Wille And The Bandits, Demi Marriner – Night & Day Cafe, Manchester – 12th March 2026


Night and Day Cafe are tonight’s hosts, which is a great venue and normally has a crowd that really shows their appreciation when they see and hear something they like. Caitlin Krisco And The Broadcast, The Deep Blue and St. Catherineโs Child have all played here in recent months and gone down a storm, so it all bodes well.
Tonightโs headliner is Wille And The Bandits, a band thatโs new to me, even though theyโve been around for a good few years, and one from a part of the country thatโs not known for churning out musicians – Mick Fleetwood aside, that is. Heading to the bright lights and the big city of Manchester, from their homes in Cornwall, theyโre a band that has a reputation for putting on a good show when they play live. Theyโve received rich praise from the likes of Joe Bonamassa and Beth Hart and, if that isnโt enough, their tunes have a huge chunk of Hammond sounding organ running through them – which always gets my attention. Whether itโs the real McCoy, with a Leslie cabinet in tow, or one of those Swedish Nords, that can pull off a neat imitation on a good day, remains to be seen.
Thereโs a support too, which tonight comes in the form of the delightful Demi Marriner, who takes a break from providing support and bvโs on the huge touring schedule of Elles Bailey to do her own thing, soโฆ
Letโs get on with it.
DEMI MARRINER
Anyone thatโs familiar with Elles Bailey will know of Ms. Marriner, as theyโve been in cahoots for quite a while. Not everyone however might know that she has her own songs to offer. Tonight, sheโs accompanied by Joe Coombs, who I last saw playing with Laura Evans, so as good a wing man as anyone could ask for.
A little later than advertised, the twosome appear and with a polite hello from the Lady, they open with Sins from Marrinerโs first album The Things We Didnโt Say and follow it up with the next track off the same album Distorted Desires. Now as opening tracks go, these are very good, and very well received by the Manchester crowd. It didnโt go unnoticed though that a good few of them had Elles Bailey t-shirts on, so maybe she is more of a known quantity than she thinks she is, as she introduces the third song, Think of Me, as โa new song, well, theyโre probably all new to you.โ I think not, Ms. Marriner, as your reputation very much precedes you.
LISTEN… AND LEARN
Repeat Refrain comes from the second album The Things I Said that, she says โtells you too much about me, and if you want to get to know me really well and really fastโ – listen and learn. It was nice for a delicate ripple of applause to come through when she mentioned the title as an additional show of appreciation. Need To Know and Good Guy Act finish off an opening salvo of wonderful vocals, delicate harmonies with Coombs and guitar work from both that complimented each other throughout. Very nice.
It was even more pleasing to hear the huge cheer that came about when Demi announces that sheโs getting ready to announce a full tour later in the year, and with a full band in tow, now thatโs something to really look forward to. On this showing Manchester, in particular, will look forward to it, so letโs hope the city makes the schedule.









Wille And The Bandits
Now these guys had been on my radar for a while, but Iโd never got close to a gig and didnโt really know much about them. Frontman, Wille Edwards noted that that someone had described the new album Salt Roots as โan album that AI couldnโt make,โ which he didnโt know how to take, but has put it down to their many different styles of music that they blend together to make their own unmistakable sound.
With Manchester nicely warmed up, courtesy of Ms. Marriner, the crowd was ready and the overture that played as the band walked on was enough to set a few pulses racing. This is what they had come to see and were ready for it. A trio of tunes, all segueing as one big opener, came thick and fast. Wheal Jane started things off, followed by King Kong and Style Thing finishing us off very well, thank you.
The bands eclectic mix was on show from the beginning, and it carried on with Reina Del Mar, with a real Latin groove to it and all very Santana-esque, which is no bad thing, and it included some wonderful flat chops from Zachariah OโLoughlin on drums โ who was definitely there, as we saw him walk on, but anyone that knows the Night & Day Cafรฉ, knows that their stage lighting doesnโt reach the back of the stage, so you have to have faith that he is actually doing his thing and itโs not a machine.
HEART & SOUL
Up front, Wille Edwards was putting heart and soul into things, swapping out lap steel guitars on a regular basis and wringing out passion with soulful vocals that Manchester lapped up. Where Edwards took time to breathe, the gaps were filled in by Stevie Watts on keys and a Hammond sound from a Viscount that sounded delicious not least on Four Million Days. A song with a pulsing bass running throughout it, courtesy of Harry Mackaill, but with that Viscount lauding it all across the back. Not to be left out, Edwards launched into one mean guitar solo that hit the mark with everyone in the room.
Heart strings were tugged with Angel, which Edwards wrote in memory of his mother, who he lost some twenty years ago. After taking a bit of a break to come to terms with things, he needed to let everything out when he finally came back to the band. Angel was the result which starts off all gentle and esoteric and haunting – until a big thumping beat kicks in, by he who could be heard but not seen, and the sound of that Viscount wrapping around everything like one big blanket. Itโs a mammoth instrumental tune that pulls you every which way and leaves you grateful for it. This song was one big outpouring of every emotion known to man and the response from the crowd was truly amazing and great to witness.
FUNKY – AND EVERYTHING ELSE
Keep It On The Downlow is a funky tune – well weโve had everything else – with a brilliant solo from Watts, whoโs up for Instrumentalist of the Year at the 2026 UK Blues Awards incidentally, whereas Caught In The Middle is a right meaty tune which loads of power behind it. That eclecticism knows no bounds.
1970 is another real tune with power behind it, and which went straight into Bad News as the (supposedly) last songs of the night and together must have lasted a good quarter of an hour โ Prog Rock now being firmly added to the mix !
NOT DONE YET
Manchester had been treated to anything and everything tonight, with a good selection of songs from the back catalogue and the new offering Salt Roots, no-one had been left out. The boys werenโt done just yet though as there was an encore on the way with two songs from that latest album, Sail Away is an emotional tale, telling the story of the children left behind by the Pilgrims when The Mayflower set sail, some 400 years ago, before Trouble Round The Bend really did finish things off.
If I didnโt know what to expect at the start, I do now. Iโve ran out of superlatives to describe the many different styles of music that these guys cover, but it is true to say that thereโs something for everyone, all done extremely well by musicians that know their craft. Itโs an emotional rollercoaster of a ride and I was very glad that I finally caught up with Wille and the Bandits and I promise not to leave it too long before I witness it all again.
Until the next timeโฆ








Wille & The Bandits: Website
Demi Marriner: Website
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