Steeleye Span

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Steeleye Span
Background information
Origin UK
Genre(s) Folk-rock
Years active 1970–present

Steeleye Span are a British folk-rock band, formed in 1970 and remaining active today. Along with Fairport Convention they are amongst the best known acts of the British folk revival, and were the most commercially successful, thanks to their hit singles Gaudete and All Around My Hat.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] Introduction

The name Steeleye Span comes from a character in the traditional song Horkstow Grange (which they did not actually record until they released an album by that name in 1998). The song gives an account of a fight between John "Steeleye" Span and John Bowlin, neither of whom are proven to have been real people. Martin Carthy gave Tim Hart the idea to name the band after the song character. When the band discussed names, they decided to vote between the three suggestions "Middlemarch Wait", "Iyubidin's Wait", and "Steeleye Span". Although there were only five members in the band, six ballots appeared and "Steeleye Span" won out. Only in 1978 did Hart confess that he had voted twice. Terry Woods maintains that the members had agreed that if more than one person departed, the remaining members would select a new name, and he was upset that this did not happen when he and Gay Woods left the band. The liner notes for their first album includes thanks to Carthy for the name suggestion.

Throughout its long history, Steeleye Span has seen a great many personnel changes but has maintained a strong continuity of tradition. Lead vocalist Maddy Prior was one of the main attractions of the band's music, being one of a handful of strong-but-melodically-voiced women in rock music in the 1970s (along with Sandy Denny, Renaissance's Annie Haslam, Jacqui McShee, and Linda Thompson).

Their typical album is a collection of mostly traditional songs with one or two instrumental tracks of jigs and/or reels added in; the traditional songs often include some of the Child ballads. In their later albums there has been an increased tendency to include music written by the band members, but they have never gotten completely away from the traditional music, which draws upon both the English and the Celtic traditions.

All of their LP-era recordings have now been re-released on CD, many on the Shanachie label, and others on their current label, Park Records.

[edit] The early years

Steeleye Span is like a bus. It goes along, and people get on and get off it. Sometimes the bus goes along the route you want to go, and sometimes it turns off, so you get off.

—Maddy Prior

The Steeleye Span story began in early 1970 when London-born bass player Ashley Hutchings departed Fairport Convention, the band he had co-founded in 1967. Fairport had been involved in a road accident in 1969 in which the drummer, Martin Lamble, was killed and other band members injured. They convalesced in a rented house near Winchester in Hampshire and worked on the album Liege & Lief. Despite the success of the album, Ashley Hutchings and the band's vocalist Sandy Denny left Fairport Convention.

In part, Hutchings's departure was because he wanted to pursue a different, more traditional, direction than the other members of Fairport did at that time. However, Fairport's co-founder, guitarist Simon Nicol, says in an interview on the band's website [1]: "Whatever the upfront reasons about musical differences and wanting to concentrate on traditional material, I think the accident was the underlying reason why Ashley felt he couldn't continue with us."

Hutchings' new band was formed after he met established duo Tim Hart and Maddy Prior on the London folk club scene, and the initial lineup was completed by husband and wife team Terry (formerly of Sweeney's Men, later of The Pogues) and Gay Woods. With two female singers, the original lineup was unusual for the time, and indeed, never performed live, as the Woods departed the band shortly after the release of their debut album, Hark! The Village Wait (1970). While recording the album, the five members were all living in the same house, an arrangement that produced considerable tensions particularly between Hart and Prior on the one hand and the Woodses on the other. Gay and Terry were replaced by veteran folk musician Martin Carthy and fiddler Peter Knight in a longer-term lineup that toured small concert venues, and recorded two albums - Please to See the King (1971) and Ten Man Mop, or Mr. Reservoir Butler Rides Again (1972).

[edit] A new direction

Shortly after the release of their third album, the band brought in Jo Lustig as their manager who would bring a far more commercial sound to their recordings. At that time, traditionalists Carthy and Hutchings left the band to pursue purely folk projects. Their replacements were electric guitarist Bob Johnson and bass player Rick Kemp, who brought strong rock and blues influences to the sound.

