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Album Review

This second album from Rachel Unthank & the Winterset, following the group's highly praised debut, is a record that demands several plays to understand. It starts off in uncompromising fashion, as the first verse of "Felton Lonnin" is in Northumbrian dialect so deep as to be virtually incomprehensible to an outsider (and Unthank's wavering vocal isn't exactly embracing). But the song opens up, and it sets the tone well for the rest of the disc. It's very much a folk record — most of the songs are traditional — but it takes chances. "Blue's Gaen Oot o'the Fashion" is a patchwork of snippets taken from several different songs, while "Lull III: A Minor Place" simply uses the chorus from Bonnie Prince Billy's song of the same name. There are some contemporary folk songs, one from bandmember Belinda O'Hooley, but the most ambitious track has to be a cover of Robert Wyatt's "Sea Song." Always a very personal piece, it's one that doesn't lend itself easily to interpretation, especially by an acoustic group, but Becky Unthank does an excellent job on the vocal, while the arrangement, neatly subdued, is sympathetic and true to the feel of the original. It's rare to hear a folk group where piano stands as the central instrument (the fiddle often feels like it's there in a supporting role), but they make it work, and when the sisters harmonize in their singing, it can be quite sublime. Time will shake off the hype that's attended them over the last couple of years, but this is a band with real spark and invention.

Customer Reviews

Much better live than on CD

Bought the CD and have seen them live (Oysterbands Big Session) which I much preferred. Sad to say they may be quirky and the darlings of the folk circuit at the moment but there are so many other artistes from the North East of England who can sing and play better. That said, I really enjoyed Farewell Regality, a superb song and nicely done. If you like the tunes but aren't fond of the adenoidal and occasionally flat tones then try Bob Fox (and Stu Luckley), Billy Mitchell, Jez Lowe, 422, Benny Graham, Kathryn Tickell (and many, many more).

Super!

Stumbled across this on iTunes and I'm so glad I did. Georgie folk music like this doesn't get as much exposure as the better known Celtic variety but it's well worth a listen if you like the latter. Blackbird is one of those songs that is by turns melancholy and sweetly uplifiting. The rest of the songs follow more or less in this vain and all are well crafted with both fiddle and piano accompaniment. Well worth a listen!

Not your normal folk....

I chanced upon a review of this in the Grauniad where the reveiwer played this to Robert Wyatt whose Sea Song is one of three more recent covers on this impressive album that manages to be stirringly traditional yet very very modern. They marvelled at 'Fleton Lonnin', sung in broad Geordie, accompanied by jazz influenced piano, Kornos Quartet style strings and Rachel Unthank keeping the beat with her foot tapping away on a wooden floor, it is quite simply one of the most moving pieces of music I have heard this year. I am not a big fan of folk, I like some stuff but most of it seems to take itself so seriously yet this manages to be far more accessible and interesting. Underpinning all of the songs are the incredible harmonies and their voices, which ring out in a classically English way, not Irish, not Scotts. The songs have a strong regional focus and somehow reflect the Geordie sensibilities, strong people, tough times, strong sense of community and of course a cracking sense of humour. Anyway, buy this. This is the kind of stunningly new stuff that comes out of nowhere to take people by storm, they could be this year's Joanna Newsom.

Biography

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '00s

Steeped in the musical heritage and folklore so abundant in the northeast of England, Rachel Unthank and her younger sister Becky found a fresh way of presenting the songs, stories, and customs of their home area around Ryton, Newcastle, to a young new audience. Oddly given their rich traditional credentials and proud determination to show off the pure roots of their music, they quickly gained acceptance and acclaim beyond the established folk scene, yet were initially regarded with suspicion by...
Full bio
The Bairns, Rachel Unthank
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