Tradicals
Jill Stone  |  by www.sundayherald.com. All rights reserved. 4.03 | 21:29
Tradicals

Foxface are Michael Angus (vocals, guitar, lyrics) from Carnoustie, Jenny Bell (vocals, bass) from Islay and John Ferguson (drums, accordion, banjo, mandolin, comedy) from "Greater Oban". They cite their various influences as folklore, ferries, whisky, love, Kate Bush, American indie rock, childhood ceilidhs, Pablo Neruda, Paul Auster and the graphic novels of Alan Moore, which makes them an interesting band, which is exactly what they want to be.
Their debut album This Is What Makes Us will be released in the summer, but in the meantime you can hear them on Ballads Of The Book, the forthcoming album in which Scottish writers and musicians collaborate on songs.

Foxface and the poet Rody Gorman have contributed Dreamcatcher, a ferocious Anglo-Gaelic romp that Angus describes as "three-chord teuchter pop"; Bell and Ferguson both sang in the Gaelic choir at their schools. "Somebody told me that Foxface had been played on Radio nan Gaidheal," she says. "That was a proud moment because that was always on in our house when I was little.

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Written during a journey by horse-drawn wagon from London to Skye, Vashti Bunyan's first album Just Another Diamond Day was released in 1970 to mass indifference. Feeling a failure, she stopped making music, raised a family, and barely sang a note for more than 30 years. Yet as the decades passed, her unloved debut became regarded as a lost masterpiece, and Bunyan inspired a new generation of artists, notably Devendra Banhart.

In 2005, she finally released her great second album, Lookaftering. Now in her early 60s and based in Edinburgh, Bunyan has just completed a series of shows in Japan, Australia and America, including an all-star "experimental folk" night at Carnegie Hall, organised by David Byrne.
Thanks to the presence on Diamond Day of members of Fairport Convention and the Incredible String Band, and a certain archaic and pastoral quality in the songs, Bunyan has always been thought of as a folk singer, although she has never considered herself as such.


Read more on by www.sundayherald.com. All rights reserved.
Keywords: String Band, John Mccusker, Julie Fowlis, Michael Angus, Kris Drever, Diamond Day, Roddy Woomble, Eddi Reader, Lucky Luke, Incredible String Band
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