calimac: (puzzle)
[personal profile] calimac
In preparation for my first live Steeleye Span concert in nearly two decades next month, I've finished listening through the band's albums from the intervening period, some of which I hadn't paid much attention to and the most recent two of which I hadn't even picked up until now. I'd been a close and devoted follower of all this electric-folk band's earlier work, with the epically memorable classic period of 1972-77 and the sizzling Silver Age of 1990-97 being particularly dear to my heart, but when beloved lead singer Maddy Prior left the band (temporarily, as it turned out), I kind of lost heart. Not that I had anything against the remaining female vocalist, Gay Woods, but it wasn't Steeleye for me without Maddy.

Too bad I took that attitude, because Horkstow Grange (1998), the first of two albums from this period, is a pretty good one. Very quiet and subdued by Steeleye standards, it has some lovely songs on it. However, Bedlam Born (2000), the follow-up, I don't care for at all. It's far too unbridledly noisy, especially in those songs where bassist Tim Harries takes over the electric guitars: the new melodies are dull (a problem that would continue) and the arrangements uncontrolled and tasteless.

This period ended in a complete meltdown - at one point Steeleye consisted of nothing other than fiddler Peter Knight managing a lone website - but a reunion band containing some returning old members, including Maddy Prior, got together to re-make the old favorite Steeleye numbers that had won a readers' poll on that website. This was called Present (2002). A studio re-make of songs we already had in their classic original versions was kind of superfluous, but these are good performances, plus the album has the stark acappella "Lyke Wake Dirge", a concert favorite they'd never recorded before.

And then they carried on. The next new album, They Called Her Babylon (2004), has two songs I really like: a long ballad called "Heir of Linne" and the title song, the only tolerable one of new guitarist Ken Nicol's wordy historical songs. The rest I find forgettable. It was followed by Winter (2004), a Christmas carol album, much better overall mostly because the folk material is so sturdy and the new songs in their spirit, and with some clever arrangements, like the light pop/swing version of "Hark the Herald Angels".

That was the high point. Bloody Men (2006) seems rather lacking in appeal, with only one really good song this time, the ballad "Lord Gregory", and even that isn't truly up to Steeleye's best. Its successor, Cogs, Wheels and Lovers (2009), has nothing really outstanding, but it's altogether more agreeable all around, with some clever steampunk-mechanistic arrangements.

That leaves the two newest albums. Now We Are Six Again (2011) is a track-for-track re-make of one of the classic-period albums (and not one of the best of those, either): a great idea for a concert, which this was taken from, but entirely superfluous as an album.* (There's a second disc of other miscellaneous concert performances.) Terry Pratchett's entirely un-folky lyrics for Wintersmith (2013) generate a stupendously mediocre rock album of the kind by famous rock bands that my college friends in the 70s entirely failed to convince me were masterpieces. By abandoning its folk roots entirely here, Steeleye has lost any reason I ever had to listen to them.

Let's hope they bring some of it back to the concert.

*This is the second time I've used that word, so let me add that I don't always consider remake albums of previously-recorded material to be superfluous, not if they bring a verve and immediacy to the music beyond the original's. By that standard, by far the best Steeleye live album is something with the confusing title The Collection Steeleye Span in Concert (1994, from the Silver Age).

Date: 2015-06-12 05:54 pm (UTC)
ext_12246: (skull)
From: [identity profile] thnidu.livejournal.com
"Lyke Wake Dirge" -- is that "This ae night, this ae night, This ae night and all..."? HOOOOO, that'un's spooky.

Date: 2015-06-12 06:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com
That's the one.

When touring to open for bands like Jethro Tull in the early 70s, Steeleye would make their appearance on stage lined up before microphones, wearing mummers' costumes, with the tall crowned hats and all, lit spookily from below and otherwise in darkness, sing this stark and terrifying dirge, and scare the sht out of everybody.

Date: 2015-06-12 10:09 pm (UTC)
ext_12246: (Wikipedia)
From: [identity profile] thnidu.livejournal.com
Yah, I just spent an hour or more editing the Wikipedia article, and read Maddy's description:
5 nights at the LA Forum with Jethro Tull. We were opening our set at the time with the Lyke Wake Dirge, a grim piece of music from Yorkshire concerning pergatory [sic] and we all dressed in dramatic mummers ribbons with tall hats. The effect was stunning. 5 gaunt figures in line across the front of the stage, lit from below casting huge shadows, intoning this insistent dirge alarmed some members of the audience whose reality was already tampered with by 1970s substances. It was most satisfying.
I learned it from Buffy— Sainte-Marie, that is. O tempora, o mores! :-)

Date: 2015-06-22 03:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ken-3k.livejournal.com
I don't have the same love for the "Silver Age" that you do, but I more or less agree with your evaluation of the late works. I liked some of "Horkstow Grange," the first of the Gay Woods-only albums, but after that, anything from Steeleye went in one ear and out the other. I haven't heard the last 3 or 4 albums.

What I would really like to do is corral all the post-1980 Steeleye albums and extract the best track or four from each one. That would yield a couple of mix CDs, or iPod playlists, I could have a fine time with. The problem of course is that the CDs are scattered throughout the house, as our CD collection is stored in random piles and cartons.

I disagree with you on the original "Now We Are Six." I find the original UK track order and mixes makes one of the best Steeleye albums. The USA edition I have always found somewhat disappointing. (UK mix available on the BGO cd; I forget what ended on the "Parcel of Steeleye" compilation.)

Does Steeleye Span sunset when Maddy Prior retires? My guess is that it does.

Date: 2015-06-22 03:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ken-3k.livejournal.com
Oh yeah, repeating my earlier comment here: Steeleye fans ought to give a (free!) listen to the new UK band False Lights, led by Jim Moray and Sam Carter, whose album is available for preview on Bandcamp. Best folk-rock album I have heard in some years.

https://falselights.bandcamp.com/album/false-lights-ep

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