Lustig signed them to the Chrysalis record label, for a deal that was to last for ten albums.

With the release of their fourth album, Below the Salt, later in 1972, the revised lineup had settled on a distinctive electrified rock sound, although they continued to play mostly arrangements of very traditional material, including songs dating back a hundred years or more. Even on the more commercial Parcel of Rogues (1973), the band had no permanent drummer, but in 1973 rock drummer Nigel Pegrum, who had previously recorded with The Small Faces and Uriah Heep, joined them, to harden up their sound (as well as occasionally playing flute).

Also that year, the single 'Gaudete' from Below the Salt belatedly became a Christmas hit single, reaching number 14 in the UK Charts, although the a capella motet, sung entirely in Latin, cannot be considered representative of the band's music, nor the album from which it was taken. This proved to be their commercial breakthrough and saw them performing on Top of the Pops for the first time.

Appropriately enough, their sixth album (and sixth member Pegrum's first with the band) was entitled Now We Are Six. Produced by Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson, the album includes the epic track 'Thomas the Rhymer', which has been a part of the live set ever since.

Although successful, the album is controversial among some fans for the inclusion of nursery rhymes sung by "The St. Eeleye School Choir" (band members singing in the style of children), and the cover To Know Him is to Love Him, featuring a guest appearance from David Bowie on saxophone.

The attempts at humour continued on Commoner's Crown (1975), which included Peter Sellers playing ukelele on the final track, New York Girls. Their seventh album also included the epic ballad 'Long Lankin' and novelty instrumental 'Bach Goes To Limerick'.

[edit] The Mike Batt era

With their star now conspicuously ascendant, the band brought in producer Mike Batt (best known for his musical association with The Wombles) to work on their eighth album, All Around My Hat, and their biggest success would come with the release of the title track as a single — it reached number 5 in the UK Charts in late 1975.

The album had a polished, commercial sound, and perfectly captured the flavour of the mid-1970s. Other well-known tracks on the album included Black Jack Davey (sampled by Chav rappers Goldie Lookin Chain on their track The Maggot) and the rocky Hard Times of Old England.

This time on Top of the Pops Steeleye performed a lively dance on the stage, with Maddy Prior flouncing around in a long dress with wide sleeves. At this point in their career the band indulged in picturesque clothes, much to the disapproval of the pop press.

But while All Around My Hat was the height of the band's commercial success, the good times were not to last very long. Despite touring almost every year since 1975, they have not had another hit single, nor any success in the album chart since the late 1970s.

The follow-up album Rocket Cottage (1976), also produced by Batt, proved to be a flop, despite having much in common musically with its immediate predecessor. With the advent of punk, the mainstream market seemed to turn away from folk-rock almost overnight, heralding a downturn in commercial fortunes for the band.

Thanks to their connection with Mike Batt, band members appeared in Womble costumes on Top of the Pops, performing the Wombles hit Remember you're a Womble, and at least one member of the band – fiddler Peter Knight – is widely accepted to have actually played on the track, although this has never been officially confirmed.

[edit] The late 1970s and early 1980s

While they would never regain the commercial success of All Around My Hat, Steeleye remained popular among folk-rock fans, and generally respected within the music industry.

It has been widely reported that Peter Knight and Bob Johnson left the band to work on another project together, The King of Elfland's Daughter. The actual situation was more complex. Chrysalis records agreed to allow Knight and Johnson to work on "King" only as a way to persuade the duo to continue working with Steeleye. Since the record company had no interest in "King" for its own sake, it made no effort to market the album. Chrysalis' ploy failed, however, and Knight and Johnson quit.

