Beverley Martyn

Beverley Martyn has led an incredible life: a beautiful woman and talented

singer-songwriter she was also muse, friend or partner to some of the greatest recording artists of the past forty years….Bert Jansch, Paul Simon, Nick Drake and of course her husband John Martyn. Along the way she played at the Monterey Festival in 1967….”


Below – Beverley on the cover of Bert Jansch It Don’t Bother me album 1965 (thanks to Dave Cooper for that information)


“Beverley Martyn (born Beverley Kutner on 24 March 1947) is an English singer, songwriter and

Beverley Martyn in the 1970’s


guitarist. Beverley was born near Coventry. While still a student, she was picked to front The Levee Breakers, a jug band featuring Mac McGann and Johnny Joyce, who played the folk circuit in south east England. At the age of 16 she recorded her first single. “Babe I’m Leaving You“, which was released on the Parlophone label in 1965. Martyn was then signed as a solo artist to the Deram Records label. In 1966 she released a single, “Happy New Year” (b-side “Where The Good Times Are”), written by Randy Newman, on which she was accompanied by Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, Nicky Hopkins and Andy White. “Happy New Year” was chosen, together with “I Love My Dog” by Cat Stevens, to launch Deram as the progressive branch of Decca Records. She also recorded an unreleased single in the same year, “Picking Up The Sunshine” / “Gin House Blues“. These last two tracks also featured John Renbourn and Mike Lease. During this period she was taught the guitar by the folk guitarist Bert Jansch who also encouraged her songwriting. Her follow-up single “Museum”, written by Donovan was released in 1967, produced by Denny Cordell.

Closely involved with the folk scene at the time, she met Paul Simon who invited her to New York where she contributed to the track “Fakin’ It” on the Simon & Garfunkel album Bookends on which she says in the middle of the song: “Good morning, Mr Leitch, have you had a busy day.” She later appeared at the Monterey Pop Festival on 16 June 1967, as did Simon & Garfunkel.



In 1969 she met John Martyn, whom she later married. As a duo they issued two albums, Stormbringer!


and The Road to Ruin both of which were released on Island Records. Following The Road to Ruin, Island persuaded John Martyn to resume his career as a solo artist because they believed that there was more public interest in solo singer/songwriters. Although she was spending more time with her children, Martyn continued to contribute to her husband’s solo projects until the breakdown of their marriage. The couple divorced during the making of John Martyn’s album Grace and Danger in 1980 and she retired from music for years.



In the 1990s, with her children now grown, she was invited to join Loudon Wainwright III on his European tour. In 1998 she resumed her recording career with the release of the album No Frills.

In 2004 Martyn’s song “Primrose Hill” about the simple joys of domesticity, which she wrote and sang on Road To Ruin, was sampled by Fat Boy Slim for the track “North West Three” on his 2004 album Palookaville.

At various times, Martyn has worked with Levon Helm, Jimmy Page, Dave Pegg, Richard Thompson,


John Renbourn, Ralph McTell, Davy Graham
and Sandy Denny. She appeared in the photograph on the album sleeve of  Bert Jansch‘s 1965 album It Don’t Bother Me; where she can be seen lounging in the background. On 3 December 2013 she performed the song “Levee Breaks” with her band at the concert A Celebration Of  Bert Jansch at London’s Royal Festival Hall alongside Robert Plant, Donovan and various members of Pentangle, amongst others. The concert was broadcast by BBC4 in the UK on 28 March 2014 under the name The Genius of Bert Jansch: Folk Blues and Beyond.

Martyn released a new album in 2014 entitled The Phoenix and The Turtle. The album features a previously unrecorded Nick Drake and Martyn song, “Reckless Jane“. The album features bass by Matt Malley (Counting Crows), drums by Victor Bisetti (Los Lobos), acoustic guitars by Mark Pavey, electric guitars by Jakob Nebel and Michael Watts with strings by Owain Roberts.”


