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'Hot Music Live Presents' fundraiser for The Tin #11

We are extremely pleased to announce one more 2026 'Hot Music Live Presents' fundraiser for The Tin.

With a really exciting lineup of Banoffee, Permanent Daylight, Reiss Pinder and The Illusion this will be another night to remember.Tickets are available via:

https://www.universe.com/events/hot-music-live-banoffee-permanent-daylight-reiss-pinder-the-illusion-tickets-GMTBLH

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'Hot Music Live Presents' fundraiser for The Tin #12

It gives me great pleasure to unveil the lineup for our third 'Hot Music Live Presents' fundraiser for The Tin of 2026.

On April 10th you can see Duke Keats, Reign the Girl Band, Shanade & DANE-O for a very modest sum, all of which goes towards sustaining this wonderful venue.

Tickets are already available via this link:

https://events.humanitix.com/hot-music-live-duke-keats-reign-shanade-dane-o

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CVFolk reveals the secrets of ace guitarist Kevin Dempsey

CVFolk is about to reveal some long-kept secrets in the life of one of Coventry's most celebrated musicians.

Guitar virtuoso and songwriter, Kevin Dempsey is the featured artist for the latest 'Up Close and Acoustic' show that the folk promo organisation is staging in the city's Albany Theatre on Friday, 20th February. 

The event will provide an insight into the extensive back-story of this Coventry-based and internationally-acclaimed artist. And of course there's the opportunity to enjoy Kevin's beautifully-crafted songs and guitar technique, not only as a solo performer but also with the help of one or two surprise guest musicians. 

Described as CVFolk's answer to Graham Norton, Bill Bates will be hosting the occasion and questioning Kevin on his illustrious career. 

Founder member of 60s progressive folk legends, Dando Shaft and later appearing with the redoubtable folk-rock supergroup Whippersnapper with three fiddle maestros, Dave Swarbrick, Martin Jenkins and Chris Leslie, Kevin's career also includes: tours with Polly Bolton, Pentangle's Jacqui McShee, and celebrated Irish singer Mary Black; appearances with Los Bohemios de Santa Paula when he lived in California; performances across the US and Europe as well as visits to India and Nigeria; recordings with Julie Felix, Radhika Balakrishnan, and Kalinka Valcheva; and collaborations with leading folk fiddlers Tom Leary, Rosie Carson, and Joe Broughton.

The idea behind ‘Up Close & Acoustic' is to create a more informative and interactive experience of locally based folk music by revealing the events and encounters that have inspired and motivated the musician. The format is proving popular for audience and performers alike in the intimate setting of the Albany Theatre's Courtyard Studio.

Leamington musician and podcaster, Bill is very much looking forward to his 'interrogation' of Kevin - 'Any man who has worked alongside such iconic musicians is bound to have some brilliant tales to tell. He's seen by many as one of the best guitarists in the world and to top it all, he's also one of the nicest guys on the planet!'

The show begins 7.30pm and tickets are £14.50 or £10.50 concessions (including students and pensioners). You can book online (https://www.albanytheatre.co.uk/) or call the Box Office on 02476 998964. The event is expected to run until approximately 10pm.

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"Devil Drives" by The Folly Brothers

Out now is "Devil Drives", The follow-up to December's "Belly Full of Whiskey" by The Folly Brothers which finds them musing on behaviours & consequences in their inimitable style.

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KENFEST Calling - The Final @hmvempire Coventry

By way of an intro, KENFEST (www.kenfest.co.uk) is a festival that takes place May bank holiday each year. It's in its 5th year in 2026. It's a community driven event that raises funds for a number of local charities such as Myton Hospice and Warwickshire Hearts, as well as Kenilworth Rugby Club.

Each year the KENFEST team organise a "Kenfest Calling" - a number of live heats and judges choice focussing on local live singer/songwriters and bands. This year the quality of the entrants was amazing, making judging extremely hard. 

The event that this article features is the final for Kenfest Calling. There will be 5 entrants performing live at the HMV Empire in Coventry where the judges will whittle down to a winner who will earn a slot at the main KENFEST festival in May. 

