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Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s

GUEST,CSH 26 Feb 10 - 09:15 AM
GUEST,BarryB 26 Feb 10 - 01:51 PM
John MacKenzie 26 Feb 10 - 02:08 PM
GUEST,Roger Fleming 26 Feb 10 - 02:12 PM
GUEST,Roger Fleming 26 Feb 10 - 05:29 PM
John MacKenzie 26 Feb 10 - 05:36 PM
Kevin Sheils 27 Feb 10 - 04:15 AM
GUEST,Roger Fleming 27 Feb 10 - 06:28 AM
John MacKenzie 27 Feb 10 - 06:48 AM
Kevin Sheils 27 Feb 10 - 07:59 AM
GUEST 27 Feb 10 - 10:37 AM
GUEST,Roger F. 28 Feb 10 - 12:47 PM
The Borchester Echo 28 Feb 10 - 01:47 PM
John MacKenzie 28 Feb 10 - 02:21 PM
Edthefolkie 28 Feb 10 - 04:00 PM
John MacKenzie 28 Feb 10 - 04:33 PM
John MacKenzie 28 Feb 10 - 04:41 PM
GUEST,Guest - Lin 01 Mar 10 - 03:17 AM
GUEST,Roger F. 02 Mar 10 - 04:00 AM
John MacKenzie 02 Mar 10 - 04:19 AM
GUEST,Roger F. 02 Mar 10 - 04:51 AM
GUEST,BarryB 02 Mar 10 - 05:07 PM
Leadfingers 02 Mar 10 - 07:44 PM
GUEST,Guernsey Pete 04 Mar 10 - 04:47 PM
GUEST,Roger F. 04 Mar 10 - 05:56 PM
Folknacious 04 Mar 10 - 07:00 PM
GUEST 14 Mar 10 - 04:00 PM
GUEST,Roger F. 16 Mar 10 - 12:46 PM
GUEST,Roger F. 18 Mar 10 - 06:39 AM
The Borchester Echo 18 Mar 10 - 06:46 AM
GUEST,SheilaG 03 Apr 10 - 06:20 AM
Bonnie Shaljean 03 Apr 10 - 06:24 AM
GUEST,SheilaG 03 Apr 10 - 06:30 AM
GUEST,SheilaG 03 Apr 10 - 06:35 AM
GUEST,Mick Penning 15 Apr 10 - 05:38 PM
Mick Woods 16 Apr 10 - 02:36 AM
GUEST,jacobs ladder 30 May 10 - 05:19 PM
Joe_F 30 May 10 - 05:38 PM
Marcia Stehr 31 May 10 - 04:29 PM
GUEST,arjay 05 Jun 10 - 02:14 AM
The Borchester Echo 20 Jun 10 - 11:16 AM
Kevin Sheils 07 Jul 10 - 05:47 AM
GUEST,Angieb 08 Jul 10 - 05:36 AM
GUEST,Jack King 08 Jul 10 - 10:09 AM
GUEST,DJC 14 Jul 10 - 01:19 PM
GUEST,Lynne 20 Jul 10 - 05:11 PM
GUEST,Roger F. 21 Jul 10 - 04:49 AM
Tug the Cox 21 Jul 10 - 08:20 PM
GUEST,Jim Anderson 27 Jul 10 - 03:01 PM
John MacKenzie 27 Jul 10 - 04:12 PM
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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,CSH
Date: 26 Feb 10 - 09:15 AM

What does CSH stand for? Like in ' the Folk Cellar at CSH' .....


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,BarryB
Date: 26 Feb 10 - 01:51 PM

CSH=Cecil Sharpe House, London's Folk HQ in Camden Town, where it all began.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 26 Feb 10 - 02:08 PM

Mac used to play with the Levee Breakers, the full lineup of whom, I cannot get right.
I think it was Mac, Johnny Joyce, King Henry and Beverly, (later to marry John Martyn). Mac is also on a couple of Ralph MacTell albums, the first two I think.
Still not 100% sure if Ralph was involved in the group too.
Mac could do something I never managed to achieve. he could play sitting down with his legs crossed, and keep time by tapping the foot of the top leg, on the stage. Try it, it's not easy.
BTW I found out that Johnny died a year or so back, pity. A nice bloke, and a great luthier too.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger Fleming
Date: 26 Feb 10 - 02:12 PM

Cecil Sharpe House is the HQ ofthe English Folk Dance & Song Society.
The President of the EFDSS now is Shirley Collins, well known singer and banjo player of old.
I ran the instrumental workshops there in the 70's when we had 3 beginners guitar classes and one banjo class. People came from far afield such as Herne Bay to learn finger-style guitar as there was no where else to learn that type of playing at the time. Not like now when you can buy a DVD!


