Saturday, November 03, 2007

Remembering Lal Waterson - my obituary in The Independent 9 years ago

The ludicrousness of the division between traditional singing and contemporary singing and song-writing that has bedevilled the English folksong revival over its past 50 years was never better demonstrated than in the career of Lal Waterson, who died from cancer on Friday September 5, 1998 at the age of 55.

As Martin Carthy, her brother-in-law, puts it: “It was impossible to separate her singing from her song-writing. She used all the techniques of traditional song-making in her own lyrics and she never sounded like a revival singer. All the rest of us
did.

“She was tremendously inventive, and as different from her brother Mike and her sister Norma as it was possible to be. She and they were and are the very, very best to be heard today.”

Coming from the acknowledged doyen of the English folk music revival, that’s high praise indeed, and while his marriage to Lal’s sister might be thought to colour his judgement, there are few of his peers who would dispute it.

I first met Lal, Mike, Norma and their second-cousin, John Harrison, when I was compering some sort of a benefit concert in St Albans in the early Sixties. They had not yet shaken off their roots in the skiffle movement, and accompanied their songs with a guitar, yet there was an integrity and an authenticity that distinguished them from many of their better-known colleagues in the second wave of the revival (the first wave, of course, being that led by Ewan MacColl and A. L. Lloyd) with record contracts on budget labels.

Folk producer Bill Leader had picked up what he billed as “The Waterson Family” for a “New Voices” sampler he was putting together for Topic Records, and in the liner notes for that album Lloyd himself wrote: “They have a wide repertory but their abiding interest is in the songs and customs of their native East Yorkshire. They make their own harmonies to the songs and in all the world of the folk song revival there's nothing quite like the ' Waterson sound'.”

Actually, Lloyd was only the first of many to make the mistake of describing the interweaving melodies of their a capella singing as “harmonies”: their style was strictly polyphonic, and the lines they sang had the same relationship to the root chords of the tunes as the three-part voicing of a New Orleans jazz front-line.
And like many jazz virtuosi, their ensembles were the combination of four very individual solo voices, but it was not for some time that this was to be adequately recognised.

Elaine "Lal" Waterson, was born into a Hull family partly of Irish gypsy descent, on February 15, 1943. The three children were orphaned early in life and brought up by an aunt, a second-hand dealer. They started singing around Hull as the Mariners, and were known later as the Folksons until they reverted to their family name and started up what became one of Britain’s leading folk clubs, Folk Union One, at the largest venue they could find in the city, at the old Bluebell pub.

The four of them were never keen on the touring that soon became necessary, Lal less so than the rest. As Carthy recalls: “She was a very private person. She didn’t enjoy singing on stage, or in any public event, for that matter.”

When Norma went abroad to work in a tropical radio station in the unlikely role as a late-night DJ, and John Harrison went to live in London in 1966, they stopped performing for a while. Six years later they returned to public platforms, for a short time with Bernie Vickers, and ultimately with Martin Carthy.

The group last toured in 1993, but had been performing without Lal for some years. She had been plagued with ill health for many years, and had to withdraw from a US tour in 1991, after which she was replaced by Jill Pidd, who was joined on their final US tour two years later by her niece, Eliza, Norma and Martin’s daughter, today a Brit Award-nominated star in her own right.

However, in the previous two decades she and her brother had begun writing songs, at first not aware of what the other was doing, but then coming together triumphantly in May 1972 for what is probably the seminal British folk rock album of all time, when these two singers – known till then, predominantly, for their unaccompanied singing of traditional lyrics and ballads – blazed forth to the accompaniment of electric alumni like the great Fairport Convention electric guitar virtuoso, Richard Thompson.
Lal contributed six songs to the album, “Bright Phoebus”, for Bill Leader's Trailer label, ranging from the drunken reminiscence of Red WineAnd Promises to the devastating picture of industrial poverty in Never The Same.

Perhaps her most remarkable song on the album was The Scarecrow, a joint composition with Mike (later recorded by June Tabor on her “Abyssinians” album), with its chorus:

    Ah, but you'd lay me down and love me,
    Ah, but you'd lay me down and love me, if you could.
    For you're only a bag of rags in an overall
    That the wind sways so the crows fly away
    And the corn can grow tall.


Mike’s song, I’m the Leader of the Rubber Band, was licensed to RCA as a single, and there was even talk of a Top of the Pops appearance, but the group refused to go on the show.

The Phoebus album has been long out of print since Dave Bulmer bought the Leader catalogue, but two tracks (one, The Magical Man, another joint composition of Lal’s with Mike) reappeared recently on Castle Communications' reworking of the “Electric Muse” folk-into-rock compilation).
In addition to her appearances on Waterson albums, she recorded with her sister and her daughter, Maria, on the Topic album, “A True-Hearted Girl”, in 1977, which included her solo performance of The Welcome Sailor.

