There’s something rather perverse about a London folk club putting on a tour of countryside village halls, and you’d think that if there were to be a natural exchange of folk music between rural and urban environments, it probably wouldn’t flow in that direction. At tonight’s show in the delightful bunting-decked Wytham Village Hall (seating sixty at a push) there is a slight feel of the Londoners coming down from the mountain and it’s a more elaborate performance than seems appropriate for such a low-key environment, where perhaps a more relaxed session would be the ideal. Though when The Lantern Players are playing they guest on-stage for each other’s sets, all of which almost adds up to a strange display of formal informality, particularly when one musician’s backstage practicing is audible from the stage. Nevertheless, it’s a relaxed evening in a delightful environment and adds up to a show well worth making the effort out of town for.
The Lantern Players – Pepe Belmonte, Benjamin Folke Thomas and Jack Day – seem to be the in-house regulars of The Lantern Society, and each play a solo set which concludes with a sing-and-play-along from all three. Since the closing songs are the best in each set it would probably have made for a better gig if the three had played together from the outset, taking it in turns to play their solos and backing each other up, instead of spreading it all out to a six-band bill. Of the three, Pepe Belmonte is probably the strongest, playing and singing blues in a Bert Jansch style with unobtrusive harmonica complementing a gentle voice. Jack Day has a striking blues-gospel sound with the gravelly voice of a grizzled gold prospector which nevertheless doesn’t feel out of place with the rolling freight-train blues style, and which lends him a Cat Stevens air in his slower songs. Benjamin Folke Thomas’s reach slightly exceeds his grasp, with his aggressive guitar finger-picking not offsetting particularly well his muffled Swedish-accented baritone, which is better suited to the slower, delicate songs where it has a weary sophistication redolent of Kris Kristofferson.
Of the two local supports the first, Half Moon regulars Alice Little and Danny Chapman as The Selenites, are by far the better act. Tonight they are a viola and concertina duo, and they give a strong performance of traditional folk tunes and songs in a reserved chamber style. The music is good, but the formality of the performance and the precision of the playing tends to make things a bit dry, and Little’s reticent voice, which makes her seem like a shy Edwardian spinster forced to do a turn at harvest festival, can suck some of the presence from thoughtful arrangements. It’s admirable, but occasionally somewhat lifeless.
It would be kind to say as little about the second local support act – Goldrush’s Robin Bennett as Dusty – as possible, as it was a truly awful performance of sub-Dylan clumsy guitar strumming, adenoidal busking and woefully clunky songwriting. The blues-style harmonica is often evocative of the freight train’s whistle, but in Dusty’s mouth it reminds us more of having got on the stopping service from Paddington by some horrible mistake; “42 Days” is a lamentable political ballad, but it makes us feel as if our train has been delayed by that long outside Reading. His last piece was apparently written for a “computer game about the environment”, but it would be more suited to Advanced Waiting Room Simulator or Catatonic The Hedgehog, such is its leaden dirge. Grand theft evening.
As can often be the case with bands who book their own supports, the top billing is head and shoulders above the rest. At the start of their set it’s difficult to tell which of Trevor Moss and Hannah-Lou is singing which parts as their voices blend beautifully in the high alto register, with Moss’s voice standing out with a clear reedy tone, complementing Hannah-Lou’s softer timbre. It’s clear they’ve been singing together for a long time, and the guitar playing from both of them is restrained and almost transparent to foreground the voices. For folk promoters, it’s perhaps surprising that they aren’t playing traditional songs, but they are playing songs written to traditional themes, and the whole feels very English, evidenced by the facts that “Deptford Market” is about timeless London locales, and that Moss looks like an extra from Oliver! They’re clearly the standout act, though with tired ears it’s not inspiring us enough to want to take their music home. The night was good honest entertainment, but it was a pleasant, quiet night out rather than a musical epiphany…which is perhaps what acoustic nights in Wytham Village Hall ought to be.
Trevor Moss and Hannah-Lou Myspace