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CRAMLINGTON FOLK CLUB |
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Tuesday 17
October 2006
A small but
appreciative crowd met at the Comrades Club for the visit by Battlefield Band
regulars Alan Reid and Rob Van Sante.
MC Keith Taylor introduced Alan Reid and his playing partner Rob Van Sante. Alan
is a native of Scotland and Rob hails from Holland. They both had very good
lines of patter and the evening flowed along in their experienced hands. Most of
the songs had been written by Alan for the Battlefield Band. ‘Arran Convict’ was
about a Scot who emigrated to the USA. Alan played keyboards for this with Rob
on guitar. A stirring song to begin the set. ‘Jenny ‘o The Braes’ is an
appealing, evocative song about an old woman who lives outside the town but is
part of everyone’s hearts. ‘The Rout Of The Blues’ is a Dransfields song. Rob
sang this as it was on the first album he owned after coming to Grimsby from his
native land in 1973. He won the disc in a folk club raffle and became hooked on
the scene. ‘The Pleasure Will Be Mine’ or ‘Fintry’ as Alan prefers to call it,
is a simple tale of two lovers with a great chorus. A real show-stopping song,
in my opinion. ‘Atlantic Bridge’ is a beautiful waltz about the bridge between
Seal Island and the Argyll coast. I have been there and there is something quite
magical about Argyll. The locals say that the Atlantic Ocean flows under the
bridge and if you look on some maps, this is very true. There is something
indisputably Scottish about this lovely melody. ‘The Rickarton Tollman’s
Daughter’ is by Alan’s reckoning, the only song about Kilmarnock. With its
reference to curling, it is another grand addition to the repertoire. ‘Rantin’,
Rovin’ Robin’ is a tremendous Robert Burns song with a grand chorus which was
much enjoyed. ‘The Last Lighthouse Keeper’ gave ample opportunity for the pair
to showcase their lovely harmonies. A good end to the first set.
Alan Reid and Rob Van Sante started their second set with ’Fifty-four Winters’,
an excellent, dramatic tale about an old man who disappears. ‘Eulan A Mara’
(again Author’s apology for spelling) tells of the Sea Eagle which was extinct
but which has been reintroduced on the Isle of Rhum in recent years. ‘Hector And
Bessie’ is a song about Clydesdale horses which Alan wrote for Robin Laing’s CD
about the Scottish breed of heavy horse. A theme very much up my street, except
I think Clydesdales are taller than the 16 hands Alan says his Hector measures.
Seventeen hands are much more likely, judging by what I have seen at the Royal
Highland Show. Smashing song. ‘Nancy’s Whisky’ is Alan’s variation on the
traditional ‘Carlton Weaver’ song. Another fabulous chorus song. ‘The Saints And
The Sinners’ is a song by a Canadian émigré. Rob sang this accompanied by Alan
on melodeon. ‘The River’ is Alan’s sad lament on the demise of shipbuilding on
the Clyde. As an encore, the pair sang ‘The Road Of Tears’, a moving tale with
the theme of displacement.
Keith Taylor thanked Alan and Rob for a great evening and hoped they would put
us in their diary for a date next year