Album Launch Party: What a Night!

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Still trying to take it all in. Stainforth Pit Club last night was just electric. Managed to keep it together during the gig, but on the drive home there was something wrong with the air inside the car because I kept getting sand in my eyes. I’ll have to have that looked at….

Massive thanks to Lee Huck​ for doing the sound and to the amazing Rebekah Findlay​ for a stunning performance. There was so much sniffling and wiping away of that dratted sand (it was EVERYWHERE) that I daren’t look up while she was singing!

Massive thanks too to all of those who travelled from as far and wide as Liverpool, Scunthorpe, Darlington, Barnsley, Sheffield, and, in the case of Bob Crow’s cousin Dave, London; incredible support from you all, and so great to have you there.

Biggest thanks of all though must go to the Hatfield Brigade themselves. Out in force and supporting every last note, I am proud and privileged to call them comrades and friends. Before I went on stage I was presented with this amazing plaque by ‘Little’ Harry Harle​. As if I wasn’t having enough trouble controlling my bottom lip. The caption reads:

“PRESENTED TO ‘OUR JOE’. FROM A HATFIELD PICKET. SOLIDARITY, MARRA. 06-02-16”

It will be treasured always.

I spoke last night about this through the mic, but it is worth repeating. Those lads and lasses weren’t defeated in 1985. If they’d been defeated I would not have been sat there 31 years later singing those songs. They fought against overwhelming odds with the full force of the State against them, on the front line against The Cuts (for Guardian readers, yes, that is a potential ‘Lost Consonant’) before the rest of us even knew there was one. A full year without wages fighting to save jobs, communities and the future of their children and their children’s children. THAT is an example to EVERYONE. For me they will pass into folklore and be revered like the Tolpuddle Martyrs, the Suffragettes, the Hunger Marchers, the volunteers for the International Brigades; they gave up so much for so long and deserved better, and I for one will NEVER FORGET.

I looked out on a room full of heroes and saw a fight still burning in a community forever bound by the ties of comradeship and loyalty only a mining town can build. I saw people who would join the Junior Doctors on their picket next Wednesday; I saw people fighting to have the Hatfield Main headgear preserved as a national monument to their industry; I saw Kerry Hughes​, the proud miner’s daughter of a proud miner’s son collecting food for her new DN7 food bank because they know what it means to go without and won’t let that happen to anyone else if they can help it.

Good people. The BEST of people.

Defeated?

Never.

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EMERGENCY GARAGE SALE!!!

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NEED YOUR HELP FOLKS!
 
Joe Solo CDs/downloads are being sold over the next 48 hours for a very important cause. All money raised will be passed straight to The Station in Ashton-under-Lyne, direct to the point of need in a WE SHALL OVERCOME Crisis Mission.
 
The reason is this. The wonderful Pauline Town​ has been trying to save the world one person at a time for as long as anyone can remember. Her efforts over the last few months have been phenomenal as her, and a network of volunteers, have begged and pleaded and cajoled their way into finding food and warmth and shelter for the homeless in her part of the world. At the moment she has two young people, Chloe and Jo, she is desperate to keep fed and warm while her network find them shelter. Chloe is 19 and a victim of abuse, Jo is 38 weeks pregnant poorly and alone.
 
Pauline’s big big heart is breaking trying to help them and she has run out of money. Any funds raised by sale of my music over the next 48 hours will go to Pauline over in Ashton-Under-Lyne so PLEASE help if you can.
 
This is We Shall Overcome on the front line. If our government is so f***ing heartless they will let Chloe and Jo slip away so save a few quid, we are not.
 
Please help.
CDs and downloads are available from:
 

More Reviews and Interviews!

Ahead of the official launch gig for ‘NEVER BE DEFEATED’ at Stainforth Pit Club on Saturday February 6th, there have been some wonderful reviews landing in my inbox. The album has had some fantastic support already and I’m overjoyed, not just because people seem to like the record, but because the story of the Hatfield Brigade during the Miner’s Strike needs to be heard, and that is putting a great big smile on my face.

