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ONE
STEP FORWARD, TWO
STEPS BACK
written
by Bob Woffinden,Charles Shaar Murray & Patrick Humphries
New
Musical Express
18 JUNE 1977
THE NEWS of the internal realignment
of Steeleye Span has blighted the hopes of those who considered that the
Spanners could become the first band to crack open the American market
with material based on traditional English folk music.
There always was a dichotomy
in the band between the folk and the rock axises, and it now seems that
even at their most fluid they had done little more than paper over the
cracks. The replacement of Bob Johnson (guitar, vocals) and Peter Knight
(violin) with Martin Carthy (guitar, vocals) and John Kirkpatrick (accordion),
both stalwarts of the traditional folk scene, suggests that the band will
either abandon or at the least de-emphasise their rock orientation. Carthy
confirmed as much when we spoke to him last week.
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In turn, Johnson and Knight are
both sorry that after their irrevocable decision to leave, the band should
have immediately closed ranks and assured their own survival by looking
to the past. Knight had been intending to play keyboards on future Steeleye
dates, and the band could have drafted in a rock guitarist and a keyboard's
player and stuck to their pioneering direction. Because while no-one would
wish to underestimate the qualities of an album like "Please To See
The King," equally it gives cause for little more than regret that
they should apparently be retrogressing. Come back 1971, all is forgiven.
Nevertheless, it's difficult
to ascertain entirely what will be the future direction of the band.
The reshuffle means that there
isn't anyone in the band who can play the kind of no-bullshit rock and
roll rifferama with which Johnson used to underpin the chord structures.
This could create considerable reorientation problems for the band's decidedly
rock and roll-based rhythm section of Rick Kemp (bass) and Nigel Pegrum
(drums).
Certainly the reappearance
of Carthy will make it necessary for Kemp and Pegrum to reassess both
their approaches to their instruments and their musical role in the band.
In other ways, it's difficult
to see how Carthy can fit in. He is a singularly inappropriate choice
to fill one of the vacancies. It is an open secret that ever since he
left for the first time in 1972, he has slagged the band virtually at
every opportunity; "raucous" being one of his more polite descriptions
of their post - "Parcel Of Rogues" music. There have already
been rumours, for example, that he only rejoined on the understanding
that he would under no circumstances sing "All Around My Hat"
Though he didn't actually confirm this to us, he hardly denied it either.
"Well, I think you can
take an educated guess at what I'll not be doing; but I don't want to
be negative about it. I mean, it's a democratic process choosing what
material we'll be playing. Everybody's going to be bending."
No doubt John Kirkpatrick
will fit in to whatever structure the band do decide to adopt more easily
than Carthy, since he already has considerable experience at playing both
folk numbers and, with Richard and Linda Thompson, more rock-orientated
material.
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Knight said, "I think
that had the band remained in its previous form, in two years time some
of our music could have been phenomenal."
They will now concentrate
on helping to get their new project, "The King Of Elfland's Daughter"
off the ground. It is something that has taken them over three years,
because they have always tried to fit it in with Steeleye's activities.
It is a concept album based on Lord Dunsany's fantasy- classic of the
same name, and another of the reasons for the lengthy gestation period
was that everything they wrote had to be cleared with the executors of
Dunsany's will. The album features contributions from Frankie Miller,
Mary Hopkin, Chris Farlowe and P. P. Arnold who happened to fly into England
at the very moment they were looking for someone to take the part of the
Witch. Christopher Lee acts as narrator. Not surprisingly, the album in
toto probably cost as much as three times to make as a Steeleye album,
hopefully it will attract spin-off ventures a stage play and an animated
film being the most likely.
They considered that their
time with Steeleye had been very valuable and exciting, and they now look
forward to utilising their experience as independent songwriters/producers/arrangers/orchestrators.
No-one who listens to "The King Of Elfland's Daughter" would
doubt their abilities in these fields.
Steeleye, meantime, have found
that the exigencies of rehearsals have forced them to cancel some dates
in Ireland, but they will still be under taking their world tour, playing
European dates in July, Australia in August and America in November and
December Only after completing those gigs will they play British dates.
They have plans to go into a studio in September to record an album for
release on November 1. What it will sound like is, at the moment, anybody's
guess.
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