The Bookshop Band in Abingdon & 20 Books of Summer, 6: Orphans of the Carnival by Carol Birch

The Bookshop Band have been among my favourite musical acts since I first saw play live at the Hungerford Literary Festival in 2014. Initially formed of three local musicians for hire, they got their start in 2010 as the house band at Mr B’s Emporium of Reading Delights in Bath, England. For their first four years, they wrote a pair of original songs about a new book, often the very day of an author’s event in the shop, and performed them on guitar, cello, and ukulele as an interlude to the evening’s reading and discussion.

Notable songs from their first 13 albums are based on Glow by Ned Beauman (“We Are the Foxes”), Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight by Alexandra Fuller (“Bobo and the Cattle”), The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce (“How Not to Woo a Woman”), and Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel (“You Make the Best Plans, Thomas”). They have also written responses to classic literature, with songs inspired by Alice in Wonderland, various Shakespeare plays, and a compilation of first lines called “Once Upon a Time.”

I got to see the band live five times pre-pandemic, even after husband-and-wife-duo Ben Please and Beth Porter moved nearly 400 miles away to Wigtown, the Book Town of Scotland. During the first six months of Covid-19 lockdown, the livestream concerts from their attic were weekly treats to look forward to. They also interviewed authors for a breakfast chat show as part of the Wigtown Book Festival, which went online that year.

In the years since, the band has kept busy with other projects (not to mention two children). Porter sings and performs on the two Spell Songs albums based on Robert Macfarlane’s The Lost Words and its sequel. Together they composed the soundtrack to Aardman Animations’ short film, Robin Robin (2021) – winning Best Music at the British Animation Awards, and wrote an album of songs based on Scottish children’s literature. And they have continued writing one-off book songs, such as for the launch of Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton. (I’m disappointed their songs about All My Wild Mothers by Victoria Bennett and The Spinning Heart by Donal Ryan still haven’t made it onto record.)

I’ve been enthusing about them for nearly a decade, but they’ve remained mostly under the radar in that time. Not so any longer; their recent album Emerge, Return was produced by Pete Townshend of The Who; the production value has notably advanced while retaining their indie spirit. Foreword Reviews kindly agreed to pay me to fangirl – er, write a blog – about Emerge, Return and the tour supporting it, so I’ll leave it there for the music criticism (their complete discography is now available on Bandcamp and Spotify). I’ll just add that a number of these ‘new’ songs have been kicking around for six to ten years but went unrecorded until now. For that reason, I worried that it might feel like a collection of cast-offs, but in fact they’ve managed to produce something sonically and thematically cohesive. It’s darker than some of their previous work, with moody minor chords and slightly sinister subjects.

 

Julia Pastrana after death. George Wick, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

I’ve often found that the band will zero in on a detail, scene, or idea that never would have stood out to me while reading a book but, in retrospect, evokes the whole with great success. I decided to test this out by reading Carol Birch’s Orphans of the Carnival in the weeks leading up to seeing them on their months-long UK summer/autumn tour. It’s a historical novel about real-life 1850s Mexican circus “freak” Julia Pastrana, who had congenital conditions that caused her face and body to be covered in thick hair and her jaw and lips to protrude. Cruel contemporaries called her the world’s ugliest woman and warned that pregnant women should not be allowed to see her on tour lest the shock cause them to miscarry. Medical doctors posited, in all seriousness, that she was a link between humans and orangutans.

My copy of Birch’s novel was a remainder, and it is certainly a minor work compared to the Booker Prize-shortlisted Jamrach’s Menagerie. Facts about Julia’s travel itinerary and fellow oddballs quickly grow tedious, and while one of course sympathizes when children throw rocks at her, she never becomes a fully realized character rather than a curiosity.

There is also a bizarre secondary storyline set in 1983, in which Rose fills her London apartment with hoarded objects, including a doll she rescues from a skip and names Tattoo. She becomes obsessed with the idea of visiting a doll museum in Mexico. I thought that Tattoo would turn out to be Julia’s childhood doll Yatzi (similar to in A Council of Dolls by Mona Susan Power, where dolls have sentimental and magical power across the centuries), but the connection, though literal, was not as I expected. It’s more grotesque than that. And stranger than fiction, frankly.

{SPOILERS AHEAD}

Birch sticks to the known details of Julia’s life. She had various agents, the final one being Theo Lent, who married her. (In the novel, he can’t bring himself to kiss her, but he can, you know, impregnate her.) She died of a fever soon after childbirth. Her son, Theo Junior, who inherited her hypertrichosis, also died within days. Both bodies were embalmed, sold, and exhibited. Theo then married another hairy woman, Marie Bartel of Germany, who took the name “Zenora” and posed as Julia’s sister. Theo died, syphilitic (or so Birch implies) and insane, in a Russian asylum. Julia and Theo Junior’s remains were displayed and mislaid at various points over the years, with Julia’s finally repatriated to Mexico for a proper burial in 2013. In the novel, Tattoo is, in fact, Theo Junior’s mummy.

Two Bookshop Band songs from the new album are about the novel: “Doll” and “Waggons and Wheels.” “Doll” is one of the few more lighthearted numbers on the album. It ended up being a surprise favourite track for me (along with the creepy “Eve in Your Garden,” about Margaret Atwood’s The Testaments, and “Room for Three,” a sombre yet resolute epic written for the launch of Philip Pullman’s La Belle Sauvage) because of its jaunty music-hall tempo; the pattern of repeating most nouns three times; and the hand claps, “deedily” vocal fills, unhinged recorder playing, and springy sound effects. The lyrics are almost a riddle: “When’s a doll (doll doll) not a doll (doll doll)?” They somehow avoid all spoilers while conveying something of the mental instability of a couple of characters.