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger Fleming
Date: 26 Feb 10 - 05:29 PM

I wrote last item in a hurry. Actually, on Tuesday evenings at the Sharpe House, I organised the instrumental workshops when we had at
our busiest time 3 beginners' classes (folk guitar), one I took myself. One intermediate class and one advanced class. I booked the teachers and arranged holiday reliefs. After the classes there was a Song Swop at which beginners were encouraged to perform before an audience. Also, experienced singers and instrumentalists would drop in to try out new material before using it at a club, such as Terry Gould, Peter Knight of Steeleye, Dave Cousins, etc.,
On Saturday evenings there was a folk club called the Folk Cellar originally run by Jack & Margaret King (anyone remember them?), I took over from them, and then Kevin Shiels followed me when I gave it up.
In the large hall above, folk dancing took place at the same time.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 26 Feb 10 - 05:36 PM

My first floor spot was done at CSH under the auspices of Jack and Margaret, and what an arse I made of it. I had been to the Railway [?] for Dutch courage, and was TOO full of Courage.
It was a long time before I tried again.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Kevin Sheils
Date: 27 Feb 10 - 04:15 AM

Roger

I have a slightly different memory/tiimescale of the Cellar.

I recall that after Jack and Margaret the residency was shared between Tony Rose, Dave Watts and Tony Deane and the Laymen. Dave W and Tony D are/were still active as part of Elsie's Band. It was Tony Rose who encouraged me to get more involved on the organising side rather than just doing the odd floor spot.

Then you took over and I joined you before you gave up. But it was a long time ago!

John M - probably the "Engineer". Always a mad dash down the road during the interval before there was a bar at CSH.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger Fleming
Date: 27 Feb 10 - 06:28 AM

I remember Margaret, who was a fine singer, telling me that she
suffered terribly from stage nerves and couldn't go on and asked
me if I'd take over as I sang there every week.
Being resident I was like a bear with a sore head all Saturday, worrying if we'd get any floor singers, if the guest would turn up and if we'd get an audience! Also stage nerves too!
There was an unwritten law that the same song would not be sung
twice at a club so I'd have to rehearse 7 to 8 songs in case a floor singer or the guest did a song that I planned to do.
Sometimes an experienced pro or semi-pro would turn up and ask to do a floor spot hoping to get a booking, so as resident I'd have to follow them rather than call up a local who was just beginning, and
do a shanty or comical song to get the level down. All too much hassle in the end!


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 27 Feb 10 - 06:48 AM

I booked Jack and Margaret when I was running the Coach and Horses at Kew Green, and Jack came alone, said Margaret had a cold. I wonder if it was the nerves after all?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Kevin Sheils
Date: 27 Feb 10 - 07:59 AM

It's possible then, Roger, that you were between Jack and Margaret and the 2 Tony's and a Dave, after which I took over with your returning help. But it's so long ago and I never kept a diary!


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST
Date: 27 Feb 10 - 10:37 AM

Link for John re Mac McGann and Ralph McTell...
http://www.ralph-mctell.co.uk/leveebreakers.html

AFAIK, he's no longer with East of Ealing. (At least he's absent from their website.)


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger F.
Date: 28 Feb 10 - 12:47 PM

Anyone know what's happened to Noel Murphy?
A few years after I left the Sharpe House I bumped into him in Edgeware Rd., London, carrying his guitar. I asked what he was
doing and he said still travelling around sleeping on club residents sofas or staying in cheap B&B's. Didn't sound too happy!
I've got a tape he made but that must have been in the late 70's.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: The Borchester Echo
Date: 28 Feb 10 - 01:47 PM

Noel Murphy turned to after-dinner speaking after an accident damaged his vocal chords. His sidekick Shaggis, however, reverted to being Davy Johnstone, musical director to Mr Reg Dwight.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 28 Feb 10 - 02:21 PM

Noel now lives down in Cornwall, or is it Devon?
Web Site


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Edthefolkie
Date: 28 Feb 10 - 04:00 PM

Re the Folk Cellar at Cecil Sharp House, we saw the Silly Sisters (June Tabor and Maddy Prior for them as doesn't know) there in the 1970s. As usual, the performance was punctuated by great galumphing noises from the dancers doing Sir Roger de Crasherley upstairs! I still have a scar from that gig as there was a solid beam (above the door I think, memory fades) which I came into violent contact with. Admittedly we had been to the bar or out to the pub at half time.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 28 Feb 10 - 04:33 PM

Man walked into a bar.

