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Sadie Jemmett – “These Days” (video)

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THESE DAYS

These days are dragging by and there’s just too much rain
Too much rain for a summer in London Town
I keep myself busy painting the house
But I’m lonely and none of my friends are about

I thought of you today on the bus in the rain
I pictured you laughing again and again
If you knew how much I missed you you’d be back like a shot
Telling me oh, just be yourself

And I’ve got to stop kidding myself
That I don’t need anyone else to love me

Now everyone tells me you just did your best
But I don’t think your best was enough
I was so young when you left
I’m a woman now you know
A woman with a child trying to build up a life

You know its not easy with a kid on your own
It’s not easy to settle and build up a home

And I’ve got to stop kidding myself
That I don’t need anyone else to love me

These days are dragging by and there’s just too much rain
Too much rain for a summer in London Town
I thought of you today on the bus in the rain
I pictured you laughing again and again
I pictured you laughing again and again


Music & lyrics by Sadie Jemmett
Copyright © 2011 Mamaz Music Publishing/PRS BMI All Rights Reserved


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29 Feb, The 12 Bar Club: The Campfire Collective presents The Fircones, Sadie Jemmett, Will Kevans, Phil Kay & more

THE CAMPFIRE COLLECTIVE
at
THE 12 BAR CLUB
presents
THE FIRCONES
Sadie Jemmett
Will Kevans
and Special Guests

Compered by the incomparable Phil Kay
Doors at 7pm
Live DJ until 2am: American Folk Rock


THE FIRCONES

The Fircones are a band made up of actors who met while on the National tour of Calendar Girls. On hearing the various instruments coming from separarte dressing rooms backsatge, they decided to put them all together and become a group. the name The Fircones (originally The Fircone Boy Band) comes from a line in Calendar Girls. Carl Prekopp-Guitar/Vocals, Gerard McDermott-Mandolin/vocals, Gary Lilburn-Bodran/Vocals, Brigit Forsyth-Cello, Emma Darlow-Violin


SADIE JEMMETT

Sadie Jemmett’s extraordinary songs reflect a remarkable life. Behind the entrancing, eloquence of her lyrics and the subtle acoustic beauty of her music lies a restlessly seeking spirit and a rich but frequently dark experience. Her peripatetic journey has followed a jagged course from a wildly bohemian childhood through being a teenage runaway, a backing singer in a reggae band and a touring actress to her role today as one of the most magical new singer-songwriters to excite our ears in many years. Somewhere along the way, she also found time to work with adults with learning difficulties, spend a year busking in Berlin, write the music for an award-winning play in Paris and to become a mother. Every one of these kaleidoscopic experiences has helped to shape her into a potent singer-songwriter who stands in the great lineage of the art from classic era Joni Mitchell and Neil Young to the likes of David Gray and Ryan Adams today, and yet who shines out as a profoundly unique voice.


WILL KEVANS

Will Kevans is a UK-based singer-songwriter and master of the catchy pop tune and lyric. His song, ‘Dialling Tone’, recently won Will an award in the prestigious ‘International Songwriting Competition’. It has also been featured on a compilation album released by Universal alongside artists such as James Morrison, the Goo Goo Dolls and Keane.


PHIL KAY

“One of the greatest comedic odysseys ever witnessed… ‘Hysterical’ in every sense of the word – Kay truly is a mesmerizing headf**k genius” ★★★★★ – Time Out


The 12 Bar Club

26 Denmark Street, London WC2H 8NN
Tel: 0207 240 2622
29th February 2011
http://www.12barclub.com


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Songkick


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Sadie Jemmett – Five Things That I Noticed As I Walked To Camden Square (video)

Bumpkin



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Lou Reed apparently once said “give me a title and I’ll write you a song.”

Such was the begining of this song.

I came up with the title first, actually, originally walking to Soho Square, but discovered that I found many more interesting things to write about whilst walking through Camden Town.

Having worked at the market there and lived just off Camden Square in two rooms with my baby girl when I first moved to London, Camden Town holds a special place in my heart.

Everything is written from observation in the song apart from the meeting at the end, that is an amalgamation of many memories.

love, Sadie


Sadie Jemmett — vocals & acoustic guitar


“Five Things That I Noticed As I Walked To Camden Square” filmed live at Bumpkin Notting Hill, London, UK – 15 Sept 2011


Music & lyrics by Sadie Jemmett
Copyright © 2010 Mamaz Music Publishing/PRS BMI All Rights Reserved


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Acoustic Magazine: Interview with Sadie Jemmett

Sadie Jemmett’s life could be viewed in different ways: colourful, vibrant and full of adventure, or the wanderings of a lost child looking for home. Both views hold a large degree of truth but, regardless, the extraordinary patchwork of theatre, writing, music and travel, equips her admirably to write moving and beautiful music. Acoustic caught up with Sadie as she prepared to launch her first album, The Blacksmith’s Girl.

