Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Lewes Local Group Report – Monday June 16th 2025

Ten of us came to the Lewes Arms, including two new singers and a spectator from Brighton, Hove and Uckfield, who were brought along by existing singers. Our introductions at the beginning threw up several interesting connections where they knew and had sung or played with others present too. We missed those absent due to illness or holidays (Malta sounded lovely. 

The songs were firstly lesser-known items that some of us will be performing at the two upcoming Bevendean events (Farm Green archaeological dig open day on June 28th and Community Garden celebration at the end of the “Wild Walks” programme on July 12th) and the song for Whitsun which had just passed on 9th June. Then we took turns to choose our favourites from the 25 possible songs I had suggested.

In the first half we sang “East Sussex Drinking Song”,  “Poor Froze-Out Gardeners”,  “One for the Rook”  (not the correct season for the previous two but they will be performed at Bevendean Garden), “Hard Times of Old England”,  “Sing You Now After Me” ( the Thomas Ravenscroft 15th century Sussex round in five parts, which we will be using for audience participation at Bevendean Farm, where a mediaeval farm site is being excavated), “Turmut Hoer”,  “Magpie”,  “Rosebuds  in June” , and  “On Sussex Hills”.

During the break, discussion included various places where we sing and play; where to buy instruments in Aldeburgh; someone’s ongoing folk-based project they are writing about a neuroscientist; and should someone buy a hammered dulcimer (yes, obviously!). One person, who had dashed straight from work without eating, collected and enjoyed his supper order (shout out to Big Fish round the corner).

We discussed our new poster which is now online on several sites in Lewes, Brighton and East Sussex, and has been mailed out to singers to circulate. A couple of singers took hard copies to put up in their areas and I said if anyone else wants copies printed off, let me know and I can post some out to them.

We eventually got back to singing with a new song to everyone at Lewes, “Harvest Round” which is the other to be used for audience participation at Bevendean Farm. This has words by Alan Wheeler from our Chichester group, set to the tune we also use for “Child of Light” at Christmas time. This was quickly learned and sung in four parts. With the hard work out of the way, we turned to our favourite more well-known songs (to some of us anyway, they were less well-known to the new singers, but they kept up very well). We did “Hares on the Mountain”, “Ladies go Dancing at Whitsun”, Bee-Boy’s Song”,  “Farmer’s Toast”, “My Downland Remembered”,  “Smuggler’s Song”, and “Country Life”.

We ended with “Thousands or More”. During lockdown, when meeting online we would sing “With my bottle and friend you will find me on Zoom” and looked forward to evenings like today when we could once again sit around the table and sing face to face.

As I left the pub, they were putting our new poster up in the front window. A satisfying evening all round.

Our next session will be on Monday July 21st. New singers are always welcome to join us, whether seasoned performers or new singers. Drop us an email if you want to know more or just turn up on the night.

 
Tina
 

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Worthing Local Group Report - Thursday June 5th 2025

We opened this month's session with some future event notices, as we often do, and three new singers were welcomed to the fold.  We also thanked Alan for all his work on preparing and leading the very successful Chichester Fringe performance he'd steered to its completion the previous Sunday  Unfortunately due to other demands on her time Emily was unable to be with us - but Alan and Amaryllis had already kindly agreed with her to facilitate the evening between them. 

Alan set off with "Hal an Tow""The Cuckoo" (sung twice to refine the timing and tone - and with cuckoo calls added by Amaryllis to finish!), and then the "Sussex Wedding Song" with men and women taking turns to sing verses in conversation.  Amaryllis took the reins for "Searching for Lambs" and the "Smugglers Song", before Alan resumed with "Ladies Go Dancing at Whitsun".

Angela S was then invited to contribute by guiding us through the "Song of the Sussex Downsman" - which many felt we should sing more often in our sessions and also use it at our public events, given how vividly it describes various locations and landscape features across Sussex.  

The mid-time break concluded with a few notices from different singers with news about local events of interest beyond the SDFS (at the Creative Heart centre in Littlehampton on June 28th - Worthing Festival's music weekend on 21/22nd June, and a programme of Heritage Walks in Worthing and other local areas). 

The tandem facilitation continued with Alan or Amaryllis leading us by turns for "Rambling Comber", "Rolling in the Dew", and then "Our Captain Cried All Hands" which we haven't sung in Worthing for a while.   Some requests followed - although no-one took up Alan's suggestion that the individual choosing a song should also have a go at leading it!  So we took our start notes from Alan for the "Turmut Hoer" and Amaryllis for "Rosebuds in June" before singing these old favourites to finish on, and the evening closed with more "Thank Yous" to Alan and Amaryllis, and Angela S, for their valuable contributions.  

More next month - see you then !

H. 

Monday, June 9, 2025

Lewes Local Group Report – Summary - March 17th, April 21st and May19th 2025

Small but enthusiastic groups gathered for our usual third Monday sessions over the spring months. Eight singers came to our usual venue at the Lewes Arms on March 17th. On April 21st the pub was busy with Easter Monday drinkers and diners, so five of us decamped to the Railway Land Nature Reserve, where our singing was aided by crisps and vegan beer kindly provided by Eva and James. We sang at what we call the Magpie Tree, so named because during lockdown we sang here (carefully socially distanced) and when we sang Dave Dodd’s beautiful song “The Magpie” two of them sang overhead. This time we saw one walking along the ground but none in the tree.  Back at the Lewes Arms on May 19th there were seven singers. In total there were twelve different singers, including a new singer, but not all present at the same time. 

  
Over the three sessions we covered 28 different songs from our spring, summer, outdoors and sea themed lists.   
  
Some of them were sung twice, either because of the different singers present, or to practise some harmonies for upcoming performances. These were: “Bee-Boy’s Song”, “Country Life”, “East Sussex Drinking Song”, “Ha’nacker Mill”, “It is the First of May”, “May Day Carol”, “Nightingale”, “Oldland Mill”, “On Sussex Hills”, “Pleasant and Delightful” and “When Spring Comes In”.
  
The others were: “Ale Glorious Ale”, “Birds on the Spray”, “Brave Eleven”, “Constant Lovers”, “Eileen Aroon” (an Irish guest song for St Patrick’s Day, shoehorned in as it was allegedly Hilaire Belloc’s favourite song which many of us learned during the original South Downs Songs Project), “Fathom the Bowl”, “Green Grow the Laurel”, “Littlehampton Collier Lads”, “Love and the Ball” (concerning stoolball, the precursor to cricket, which James recalled playing at school in Uckfield), “Magpie”, “Oak Tree Song”, “Rosebuds  in June”, “Searching for Lambs”, “Smuggler’s Song”, “Sussex Wedding Song”, “They Won’t Let Us Go to Sea Any More” (I decided the previous week to sing this, not realising how prescient it was given the new furore over fishing quotas on the very day we were singing it, just as when it was written in Hastings all those years ago) and, last but never least, “Thousands or More”.
  
In between we also had a lot of discussion about past and future events, the origins and history of the songs, and compared notes about the various other musical groups we sing and play with in other places. 
  
We will be back at the Lewes Arms on Monday June 16th. New singers are always welcome to join us, whether you are an old hand, new to folk music or somewhere in between. With 100 plus local songs in our repertoire, and more being added all the time, there’s something for everyone, why not come and give it a try! 

Tina