OUCH!!


It was an iron bar.


Tommy Cooper


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 28 Feb 10 - 04:41 PM

There ya go. Looks like I even booked you once BarryB ☺


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Guest - Lin
Date: 01 Mar 10 - 03:17 AM

When I was on holiday in London I used to frequent The Troubadour in Earl's Court a lot. Loved their coffee! Then I would go downstairs to the Singer's night to hear various folk singers. I was not a singer but I did manage to muster up my courage and read a few poems there one night.
The club where I hung out the most was at Bunjies Folk Cellar.
So easy to get there on the Tube from my hotel and get back again afterwards. I really loved Bunjies! I went there a lot! I remember some great singers there, especially the folk duo, Brackenwood who had a regular floor spot. Their names were Jez & Clive but don't recall their sirnames. Also used to go there to hear a great singer named Rhatch. He had a really good voice and great guitar player!!
Another guy who comes to mind that I used to enjoy listening to was Mike Lee. He was a big Ralph McTell fan and used to sing many of his songs, doing really great covers.
I also remember a girl named Sippy who was a very good singer.
Bunjies was my favourite place! Does anyone remember these particular singers?
The Greek Lasagne was great too! I hear that Bunjies is no longer a folk club for many years now but don't know when it shut down for folk music.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger F.
Date: 02 Mar 10 - 04:00 AM

At the Folk Cellar, CSH, and likewise the Hampstead Folk Club, Diz Dizley would be booked by way of a change. He was a great racanteur and jazz guitar player. He did more talking than playing but he was very amusing & a popular guest.
Is he still about?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 02 Mar 10 - 04:19 AM

Current Mudcat thread Roger.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger F.
Date: 02 Mar 10 - 04:51 AM

Re Diz. Thanks for that John.
Just googled Mudcat Diz Dizley and got lots of info.....


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,BarryB
Date: 02 Mar 10 - 05:07 PM

Thanks for the glimpse of the poster John, gave my other half a good laugh!...I packed up playing in the clubs around 1971, although carried on for a while at the Elizabethan Rooms in Kensington after that.
More names in the "where are they now" saga....Josh McRae (of "Messing about on the River" fame)...don't think he performed "down south" much, but came across him in Scotland, a very impressive performer....Jean Redpath?....Davy Graham?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Leadfingers
Date: 02 Mar 10 - 07:44 PM

Noel Murphy was living in Mullion (Cornwall) last time I saw him - I think he has stopped gigging entirely now , which IS a shame .


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Guernsey Pete
Date: 04 Mar 10 - 04:47 PM

Oh, nostalgia, nostalgia ! It isn't like it used to be ......
Having read all the names from the past; Roger Fleming, were you the third resident at the Cellar after Jack and Margaret King? I could remember Tony Rose, and Tony Deane and the Laymen, and was struggling for the third. And then there's all the other clubs - The Starting Gate in Wood Green was the first I went to in London, given directions from someone I met at the new Guernsey Folk Club in the summer of '65 ( suddenly I feel old...). This, of course, was back in the days when people talked in folk clubs, and if you sat at the back you could barely hear the performers, even someone as extrovert as Alex Campbell. The The Cellar, of course. Somewhere in my archives I have a cutting from a long-defunct Camden local newspaper "Artists, writers, poets, meet at the Cellar to hear performers like Tim Hart and Maddy Prior...." and in the photo there are empty seats everywhere and I think I can recognize Paul Stevens in the second row. Already well remembered the Enterprise, The Cut, BBC club, Islington, also there was an early reference on this discussion to Dave Lipson and Grotty Lottie's in Dalston Junction. I was there too. First time I ever heard anyone play a fiddle-tune on a guitar ( The Gants Hill-Billies ). Surely the club near Liverpool Street was The Peelers ? Jim Younger was one of the residents. Terrible amount of hand-rolled cigarettes around in those days, ruined a few performances, Sweeneys Men took ages to tune in their second set, too busy laughing, Amazing Blondel similarly rather incapacitated ( was it the hair ? ). Also anyone remember Free Folk ? Royal Free Hospital folk club down in the basement before the hospital moved to Hampstead in the late '60s' ? Ah, nostalgia. I played at the Royal Free Freshers Week with my barn-dance band a few years ago, and when I jumped off the stage to try to organise the dancing personally I was dwarfed by the 6-foot-plus eighteen-year-old women freshers !
Well, hullo Bonnie ( how's things in Cork ? ), Kevin, Dom -saw your niece at C Sharp last year, she's doing well.
Hullo to everyone !
The Cellar Upstairs still marches on, as does Islington.
Then there's the new clubs coming on, it seems like a revitalization is occurring, also a rise in informal acoustic sessions. The cycle turns with the seasons. All is not lost