Discography
Singles
“Babe, I’m Leaving You” (McGann) / “Wild About My Lovin'” (Trad. Arr. Joyce) (June 1965 with the Levee Breakers)
“Happy New Year” (Newman) / “Where The Good Times Are” (Martyn) (September 1966 as “Beverley”)
“Picking Up The Sunshine” / “Gin House” (1966 as “Beverley”; unreleased)
“Museum” (Leitch) / “A Quick One For Sanity” (by “D. Cordell Tea Time Ensemble”) (July 1967 as “Beverley”)
Albums
Stormbringer! (February 1970 with John Martyn)
The Road to Ruin (November 1970 with John Martyn)
No Frills (1998)
The Phoenix and the Turtle (2014)



Below is a link to an interesting and recent interview with Beverley Martyn



In this cutting from a Coventry paper in the mid 60’s (via The Broadgate Gnome A to Z of Coventry Bands), Beverley says “My band will be the best in England” and her early records had the likes of Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones on, long before Led Zeppelin came along and Nicky Hopkins. “Good artistic pop records can be made and I am trying to prove this.” Her early association with Donovan resulted in her recording Donovan’s Museum in 1967. Perhaps her two lines in Paul Simon’s song Fakin’ ItGood morning Mr Leitch, have you had a busy day” was a reference to Donovan Leitch. 


Another cutting, also from The Broadgate Gnome A to z Site 


Beverley’s sister ran the Hub Boutique in Coventry  and the above article by the Coventry Standard in 1967 was conducted in a Coventry Precinct cafe not long after her return from San Francisco during which she recorded with Paul Simon and appeared at Monterey and appreciated by the Monkees.

Pete Willow, writing in Folks magazine (Coventry folk magazine Jan/Feb 1979) covered the history of the Coventry folk scene (his articles and magazines posted on this blog), included another cutting –

The Daily Sketch (Aug 23rd 1966) ran an article headed ‘Now Beverley has the key to the top’ which


read: ” If there was an award for sheer will to win in the pop business it would this year to an 18 year old singer billed simply as Beverley. Just a year ago she came to London and Demmy Cordell, who makes discs for Georgie Fame and the Moody Blues, heard her sing in a club. Cordell told me: “I offered her a recording contract. She is the only person, other than Georgie and the Moodies, I’ve wanted to record. “But Beverley told him: ‘I’m going away – I’ll see you when i think I’m ready’..Beverley went back to her home in Coventry with a guitar – which Denny Laine of the Moody Blues had given her – and learned to play. Now she is rated by Jimmy Page of the Yardbirds, as ‘ the best girl guitarist’ he’s heard.”


Pete Willow comments – “Here is a typical selection of other cuttings about the lady, proving the press moves in mysterious way: She’s an 18 year old Chelsea-looking brunette from Coventry who has just cut her


first record. The title is ‘Happy new year‘ (Deram).” ” Beverley……wore a cool black satin pajama suit – with enormous flapping trousers – at London airport yesterday. To keep away the chill winter breezes she wore a snug fox fur on top. Beverley was flying to Munich to make a broadcast and make promote her new record….””She admires Donovan’s interpretations and was particularly thrilled when, in a London club recently, he stepped from the audience and offered to accompany her on guitar.” “Beverley…claims that at 20 she has at last found her real self thanks to the Love Thy neighbour hippies of San Francisco. Beverley has just returned from Hippie-land after taking part in the Monterey pop Festival.”

It seemed for a while that Beverly was in the limelight of press attention and attracting a lot of interest in the


national folk/rock scene. When she married and worked with John Martyn, interest in her from the music media fell and lost much of its previous intensity. The sleeve notes on John and Beverley’s album Stormbringer simply refer to the fact that she once worked for a jug band in Coventry. Mentioning no names.”