Those performing will be Cat Mead, The Social, Relize, Kizzylimbs and Beebee Bassey

Tickets will be available on the door on the night

The more the merrier to support these fantastic performers - please attend if you can !

Videos are available on the KENFEST Facebook page from all the heats and the judges choice.

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Hot Music Live Presents Volume 16

Volume 16 (opens in BandCamp)

This collection is the sixteenth in a series celebrating the inspiring & diverse talent of Coventry & Warwickshire musicians of yesterday, today & tomorrow.

When you have enjoyed the music yourself, please do share the album with others to help promote & support the creativity of these innovative, authentic, dedicated & skilled musicians.

The previous volumes can all still be downloaded for free from: hotmusiclivepresents.bandcamp.com

You can find out what each artist is up to on their individual websites or by following "Hot Music Live Presents" & “Hot Music Live” magazine on social media:

Many thanks to all the generous & supportive musicians who have contributed their considerable talent to this project. The music scene of Coventry & Warwickshire has so many artists of vision, integrity & sense of community: hopefully this project can give a sense of some of this.

Credits:

Released February 1, 2026

Album compiled by Andy Holdcroft

Executive Producers Paul Englefield & Alan Moores of "Hot Music Live" magazine

Hot Music Live logo designed by Mel Skellon.

Hot Music Live Presents Volume Sixteen

© all rights reserved

1. Banoffee - "Ripening" 03:57 2. Reign the Girl Band - "She Stayed (Demo)" 05:47 3. Cat Mead - "Fantasise With Me" 03:02 4. HomeBread - "Smoke Rings (Live)" 05:24 5. Luna and the Moonhounds - "Desert Song" 05:43 6. Zaruna - "Cocoa Bango" 03:36 7. Nuke The Whales - "Aliens" 02:38 8. las vedas - "taylor" 05:31 9. Otto and the Dark - "Aviation" 05:21 10. Barnabas - "Snake Angel" 04:50 11. dogmarket - "mousebites" 09:45 12. Wallace & Vomit - "County Lines" 01:36

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'Hot Music Live Presents Volume Sixteen'

We are delighted to be able to announce ‘Hot Music Live Presents Volume Sixteen': a dozen more of the very finest original songs from Coventry & Warwickshire artists, demonstrating the great diversity of the local music scene and a standard of originality & quality which continues to grow. Long may that be so.

With this volume, we are delighted to share with you the following tracks:

"Ripening" by Banoffee

"She Stayed (Demo)" by Reign The Girl Band

"Fantasise With Me" by Cat Mead

"Smoke Rings (Live)" by HomeBread

"Desert Song" by Luna and the Moonhounds

"Cocoa Bango" by Zaruna

"Aliens" by  Nuke The Whales

"taylor"  by las vedas

"Aviation" by Otto and the Dark

"Snake Angel" by Barnabas

"mousebites" by dogmarket

"County Lines" by Wallace & Vomit

They can be downloaded for free via this link: https://hotmusiclivepresents.bandcamp.com/album/hot-music-live-presents-volume-sixteen

After  you have enjoyed the music yourself, please do share the albums with others to help promote & support the creativity of these innovative, authentic, dedicated & skilled musicians.

The album and all fifteen previous volumes can be downloaded  from:

https://hotmusiclivepresents.bandcamp.com

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"Roundabout"/"Crash" by Jackdaw With Crowbar

If you can have an elephant in the room type situation in terms of reviewing, then in my case it might be Jackdaw with Crowbar. I should have reviewed them (at least in terms of a release) long before but apart from some live reviews in the context of APE Promotions nights, I've not managed to reference them in the magazine. As for featuring them on a volume of ‘Hot Music Live Presents'.. well they've been on the list from the start. I live in hope.

It's perhaps made worse by the length of my awareness of them: an old school friend was in the original lineup so I can't claim to have stumbled upon them recently.

