Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj

Post to this Thread - Printer Friendly - Home
Page: [1] [2] [3] [4]


Singers and songs which stunned me .

The Sandman 02 Apr 09 - 05:21 AM
Phil Cooper 01 Apr 09 - 03:11 PM
MartinRyan 01 Apr 09 - 09:53 AM
Art Thieme 01 Apr 09 - 09:04 AM
Bruce MacNeill 01 Apr 09 - 07:13 AM
Simon G 01 Apr 09 - 05:01 AM
Phil Cooper 31 Mar 09 - 10:46 PM
Betsy 31 Mar 09 - 08:47 PM
Art Thieme 31 Mar 09 - 08:39 PM
Kampervan 31 Mar 09 - 06:56 PM
Ref 31 Mar 09 - 06:16 PM
kendall 31 Mar 09 - 04:49 PM
kendall 31 Mar 09 - 04:40 PM
breezy 31 Mar 09 - 04:28 PM
Folkiedave 31 Mar 09 - 04:21 PM
breezy 31 Mar 09 - 04:08 PM
breezy 31 Mar 09 - 04:07 PM
breezy 31 Mar 09 - 04:05 PM
breezy 31 Mar 09 - 04:04 PM
Phil Cooper 31 Mar 09 - 04:02 PM
Phil Cooper 31 Mar 09 - 03:53 PM
GUEST,mg 31 Mar 09 - 03:37 PM
GUEST,mg 31 Mar 09 - 03:27 PM
folkypaul 31 Mar 09 - 03:00 PM
The Borchester Echo 31 Mar 09 - 02:46 PM
folkypaul 31 Mar 09 - 02:31 PM
Mark Ross 31 Mar 09 - 01:23 PM
Betsy 31 Mar 09 - 12:33 PM
Sleepy Rosie 31 Mar 09 - 12:16 PM
GUEST,HiLo 31 Mar 09 - 12:09 PM
bobad 31 Mar 09 - 11:35 AM
George Papavgeris 31 Mar 09 - 11:14 AM
Dave Sutherland 31 Mar 09 - 10:48 AM
Phil Edwards 31 Mar 09 - 10:45 AM
matt milton 31 Mar 09 - 10:44 AM
Art Thieme 31 Mar 09 - 10:35 AM
topical tom 31 Mar 09 - 10:11 AM
Betsy 31 Mar 09 - 09:59 AM
greg stephens 31 Mar 09 - 09:57 AM
Bryn Pugh 31 Mar 09 - 09:49 AM
Dave Hanson 31 Mar 09 - 09:07 AM
SINSULL 31 Mar 09 - 09:06 AM
breezy 31 Mar 09 - 09:01 AM
breezy 31 Mar 09 - 09:00 AM
nutty 31 Mar 09 - 08:56 AM
Dave Hanson 31 Mar 09 - 08:45 AM
The Borchester Echo 31 Mar 09 - 08:44 AM
The Borchester Echo 31 Mar 09 - 08:36 AM
Harmonium Hero 31 Mar 09 - 08:33 AM
GUEST,George Henderson 31 Mar 09 - 08:32 AM
Share Thread
more
Lyrics & Knowledge Search [Advanced]
DT  Forum Child
Sort (Forum) by:relevance date
DT Lyrics:













Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: The Sandman
Date: 02 Apr 09 - 05:21 AM

Richard Grainger singing BornToday


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 01 Apr 09 - 03:11 PM

Art, we won't mention the fish jokes. Another song and singer that stunned me occasion was when Louis Killen came with us to a singing/playing session at the Malone's house in Wilmette one of the years he was playing Fox Valley. He'd asked me to play an arrangement Kate Early and I had worked up of Salisbury Plain, because he wasn't quite sure he approved of the "Flamenco guitar riff" I did between a couple of the verses.

After I played that, and got his approval, I asked him if he could sing me "The Flying Cloud," which he did. Sure quieted the room down fast. I think it may have been one of the last times I saw Gerri Armstrong, as she was there, too.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: MartinRyan
Date: 01 Apr 09 - 09:53 AM

Two very different examples:

First hearing the recording of John Reilly singing The Well Below the Valleyand realising that the man singing this song as old as time and sounding that way himself, had died in poverty aged about forty.

