Twelve Hours Before

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Bridget St John - The Carlton Club

Manchester, England - 21st August 2025

TWELVE HOURS BEFORE (A Poem for Bridget St John)

Twelve hours before

as night consigned that day

to where all days reside,

she'd stood alone in the spotlight

whilst diamonds from a glitterball

caressed her form,

embellishing her coloured cloak

as she sang afresh the songs

of brothers from her muse

she had outlived,

as love restored their words

from her crafted presence,

which time alone allows 

to carve from within.

A voice of cello elegance,

resonant and unassumingly sublime,

stilled the room,

some gift from time.

Her own songs rose and swooped

as birds in evening do

between the light of day

and night's encroachment

and as her silence fell,

head bowed as indication of completion,

she left the stage beneath a rainfall of applause,

an emissary from another time

but of the now.

This morning as I wandered through

my local coffee shop

with its usual discretion of piped jazz

I spied her seated with a friend

which made me smile because 

the evening had more punctuation 

to extend into a Friday dawn.

As she walked by I said her name,

she smiled in gratitude

and whispered

'I remembered you from the dark last night'

as I  thanked her for those songs,

but when I turned my head

a little later

her table had been cleared

concluding her brief vignette of reprise,

reclaimed by traffic noise,

the clatter of cups,

conversations heard,

but not discerned.

-------------------------

The Carlton Club lies tucked away in the leafy Manchester suburb of Whalley Range, mentioned and immortalised by Morrissey in his Smiths song "Miserable Lie:"

"What do we get for our trouble and pain?

 Just a rented room in Whalley Range"

It played host the other evening to English export to New York, the legendary songstress Bridget St John, who captivated a considerable audience with an all-too-brief catalogue of her exquisite songs and those of those she'd known along the way, Michael Chapman, Nick Drake, and John Martyn. All sadly gone.

Her quartet of albums, three on John Peel's legendary Dandelion Records, beginning with Ask Me No Questions in 1969. Plus Jumble Queen on Chrysalis in 1974 marked her out as an innovator of English singer-songwriters, although she admits from the stage that the term "Folk" has never felt appropriate, nor accurately representative of her craft.

She was joined by her friend and occasional collaborator, Emma Tricca, who had proved a sublime support act, her own creations possessing gossamer-like elements, underlined by a profound certainty of tone. A talent of immense elegance, and one worthy of discovering if you wish to unearth a new repertoire of worthy gems, Aspirin Sun, her latest album, is a perfect place of modulated beauty to work backwards from.=

During her set, she had been assisted by Pete Greenwood, another remarkable and deceptively understated talent whose set of songs betrayed a deep intelligence and songcraft, aided manfully by his exceptional and refined guitar skills. His debut solo work, Sirens, from 2008 on Heavenly Records, remains a touchstone work that provides constant pleasure via its gently understated accomplishments.

It proved a magical evening, three individual talents under the same roof, something to cherish after the lights went out and the doors of the Carlton Club closed on its Victorian splendour.

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