Sunday, 12 July 2026

“I’ve Lost My Spotted Cow” – In Search of English Folk Song, Part One: From the Beginning to the 1960s

 

The Spotted Cow” is number 956 in the Roud Folk Song Index. It is included in nineteenth and early twentieth century books of English traditional songs that were collected by musicologists who were concerned that they were dying out. It first appeared on a record by the Norfolk folk singer Harry Cox that was released in 1966, and then on a record by the Copper Family of Rottingdean in Sussex in 1971. In both cases it was sung unaccompanied. There are many more recordings, in a range of instrumental arrangements. I first heard it on Steeleye Span’s 1972 record Below the Salt, played on electric instruments, and I sing it myself from time to time. On the face of it, The Spotted Cow” is a classic traditional song of rural lust, with the cow in question having a double meaning. But the scholar and folk singer A. L. Lloyd suggested that it was actually written in the early eighteenth century by a London hack writer for performance at entertainments in the famously louche Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens, before being taken up elsewhere.


And that, in a nutshell, is English folk song. Throwaway ditties from the nineteenth century or earlier that caught the imagination of generations of singers in pubs and social gatherings and were passed on and on until eventually being written down by earnest middle class antiquarians and subsequently recorded by modern professional folk musicians – and kept in the mix by rank amateurs such as myself. The unknown songwriter who first penned it would doubtless by astonished to learn that his creation is still being been sung, catalogued, rearranged and subjected to scholarly analysis three hundred years later. Building on this example, in a brace of articles I undertake the not inconsiderable task of giving an overview of English folk song, its history and its peaks and troughs of popularity.


What is English Folk Song?

Much ink has been spilt on this question, not helped by the term being used for two different genres of song. The term originally referred to ‘traditional’ songs such as “Spotted Cow”, that were first written by unknown songwriters in the nineteenth century or earlier, and which became the music of the mainly rural labouring classes. They were passed orally from singer to singer before being ‘collected’ in the late nineteenth or early twentieth century by middle class dilettantes who were seeking to prevent them from being lost to industrialisation and urbanisation. Then in the second half of the twentieth century, the term began to be applied to contemporary songs written and performed by young ‘singer-songwriters’, usually accompanying themselves on guitars or similar instruments, and often on social or political themes, overwhelmingly from a left-wing standpoint. The ‘folk revival’ that began in the 1950s embraced both genres of song, and then diversified in terms of subject matter, arrangements, instrumentation and playing styles. Today, there is a bewildering diversity of songs and accompaniments that come under the broad banner of folk, and the term has to be applied pragmatically. So, folk songs are labelled as such if they are performed in folk clubs or at folk festivals, by musicians who identify as folk singers; or which appear on records in the ‘folk music’ section of the few remaining record shops, and on ‘folk music’ playlists produced by music streaming companies. As we will see, this means that a lot of artists or songs today get categorised as folk that would never have been recognised as such by early folk pioneers. But diversity has won the day – as the eminent folk singer Eliza Carthy puts it, “a folk song is any song that can be sung in a pub”.


English, Scottish, Irish and Welsh Folk Music Compared

The nations of the British Isles each have their own folk music, but differ in the part that it plays in their culture and national life. In Scotland and Ireland, folk music has long been an integral part of national identity. Scottish traditional songs began to be collected and recorded in the early eighteenth century, much earlier than in England, and poets, in particular Rabbie Burns and Sir Walter Scott used traditional themes in their own works. In the twentieth century, ‘modern’ folk songs, such as Flower of Scotland’, written by Roy Williamson of the Corries, have reached far beyond the folk world. Scotland and Ireland also have rich stores of traditional instrumental music, that have transcended their origins as tunes for dancing. ‘Sessions’, where folk musicians get together to play tunes are common in pubs and community centres across both countries.


In England, by contrast, traditional folk music has rarely been mainstream. Most peoples’ knowledge of English folk song extends no further than the recollection of being in a class of children singing sanitised lyrics in primary school, accompanied by the music teacher on her piano. English traditional songs are regarded as exotic things, performed by men with serious beards and their fingers in their ears. Similarly, English traditional instrumental music is only played to accompany garishly clad morris dancers and the like. English pop and rock bands that include elements of traditional music are few and far between, and have a specialist following, while in Scotland, bands like Runrig and Skerryvore attract large mainstream audiences.


Why is traditional music a minority pursuit in England, but widespread in Scotland and Ireland? I’d hazard three reasons. First, Scots and Irish have long expressed their national identity through traditional songs, that often have a patriotic air, or otherwise celebrate their countries history (not to mention their dislike of English high-handedness). Second, traditional instrumental music has a central place in Scottish and Irish culture, with ‘sessions’ an integral part of musical life, while in England it has never really transcended its country dance roots. And third, Scottish and Irish music, well, sounds better. Their melodies and tunes are more attractive or foot tapping, their lyrics are more meaningful and poignant and their range of instruments and arrangements make the music more interesting. English folk songs, by contrast, are often pedantic, and can sound too much like hymns (it is perhaps no coincidence that the only traditional English songs to become widely known are Christmas carols). English dance music is four-square and plodding compared to the jigs and reels of Scotland and Ireland (by the way, in this article I will concentrate on English folk song rather than folk dance, for the simple reason that I bloody hate dancing). Of course, there are some great songs and tunes that have come out of the English tradition – I wouldn’t be writing about it if there weren’t. But to me most English traditional music lacks the immediacy, emotional thrust and popular appeal of the best Scottish and Irish music, and therefore remains a minority pursuit.


The comedian Billy Connolly, who began his career in folk clubs in the 1960s, had his own take on the difference between Scottish and English folk:

The Scottish clubs liked entertainers and English clubs liked educators. They seemed to like to be educated by the traditional unaccompanied songs. It was like Brussels sprouts, supposed to be good for you”.


What of Welsh traditional music? It has tended to have a low profile, often hidden behind the Welsh language, and subsumed within the pageantry of the Eisteddfod. Welsh musical life has also focused more on the many male voice choirs that are a distinctive part of the nation’s identity. There are singers and musicians who explore Welsh traditional music, in both Welsh and English, but as in England, Welsh folk music is not mainstream.


