure be so delighted that she is releasing music regularly at the moment. I know I am.

Out now is a new EP called ‘Behind Me': it has a trio of tracks of which  "I Will Go" will be more familiar as it appeared (and been reviewed in the magazine) in its own right.

Therefore I'll turn my full attention onto the newbies, "Stockholm" first.

I must say that it's another great example of how in this one artist we receive (a) the creativity of a totally unique imagination (b) which in turn is mediated via an equally unique set of performance characteristics and (c) honed by a perfectionist who would rather put out rarely as long as the results were this good & precisely what she intended.

Noah seems to possess titanium strength artistic resolve yet her attitude to self publicity is a blend of modesty & diffidence. Which is why her star shines brightly in the skies of many aficionados but hasn't yet reached a wider local audience. Maybe that's the why she likes it: the intensity of her muse probably militates against swimming in the mass media ocean but I think it's a bit of a shame that one of the most talented local voices (both compositionally & in delivery) remains something of a secret.

At any rate, she is so darned distinctive that you can't mistake her for anyone else.

Returning to "Stockholm" after that little diversion, this is something of a narrative poem, I'm guessing (bit dangerous I know) not that it's set in the Swedish capital, but more a reference to the syndrome and frankly there is plenty of supporting evidence for the latter in the lyrics. Though for all I know the action may have a Swedish setting too. That's the great thing about allusion.

Employing a sort of haiku form to set the scene, to which Noah returns throughout the song, it breaks into the usual gorgeous lush passages which one finds in her songs and what on the surface seem rather blissful memories.

The title track ("Behind Me") features a rather different vocal approach and switches the bliss for more domestic images (though with Noah you always get the feeling that taking her pictures literally is probably missing the point). The mundanity soon dissolves away when the realisation hits you: is she singing about a ghost? Once again, there is a sufficiency of lyrical support if that's what you want to take away from the song. If it is a phantom, then there is another layer of ambiguity as Noah offers the possibility in her singing strategy that she's not necessarily scared but enjoys the nostalgia & reconnection.

Listen out too for the bass playing: I don't recall this element playing such a vital role in the arrangement of any of her other songs.

At this point I'm going to take an even more risky leap and take all three songs plus this year's earlier "Unkind" and "Regret/Forget" to wonder to what extent they are takes on a single episode or related episodes? There certainly seem elements of common emotional ground and connected perspectives.

I may sound tentative in trying to communicate what I think Noah's songs may "mean". That's good I'm sure as they are so poetic as to accommodate various personal interpretations. Who wants one whose content is revealed on first play leaving nothing for further exploration? I don't. She may even have a chortle at my comments above if they miss the mark. That's fair.

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Ten entire days passed between my review of Zaruna's "Piss" &  "Cocoa Bango" and that of their "Heaven". Only nine have elapsed since & here I am telling you about "Indigo". Is this band actually speeding up? In the New Year will they put out a song every hour?

As noted so recently, this relentless campaign advertising their versatility as well as zesty originality is doing a fine job of promoting the breadth as well as depth of their talent & today's offering takes us in yet another direction.

Once again, it was hardly what I was expected, which suits me fine. If you consider Zaruna to be some form of "Indie" band than your expectations are challenged once more: which frankly I think is healthy. What sort of a song is "Indigo"? Well it reminded me in places of the sort of music which developed as the 60s became the 70s: early rock music taking on folk elements: though to be fair it's no exercise in retro pastiche: it has enough unique character to sit nicely in 2025 albeit drawing on the rich tapestry of popular music for its distinctiveness.

The subject matter fits snugly with the music & with the cultural interests of the earlier period: acoustic picking, hypnotic groove and hints of psychedelia and Summer of Love lyrics. You'll certainly enjoy it but I suspect in a different manner to how you enjoy their other songs. Is this really just one band you may ask yourself?

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I'm pleased to let you know that the memorial bench for Gemma Leahy Waddell is now in situ right up high on Campion Hills in Leamington: a spot chosen by Gemma herself. I've just been up there on a glorious autumn morning and the location & view do certainly make you consider higher thoughts. 

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After a little break for summer holidays and to avoid getting in the way of our friends at CovTember, the ‘Hot Music Live Presents' fundraisers for The Tin resumed last night: the seventh in the series, featuring Lucifer Sky, Little Girl Screaming, Le Hev Hev and The Muthas.

