Saturday, 15 June 2019

Ginger Feather playlist 16 June

Through the wonders of technology you can listen to tomorrow's show today or on other day that takes your fancy. Time, as they say, is an illusion. 

https://www.mixcloud.com/cmbertram/off-the-beaten-tracks-16-june-2019/

Steve Knightley - Raining Again
Richard Thompson - Tempted
Le Vent du Nord - Le Rosier
Annlaug - Suril Luril
Chamberlain & Haywood - Hungarian Dance No 2 in D Minor
Bryony Holden - Gypsy Davey
Daimh - Harris Dance
Richard Thompson - Walking The Long Miles Home
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain - Dancing Barefoot
Damien O'Kane & Ron Block - Phoebe's / The Banjo Strikes Back
Equation - Wild Card
Pentangle - Sally Go Round The Roses
Ralph McTell - Anji & Lullaby of Birdland
Paddy Garrigan & The Stroller Priests - What You Want And What You Get

Or wait until Sunday at 6pm and goto http://gingerfeatherfm.listen2myshow.com/

Sunday, 9 June 2019

Ginger Feather playlist 9 June

Here's tonight's playlist on http://gingerfeatherfm.listen2myshow.com/

Neil Young - Old Man
The Stray Birds - The Bridge
Anna Laube - Chocolate Chip Banana Cupcakes
Kris Drever - Shipwrecked
Fairport Convention - Sir Patrick Spens
Swarb's Lazarus - Grey Funnel Line
Kate Rusby - Underneath the Stars
Elaine Palmer - Blackened Heart
Ray Cooper - Drunk on Summer
Neil Young (with CSN) - Through My Sails
The Stray Birds - Long Table
Bob Dylan - Mr Tambourine Man
Joni Mitchell - I Don't Know Where I Stand
Graham MacKenzie - Cape Breton Set


Sunday, 2 June 2019

Ginger Feather playlist 2 June

Here's tonight's playlist. Ginger Feather FM is now on Twitter. Follow us at @FmGinger

Steeleye Span - All Around My Hat
Turnstone - Copper Canyon
Luke Jackson - Fumes and Faith
The Proclaimers - King of the Road
Rita Hosking - Sierra Bound
Dolly Parton - Seven Bridges Road
Rose's Pawn Shop - Pine Box
Martha Wainwright - When The Day Is Short
Reg Meuross - My Name is London Town
Dick Gaughan - Now Westlin Winds
Clype - Down With May
The Proclaimers - Hate My Love
The Imagined Village - Cum On Feel The Noize
Afro Celt Sound System - Amber

http://gingerfeatherfm.listen2myshow.com/


Sunday, 26 May 2019

Ginger Feather playlist 26 May

Here's the playlist from this evening's show on Ginger Feather FM

Bert Jansch - Strolling Down The Highway
The Rails - Breakneck Speed
The Young Uns - Be The Man
Sarah Jarosz - Comin' Undone
I'm With Her - Close It Down
Gilmore & Roberts - Billy Green
The Willows - Honest Man
Paul McCartney - Every Night
John Lennon - Oh Yoko
Dog Daisies - Auk
Dog Daisies - It's All Gone
Mr Ben and the Bens - Birth at Sea
Patsy Matheson - If You Ask Me
Angie Palmer - Little By Little
The Slambovian Circus of Dreams - Sunday in the Rain
Big Country - Chance

Tune in every Sunday at 6pm at http://gingerfeatherfm.listen2myshow.com/

Shows are uploaded to https://www.mixcloud.com/cmbertram/ 


Thursday, 4 April 2019

King Creosote, Fence Collective & Crail Folk Club


I first came across Kenny Anderson, aka King Creosote, back in the mid-90s when he was a regular on the St Andrews’ music scene either playing at pubs like Aikmans* on Bell Street or playing in bands such as Khartoum Heroes and the Skoubhie Dubh Orchestra. Rumour had it that the latter of those two bands was forced to change their name due to it sounding too much like a certain cartoon character for the lawyers representing its American studio. How much truth there was in that I have no idea but it did give Kenny and co some publicity. I saw both those bands in 1995, the Heroes in Crail at the Community Hall and the Orchestra at the Victory Memorial Hall in St Andrews. I have no memory of the Crail gig though do remember seeing the likes of Tom Paxton and Salsa Celtica play that converted church venue some years later, gigs organised by the Crail Folk Club. But I do remember being at the Memorial Hall which was across the road from the student association building.