Origins and Collectors

The fine autobiographical novel ‘Lark Rise to Candelford’ is a fictionalised account of author Flora Thompson’s childhood in a rural Oxfordshire community in the 1880s. In it she describes a typical evening in the village pub, the ‘Wagon and Horses’. The men of the village, after a hard day’s labour in the cornfields, would gather in the pub to talk, smoke and drink a half pint of beer – all that their meagre wage would afford them. Women and children were of course excluded. The evenings would often end with a singaround, with each contributing a song, ‘to oblige’. Thompson provides the lyrics of some of the traditional folk songs that resounded through the cosy taproom. There were chorus songs like ‘The Barleymow’ (Roud index number 944), a drinking song that lasted as long as the singers wanted it to. ‘King Arthur’ (Roud 130) was another chorus song; the version Thompson includes actually came from a mid-nineteenth century collection of nursery rhymes. The narrator of My father’s a hedger and ditcher’ (Roud 846) is a woman complaining that no one wants to marry her; the villager who sang it in the pub was a bachelor. The older men present would sing lengthy ancient ballads such as ‘Lord Lovell’ (Roud 48; Child 75) or ‘The Outlandish Knight’ (Roud 21; Child 4 – I will explain these numbers later, suffice to say they designate that the songs have all been collected and catalogued). The songs would have been sung unaccompanied – none of the men could play instruments, still less come up with appropriate arrangements.


As these are all traditional songs, by definition we don’t know who wrote them, but someone must have. Doubtless, some had their origins in rural communities, composed by noted singers and passed on down the generations. Others, like ‘The Spotted Cow’ mentioned earlier, probably came from hack songwriters in towns and cities, who were in effect parodying rural life. As such, they were related to ‘Broadside Ballads’. These were songs, often on contemporary themes, that were written by professional songwriters, published on printed posters and sold in London and other towns for performance at local entertainments. Broadside ballads shared subject matter (crime, lust, current affairs, war, etc) and tunes with folk songs of unknown provenance, and today tend to be lumped together with them as ‘traditional songs’.


Flora Thompson’s account of the singarounds at the ‘Wagon and Horses’ is probably a fairly typical example of how folk songs were performed and disseminated when England was a largely rural nation. But it also showed that change was coming, for it was the older men who sang the traditional songs – the young men scorned them and preferred the contemporary popular songs emanating from the Music Halls. By the 1880s, Britain was becoming an urbanised nation, and the culture and tastes of the cities were spreading into the countryside. Traditional song was in danger of dying out.


A village in rural Oxfordshire, not far from where Flora Thompson witnessed (from outside) a singaround at the 'Wagon and Horses'

Enter the intrepid band of folk song collectors - men (and some women) who travelled the country to visit rural communities and write down songs from local singers. Between the mid-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, many collections of traditional songs were published, having been collected by the likes of Lucy Broadwood, Alfred Williams, Maud Karpeles and others. Classical composers Ralph Vaughan Williams, Percy Grainger and George Butterworth also collected traditional songs, and included their tunes and lyrics in their own compositions. But the doyen of collectors was Cecil Sharp (1859-1924), who collected over 5,000 songs and tunes, was a leading light in the nascent English Folk Song Society and founded the English Folk Dance Society (they later merged into the English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS)).


Between them, the pioneer collectors gathered and wrote down thousands of songs, and today’s practitioners would have little to perform without their efforts. However, it is possible to criticise their approach to collecting. They could be selective in what they wrote down, discarding songs that they deemed inappropriate and sometimes altering lyrics. They concentrated on rural areas, ignoring the songs coming from industrial towns and mining areas. They were sometimes not very interested in the singers, and failed to include information about their backgrounds, or the context of their songs. Some singers may well have been selective in what they passed on to the middle class, and sometimes rather high-handed collectors. And there was a lack of diversity, with songs by women and people of colour being under-represented. We will probably never be able to retrieve what the early collectors ignored or discarded – but there are still thousands of songs for modern performers to explore.


That exploratory work has been made easier by efforts made to catalogue and categorise traditional songs. An early attempt was made in the 1880s by the American academic Francis Child, who published a collection of 305 English and Scottish ballads (narrative songs that tell a story), giving each a number – we have noted the ‘Child numbers’ of a couple of songs above. In recent years, a professional librarian, amateur folklorist and glorious obsessive named Steve Roud has catalogued and numbered nearly 25,000 folk songs, including their origins, variants and recordings. The ‘Roud Index’, again mentioned above, is today hosted online by the EFDSS and is available for all to search.


The efforts of the early song collectors may have saved many songs from being lost, but did not significantly raise the profile of English folk music. As we have seen, a few songs and tunes were taken up by classical composers, or by school teachers, often in sanitised versions (a classic example is the song ‘No John, no’ (Roud 146), which was originally much saucier than the bland version I remember singing at primary school). But in general, folk songs did not catch the popular imagination, and most were left to gather dust in the archives of the EFDSS.


The Beginnings of the Post-War Folk Revival

In the early 1950s, interest in folk music began to increase, through the efforts of a new generation of collectors, who could use recording equipment, and disseminate their discoveries through radio and television. Early leading lights in this revival were Peter Kennedy, whose father Douglas had followed Cecil Sharp as head of the EFDSS, and Alan Lomax, an American musicologist and song collector who came to Europe to escape the McCarthy witch hunt years. They realised that there were still some traditional singers scattered around the English countryside and recorded them on early reel-to-reel tapes. Singers such as Harry Cox and Walter Pardon, both from Norfolk, and the Copper family of Rottingdean in East Sussex, a long-standing folk music family who sang in harmony, became minor celebrities through appearing on the BBC. In 1953, Lomax hosted a television series named ‘Songhunter’, which featured performances from folk musicians from a number of traditions. The programmes were broadcast live, which troubled his producer, a young man named David Attenborough, who was concerned that the amateur musicians might be overwhelmed by the occasion, and sought ways of putting them at ease. A memo exists in which Attenborough requests that beer be made available in the studio while the Copper Family were playing, to improve their performance – the mark of a young man of rare insight and initiative, who should go far!


A young David Attenborough requests beer to lubricate the voices of the Copper Family

In the late 1950s, Kennedy and Lomax compiled a monumental series of L.P.s of their field recordings titled ‘The Folk Songs of Britain’. Sadly, however, Kennedy made the decision to maximise the number of singers featured, meaning that many songs were represented by brief extracts, sometimes from multiple performers. This approach drastically reduced the records’ enjoyment as a listening experience.


Peter Kennedy and Alan Lomax's monumental series of records of British folk songs. I bought the lot in the early 1970s, but found them such hard going that most of the discs have never been played. Any offers?