At a festival in Wexford, hearing Paddy Berry sing a modern sporting ballad called Cuchulainn's Sons about the Rackard brothers who had played hurling for Wexford in the 1950's. I think one of them had died shortly before and the electric atmosphere was astonishing. As it happens, the last of the brothers died recently - and a new verse was added to the song.

Regards


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Art Thieme
Date: 01 Apr 09 - 09:04 AM

Phil, Thanks! That song of Don Lange's means a lot to me--as does your mentioning it.

I was in the Club De Wash in Madison, Wisconsin--where Peter and Lou Berryman hold court, in the 1970s, when a fellow came up to me and told me, with tears in his eyes, that my record of "Here's To You Rounders" saved his marriage!

I was stunned then, and it still makes everything -- even the hard roads -- worthwhile -- to this day.

Art


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Bruce MacNeill
Date: 01 Apr 09 - 07:13 AM

With appologies for being American, Harry Chapin, "Cats in the Cradle". I was on the road a lot at the time. The really sad thing being that he grew up pretty much just like me.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Simon G
Date: 01 Apr 09 - 05:01 AM

My wonderful friend mauvepink(on this forum) singing Reg Meuross's Until I Hold You Once Again, especially the time when I looked round and there were several people crying.

Geroge Papavgeris - Memory

Mick Ryan - The Man I Killed

For me the single most stunning performance is Cloudstreet - King Willy. I love watching an audience that isn't expecting the Witch's voice.

But most of all I'm stunned when people react emotionally to my feeble attempts to sing a song. I'm always amazed at the power of a song to break through an at best average performance and touch people's hearts.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 10:46 PM

Art Thieme singing Here's to you Rounders at juicy john pink's in 1977.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Betsy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 08:47 PM

Agreed Kampervan - no mawkisheness here.Is that a word ?
How about when Planxty did Raggle Taggle Gypsies and the moved on to effortlessly to the fabulous "Give me you hand ".
I saw them do it at Redcar Folk club and was knocked out.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Art Thieme
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 08:39 PM

Here are some off the top o' my head. Hearing these performances made everything else go away. It was not possible to give anything but complete attention.

Jim Ringer--"California Joe (just the best)

Pete Seeger singing "Bells Of Rhymney" at Newport (After hearing this I knew what I wanted to devote my life to.)

Paddy Tunny's "Lowlands Of Holland"

David Jones' live at a festival version of "Arthur McBride" as broadcast on NPR's Folk Festival USA radio broadcast--1970s.

Lou Killen--"The Flying Cloud"

Jack Elliott singing "Old Shep" - "912 Greens" - "1913 Massacre" - "Tom Joad" at University of Chicago Folk Festival 1961 or '62.

Geoff Muldour---"Brazil" with the Kweskin Band and in the film.

Bukka White--"Panama Limited" for me alone in an alcove of the 2nd floor at Ida Noyes Hall at University Of Chicago Fest.

Roscoe Holcomb in that same alcove a different year tuning my guitar to an open chord, taking out his knife, and fretting with it while singing

Bob Gibson singing "No More Cane On The Brazos"

Paul Clayton singing "The Shanty Boy On The Big Eau Claire" in a guest set at the Sunday afternoon hootenanny at Chicago's Gate Of Horn---and later telling me where to find it. 1959

Bob Atcher singing "tying Knots In The Devil's Tail" at the first U. of Chicago Folk Festival in '61.

Odetta and Larry Mohr's duet version of "Santy Ano"

The blind singer Emery Denoyer singing any of his ballads of the American lumber camps in the early 20th century.

Wade Hemsworth singing "The Land Of The Shining Birch Tree"

Cisco Houston singing "East Texas Red" - "Doby Bill" - "The Colorado Trail" - "The Girl In The Wood"

Vivian Richman singing "The Captain On The Coast Of Maine" on a Folkways album. BUT there was no mention of the song in the notes, on the jacket, on the disc label, or anywhere else. After all the songs were done, there was this song -- to end the LP.

Horton Barker singing "The City Four Square" and "At he Foot Of Yonders Mountain" on his Folkways LP that Sandy Paton recorded.

Leadbelly doing "Fannin Street" (unbelievable!)