You had a very peripatetic and frankly painful-sounding childhood. What did that leave you looking for in the world?

I don’t think I was very aware that I was looking for anything in particular. There was a great lack of form: my childhood was much too free – nobody was looking out for me or anything – so I tended to wander a lot, and went wherever I could with my guitar on my back. I didn’t have a conscious aim to pull it all into music, I just kind of drifted, and I suppose I was looking for love, and was looking for the nurturing that I didn’t get at home. It’s very unconscious; if I’d really have been thinking about nurturing, I wouldn’t have gone for half the guys I went for!

How has that experience informed your career and songwriting?

For a long time I sang and played music because it made me feel better, and helped me make sense of the world. A family I went to live with introduced me to Dylan and Joni Mitchell, people who were a big influence on my career, and that was such an inspiration to write and play. I was doing it because it felt good, rather than as a real career choice, but when I got older I started to feel that I was quite good, and people were responding. While I was wandering, my songwriting came from an unconscious plane. I had a great knack for melodies, and I could come up with good songs in all the bands I played in, but the big change recently has been in the lyrics. Th at’s something which has come through looking back on my life and my childhood and trying to understand it, and the lyrics were very much about making sense of that. I think that when you start examining what happened to you – which I needed to do because I had a child and had grown up without a mother – if you haven’t had a mother who has been there for you, you need to draw on nurturing resources from elsewhere, and they just weren’t there. The things that you’re working with in these situations are completely universal – feelings of loss, feelings of abandonment, of being alone – and if you can say it in the right way, maybe the less complicated the better, people will be able to respond.

You’ve had an extremely varied career … What drove you from one thing to another, and what have you taken from the experience?

I think that because I was desperately looking for home, which sounds desperately clichéd, but I really was – I had had no real home and had terribly bohemian parents, who were actors, and couldn’t really provide a home. My father died when I was very young, and my stepmother sold the family home and banked the money, so I really didn’t have anywhere to go, and I never felt particularly welcome in either of my parents’ homes – when you’re in that situation and you don’t have any money, you tend to move on. Th ere were also a lot of deepseated psychological issues from not having had much nurturing; when you’re a teenager you’re not terribly conscious and you just accept how things have been, and just keep moving in the hope that the next thing you land in will be better. I think people did appreciate my music, though I wasn’t being very career minded, so I ended up in bands and stuff , and people wanted to hear me sing, which kept me moving around. Then I got involved in theatre, and having left school at 16 with no exams, I went back and studied theatre. I’m not quite sure why – perhaps because my parents had been actors and my brother was involved in theatre. I kept getting asked to do music for theatre, and I had my fi rst success when I wrote the music for a play in Paris, and that kind of woke me up.

How has motherhood changed your world view and your writing?

I did this show in Paris, which was my fi rst moment when I thought I ought to take things a bit more seriously, because the reaction to the music had been so good. Th at encouraged me to approach record companies, which went well, and then I got pregnant. I walked into a big record company office which had been very interested before, and they saw I was pregnant and I could see it was a big nono. My relationship ended when my daughter’s father and I had a real moment of clarity. I realised I either needed to go to London and do this thing, try to make a real career from my songwriting or it’ll pass me by, so I did. I guess the answer is that motherhood is gradually aff ecting my writing, but more than that it was a spur to get serious – make my career happen before it passed me by.

You’ve talked about Blue being a very reassuring record, yet Joni talks about that being written at a time when she had no protection, emotionally, at all. What do those songs mean to you?

When I first heard Blue I remember thinking that if someone can be that honest about how they feel, then there is salvation for us. If we can articulate pain like that, then that’s how we save ourselves. Joni and I sound very diff erent, and if we have a similarity it’s in the honesty. What I learnt through therapy was that if you can allow yourself to be honest with yourself about how you feel, you become innocent again.

When you write a song, are you thinking about the impact on other people, or are you just writing for yourself?

