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Jackie Oates

In January of 2016, Jackie’s much-loved dad unexpectedly died just five days after the birth of her first child, while both she and her newly arrived daughter were ill in hospital. Having experienced such extremes of life, it was inevitable that her next record would speak deeply about childhood, parenthood, grief and renewal.

The songs that became 2018’s The Joy Of Living were a long way from the pretty pastoralism that began her career. From a reframed and devastatingly sad interpretation of John Lennon’s Mother to a joyous reimagining of Darwin Deez’ indie hit Constellations, alongside songs both about and remembered from childhood, Jackie’s plaintive and mellifluous voice reached beyond the past lives in folk song to the lived experience of all of us. The power and beauty of this record was immediately apparent in the reviews it received, with The Guardian calling it “utterly gorgeous… moving, depth-filled.” And none more moving than the final track, John Tams’ Rolling Home on which Jackie duetted with the only known recording of her late father; significantly finishing the song herself alone.

Either side of this most personal statement, Jackie has found the greatest artistic satisfaction in creating work for a diverse array of artists and commissions, including teaming up with singer songwriter Megan Henwood to release the Wings EP; collaborating on an hour long piece for the Reading Fringe Festival with dancer/musician Hannah James and Norwegian percussionist/composer Thomas Strønen; recording with multi-instrumentalist Barney Morse-Brown and Scritti Politti’s Rhodri Marsden for EEC’s ambitiously eclectic The Self Preservation Society and Instant Replay compilations (covering songs by The Zombies and The Jam); and with producer Richard Evans, exploring the pagan lore surrounding the city of Bath, to create a meditative spa soundtrack in collaboration with Belinda O’Hooley.

Perhaps the most unlikely but rewarding project has been Jackie’s 18-month placement with the Museum of English Rural Life. As Artist In Residence, her many and varied roles encompassed educational sessions on agricultural work songs, songwriting workshops with PhD students, performing themed concerts, speaking at the annual EFDSS conference, and many hours in the museum’s library researching the seldom explored area of English waulking songs (a tradition of singing to accompany women’s textile work usually associated with Scotland.)

It was this research that led to Jackie’s ongoing development of Lace Tellings, a radio ballad that tells the story behind the lives of the girls who lived and worked in the lace making areas of Southern England, through spoken word, songs and music. Combining the tradition’s surviving song words with lace telling tunes that are still in circulation in Belgium, the complete show was first performed in the summer of 2019 with much more planned for the project in the future.

2020 saw the release of an entirely handmade (right down to the sleeves) duo album with former Bellowhead founder John Spiers, called Needle Pin, Needle Pin that features some of the songs from Lace Tellings.

It’s this variation of work, continual discovery, and these unique opportunities to bring elements of the English folk tradition to new people and places that gives Jackie Oates the most happiness in her music; in turn bringing a much needed calm and joy to those who hear it.

Upcoming Events

Magpie’s Nest Festival

Location: Paddington, London

Time: 3pm - 10:30pm

19

nov

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The Nest Collective

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