Their departure left a significant hole in the band. For the 1977 album Storm Force Ten, early member Martin Carthy rejoined on guitar. When he originally joined the band for its second album, Carthy had tried to persuade the others to bring John Kirkpatrick on board, but the band had chosen Knight instead. This time, Carthy's suggestion was accepted, and Kirkpatrick's accordion replaced Knight's fiddle, which gave the recording a very different texture from the Steeleye sound of previous years. Kirkpatrick's one-man morris dances quickly became one of the highlights of the band's show. This line-up also recorded their first album outside of the studio, Live at Last, before a "split" at the end of the decade that proved to be short-lived. But Carthy and Kirkpatrick had only intended to play with the band for a few months and had no interest in a longer association with the band.

The band were contractually obliged to record a final album for the Chrysalis label, and with Carthy and Kirkpatrick not wanting to rejoin the re-formed band, the door was open for Knight and Johnson to return in 1980. The album Sails of Silver saw the band moving away from traditional material to a greater focus on self-penned songs, many with historical or pseudo-folk themes. "Sails" was not a commercial success, in part because Chrysalis chose not to promote the album aggressively, but also because many fans felt uncomfortable with the band's new direction in its choice of material. The failure of the album left Hart unhappy enough that he decided to give up commercial music entirely, in favour of a reclusive life overseas.

After Sails of Silver there were to be no new albums for several years, and Steeleye became a part-time touring band. The other members spent much of their time and energy working on their various other projects, and the band went into a fitful hibernation.

In 1981 Isla St Clair presented a series of four television programmes called "The Song and The Story", about the history of some folk songs, which won the Prix Jeunesse. Isla sang the songs, and Steeleye Span did the backing instrumentals.

[edit] The wilderness years

For much of the 80s, the members of the band tended to focus on outside projects of various sorts. Johnson opened a restaurant and then studied for a degree in psychology at the University of Hertfordshire. Pegrum ran a music studio. Prior and Kemp devoted much energy to their own band, recording 4 albums, and also had children together. The result was that the band's output dropped sharply, producing only three albums over the space of ten years (including a concert album), although the band continuing touring.

After a quiet spell, the group's 12th studio album (and first without Tim Hart) Back in Line was released on the Flutterby label in 1986. With no "relaunch" as such, the band retained a low profile, although they caused some controversy when they played the song Blackleg Miner in Nottingham. The song originates from Northumberland in the early 20th century, but had been revived due to the 1984-5 strike. The Nottinghamshire coalfield had generally opposed the strike and tensions remained high when the song was performed in 1986.

In 1989, two long-term members departed the band. One was bassist Rick Kemp, who needed to recover from a serious shoulder injury, exacerbated by playing bass on stage. His eventual replacement (after two tours, each with a different bassist) was Tim Harries, who was brought in less than two weeks before the band was scheduled to start a tour. A friend of Pegrum's, Harries was a self-taught rock bassist, as well as a classically trained pianist and double bassist. With Harries on board, Steeleye released Tempted and Tried (1989), an album that formed the basis for their live set for many years to come.

Not long after recording "Tempted", drummer Nigel Pegrum emigrated to Australia for personal relationship reasons. He was replaced by eccentric drummer Liam Genockey of Gillan, easily identified by his long, plaited beard. He and Knight were simultaneously members of "Moire Music", a free-jazz band with a classical flavor, led by Trevor Watts. Unlike Pegrum, who employed a traditional rock drumming style, Genockey favoured a more varied drumming style, influenced by both Irish and African drumming, in which he hit, brushed, and rubbed the various surfaces of his drums and cymbals, creating a more varied range of sounds. Consequently, when the band embarked on their 20th Anniversary Tour, they did so with a totally new rhythm section.

Both Harries and Genockey were interested in experimenting with the band's sound, and they helped re-energize the other members' interest in Steeleye. The band began reworking some of their earlier material, seeking new approaches to traditional favourites. For example, Johnson experimented with an arrangement of Tam Lin that involved a heavy Bulgarian influence, inspired by Eastern European versions of the Tam Lin legend. In 1992, the band released Tonight's the Night...Live, which demonstrates some of this new energy and direction. The band continued to tour the UK every year, and frequently toured overseas as well.