Some of the songs, like ‘So I Begin’ and ‘I’m Glad You’re Back’, are deeply personal and come from feelings I was really dealing with, but some of the  others are much more mixed, with other people’s experiences coming in as well. I quite like the fact that I’m more and more being able to write from other people’s perspective. I once heard Dylan say that his work started to get interesting when he could write songs from the point of view of others. On some level you’re always trying to reach the truth, whether it’s your truth or someone else’s truth; you’re trying to unify experiences, trying to share yours, and tie them in with other people’s as well. Somebody was asking me recently about lyrics, and I realised that early on I was trying to be cool, and write cool songs, and was a bit selfconscious, but now I’m just trying to write honest songs. If you are really really honest, people will respond to you more.

Could you tell us what guitars you use?

At the moment I’m playing a Martin D-35, which was lent by a friend, and it’s gorgeous. My own Martin was in the hold of an aeroplane and came back looking as though someone had put their foot through it. I got it repaired, and it was very good, but I was in Paris earlier this year, working on a play, running around – I had the guitar round my body on a strap and it got tapped on a wall and split apart again. Currently it’s held together with gaff er tape and it needs repairing; gaffer tape is wonderful stuff but there are some jobs too big for it!

I also play some Appalachian dulcimer, but I’m a very timid dulcimer player; I don’t have a very expensive or good one because I can’t aff ord it, but I’ve also never really had lessons. The first song on the album is played on dulcimer, which came about because my fi rst manager bought me a cheap one as a gift. I had picked it up, learnt to tune it, and immediately written a song on it, so now I’m gigging on it, but I feel like I need lessons to fill the gap.

Sadie’s Album, The Blacksmith’s Girl is out now.
For tour details and more information go to www.sadiejemmett.com.

Sadie Jemmett

by Gareth Powell, Acoustic Magazine, March 2012

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The Big Issue Q&A: Sadie Jemmett

With parents who were actors, Cambridgeshire-born singer Sadie Jemmett had a nomadic life infused with music and creativity. Her debut album, The Blacksmith’s Girl, is a startling confessional work.

The song The Blacksmith’s Girl has the unmistakable ring of Dylan’s Subterranean Homesick Blues. Is that intentional and what were you hoping to capture?
Yes, I guess there is definitely a nod to Dylan’s song in the way that we did the guitars, and you’re right that it came very naturally out of the driving rhythm of the acoustic guitar. I was really trying to illustrate the relentless spirit of this young girl, The Blacksmiths Girl, going out into the dark forest at nightfall, with only a rifle and an old black hat to protect herself. It is a song about courage and tenacity.

You’ve lived all over the place. What do you think inspired such a restless sprit in you?
I moved around so much as a child I don’t think I lived anywhere longer than three years when I was growing up and had lived with about nine different families, so it was very much in my blood. Also, the lack of parental support was pretty extreme, so by the time I reached an age where I could legally do what I liked, I did, and no one really seemed to mind.

On Standing In The Room you say “too afraid to laugh, too afraid to cry”. Do you bottle emotions up quite well?
I think the really big painful emotions, yes. I’m generally quite open about things but often the big stuff can hide itself really well under a layer of fear or anger. That line is really about fear, and how it can cripple us emotionally If we let it.

You’ve arranged music for theatre and worked with DJs. How did you find the right balance of sound for this debut album?
I’m quite chameleon-like in the sense that I adapt easily to different styles of music and situations and really enjoy it. My main instrument is acoustic guitar and so when I was writing it was on guitar, which suited the quiet outpouring of confessional stuff at the time.

by Lianne Steinberg, The Big Issue.

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Judy Collins in Music Week News: “Sadie’s music is both lovely and compelling”


Judy Collins: “Sadie Jemmett is a riviting performer who brings grit and lyrical singing to her song. Written with her sense of beauty and her ear for a good story, Sadie’s music is both lovely and compelling, a combination that wins the hearts and the devotion of her listeners.”

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Sadie Jemmett session & interview with Joanne Good on BBC London


Sadie popped in to see Joanne Good at BBC Radio London to do a live session and interview on Sunday 23th October.

In session, Sadie played ‘The Blacksmith’s Girl’, ‘Up On The Heath’ and ‘I’m Glad You’re Back’.

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Belfast Telegraph: “Talented ability to appeal to the heart of anyone who has ever been in love”

As music becomes increasingly technological, the old-fashioned, soulful sound of Sadie Jemmett stands out as a refreshing alternative. Jemmett’s debut solo album, with its roots deeply entrenched in folk, shows off her beautifully honest style and skills on guitar, piano and dulcimer to great effect. Best tracks include the confessional Making Sense and the chilled tones of So I Begin. The Blacksmith’s Girl showcases her talented ability to appeal to the heart of anyone who has ever been in love.

Rating: 8/10

Review by Vicky Amaning, Belfast Telegraph

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