She joined the Rotherham-based No Master’s Voice song-writing collective (forced by HMV to drop the last word in their name), for whom she joined with her son Oliver Knight, in recording “Once in a Blue Moon”, an album in many ways as significant as “Bright Phoebus”, and very different from it. Ultimately this appeared on Topic.
She was also involved in a TV project, “Hard Cash” for the BBC, who took fright at its downright condemnation of mid-1980s Thatcherism, and refused to show it. Her song from the soundtrack, Hilda’s Cabinet Band, was the most outwardly political of her material, though her very existence, and the disregarded tradition upon which she based her life’s work, was a political statement of great power.

In the last year of her life she was also working with Oliver, who had turned out to be a highly talented electric guitarist and recording engineer, not only for his mother but also for his cousin Eliza.
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Elaine “Lal” Waterson, born Hull, February 15, 1943, died Robin Hood’s Bay, September 5, 1998.

Once in a Blue Moon - a tribute to Lal Waterson

BBC Electric Prom, October 25, 2007
Did you miss this? Yes, so did I. I managed to capture a web showing (which ended on November 4, so you've missed it unless you're reading this today) and captured it to a DVD which is now one of my most precious possessions.

(If you're interested to know how I did this, I'll be posting a techie thingie on my SoftwareDaily blog http://software-daily.blogspot.com/ if you're interested. But not today, which is supposed to be my day off.)

The video quality isn't up to much. Blowing up a tiny web window to full TV screen pixelates like mad, and since I did the capture on a Saturday, which has got to be the web's busiest time, the transmission juddered a few times and lost sound and/or vision once or twice. But most of the time, it was OK, and the sound was superb. I'll be editing it down to an audio CD I can play in my car as soon as I have the time.

And no, before you ask, I can't let you have copies! But (crossed fingers) here's a slideshow of shots from the show:











The set list was
* Some Old Salty
* Flight Of The Pelican
* Foolish One
* The Altisidora
* So Strange Is Man
* Migrating Bird
* Pheobe
* Cornfield
* Memories
* Fine Horse Man
* Winifer Odd
* Never The Same
* At First She Starts
* Midnight Feast
* Her White Gown
* Evona Darling
* The Bird
* Wilsons Arms
* One Of Those Days
* Scarecrow
* Red Wine Promises
* Song For Thersa
* Once In A Blue Moon
* Stumbling On

BBC's Clare Hudson and Daniela Armstrong recorded this minute-by-minute record of how it all happened:

1. 19.31 - We are waiting for the 'Once In a Blue Moon' music event to start.
2. 19.36 - Radio 2's Mike Harding takes the stage to introduce the event with a story of when he first met Mike and Lal Waterson.
3. 19.38 - There are twelve people on the stage. It's hard to describe how powerful the sound is.
4. 19.39 - Eliza is centre stage in a fabulous red dress.
5. 19.42 - She's introducing the house band. She's warned up she might blub. She won't be alone if she does!
6. 19.44 - Flight of the pelican starts with a guitar solo followed by the haunting lyrics sung by Eliza about
7. 19.47 - Marry Gilhooley, Lal's daughter, joins Eliza for 'Foolish One'.
8. 19.49 - Their vocals are supported by a string quartet.
9. 19.53 - Eliza introduces special guest actor Tim van Eyken to ring the next song The Altistadora.
10. 19.57 - Another special guest - James Yorkston and guitar join Tim for 'So Strange Is Man'.
11. 20.00 - Liverpool artist Kathryn Williams takes centre stage for the 'Haunting Bird' supported by the string quartet.
12. 20.03 - The audience are delighted as Kathryn sings 'Phoebe' and 'Cornfield' which she explains are part of the same story.
13. 20.05 - An instrumental resounds around the walls of Cecil Sharp House.
14. 20.10 - Marry and Eliza are back for 'Memories'. It's a family affair with Lal's son Oliver Knight on guitar.
15. 20.13 - Eliza affectionately introduces her old Dad Martin Carthy to the stage to accompany Marry in Fine Horse Man.
16. 20.18 - Martin's singing this one solo. 'Winifer Odd'. It's a curious song of a woman in strange circumstances!
17. 20.23 - One more from Martin. 'Never The Same' harks back to the old days.
18. 20.49 - The second half starts the man from Fife, James Yorkston singing the melancholic 'At First She Starts'.
19. 20.56 - 'Midnight Feast' and James is joined by Norma and Mike, Lal's sister and brother.
20. 21.01 - He jokes about the rehearsals at Norma's house. Wouldn't you love to have been a fly on the wall there!
21. 21.03 - Another special guest Liza Knapp brings what looks like an electric zither to the stage to give her rendition of 'Her White Gown'.
22. 21.05 - She's immersed in the song.
23. 21.07 - Talented Lisa takes to the auto harp for this next care free track 'Evona Darling'.
24. 21.17 - Alasdair Roberts is the next special guest, he solos on 'The Bird'.
25. 21.20 - Mike Waterson has arrived on stage, introduced by his niece Eliza as the family trouble maker. He's joined by Liza and Dougie.
26. 21.23 - Mike stays on stage joined by brother-in-law Martin and nephew Oliver.
27. 21.26 - Mike jokes with the crew and the audience - "We're only here to have fun", he laughs.
28. 21.33 - After a moving song Mike invites "the plague of his life" Norma to join him in Red Wine Promises!
29. 21.37 - Norma introduces 'Song for Thersa', the lady who looked after her, Lal and Mike when they were kids. Did Norma just wipe away a tear?
30. 21.38 - The family unite again for 'Once In a Blue Moon' what an incredible line up.
31. 21.42 - Eliza grabs a violin in this track.
32. 21.45 - Everyone's back on stage. Eliza runs through the thank yous and the applause for the assembled throng.
33. 21.49 - The crowd are demanding more. Will they get it?
34. 21.50 - They're back, but Norma says they've not rehearsed any more. Ah they've found one!
35. 21.51 - Goodnight, goodnight, goodnight!