[edit] Maddy leaves the bus

In 1995, almost all the past and present members of the band reunited for a concert to celebrate the 25th Anniversary of the band (which would later be released as The Journey ). The only former member not present was founding member Terry Woods.

A by-product of this gig was founding vocalist Gay Woods rejoining the band fulltime, partly because Prior was experiencing vocal problems, and for a while Steeleye toured with two female singers, and released the album Time 1996, their first new studio album in seven years.

There were doubts over the future of the band when Maddy Prior announced her departure in 1997, but Steeleye continued in a more productive vein than for many years, with Woods as lead singer, releasing Horkstow Grange (1998), and then Bedlam Born (2000), although without Maddy on board, the band's popularity waned. Fans of Steeleye's "rock" element felt that Horkstow Grange was too quiet and folk-oriented, while fans of the band's "folk" element complained that Bedlam Born was too rock-heavy.[citation needed] Woods received considerable criticism from fans, many of whom did not realize that she was one of the founding members and who compared her singing style unfavorably to Prior's. There was also disagreement among the band about what material to perform; Woods advocated for performing old favourites such as All Around My Hat and Alison Gross, while Johnson favored a set that emphasized their newer material.

Liam Genockey had also left the band by 1998, and on these albums the drum kit was manned by Dave Mattacks.

Reported difficulties among band members saw a split during the recording of Bedlam Born. Woods reportedly was uncomfortable with the financial arrangements of the band. Health problems forced Johnson into retirement, and for a while the band consisted of just Peter Knight and Tim Harries, plus various guest musicians as they fulfilled live commitments. Rick Kemp then returned to the line-up, during a time when their future seemed uncertain, while Harries was not keen to continue his role.

[edit] The comeback tour

In 2002, Steeleye Span reformed with a "classic" lineup, bringing an end to a couple of years of uncertainty. Knight hosted a poll on his website, asking the band's fans which Steeleye songs they would most want to see the band re-record. Armed with the results, Knight persuaded Prior and Genocky to rejoin, coaxed Johnson out of a health-induced retirement, and along with Kemp and Knight, they released Present--The Very Best of Steeleye Span (2002), a 2-disc set of new recordings of the songs.

But Bob Johnson's health prevented him from playing live shortly before the 2002 comeback tour, and he was replaced at the eleventh hour on guitar by Ken Nicol, formerly of the Albion Band. Nicol had been talking with Rick Kemp about forming a band when Kemp invited him to play for the tour.

With Nicol on board, the band released the album They Called Her Babylon early in 2004, and extensively toured the UK, Europe and Australia, and their relatively prolific output continued with the release of the Christmas album 'Winter' later the same year, as the band ended a busy year of touring with a gala performance in London's Palladium theatre.

In 2005 Steeleye Span were awarded the Good Tradition Award at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, while a recent book, Electric Folk by Britta Sweers (2005), devotes much space to the band.

The band carried out a UK tour in April and May 2006, followed by dates in Europe and an appearance at the 2006 Cropredy Festival. They were the final act on Cropredy's first night. They started with Bonny Black Hare and finished with All Around My Hat with backing vocals from the Cropredy Crowd. The full play list is at Crop Log 2006. The tour was supported by a live album and DVD of their 2004 tour.

[edit] Steeleye Span today

In November 2006, Steeleye released their latest studio album Bloody Men. Their Autumn/Winter tour started on 24 November 2006 in Basingstoke and ran until just before Christmas.

The current line-up consists of Maddy Prior (vocals), Ken Nicol (guitar, vocals), Rick Kemp (bass, vocals), Peter Knight (violin, piano, vocals), and Liam Genockey (drums and percussion), and draws on past and current Steeleye Span repertoire. They usually play to theatres and arts centres but also performs at festivals.

[edit] Trivia

When they supported Status Quo on tour in 1996, the latter had just issued their version of "Hat" as a single, and for their encore Maddy joined them on stage to sing it with them.

The final encore is often Gaudete, a 16th century Latin religious song performed a cappella, an unusual ending for a non-classical modern concert.