In my defence I can bring up the difficulty of communicating with them: I have tried but they are elusive online.

Now finally I get to write about their latest release, a double header of "Crash" and "Roundabout" which is out on TraceyG Records

The records were made by Tim  Ellis (the one ever present member), Adam Sindall, Charles "Aitch"  Bembridge (whom you'll also know from The Selecter) and Paulina Kalwarska (who also created the artwork). However a fair few others have been involved over the years, names who crop up in a wide variety of contexts including other ones we've covered.

That one of the lineup is a visual artist is important given the fact that in live performance, visuals & theatricality are so high profile: in fact one might make something of an argument that reviewing the music divorced from the full live show is selling the Jackdaw With Crowbar experience short: which is fair enough but I'm still happy to break my duck with this piece. Just imagine the performance in your head as you watch.

I'm not going to attempt to pigeonhole the music as that's neither respectful nor possible. A lot of writing about them quite rightly mentions the ideology and theory which underpins their approach and given all the circumstances, seeing them as an arty sort of band in inevitable. However you can't equate that with any sort of inaccessibility because that simply isn't the case. If anything Jackdaw With Crowbar are Fun. Just well thought out fun. The intertwining of the band and what they do with Leamington LAMP (whom we have mentioned whenever we can) tells the story eloquently of their engagement with community and embracing of diverse ways of seeing the world and processing it.

Of course even a great approach allied to the best playing won't remain potent over this long a period unless it is flexible & capable of evolution. Jackdaw With Crowbar have moved on from conventional instrumentation through self constructed equipment & electronic kit to achieve this: embracing change but thankfully without being tied to any given zeitgeist or becoming hostages to temporary fads.

The delightful bizarre "Roundabout" certainly uses a range of instruments and melds modern sensibilities with more retro ones: I hear 1970s synth sounds in there over a very glam rock stomp with a song which have resulted from the collision between a road safety campaign of the era & contemporary children's television.

"Crash" I suppose inhabits a related theme of the dangers of technology but opts for a more modern dance beat with added Eastern motifs whose significance I can't pretend to offer an explanation for. Which merely adds to the pleasure.

So here we are, my first review (and hopefully not the last) of a Jackdaw With Crowbar release and I can only offer sketchy descriptions, but that does at least cue me to send you off to investigate them for yourselves, which is what the purpose of this article should be.

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"Diamonds" by Katherine Abbott

The many fans of Katherine Abbott will be pleased to hear the latest good news from her.

It comes in multiple parts too. The first of which is that's she's working on her album and the others are that before that comes out  "I'll be releasing a few songs I've written and recorded over the past 5 years or so which need to be set free like tiny birds who've been cooped up too long in files on my phone."

The first of those is out now and it's called "Diamonds".

Also featuring on second guitar is Jonathan Fletcher who produced & engineered the track.

Given all the work Katherine has been putting into the WLDFLWRS project over the last few years and the time she spends on the road, it's hardly surprising that her own career hasn't seen these tracks emerge before (though it's worth noting that virtually every one of her songs of whose genesis I'm aware, has been inspired by her travels. She seems much happier composing (and indeed existing) on the move.)

What adds to the picture of the nomad is the way how she seems to drift serendipitously with the natural flow of the rhythms she's attuned to, without any restricting plan. This shapes the nature of her creativity and also how she shares her songs: one seldom gets much warning of their arrival: I described last year's "Pure" and "Carnage" as having "guerilla releases".

Equally this (despite having a producer) affects the production culture. In her own words "sometimes you have to say to hell with perfection and bells and whistles and carefully laid plans and just release the damn songs".

Beautiful crafted & honed as Katherine Abbott songs always are, she has never flirted with the dangers of over-production: indeed the fans alluded to at the start are drawn to her by the emotional truth & accessibility she offers them on record as much as in her intense & ethereal live performances.

However while the general emotional tenor of her songs may be readily accessed, the literal meanings are always much more elusive, and that thankfully is the case with "Diamonds".