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger F.
Date: 04 Mar 10 - 05:56 PM

God God, what a blast from the past. I was going to ask if anyone
had heard of Guernsey Pete. I followed directly after Jack & Margaret King in the Folk Cellar, CSH. I was helped sometimes with Karl (Jack) Wahnig who sang a bass line under my 'soprano' voice.
Incidently, there was no talking in the Cellar or at the Enterprise when people were singing. One reason I think was that there was no bar in the room. People went out in the interval for a drink and chat.
I confess that I do not remember Tony Rose, Tony Deane or The Laymen so they must have come after I gave up at the Cellar & I don't remember them at the Enterprise. I had a photograph, which I have mislaid, of standing with Tim & Maddy, when I was resident at the Cellar. Also with Dave & Toni Arthur when we shared a gig at a school somewhere around Havistock Hill. I saw Toni Arthur appearing on childrens' TV but where is Dave Arthur these days?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Folknacious
Date: 04 Mar 10 - 07:00 PM

Questions answered from posts above:

Dav(e)y Graham passed away in 2008

Dave Arthur is currently in the fine band Rattle On The Stovepipe (Google . . .)

And a passing note: why do folkies always put an e on the end of Sharp? And indeed Renbourn, come to think of it . . . often the same ones who put an extra c in acoustic, I notice. Is letter inflation traditional


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST
Date: 14 Mar 10 - 04:00 PM

Nick Harrison . I ran the Peanuts Folk Club and the BBC Folk Club for several years in the 60s and 70s, and performed in dozens of other clubs in the Home Counties. It would be nice to hear from any old buddies at Wizphut@gmail.com Happy days|


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger F.
Date: 16 Mar 10 - 12:46 PM

Hello Nick Harrison,
In regard to your query, I ran the BBC Folk Club on a number of occasions. Peter Charlton was the permanent resident, but like
most of us who worked at the BBC, shift work didn't allow us to
attend all the time. When Peter was working he'd give me a call.
The club at the time was in the Langham building, which is now an
upmarket hotel. Now & again when the room wasn't available in The LANGHAM we were given a room in Brodcasting House. I remember sometimes booked guests, like Margaret Barry, were convinced they
were going out on air, though it was a club for the staff when they were off duty. I can't remember the exact time but it must have been in the early 70's. Floor singers who didn't work for the Beeb were welcome and friends of mine, such as Roger Nicholson and Clive Woolf
would sing and/or play for us.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger F.
Date: 18 Mar 10 - 06:39 AM

Someone was asking on the website FRoots about folk mags of the 60's & 70's. I do not have access to that website but I gave a box full of folk mags from that period to the BBC Music Library. They weren't too enthusiastic about taking them off my hands though they contained hundreds of songs and their origins. They may part with them if asked for! One of my favourite articles was The Bosun's Locker by Stan Hugill. Life aboard sailing ships with a shanty given each month. Shanties were useful in the 70's to get audiences joining in with the choruses. What happened to Stan Hugill? Anyone know?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: The Borchester Echo
Date: 18 Mar 10 - 06:46 AM

fRoots forum here.
Stan Hugill died in 1992 aged 86.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,SheilaG
Date: 03 Apr 10 - 06:20 AM

Hi Angie and all

I, too, have just stumbled across this site/forum. I was searching for The Peelers and Bonded Boots - seems we are all down memory lane! I think the Capricorn Club deserves a mention. Angie ran this club at Gt Portland Street for 2 years. It was mostly packed to the gunwhales (what would H&S have to say about that now) and we had some fantastic times. One great memory was when Martin Carthy turned up with horrendous flu - but not wanting to let the club down. He couldn't possibly go on and, as luck would have it, Royston Wood had turned up in the audience and did the gig instead.