A few memories from Dave Cooper of  Dando Shaft
“Bev and John had a basement flat in West Hampstead. I had a brief meeting there with Nick Drake in ’71. Bev had been mates with Ted Kaye of Dando Shaft in Coventry. She was the perfect Hippy Chic icon, stunning, and a great voice. Bev is also on the cover of Bert Jansch’s 1965 album “It Don’t Bother Me” Glad she succeeded in releasing “The Phoenix And The Turtle” earlier this year.


……………………………………………
NEW ARTICLE BY PETE CLEMONS HERE (AND ONE BY PETE CHAMBERS TOO.
http://coventrygigs.blogspot.co.uk/2018/03/the-beverley-martyn-story.html











As fairytale as Beverley’s musical career appears, she tells a more reveals a more disturbing side to her life in her biography published in 2011 – Sweet Honesty –


Sweet Honesty – The Beverley Martyn Story … as told to Jaki da Costa. Beverley was a rising star in


the 1960s’ British folk/rock music scene when she met and married singer/songwriter John Martyn, who died in 2009. For years she kept silent about the abusive relationship they shared. Here she tells her story in her own words, taking us from her childhood in post-war Coventry through the making of classic albums “Stormbringer!” and “Road to Ruin” to today, where she survives as a woman beaten but not bowed and still a gifted musician in her own right.” Amazon http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sweet-Honesty-Beverley-Martyn-Story/dp/1907211888



You can read some sample chapters on the Amazon kindle version on the above site too. Another review on Amazon –


Beverley Martyn has led an incredible life: a beautiful woman and talented singer-songwriter she was also muse, friend or partner to some of the greatest recording artists of the past forty years….Bert Jansch, Paul Simon, Nick Drake and of course her husband John Martyn. Along the way she played at the Monterey Festival in 1967 and also endured ten years of marriage with an abusive husband that eventually led her to have a breakdown, near destitute and in a mental hospital.

The Music – Early singles from the mid 1960’s –



Tomorrow Time 

Beverley Martyn – Picking Up the Sunshine Monterey Pop Festival 1967





This is Donovan’s version of his song which Beverley covered.



Beverley Martyn appears on this Simon and Garfunkle track as the voice that says “Good morning Mr Leitch, have you had a busy day” and possibly some backing vocals.












A song she wrote with Nick Drake which was unfinished.



Beverley talks about the song she wrote with Nick Drake here 

and in this video Interview




From her new album The Phoenix and The Turtle 2014




Visit Beverley Martyn’s site for photos / live dates / audio / the new album and bio etc. 


Isambarde

Isambarde Folk / Acoustic / Alternative


Label Whirly Whorl Records

line up
Chris Green Vocals Guitar

Emily Sanders (vocals, fiddle)

Jude Rees (oboe, vocals)


They are the unusual and winning combination of Chris’s driving guitar, Emily’s incisive fiddle playing and Jude’s lyrical oboe coupled with great full on vocal harmonies.”



“The
 Isambarde story begins in late 2001, when Chris Green (vocals, guitar), decided to form a band. The only slight problem with this was the fact that he didn’t really know anyone within twenty years of his own age who shared his taste for traditional English folk music. A lonely and brief solo career beckoned!



Then as luck would have it, Chris got involved at very short notice in a musical theatre production at the

Alexandra Theatre that shall remain nameless, as it was a bit of a nightmare for all concerned. It was in these stressful circumstances that he met the show’s orchestral manager and more importantly pit oboist Jude Rees (oboe, vocals), a fellow folkie reared on Steeleye Span, the Albion Band and other alumni of the 60’s and 70’s folk revival. She had just completed an MA at Birmingham Conservatoire and leapt at the chance to do something different from the music traditionally associated with the oboe.

Chris had met Emily Sanders (vocals, fiddle) briefly at the Bridgnorth Folk Festival in 1997, but being Chris had promptly lost her number! They met again by chance at the Boggery Folk Club in Solihull in early 2002. Emily had been a regular fixture on the Staffordshire circuit since the age of 12, but was not involved with any band on a regular basis, so the other two lost no time in recruiting her talents and formidable repertoire of traditional songs and tunes.

