Originally published at kemptation.com on 10 June 2015. Words by Laura Thomas
A trend in recent years has seen many artists eschewing traditional gig venues – with their sticky carpets, overpriced drinks, broken PAs and ear-bleeding volumes – for acoustic gigs in informal venues, sheds, people’s front rooms (crammed onto the sofa with the TV pushed into a corner), kitchens…and bookshops. A whole circuit of community bookshops is springing up as the thoughtful, literate community reject Amazon and Kindle to make community and gather in a circle of light with fellow souls.
The beautiful and enigmatic Sale has been a poorly kept secret for some years now
The Tree House Bookshop in Kenilworth is typical. Tucked away in this hidden gem of a middle-England town, its proprietor, the redoubtable Victoria Meir, provides and oasis of calm in a hectic world. There are books, many books. There is cake, and tea and coffee and sometimes homemade biscuits. And on Friday, local legend Lucy Anne Sale came and brought strawberries and chocolate. The plan was to video a low key acoustic set; she was baffled to find the tiny venue packed in anticipation of her appearance.
The beautiful and enigmatic Sale has been a poorly kept secret for some years now, but somehow she has managed to avoid the mass popularity her talent demands despite touring with Kelly Joe Philips, performing sets at Glastonbury and the Union Chapel and boasting collaborations with Devon Sproule and Rachel Ries.
Sale quickly establishes an easy rapport with her audience, sitting slightly hunched over her nylon strung guitar, her smoky, jazz-infused vocals flowing over a soundscape of chords and runs. A classically-trained composer, Sale has devised her own system on the guitar, refraining from hackneyed three-chord tricks. After playing a couple of numbers solo, she brings on vocalists Lizzie Coughlan and Liz Crowley.
Songs like The Beatles (about a Facebook stalker) and the bitterly acerbic Where Does all the Money Go? show the trio’s unique vocal stylings. These are no mere backing singers; the three voices syncopate against one another and the jagged polyrhythms of Sale’s guitar, harmonic intervals and breaks unexpected and glorious in their originality, reflecting hours in the practice room and the considerable skills of Coughlan and Crowley as well as the classical training of Sale. The arrangements resemble a string quartet, with the guitar taking the part of the cello and three voices driving rhythm, melody and harmony into one glorious whole. Or, as one wag put it, ‘like the Andrews Sisters on acid.’
Sale’s lyrics are a mixture of the enigmatic and the commonplace: the homespun themes of Hurry, Quickly merging with displays of breath-taking vulnerability on Fooled by the Minor Key or Slow Motion Heart.
Material is drawn from her privately-released second album Sonomama and her yet-to-be-recorded new album on which Sale promises string arrangements and is looking for crowdfunding to try and get the project off the ground. Check her out at www.lucyannesale.com and make your pledge.
Lucy Anne Sale has a busy summer coming up, and the gig with full band at the Bridge House Theatre on 26th July (as part of Warwick Folk Festival) is one not to miss.