Singer Songwriters Arrive from America

We noted earlier that the second meaning of ‘folk song’ refers to newly composed songs, often on social or political themes, and generally sung accompanied by a guitar or other acoustic instruments. This genre of music had its roots in the first half of the twentieth century in the United States, where the guitar and banjo became the instruments of choice for black blues composers and singers, and later for white writers and performers such as Woody Guthrie. In the 1950s many American blues and folk musicians, both black and white, came to Britain for concert tours, including the Weavers, whose main songwriter was Pete Seeger (a Harvard drop-out whose songs included ‘If I had a hammer’ and ‘Where have all the flowers gone’), and the folk-blues artists Big Bill Broonzy and Sonny Terry and Brownie McGee. Young British performers flocked to their concerts, and started writing their own ‘folk songs’. In the mid 1950s, a uniquely British genre of music named ‘skiffle’ became briefly prominent. This was a guitar-based amalgam of American-style folk-blues and trad jazz, whose leading figure, Lonnie Donegan, had a chart hit with an arrangement of Leadbelly’s ‘Rock Island Line’. Skiffle was soon replaced by rock and roll as the popular music of young Britons, but it brought the guitar to Britain and helped kickstart the British contemporary folk movement.


An early English advocate of the guitar in folk music was an academic physicist named Dr. John Hasted. Today largely forgotten, in the 1950s he was a leading light in skiffle and the folk revival, as a collector and disseminator of songs, and as a performer.


The Rise of the Folk Clubs

Traditional and contemporary folk music came together, sometimes uneasily, in the folk clubs that proliferated across the UK in the 1950s and 1960s. It was a grassroots movement, organised by amateur volunteers, who took over rooms in coffee bars, pubs, parish halls and the like so that young people could sing and listen to folk songs. By the late 1960s, it is estimated that there were over 300 folk clubs in London alone. There were (and still are) three types of folk club. Some were ‘concert clubs’, that had a programme of paid professional, or semi-professional performers, with support coming from ‘residents’, regular attendees of a high standard who acted as warm-ups to the main act. Other clubs held ‘singers nights’, where anyone could take the stage as a ‘floor singer’ to sing a couple of songs. Sometimes clubs swapped roles, with concert clubs holding occasional singers nights, and singers clubs sometimes booking a paid performer. The third, less formal type of club held ‘singarounds’, where attendees sat in a circle and took turns to sing a song. Many clubs embraced both traditional and contemporary folk music, and allowed a range of instruments, but some clubs insisted on traditional songs only – and some of these required participants to sing unaccompanied.


In the early 1960s, the grassroots nature of folk clubs extended to the lives of the young professional performers. Most started off as floor singers, taking their turn at singers’ nights, attracting the attention of the club organiser and being booked for a concert night. Their careers were furthered by word of mouth; there were fewer top class performers than clubs looking to book them and good artists could quickly find themselves with a full diary. Many travelled from club to club by train (a surprising number of leading folk musicians can’t drive), or hitch-hiked, and often slept on the settees of club organisers.


Young English artists started to make their mark, some concentrating on traditional song, others writing their own material. Leading traditional singers included Shirley Collins, who in the 1950s assisted Alan Lomax with collecting songs (and became his lover); Oxford-educated June Tabor, and Martin Carthy, who embraced guitar accompaniment as well as a creative approach to arranging traditional songs. Groups of harmony singers built on the legacy of the Copper family, including the Watersons from North Yorkshire (later joined by Martin Carthy when he married Norma Waterson) and the Young Tradition, whose roof-raising approach presaged the development of folk-rock in the late 1960s. Young traditional singers generally had very different backgrounds to the countrymen and women whose songs they sang – Martin Carthy was raised in Hampstead and before dropping out of education to pursue music was destined to read classics at university, while June Tabor represented her Oxford college in University Challenge.


June Tabor on University Challenge, 1968

Early folk songwriters included Sidney Carter (who wrote ‘Lord of the Dance’); Cyril Tawney, a former submariner who specialised in songs of the sea, and Ian Campbell, who led a Weavers-style acoustic band and ran a folk club in Birmingham (his song ‘The Sun is Burning’ was covered by Simon and Garfunkel). Another popular group was the Spinners, from Liverpool, who also ran their own club. Then came the likes of Bert Jansch and John Renbourn, who took guitar playing to a new level and later came together in Pentangle, Ralph McTell, Harvey Andrews and Robin and Barry Dransfield. And despite Billy Connolly’s ‘Brussels sprouts’ jibe, there were English entertainers who combined songs with comedy, such as Mike Harding, Tony Capstick and Richard Digance. Scottish and Irish artists of course also visited England (and vice versa), including Nigel Denver, Alex Campbell, John Martyn, Christy Moore and...Donovan! In practice, it was of course difficult to distinguish English contemporary singer-songwriters from Scottish, Irish and Welsh. There were some differences in subject matter (and accents), but little in style, and I will not be precious by excluding them from this account.


American singer-songwriters also played English folk clubs in the early 1960s. Bob Dylan visited briefly in 1962, then returned in 1964 as a superstar playing concert halls. Tom Paxton, Phil Ochs and Jackson C. Frank also did the rounds. In 1964, Paul Simon toured British folk clubs, stole ‘Scarborough Fair’ from Martin Carthy and supposedly wrote ‘Homeward Bound’ on Widnes railway station (I’ve never understood why Widnes celebrates that song, as it is plain from the lyrics that Simon hated Britain in general and Widnes in particular).


The Folk Police

The folk revival of the 1960s was a youth movement, with folk briefly overtaking modern jazz as the music of students and like-mined young people, before itself being sidelined by rock music in the 1970s. But the early years of the revival were dominated by two older performers: the forty-something Ewan McColl and the fifty-something A. L. (Bert) Lloyd, both (like Alan Lomax) avowed communists. Between them, they had an outsized influence on the shape and direction of the English folk song revival.


A.L. Lloyd (1908-1982) had street credibility in the folk world, for as a young man he had worked on an Australian sheep farm and crewed on an Antarctic whaling ship, before settling in London as a freelance journalist and broadcaster. He was a self-taught musicologist (like his successor Steve Roud) and became an authority on the traditional music of Britain, Australia and Europe. He also became a noted singer, and from the 1950s his folk club appearances and records set the standard for the performance of traditional songs. He also acted as musical director for Topic Records, the leading folk label, nurturing the careers of many young artists.


