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Womad festival, review: Musical magic lingered long with the weather

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  • Womad festival, review: Musical magic lingered long with the weather

    Womad festival, review: Musical magic lingered long with the weather

    New names Maz O Connor and Samantha Crain stood out at this year

    TIM CUMMING
    Monday 28 July 2014



    Q was talking to one of the festival's bleary-eyed security guards -
    six hours sleep in three days - and asked how it was, marshalling the
    notoriously violent Womad crowd. He laughed. Out of all the year's
    festivals, he said, it was the one he looked forward to most. Womad
    is, of course, one of the most peaceful of all gatherings, but when
    even the back line crew has a great time, that tells you a little
    about its magic a good year.


    While this year wasn't the most ambitious musically, and had a big
    soul-shaped hole where Bobby Womack should have been, that magic
    lingered long with the weather - God bless the Azores, purveyors of
    warm fronts since time immemorial - for Charlton Park basked in a
    festival-long heatwave - Saturday's temperatures were probably
    illegal.

    After a powerful Thursday night set from Bessekou Kouyate and Ngoni Ba
    - his wife, the singer Amy Secko is one of the most in-demand wedding
    singers in Mali, with few to match her voice for power - Friday night
    promised acoustic delights from Richard Thompson, touring his album of
    classic songs in acoustic mode, and he delivered as assuredly as
    Martin Simpson did the following afternoon on the Radio Three Stage
    with Dom Flemons of Carolina Chocolate Drops, the two combining Old
    Timey Americana with old-time English folk song.

    Following Thompson after midnight was the mellifluous award-winning
    sound of the kora and harp of Seckou Keita and Catrin Finch, as
    gorgeous as it is on record, but suffering from a metallic high end in
    the PA - which also affected a stunning Sunday afternoon set from The
    Gloaming, the Irish-US supergroup with the great fiddle player Martin
    Hayes leading us into the musical stratosphere.

    On the new, small Ecotricity stage in the wooded Arboretum - the best
    place to sink yourself in the blazing afternoon heat - Andrew Cronshaw
    and Sans, combining British, Sami and Armenian sounds - was a
    beautiful start to Saturday afternoon, followed by The Good Ones from
    Rwanda, music so unadorned you'd think any beginner could handle it.
    Bass, guitar, shakes, voices - simple elements making sense of lives
    that survived unimaginable but thoroughly documented genocide. How can
    songs be so uplifting and so mournful at once?

    While big-name sets from Youssou N'Dour on Saturday night, and the
    reformed Les Ambassadeurs on Sunday, had much to love in them, their
    sheer dexterity and panache thrilled but there was nothing radically
    new or revelatory on show. What did stand out were new names to Womad
    - including a superb Maz O Connor, playing strong traditional British
    and self-penned songs and Samantha Crain from Oklahoma, with a supple
    guitar technique and a wonderful, dark, smoky voice and lyrical depth.
    Both young singers drew big and enthusiastic audiences.

    Sinead O'Connor was a wildcard for the closing main-stage set, and
    chose to perform mainly new songs from an album no one's heard - it's
    not out for another two weeks. Brilliant. She dedicated the set, and a
    beautiful acapella gospel, to Bobby Womack, drew tears from the
    audience with Nothing Compare to U, occasionally swore like a trooper,
    and sang like a demon with the voice of a Pre-Raphaelite in psychic
    turmoil. It really wasn't a festival closing set - too dark and
    intense for that - but it was ragingly impressive, nevertheless.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/reviews/womad-festival-review-musical-magic-lingered-long-with-the-weather-9633791.html

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