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PLEASE NOTE:

As of January 2025 Our opening time will change
Doors will open at 7:00 pm and music will start at 7:30 pm
Guest at 8:00 pm and finish at 10:00 pm

(Unless otherwise stated entrance = (£6 Members / £7 Non-Members)
Ticket Prices - £9 - £10 for members (Apologies but we can only except cash (Sterling))

Membership prices

Single: £5.00 / Year
Couple / Family: £8.00 / Year

PLEASE NOTE:- Doors Open at 7:00 Music starts at 7:30

And Booked so far for 2025

 

 

Future Guests include

14th May

Dan Walsh
(£11 / £12)

BBC Folk Awards Best Musician nominee Dan Walsh combines ‘virtuoso playing and winning songwriting’ (MORNING STAR). Describing what Dan does is no easy task but at the heart of it is British, Irish and American folk music delivered with a healthy dose of funky grooves – all performed with his unique and dazzling take on clawhammer style banjo helping to challenge all preconceptions about the instrument. Add to all that poignant songs, astonishing musical departures and lively humour and the result is a truly memorable live show which has wowed audiences across the world from intimate seated rooms to huge dancing crowds in festival fields.

Walsh has recorded seven solo albums to much critical acclaim. Most recently he returned to his first love and recorded ‘O’Neill’s Tunes’ – a collection of traditional Irish tunes played in his unique take on clawhammer style which was described as ‘expertly played’ and ‘difficult to find any fault with’ by Songlines magazine as well as receiving airplay on BBC Radio 2. He is an in demand performer with a hectic touring schedule in the UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India and throughout Europe. He has also released two banjo tablature books including a very successful book of clawhammer arrangements of Irish folk tunes which inspired the O’Neill’s album.

Session work

Dan is also an in demand session musician and has recently worked with Universal Studios for an upcoming film soundtrack. Dan is also an in demand session musician with recent guest appearances, on stage or in the studio, with the likes of Ward Thomas, Imelda May, Joss Stone, Seth Lakeman, the Levellers, Duane Eddy, Martin Simpson and even the City of London Sinfonia. He has recently added a home studio setup so is busier than ever. Other previous work has included tours with sensational Indian sarangi player Suhail Yusuf Khan and Canadian country singer Meaghan Blanchard. 

Teaching/Outreach
He is also greatly in demand as a teacher and teaches banjo both in person and over Skype/Zoom and is the only international banjoist to be invited to teach at the Midwest Banjo Camp in the USA. He also teaches at Newcastle and Sheffield universities. Dan also retains a passion for outreach work and has performed throughout the UK in hospices, hospitals, special needs schools and care homes.

21st May

Jez Lowe
(£12 / £13)

A double nomination in the 2015 BBC Folk Awards – for best singer and best new song – was a timely reminder of Jez Lowe’s standing in the UK folk and acoustic music scene. Not only he is one of the busiest live performers in the country, but his songs are among the most widely sung by other performers, whether by long-established acts like Fairport Convention, The Dubliners and Bob Fox, or by the new breed of stars like The Unthanks, The Young Uns, Megson and The Duhks.

Jez’s own long-established band The Bad Pennies (featuring Kate Bramley, Andy May and David De La Haye) continue to attract a huge following, and his other collaborations with The Pitmen Poets (with Billy Mitchell, Bob Fox and Benny Graham), The Broonzies (alongside fellow-veterans Maggie Holland, Chris Parkinson and Roger Wilson), Men at Words (with James Keelaghan and Archie Fisher) and with fellow-songwriter Steve Tilston, show a willingness to push boundaries and venture boldly into pastures new.

Meanwhile, his involvement in the award-winning BBC series The Radio Ballads continues, with his song The Wrong Bus singled out for inclusion on Radio 4’s Pick of the Year in 2018, and five more of his contributions included in the BBC Radio broadcast featuring the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra in November 2019. Many of these songs also featured on his 2016 solo album, The Ballad Beyond, the success of which prompted a feature in fRoots magazine and glowing reviews the world over.

Jez’s ongoing partnership with fellow-singer/songwriter Steve Tilston reached fruition in 2016, with the release of a duo album, The Janus Game, consisting entirely of new, co-written songs by the duo. 
Another long-term partnership, with Canadian singer-songwriter James Keelaghan, will bring the two men together again in 2024 for a tour across Canada in March. Their joint-album “Live In Australia”, recorded at a concert in Fremantle, was released in 2017.

Jez’s role as musical director for Badapple Theatre is also an ongoing concern, and he will be contributing songs and music to their next production, due in Spring 2021.

The publication of Jez’s first novel, “The Dillen Doll”, in 2017, with an accompanying CD featuring a “suite” of traditional songs inspired by the story within it, was met with widespread acclaim. This project sees him return to his roots in the folk music of his native North East England. His second novel, entitled “The Corly Croons”, was published in October 2019, and is a “continuation” of the first, rather than a follow-up, and introduces readers to a new hero, Evan Piper, “the stranger from the South”. In 2022, Jez’s third novel “Piper’s Lonnen has been published, featuring more of Evan Piper’s adventures, this time with Northumbrian songs and tunes serving as the backdrop to the plot. A five-track CD featuring Jez and long-time Bad Pennies piper Andy May, has been released to coincide with the publication of the new book, including several new songs and two instrumental tracks.

A special anniversary was celebrated at the beginning of 2020, when Fellside Records released a five CD set of Jez’ solo albums, forty years since the release of his debut LP in 1980. “The Jez Lowe Fellside Collection” contains every track that Jez ever recorded for the label, up to 1993, and also includes extensive liner notes by producer Paul Adams.