Ewan McColl (1915-1989) eked out a career as an actor and playwright in left-wing theatre groups, before being introduced to traditional music in the 1950s by Alan Lomax. He formed a working, and romantic partnership with Peggy Seeger, younger half-sister of Pete Seeger (she later became his third wife), and they founded one of England’s first folk clubs, the London-based Ballads and Blues club, which later became the Singers club. Like Lloyd, McColl sang and recorded traditional songs (they made several albums together, though generally did not sing together). Listening to their albums from the 1950s and early 1960s today is a rather ennervating experience, as the recordings were stark and simple and the arrangements sparse compared to today’s complex and heavily produced styles. Both either sang unaccompanied, or with minimal instrumentation: in Lloyd’s case often just Alf Edwards’s concertina and for McColl, Peggy Seeger’s banjo.


Unlike Lloyd, McColl also wrote songs, completing over 300 in all. His best known compositions were ‘Dirty Old Town’, ‘The Shoals of Herring’, ‘The Manchester Rambler’ and ‘The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face’, a love song that he wrote for Peggy, which became a chart hit in 1972 for Roberta Flack.


Bert Lloyd was a clubbable, open-minded personality, who carried his deep knowledge of folk music lightly and encouraged young performers such as the Watersons to find their own approach to traditional song. He was also not above occasionally altering the lyrics of traditional songs to make them sound better. Ewan McColl, by contrast, was opinionated and dogmatic, and inclined to hold that there was a ‘right’ and a ’wrong’ way to perform (his way was right, of course). He ruffled many feathers at the Singers club by insisting that performers only sang songs from the part of the country (or world) that they came from, a rule that many found over-restrictive. He was supported in this policy by Peggy Seeger, who later in life defended it strongly, believing that without it performers would all gravitate towards American folk music, and British music would be lost (other leading clubs did not seem to find this a problem). McColl himself was in a good position to break his own rule, as he had been born James Henry Miller in Salford, the son of Scottish parents, and he airily performed and recorded both English and Scottish songs.


Some of the abiding stereotypes of English folk can be traced back to Ewan McColl. The roots of the “beards and fingers in the ear” jibe can be seen in the photograph reproduced below. The beard is unmistakeable (he wore one all his life), but he is not actually putting his finger in his ear; like many who sang unaccompanied, he cupped his hand over his ear, so that he could hear himself better and help keep in tune. However, many outside the folk scene saw it as an affectation. The reputation of the folk world as one of priggishness and cliquishness can also be traced to McColl and Seeger’s ban on ‘foreign songs’ and McColl’s insistence that there was a ‘right’ way to sing folk songs. In the 1960s, he and Seeger set up a clique (there is no other word for it) called the ‘Critics Group’, which was a small group of performers approved by the couple who were invited to their house in Beckenham to share songs – and be lectured to by McColl. Membership of the Critics Group was an honour afforded to few, and naturally caused resentment among those excluded from the inner sanctum.


The face that launched a thousand folk stereotypes. Ewan McColl with beard and his finger in over his ear

McColl and Seeger weren’t the only ones who were felt to take folk song too seriously. As we have mentioned, other clubs had an exclusive policy, insisting on traditional unaccompanied songs only. Some in the folk world believed that traditional songs should only be performed with the lyrics, tunes and style of the original source singers. The musician and writer Bob Pegg likened this approach to butterfly collecting. Rather than being living, dynamic and changing things, folk songs were to be humanely killed, frozen in time and stuck on pins, ignoring the fact that the versions collected from nineteenth or twentieth century sources represented just one step in the songs’ journeys. The best performers in the 1960s, such as Martin Carthy, his collaborator, violinist Dave Swarbrick and the Watersons (encouraged by Bert Lloyd), took the alternative view that traditional songs could and should be arranged, adapted and sometimes revised for the next stage in their journeys. The epitome of this philosophy was an album released in 1964 named ‘Folk Roots, New Routes’, in which Shirley Collins sang traditional songs accompanied by the jazz and blues influenced virtuoso guitar playing of of Davy Graham. Revolutionary for its time, it presaged the later work of Pentangle and Fairport Convention. Needless to say, McColl and the Critics Group disapproved.


The Times They Are A-Changin’

At the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, Bob Dylan caused a sensation by performing the second half of his set with an electric band (The Band!) Hardcore folkies such as Pete Seeger deplored this development. On a subsequent UK tour, Dylan brought the band to Manchester’s Free Trade Hall, where between songs someone in the audience shouted ‘Judas!’ Dylan, naturally, was unmoved and ‘folk-rock’ was born. (The concert was recorded and released as an ‘official bootleg’, and the shout can be plainly heard, as can Dylan’s reaction. At least two men have claimed to be the heckler. Quaintly, at the end of the concert, as the audience is filing out, the National Anthem plays over the PA system).


Ewan McColl, of course, strongly disliked Dylan’s approach, and the Singers Club and Critics Group continued along the true path. However, it shouldn’t be assumed that the Singers Club was a dour, sterile place. It attracted large and enthusiastic audiences, who enjoyed joining in the choruses, and the atmosphere was relaxed, with much laughter. But it represented one extreme of the folk music spectrum, and other clubs were available.


The leading alternative was Les Cousins – the name, for complicated reasons was French, but it was usually pronounced like an English bloke called Les. It opened in 1965 in the basement of a Greek restaurant, appropriately in Greek Street, Soho, and was run by Andrew Matheou, the son of the restaurant owners. It became the venue of choice for young singer-songwriters and guitarists, as well as welcoming traditional performers. A veritable Who’s Who of the principal British (and American) folk and contemporary artists took to its stage during its seven-year lifespan, sometimes contributing to its legendary Saturday all-night sessions (which provided a useful alternative for some out-of-town musicians to finding digs for the night). Deep breath:

Al Stewart, Diz Disley, Van Morrison, Cat Stevens, Paul Simon, Davy Graham, Sandy Denny, Trevor Lucas, Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, Wizz Jones, Alex Campbell, Roy Harper, Alexis Korner, The Young Tradition, The Dransfields, Michael Chapman, Peter Sarstedt(!), John Martyn, Jackson C. Frank, Ralph McTell, the Strawbs, Plainsong...

Oh, and Nick Drake, who was put on at four o’clock in the morning because he was so boring. All of these are today worthy of the folk Hall of Fame, while the members of the Critics Group are largely forgotten.