Lal died nine years ago last September, which is why I've preceded this post with a reprint of my obituary published in The Independent.

Friday, November 02, 2007

Joint Fixture List for Kimber’s Men and Joe Stead

2007

Nov 18th (KM) The Open Door Folk Club, The Royal Oak, Werneth, Oldham.

Nov 25th (KM) The Works, Sowerby Bridge. (6pm start)

Dec 8th (Joe) Sixmilebridge Folk Club, Sixmilebridge, County Clare, Eire.

2008

Jan 10th (KM) Topic Folk Club, The Cock and Bottle, Bradford.

Feb 2nd (KM) Square Chapel Theatre, Halifax. (Matinee and evening).

Feb 6th (Joe) Menston Men’s Forum, Main St, Menston. (Valparaiso).

Feb 24th (KM) Southport Folk Club.

Feb 25th (Joe) Rossett School, Harrogate – Valparaiso round the Horn

Feb 29th (Joe) Ripon Heritage Centre – Life + Times Paul Robeson

Apr 3rd (Joe) Bishop Stortford Folk Club, All Saints Church Hall, Bishop Stortford.

Apr 6th (Joe) Walthamstow Folk Club, The Plough Inn, Walthamstow. (Robeson lecture)

Apr 20th (KM) The Puzzle Hall Inn, Sowerby Bridge. 5pm

Apr 26th (KM) Halifax Playhouse Theatre – recording ‘live’ album.

May 9th (KM) Clennell Hall Folk Festival, Alwinton, Northumberland.

May 10th (KM) Clennell Hall Folk Festival, Alwinton, Northumberland.

May 11th (KM) Clennell Hall Folk Festival, Alwinton, Northumberland.

May 14th (Joe) North Bradford Retired Men’s Forum - Life + Times Paul Robeson

Jul 4th (KM) Cleckheaton Folk Festival

Jul 5th (KM) Cleckheaton Folk Festival

Jul 6th (KM) Cleckheaton Folk Festival

Jul 10th (KM) Darlington Arts Centre

Jul 17th (KM) Gregson Lane Folk Club, Village of Gregson Lane, Preston.

Sep 5th (KM) Swanage Folk Festival

Sep 6th (KM) Swanage Folk Festival

Sep 7th (KM) Swanage Folk Festival

Sep 8th (Joe) Leeds North East Probus Club, Oakwood – Valparaiso round the Horn

2009

Jan 11th (KM) Sixmilebridge Winter Festival, County Clare - Provisional

Jan 12th (KM) Sixmilebridge Winter Festival, County Clare - Provisional

Oct 25th (KM) Scrag End Folk Club, Shoulder of Mutton, Oakthorpe, Leicestershire

Petition to nominate Pete Seeger for Nobel Peace Prize

The petition to nominate Pete Seeger for a Nobel Peace Prize has grown rapidly; there are over 7600 signatures and you are one of them. The comments on the petition web page attest to how deeply Pete has touched our lives, from our parents to our children and grandchildren, and helped shape our sense of human responsibility.

