Chart news is music to Seth's ears
HOMEGROWN folk hero Seth Lakeman has seen his new album hit
the top ten – just two days after its launch.
Seth, who launched Poor Man's Heaven at Plymouth HMV on
Monday, confessed to being 'absolutely speechless' at the
number six placing in the midweek official UK album chart,
which gives a strong indication of where the album will end up
at close of play in the official weekend chart.
“We were hoping for top twenty,” he said, en route to his
album signing at HMV Bristol on yesterday, “but didn't expect
top ten.
“I'm completely bowled over! It means we're up there with
the Ting Tings and Duffy; this is a folk record for goodness'
sake!
“This placing means that the album should be sure to stay in
the top ten, and with all the promo may even stand a chance of
going higher.”
The release of the album was cleverly timed to coincide with
Seth's appearance on the acoustic stage at Glastonbury before
an audience of around 10,000 punters.
This, together with a live appearance from the BBC tent plus
plenty of networking and promo at the festival, appears to be
helping shift his fourth and grittiest collection in
quantity.
But all the hype would be nothing if the music wasn't up to
scratch and Seth and his band stormed the acoustic tent, with
crowd volume on a scale seldom heard before.
The success of Poor Man's Heaven, which was co-produced by
Seth's brother Sean and recorded at Cornish studios in Bude and
St Merryn, will be a real vindication for Seth, who has had to
battle to get the album released on his own terms.
He refused to comply with his label Relentless's wishes to
come up with a more 'pop'- orientated song to put out as a
single, which resulted in the delayed release of the album.
He said: “This has been a really big step for me; there's no
single on there, but it shows that people are getting behind
real music. The label is really, really happy with the way
things are going and are getting fully behind it.”
Radio 2 have chosen to play Crimson Dawn, arguably the most
accessible/ crossover track on the album, though the opening,
tribal-drum-driven rocky song The Hurlers is also a popular
choice for radio presenters.
A top ten placing for the album is all the more remarkable
with the lack of an obvious heralding single: but then for a
folk album to chart this high is a real rarity. In the early
Seventies the likes of Fairport Convention, Lindisfarne and
Steeleye Span made it into the top ten and The Waterboys and
the Levellers did it in the Nineties. Seth's labelmate KT
Tunstall has done it more recently, but to reach the upper
echelons with such a full-on, uncompromising, rootsy offering
as Seth's latest, in this day and age, is an exceptional
achievement.
Seth says: “We've worked really hard and it looks like all
the good work we've put in is paying off.”













3 Comments
by Paul Atkins, West Country
Thursday, July 03 2008, 2:00PM
“Listen to audio interviews with Seth Lakeman and Show Of Hands, on www.whatsonsouthwest.co.uk”
by Paul Atkins, West Country
Thursday, July 03 2008, 1:58PM
“Listen to audio interviews with Seth Lakeman and Show of Hands, on www.whatsonsouthwest.co.uk”
by John, Plymouth
Wednesday, July 02 2008, 9:03AM
“The success of this superb album shows that people want real music not the plastic teeny throw away tripe that dominates the charts. Seth is a real person, not a multi-millionaire prima donna far removed from reality, and this shows in his music. Folk music is alive and kicking, especially here in the South West. What with Seth's success and the fantastic Show Of Hands we are privilaged to have two wonderful Devon acts.”