Tag Archives: pop

Live review: The Amy Winehouse Band at De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill 18/12/25

My final gig of the year. And rather than my more typical diet of folk, glam rock and heavy metal, it’s the Amy Winehouse Band.

The project brings together musicians who played with Amy Winehouse over the course of her spectacularly promising career, which tragically came to a premature end back in 2011. The band members include Dale Davis, her musical director and bass player; Hawi Gondwe, Winehouse’s guitarist from 2007-11; drummer, Nathan Allen; backing vocalist, Adeleye Omatayo, and the brass section, Henry Collins and Dave Temple. The aim of the band, of course, is to perform and celebrate Winehouse’s music and to be much more than just another tribute act through retaining that very direct link to the late artist, herself.

The first part of the set was very much focused on the soulful jazz influences of the Frank album and vocalist, Beth Morris, (one of a couple of alternating female lead singers for the band) did a devastatingly good job at performing Winehouse’s material and really embodying the spirit of those songs. The musicians are on top form, too, and with the spotlights and dry ice the De La Warr stage takes on the vibe of a smoky, intimate jazz club.

The tempo and the mood change as the band move on to material from Winehouse’s second album, the soul-pop masterpiece that is Back to Black.

We are soon being invited by Morris to get to our feet and boogie and within seconds the entire De la Warr audience are bopping along to the likes of ‘Back to Black’, ‘Me and Mr Jones’ and, of course, ‘Rehab’. Not only did male backing vocalist, Adeleye Omatayo, take the lead vocal on a handful of songs himself, he also wowed the crowd with some impressive dance moves of his own, too.

The Amy Winehouse Band do a tremendous job in celebrating Winehouse’s legacy and keeping her music alive in a live performance setting. It’s a really impressive show and well worth seeing if you have the opportunity.

https://www.theamywinehouseband.com/

Setlist:

Know You Now
October Song
Mr Magic (Through the Smoke)
In My Bed
Stronger Than Me
Moody’s Mood for Love
You Sent Me Flying
Addicted
Cupid
He Can Only Hold Her
I Love You More Than You’ll Ever Know
Love Is a Losing Game
Tears Dry on Their Own
Back to Black
You Know I’m No Good
Me & Mr Jones
Rehab
You’re Wondering Now
Monkey Man
Valerie

This week’s featured artist: Singer-songwriter Anita Abram – debut EP ‘The First Escapade’

Anita Abram is a singer-songwriter, radio presenter and producer who also has a passion for the visual arts. A member of the DIY female musicians’ ‘Rise and Release’ community, she composes, records and produces music from her home in Suffolk, and is the founder of Every Bird Records, a community interest company supporting independent female musicians with unique voices.

Abram herself performs as part of folk trio, The Copper Foxes, as well as a solo artist. The First Escapade is her debut EP.

Opening track, the poignant and beautifully-atmospheric ‘Gravity Running’, is a personal commentary on the “futility, inevitability and insanity of human conflict driven by fear and greed”. The song’s final line “we will never back down” pays tribute to the strength and determination of the Ukrainian people.

Comprising five original songs, other themes explored on this charming and thought-provoking EP include love (‘Go Again’), ongoing threats to our natural environment (‘Shift Away’) and loss (‘Stars Above’), which is dedicated to NHS staff. Bearing striking hand-painted cover art, the CD artwork also incorporates an additional images created by Abram.

Luke Concannon, best known from the folk duo Nizlopi while influencing a young Ed Sheeran, says: “There is something classic in Anita’s song writing. Simple, mythic, deep…”

In addition to Anita Abram (lead vocals, rhythm guitar, field recordings), the release also features Pete Moody (vocals, piano, arrangements), Chris Lockington lead guitar) and Mark Sewell (percussion)

Released: 1 January 2024

https://anitamusic.uk/

Soul/pop/rock: album review – John Wallace Wheatley ‘Spent the Morning Watching TV and Looking Through My Phone’

Having made a noteworthy impact on the UK Americana scene and garnering many favourable reviews as part of Suburban Dirt, their frontman John Wallace Wheatley is open about seeking out a complete change in musical direction for his first solo album: Spent the Morning Watching TV and Looking Through My Phone. “I got bored of mandolins, banjos and hipsters wearing cowboy shirts and singing about mountains, trees and birds,” he confessed to one interviewer recently.

The acoustic guitars and cowboy shirts are out and, picking up his electric guitar, Wheatley delivers an album of perfectly crafted, bitter-sweet, soulful pop-rock.

With ten self-composed songs, including one co-written with cousin Donald Wheatley, John Wallace Wheatley’s tender, soulful vocals and warmly evocative guitar and piano playing instantly transport you back to some of popular music’s most memorable eras. It’s immediately evident that Wheatley is well-suited to this change in musical direction and he’s come up with the songs to boot. Moreover, the team he’s assembled for this solo project, particularly Andy Fairlough’s work on the mellotron, provide for some lush, exquisite, multi-layered, musical textures.

As a lyricist Wheatley doesn’t do either lightweight or upbeat. Themes include death, self-doubt and existential crisis and two of the songs are inspired by a visit to a cemetery and the chance discovery of a gravestone bearing his own name. For soulful pop-rock with intelligent song-writing, sincere vocal delivery and gorgeous instrumentation, time spent immersing oneself in this album could prove immeasurably more satisfying than a morning spent watching TV and looking through your phone.

Released: 27th November 2020

https://www.facebook.com/johnbumbag/