Live review: Steeleye Span at the Old Market, Brighton & Hove 23/11/23

One of the really nice things about seeing Steeleye Span live (and there are many) is that on each new tour there are always a few surprises to look forward to. It’s never just a ‘greatest hits’ set of the most obvious crowd-pleasers plus a few songs thrown in to plug whatever happens to be the latest album. Obscure songs from the band’s bulging back catalogue are dusted down and given a new lease of life. New arrangements are tried out by what is often a very different line-up from the one that originally recorded it. Or sometimes an entire album is revisited and performed in full. Meanwhile, to make way for a constantly-evolving setlist, old stage favourites are often gently retired and given a rest for a few years.

This current tour sees Steeleye Span promoting a new album The Green Man Collection. Here, the band revisit some of their past material with a mixture of songs written by members of the band at the time and some traditional numbers. The new album also includes a newly-composed song from Maddy Prior, a couple of well-chosen covers and something that was written for the band by Bob Johnson back in the ‘80s, committed to tape and then completely forgotten about for the next four decades.

The latter song, ‘Green Man’, is the one that opens the show. The symbolism of the Green Man has obviously been a mainstay of English folk traditions for centuries but here the lyrics address ecological concerns – then very current in the 1980s when it was first written and, alarmingly, even more current now. Dark, brooding and slightly mysterious, it’s a classic slice of Steeleye Span and a superb opener. Indeed, it’s a complete mystery how the band managed to forget about such a magnificent track. Both the original version and the newly-revisited version appear on the new album.

Alongside familiar numbers like ‘The Dark Morris Song’, ‘New York Girls’ and ‘Tam Lin’, the first half of the set also sees the band take on two songs written by former bass-player, Rick Kemp, ‘Low Flying’ and ‘Genocide’. The former featured on the 1990 Rick Kemp & Maddy Prior album Happy Families whilst the latter appeared on Kemp’s solo album Escape.

The second set opens with a surprising but hugely poignant cover of Elvis Costello’s ‘Shipbuilding’. This is then followed by a newly-written song from Maddy Prior – the excellent ‘Hey Nonny Violence’, which very much follows in the Steeleye Span tradition of seemingly jolly songs tackling much darker themes. Another new song (well new for Steeleye Span, anyway) is the band’s interpretation of the traditional ‘The Sound of Drums’.

That’s not to say there aren’t a few more familiar favourites as well. One song I would have been disappointed to see dropped was ‘Hard Times of Old England’ and, as Prior points out in introducing it, it’s sadly as relevant today as it ever was. For those familiar with the Mike Batt-produced version on the All Around My Hat album, this new interpretation is even more of a rocked-up boogie-fest than the original recording. This is no surprise as none other than Status Quo’s Francis Rossi makes an appearance on the new album guesting on this track, and the band bring some of the spirit of the mighty Quo to their stage performance tonight. There’s also some equally lively fiddle from newcomer, Athena Octavia, who slots in alongside the old hands beautifully.

All the band are on fine form, Prior’s voice is in top-notch shape and Steeleye Span continue to surprise and delight. When the band exit the stage to huge applause towards the end of their second set all that is left is for them to come back on for a riotous, sing-along version of ‘All Around My Hat’ and we can all leave with a spring in our step.

Setlist – first set:
Green Man
The Dark Morris Song
Sir James the Rose
When All The World
The Gardener
New York Girls
Low Flying
Genocide
Tam Lin

Setlist – second set:

Shipbuilding
Hey Nonny Violence
Black Jack Davy
The Sound of Drums
The Weaver and the Factory Maid
Jack Hall
Hard Times of Old England
Bonny Black Hare
Dodgy Bastards
All Around My Hat

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Related posts:

Book review: ‘All Around My Hat – The Steeleye Span Story’ by John Van Der Kiste

Interview with Maddy Prior

Interview with Julian Littman

Review: Steeleye Span at Hastings 2019

Review: Steeleye Span at Ashford 2019

Review: Steeleye Span at Hastings 2017

Review: Steeleye Span, London 2015

Review: Steeleye Span at New Forest Folk Festival 2014

2 thoughts on “Live review: Steeleye Span at the Old Market, Brighton & Hove 23/11/23

  1. At first I read your headline as ‘Steely Dan at the Old Market’ and was like, ‘wow, he saw Donald Fagen and band’ – I clearly haven’t had enough caffeine yet! 🙂

    Admittedly, this is the first time I hear of Steeleye Span. My streaming music provider cheerfully notes aside from Fairport Convention they “were the most successful and enduring British folk-rock band.” Wow, once again, I’m amazed how I oftentimes seem to live under a rock!

    Anyway, after having listened to a few tracks from a greatest hits sampler, I can see the excitement about the group. They sound lovely!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. A wonderful combination of traditional English folk and timeless classic rock. Well worth exploring and – as per your research – the second best-known UK folk-rock band after Fairport Convention. Unlike, Fairport though they even had a hit single which got to number 5 in the UK single charts in 1975!

      Liked by 1 person

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