By the late 1960s, the folk revival was at its peak. Folk clubs were booming and packed. Traditional songs were being sung more than at any time since the nineteenth century. Contemporary singer-songwriters were attracting the attention of major record labels and mainstream audiences; their albums were selling well and some, like Paul Simon, Cat Stevens and Ralph McTell, even pierced the singles charts. The Cambridge Folk Festival was first held in 1965, and was followed by others, while folk acts were among the line-ups of early Glastonbury festivals. But as sure as skiffle was replaced by rock and roll, folk began to lose its mainstream cachet, as the original revivalists grew older and younger artists looked to other musical genres – such as punk rock. In Part Two, I will chronicle the ups and downs of English folk from the late 1960s to the present day, and will reassure readers that English folk music isn’t dead...


..yet.


Further Reading

Bean JP (2014) Singing from the Floor: A History of British Folk Clubs. London: Faber & Faber.

Pegg B (1976) Folk: A Portrait of English Traditional Music, Musicians and Customs. London: Wildwood House.

Roud S (2017) Folk Song in England. London: Faber & Faber.

Young R (2010) Electric Eden: Unearthing Britain’s Visionary Music. London: Faber & Faber.

“I’m not Looking for a New England” – In Search of English Folk Song, Part Two: From the Late 1960s to the Present Day


The first English traditional song to be heard accompanied by a rock drum kit (according to Rob Young) was ‘Let No Man Steal Your Thyme’ (Roud 3). It was the opening track of the first, eponymous album by the Pentangle, released in May 1968. This was not, however, the start of English folk-rock. The band did not play any electric instruments, and drummer Terry Cox used brushes rather than drum sticks. Another year would pass before Fairport Convention recorded ‘A Sailor’s Life’ (Roud 273) with a full electric band (and amplified violin).


The coming of folk-rock in the late 1960s was the next step in the development of English folk song performance. In this article, we will continue the search for English folk song, from the onset of folk-rock until the present day, and offer our thoughts on its current condition.

The 2000s were a great decade for English folk. Here, Spiers and Boden perform at Wallingford Bunkfest in 2005


Into the 1970s – the Advent of English Folk-Rock

The late 1960s saw the peak of folk music in England. Folk clubs were numerous and thriving, and folk festivals were starting to proliferate. Albums by folk artists, both traditional and contemporary, were selling well, and singer-songwriters were spending money on sophisticated arrangements and production, and following Bob Dylan in using electric instruments. In short, folk music was mainstream in England, for the first and only time, and it was only a matter of time before electric instruments were used in a traditional song arrangement.


Fairport Convention were brought together in suburban north London by bassist Ashley Hutchings, and recorded their first album in 1967, under the auspices of producer and impresario Joe Boyd. In their early days they were heavily influenced by Bob Dylan and Americana. For their second album they recruited Sandy Denny, who was making a name for herself in the folk clubs as a singer of traditional songs, along with her own compositions. She introduced the band to the traditional song ‘A Sailor’s Life’ and their epic eleven-minute version on their 1969 third album Unhalfbricking, including a lengthy jam featuring guitarist Richard Thompson and guest violinist Dave Swarbrick, ushered in English folk-rock.


All was set fair for the band, until in May 1969 their road manager fell asleep driving home from a gig, and their van crashed. Drummer Martin Lamble was killed, along with an American hanger-on named Jeannie Franklyn. Band members Richard Thompson, Simon Nichol and Ashley Hutchings were all injured (and mentally scarred); Sandy Denny had luckily travelled separately.


The accident could have finished the band, but nurtured by Joe Boyd they regrouped with new drummer Dave Mattacks, and with Dave Swarbrick joining full time. In late 1969 they produced their masterpiece, Liege and Lief, a successful attempt to do for English roots music what The Band had done for Americana on their recent album Music from the Big Pink. The album comprised arrangements of traditional songs and tunes (selected by Ashley Hutchings with help from traditional music guru A. L. Lloyd), and self-penned songs in a folk idiom (mainly by Richard Thompson), and it remains the high water mark of folk rock.


Modest fame beckoned, but all was not well within the band. Shortly after, Sandy Denny left, wanting to promote her own songwriting (none of the songs on Liege and Lief were by her). Then Ashley Hutchings also left his own band (not for the last time), but for the opposite reason, as he wanted to explore traditional music more deeply. Fairport Convention decided to continue without a female singer (the band has never since had one), and recruited bassist Dave Pegg, who had previously played with Swarbrick in Ian Campbell’s band. Their next album, Full House, was their rockiest, and second best, but then Richard Thompson left to pursue his own songwriting and a solo career.


Ashley Hutchings formed Steeleye Span with two established traditional folk duos, Tim Hart and Maddie Prior, and Gay and Terry Woods. They released an album of traditional songs in 1970, whereupon the Woods left, and were replaced by violinist Peter Knight - and none other than Martin Carthy, who treated his Fender Telecaster as judiciously as his trusty acoustic guitar. But after two further albums, Ashley Hutchings left Steeleye, as did Carthy. Hutchings spent the rest of the 1970s exploring English traditional song and dance within a rock context through various iterations of the Albion Band, along with a proliferation of other projects. He worked with a large number of folk musicians, but in particular Shirley Collins (whom he married) and Derbyshire-born singer and songwriter John Tams.


No other 1970s English folk-rock bands reached the heights of the Fairport/Steeleye/Albion three-headed monster. Early in the decade, Bob Pegg, with his then-wife Carol, formed Mr Fox, largely a vehicle for Bob’s somewhat gothic songs. Later, he brought out a couple of well received concept albums (that early seventies indulgence). Hedgehog Pie, from the North-East, briefly flourished, and there were a handful of bands, influenced by Scotland’s Incredible String Band, who fused singer-songwriting with psychedelia and New Age themes. But overall, the floodgates didn’t open.


Needless to say, not everyone in the folk world was enamoured by the advent of electric instruments. In particular, while young oiks like Fairport could be excused, for established traddies like Dave Swarbrick and Martin Carthy to ‘go electric’ was akin to apostacy. Then in the mid-1970s, folk goddess June Tabor included a synthesiser on one of her solo albums, and outraged folkies spluttered into their real ale.