I think you should write a history of it, Ange. Did you keep the gig lists?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Bonnie Shaljean
Date: 03 Apr 10 - 06:24 AM

Sheila G, I just got a lovely Easter card from Kay who co-ran the Peelers for awhile.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,SheilaG
Date: 03 Apr 10 - 06:30 AM

I used to hang out at Bunjies. They had a resident singer/songwriter called Amory Kane!! One night a guy called David Bowie did a couple of numbers. (Yes, Bowie - not Jones).


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,SheilaG
Date: 03 Apr 10 - 06:35 AM

Any news on Joe and Ann Palmer and Tom Madden?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Mick Penning
Date: 15 Apr 10 - 05:38 PM

Is there anyone out there who frequented the pub on Friday nights around 1972/73? Folk Night (upstairs)..... The Nag's Head, York Rd Battersea.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Mick Woods
Date: 16 Apr 10 - 02:36 AM

I attended a Folk Club in the St Martin In The Fields Crypt Trafalgar Square London circa 1970 I remember seeing Eclection performing there. It was free entry and My girlfriend and me used to bring our own bottle of cheap wine.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,jacobs ladder
Date: 30 May 10 - 05:19 PM

I posted on this trhread about a year ago - and follow the corespondence with interest - when we used to go to the troub in the mid and late 60's there was often a very young singer who would come up and sing during the 'open mike' whose name I think was graham and he almost always sang a song which went "salty dog, salty dog, I could be your salty dog, honey let me be your salty dog ... two old ladies sitting in the sand, each one wishing the other was a man ... honey let me be your salty dog ... anyone know who he was or what happen to him


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Joe_F
Date: 30 May 10 - 05:38 PM

I was in Scotland on a Fulbright in 1958-9, and was in London for the winter vacation. I joined Ballads & Blues. I heard someone sing "The Second Front Song" -- it must have been Ewan MacColl, but I didn't know him from Adam at the time.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Marcia Stehr
Date: 31 May 10 - 04:29 PM

Hi Jacob's Ladder..
Perhaps the Graham you heard was THE Davy Graham?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,arjay
Date: 05 Jun 10 - 02:14 AM

Anyone heard of Ron Simmonds of Bunjies and elsewhere, in recent years ?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: The Borchester Echo
Date: 20 Jun 10 - 11:16 AM

Re "Graham" @ the Troubadour

A very young and extremely good blues picker there and at the Cousins at that time was Graham Butterfield. He lived somewhere out in Surrey and would often come and crash in my kitchen till the trains restarted.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Kevin Sheils
Date: 07 Jul 10 - 05:47 AM

Jack King just posted in another old 60's thread but I thought I'd copy his note here as it may be more noticed.

Glad to hear he and Margaret are still out there. He wrote

Margaret & I are still alive & kicking and living in Deepest Suffolk Mag has just celebrated her 80th birthday & I will catch her up next March.We left folk music in the middle 70s(some say we never joined)Mag gave up to nurse her sick mother in 1970 & I soldiersd on foer a few years th elast proffesional work I did was as a minstrel at the Gore hotel along side such as Hylda Symm Barrie Beattie & Dave Ward.Still got the old00018 though


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Angieb
Date: 08 Jul 10 - 05:36 AM

Hi all

Last I heard of Tom Madden was (from Kevin Burke a couple of years back) that Tom was running a B&B with his missus in Torquay! Also that Joe Palmer was running (or part of) a radio station in Spain (or somewhere).

Recently went to Fleetwood FOlk Club's anniversary and was treated to a reunion of Dave Walters and Howard Bond (Bonded Boots). It was really great to see them together again. Howard is still singing (and playing) and I see him occasionally. Seem to have been involved in folk music forever, and wonderful it is to. Currently organising Four Fools events up here in sunny Lancashire. Sad to hear of the loss of Roger Nicholson, what a superb dulcimer player he was.

Thanks for the reminder about Capricorn Folk Club Sheila. It was going great until the pub turned the room into a restaurant. (Yep it was happening even back then).