Crail was just down the road from the village of Kingsbarns, where I was living in those days, and I started going along to the folk club more out of curiosity than anything else. I certainly wasn’t much of a folk music fan back then but there was always a friendly welcome from Jill who ran the club and they were happy to see any musicians who were willing to sing a song regardless of what genre it was. I can still recall my first visit to the Golf Hotel for a singers’ night. I was sitting at a table quietly minding my own business when Jill approached me and asked if I could sing. Yes, I replied, a bit. Her next question was, do you play any instruments? I replied that I played the guitar and her third question threw me a bit as she asked, if I find you a guitar will you give us a song? Shortly after that I was sitting in front of the audience playing a rather hurried version of The Beatles’ song I’m Only Sleeping. When I had finished I went and sat down. There was a couple sitting next to me and the chap told me that was one of his favourite Beatles songs, but he’d never heard it played so fast. That must’ve been the adrenalin kicking in - nature's amphetamine!

But back to King Creosote. By the late 90s Kenny, along with various pals in Anstruther in the East Neuk of Fife, had formed the Fence Collective. They all adopted nicknames such as The Pictish Trail, Uncle Beesly and HMS Ginafore and their gigs were usually fairly laid-back affairs with each of them taking turns on the sound desk and sitting in with each other on stage. I saw them a number of times around the East Neuk in places like Anstruther, Pittenweem and Elie and a memorable night when they came along en masse from Anstruther to the Crail Folk Club. There was a great sense of camaraderie among the Collective and I was quite envious of how much fun they always seemed to have playing their music. The folk club was all well and good, and I did meet some people there who became close friends, but the Fence Collective had something special going on there. My final Fence gig before leaving Fife was at the St Andrews Scout Hut, an unlikely venue for a gig but it suited them down to the ground. There were quite a few students in the audience which was unusual. I'd been to a couple of poorly attended gigs at the student association but word must have got around that the Fence Collective were worth seeing.

I should mention one other gig from those times which took place at the  Association - it wasn't called a student union as St Andrews wasn’t affiliated to the NUS. In May 2004 King Creosote played support to the American indie pop duo Joy Zipper. I hadn’t heard of them but my mate Joe was interested in the gig so I went along too. Kenny took to the stage and for some reason there was a spinning top on the floor next to his chair. He made no mention of it and it sat there until the end of one of his songs when he pumped it up and as the music faded, he set it spinning. A slightly surreal moment but in a way it perfectly summed up his music and the Fence Collective vibe.

Since moving to Lancaster in 2005 I have seen Kenny a couple of times here along with a very good headlining spot with his own band at the Cloudspotting festival in 2016. His Fence friend The Pictish Trail has made it here too along with James Yorkston who was a member of the Fence Collective back in its early days before he went on to pursue a solo career.

I’d be interested in Kenny’s thoughts on those days but at his recent gig at The Hall in Lancaster he told us that he always has the internet turned off. He seems happy though, living as he is in Crail and playing his accordion. Good to see you again KC. As those of us from north of the border might say, lang may yer lum reek.


*I’m sure Aikmans was known by another name but I can’t for the life of me remember what it was. If your memory is better than mine, do let me know what it was called. Cheers.

Wednesday, 3 April 2019

Off The Beaten Tracks on Ginger Feather FM

My first show on Ginger Feather internet radio is being broadcast today and will be repeated on Sunday at 6pm which will be my regular slot. 

Tune in on  http://gingerfeatherfm.listen2myshow.com/

You'll need to install the Listen 2 My Radio app to listen on smart phones and tablets. 