In Come I

I was too young to witness the great days of the English folk song revival in the 1960s. I first started buying folk albums, going to folk gigs, and attempting to play the guitar and sing folk songs, in the early 1970s. I came to folk through the folk-rock bands mentioned above, but at a later stage in their careers. The first time I saw Fairport Convention live was in 1973, at the Fairfield Halls in Croydon. On that tour they were promoting their ninth album, and at that time none of the original members were still in the band (the concert was recorded and tracks from it were included in the 1974 album Fairport (Live) Convention. Perhaps you can hear me clapping along). A few months later, I saw Steeleye Span at the same venue, touring their sixth album, with just Tim Hart and Maddie Prior left of the original lineup.


I continued to loyally follow Fairport through their myriad lineup changes during the 1970s, but I parted company with Steeleye when they entered their Mike Batt produced ‘All Around My Hat’ folk-pop phase. I followed Richard Thompson, and still do – the first time I saw him play live was in 1974 at the Fairfield Halls again, with then-wife Linda, supporting Traffic. I also followed Ashley Hutchings’ Albion Band(s), culminating in the then-revolutionary National Theatre productions of Keith Dewhurst’s plays The Mysteries and, yes, Lark Rise to Candelford, for which the Albions were the house band.

Richard and Linda Thompson played Lancaster University in 1977. Note the (presumably) non-deliberate mistake


I also went to folk clubs, but not as a floor singer. Performers then were young, keen and numerous, and the general standard was high, and as someone bluntly told me, I wasn’t good enough. In the 1970s you could still see top artists in folk clubs, and at different clubs I saw Martin Carthy, Shirley Collins, Peter Bellamy, Bob Pegg, Steve Ashley and the Scottish and Irish performers Dick Gaughan and the Matthews Brothers, among others. I can’t tell you now exactly where those clubs were. There were so many clubs in those days, many were ephemeral, and most have now gone – but I know I never went to the Singers Club, or Les Cousins.


Finally, when a student in Lancashire in the late 1970s I briefly took an evening class in Clog Dancing – and was so bad at it, and so chastened by the silent scorn I received from the other participants, that I was put off folk dancing for ever.


The Folk Revival Subsides

By the end of the 1970s, the folk revival was running its course. Les Cousins closed as early as 1972; the leading singer-songwriters that it had nurtured had moved on to playing the university and college circuit, or concert halls, and a new generation did not emerge. The advent of punk rock in 1976 blew away a lot of other musical genres, including folk. The number of new performers entering the scene dwindled. Many clubs found audiences becoming thinner, and had to close down. Professional performers found it harder to get gigs and a number gave up and got proper jobs (at the end of the decade I saw Bob Pegg at my college’s arts centre; there were eleven people in the audience. Next year he returned – and played to pretty much the same eleven people. Later, he gave up performing full time and became an arts worker in the Scottish highlands).

I was there - One of the eleven tickets sold for Bob Pegg's Preston gig in 1980


Established singer-songwriters and the leading folk-rock bands (and leading traditional artists such as Martin Carthy and Dave Swarbrick) had built up sufficient audiences to carry on touring and making records, but the freshness had gone. Fairport Convention disbanded for a few years, but then came together again with a new line-up, and are still going – and still curating their long-standing Cropredy festival (and I still regard the current iteration as ‘new Fairport’, despite it being in existence for over forty years). Steeleye Span is also still around, having gone through even more lineup changes than Fairport. Ashley Hutchings left the Albion Band at the end of the 1970s, but took the name with him and over the next thirty years applied it to a number of different iterations, largely giving up traditional music in favour of his own (and others’) compositions. John Tams kept the classic Albion line-up going for a few years under the name Home Service, but economics led to it disbanding, and he concentrated on his alternative career as an actor and theatre director (most notably in the TV series Sharp).


There were also casualties. Sandy Denny, who had a chaotic, drink and drugs-fuelled lifestyle, died in 1978 of head injuries following a fall, aged 31. Nick Drake committed suicide in 1974 – and became a legend. Peter Bellamy would also commit suicide in 1991; in both cases they were depressed at the lack of recognition their work was receiving.


There were casualties in other ways. Shirley Collins’s marriage to Ashley Hutchings failed after he had an affair with an actress at the National Theatre and she developed dysphonia, for many years losing the ability to sing (Linda Thompson developed the same condition following her divorce from Richard). The fine traditional singer Nic Jones was badly injured in a road accident returning from a gig, and had to give up performing. And Anne Briggs, a singer with a voice so delicate that Andy Kershaw once remarked that “she makes Kate Rusby sound like Ethel Merman”, gave up a promising and highly respected career to live in obscurity in the Scottish highlands (Richard Thompson’s song ‘Beeswing’ may be partly inspired by her story).


The Fallow Years: 1980 to the mid-1990s

By the 1980s, English folk had lost its mainstream status, and there were few top-notch new artists entering the scene. There were some successful new singers and bands in what might be called a folk idiom, such as Billy Bragg, the Pogues (despite their Irishness, they were actually an English band), and later in the decade, the Levellers, but they didn’t brand themselves as ‘folk’, or play folk clubs or festivals. While there was much attrition, the folk club movement continued, and new clubs were sometimes set up. The three broad models of folk club (concert clubs, singers night clubs and singarounds) persisted, but the quality of the guests at concert nights did not, in general, reach the heights of the 1960s and early 1970s, with many performers being semi-professional. I stopped attending folk clubs around this time. There were no top artists to go and see, and still no chance of performing myself. My impression was that folk clubs were becoming entrenched and cliquey, reduced to a hard core of steadily ageing folkies who were more and more embracing the beards, real ale and finger-in-the-ear stereotypes.


Older performers began to fall by the wayside. A. L. Lloyd died in 1982, aged 74, and Ewan McColl in 1989, also 74 (the Singers Club continued for a couple of years, led by Peggy Seeger, then closed in 1991). Some of the children of the early folk revivalists began to make their own mark in music, but not in folk. Ian Campbell’s sons Ali and Robin formed the reggae band UB40 and McColl and Seeger’s daughter Kirsty McColl had several chart hits as a solo artist and sang on the Pogues’ Christmas hit song ‘Fairytale of New York’ (she died in 2000 in a boating accident, aged just 41).


Overall then, this period was one of marking time, with established artists from the 1960s and 1970s continuing their careers and dominating the line-ups at folk festivals, and few new performers breaking into the top ranks. And both the artists and their loyal audiences were getting older.