In response to this initial outpouring of support, we have launched a new website, specifically to support this campaign. While it is still under development, we are asking you to take a look, and to publicize its existence to others who might want to support this campaign. The site can be reached at:

http://nobelprize4pete.org

We are actively seeking additional help in building this campaign. Of particular interest would be organization endorsements of the campaign that we can publicize. If you are involved in such an organization, please ask them to endorse this effort, and have them send email to that effect to:

info@nobelprize4pete.org

Another goal of ours is to collect additional materials to support this campaign. Because Pete is such a private person there is little besides what's on his record jackets that fills in his life story. Everybody has a little tale to tell about when they first met Pete or when he sang at their camp or school. Others may have photographs of Pete or of activities he has been involved with. It would be nice to collect those memories. He is essential to so many people.

Below are some of my thoughts on this campaign that you might be able to use in convincing others to join in!

Eleanor Walden
eleanor@nobelprize4pete.org

==== some thoughts ====

The fact that Al Gore won the Peace Prize award this year encourages our effort for Pete Seeger for 2008! I hope this recognition helps the environmental movement and increases ways to protect the planet that is our home. I hope it makes more of us aware of the chasm we endure between rich and poor, between obscenely rich and obscenely poor. I am also encouraged that it was through an art form, a film, that Al Gore got his message around the world so quickly and won such acceptance. How tired I am of having the arts referred to as “artsy/fartsy”, how insulting to have the Universities cut back programs in the “humanities”, and music and arts enhancement in grade schools be the first to go for budget cuts.

The folk music revival movement that spread around the world encouraged young people to learn to play an instrument, give poetic voice to political opinions, and find appreciation for the carriers of the folk tradition who had kept those jewels of music alive in their families and communities. One of Pete’s most important contributions to our consciousness was that he always paid homage to the lineage of folk traditions and was one of the first to see that folk music, was not cute and quaint, but was a form of protest against oppression.

Pete Seeger is an ambassador for Peace and Social Justice and has been over the course of his 88-year lifetime. His work shows up wherever you look in the history of labor solidarity, growth of mass effort to end the Vietnam war, ban of nuclear weapons, work for international diplomacy, support of the Civil Rights Movement, for cleaning up the Hudson River and for environmental responsibility in general. Pete knit the world together with songs from China, the Soviet Union, Israel, Cuba, South Africa and Republican Spain. We learned that Crispus Attucks, born a slave, was the first man to die at the opening of the Revolutionary War, that the Farmer-Labor party in the mid-west had a socialist philosophy that lasted well into the 20th century, we learned that anti-slavery movements were often inspired by songs that indicated a map of escape, such as “Follow the Drinkin’ Gourd,” he popularized many of the IWW songs that helped in CIO organizing, and spread the Civil Rights Movement through promoting the SNCC Freedom Singers and making songs such as “We Shall Overcome,” known all over the world.

When subpoenaed by the House Un-American Activities Committee and Senator Joseph McCarthy, Pete defended himself on the basis of the First Amendment, the right of an American citizen to free association, not the Fifth Amendment, protection against self incrimination. When he was boycotted from earning a living and practicing his craft on a national scale Pete appeared at union meetings, summer camps, Jr. High and High Schools, and Colleges. His pay at times was as little as $5, but his value was priceless!

Pete also had his mentors: among them Paul Robeson, who said: “The Artist must elect to fight for freedom or slavery...” It is time that a cultural worker receives the acknowledgment that, as Bertolt Brecht points out, “Art is not a mirror held up to reality, but a hammer with which to shape it.” The cultural workers who know the power of the arts for social and political change, also know how difficult it is to gain recognition for cultural creation without either trivializing the art or somehow qualifying for designation of “high art” selected by an elite.

Pete Seeger always held to the principles that people’s music is not only “good art” but is representational art through music. Thus “folk music” was a living, vibrant form of culture.

Culture, in essence, means to honor our forbears. In the words of the Eastern European writer Milan Kundera: “ the struggle for people’s power is the struggle for memory and against forgetting”. Pete’s talent, sense of decency, and inalterable belief in, as Anne Franke said, that, “at heart, people are basically good”, were uniquely his, but he has never been alone in his work; the support of his wife Toshi and his family gave him the opportunity to be all he could be. We all stand on Pete Seeger's shoulders in a manner of speaking. We share Pete Seeger as a "father" of cultural, social, and political movements, as much as we share our parental DNA.

It is time that cultural work receives the recognition that the arts have great influence and global reach, that it is not only a medium of entertainment but of education, compassion and action. It is the desire of the committee that Pete Seeger be recognized as a beacon of integrity and principle in a time, and in a country, more defined by the absence of those qualities than by their honor.

Eleanor Walden

www.nobelprize4pete.org

Eleanor@nobelprize4pete.org

mailto:steve@nobelprize4pete.org

If you’ve not yet signed the petition – there is still time.

Go to http://nobelprize4pete.org