Tom Paley singing and picking "Railroad Blues" at the 1962 U. of Chicago Folk Fest - 1962 I think

Marc Silber sitting on a table and singin "San Francisco Bay Blues" in Ida Noyes Hall at the first U. of Chi. Folk Festival.

93 year old Paul Durst singing his hobo and Wobbly songs, and telling of his life into my tape recorder at Pete Laibundguth's Fret Shop on 57th Street in Chicago--in the old Artist Colony.--(These were cold water store fronts left over from The World's Colombian Exposition.) December 12, 1961

Blind street singer Lee O.B. Quiggins singing "You Take Care Of The Bumble Bee" into my tape machine in his Evansville, Indiana hotel room--1962.

prisoner Charlie Butler singing "Diamond Joe" for Library of Congress Archive Of Folk Song collector Duncan Emrich in 1937.

Those are a few of 'em that come to mind now.

Art Thieme


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Kampervan
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 06:56 PM

Some enterprising entrepreneur could make some money by putting together a boxed set of 100 (?) tracks selected from this thread.

Reading through from start to finish it's a catalogue of intense but mainly down-to-earth emotion that generally manages to avoid the mawkish.

Good thread!!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Ref
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 06:16 PM

Stan Rogers - Mary Ellen Carter


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: kendall
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:49 PM

Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, Gordon Lightfoot.
The Jeannie C by Stan Rogers


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: kendall
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:40 PM

On the road from Srebrenica by Tom Paxton
The horrors of war and the massacre of unarmed civilians.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: breezy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:28 PM

The correct title is 'The Old Man's Tale'

the subtle change from 'fight ' to 'hunt' was based around the word 'boer' that also sounds like 'boar'. Clever eh?

Night night


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Folkiedave
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:21 PM

There has been a huge number of them - too many to name.

Lal Waterson - Stow Brow on the stage at the Bluebell and every time she sang solo.

Mike Waterson - first time he sang Tam Lin.

Jeanie Robertson, Joe Heaney, Lizzie Higgins, Willie Scott.

Great voices like Roy Bailey, Bob Fox.

Kathryn Roberts (first singer to win BBC Young Folk Award)

Maz O' Connor - Constant Lovers. There is the future.

And finally melodeon and saxophone player Matt Crum.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: breezy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:08 PM

Artisan doing Stan's 'raising of the M E C'

Bogle doing Stans 'Lock-keeper'

Stan 'House of Orange'


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: breezy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:07 PM

John Denver singing Tom Paxton's '[Get up] Jimmy Newman'


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: breezy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:05 PM

pre college days '64 Harvey's 'Kid's Colour Bar'


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: breezy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:04 PM

Just been reminded,

1994 Roy Bailey singing the 'Testamony of Patience Kershaw'

Vin Garbut 'City of Angels'

There are some really great songs out there

June Tabor's version of 'Willie MacBride'

and 'The King of Rome'

shit this is heavy


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 04:02 PM

Oh yeah. I believe the one time Tony Rose played in Chicago in 1982 I liked Young Hunting so much I spent years trying to track it down. Also, around that time seeing Stan Rogers singing almost anything.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 03:53 PM

When I was fourteen my dad took me to see Gordon Lightfoot. The encore was The Canadian Railroad Trilogy. When I was in college I was on an exchange program and went to a lot of London folk clubs and was floored by Nic Jones singing Annachie Gordon. I also recall being spellbound by the 13 minute version of Calvary Cross that Richard and Linda Thompson performed at the Theatre Royal in November of 1975. Also, hearing Vin Garbutt singing Cissy Lee (I may have the title incorrect) brought tears to my eyes.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: GUEST,mg
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 03:37 PM

well I tried twice to send the click

click here


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: GUEST,mg
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 03:27 PM

Anne Byrne singing the Croppy Boy..which I think is on You Tube and I will post if I can. Pat's People in Vancouver B.C. singing the Boys of the Old Brigade. The wife of an Army officer heading for Vietnam the next day who sang America the Beautiful. Gordon Quinton playing guitar in Newfoundland...mg


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: folkypaul
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 03:00 PM

Old Man's song/tale/lament we'll have to think about that?

But at the turning of the century he was a lad of five.   That's why his father never came back alive.