Just one significant new band unfashionably bucked the 1980s trend, having started in an unfashionable way. In 1979 a group largely made up of former students of the University of Kent, and named Fiddler’s Dram, had a novelty hit with a rather twee song called ‘Day Trip to Bangor’, which reached number 3 in the charts and was used in an advert for Anchor butter. The music world regarded the song with scorn, and it spawned several parodies, but the band were actually well established in the folk scene around Canterbury and when the fuss had died down they re-emerged as The Oyster Band (later Oysterband), and became one of the dominant forces in English folk.

Oysterband at Cropredy in 2002, with Fairport's Ric Sanders guesting


The Folk Revival Revival

In 1993, an album of traditional songs and tunes was released by two teenage girls who both played the violin and sang. It was a good album, fresh and lively, with an energy you would expect from such young virtuoso artists. Most noteworthy, though, was the pedigree of the performers. Nancy Kerr was the daughter of Sandra Kerr, a member of Ewan McColl’s Critics Group and later a notable educator, while Eliza Carthy was the daughter of folk royalty Martin Carthy and Norma Waterson. Their eponymous album can be said to mark the beginning of what I like to call the ‘folk revival revival’, a second blooming of English folk music that began in the mid-1990s and has only recently begun to dwindle (to avoid too much clumsiness, I will refer to this movement henceforth as ‘Revival 2’).


In the next few years, more young artists turned their attention to English folk music, making energetic and original albums of traditional music and self-penned songs. The aforementioned Kate Rusby (‘the Barnsley Nightingale) released her first solo album, Hourglass, in 1997, and she, Eliza Carthy and Nancy Kerr were joined over the next few years by John Spiers and Jon Boden, Seth Lakeman, Jim Moray, Tim van Eyken, Jackie Oates, the Unthanks, Dr Faustus, Bellowhead (a folk big band fronted by Spiers and Boden) and others. Like Carthy and Kerr, some artists were the offspring of earlier folk revivalists. Benji Kirkpatrick, of Dr Faustus and Bellowhead, was the son of accordion player and one-time Steeleye Span member John Kirkpatrick, and his then wife and playing partner Sue Harris, while Seth Lakeman’s father Geoff had been a notable folk club organiser and resident singer (Seth’s brothers Sean and Sam were also prominent in Revival 2).

The high-energy approach of Seth Lakeman, at the Big Session festival in 2007


Revival 2 was not, however only a youth movement. The overall revival of interest in English folk led to some older artists, who had been more or less dormant during the fallow years, returning to the scene. The principal duo of Revival 2 was Show of Hands, who released their first CD in 1992. At that time, singer and songwriter Steve Knightley was 38 and multi-instrumentalist Phil Beer was 39. Beer had been carving a living on the folk scene for many years, including a spell in the Albion Band, but Knightley had not until then taken the professional plunge, preferring to make his living as a music teacher. Now he (and Beer) has an honorary doctorate for services to music, he won’t be returning to teaching any time soon. John Tams, who had more or less given up music in favour of the theatre, released three award-winning albums of his own songs between 2000 and 2005 and returned to live performing, mostly as a duo with the late Barry Coope, and also revived the Home Service for festival performances. Martin Carthy and Norma Waterson teamed up with daughter Eliza as Waterson:Carthy. And Oysterband, who had been slogging away since the early 1980s, found themselves on the top of festival bills (and made a multi-award winning album with June Tabor).



The older generation: Martin Carthy at Beautiful Days 2016...

...Fairport Convention, looking to outlast the Rolling Stones, at their 50th anniversary Cropredy festival in 2017...


 

...Ralph McTell, also at Cropredy 2017...

...and Dave Swarbrick, some years after the Telegraph published his obituary, in the unlikely company of Scotland's Dick Gaughan and a Canadian reggae band, Wickham festival 2012

Revival 2 largely bypassed the remaining folk clubs. The top young artists didn’t share their parents’ capacity for hitchhiking and sleeping on club organisers’ floors. The lead performers’ natural venues were Arts Centres, and they would stay in hotels, albeit cheap ones - legends in the folk world were very familiar with the UK’s network of Travelodges.


Revival 2 coincided with the growth of music festivals, and artists and bands could spend their summers gigging from festival to festival. Established festivals such as Cambridge, Sidmouth, Cropredy and Whitby were joined by many others, including those set up by folk bands themselves. The Levellers ‘Beautiful Days’ festival is well established and regularly includes folk acts. For several years, Oysterband curated the Big Session festival, initially in Leicester and later in Buxton. Even Steeleye Span tried to get in on the act, holding a short-lived festival called ‘Spanfest’.


Folk artists also gained some mainstream recognition. Norma Waterson, Seth Lakeman and Eliza Carthy (twice) were nominated for the Mercury Prize for best album of the year. Albums by Seth Lakeman and Bellowhead pierced the UK album charts. And in 2008, there was a Folk Night at the BBC Proms, featuring solo artists Bella Hardy and Martin Simpson and a roof-raising set from the mighty Bellowhead.

The nominees for the 2006 Folk Awards represent perhaps the high point of Revival 2, with the finest English and Scottish artists represented. There were also a couple of anomalies - Show of Hands won Best Duo despite at the time being a trio, with bassist Miranda Sykes, and Seth Lakeman won Best Traditional Track for a song he wrote himself

Folk's biggest duo - Show of Hands with Miranda Sykes, Wickham festival 2010


The 2000s were a great time to be a folk fan, and my wife and I had to limit ourselves to two gigs a month and three festivals a year, and our CD collection started to bend the shelves. The folk and world music magazine Froots (now sadly defunct) was essential monthly reading. Adding in the great Scottish and Irish acts that were also at their peak at the time, the decade was a high water mark for folk comparable to the 1960s. But clouds were on the horizon. With few exceptions (e.g. Seth Lakeman, Bellowhead), the Revival 2 acts did not bring new audiences to folk music. By and large, the audiences for Revival 2 were people (like me) who had been following folk since the 1960s and 1970s. Indeed, the success of Revival 2 was largely because its artists kept to the style and repertoire of the earlier revival, while injecting new energy and freshness. The fact that prominent performers were the children of earlier revivalists undoubtedly helped make Revival 2 attractive to long-standing folk fans. At festivals such as Cropredy, the audience grew steadily older year after year, rather than renewing itself with younger fans.

Two rare mixed-race collectives - folk reggae band Edward II at Wickham festival 2017...