Jez shows no sign of slowing down – following a solo American tour last September, the “Farewell” tour by The Pitmen Poets, last October, the year ended with The Bad Pennies joining him for their annual Christmas tour. Lined up for 2020 was a tour of Canada with James Keelaghan, followed by summer Canadian festival appearances for the duo, and another US solo trip, plus an enviable list of UK solo dates and a UK tour with Steve Tilston. It seems for the moment that most of these will have to be postponed.

However, a new solo album, “Crazy Pagan”, his first for six years, and recorded during the lockdown of 2020, has just been released. Twelve new songs, with Jez playing all the instruments and doing all the vocal work, this new CD is a solo album in every sense. The new album is a tantalising, not to say hopeful glimpse towards the future, when once again, Jez Lowe will be coming to a venue near you.

4th June

Steve & Julie Wigley
(£9 / £10)

Julie Wigley is a prolific songwriter from Derby. Steve and Julie have recorded ten albums of her songs and they regularly perform at Folk Clubs around the country.

Julie’s songs always have a story to tell, whether it be of their Derbyshire home or songs of the sea and air, or drawn from their love of history and its characters.

They have performed at Derby Folk Festival, Moira Furnace Festival, The Isle of Wight Sea Songs Festival, Lincolnshire Day of Folk and numerous folk clubs around the country.

Steve & Julie are also members of acapella trio Stonesthrow,

18th June

James Keelaghan + 1
(£12 / £13)

Since 2011, I’ve been the Artistic Director of the Summerfolk Music and Crafts Festival in Owen Sound, Ontario. and since 2018 I’ve been the AD at the Stewart Park Festival in Perth. The job has given me a new passion for programming. I have to book the artists and program  6 daytime and two nighttime stages. The walls of my office end up looking like this:

I was born in Calgary but have lived in Toronto, Winnipeg and now, a charming little town called Perth in Eastern Ontario. I’m trying to say at home more these days, as I have a couple of boys at home, aged 16 and 12. I want to spend as much time with them before they fly the coop.

If you know my music, you know that I love history. I studied at the University of Calgary, though I never actually completed my degree. I concentrated on the history of science, under the tutelage of the dear, departed Dr. Margaret Osler and was influenced and inspired by Dr. Shel Silverman – one of the great storytellers of our time.

While I read a lot of history on many different topics, my areas of specialty remain science and World War One, especially the Battle of the Frontiers, 1st Marne and Verdun.

I prefer Irish to Scotch but never developed the drinking gene, so I am good for about 1 shot if I ever have the urge.

I am omnivorous. My favourite meal is breakfast. Followed by lunch and then dinner.

I’m more comfortable on the plains than in the mountains.

I once met Harry Belafonte in an elevator in Saskatoon.

I am a fellow of the Royal Canadian Geographic Society. I was added to the college in the same year as Margaret Atwood and had the pleasure of singing her a song on her birthday at the annual Fellows dinner.


2nd July

Terry Lees/ Natasha Norodien

Terry Lees is a world-class acoustic guitarist winning guitarist of the year in 2000 and described as an ‘Absolute guitar virtuoso’, BBC radio. Natasha Norodien is a folk singer, guitarist, and flautist with a ‘Staggering good voice’, Broadstairs Folk Festival. As a duo, they perform their own arrangements of traditional songs and tunes combing guitars, flute, and penny whistle with some wonderful harmonies.

9th July

Lynne Heraud/
Pat Turner

Individually, and in combination with a variety of well-known singers and bands, Lynne Heraud and Pat Turner have both served long apprenticeships on the shop-floor of folk music.  

Lynne sang in a duo with Sue Ashby; performed with John Lambert and Frank Lee as Tom, Dick and Harriet; and has made a CD, 'Stars in My Crown' with Keith Kendrick.  She was, for many years, the organiser and MC for the Hoddesdon Folk Club.

Pat toured for six years with the folk band Filigree, making an album and also releasing a single! She was co-founder and MC of the City Folk Club in London.

Together they later joined Pete Cunningham (ex-English Tapestry and Heritage) to form Brandis, making several radio appearances. They finally settled into a permanent duo and made their first CD, 'Parallel', in 2003, and have since made five more on the Wildgoose label.

Between them they play guitar, recorder, English concertina and a variety of whistles (including swanee, policeman's and referee's), list a spoons workshop in their hall of fame, and are not in the least averse to dressing up or dancing when a song requires it.  They both agree, however, that their voices are their most important instruments. Their resulting style is a unique blend of stunning song and harmony, and a humour which takes their audience on a roller-coaster ride - "everything from high tragedy to ingenious smut in glorious vocal harmony!"

In addition to appearing at  folk clubs and festivals, Lynne and Pat also organise and perform themed shows and workshops,  music hall evenings (awash with sauce and innuendo), and a special show called 'A Birds' Eye View', which presents songs particularly from a woman's perspective (but which men are invited to attend as well — and learn from!) Audiences need to be robust as their humour has been known to cause side-splitting injuries. They both, however, include emergency first aid amongst their many qualifications.

23 July

The Lost Notes  

 

10th September

Stan Graham

 

1st October

Edwina Hayes

 

15th October

Jack Rutter

 

3rd December

John Kirkpatrick
Price TBC

 

All Wednesdays
without guests.

Singers Nights.
Admission £2 for everyone.

Bring your instruments, poems, stories and particularly your favourite songs and join in - or just listen or sing the choruses.