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Whapweasel
are no longer the best-kept secret on the English ceilidh-dance
circuit. The word is out. After seven years of dignified obscurity,
the Whaps were propelled into the limelight in 2003 when their
third CD, Relentless, shifted wagonloads on the back of
heavy national radio coverage, unanimously enthusiastic reviews
nationwide and indeed worldwide ("Whapweasel slaagt er wonderwel
in..." see Press Coverage page), and a series of triumphant
gigs at the Sidmouth International Folk Festival. Relentless
was featured on the prestigious fRoots Top Ten Playlist,
and the band themselves were interviewed by fRoots editor
Ian Anderson for the magazine's August issue. Further critical
acclaim came at the end of the year with their inclusion in Mojo's
list of Best Folk CDs of 2003, and their nomination for the Horizon
Award (Best New Act) in the annual Radio Two Folk Awards
the only dance band shortlisted in any category.
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Five go naked 1998
Seven up 2002
Peaking at eight 2003
With Tom in 2005
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Not bad for a band that started out as
two melodeon players. Robin Jowett and Brian Bell decided in the
mid-Nineties that the world was ready for another electric ceilidh
band. Needing a rhythm section, Brian switched to bass, and in due
course drums, guitars and cittern were added. At this point they
adopted the name Whapweasel, taken from a small stream that flows
quietly through Hexham Low Quarter in mid-Northumberland; their
previous name scores highly in pub quizzes throughout the North
of England. In 1998, with a line-up of Robin, Brian, Dave Ainsley,
Mike Coleman and Bob Wilson, they recorded their first CD, Skirl
Naked, and made a second, Burn, two years later, by which
time the band sound had been augmented by a saxophone section ("The
Toots") comprising Stuart Finden and Fiona Littlewood. The
addition of brass further accentuated the band's adroit use of elements
of jazz and ska. Both CDs had been produced by Steeleye Span's Rick
Kemp; and in the course of recording Relentless in 2003 Rick
added some stinging electric guitar, plugging the gaps left by Dave
Ainsley, who had withdrawn from gigging earlier in the year. Rick
was thereupon added to the line-up by (rumour has it) mutual agreement.
Also joining the line-up at the time of recording was Brian's daughter
Heather on keyboards.
The Band won the prestigious Best
Dance Band category at the Radio 2 Folk Awards in 2005 and it was
after that that Robin decided to call it a day. The Band was fortunate
to have met an amazing fiddle player, Tom Fairbairn at Sidmouth the previous
year and invited him to join the band.
Whapweasel are first and foremost
a dance band, but they're likely to be in increasing demand on
the concert circuit, and are busy developing pieces designed
as much for listening as for dancing (though they have devised
a way for audiences to dance while remaining seated; experts
are baffled...). Meanwhile, hang on to your hats: the Mighty
Wind of Whap is heading your way...
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