We're sorry, we're unable to process your request. Please try again.
|
To edit your Favourites or customize your e-mail preferences, go to My Ticketmaster.
Customise your e-mail preferences and more on My Ticketmaster.
Placeholder
Alternative and Indie
Seth Lakeman Tickets
You are in the loop for Seth Lakeman! We'll email you before tickets go on sale in your area.
Have more than just one favourite artist? Let My Ticketmaster keep track of all of them for you.
Has your taste changed? Use My Ticketmaster to find some new favourites!
Seth Lakeman Tickets and Concert Dates
Biography
Short Biography
Seth Lakeman, is a West Country born singer-songwriter, credited with bringing folk music to a whole new audience, since his 2005 Mercury nominated debut ‘Kitty Jay'.
Seth's live show, as with everything else he does, takes the established folk orthodoxy and turns it on its head. The spirit of the rock band meets the timeless and heartfelt subject matter of the folk tale in a blur of fiddle, acoustic guitar and foot-stomping rhythms, with Seth's unmistakable vocals riding the wave.
Seth's third album ‘Poor Man's Heaven' (follow up to 2006's critically acclaimed, gold selling ‘Freedom Fields'), perfectly captures the raw, rhythmic energy of his live shows.
Produced in large part by Seth's brother and fellow band member, Sean Lakeman, ‘Poor Man's Heaven' represents a progression for Seth's sound - while remaining firmly rooted in folk, it moves from a more acoustic-based feel to a fuller, rockier sound, underpinned as ever by emotive lyrics and story telling, this time with a strong coastal theme.
Having taken the leap of signing to a major label off the back of his self-financed debut, Seth's second album, ‘Freedom Fields', sold over 100,000 copies following its release in 2006. Since then Lakeman has been branded the ‘Poster Boy of Folk' (much to his exasperation), has toured constantly, performing to a heaving mass of 15,000 in the ‘New Band Tent' at last year's V Festival as well as on two stages at Glastonbury, and has made significant inroads internationally. On ‘Poor Man's Heaven' he continues inexorably to take his own brand of ‘indie-folk' to a whole new generation.
Seth also continues to develop the lyrical themes from the traditional West Country inspired story telling of his previous work. The often historical contexts are brought sharply up-to-date when pivotal track, ‘Soloman Brown', recounts the real-life story of the ill-fated Penlee lifeboat which perished in 1981 while trying to salvage a shipwrecked Union Star coaster. 16 people died in the failed rescue, and Lakeman's dramatic and powerful take on that night's fateful events, written in the hope of honouring those men and keeping the story alive, is a modern take on the truest tradition of folk music.
In-depth Biography
When the band Equation stumbled to semi-retirement in 2001, Seth Lakeman appeared to be the bandmember least equipped to find solo success. His brothers Sam and Sean teamed up in successful duos with their partners and fellow bandmembers Cara Dillon and Kathryn Roberts, but few imagined the band's frenzied fiddle player/guitarist would swiftly transform himself into not only one of the hottest talents on the British folk scene, but achieve fame and success well beyond the genre's parameters. Post-Equation, he played support fiddle behind his sister-in-law Cara Dillon, but back home in the beautiful, dramatic surroundings of Dartmoor in the southwest of England, he was inspired to write songs about the myriad legends and folklore endemic to the mystical countryside in which he was raised. His sole motivation for releasing his first solo album, The Punch Bowl (recorded in brother Sean's kitchen with other members of Equation and released on his own iScream label in 2002), was to stir up enough interest to get a few folk club gigs. The album sank without a trace. He didn't have the credibility or a striking enough voice to be taken seriously performing traditional material, and his own songs seemed scarcely original enough to garner attention beyond Equation followers.
Lakeman had little expectation that his second effort, 2004's Kitty Jay, would fare any better. Again recorded on a shoestring budget (£300!) in his brother's kitchen, it delved further into Devon's rich legacy of legends and was officially launched with a surreal gig in front of a captive audience at the bleak, intimidating Dartmoor Prison close to his home. But unlike its predecessor, Kitty Jay captured people's imaginations in unexpected ways. The title track told the harrowing story of a maid who committed suicide when ostracized by the local community after being impregnated by the squire's son, and inspired a trail of visitors to her roadside grave. Lakeman, meanwhile, found himself the shock inclusion on the short list of the 2005 Mercury Music Prize alongside rock luminaries Coldplay, Kaiser Chiefs, Magic Numbers, Hard-Fi, KT Tunstall, and eventual winners Antony and the Johnsons. Lakeman's passionate performance of "Kitty Jay" at the finals and his genial, homespun attitude toward the press interest accompanying it helped win a whole new audience, not merely for him, but the folk genre he was representing.
Suddenly Lakeman was the pinup boy of "nu folk," and although his next album, Freedom Fields, had already been recorded in a similarly modest manner to the previous two, EMI stepped forward in 2006 to sign him to its Relentless imprint and remix and reissue the album. With the full might of a major company behind him, Lakeman was projected into a previously alien world of singles, remixes, videos, daytime TV and radio promotion, and massive tours. He took it all in his stride and relished the chance to create a bigger sound, establishing a band, including brother Sean on guitar and Irish percussionist Cormac Byrne from the Uiscedwr trio playing bodhran.
Achieving mainstream recognition and a couple of minor U.K. hit singles (with "The White Hare" and "Lady of the Sea"), Lakeman's spectacular rise was greeted with skepticism by a folk world programmed to be suspicious of crossover success. Yet while his style was hardly authentic -- a novel hybrid of traditional song, frothy pop, and classically flavored fiddle playing -- he built an entirely new, young fan base for the music, something many had tried and failed to do before him. He was rewarded with Album of the Year (for Freedom Fields) and Singer of the Year honors at the 2007 BBC Folk Awards, though there was an outcry when the apparently self-written "The White Hare" was nominated as traditional track of the year. His fourth album, Poor Man's Heaven, arrived in 2008, followed by Hearts & Minds in 2010. Few ever successfully manage to straddle the disparate worlds of pop and folk, but with his infectious energy, original style, and natural charisma, Seth Lakeman kept his balance. ~ Colin Irwin, Rovi
See Less