Will Pound - The Liberty Bell March
Richard Thompson - Wall of Death
Jez Lowe - The Wrong Bus
Megson - Voice of the Nation
Stuart Anthony - Song to the Siren (live)
Turnstone - Second Chance
Karine Polwart - Cornerstone
Lau - Toy Tigers
Gilmore & Roberts - Just A Piece of Wood
Davy Lees - I Ain't Got No Home
Hannah Saunders & Ben Savage - Way Over Yonder in the Minor Key
Mikey Kenney - Montagna Di Menta
Moonlight Gazette - Souk
You Are Wolf - Witch of the Westmerlands
Peter Knight & John Spiers - Waiting for the Federals
John Renbourne - Sad News
Salt House - Lay Your Dark Low
Flossie Mallavialle - Girls' Night Out
Mike Vass feat Mariearad Green - Teen
Skerryvore - Rocket to the Moon
The Tillers - 500 Miles

Tuesday, 5 March 2019

The Nature of My Mental Illness


You know how it is – you get up, have breakfast, have a shower, get dressed and are making plans for the rest of the day. Okay, it’s raining just now but it might brighten up later. There are so many possibilities. Yes, there are chores to do like shopping, as you’re nearly out of washing up liquid, and you really need to get a haircut but maybe you could go swimming today.

Then it happens. Some part of your brain says, “Stop. You aren’t going anywhere.” A wave of anxiety floods your mind and you feel almost paralysed. You feel like crying. The tears well up in your eyes but even the act of crying seems too much. Another part of your brain is saying, “Come on, don’t give in to this. This is bullshit.” But it feels so real. All your plans go out the window. You just want to stay indoors. No, you need to stay indoors. You look out the window and see one of your neighbours going out. To her, this is just another day of coping with the kids and going to work. She gets in her car and off she goes.

You try and remember what it was like, being able to do all these things that other people take for granted and you know that when you’re having a good day you too can do these things. You sit at your computer and feel that at least you can do stuff online. You order a new ink cartridge for you printer. Hey, I’ve done something. You post on social media. Someone likes your post and you don’t feel quite so alone.

You make a coffee. Drink it down and make another. Towards the end of this one you add a slug of whisky. You hear that voice in your head telling you, you shouldn’t do this but it tastes nice and you relax a bit. You make another hot drink and add a bit more alcohol. You know you have your pills upstairs but they often don’t seem to make much difference.

Whatever happened to Valium? You remember that bit in Trainspotting where Renton, as part of his preparation to come off smack, nicks some of his mum’s pills? He describes her as being, in her own way, a junkie as well but her drugs were on prescription. But these days such medication is out of fashion. It’s all anti-depressants and beta blockers. No wonder so many people self-medicate with alcohol and smoke weed to alleviate their symptoms.

There’s so much shit to cope with. Is it any wonder we are facing an epidemic of mental illness, self-harming, alcohol and drug abuse, gambling addiction, domestic violence, increasing levels of racism, antisemitism and God knows what else? The planet is burning, there are dire warnings about our very survival and don’t get me started on Brexit.

But there is hope. There has to be. We need to cling on to the belief that things will work out for the best. It’s hard, often very hard to stay positive but for the sake of our loved ones and future generations we mustn’t give in to the fear-mongers. Those in the tabloid press who make money from spreading their own brand of fake, or at least distorted, news to enrage their readers. These poor sods who then consciously or unconsciously become more extreme in their views blaming immigrants, remainers, the liberal elite or whoever for all the troubles apparently afflicting our society.

But fuck it. Whether you think that Winston Churchill was a hero or a villain, he did come up with the acronym KBO which stood for Keep Buggering On. At the end of the day that’s all we can keep doing. I heard something on a play on the radio the other day where a character was going to throw herself into the sea but was persuaded not to and was told that we just have to keep going, even if it’s just out of habit, until things get better.

Me, I have music that has so often pulled me back from the edge. Today it’s been UK band Bruise followed by Buffalo Springfield and now The Black Crowes that is keeping me here. And the rain has stopped and the sun is out. I might get to the swimming pool tomorrow.