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First up is a fantastic review on the excellent Louder Than War website by Dave Jennings:

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Louder Than War’s Dave Jennings reviews Joe Solo’s concept album about one of the most turbulent periods of recent British history.

This is a concept album with an interesting twist. The concept is of a country gripped by a vicious and bitter civil war. On one side is the workers in an industry that has been decreed too expensive to continue to run but their livelihood and future of their communities is dependent on the continued existence of the industry. On the other side is an ideologically driven government that is utilising the law enforcement forces to ensure total victory over “the enemy within”. The ‘concept’ of course is all too real and the story that unfolds here is that of the 1984-85 Miner’s Strike as told by those involved.

Joe Solo has produced a musical testament of one of the most turbulent periods of recent British history. The album tells the story through the eyes of those who stayed out on strike at Hatfield Main Colliery, South Yorkshire which finally closed in 2015. Solo has conducted extensive interviews with a number of participants and woven these together to produce a unique perspective on an event from which wounds are yet to heal.

The acoustic folk style of the songs is well suited as this is an album where you really need to hear the lyrics, fashioned as they are from the individual stories he has gleaned. The opening tracks of Coal Not Dole and Solidarity set the scene well as they describe the importance, running through generations, of union in mining communities. As Solo repeats the mantra “don’t cross the picket line” we develop at least some understanding of the importance of organised industrial labour but it is the aspect of family unity that maybe is even more important. Solo has enlisted Rebekah Findlay to provide the voices of the miner’s wives, such a vital force in the longevity of the strike and she delivers impressively. The vocals of Findlay serve to offset the harsher vocal tone of Joe Solo (necessarily so as the issues in the tracks he sings require it) and give the album greater depth and heightened musical accessibility.

However, the music is not the main aspect of this album, good as it is. The real triumph is the way that Solo has immersed himself in the characters and the moments of a defining period of British industrial history. Sometimes, the best way to understand important historical events is by seeing them unfold through the eyes of those involved and you can’t fail to be moved when Solo compares the stealing of potatoes to feed a hungry family, with stealing people’s  futures and livelihoods. These songs are essentially personal vignettes that capture moments of anger, injustice but more than anything, as the album title suggests, a lasting feeling of pride.

http://louderthanwar.com/never-defeated-joe-solo-album-review/

And Saturday’s Morning Star contained an interview with yours truly by the great Bob Oram:

“Joe Solo was 14 and a punk rocker at the time of the Miner’s Strike and it was his first taste of how bad politics hurts ordinary people.

“It was my political awakening. It made me think. There was a poisonous agenda in the media at the time that didn’t quite make sense. When you’re a kid you tend to see things in black and white, and I couldn’t see how on one hand the telly could criticise some people for not having a job, and then criticise others for fighting to save the one they had! They couldn’t have it both ways. And yet they did. So as a punk rocker, it naturally made me think the Miners were the good guys, the press were just the government in print, and anyone who fell for it was an idiot. I’ve never really recovered from that.”

No surprise then that his latest album ‘Never Be Defeated’ about The Strike is one of the most achingly heartfelt and moving albums around.

An aural history and tribute it recounts the story of The Strike through the eyes of the men and women of Stainforth and Dunscroft, South Yorkshire- The Hatfield Brigade. It is an intense piece of work that melds working class culture, pride, solidarity, anger, passion and hope into a body of work that will stand the test of time. Many artists write a song about the strike but Joe has given birth to thirteen, and they follow its course from the ballot and the initial success picketing Nottinghamshire pits to Thatcher mobilising the police against them to the bitter but proud return to work at its conclusion. There are songs about the brutality of Orgreave, the riots in Stainforth, and the black humour which held the mining communities together when winter started to bite. There are numbers too about the horror of being called back to work before a deal had been struck to reinstate those who had been sacked, together with songs which even at 30 years distance celebrate the unbowed defiance felt at The Strike’s conclusion.

“I knew what stories I wanted to tell, and wrote those first, and when I saw a gap in the narrative I wrote songs to fill them in. Then there’s the two songs about the women fighting first on the home front, and then becoming empowered and taking to the picket lines. Both are sung by the brilliant Rebekah Findlay, who absolutely nails them…..and we finish with the true story of the Picketing Gnome of Hatfield Main, a light-hearted morality tale of kidnap and liberation.”

