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Diversions Vol.2: The Unthanks With Brighouse And Rastrick Brass Band

4.7 out of 5 stars 88 ratings

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Audio CD, 30 July 2012
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Track Listings

1 The King Of Rome
2 Trimdon Grange Explosion
3 George
4 The Happiness Or Otherwise Of Society (Jack Elliott)
5 The Father's Song
6 George II
7 My Lagan Love
8 Queen Of Hearts
9 Gan To The Kye
10 Felton Lonnin
11 Blue Bleezing Blind Drunk
12 Newcastle Lullaby
13 Gresford (The Miners' Hymn)
14 Farweel Regality

Product description

"Diversions Vol 2. constitutes perhaps the most daring and accomplished of musical adventures to date for The Unthanks. Their paradoxical marriage of staunch traditionalism and sonic adventure continues in the shape of brand new collaboration with Brighouse and Rastrick Brass Band, known as the best public subscription band in the world, celebrating their second successive year as National Champions of Great Britain.
The record is the culmination of a project that began as a commission from Brass: Durham International Festival, with Unthanks pianist, composer and producer Adrian McNally writing The Father s Suite: a four movement piece in celebration of Rachel Unthank and McNally's first child, born four weeks before the sold-out, premiere in Durham Cathedral.
""I grew up in the former mining village of South Hiendley, about two miles from Grimethorpe, home of the most famous colliery band in the world,"" explains McNally. ""I was 11 when everything changed in 1984. Brass band music was part of the fabric, and something I absorbed as a child, which is probably why I find it so emotive as an adult. Folk song and brass band music may be different musical disciplines but often both were designed to speak for and be spoken by the same people"".
Despite having no training and being unable to read or write music, with the assistance of Unthanks fiddler player Niopha Keegan, Adrian McNally has written brass scores for approximately half this record. The other half features songs that have previously appeared on Unthanks albums, with The Unthanks arrangements adapted for brass by conductor Sandy Smith.
Amongst the new material is Tommy Armstrong's Trimdon Grange Explosion, written 150 years ago about a Durham mining disaster. ""74 people died, among them boys as young as 11,"" explains Rachel Unthank. McNally's The Father's Suite features spoken word by Jack Elliott (of the famous Elliott's of Birtley, taken from a BBC film about his life) and an adaptation of Ewan MacColl's Father's Song, with a new tune written by McNally, unable to find a copy of the original tune to hand at the point of writing and keen to press on while the creative iron was hot. The project also sees debut lead vocal performances by Unthank members Niopha Keegan and Chris Price and the record kicks off with the televised performance of King of Rome that was so rapturously received at the BBC Folk Awards earlier this year.
While all the tracks on this record were recorded live in concert halls, cathedrals and town halls; some in front of an audience and some not; it should not be regarded as a 'live album', in the lowly, lesser sense of the term. A live album would normally contain pieces that an artist has recorded more definitive studio versions of previously. That is not the case here. The scale of a brass band and the practicalities of singing with them almost necessitates live performance anyway, so why not in front of an audience? For better or worse, these are the definitive versions!"

Product details

  • Is discontinued by manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 14.1 x 12.4 x 0.79 cm; 68.04 g
  • Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ RabbleRouser Music
  • Label ‏ : ‎ RabbleRouser Music
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B008DPC4D0
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer reviews:
    4.7 out of 5 stars 88 ratings

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
88 global ratings

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Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 March 2013
    I bought this for my husband after he mentioned that he liked a track he heard on the Mark Radcliffe/ Stuart Maconie show on Radio 6. It is not often that I listen to cd from beginning to end on the first play but I fell in love with this from the first track which brought tears to my eyes. The voices and the sound made by the brass band is sublime. The stories told in the songs are easy to follow and so real to life. Not the usual sort of thing I go for but the music is full of emotion and is just wonderful.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 August 2012
    When all else is failing "folk music" sometimes makes a leap forward by not looking in what direction it leaps. This is an awesome album, I can't tell you why, to me it comes from somewhere sort of familiar, but its fired out of a cannon. It kind of make a noise that will give you goose pimples, buy it, put your headphones on and let it kind of lift you. I never expected brass and voice to do this.
    12 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 August 2012
    And on that first point there's no doubt. It's one thing to arrive on the scene, and remain there by remaining resolutely in the zone that first got you fame. The Unthanks believe in going down new roads, the risky path, and all power to them that they do this, and by all accounts they're growing their fan base in the process. I've seen them live three times over the course of as many years, and each concert has been totally different to the previous one. Who knows where they go next? (well we know the immediate future, and I'm certainly looking forward to the shipyard songs).

    And having said all that, I wish I could have liked this a little more. No doubting the quality of the musicianship, from both band and brass band. The King of Rome is a good start, though for me it won't replace June Tabor's sublime version. But there's room for more than one interpretation. I think the album sags considerably in the middle - I'm sure the father songs are of supreme significance to Adrian and Rachel, but to me they came across as a bit, well, unmemorable. Finally the tempo goes up - and it's not Rachel or Becky singing. And then the songs from The Bairns - strangely I find the Newcastle Lullaby the best of these, I say strange because I always regarded it as a bit of a throwaway track. For the others, well I declare my interest that The Bairns is my favourite album by this band, and I don't find any of them an improvement, much preferring the original piano based backing. And whilst I wouldn't go as far as the one negative reviewer so far, Farewell Regality does (to me) almost slow to a halt. I still remember the then still all-girl band playing that at a small folk club in Newbury, when it was a real anthem to round off a rousing concert.

    The Unthanks have done an extraordinary number of good things in the past, and I've every confidence they'll do more in the future. But although this is undoubtedly a very pleasant album to listen to, for me it misses, for want of a better phrase, the fire in the belly that marks this band at its best. But like I say, never knock a band for trying something different, and to that extent, four stars is merited, even though it doesn't quite light my fire.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 April 2018
    For Unthanks fans or brass band aficionados. Whatever floats your boat. This is a collection blends the heavenly voices of the girls with the sublime beauty of The Brighouse and Rastrick Brass Band. Their version of My Lagan Love is an eye-opener. The Unthanks are great ambassadors for the world of North East England traditional music.
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 December 2020
    I LOVE this album. The Unthanks with the Brighouse adn Rastrick Brass Band. What beautiful singing and beautiful accompaniment by the brass band. Thank you so much!
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 September 2012
    the warmth of the brighouseand Rastrick brass band and the vocals of rachel and becky unthank on the opening track
    King of Rome will make you cry and thats just the first track
    the Queen of hearts swings like a big band with vocals by Chris Price Its a great cd
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 January 2016
    What a brilliant collaboration. Saw them at the Folk Awards some years ago, and knew I had to buy the album. It was like "Vera" and "Last of the summer wine" rolled into music
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 October 2020
    Excellent album, sublime.

Top reviews from other countries

  • Simen Meyer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in the United States on 11 April 2015
    Another beautiful album from the Unthanks
    One person found this helpful
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  • micheldesjardins
    5.0 out of 5 stars there are arrangements of wind instruments that are as beautiful as unexpected
    Reviewed in Canada on 30 November 2016
    Beside the angelic voices of the Unthank sisters, there are arrangements of wind instruments that are as beautiful as unexpected, at least to my ears.
    One person found this helpful
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