PaulO


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: The Borchester Echo
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 02:46 PM

OK, I was a year out in the age of the character in Old Man's Lament (depends I suppose on whether you think a new century starts at 0 or at 1), but I got the title and author right.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: folkypaul
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 02:31 PM

As we attended most of thesame clubs at the time I have to agree with some of Betsy's choice's

Jim Sharp - The Old Man's Song/Tale?
Tony Capstick - But I preferred Captain Grant (Brillient guitar)

Others -
Christy Moore doing most things.
&
The emergent Hedgehog Pie simply enjoying themselves.

PaulO


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Mark Ross
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 01:23 PM

Rev. Gary Davis singing DEATH DON'T HAVE NO MERCY at an anti-war demonstration in NYC c.'65
Jerry Merrick doing FOLLOW


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Betsy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 12:33 PM

stunned me ....or actaully my daughter ....wept as a 10 / 12 yearold on hearing June Tabor sing the Unicorn at the Redcar Festival about 18 Years ago.
Thanks Bobad for Jimmy Clay and Patrick Sky


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Sleepy Rosie
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 12:16 PM

I've never been a 'folk consumer' as I've heard it termed elsewhere. So I guess I'm still in that space covered by those who are describing events of fourty years ago...
Though having dipping my toes into folk waters, I have recently heard one or two things which have struck me as being fecking brilliant!
And err, I've considered giving both a go for myself, even though the chorus on the latter is well tough going...!
The Easter Tree
Blood and Gold
The last was posted on another thread, but deserves to be posted here too.. ;-):
Water Boy


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: GUEST,HiLo
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 12:09 PM

Steeleye Span..King Henry
Fairport Convention...Matty Groves
Joan Baez.. Mary Hamilton
Frankie Armstrong...The Two Sisters (The Bonnie Swan)
June Tabor..Clerk Sanders & Reynardine and most of what she has done Since
Martin Carthy..Famous Flower of serving Men and all of what he has done since
COB..Skranky Black Farmer
Nic Jones...Miles Weatherhill and Saea Bell
Norma Waterson..Caledonia
The Watersons..Swarthfell Rocks, To name but a few.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: bobad
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 11:35 AM

"....Tony Capstick performing Jimmy Clay (writer unknown to me)."

That writer would be Patrick Sky.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: George Papavgeris
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 11:14 AM

1972 - Martin Carthy singing "Skewball"
1972 - Maddy Prior singing "Wee Weaver"
1974 - The Songwainers singing "Bright Phoebus" and "Holland's Leaguer"
.....
1997 - June Tabor singing Bogle's "And The Band Played Waltzing matilda". My skull and face went numb, I nearly had a stroke. Later I just cried uncontrollably. No better song and no better singer in my book.
2001 - Bob Fox singing "From Clare to Here" and "Big River"

Nutty, thanks for the accolade. But time doesn't flow as fast as that - The Flowers & The Guns was written in August 2002, so you must have heard it at "your" Song & Ale the following winter.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Dave Sutherland
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 10:48 AM

Martin Carthy & Dave Swarbrick "Two Butchers" Birtley Folk Club 1966

Martyn Wyndham-Read "The Overlanders" Royal Turf, Felling 1968

Ewan MacColl "James Herries" South Tyne Folk & Blues,County Hotel, South Shields 1970

A.L.Lloyd "Tam Lin" Newcastle Festival 1971

Nic Jones "Lakes of Shilin" The Barleycorn, Rose & Crown, Newcastle upon Tyne 1973

Louis Killen "The Sheffield Apprentice" Robin Hood Folk Club, Stapleford, Notts 2004

Mary Humphreys "Sheath and Knife" Traditions at the Tiger, Long Eaton 2008
among many others


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Phil Edwards
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 10:45 AM

All my folk epiphanies are about 30 years apart, mid-70s or mid-00s - what can I say, I was listening to the Desperate Bicycles when I could have been listening to Nic Jones.

On TV: bah-dap-ba-doo-da, bah-dap-ba-doo-da-dum... Opening credits of a long-forgotten programme called Take three girls, performed by Pentangle and subsequently worked up into Light Flight, the first track on Basket of light. Impressed me deeply - it was like the Swingle Singers only cool. My sister got the LP shortly after the programme had been on, & that impressed me even deeperly. All acoustic, and a fantastic production (Shel Talmy).

On TV (more recently): the Coppers (shortly before Bob's death) doing Thousands or more. It was the first time I'd heard that song, and I was transfixed - I didn't want to listen to anything else ever again.