“With any luck, by the end of it you get some feel for what it was like to be on the receiving end of Thatcher’s cosh and have your entire way of life stolen from you by the malice of the spreadsheet and a government intent on destroying their industry”.

It is truly a musical tour de force and its genesis began in a chance meeting at Stainforth Pit Club as part of the 30th Anniversary of The Strike with the Hatfield Brigade.

“After that you are never quite the same again. I was hooked on their stories from the word go.”

He kept in touch with Mick Lanaghan and the brigade and they asked him to sing at the 30th anniversary of the end of The Strike. This he did, but “the more we talked the more ideas kept coming and I knew there was an whole album waiting to be told. From writing that first song to finishing the record took six months.”

It was a process of “watching and listening” via “phone calls, email threads and Facebook posts; and they lent me some German documentary footage from the time, while I soaked up as many newspaper cuttings and archive interviews as I could find and listened to speeches; two of which especially, by Sheena Moore and Carol McCardle, really hit home. They helped me put together the two songs from the point of view of the women which I am really proud of. I knew the set-pieces of the Strike, and knew they would form the backbone of the record, the rest was getting the details right and telling their real stories as best I could. Their stories are amazing and I didn’t need to do much apart from make them fit the music. I really loved writing it, and I hope that shows.”

Solo, though not from mining stock wanted to give something back. His family have mended washing machines for three generations so, “I know about trades being passed father to son and the pride that comes with it.”

“Sadly you don’t get that much anymore. I think it helped bind communities together and the loss of those industries and those trades are a huge part of our problems today. I’m proud to walk in my father’s, and his father’s footsteps, and if you understand how much that means to people, then you understand their anger when it is taken away”.

But Never Be Defeated has its bittersweet moments too. Solo grins as he tells me why the song ‘Last Man Standing (The Ballad of Tony Clegg)’ is such a fitting postscript. Clegg, a man who suffered more than most during The Strike, got the last laugh because Thatcher died on his birthday and the final lines of the song Joe wrote for him are:

“The Devil? Well, I’ve seen her off.
She played me for my soul.
But you never bet against a man
Who come from mining coal.”

The interview over Solo heads back to his day job, endless gigs, selfless activism, passionate and inspirational ,if you see no one else this year play live, go and see him if you can. You will not be disappointed.

As he goes he says, “I am proud to call them all comrades and friends, and consider being granted honorary membership of The Hatfield Brigade one of the best days of my life. They are all still an inspiration, and they’d do it all again tomorrow, because they know they were right.”

Great to have such fantastic support from such amazing sources.

So happy to have them onside.

‘NEVER BE DEFEATED’ REVIEW!

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Fantastic review of ‘NEVER BE DEFEATED’ on the FATEA website….

“As a descendant of a family of miners, including my father, who toiled in the Durham coalfields it is hardly surprising that I have a passion for songs that document that industry over the years. To the pantheon of great songwriters who have contributed to that canon – Jez Lowe, Jock Purdon, Ed Pickford, John Tams and Tommy Armstrong to name but a few – we must now add Joe Solo whose latest CD provides a most moving and vivid account of the Miners Strike of 1984 – 85 through the experiences of the men and women of Stainforth and Dunscroft in South Yorkshire – The Hatfield Brigade.

The thirteen songs contained on the CD chronicle the individual and collective response of miners and their wives to what was a watershed moment in industrial relations and political malice in the United Kingdom. Each of the songs plays its part in the narrative in such a unique fashion and from such a specific angle that all feel essential.

With so many superb songs to choose from it can seem perverse to highlight examples with which to illustrate the impact of the CD but a number do suggest themselves on the first few listens.

Rebekah Findlay’s beautiful and plaintive voice on ‘Standing By Your Man’ and ‘They Can’t Do That To Me’ – and her sublime fiddle playing on the latter – serve to remind us of the critical role played by the miners’ wives and partners in supporting the strikers.

