Fairport Convention

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Fairport Convention
Cover of Heyday: BBC Radio Sessions 1968-1969. Left-to-right: Ian Matthews, Simon Nicol, Ashley Hutchings, Martin Lamble, Sandy Denny (front), Richard Thompson
Cover of Heyday: BBC Radio Sessions 1968-1969. Left-to-right: Ian Matthews, Simon Nicol, Ashley Hutchings, Martin Lamble, Sandy Denny (front), Richard Thompson
Background information
Origin England England
Genre(s) Folk rock
Years active 1967–present
Label(s) Island
Members
Simon Nicol

Dave Pegg
Ric Sanders
Chris Leslie

Gerry Conway
Former members
Ashley Hutchings

Bob Brady
Bruce Rowland
Dan Ar Braz
Dave Mattacks
David Rea
David Swarbrick
Iain Matthews
Jerry Donahue
Judy Dyble
Maartin Allcock
Martin Lamble
Paul Warren
Richard Thompson
Roger Burridge
Roger Hill
Sandy Denny
Tom Farnell

Trevor Lucas

Fairport Convention is often credited with being the first English folk-rock band. Formed in 1967, with Simon Nicol, Richard Thompson, Ashley Hutchings and Shaun Frater, Fairport rapidly developed from playing cover versions of American 'west coast' style music to an individual style which melded rock music with traditional English tunes and songs.

Bedevilled by numerous personnel changes throughout its first decade, Fairport Convention was temporarily disbanded in 1979 but played annual reunion concerts until it reformed in 1985. Since then, it has enjoyed stability and continues to tour and record regularly.

In part, the continuing success of Fairport Convention is due to the annual music festival it organises. Cropredy Festival has been held every year since 1974 near Cropredy, a village five miles north of Banbury, Oxfordshire and attracts 20,000 fans. Now renamed Fairport's Cropredy Convention, it remains one of the key events in the UK folk festival calendar.

BBC Radio 2's Sold On Song TOP 100 songs as voted for by Radio 2 listeners put their early song "Meet On The Ledge" at Number 17. They had performed "Meet on the Ledge" on the 1969 launch of "From the Roundhouse" (a short-lived BBC-TV youth and arts programme about the London "underground scene") . Other well-known songs include "Matty Groves", "Sir Patrick Spens" and "Over The Next Hill". In 2002 the band was given a Lifetime Achievement Award at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards and in 2006, Liege & Lief was voted the most influential folk album of all time in a public ballot, also run by the BBC.

Contents

[edit] History: 1967-1979

Fairport Convention played its first concert in a church hall in May 1967. Based in suburban north London, the group had coalesced around a bass guitar player and bandleader named Ashley 'Tyger' Hutchings.

The youngsters 'convened' for rehearsals at a house named Fairport, the family home of rhythm guitarist Simon Nicol. Thus was born the name of a band that has endured for nearly four decades. As well as Hutchings and Nicol, there was lead guitarist Richard Thompson and Shaun Frater on drums. However, that initial line-up only played the one gig. A young drummer, Martin Lamble, was in the church hall audience and he convinced the band that he could do a better job than the incumbent. It was the first of the bewildering flurry of line-up changes that characterised Fairport's first fifteen years.

The group soon augmented its line-up with a female singer, Judy Dyble (born Judy Aileen Dyble, 13 February 1949, in Wood Green, North London), which set it apart from the dozens of other bands springing up from the fast-moving youth culture of that summer. Fairport found no shortage of work and was soon a regular act at underground venues such as The Electric Garden, Middle Earth and UFO. The band had only been playing a few months when they caught the ear of Joe Boyd who secured them a contract with Island Records. Boyd suggested they augment the line-up with another male vocalist and so Iain Matthews (who had changed his surname from MacDonald and was spelling his forename 'Ian' at the time) joined the band and the first album, Fairport Convention, was recorded in late 1967 and released in June 1968. Later the band would play with folk guitarist Nick Drake, who also had connections with Joe Boyd. Drake's popularity would slowly rise after his death in 1974 peaking, ironically, due to the use of his music in a moody Volkswagen television advertisement.