An unexpected guest was Storm Amy: if she had any effect on attendance it was slight but it does allow me to make the point that the storm brewed up indoors rivalled the lashing rain & the wind bending the birches outside.

There is so much I want to say but don't want to make this article unreadable.

Supporting The Tin (and while we were doing our thing in the venue, ‘Live On Stage' bands had braved Amy to rehearse in the community spaces alongside dance classes) is something dear to the hearts of so many, but where else would you get such a packed venue on such a night, one which cheered the highly diverse set of acts (the excellent new monthly ‘Coventry Wasteland' magazine in their kind preview described Lucifer Sky as ‘industrial noise' which is great as I find it hard to describe her music): personally I can't imagine many audiences turning up for ‘blues rock' or ‘riot grrrl punk' being as embracing of such an extreme genre: except at The Tin.

I might also cite one audience member who'd given up a free ticket for Sigur Ros at the Royal Albert Hall to come to The Tin instead: and feel thoroughly justified.

Or Little Girl Screaming's response to the warmth of the reception they received on their return to the Coventry stage after over ten years from audience members & the other bands despite few having previously seen them. Sometimes it takes those outside perspectives to grasp the full truth.

Otherwise you probably had to be there to experience the communal spirit and sense of pure enjoyment: but if you've been to a gig at The Tin, you know this.

Opening up people's awareness of artists who might not already be on their radar is part of what HMLP stands for: hence the eclectic nature of the compilations & these gigs. I had little doubt that Lucifer Sky would be embraced with her industrial noise (once again thanks for a handle) but what took me by surprise was the nature of Indira's performance.

Such a description evokes various emotional responses but this set (and realistically she created one continuous piece) was staggering in its depth & impact. And I hasten to say that the points I'm about to make are both my own response and those of people I spoke to afterwards.

 Dedicated to her late friend Jessica, despite the dissonance, unexpected sounds, byzantine structure and challenging concept, the work was deeply moving: a true tribute which transcended the form and proved that "industrial" (if that's what this music is) is not the same as soulless and you don't require bland and cliched melodies to put across profound emotions.

Building slowly from the quietest elements to a work of power and impressive clout, incorporating all sorts of inputs from her collection of devices (all of which surprisingly fitted into a small suitcase) and then sampled voices & most movingly her own live heartbeat, this was a performance which impacted on those there, most of whom I suspect had not experienced the like before. I pondered a lot about how much to write about this as Indira's own emotions were obvious and still raw: I don't want to intrude too much into private grief but as I say, as a tribute it was excellent and as a performance it had tremendous weight.

As I say, Little Girl Screaming were returning to the city where they had once played so often: on this occasion, as on their ‘Count to Ten' EP released last week, this was a lineup of founders Tree and Chris playing acoustically (though their drummer was in the audience) and as you might guess, that EP formed the basis of their set. To be honest, so used am I to the power of their full lineup delivering their songs that I had no idea which ones they felt might translate the best. My predictions probably would have been terrible as the most memorably direct and forceful ones came across just as great in this format as in the original: not just "Curly Curly Hair" but veritable bangers like "Y Shaped Coffin" and "Bit Late for a Conscience" were as potent as ever. Much as I'd like to catch them with the full band, I have to admit they really lack nothing doing it this way.

Part of this much be Chris's ability to play complex yet characteristically hook orientated parts on a single acoustic which meant that the songs weren't "simplified" to any meaningful extent in relation to their essences. The other was of course the element which gives the band its name: Tree's vocals are as powerful as ever and in some ways just require a riff to turn into a full song.

Both seemed to have a ball: Tree used the space of the stage to full advantage to help her exorcise the emotions of the songs & Chris' movement were at times such that I several times thought he was on the verge of falling over.

The song themes & the vitality of the performance were in many ways compatible with the band that followed and after the intensity of Lucifer Sky, Little Girl Screaming built on that and won the audience instantly: the response clearly inspired them to heights as the set went on. Steps hopefully will be taken to bring them back to Coventry before another decade has past.

Le Hev Hev as a band don't have a long Coventry relationship: in fact this was their second gig & despite the connection between the members and the venue, their first at The Tin. However each member has her place in the local music history already: Sophie (drums) being in Septic & the Tanks, Beth (guitar) in Shanghai Hostage, both Michelle (bass and vocals) and Sara (aka Switchblade on vocals) alumnae of Deathsex Bloodbath & Michelle is also a founder Duck Thief. You might correctly guess how many other members of those bands were in the audience.