Isambarde were now a trio and played their first gig to an appreciative audience at the Styvechale Folk


Club
, Coventry in April 2002. Over the last few years they have played clubs and festivals all over the country, collecting songs, tunes and friends along the way.

Isambarde’s music is a powerful blend of traditional and contemporary folk songs, taking the English tradition forward into the 21st century.





Isambarde on Reverbnation

Dando Shaft

Dando Shaft c 1968 -72 ( with later reunions) Described variously as Progressive / Folk Rock / Acid Folk.

Dando Shaft – Coventry’s legendary Progressive folk band formed in 1968 and split up around 1972 – with various reunions afterwards – sometimes to fulfil recording contracts or for performances.


Backrow – L to R Roger Bullen / Dave Cooper / Ted Kaye. Front Row L to R Polly Bolton / Kevin Dempsey / Martin Jenkins.

Line up –
Martin Jenkins – Vocals / Mandolin /  Electric Mandola /  Fiddle / Flute / Songwriter
Dave Cooper (Coopz) – Vocals / Guitar / Songwriter
Kevin Dempsey – Vocals / Guitar / Songwriter
Ted Kaye – Percussion / Tablas
Roger Bullen – Bass (Upright)
Polly Bolton – Vocals / Piano
…….
Later additions for reunions.
Roger Williamson – Guitar / Vocals
Rod Felton – Guitar / Vocals
Baz Andruszko – bass

Albums


An Evening With … (Youngblood 1970 SSYB006) 1970
Dando Shaft S/T (Neon 1971 NE6) 1971
Lantaloon (Neon 1972 SF8256) 1972


















Later Albums – 
Kingdom (Rubber 1978 RUB034 ) 1977

Dando Shaft – Reaping the Harvest – Compilation 1990 See For Miles Records SEE CD 291


Singles:
Sun Clog Dance / This Gift – 1972 (RCA 1972 2246)

 

Here’s a quote from Dave –
“An Evening with Dando Shaft 1970″ must have been one of the cheapest albums MD ever produced. I wrote five of the eight songs. Over the years various lease deals have been made with companies for compilations. Forty years later all the albums are available on iTunes. In all this time I have never received any form of statement or communication from MD/YBM or their many subsidiaries, they do not answer letters or emails. None of the band members receive royalties from the mechanical sale of this music.”

Below – Three Dando Shaft songs – Kalyope Driver / Railway and Whispering Ned from their 1971 album 



ABOUT DANDO SHAFT


The Introduction (written by John Tobler) to Dando Shaft‘s Compilation CD – Reaping the Harvest -released in 1990 on the See for Miles label, is perhaps the best description of Dando’s formation, development and demise that we have, with contributions by the band members. And here it is –
Dando Shaft are also onFacebook – https://www.facebook.com/DandoShaft

Click to enlarge –



…………………………………………………………

Dando Shaft – The Book of the Same Name

As mentioned in the introduction, the name Dando Shaft taken from a 60’s novel by Dan Calhoun of which

this is a summary –

” Dando Shaft works in an ad agency where he comes up with the taglines we all remember decades later at the expense of any useful knowledge. He’s unhappy in his job and embarks on a scheme to become “Everyman’s Millionaire.” He takes out a full-page ad in the NY Daily News for donations and he will live the life of a millionaire for your vicarious thrills. The endeavor is partly successful at best – money comes in, but not nearly as much as he’d like, and his affair with the trampy hotsy-totsy Bunny Fairchild destroys his marriage.
Disillusioned and broke, he has to pull himself back up from rock bottom.
A great satire about 1960s suburbia, the frustrated people in it, and the American phenomenon of celebrity culture.”From this review site http://www.paperbackswap.com/Dando-Shaft-Don-Calhoun/book/22302/