At this early stage, Fairport looked to America (Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan) for material and inspiration. "The two lead vocalist approach appealed to us," Matthews recalls, "and because of our name and onstage presence, lots of people thought we were American, and we were not about to attempt to dispel that presumption." This led to the band being dubbed 'the British Jefferson Airplane'.

By the time the second LP, What We Did On Our Holidays, was released Judy Dyble had been replaced by Sandy Denny, a folk singer who had previously recorded as a soloist and with The Strawbs. The third album, Unhalfbricking, featured a guest appearance by Birmingham folk fiddler Dave Swarbrick. This album, like its predecessor, mixed strong original material with contemporary songs by artists such as Mitchell and Dylan.

Radio DJ John Peel was a staunch champion of Fairport's music. He played the band's albums on his influential BBC shows. Peel also recorded a number of BBC sessions which were later released as the album Heyday.

[edit] Folk-rock

The phrase folk-rock sprung up in the 1960s to describe a genre which brought together electric instruments and folk songs and tunes. Bob Dylan set the trend when he 'went electric' at the Newport Folk Festival in July 1965 and on his album Bringing It All Back Home. Around the same time after their encounter with Bob Dylan, the Beatles began to feature acoustic guitars more prominently in their music, and started to focus more deeply on their lyrics, particularly John Lennon who was expressing more auto-biographical content with his lyrics. This was very evident on their Rubber Soul release, most notably on the song Norwegian Wood. Bob Dylan's introduction of the Beatles to marijuana is commonly thought to be a factor to this exchange. The Byrds later developed the trend further with their covers of Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man" and of Pete Seeger's "Turn, Turn, Turn" and incorporating Beatles-sounding jangling 12-string electric guitars.

Rock journalist Ritchie Unterberger writes in his book Eight Miles High:

"Prior to 1968, rather incredibly, there was not a single British rock group that played electric folk-rock consistently and well. It is thus not too surprising that the band to become roundly acclaimed as the best British folk-rock group, Fairport Convention, took its initial inspiration from American folk-rock, particularly the guitar-oriented California sort."

Although folk-rock was well-established in the USA by 1968, Fairport Convention was the first English band to concentrate on bringing rock instruments and rock arrangements to traditional songs. Initially, the British press (and Fairport Convention's members) titled this mixture 'electric folk' but the term 'folk-rock' soon became the norm. Therefore, although other bands in the UK were experimenting with the folk-rock genre (including The Strawbs and Pentangle), Fairport Convention is widely credited with 'inventing' British folk-rock.

However, Fairport Convention was also developing in other ways. As as well as revivals of traditional material with modern instrumentation and rhythms, bandmembers were increasingly composing original material and Richard Thompson had developed into a talented and inventive guitarist. Fairport Convention even entered the singles charts with "Si Tu Dois Partir", a French-language version of Bob Dylan's "If You Gotta Go". The record just missed the top twenty but got the band (with guest triangulist, John Peel) a slot on Top Of The Pops, Britain's most popular television pop music programme at the time.

[edit] Tragedy

Things were looking rosy when disaster struck. Fairport's van crashed on the M1 motorway on the way home from a gig in Birmingham. Martin Lamble - just 19 years old - and Jeannie Franklyn, Richard Thompson's girlfriend, were killed. The rest of the band suffered injuries of varying severity. The young musicians nearly decided to call it a day. But they didn't; and once recovered they went back into the studio. Matthews had left the band by then and Dave Mattacks took over the vacant drum stool. The resulting LP, Liege & Lief, was a classic. This was arguably Fairport Convention's finest album and it established British folk-rock as a distinct and influential genre.

Liege & Lief was launched with a sell-out concert in London's Royal Festival Hall late in 1969. Dave Swarbrick had made a big contribution to the project and he now joined the band full-time. Liege and Lief was given an award at Cropredy 2006, with most of the former members picking up the award. Frank Skinner presented the award.