Starting out pre-DSB, Le Hev Hev have recently been recreated by founding member Michelle who reclaimed some of the old songs recorded by other bands in the interim: hence they kicked off with a medley (yes really: I don't hear those too often) of "My Fingers Are Wet" and "Men" from the 2026 ‘Are You There God? It's Deathsex Bloodbath' EP and included "Sue Grandad" which Michelle put out in 2022 under the name ‘Sister Panic'.

The rest of the set was as equally in our faces and uncensored patriarchy smashing (at one point Switchblade descended into the audience to apply pig's noses to male members) delivered with a zest and panache which frankly pushes my vocabulary again. If there were any filters, they were not discernible.

The energy conjured up was palpable yet there was a strange and wonderful equilibrium at work. Given the lyrics & the zeal with which they were delivered, why did the men in the audience respond so enthusiastically? Bit of magic in the mayhem I suspect.

Given the steady build up of passion, The Muthas had a high bar on entry but that's why they were top of the bill: they not only can do it but relished a response.

This was their final headline gig, their last one in Coventry & penultimate one before going into sleep mode while bassist Ben takes a global sabbatical for a year: this of course added much to the atmosphere. (He's going with Sophie from Le Hev Hev but I gather they have plans to adjust to her absence).

I would at this point like to add to my comments from the start as two musicians (one Mutha and one member of Le Hev Hev) were not well yet threw themselves into their performances such that you couldn't tell. Given their commitment, I think it's unfair to identify them, but it says much about them.

I hadn't really appreciated (I should have given that I reviewed their album ‘They Come' which provided their set) how much Mutha-music is instrumental: I suppose the natural instinct is to focus on words to identify "meaning". These guys just love playing. To be honest, their sound check lasted almost as long as their set and while much of this was an exercise in perfectionism getting everything right with sound engineer Joe McAvoy-Boss who did his usual great job curating some highly diverse & extreme sounds & problem solving mid-song, I personally wondered if they were also simply enjoying getting an extra chance to play the songs?

Joseph (guitar and vocals), Ben (bass) and Zeke (drums) too have long and noble pedigrees in a variety of bands and this has manifested itself in several ways. Firstly they are all cracking musicians: but better than that, they have a genuine chemistry. They were constantly interacting with each other onstage just as much as the audience.

Secondly, they have got taste: despite being good & liking playing instrumentals, there was no noodling nor drawn out soloing AT ALL. Respect.

Thirdly despite being modest unshowy personalities, they have an excellent rapport with their fans: I suspect their contingent, swollen  perhaps because of the limitation of future opportunities, was the largest there.

Although the phrase hiatus has been used since the announcement, the message from the stage last night was unequivocal: don't worry The Muthas will be back.

And when I came to leave, I found that Storm Amy had gone too: outstormed?

Our next gig in this series will be on November 14th with Stone Bear, Alchemista, The Pristines and Massasauga: tickets are available via: https://www.ticketweb.uk/event/hot-music-live-presents-massasauga-the-tin-at-the-coal-tickets/13870444

See you there.

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CV Folk offers another fascinating glimpse into the ‘inside story' of a leading act on the local folk circuit.

Acclaimed multi-instrumentalist and singer, Marion Fleetwood appears as the latest ‘Up Close and Acoustic' guest at Coventry's Albany Theatre on Friday, 10th October.

Now based in Stratford-upon-Avon, Liverpool-born Marion will talk about her 30-year career in music with local performer, podcaster, and poser of probing questions, Bill Bates. The conversation will be interspersed with superb songs and tunes from Marion's repertoire, performed on guitar and fiddle and in some cases – so rumour has it – accompanied by surprise guests, including some leading names in British folk music.

Marion (or ‘Mabel' as she became known) first made an impact on the local circuit as talented fiddle player and vocalist for Warwickshire folk-rock band Meet On The Ledge. These days, she is busy in several notable line-ups, including The Sandy Denny ProjectFeast of Fiddles, and songwriter Reg Meuross's Woody Guthrie project, Fire & Dust.

Also much in demand as a session musician and tutor, she hosts the popular improvised choral workshops, 'Choir in a Day,' and is passionate about people finding their own voices.

The show's format aims to increase audience engagement with well-known local folk acts and proved successful in June when Bill interviewed popular Coventry singer-somgwriter, Rob Halligan. More celebrated acts have now offered to perform in future events while being subjected to Bill's probing questions!

