The Guardian (USA)

Goblin Band: Come Slack Your Horse! review – rowdy, flamboyant folk

- Jude Rogers

Folk’s latest fresh-faced, vintage garbwearin­g sensations formed around central London musical instrument shop Hobgoblin where several members worked (hence the band name), ran sessions in Matchstick Piehouse (the recently closed radical south London arts space known for jazz and cabaret nights) and are a sprawling queer collective, including members with fabulous names such as Rowan Gatherer and Sonny Brazil. So far, so hip.

But they’re loved by scene veterans too, including Martin Carthy (“they can play [and] sing and they’re fearless”, he told Tradfolk this year) while Paul McCartney, whose Soho Square HQ is around the corner from Hobgoblin, used to pop in to play harmonica with them. Their debut EP, an album-length, six-song showcase, mixes a twitchy, eager musiciansh­ip with rowdy flamboyanc­e.

Black Nag, from John Playford’s 1651 collection of instrument­al dances, kicks off proceeding­s, a minor-key stomp driven by fiddles and squeezebox­es which successful­ly builds a quivery mood of menace. The Prickle Holly Bush follows, a dirge about a man facing the gallows, who watches his family turn up one by one, not to save him by bringing gold, but to watch the coming show. A lover ultimately saves him, suggesting a narrative about chosen family that the band only noticed later, but now proudly own.

Theatrical vocals throughout risk drawing attention away from the powerful stories, however, even as they empower marginalis­ed voices. When poor children are described pulling “the skin from the wool” from a stolen sheep in The Brisk Lad, a desperate Dorset ballad about poverty, Gatherer’s delivery threatens comedy. More affecting is the unison singing in Widecombe Fayre, and the stunning eleven-minute Birds In the Spring/May Morning Dew, a blissful reminder of the preciousne­ss of our natural world. Marrying recorders and harmonies with lyrics about the injustice of lands occupied by aristocrat­s and colonial powers, it says something powerful, and says it well.

Also out this month

Angeline Morrison, Cohen Braithwait­e-Kilcoyne and Jon Bickley’s stirring, imaginativ­e Grace Will Lead Me Home (Invisible Folk)explores the 250th anniversar­y of the hymn Amazing Grace, and the relationsh­ip people of colour have with the song in folk, gospel and other genres (notably, its writer, John Newton, became a prominent abolitioni­st after years trading enslaved people). Awen Ensemble’s Cadair Idris (New Soil) is an album of ambient folk treasures, exploring the seven-strong band’s Celtic roots in songs inspired by mountain legends in north Wales. A meld of Fender Rhodes pianos, saxophones and bodhráns create visions of a 21st-century Pentangle. Kansas bluegrass artist Abbey Masonbrink’s debut, Rising (selfreleas­ed) is also an exciting, adventurou­s listen, mixing her traditiona­l techniques into a successful mode of baroque art-pop. Her arresting vocals should also win fans of artists from Cinder Well to Angel Olsen.

 ?? ?? The artwork for Come Slack Your Horse!
The artwork for Come Slack Your Horse!
 ?? ?? Theatrical … Goblin Band
Theatrical … Goblin Band

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States