The first confirmed gig date for 2009 is for 22 May at Shrewsbury’s new Theatre Severn. This will be a rare fully-seated performance at this relatively small (600+ capacity) venue, which is due to open in March next year. The set up would seem to confirm rumours that the 2009 ’spring tour’ may consist of just five or so seated performances at smaller venues around April/May.

Tickets are £16 and are available direct from the Theatre at www.theatresevern.co.uk. You can even choose your exact seats using their nifty interactive seating plan.

Seth has been nominated for Best Live Act at the 2009 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.

Seth will be up against against stiff competition from long-standing Folk Awards favourite, "folk big band" Bellowhead, last year’s Best Group winners, Lau, and the Demon Barbers. Bellowhead have won the Best Live Act award no less than three times in the last four years (in 2005, 2007 and 2008), and were named Best Group in 2007. Three-piece Lau won Best Group in 2008, and were also nominated for Best Live Act.

The fabulous Demon Barbers are the outsiders. Not previously either a winner or nominee in the awards (although founder, Damien Barber, was a finalist in the Radio 2 Young Tradition Awards on multiple occasions during his mis-spent youth), they arguably deserve the nod more than anyone, not least for the improbable achievement of making morris dancing sexy. No. Seriously.

Introducing the Demon Barbers (video)


(Desperate attempt at Seth Lakeman connection = former Lakeman percussionist, Cormac Byrne, at around the 4m 30s mark) More Demon Barbers on MySpace »

There are no nominations for Poor Man’s Heaven, either for Best Album, or Best Original or Best Traditional Track. Seth won Folk Singer of the Year and Best Album at the 2007 awards for his previous album, Freedom Fields. He was also nominated for Best Live Act and (controversially) Best Traditional Track.

Nominations are decided by a free vote among the Folk Awards panel of around 170 broadcasters, folk journalists, festival organisers, agents, and promoters, all working within the folk genre on a regular basis. The same panel then vote again to select a winner from the four nominees in each category. The winners will be announced at the award ceremony in London on Monday 2 February 2009.

See also:
Seth Lakeman Autum Tour 2008 update (pt I)
Seth Lakeman Autumn Tour Dates


Photo by Alan Cole
More of Alan’s photos from Bristol 2008 »

Stand-in Drummer Simon Lea

Simon Lea continues to stand in for regular percussionist, Andy Tween, who has injured his wrist. Andy made a short-lived return for his home gig in Bristol (29 Oct), as well as for Bournemouth and Cheltenham (12/13 Nov) at which he hoped he was back for the rest of the tour, but Simon has covered drumming duties since.

Gig reviews

Shades of Caruso awards Seth the Emphatically Non-Hipster Non-Douchebag Recommendation Of The Week in a well-written review of the Shepherd’s Bush Empire gig, plus a quick run-down and of Seth’s career to-date including videos clips

Over on A Million Miles from Here A Night in the Church of the Black T-Shirt » is a detailed gig write-up of the same London gig, plus videos of popular support act Baskery, and live performances of Haunt You (shot at SBE) and Kitty Jay (not)

In The Times (10 Nov 2008) David Sinclair writes “Lakeman put on a show that would have been as acceptable at the Reading Festival as it would at the Cambridge Folk Festival … As the lights darkened and an ominous peal of thunder rumbled from the PA, it was more like the beginning of the first Black Sabbath album… Yet the 31-year-old singer was armed with nothing more threatening than an acoustic guitar”. Poor Man’s Heaven represents a more mainstream direction for this reviewer, and Lakeman “clearly has his eyes on bigger prizes… but it was still the old numbers that elicited the most raucous response, notably Blood upon Copper and Kitty Jay, both of which featured Lakeman in trad fiddler mode and brought out the best in his playing. ”

“It’s not that Seth’s music is bad” Rob Garrett dissents in his review for the Norwich Evening News (5 Nov 2008) “it’s just a bit dull, and it isn’t folk.” Although he goes on to praise Seth’s “strong, evocative voice” he nonetheless finds “the whole thing all falls flat on its face a little”.

Emma Hardwick, on the other hand, is keen to assure readers of the Leicester Mercury (12 Nov 2008) that “If you’re off to a Seth Lakeman gig you can rest assured he will put everything into the evening and you can leave with a smile on your face … The sheer energy of his set, where he sings, plays frenetic fiddle and a drum at the same time is infectious.” Although Kitty Jay is the “sure-fire crowd pleaser … the rest of the set didn’t disappoint”

The tour continues to 18 November

I don’t normally blog about other people’s blogs on here, but this is both an amusing review of Seth’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire gig (at which there were allegedly “exactly zero hipster douchebags”) and good general intro to Seth’s career post Mercury Prize nomination from back in the days when, the writer says, “I must still have been thinking that the award was still relevant and inspiring … because I watched the preview show, which featured Lakeman. I was blown away by his musicianship and haunting, resonant songs, many of which were arrangements of traditional English airs.”

Arguably all the better for not being an uncritical fanboy/girl, and definitely recommended if your love for “Handsome Seth Lakeman” is still in its infancy, or you’ve accidentally arrived here looking for something else and are now intrigued.

Shades of Caruso: Emphatically Non-Hipster Non-Douchebag Recommendation Of The Week: Seth Lakeman »

New official photos, Oct 08

November 1, 2008


The players (ltr, bottom pic): Sean Lakeman (producer, guitar), Seth Lakeman, Andy Tween (percussion), Ben Nicholls (double-bass).
From the official website »