The single Gaudete is one of only two songs sung in Latin to reach the British Top 50 (the other was Pie Jesu from Andrew Lloyd Webber's Requiem, a Top 10 hit for Sarah Brightman and Paul Miles-Kingston and later a minor hit for Charlotte Church. In the 1980s Mike Oldfield had a top 10 hit with In Dulci Jubilo but this Latin song was performed as an instrumental.) Gaudete is one of only a handful of a cappella performances to become hit singles. (Another notable example is Only You sung by the Flying Pickets.) When Gaudete was performed on "Top of the Pops", the resident dance troupe walked onto the set in medieval-style robes, holding candles and followed by the members of Steeleye Span.

Terry Pratchett is extremely eclectic in the influences that appear in his fantasy novels. In Monstrous Regiment, page 309, "the Ins-and-Outs, the Side-to-Sides" (regiments) were inspired by "The Ups and Downs" (on Parcel of Rogues ). In Lords and Ladies, page 126, the lines describing the three paths as "All thorns and briars" is from Thomas the Rhymer. When Pratchett appeared on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs in 1997, he selected Thomas the Rhymer as one of his choices. He said that a Steeleye Span album was the first folk album he ever bought. When the band won the "Good Tradition Award" at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Award in 2004, it was Terry Pratchett who was chosen to present them with it.

[edit] Discography

Excluding reissues, compilations and 'irregular' live albums.

Studio Albums
Hark! The Village Wait (1970)
Please to See the King (1971)
Ten Man Mop, or Mr. Reservoir Butler Rides Again (1972)
Below the Salt (1972)
Parcel of Rogues (1973)
Now We Are Six (1974)
Commoner's Crown (1975)
All Around My Hat (album) (1975)
Rocket Cottage (1976)
Storm Force Ten (1977)
Sails of Silver (1980)
Back in Line (1986)
Tempted and Tried (1989)
Time (1996)
Horkstow Grange (1998)
Bedlam Born (2000)
Present--The Very Best of Steeleye Span (2002)
They Called Her Babylon (2004)
Winter (2004)
Bloody Men (2006)
Live Albums
Live at Last (1978)
Tonight's the Night...Live (1992)
The Collection: Steeleye Span in Concert (1994)
The Journey (1999)
Folk Rock Pioneers in Concert (2006)
Singles
Rave On/ Reels/ Female Drummer (1971)
Jigs and Reels (1972)
John Barleycorn / Bride's Favourite/Tansey's Fancy (1972)
Gaudete / The Holly and The Ivy (1972)
The Mooncoin Jig (1974)
New York Girls/ Two Magicians (1975)
All Around My Hat/ Black Jack Davy (1975)
Rave On/ False Knight On The Road (1976)
Hard Times of England/ Cadgwith Anthem (1976)
London/ Sligo Maid (1976)
Fighting For Strangers/ The Mooncoin Jig (1976)
The Boar's Head Carol/ Gaudete / Some Rival (1977)
Rag Doll/ Saucy Sailor (1978)
Sails of Silver/ Senior Service (1980)
Gone To America/ Let Her Go Down (1981)
Somewhere In London/ Lanercost (1985)
Padstow / First House in Connaught/ Sailor's Bonnet (1989)
Following Me/ Two Butchers (1989)
The Fox/ Jack Hall (1990)
DVDs
Classic Rock Legends (2002)
A Twentieth Anniversary Celebration (2003)
The 35th Anniversary World Tour 2004 (2005)

[edit] The changing line-Up

Steeleye Span 1: Tim Hart, Maddy Prior, Terry Woods, Gay Woods, Ashley Hutchins

Dates: 1969-70
Albums: Hark! The Village Wait
Notes: This line-up never performed live.

Steeleye Span 2: Tim Hart, Maddy Prior, Ashley Hutchins, Martin Carthy, Peter Knight

Dates: 1971-72
Albums: Please to See the King, Ten Man Mop, or Mr. Reservoir Butler Rides Again
Notes: This was the first line-up to actually perform live.

