The Owl Service (band)
The Owl Service | |
---|---|
Origin | England |
Genres | Folk |
Years active | 2006–present |
Associated acts | Country Parish Music, Greanvine, The Trysting Tree |
Members |
Diana Collier Steven Collins Jo Lepine Nancy Wallace |
Past members |
Dom Cooper Katie English Jason Steel |
The Owl Service is an English alternative folk band formed in 2006 by multi-instrumentalist Steven Collins, named after the 1967 novel by Alan Garner.
History
The Owl Service was originally intended to be a studio-based solo vehicle for Steven Collins, but while working on the first Owl Service release (the Wake the Vaulted Echo EP from 2006) he felt the need to enlist some help with vocal duties and this resulted in collaborations with Rebsie Fairholm (who sang on the debut EP, but then made only one more fleeting appearance with the band on the Bitter Night EP in 2008) and Dom Cooper of The Straw Bear Band, who remained involved with The Owl Service until March 2012; singing, writing songs and co-ordinating the band's graphic design. The Wake EP was warmly received in psych-folk circles and this lead to Collins being asked to contribute a track to the 2007 compilation album John Barleycorn Reborn on the Cold Spring label (for which he also wrote sleeve notes). For the JBR album, Steven recorded the traditional song The North Country Maid with session singer Rachel Davies, a song the band would revisit on the debut album in an alternative version. While recording the debut Owl Service album later that year, two permanent female singers joined the band; Jo Lepine and Diana Collier.
The band's debut album, A Garland of Song, was released on Collins' own Hobby-Horse micro-label in July 2007. Still a studio-only project at that time, the band were invited to support English folk singer Lisa Knapp during her residency at the Magpie's Nest folk club in Islington in October 2008. Following the invitation from Knapp Collins opted to expand the line-up to enable them to function as a live group. It was at this time that Nancy Wallace (formerly of The Memory Band) became a permanent member. By the end of 2007 they had signed to UK independent label Southern Records.
Southern reissued A Garland of Song in June 2008 on CD and LP, and this was followed a month later by a new EP, recorded with ex-Mellow Candle singer Alison O'Donnell entitled The Fabric of Folk (released by the Birmingham-based Static Caravan label). By this time, the band had a core line-up of 7 with the addition of Jason Steel (guitar, banjo, vocals), and experimental musician Katie English (aka Isnaj Dui) providing flute and melodica. Keen to return to their DIY roots The Owl Service parted company with Southern Records at the end of 2009, and soon after they released the download only EP Rise Me Lads, and the mini-album The Burn Come Down, both on their new label Rif Mountain. These releases were the first in a series entitled The Patten Beneath the Plough, which continued with their second full-length album, The View From a Hill, released on 1 May 2010. The album featured guest appearances from Joolie Wood (of Current 93) and Alison O'Donnell among others. The View From a Hill received much critical acclaim with positive reviews in Mojo, Uncut and fRoots magazines alongside broadsheet coverage in The Sunday Times courtesy of Stewart Lee. The album also received support from BBC Radio 2 with several plays on both Mike Harding's and Mark Radcliffe's shows.
In December 2011 the band released the third part of the Pattern Beneath the Plough series, a 2 track 7" vinyl single comprising The Standing Stones and The Red Barn, a traditional ballad based on the Red Barn Murder.[1] This was followed in 2012 by another 7" EP entitled There Used to be a Crown, which included cover versions of four songs originally by Tom Rapp/Pearls Before Swine.
At the start of 2012 Steven Collins left the Rif Mountain collective and put The Owl Service on an indefinite hiatus. He immediately began working on two new projects; Greanvine, a duo with fellow ex-Owl Service collaborator Diana Collier who play a mix of traditional songs and covers in stark, electric arrangements, and Country Parish Music (a project closer to the sound of The Owl Service). He also formed a new label, Stone Tape Recordings, named after the Nigel Kneale television play from 1972. The first 2 released on Stone Tape Recordings were from The Owl Service; the first was a data DVD entitled She Wants to be Flowers, But You Make Her Owls which contained mp3 files of every track the band had released at that point, plus a wealth of unreleased material, artwork files and video recordings. The second was the album Garland Sessions, which includes all 13 songs from the debut album re-mixed and partially re-recorded, along with 6 additional tracks.
In October 2013 Collins publicly hinted that a new Owl Service record was in production and in addition to this the band made a return to the live stage in December of the same year - their first performance in over 18 months. Along with Steven Collins, only Jo Lepine, Diana Collier and Nancy Wallace returned from the original line-up. The band performed live again 6 months later where they were joined by frequent collaborator Alison O'Donnell for 2 songs from their Fabric of Folk EP.
October 2014 saw the release of the first new Owl Service record since the Garland Sessions album in 2012; a low-key EP featuring covers of songs written by US musician Glenn Danzig to mark Halloween. At the end of 2014 after 18 releases Stone Tape Recordings closed down. Collins cited the workload involved keeping him from recording new Owl Service material as the main reason for the closure. Free from the constraints of running a label, in January 2015 Collins confirmed that there would be an all-new Owl Service album released before the end of the year entitled His Pride. No Spear. No Friend.. The album is expected to be something of departure from previous Owl Service releases. According to Collins; "The album will contain mostly traditional material, but the sound will be far from traditional. It'll be a folk album in lyrical content only, not in sound". In September 2015 the band previewed the first track from their forthcoming album on Soundcloud,[2] a version of the traditional song The False Knight.
Members
- Diana Collier; vocals, percussion
- Steven Collins; electric, acoustic and bass guitars, banjo, sitar, vocals, piano, organ, drones, glockenpsiel, percussion, synths
- Jo Lepine; vocals, percussion
- Nancy Wallace; acoustic guitar, concertina, vocals
Discography
EPs
- Wake the Vaulted Echo (2006) (Hobby-Horse)
- Cine (2006) (Hobby-Horse)
- Cine (The Director's Cut) (2007) (Static Caravan)
- The Fabric of Folk (CD) (2008) (Static Caravan)
- The Bitter Night EP (2008) (Hobby-Horse)
- The Fabric of Folk (12") (2009) (Midwich)
- The Burn Comes Down (2010) (Rif Mountain)
- All Things Being Silent (2011) (Rif Mountain)
- There Used to be a Crown (2012) (Hobby-Horse)
- Bare Ghosts (2013) (Stone Tape Recordings)
- Three Inverted Nines (2014) (Horn Records)
- Jean (2015) (Horn Records)
- The Fabric of Folk (redux edition) (2015) (Horn Records)
Albums
- A Garland of Song (original) (2007) (Hobby-Horse)
- A Garland of Song (reissue) (2008) (Southern Records)
- The View From a Hill (2010) (Rif Mountain)
- Garland Sessions (2012) (Stone Tape Recordings)
- His Pride. No Spear. No Friend. (2016) (Horn Records)
Compilations
- The Petrifying Well (2008) (Midwich)
- The Pattern Beneath The Plough Parts 1 + 2 (2011) (Rif Mountain) - 2 CDs; CD 1 = The Burn Comes Down plus 7 bonus tracks; CD2 = The View From A Hill plus 2 bonus tracks
- She Wants to be Flowers But You Make Her Owls. (2012) (Stone Tape Recordings) - data DVD containing every Owl Service release
- She Wants to be Flowers But You Make Her Owls. (2014) (Horn Records) - data DVD containing every Owl Service release and 17 track CD compilation
References
- ↑ "The Owl Service: All Things Being Silent". normanrecords.com. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
- ↑ "The Owl Service - The False Knight".
External links
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