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Artist
Sheelanagig’s origins lie between the now defunct Dartington College of arts in South Devon and the diverse melting-pot of the Bristol music scene. Formed in early 2005 the band had an instant chemistry and set about playing at every pub, club and open mic night they could get their hands on. Described in an early review in Venue Magazine as “fresh and distinctive”, with “rhythmic variety and great imagination”, the band gained a considerable local following and quickly earned a reputation for their exhilarating and intense live performances. It was on the festival scene, however, that the band really began to make their mark outside Bristol. Early successes at Shambala, Knockengorroch and the Bath Fringe Festival helped to build Sheelanagig’s reputation. Camping and partying with the festival crowds, the band frequently augmented their early-afternoon ‘graveyard’ slots with late night guerrilla gigs in the bars and chill-out tents long after the main stages had shut down. Three albums were recorded in quick succession: ‘Uncle Lung’ (2006), recorded with Portishead / Get the Blessing bassist Jim Barr at his studio in Bristol, sold well and was described by fRoots as a “high octane stuff…would liven any party and keep the floor full”, and by The Living Tradition as “a most invigorating debut” by a band with a “vitally energetic and full sound”. “Baba Yaga’s Ball” (2007) was recorded at Real World Studios, and was again reviewed well with Living Tradition highlighting the al