Steeleye Span 3: Tim Hart, Maddy Prior, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson, Rick Kemp

Dates: 1972-73
Albums: Below the Salt, Parcel of Rogues

Steeleye Span 4: Tim Hart, Maddy Prior, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson, Rick Kemp, Nigel Pegrum

Dates: 1973-77
Albums: Now We Are Six, Commoner's Crown, All Around My Hat, Rocket Cottage
Notes: The most commercially successful line-up, as well as the most productive in terms of albums.

Steeleye Span 5: Tim Hart, Maddy Prior, Rick Kemp, Nigel Pegrum, Martin Carthy, John Kirkpatrick

Dates: 1977-78
Albums: Storm Force Ten, Live at Last
Notes: The first line-up to feature a returning former member.

Steeleye Span 6: Tim Hart, Maddy Prior, Rick Kemp, Nigel Pegrum, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson

Dates: 1980-82
Albums: Sails of Silver
Notes: The same line-up as 4.

Steeleye Span 7: Maddy Prior, Rick Kemp, Nigel Pegrum, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson

Dates: 1982-86
Albums: Back in Line
Notes: Prior is the only remaining original member.

Steeleye Span 7.1: Maddy Prior, Nigel Pegrum, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson, Mark Williamson

Dates: 1986
Albums: None
Notes: This line-up existed for only one tour.

Steeleye Span 7.2: Maddy Prior, Nigel Pegrum, Peter Knight, Bob Johson, Chris Staines

Dates: 1986-87
Albums: None
Notes: This line-up also only existed for touring purposes.

Steeleye Span 8: Maddy Prior, Nigel Pegrum, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson, Tim Harries

Dates: 1988-89
Albums: Tempted and Tried
Notes: Pegrum departed immediately after recording 'Tempted', so this line-up never toured to support the album it produced.

Steeleye Span 9: Maddy Prior, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson, Tim Harries, Liam Genockey

Dates: 1989-95
Albums: Tonight's the Night...Live
Notes: This line-up first toured in support of 'Tempted and Tried'.

Steeleye Span 10: Maddy Prior, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson, Tim Harries, Liam Genockey, Gay Woods, Ashley Hutchins, Martin Carthy, Rick Kemp, Nigel Pegrum, John Kirkpatrick, Michael Gregory

Dates: 1995
Albums: The Journey
Notes: This line-up was the reunion tour. It included every former member of the band except Terry Woods. Michael Gregory had not played with the band before.

Steeleye Span 11: Maddy Prior, Peter Knight, Bob Johnson, Tim Harries, Liam Genockey, Gay Woods

Dates: 1995-97
Albums: Time

Steeleye Span 12: Peter Knight: Bob Johnson, Tim Harries, Gay Woods

Dates: 1997-2000
Albums: Horkstow Grange, Bedlam Born
Notes: The first line-up to not feature Maddy Prior.

Steeleye Span 12.1: Peter Knight, Bob Johnson, Gay Woods, Rick Kemp

Dates: 2000-01
Albums: None
Notes: This line-up only existed for tourning purposes.

Steeleye Span 12.2: Peter Knight, Tim Harries, Rick Kemp, Terl Bryant

Dates: 2001
Albums: None
Notes: This line-up only existed for touring. Terl Bryant was credited as a special guest.

Steeleye Span 13: Peter Knight, Rick Kemp, Maddy Prior, Bob Johnson, Liam Genockey

Dates: 2002
Albums: Present--The Very Best of Steeleye Span
Notes: This line-up never toured because of Johnson's health.

Steeleye Span 13:1 Peter Knight, Rick Kemp, Maddy Prior, Liam Genockey, Ken Nicol

Dates: 2002
Albums: None
Notes: Ken Nicol replaced Bob Johnson for the tour in support of 'Present'.

Steeleye Span 14: Peter Knight, Rick Kemp, Maddy Prior, Liam Genockey, Ken Nicol

Dates: 2003 to Present
Albums: They Called Her Babylon, Winter, Bloody Men

[edit] External links