The show begins 7.30pm on the theatre's Courtyard Studio, and tickets are £14.50 or £10.50 concessions (including students and pensioners). The event is expected to run until approximately 10pm.

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Today would be a red letter day for Dolly Mavies fans with the release of "In Your Head", her latest single & a taster for her upcoming album. We haven't talked about a release since 2023 and her ‘The Calm and The Storm' album.

And in addition to the tremendous musical skills of Dolly & her talented band, we must add clairvoyance considering the media storm she has negotiated in the interim.

A few reasoned thoughts first:

"In Your Head" deserves the plaudits it's about to receive on its own merits regardless of those headed her way for her moral stance.

In general terms, anyone considered (however misguidedly, considering her values) to be asked to play for a very senior figure in the government of a superpower (however much of a git the person & his government might be in practice) is obviously a highly regarded & classy act. In this instance more classy than the intended audience.

The kerfuffle should work to Dolly's advantage in that it alerts those impressed by her actions who had not previously actually encountered her music to the latter for their great enjoyment.

I'm sure that in her mind there must have been a slight anxiety regarding weight of expectations: no one of her undoubted ability would wish to be known as the scourge of J D Vance at the expense of her vocation. But hey: it's Dolly Mavies we are talking of so it's a fantastic song which will only burnish her talent.

Not being acquainted yet with all the potential single choices at her disposal, I'm not able to say much about why "In Your Head" got the nod for this significant release. Imagination helps draw parallels between the song & recent events but I imagine the song was dreamt up longer ago & quite probably recorded before they took place.

In fact this rather intense (though I could use that adjective about mush of her work) simmering track would appear to fall into the inter-personal relationships category while covering a surprising amount of emotional & cognitive territory at the same time: there are examinations of perception and comprehension, the reliability of memory and above all the interplay between imagination and fulfilment. I'm sure there are times when Dolly must have wondered if she was dreaming what was happening to her but this must have been composed while considering other matters.

It's a very "adult" song, by which I don't mean saucy (though it is a bit erotic at times) but exploring complicated ideas which underpin the genuine human experience. Which fits in pretty snugly with other voyages through the grown up psyche which make up her previous songs.

It asks quite a bit of the listener who likes top notch songs requiring repeated listens but is all the more rewarding & sustaining for so doing. Like I said: this is class stuff.

Her band are great for providing a setting for these lyrics, one which is both melodic enough to appeal even to those not prepared to immerse themselves fully, one which gives depth to those so willing and one which provides complement rather than distraction. Assuming these to be the same players as on ‘The Calm and the Storm", credit to Adrian Banks (bass, guitar, piano & percussion), Christian Gillett (guitar), Belinda Webb (drums) and Ruth Draper (backing vocals).

Unsurprisingly, Dolly has received plenty of incoming for her stance: those liable to take umbrage being generally both disproportionately abusive and lacking in much wit nor range of vocabulary & she seems to laugh much of it off. Bravo. I'd like to think that the support she has got has been more articulate as well as reasoned. "In Your Head" and the upcoming album should provide her with plenty of more opportunities to smile: already widely respected (don't forget last year's Glastonbury appearance), what we are going to be experiencing is her building on her reputation as one of the fast rising stars of original music and one with a discerning audience too.

If you read this today (Friday October 3rd) it's also Bandcamp Friday so buying it today gives Dolly & her band a bit extra of the revenue & if you aren't coming to the HMLP fundraiser for The Tin tonight & fancy attending their single launch, they are playing The Old Fire Station in Oxford. This one is for her fans not a command performance for a bigot by the way.

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Out now is Luke Concannon's follow-up up album to the acclaimed 2021 release ‘Ecstatic Bird in the Burning', namely ‘Midnight Bloom'.

However I must emphasise straight away that, like so many of his recent singles, the set represents fruits of his collaboration with multi instrumentalist Darius Christian.

In fact you'll recognise the names of many old friends as "What Would You Change", "I Wanna Dance With You", "Stick Together" and "Brother" (which also appears on ‘Hot Music Live Presents Volume Thirteen') are all present and correct on this album.

Joining them now are "A Woman Is Sacred", "Namaste" and "Romy" which you'll be less familiar with unless you have caught him live on his recent UK tour or online.

Since these songs have been coming out since 2022, they represent not only a significant phase in Luke's artistic career but also one which has been involved so much of his time to perfect.