Mood setting is one of her fortes but lyrically her pathways take oblique trajectories: you recognise all the words Katherine uses and each individual word picture makes sense, but put them all together and what is she getting at?

It's all terribly allusive (the lyrics would probably stand up well as a poem) and encompass aspects of relationships, notions of rigidity and fragility, and possibly incompatibility. Maybe one person in a relationship wants marriage while the other would be bored by the conventions and longs, like Katherine for the open road? On the other hand, the notion that to "find diamonds, you've got to go under the ground" is open to so many interpretations in just my mind that I'm not confident in going for a single one in this review.

So you can reflect on the meaning, you can enjoy the poetry of the words or you could simply enjoy what is possibly musically the most gorgeous Katherine Abbott single with its lush guitar play & her playful, almost poppy vocal. It actually sounds a lot of fun (you can certainly tap your foot to it: I speak from experience) though that might not fully reflect the lyrics. Certainly I feel it has the potential to attract a broader audience than much of her earlier work: which may or may not be what she wants I suppose.

From what Katherine tells us, "Diamonds" may not have necessarily seen the light of day, but I'm glad she's freed it from her phone as it's utterly delightful.

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"Fantasise With Me" by Cat Mead

It's always a joy to introduce a new artist to the community formed by those I've written about & today it's the turn of Cat Mead to whom I was introduced by Ellie Gowers and who supported her on the final date of her most recent national tour& in that context made her first appearance in the magazine.

Today with the release of her new single "Fantasise With Me", we get the further chance to consider her recorded work.

The first point I should like to make is in regard to its composition: when I spoke with her in December, it was clear that she intended to capture many of her original songs that I heard her play in the studio. However this one doesn't seem to have even been written at the time and she went straight into recording it: presumably bumping it right up the queue which says something about her own regard for it as well as the proliferation of new ideas in her mind.

It also speaks to the notion of immediacy: it's great when songs have such freshness as to from inspiration to release in such short order.

It's a bit playful too (which appeals to me) given that the title suggests something rather different to the actual lyrical content: in fact the prevailing emotion she was experiencing at the time it came to her was sadness & I defy anyone to have guessed that accurately from just seeing its name.

One big (and growing) problem for songwriters operating in 2026 is that not only have most themes already been touched on by previous writers but in many cases the associated vocabularies have been reduced to cliches through over use.

To be honest, this results in my occasionally sighing over material I hear & the phenomenon ends up acting as a filter: what I end up writing about for you has to pass my personal cliché test. The rest I consign to a depository of homogenous & derivative content. Which then thankfully passes quickly from my memory.

Here, Cat passes the test with flying colours. Rather than delving into tired tropes, she finds her own path through a conundrum ("about longing for a feeling or a person") by considering & rejecting fantasy solutions and that helps generate fresh articulations. It also helps her voice a rejection of time wasters while she is at it.

Sad she may have been when inspiration started, but I think the song must have operated cathartically for her given the evidence of her words.

In terms of the music, I was intrigued as to what Cat would go for in terms of arrangement given that I'd only seen her play solo with her guitar. To my delight, she has kept things real by continuing with the formula which attracted me in the first place, but very subtly accentuated from time to time to emphasise dynamics: the song is pretty intense & so needs peaks from time to time. Otherwise, Cat has interposed no veil between herself & us.

So if the song itself turns out not to be quite the invitation it's name teased, then it does welcome us nonetheless into the world of Cat Mead & that's most welcome.

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"Ripening" by Banoffee

You probably could tell by the enthusiasm on display in my live reviews how I was eager to write about the next Banoffee release and with  "Ripening" coming out this morning, I get to do just that.

Many reviewers will be using the word "sublime" about Banoffee and it's so clearly accurate that I must join them and get it into the article from the start: I truly can't write about the song without using it.

It's been a while arriving  & therefore restraining myself has been necessary. I'm sure the timing relates to practical issues (the band members are also studying currently) but with music this good, building a sense of anticipation can add to impact on release: this is a rare quality of single & worth waiting for.