...and Martin and Eliza Carthy with the Imagined Village, which included Johnny Kalsi and Sheema Mukherjee, at Beautiful Days, 2009


Then, as happened in the 1970s, in the 2010s the supply of quality new young artists largely dried up. Festival line-ups became ossified, with the same acts headlining year after year. Festival organisers had to broaden their definition of folk, and welcome into the fold established names who previously they would not have considered (or who would not have considered them), such as the Levellers, Lindisfarne, Steve Earl, Billy Bragg and the Proclaimers. The fresh faced youngsters who had galvanised folk fifteen years before moved into their 30s and 40s, and at gigs concentrated on their greatest hits rather than good new material, while some acts, notably Bellowhead disbanded. By the time of the pandemic and lockdown, Revival 2 had largely run its course.


English Folk Song Today

In 2013, the EFDSS launched a major project known as ‘the Full English’, which digitalised and made freely accessible online its archives of English folk song, and promoted learning resources and school initiatives to raise awareness of traditional music and folklore. Accompanying the project was an album of folk song arrangements, by a ‘superstar’ band of Revival 2 luminaries, put together by singer and academic Fay Hield, and including Nancy Kerr, Seth Lakeman, Martin Simpson and others. The album won awards, and the band undertook a national tour. The hope was that the whole enterprise would kickstart new interest and involvement in English folk music.


It didn’t really happen, and today, the Full English seems more like the end of an era than a new beginning. Browsing the line-ups of this year’s folk festivals, the headliners are virtually all familiar faces from Revival 2, or survivors from the 1960s or 1970s. The few younger performers in prominent line-up spots are more likely to be from Scotland or Ireland than England. The quality of line-ups has been diluted further in recent years by the retirement of prominent acts, including Show of Hands, Oysterband and Martin Carthy. Inevitably, the grim reaper has also cut a swathe through the revival of the 1960s and 1970s. As previously mentioned, A. L. Lloyd and Ewan McColl are long gone, along with Ian Campbell, Cyril Tawney and other pioneers. There are also no surviving members of the Young Tradition or the original Watersons, and only lead singer Jacqui McShee is left of Pentangle. Other luminaries such as Dave Swarbrick are also gone, though Shirley Collins and Peggy Seeger are still going strong in their nineties. But the overall picture is one of time passing. And you can be sure that audiences are made up of the same people who have been attending for years – only older.


There is, of course, no current shortage of prominent English singer-songwriters (Ed Sheeran, Charlie XCX, etc), but they live firmly in the world of pop and it is hard to imagine that in years to come they will become ‘heritage’ acts at folk festivals. The same applies to the so-called ‘nu-folk’ acts that had a brief moment some years ago (Mumford and Sons, Noah and the Whale, Laura Marling). The stellar world of Spotify best-sellers is a million miles from the world of English folk.


Young artists who perform traditional folk songs today have a tendency to be consciously ‘different’ to the revivalists. I sense two reasons for this. First, there is a feeling that the long-standing approach to traditional song derived from pioneers such as Martin Carthy and Shirley Collins is outdated, or at least, they (the young artists) feel they have little to add to it. Second, young performers are more conscious than their older peers that traditional songs are, well, not very ‘woke’. Many extol hunting, or whaling, or the triumphs of the British empire. There are also examples of racism, homophobia and many many examples of misogyny. Newer artists such as Stick in the Wheel seek to explore traditional song from new perspectives, more in tune with modern sensibilities (there is also the feminist folk group Re:Vulva, whose name leaves little to the imagination). To me, their approach sounds wilfully alternative, and it has not gained traction with the bulk of folk audiences. But perhaps, in time, the pendulum will swing again, and another generation of inspired artists will usher in Revival 3.


Conclusion: The Withering Grassroots

For the past ten years, I have been a regular performer at two singers nights, and one singaround folk club. The fact that I can now hold my own in such settings has nothing to do with my improved musical abilities, for I have none. It is simply a sign of the reduced standards in many of today’s folk clubs. The days when clubs were packed with skilful young musicians are long gone; these days audiences are small and elderly. At the age of seventy, I am often the youngest in the room. Some participants are survivors from the early days of the folk revival, and have been singing and playing all their lives, while others, like me, took it up as a retirement hobby. Men greatly outnumber women. Standards across the board are not high.


The definition of ‘folk music’ applied at these clubs follows Eliza Carthy’s dictum that ‘a folk song is any song that can be sung in a pub’. While some performers stick to the traditional songs they have always sung, and a few write their own material, many more sing old pop songs (the Beatles are especially popular), or songs by favourites such as Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, Tom Paxton etc. As the organiser of one of the clubs ruefully remarks, if he insisted that only proper folk songs were sung, there would be about three songs per evening. My own repertoire is wider than most, embracing traditional, singer-songwriter, pop and rock numbers and ‘humorous’ songs (I can be funny sometimes). I don’t try to write songs - there are enough bad songs in the world without me adding to them.


The clubs retain the broadly left-wing political tone of the early revival (remember that Ewan McColl and A. L. Lloyd were both card-carrying communists), but there is little sense of revolution. The prevailing standpoint is best characterised as ‘Old Labour’. Many participants were teachers or worked in the public sector. They are socially conservative – ‘wokery’ has not yet penetrated the folk club scene. The political tone, like the music, is rather stuck in the 1960s and 1970s, and still bears the legacy of World War Two, in which many members’ relatives served. There are laments for the decline of agriculture and the loss of heavy industry, and environmentalism is not a major priority. Songs are still sung, without irony, bewailing the loss of coal mining, despite coal’s massive contribution to climate change.


So that, broadly speaking, is the present state of English folk song. It is a genre of music that has given pleasure to many people for hundreds of years, but is today sung by a diminishing number of ageing enthusiasts. Its musical and political tone is increasingly backwards-looking, and if I am honest, I share that view. In the words of Billy Bragg (turned into a chart hit by Kirsty McColl):

“I don’t want to change the world,

I’m not looking for a new England...”


...And at my age I’m not looking for another girl either!

 

Further Reading

Bean JP (2014) Singing from the Floor: A History of British Folk Clubs. London: Faber & Faber.

Pegg B (1976) Folk: A Portrait of English Traditional Music, Musicians and Customs. London: Wildwood House.

Roud S (2017) Folk Song in England. London: Faber & Faber.

Young R (2010) Electric Eden: Unearthing Britain’s Visionary Music. London: Faber & Faber.

 

“I’ve Lost My Spotted Cow” – In Search of English Folk Song, Part One: From the Beginning to the 1960s

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