‘Summer Fields and Riot Shields’ and ‘The Day The War Came Home’ take us, respectively, to the centre of the action at Orgreave in June 1984 and to a later incident in August 1984 at Hatfield where the Police charged a seated picket line and a state close to civil war ensued. Although the scenarios are both of conflict the musical and lyrical approach to each is quite different and demonstrates a creative intelligence not always to the fore in political song.

The last two songs before the bonus track, ‘The Long March Back’ and ‘Never Took My Soul’, encourage us to maintain our pride and commitment in the face of adversity and defeat, keep our banners flying high and to never abandon our souls to the evils of capitalism and greed. We may lose that battle but we must keep on striving to win the war – that message is, I believe, even more relevant now than it was at the time of the miners’ strike. If you share this view, and live close enough, there is an opportunity to hear Joe and Rebekah perform the whole album live at the Pit Club, Stainforth on 6th February.

A CD full of passion, anger and dark humour. Just what I would have expected from Joe Solo – but more so!”

Joe Grint

To see the review it’s at:
http://www.fatea-records.co.uk/magazine/2016/JoeSolo.html

To listen to, or buy the album click:
https://joesolomusic.bandcamp.com/album/never-be-defeated

 

Holocaust Memorial Event- INCREDIBLE!

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What an incredible night!

In the Spring of last year I was approached by Brian Barnes to work with fellow songwriters Gary Miller and Sara Dennis to work with the young people of Hartlepool Holocaust Memorial Group. With the help of the amazing Sarah McCluskey, the kids put together a night of commemoration and remembrance, and wanted to compose a song on the subject especially for the occasion. So off-and-on for the last few months we’ve been working together to co-write a song called ‘Through The Wire‘ telling the story of a Durham-born soldier who helped liberate Bergen-Belsen in April 1945, and a young girl imprisoned in the camp.

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We performed it on Monday January 25th, with the youngsters as our backing choir, to around 200 people at Hartlepool College. It was a part of a stunning programme the group had put together comprising poetry, plays, speeches and a very moving film of an interview members of the group did with Lady Milena Grenfell-Baines who escaped occupied Czechoslovakia on one of the trains organised by Sir Nicholas Winton, whose efforts saved the lives of 669 children. I was still busy pretending I had something in my eye when the lights came on.

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It has been an honour, pleasure and privilege to meet such amazing young people, so dedicated to remembering the past and quick to speak of the modern parallels as they warned against mistreatment of refugees and pleaded with us DON’T STAND BY.

Perhaps their spirit is best summed up by the famous words of Sir Nicholas himself:

“If it’s not impossible, then get on and do it.”

Incredible night. Inspiring.

May Day Festival of Solidarity

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Delighted to announce I’ll be helping organise the inaugural MAY DAY FESTIVAL OF SOLIDARITY which will take place on 1st May 2016. The brainchild of Hurriers-front man and  We Shall Overcome co-conspirator Tony Wright, the festival is a bringing together of musicians and poets, unions and campaigning groups to celebrate INTERNATIONAL WORKER’S DAY. It will take place between 12 and 10pm at Barnsley Rock and Blues Venue, S75 2BA.

Tony has been desperate to start a UK-based celebration of this landmark day for a long time, and I am delighted he approached me to help. Things are taking shape very quickly and you can keep up with happenings on our website at:

https://maydaysolidarity.wordpress.com/

We are also on Facebook at:

https://www.facebook.com/maydayfest

and Twitter:

@ComradeRockUK

The bill is IMMENSE with Grace Petrie, The Hurriers, The Wakes, Phil ‘Swill’ Odgers, Alun Parry, Steve White & The Protest Family, Sheffield Socialist Choir, Serious Sam Barrett, Headsticks, Quiet Loner, The Black Lamps and me too, all confirmed and some very exciting additions in the pipeline.

There will be speeches too from UCATT, UNISON, ASLEF, NUM, Orgreave Truth and Justice Campaign, Hatfield Main Heritage Association and DJ Sets from Barnsley Sime and Mark Martin.