Swarbrick was to prove a controversial band member with the band's fan base. Certainly, he brought a vast catalogue of traditional music. However, there was always that nagging feeling that he wasn't there in the beginning, and maybe the band veered off too far after Thompson left (post Full House). [citation needed]

[edit] 1970s - major changes

Despite the triumph of Liege & Lief, founding member Ashley Hutchings, who was to become the reigning intellectual of the folk-rock movement, quit to form Steeleye Span. To compound Fairport's problems, Sandy Denny also left the band. Dave Pegg took over on bass guitar and has been in the band ever since, an unbroken stint of 34 years. Pegg is a strong bass player, and his arrival gave the band a "bottom" it never had with Hutchings.[citation needed] Sandy Denny was essentially irreplaceable, so the band decided to continue without a female singer.

All the band members and their families moved in to The Angel, a former pub in Hertfordshire. There was nearly another tragedy when a runaway lorry crashed into the building. Dave Swarbrick was rudely awakened as the truck demolished his bedroom, leaving him unhurt but covered in rubble.

The next Fairport album was Full House; soon after its release Richard Thompson left the band. Simon Nicol was now the only original member. Dave Swarbrick developed a folk-rock opera called Babbacombe Lee and life in the ex-pub inspired the LP Angel Delight. The two albums were the first time the same Fairport line-up had recorded consecutively: every other release had seen changes in personnel from its predecessor. Babbacombe Lee was a success, and received good air play in the United States.

Simon Nicol left Fairport early in 1972, followed by Dave Mattacks, although both would rejoin later. That left the two Daves, Pegg and Swarbrick, holding the band together. The following few years were dubbed 'Fairport Confusion' as a bewildering sequence of band members came and went, but by 1973 Mattacks had returned and two former members Sandy Denny's Fotheringay had joined the band, Denny's Australian husband Trevor Lucas (vocals/guitar) and American Jerry Donahue (lead guitar). The next two studio albums were Rosie (1973) and Fairport Nine (1974).

Denny rejoined Fairport Convention in 1974 and there were considerable expectations, including commercial expectations, about this lineup. Denny was featured on the album Rising For The Moon, but left again in 1976, as did Lucas and Donahue. During the Rising sessions, Mattacks was replaced by Bruce Rowland. Rowland, Pegg and Swarbrick fulfilled their remaining contractual obligation to Island Records by recording the album Gottle O'Geer as Fairport (as opposed to Fairport Convention) with various session players and production by Simon Nicol, who subsequently rejoined the band. Having come to the end of the contract with Island Records, Fairport signed up with Vertigo. By now, the line-up had stabilised with Nicol, Swarbrick, Pegg and Rowland, but after two of four contracted albums, Vertigo wanted out: in fact, the label ended up paying Fairport Convention not to make albums.

Sandy Denny died aged 31, in 1978, of a cerebral haemorrhage after falling down a flight of stairs.

[edit] 1979 - "Aww, mama, can this really be the end?"

Poster / programme / ticket for farewell concert
Poster / programme / ticket for farewell concert

In 1979 the band had no record deal and Dave Swarbrick's hearing was deteriorating rapidly. Fairport decided to call it a day. The band did a farewell tour and played a final outdoor concert on 4 August in Cropredy, the Oxfordshire village where Dave and Christine Pegg lived. No record company wanted to release the live recordings of the tour and concert so the Peggs started Woodworm Records and released it themselves.

After a year, Fairport Convention staged a re-union concert in Cropredy and the annual Cropredy Festival was born. Over the next few years, it grew rapidly. Soon Fairport was staging New Year gigs and playing in Scandinavia. The Peggs continued to record and release the Cropredy concerts as 'official bootlegs'. Meanwhile, Dave Pegg had joined Jethro Tull which gave him a well-paying steady gig, and was the first of several Convention players who played in both folk rock preceptors.

Simon Nicol had teamed up with Dave Swarbrick in an acoustic duo. In 1985 both Pegg and Nicol had some spare time. Dave Mattacks was free too. They decided to record an album of new material in the Peggs' studio.

[edit] History: post-1985

Dave Swarbrick declined to join the new band, so violin virtuoso Ric Sanders, formerly of Soft Machine, was invited to participate. Multi-instrumentalist Maartin Allcock was also recruited and the five-piece recorded Fairport's only all-instrumental album Expletive Delighted.

With its mix of old stagers and new blood, this proved to be Fairport Convention's longest-lasting line-up - eleven years.

