writes:
It's time to get the boots out again and let the walking do the talking.
I remember what it was I so enjoyed on the first part of the tour, as well as the company and the landscape...that feeling of being free of anxiety. No computer breakdowns, interviews, logistics, or worst of all, WAITING.
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My guest blogger this week is , singer with legendary folk rock group .
He is currently on a solo tour called 'Feet Don't Fail Me Now Tour' on which he is walking from gig to gig.
I'll let him tell you a bit more..
writes:
Well, this has been a pretty incredible journey so far - thanks for joining me for the second half!
The tour, on which I'm walking to all of the venues, started back on the 21May in Herefordshire.
We (and I mean we, because I was joined at various stages of the journey by old friends and new ones) walked 133 miles in 10 days through 6 counties with 8 gigs.
We finished up at Nettlebed on 1 June (not before playing a couple of superb gigs at Wychwood Festival).
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I don't know what kind of an idiot I am - certainly a pretty serious and committed one with a long pedigree of bloopers.
All that stuff about in my last blog and somehow I hadn't realised that Feargal is the same Feargal Scahill who made a brilliant CD called 'A Flying Start' with ace harmonica player Paul Moran a few years back.
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I was lucky enough to be in Ireland recently for the hottest long spell of glorious weather that I can remember.
Clear blue sky day followed clear blue sky day; people starting taking off their overcoats and the Rain Museum in Letterfrack closed down for the duration.
Walking round the streets of one afternoon I hear a fine class of music coming from somewhere in the region of E. J. King's pub.
Coming round the corner I saw a four-piece band: fiddle, melodeon, beatbox and bouzouki lashing into a rake of fine tunes in world class style.
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writes:
In this final blog, I would firstly like to take this opportunity to thank every single person who was involved with the Young Folk Award.
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writes:
"Forget about Genres, there's just good songs and bad songs" -
What makes a song memorable? What makes a musician inspirational? And who decides which genre is which?
For me a good musician finds the balance between technicality and creativity. One of the masters at finding this balance is who wrote beautiful technical melody lines that are both catchy and delivered with great emotion.
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