On record: Pentangle again, When I was in my prime; planted the idea that you could sing songs unaccompanied in my mind.

Live (more recently): I won't embarrass him by going on about it, but John Kelly.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: matt milton
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 10:44 AM

An unknown singer in Cuba last year. She was in her 60s or 70s. She was talking to a younger singer, about 20 years or so younger (her daughter?) who had just finished playing a set in a bar. The younger woman was describing something that was upsetting her, because she started to cry. The older woman picked up her guitar (which as it happens was badly out of tune) and sang a couple of verses of a song. The younger woman stopped crying.

It was the most direct and moving demonstration of what the point of music is I've ever experienced. I like to think that whatever the problem was, the words of the song offered a solution to it.

I'd seen the same old lady singing on the street two days before. Wish I'd spoken Spanish, because she was, with no exaggeration, the most interesting son singer I've heard. She sounded like Elizabeth Cotten, but croaky and Hispanic.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Art Thieme
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 10:35 AM

The Talkin' Taser Blues

I've yet to write this. One o' these days...

But I WILL BE stunned by it, I'm certain.

Art


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: topical tom
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 10:11 AM

1.And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda by Eric Bogle at the Golem Coffeehouse in the 80s
2.No Man's Land, same venue and era (by Eric Bogle)
3.Natalie MacMaster in Lasalle, Quebec circa 2000 (a blowaway concert!)
4.A Reason for it All, again by Eric Bogle, Champlain Valley Folk Festival
5.Odetta singing Oh Freedom

But, oh, so many more!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Betsy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 09:59 AM

Breezy thanks for correcting Diane's post 06:17 AM - I was flummoxed - I assumed she was correct and that I had forgotten / was having a Senior moment .
In your reply , Father went to fight the Boer ( as in Boer war ) not to hunt the boer , still we can't get everything right can we?
Thanks for everyone for giving my memory banks a good waking-up, loads of top singers and songs mentioned, and Kampervan's note re Bob Fox is reassuring that we can still get stunned these days - we don't need to go back "years" .


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: greg stephens
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 09:57 AM

(The title, and the first posts, are amBiguous; is it confined to singers heard in folk clubs, or is it more general? I have taken it to mean people singing folk songs anywhere)
Aubrey Cantwell singing the Nightingale in the Bell in Standlake, c1966.
Seamus Begley singing in Dingle, c 2000.
Gary Davis, Cambridge c 1966.
Martin Cummins singing the Flying Cloud, several places, 60's.
The Watersons, some pub in London 64ish.
Jim Parkin singing Joe Bowman and Follow the Plough, Highwayman, Burro, Kirkby Lonsdale c 1975.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Bryn Pugh
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 09:49 AM

Late 1960s - Martin Carthy singing and playing "Brown Adam".

The accompaniment was a masterpiece of understatement.

Janis Ian - "At Seventeen", and "Tea and Sympathy".

June Tabor - "Hugh the Graeme".


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Dave Hanson
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 09:07 AM

Another one that grabbed me was Pete Seeger singing ' Little Boxes ' on Sunday Night At The London Palladium, long long time ago, then two Paul Robeson songs, ' Joe Hill ' and ' No More Auction Block '

Dave H


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: SINSULL
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 09:06 AM

46 years ago - Dylan singing Hard Rain's Gonna Fall after Joan Baez dragged him onstage at a concert in NY.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: breezy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 09:01 AM

Harvey Andrews 'The Soldier'


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: breezy
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 09:00 AM

Hello Diane Easy

At the turning of the century
Wasnt he
a lad of Five
Me father went to hunt the boer
and never came back alive

'69 ish Tony Capstick singing that and Grey October at the Rising Sun Catford

Hi Will yes it was Stefan Sobell who also sang 'The Black Velvet' and I think 'Johnny Cope' or 'Lowlands'Low' 1964-7

Then there was PP M singing 'Blowing In the Wind' at S N at the london palladium

'72/3 ish Mary from Sheffield singing Bogles 'The Band Played Waltzing Matilda' from the recording by June Tabor at the stable loft in Wadebridge. Same voice range great delivery Mary see ya at the ringers.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: nutty
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 08:56 AM