In the early nineties, a four-piece acoustic line-up emerged, the two versions of Fairport running in parallel. Woodworm continued to record and release the band's studio albums and live 'boots'. Maartin Allcock left in the mid-1990s and was replaced by Chris Leslie on mandolin and fiddle. Chris proved to be a talented songwriter and has made a significant contribution to the band's repertoire.

In 1998, Dave Mattacks moved to the USA and Gerry Conway, who had travelled a parallel musical road to Fairport for 30 years, took over on drums and percussion.

[edit] Into the 21st century

The new century found Fairport in fine form. Concert halls were full and records were selling surprisingly well. The year 2000 was marked by the very successful 'Y2K' tour and a new studio album, The Wood And The Wire. In 2002, Fairport Convention celebrated 35 years as a band and released a new album, titled XXXV. They also commissioned Fairport-branded 'Anniversary Ale', a bottled beer from Wadworth Brewery (the band was always known for a willingness to hoist a few). The band undertook a gruelling schedule, touring the UK, Europe, Australasia, Europe, the USA and Canada.

Fairport Convention won the coveted Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2002 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards. Their seminal album Liege & Lief was voted 'Best Folk Album Ever' by Radio 2 listeners. Free Reed Records, an independent label, released Fairport Unconventional, a four-CD boxed set of rare and unreleased recordings from the band's 35-year career in 2002. The band had achieved legendary status, "outliving" scores of similar musical aggregations.

Fairport Convention is still one of the busiest bands on the folk-rock scene in the UK. The current line-up of Simon Nicol (lead vocal, rhythm and electric guitars), Dave Pegg (backing vocals, bass guitar, mandolin), Ric Sanders (violin), Chris Leslie (lead vocal, fiddle, bouzouki, mandolin) and Gerry Conway (percussion and drums) still packs venues on its frequent tours.

In 2004, the band staged a major fundraiser at Birmingham Symphony Hall for Dave Swarbrick—who received a lung transplant—and played summer dates at home and abroad.

In August 2004, the band's new own-brand label, Matty Grooves Records (the name is a pun on an old murder ballad sung memorably by Sandy Denny on Liege & Lief, "Matty Groves"), released the album Over The Next Hill and Free Reed Records released a four-CD boxed set, Cropredy Capers. In October, Fairport toured the USA and Canada and the year will end with tours by the four-piece acoustic line-up and spin-off band The Dylan Project.

[edit] Band members

The 2005 line up of Fairport Convention is:

  • Simon Nicol (guitar, lead vocal): joined 1967
  • Dave Pegg (bass guitar, mandolin, backing vocal): joined 1970
  • Ric Sanders (fiddles): joined 1985
  • Chris Leslie (fiddle, mandolin, bouzouki, lead vocal): joined 1997
  • Gerry Conway (drums and percussion): joined 1998

The following musicians have been members of Fairport Convention:

[edit] Discography

  • Fairport Convention 1968
  • What We Did on Our Holidays 1969
  • Unhalfbricking 1969
  • Liege & Lief 1969
  • Full House 1970
  • Live at the L.A. Troubadour 1970
  • House Full (live) 1976
  • Angel Delight 1971
  • Babbacombe Lee 1971
  • History of Fairport Convention 1972 compilation
  • Rosie 1973
  • Nine 1973
  • Fairport Live Convention 1974 aka A Moveable Feast
  • Rising for the Moon 1975
  • Gottle O'Geer 1976
  • The Bonny Bunch of Roses 1977
  • Tipplers Tales 1978
  • Farewell Farewell 1979 aka Encore Encore
  • Gladys Leap 1985
  • Expletive Delighted 1986
  • In Real Time 1987
  • Red And Gold 1989
  • The Five Seasons 1990
  • The Woodworm Years 1991 compilation
  • 25th Anniversary Concert 1992
  • Jewel in the Crown (album) 1995
  • Old New Borrowed Blue 1996 (Fairport Acoustic Convention)
  • Who Knows Where the Time Goes (album) 1997
  • The Cropredy Box 1998
  • Cropredy 98 1999
  • The Wood and the Wire 1999
  • XXXV 2001
  • Over the Next Hill 2004
  • Off The Desk 2006

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Fan sites

[edit] References

This article share its genesis with material in the public-domain source on Fairport Convention's website (see 'External links' above).