Cheers everyone and keep singing/playing


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Jack King
Date: 08 Jul 10 - 10:09 AM

just to put the record straight Margaret & I took over the Cellar from Peter Kennedy who ran it on much more informal lines and together with Mike Robinson built it up over the years into a more formal arrangement. We were very lucky in persuading guests to perform as the fees were derisory and when the guests got paid we didnt Happily many old mates were always willing to appear including Colin Wilkie &Shirley Hart,Alex Campbell Martin Winsor Redd Sullivan Pete& Marion Maynard Martin Carthy& the Spinners to mention but a few.I think however that some of the best evenings were the Come All Yees particularly when "Atrocity Alley were in fullcry ,singersfrom the floor included Gerry Fox ,Mick Flynn,Brian Norman & ayoung hopeful named Noel Murphy!!!!Happy days. We handed the club over in the mid sixties to Tony Dean& the Laymen & Tony Rose. and finally left Folk Music about 1974.Hope this brings back a few memories


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,DJC
Date: 14 Jul 10 - 01:19 PM

Can anyone else remember a folk club that was run in The Old Fire Station in Richmond Surrey? In the early 1960's you had to be a club memeber to get a drink on a Sunday Night after 10.00PM - so the folk club was an obvious venue! I saw Long John Baldry playing accoustic blues there and when I heard he was also playing over at Eel Pie Island a few weeks later I went to see him (Rod Stewart was allowed two songs in the "interval" provided he got back from playing football in time!). At Eel Pie, Baldry played with a full blues band including Geoff Bradford and Ian Armitt.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Lynne
Date: 20 Jul 10 - 05:11 PM

I used to go to the Quaggy Folk evenings in the Manor Park area of Lee. It was my first intro to Folk- wonderful musical nights!


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Roger F.
Date: 21 Jul 10 - 04:49 AM

Good to hear from you JACK! That's Jack King.
I remember your 00018 well. I live in deepest Suffolk too! Where old folkies retire to.....
Gave up the guitar and sold both of them some years ago but I now play a set of Hummelchen Bagpipes and have take up the 5-string banjo just for amusement. I remember Mike Robinson playing the Northumbrian small pipes. He gave some workshops at CSH but they were too expensive to buy.
One gets the bug so I have played my pipes and the banjo at the Quay Theatre Folk Club in Sudbury, Suffolk. Give my regards to Margaret.
My wife at the time, Joyce, has passed on. We visited you at your home at times if you remember.


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: Tug the Cox
Date: 21 Jul 10 - 08:20 PM

Crikey Lynne ( Guest)I used to live in that area, remember the River Quagy when it still ran through a culvert in Sutclife park, before it was tunneled in. Nearest regular Folk Club was catford, foredt hill or farningham, 60's/70's. When are you talking about, and where was the venue?


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: GUEST,Jim Anderson
Date: 27 Jul 10 - 03:01 PM

I came to London in February 1966 and in my first week saw Bob Davenport and The Rakes at The Fox on Islington Green- it was their 10th anniversary as a band and that night was a bit of a party I remember Freddy McKay particulary and a guy called Norman, I think, who used to sing the same song every week about " the man wot waters the workers' beer " ! A couple of nights later I met Matt McGinn, Hamish Imlach [ both now long gone ]and Jimmy McGregor at Bruce Dunnet's Scots Hoose at Cambridge Circus - went for supper with them and Nadia Cattouse at a wee eaterie on Old Compton Street - The Blue ..? Through Bruce, who became a lifelong friend until his death some years ago, I met a whole host of people I'd only heard on record or seen on TV, including a great many of the names mentioned in all these contributions.
But Ewan McColl undoubtedly was the person who had greatest influence on my understanding and appreciation of the music and the tradition. Perhaps a difficult man for some, but the soul of kindness to me. I eventually did the door stuff etc at the Singers' Club when it was at the John Snow in Broadwick Street, Soho, until I was recalled to Scotland at the end of that year.
But over the subsequent years I visited London many times and went round many of the clubs, often with Bruce D, until ill-health turned him off going out much at all. I think the last time was to one of the last Singers' Club nights, when Ewan was already too ill to attend.
Reading this thread has brought back some wonderful memories ... as well as the dreadful realisation of just how long ago that all was. Great days indeed !


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Subject: RE: Folk Clubs London 1960s & 70s
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 27 Jul 10 - 04:12 PM

Glad to hear Jack and Margaret are still with us, my best wishes to you both.

JM


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