Over 40 years ago .... Vatican Rag and Rickety Tickety Tin -- Tom Lehrer

35 years ago ... Barbara Dickson ... The Witch of the Westmorland (Archie Fisher)? and Firebird .... Rosie Hardman


30 ish years ..... Bedlam Boys ..... Nic Jones
Crazy Man Michael .... Fairport Convention .... Richard Thompson


25 Years ago (approx) Dick Gaughan .... Stand up for Judas ... Leon Rossleson and Rosa's Lovely Daughters .... Roy Bailey


15+ years The Drover's Boy   .... Ted Egan and The Easter Tree .... Brian McNeil


10 years approx Flowers and Guns ... George Papavgaris


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Dave Hanson
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 08:45 AM

Norma Waterson singing her solo version of ' Coal Not Dole ' this is one powerful song.

Ian Campbells song is ' The Old Mans Tale, ' dated now but a powerful song nonetheless.

Dave H


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: The Borchester Echo
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 08:44 AM

I was at that farewell YT gig in 1969 too, but they did reform once or twice during the 70s, so maybe Kampervan rolled up at on one of these occasions. Especially memorable was the benefit for Clive Woolf (former Assistant Librarian at VWML) at Hampstead Town Hall in (probably) 1977.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: The Borchester Echo
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 08:36 AM

The first time I heard Ian Campbell's The Sun Is Burning it was by The Three City Four (Leon Rosselson/Roy Bailey/Marian McKenzie/Martin Carthy (or possibly Ralph Trainer had already replaced MC). It was one of those moments.

Dick Gaughan doing his Sail On / Why Old Men Cry and Bran McNeill's No Gods And Precious Few Heroes.

And as he's coming soon on tour, I'll mention Chris Foster doing Leon Rosselson's The Olive Tree in a dreary, dusty Oxford room. It was the first time I'd heard it but for him it was the first time he'd got through it without crying.

Most recently, seeing Jon Boden do Blue Dress live for the first time during the launch for his 2nd solo CD a couple of weeks ago.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: Harmonium Hero
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 08:33 AM

Ooo, er....let's see....
Somewhere about 1966, Joan Baez singing 'The Great Silkie'.
Bit eaarlier, and onwards...Bob Dylan, singing Bob Dylan stuff.
Must have been 1967ish, on Julie Felix show (British TV), The Corries, with 28-string guitar and enormous bodhran (played with a bone) singing 'Kishmul's Galley'.
Sometime in the 70s, on a TV broadcast of a Scottish concert (the significance of which I can't now recall) which featured all the usual crowd then beloved of British TV - who shall remain nameless, but who Billy Connolly likes to refer to as 'singin' shortbread tins', all doing their 10 minute spots and getting together for the Scottish Old Pals act; then the Corries came on - no tartan - and sang one song - 'Liberty'. Stirring stuff. Makes you think you're Scottish when you're not. Or is that just me?
In the opening sequence (if memory serves) of a black and white film on telly in the 70s (?). Somebody - possibly Bert Lloyd - singing 'Searching for Lambs.
At a folk festival in St George's Hall, Liverpool, 1968/9?. Lizzie Higgins singing McCrimmon's Lament.
Just looking at this list.... there seems to be a preponderance of Scottish stuff. I love it!
John Kelly.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Singers and songs which stunned me .
From: GUEST,George Henderson
Date: 31 Mar 09 - 08:32 AM

Sorry to upset you Kampervan but the Young Tradition broke up in 1969 (I was at their darewell gig in Cecil Sharpe House). That was 40 years ago.

Inluences for me were a group of singers who never made fame. They sang as The Reivers in the 7 Stars in Ponteland Northunberland singing all the popular folk of the time. These songs included The Wild Rover, The Black Velvet Band, Home boys home and we often heard Jim Sharpe singing Paddy Lay Back.

Great days and what an introduction.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate
Next Page

  Share Thread:
More...

Reply to Thread
Subject:  Help
From:
Preview   Automatic Linebreaks   Make a link ("blue clicky")


Mudcat time: 16 June 7:45 AM EDT

[ Home ]

All original material is copyright © 2022 by the Mudcat Café Music Foundation. All photos, music, images, etc. are copyright © by their rightful owners. Every effort is taken to attribute appropriate copyright to images, content, music, etc. We are not a copyright resource.