This started life as a dream I had about meeting the 90s RJ Band bass player Huggy Harewood accidentally at a service station car park. The 90s RJ Band, by then down to a three piece (me, Hug & Paul Mullineaux on drums) sensibly decided to call it quits in a service station at 3am on the way back to West London from a benefit gig in Fleetwood where not only were we not offered expenses, we were not offered anywhere to stay too. .So Huggy drove us back south again in his van, & we stopped off at a service station & decided it would be beyond stupid to keep doing this. Hug's still playing awesome bass in a covers band. As Hug pointed out when we called it a day, in a covers band he could earn much more as a bass player than the RJ Band ever - rarely - got paid as a band. Which sort of puts "Here Goes Nothing" in perspective, as another act of utter folly by people mostly old enough to know better.
supported by 8 fans who also own “Happily Ever After - acoustic”
What a tribute, I haven’t the words to say how this group have been the soundtrack to my life, through good and bad.
Anything that helps is the least I can do, missed dearly. Joe Zux
The second EP from Northern Irish singer-songwriter Bea Stewart runs from gentle folk to pillowy pop ballads, all perfectly executed. Bandcamp New & Notable Apr 15, 2024
Michelle Stodart’s folk music captures hope in melancholy, addressing the transformational aspects of the most challenging times. Bandcamp New & Notable Oct 3, 2023