Tickets are a measly £10 and available from:

http://www.seetickets.com/event/mayday-festival-of-solidarity/barnsley-rock-blues-venue/943422

Make a date in your diaries. MAY 1ST.

 

Radio, Radio!

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Just in from recording a session with Tim Moon for the Bradford Community Broadcasting (BCB) Folk Show. There’s an interview and three live songs- ‘Coal Not Dole‘, ‘Summer Fields & Riot Shields‘ and ‘Starve Us Back To Work‘….all from the new album ‘NEVER BE DEFEATED‘- and the session is scheduled for broadcast on Monday 25th January.

In other radio news, the wonderful Mike Harding played ‘Standing By My Man‘ (from the same album and featuring the incredible vocals of Rebekah Findlay) on his Folk Show last Sunday. The podcast is available to stream at:

http://www.mikehardingfolkshow.com/category/podcasts/

and look out for some great songs, especially stunners by Conor O’Sullivan and Grace Griffith. As ever, Mike’s support is very much appreciated in these parts. He has been playing my songs for five years now and the airplay has been instrumental in spreading the word. Great news.

This followed on from BBC Introducing Humberside playing ‘The Day The War Came Home‘ on 9th January. Again, Alan Raw and the gang have been incredible support over the years and the podcast is available here:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03cxx2f

This came a week after BBC Introducing West Yorkshire played ‘Summer Fields & Riot Shields‘ on their show…..it has been an amazing few weeks. The show plays at:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03cm5f2

Just time to thank them for including ‘Mean When The Money’s Gone‘ in the 2015 playlist broadcast at the back end of last year and available to stream at:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03c79rf

The BCB session was a first live outing for ‘Coal Not Dole‘ and ‘Starve Us Back To Work‘ ahead of the album launch gig at Stainforth Pit Club on February 6th. Great to have them under my belt, they feel like old friends already.

Next up, is yet more radio. This time a session for the Vixen 101 Fox’s Den Show on Friday January 22nd.

I love radio.

January….that ‘month off’ in its entirety.

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January is my month off. Makes sense. After all, the weather is crap and no-one has the money or the inclination to head off into the cold to watch some bloke attempt to change the world using only a beat-up old guitar, a massive amount of hair gel and a maraca in his shoe.

Yep. My month off. Nice and relaxing.

Yeah, right.

I’m back on the campaign trail from Saturday January 9th at The Leopard in Doncaster where I’ll be opening for Martin Black.

Then on Wednesday 13th I’ll be pre-recording a session for Bradford Community Broadcasting (BCB) on the Tim Moon Folk show.

Then Friday 22nd I’ll be popping in to Vixen 101 to play some songs live on the Fox’s Den Show.

Monday 25th I’ll be performing the song I co-wrote with Gary Miller and Sara Dennis for the Hartlepool Youth Holocaust Memorial Group.

And lastly, on Saturday 30th there’s the small matter of opening for Attila the Stockbroker at the Corporation Club in Scarborough.

In between all that I’m busy writing songs and recording demos for what will eventually become my next album ‘A Raised Fist & A Helping Hand‘ pencilled in for a November release. You can check out its progress at:

https://joesolomusic.bandcamp.com/album/a-raised-fist-a-helping-hand-demos

Like I say, January is my month off.

NEW INTERVIEW….

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There’s a brand new interview up on the Porky’s Prime Cuts website. It was published on Monday 4th January having been sorted just before Christmas. In it I cover music, UK politics, We Shall Overcome, Socialism and the new album ‘NEVER BE DEFEATED’.

The link is:

https://craighaggis.wordpress.com/2016/01/02/and-that-means-you-joe-solo-fighter-extraordinaire/

Please give it a read.

2016 gigs kick off this weekend at The Leopard in Doncaster on Saturday 9th. I’ll be opening for local lad Martin Black as he launches his new single. Later this month, Saturday 30th, I’ll be opening for the mighty Attila the Stockbroker at the Corporation Club in Scarborough. After that we have the official album launch on February 6th at Stainforth Pit Club.

Can’t wait to kick it all off again!

NBD #1