Five Have An Out-of-town Experience
You can’t always get that live music experience you crave by simply staying within the walls of D-Town. Sometimes, and especially when there’s a band playing that you simply have to see, you just need to get the gang together and pile into a motor to visit the wilder Wiltshire provinces. And so it was last night that we ventured over the hill to Calne. We found the border post un-guarded, and so we slipped into the town and found our way to The Piggy Bank micro-pub to see The Lost Trades……
The Piggy Bank has been a surprisingly good little venue over the past year or two, featuring some great nights with, among others, The Rob Lear Band, The Black Feathers, Jess Vincent, and Jinder, as well as pop-up dining nights, quiz nights and (a big favourite of mine) Crazy Bird comedy club nights.
Just in case you don’t know them, The Lost Trades are a trio who play folk/ Americana with a cool Laurel Canyon vibe. With a sound that is reminiscent of the California folk scene of the late 60s/early 70s, (we’re thinking here of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young), their three part harmonies have been previously described as “flawless”, “spine tingling” and “magical”.
Formed in late 2019, the global Covid hoo-hah cut short their first tour after just a single sold out gig. The band shrugged their shoulders, and retreated to their respective song-writing rooms to work on what was to become their debut album, “The Bird, The Book & The Barrel”, released in June 2021. The follow up album, “Petrichor” was released in March 2023. Both are highly recommended – trust me!

Then, just last year, one of their founding members, Tamsin Quinn, decided to leave the trio to pursue other interests. Bit of a shock. Was this the end for The Lost Trades, we all wondered? Not a bit of it! Tamsin has now been replaced (if replaced is really the right word) by the very talented Jess Vincent, who had recently returned to the UK after a few years away in Bulgaria.
The result of all that is that The Lost Trades now consist of:
· Phil Cooper (vocals, acoustic guitar, electric bass), a performer not unknown in the local area for many years, both as a solo performer, as well in various bands, and a guy who knows his way around a recording studio and the producer’s job;

· Jamie R Hawkins (vocals, acoustic guitar, electric bass, ukulele), also massively well-known locally, especially in venues around D-Town, for his wonderful solo performances and some great songs. Indeed a bunch of us had slipped over to The Pulpit (ex The Little Hop) in Old Town, Swindon only last week to witness a really excellent solo performance at that new musical venue;
· Jess Vincent (vocals, guitar, percussion, shruti box). Jess first came to notice singing with Penny Red, before branching out into a solo career that produced several albums (Time Frame, Seesaw Dreams, Shine, and last year’s Lions Den)
Between us five we’d seen The Lost Trades in their old formation many times before, but this was to be the first time with new band-member Jess. How would this all work out? Would the sound and the dynamic have changed? And if so, for better or worse? Well, in sum, we need not have worried. Despite a massive learning curve for Jess to pick up the band’s performing repertoire in just a few short months, to say nothing of having to re-blend all of their trade-mark close harmonies, the end result was spectacularly good. It was neither better, nor worse, just slightly different and more developed and mature. Right from the first number we knew that the magic had remained intact.

All the old stuff was still there – the constant and easy interchanging of instruments (including guitar, ukulele, bass and percussion), the close three-part harmonies, the well-worked song material, and the light-hearted intimacy, with the group engaging in comfortable repartee with each other and the audience like a group of old friends. And there were a lot of old friends in the audience to help them along. And, of course, the many familiar songs.
But there was some great new stuff too – new songs, a different female vocal line, new instruments, and (obviously) a new personal dynamic between the three performers. All of them had played The Piggy Bank before, and all to packed houses, so there were no nerves about any of that. And last night, in front of yet another packed house, they managed to produce a truly spell-binding performance once again.
My only (very slight) reservations about the evening were that I needed slightly less chat (some of the introductions were as long as the songs!) and I would have liked slightly more of Jess (the two boys tended to dominate proceedings at times). But, hey, these are very simple things to be fixed and developed, and didn’t in any way detract from all the superb quality of the music they delivered in their three sets (or “spasms” as Phil nicely put it).
There were no lashings of ginger beer, but the music flowed, the craft beer certainly flowed, and a jolly good time was had by all. Then, under cover of darkness, we fled through the night back to the safety of D-Town, our out-of-town mission successfully accomplished.
Hopefully there’ll be more music dates to come at The Piggy Bank in the autumn. But, meanwhile, if you want to see The Lost Trades live in concert (and I strongly recommend that you do!), they’ll be appearing locally as below:
Future dates for The Lost Trades:
Wednesday 23rd July 2025 @ The White Bear, Devizes
Friday 25th July 2025 @ Trowbridge Festival
Friday 26th September 2025 @ The Pump, Trowbridge
Saturday 27th September @ The Hop, Old Town, Swindon
For more information go to thelosttrades.com/