The song itself is a highlight of their remarkable live shows so no Banoffee fan can be unaware of it & like me presumably yearning to have a copy to keep. They too are probably aware of another already recorded song of theirs with a similar level of sublimity just waiting its turn for the limelight. As noted in my last review of a live show (Izzie Derry's Christmas Show) at which they played, a key indicator for me has been the number of local musicians (especially those we rate ourselves) who are admirers: like everyone else, captivated in an instant.

The joys of Banoffee include their understanding, the emotional frisson and they embrace too a series of dualities. The most glaring one, which admittedly has cropped up in previous articles but it's simply too true and too central to their musical identity not to reiterate, is how the songs seduce you into a comfortable familiarity which suggests they you've known the melody all your life and that its simple: then you watch the fingers and realise the complexity and realise that this is all their own imagination at work . Making this work so apparently effortlessly is some art isn't it?

The studio version is absolutely true to the live renditions: they've worked hard to capture the feeling as well as the essence of the song, which can't be easy with material this intimate. It really does draw you into itself just as well in your own space as in the live venue. Credit to producer Tom Gittins  of Monochrome Productions for his art in helping them to achieve this.

The other aspect of the simple/not-so-simple dynamic is the songs' meaning. In this respect "Ripening" might be their zenith to date. "Maturity" is a relative term insofar as it relates to insights and with this song one might question whether Ella & Cia possess sensitivities more mature than other individuals who may have walked this earth for longer. It's a remarkable reflection on growth & finding one's milestones: novels have tried to cover this amount of ground in thousands more words. A poetic musing pivoting round the concept of seasonal growth.

I'm most pleased to report that you can enjoy Banoffee live on March 20th at The Tin, headlining  our ‘Hot Music Live Presents' fundraiser for that venue alongside The Illusion and DANE-O plus one more act whom we'll be revealing soon.

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

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"By Your Side" by Reiss Pinder

It's been a while since I wrote about a Reiss Pinder solo release: it's been four years since "California" (you can find it on ‘Hot Music Live Presents Volume Seven' too) but in that time he's been written about plenty of times in the context of several bands, most notably & most recently the mighty HEK.

However he's found time to treat us to "By Your Side" which comes out on January 30th via our local Love + Madness label, run by Pandora Craig & Sam McNulty and which has also put out tracks by artists including Jack Blackman and Dean MacDonald whom we cover regularly.

Awesome as the sound of HEK in full flight is, inevitably with a writer with Reiss' range, there will be songs he rightly feels require a different, more intimate setting to convey their essence. This then is one such.

You'd find it hard to name a band tighter than HEK and this helps magnify their power & increase their impact. Some songs however cry out for looser treatment which is what is gloriously applied with "By Your Side". Reiss seems to revel in being allowed to roam freely, leashless. That he spoke of his love (among other artists) of Bob Dylan in an interview on HillzFM this morning is interesting makes sense in this context. So many of his classics, though the lyrics were carefully pre-thought out, sound like the arrangement was arrived at via a process of jamming: in fact the re-releases in the "Bootleg" series show this to be the case. Here, it was illuminating to hear Reiss speak of the song emanating from an interesting opening chord: presumably he just went from there & it works.

He also puts his lyric writing down to something nearer perhaps to intuition than cold calculation (I think he's being too modest though in calling it  "more or less a ramble"). I'm sure careless & random spouting of words produces some terrible songs but in the head of a writer as good as Reiss, letting instinct have its head can produce something closer to poetry than prose. 

What of course shines through is his honesty & authenticity: he might not fully understand what he's created (and that's actually a good thing for an artist I think) nor how he got there, but what he sings, he truly believes in and is committed to. The passion is palpable. He is certainly amongst the best songwriters creating locally and maybe having this song out under his own name will help to shine a light more clearly on this & get him his due.

As you all know, I am an admirer of HEK and have high hopes for them: working on achieving their deserved success will take much of his time & what amount that leaves for his solo work is unclear, but I hope he can manage both releases & gigs in both formats as I think each deserves its complementary public attention.

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