Michael Waters - 23/Jul/2010 Lakeman's previous works to date - which nobody would know existed if it weren't for his career-catalysing rugged looks, photographed near some grass ...
|
 |
Jude Rogers - 08/Jul/2010 Ever since his Mercury Prize nomination for Kitty Jay in 2005, Seth Lakeman has cut a striking figure in conventional folk circles. Loved by tradition...
|
 |
MarcusErridge - 26/Jun/2010  Seth Lakeman’s new album is a surprisingly rich blend of bluegrass and Irish folk. Some excellent string arrangements offer occasions of genuine depth...
|
 |
Tom Gockelen-Kozlowski - 25/Jun/2010 Hearts & Minds...
|
 |
Andy Gill - 25/Jun/2010  To follow-up Poor Man's Heaven, Seth Lakeman has brought in the producer Tchad Blake, known for maximising the power of acoustic music without sacri...
|
 |
Robin Denselow - 24/Jun/2010  Seth Lakeman has become a victim of his own success. He brought folk to a new audience and notched up a top 10 album with Poor Man's Heaven, thanks to...
|
 |
Benjamin Hiorns - 15/Jun/2010  5 albums deep and still unable to replicate the flirtation with mainstream success afforded him by 2004's Mercury nominated concept album Kitty Jay, p...
|
 |
Simmy Richman - 13/Jun/2010 The problem with rabble-rousing fiddle-led folk music with contemporary political lyrics is that you run the risk of sounding like the Levellers.And s...
|
 |
Niki Boyle - 10/Jun/2010  In the wake of the folk modernism of Mumford and Marling, Lakeman’s latest is occasionally at risk of sounding a little too rustic and antiquated....
|
 |
Chris Sheerin - 09/Jun/2010  Seth Lakeman is for some the poster boy of the English folk scene, born in the heart of Dartmoor in a region soaked in history, heritage and stories, ...
|
 |
|
|
 |