The gorgeous “Waggons and Wheels” picks up on the melancholy tone and parental worries of earlier tracks from the album. The chorus has a wistful air as Julia ponders the passage of time and her constant isolation: “old friends, new deals / Winter or spring, I am hiding … Winter or spring, I’ll be travelling.” Porter’s mellow soprano tempers Julia’s outrage at mistreatment: “who are you to shout / Indecency and shame? / Shocking, I shock, so lock me out / I’m locked into this face.” She fears, too, what will happen to her child, “a beast or a boy, a monster or joy”. Listening to the song, I feel that the band saw past the specifics to plumb the universal feelings that get readers empathizing with Julia as a protagonist. They’ve gotten to the essence of the story in a way that Birch perhaps never did. Mediocre book; lovely songs. (New (bargain) purchase – Dollar Tree, Bowie, Maryland)

 

I caught the Emerge, Return tour at St Nicolas’ Church in Abingdon (an event hosted by Mostly Books) last night. It was my sixth time seeing the Bookshop Band in concert – see also my write-ups of two 2016 events plus one in 2018 and another in 2019 – but the first time in person since the pandemic. I got to show off my limited-edition T-shirt. How nice it was to meet up again with blogger friend Annabel, too! Fun fact for you: Ben was born in Abingdon but hadn’t been back since he was two. Beth’s cousin turned up to the show as well. Although they have their daughters, 2 and 7, on the tour with them, they were being looked after elsewhere for the evening so the parents could relax a bit. Across the two sets, they played seven tracks from the new album, six old favourites, and two curios: one Spell Song, and an untitled song they wrote for the audiobook of Jackie Morris’s The Unwinding. It was a brilliant evening!

22 responses

  1. margaret21's avatar

    I’ve never heard of this band, Unsurprising, as I’ve rarely heard of any bands! They seem worth looking out for.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      They have flown under the radar! Many people probably discover them through word of mouth or stumbling upon a small bookshop event. They’ve already been in Leeds earlier in the month and I don’t see any nearby dates coming up (unless you’ll happen to be in London in late July/early August), but I’ll keep you posted if I see anything. With 15 albums now, it’s likely that they’ve written songs about at least a few books that you love.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. margaret21's avatar

        I must seek them out. You’re right. Not in London then.

        Like

  2. A Life in Books's avatar

    What a brilliant evening, and how lovely to meet up with Annabel. Great photos, too.

    I loved Jamrach’s Menagerie but Orphans of the Carnival not so much.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I think I’d enjoy Jamrach’s more now, though at the time it first came out I was slightly repelled. While it’s good for Julia Pastrana’s story to be told sympathetically, I’m not sure it worked as a novel.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Cathy746books's avatar

    How lovely to see you and Annabel meeting up. I love the Bookshop Band too.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I don’t see any NI dates on this tour, but maybe one day! In Wigtown they’re not far from the ferry across to Belfast.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Annabel (AnnaBookBel)'s avatar

    It was indeed lovely to see you again – and to meet Chris too! I’d only heard a couple of tracks on YouTube by the band, and I thought they were fabulous. Bought the album, natch.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Yay, so glad you enjoyed the evening and were converted into a fan 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Laura's avatar

    I didn’t like Jamrach’s Menagerie so it sounds like I should definitely skip this one. I’d love to hear the band’s Birnam Wood song!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Yeah, Birch hasn’t had a real hit with me yet, though I did enjoy Shadow Girls, which is something of a creepy campus mystery.

      You can see the video here! It features an abandoned greenhouse setting and drone photography. The song has an F-bomb (rare for them) to fit the sweary nature of the novel. I like the groove of this one but it’s probably too long. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IgIJ8vBnsU

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Laura's avatar

        I just listened to it! Gentler than I expected given the novel… I liked the folky vibe.

        Liked by 1 person

  6. Liz Dexter's avatar

    Lovely! Of course I failed to see them this year but I will try if they come to Birmingham again. Super to see your meet-up with Annabel, too.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It’s a shame you missed when they came to your local, but I’m sure there will be another opportunity!

      Like

  7. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    Looks like a great evening! I need to check them out on Spotify.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Yay, I hope you will! You’ll see a lot of familiar books that they’ve written songs about.

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    It sounds and looks like you had a fabulous time! Especially given how long you’ve been following/appreciating them, it must feel sweet to see them gain greater recognition for their hard work and passion.

    Jamrach’s is one that I admired rather than I enjoyed, and I’ve not yet returned to her. It might simply been that I have added in a lot of other reading, but it feels like British authors are less often front-of-face in the media here (than was true, say, ten years ago, twenty even).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I felt the same about Jamrach’s. Birch has written a lot, more than one might think, and has mostly stayed under the radar.

      Same for the band, but I do hope that will change this year! Shelf Awareness image of the day, Foreword blog, post here, post on Instagram … I’m doing my bit to get them the publicity they deserve!

      Like

  9. […] It was also fun tying into the Reading the Meow week and connecting reviews with events such as an online conference about Vita Sackville-West and the new album by the Bookshop Band. […]

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  10. Unknown's avatar

    […] and a lovely opportunity to meet up with Rebecca and her husband Chris (she blogged about it here). I’m a […]

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  11. […] bookish achievements: Reading almost the entire Carol Shields Prize longlist; seeing The Bookshop Band on their huge Emerge, Return tour and not just getting my photo with them but having it published […]

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  12. […] a party you’d find me with Orphans of the Carnival (Carol […]

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