If I'm being honest, had I been asked to bet either (a) which artist I review regularly will come up with songs entitled "A Woman Is Sacred" or "Namaste" or (b) to predict potential Luke song titles, these two would have been contenders as archetypal of his area of emotional & spiritual interest which inspire his writing. Oh to have such an intensity & consistency of personal commitment and the capacity to articulate them via highly individualistic writing.

Luke has been endowed with such a clear and personal creative identity for so very long now (I bet record companies would describe it as a "brand" but for such an anti-materialist artist I won't offend him by using the term): it must represent a major part of his attraction to his audience.

Another is of course his capacity to devise very accessible songs which paradoxically are composed of weird chords, structures and time signature. This era though is distinguished by having the very close collaboration of Darius enabling his songs to gain interesting & arresting arrangements which never take attention away from the heart of the songs themselves.

"Romy" is a bit of a masterclass in how to be a top writer. Starting off with just Luke and a guitar, you think it's going to be a nod back to his roots until the most gorgeous arrangement suddenly kicks in (involving woodwind & female harmonies) to seize you in pleasant surprise. Nice work. Its tale of ecstatic love must surely be deeply personal except Luke's wife has another name & their child is a son not a daughter. I imagine that this is a prime example of a writer informing a song with his own truth but then evolving it from the specific to the universal so many others can identify with it.

"Namaste" is another story song whose narrative seems at odds with his current emotional circumstances so again picking out where the personal elements are (and I decline to believe that Luke ever writes a song without having gone through or closely observed the feelings within it) is a bit elusive but then exploring the layers & depths of his finely wrought songs is part of the pleasure. The intensity of the words & delivery can't be missed though I think there is a pun in operation here which suggests that he is keen to let a little light in.

"A Woman Is Sacred" is a revelation in that it's a female lead vocal on a Luke Concannon song (I'd be awfully surprised to learn that it was anyone other than that of his wife Stephanie Hollenberg) and quite apart from the notion of introducing a diversity of sound (he does pretty well in that respect at the best of times though not perhaps to the extremity of someone else singing his songs). For once his own voice takes a definite back seat until the last three quarters of a minute when he responds to the manifesto we've been listening to.

To put out a song based upon the perspective of a woman is, as I suggested earlier, not a huge surprise in considering Luke but presenting it in this way certainly validates the sentiments and avoids the pitfall of being accessed of being patronising. Since every one of his songs might be a single (his level of craft excludes filler) it's an easy thing to say about any of them, but in my opinion, "A Woman Is Sacred" would make a very fine one indeed.

I am confident that in many ways Luke is in a really good place now personally & creatively and I rejoice for him. However he has always tended to accentuate the positive & optimistic in what he writes: that's always been his philosophy. It doesn't mean that he wears rose tinted spectacles nor offers facile ideas. His activism is probably more engaged and affective than most of ours (mine for sure) and I can't forget his hike to Palestine when the situation was appalling yet only a fraction as bad as it is now. Who of us can say so much? On ‘Midnight Bloom' there is "Brother" which deals specifically with the Ukrainian situation but how can he write individual songs about every single problem which much distress him? Better to go for more broad value centred songs which are applicable to many situations & inspire people to have the courage to do the right thing. It cannot be easy for him living in a country where his ways of thinking & acting are derided by the highest authorities on a daily basis and espousing these virtues as publicly as he does must be becoming acts of bravery as well as defiance and hope. There are easy ways to be a musician when you have Luke's talents but he's chosen to stick to his principles & produce an album of outward beauty but inner steel. I'll leave you with his own mission statement: "Music can be a spiritual practice and path, it can be used to serve and nourish the hunger in people's hearts. I commit to that path!" 

Luke is back in the UK to promote the album with gigs in Birmingham (October 9th) Bury (10th) Newport IOW (16th), Brighton (17th) and St Mellion in Cornwall (24th). He'll be playing a couple of Nizlopi dates with John in London as well though I'm afraid those have unsurprisingly sold out already.

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We are delighted to announce the first 'Hot Music Live Presents' fundraiser for The Tin of 2026.

Featuring a very special lineup of Izzie Derry, Sophie Hadlum, Croissant & Brass Hip Flask, the character of the music you'll enjoy means that we are making this our first seated event in this series.

Therefore the number of tickets available will be limited. They are available via:

https://www.universe.com/events/hot-music-live-presents-izzy-derry-sophie-hadlum-croissant-brass-hip-tickets-67FKZM

Many thanks to Rebecca Male for the wonderful poster.

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