On Amazon ” One example dealt with the account supervisor who resented the owner’s son position in the agency. The son had just purchased a new homburg hat and was quite proud of it. The account supervisor bought the same hat in a size smaller and one a size larger and would then periodically switch the hats. There is also an on-going tale of the account supervisor and a woman he sits next to on the train every day during his commute to work. It ends in the most hilarious scene immaginable. This is a light-hearted book that anyone who has ever had anything to do with advertising will find totally enjoyable.” http://www.amazon.co.uk/Dando-Shaft-Don-Calhoun/dp/0812817486

…………..
Jackson C. Franks – An Early Influence.
Dave Cooper

 Dave Cooper recalls “At the age of 17 Jackson inspired me to write my first song “This Weary Road“. Spent the summer of ’65 (warm nights and groovy tunes) at the Barge Club in Kingston on Thames listening to his magical renditions. Like all maestro’s he was humble and had time for anyone. Sitting on the upper deck of the barge he taught me some guitar how to hammer-on in G, and one night told me that “all great art seeks the poetic“. I remember seeing Paul Simon, Sandy Denny and Martin Carthy’s jaws hit the ground when Jacko sang. Strangely our paths crossed again. In 68? Sue and I by chance saw an advert with his name on a board outside the short lived Jaguar folk cellar bar in Coventry. We went in and found Jackson sitting on his own in a virtually empty bar. We shared a drink and a chat remembering the Barge Club. We waited with him, alas no one came, no gig organiser or audience. Sometime after 8 we said our goodbyes and he walked off into the night. Bert loved his music about a year before he died he played me his version of “My Name is Carnival” as we shared memories at Robs house. Without Jackson C. Frank no Dando Shaft” More about Jackson C Franks on this blog from Dave Coburn – Here http://coventryfolkclubs.blogspot.com/2012/08/jackson-cfrank-by-dave-coburn-folks.html
……………………
Darrell Viner
Back in 2007 when I started the Hobo blogs (Coventry music sites), Dave Cooper sent me a message about Dando Shaft’s involvement with the Coventry born sculptor  / artist Darrell Viner. Dave said ” Did you ever come across some of the ‘Happenings’ at some of the early Dando Shaft gigs at the Pilot on Sunday lunchtimes with Darrell Viner who sadly left the stage 2001?” Dave went on to say ” In 1968 he built the first sound activated lighting system in the UK, before Pink Floyd or anyone. 20.000 Watt. I need to make a link as Darrells early involvement with ambience was special.

Darell Viner lived in the attic flat in the end house in Barras lane (the other end from Martin Jenkins of The Rest” when we all moved to London in 1970, gaining his place at Chelsea in 1971. The rest as they say is his story. Coopz.  Darrell Viners obituary was in the Guardian and gives a lot more background to his development and later career in the art world – http://www.theguardian.com/news/2001/nov/23/guardianobituaries
Dando Shaft and where Dando started out). We had an ajustable lense projector quite powerful. We were


into making our own acid slides oil, bubbles and dyes which we projected onto the synagogue wall down and opposite. The odd late night drunk got quite a colourful suprise. He lived in the Dando house/commune ‘

Darrell Viner (1947 – 2001) was a pioneer in the field of computer art. He originally turned to computers to pursue his interest in movement and animation and went on to apply the technology to kinetic and interactive sculpture. Viner was one of a small number of British artists, based at a cluster of art schools in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including Hornsey and the Slade, who started to use computers as a creative tool. They learnt to write in code, developed their own systems and built their own equipment to further their aims.”
………………………

Interview with Martin Jenkins from 1980 on Gentlefolk Radio with Norman Wheatley May 2014 – http://www.gentlefolk2.co.uk/

……………………………………..
Polly Bolton  “is recognised as one of the leading exponents of the decorative style of traditional


British singing. She began singing professionally in 1970 in an acoustic folk-rock band, Dando Shaft. In the 1970’s she worked in soul and folk bands both in the States and Britain, including Bert Jansch’s Conundrum. In 1980 she left the music business to live and work on an organic smallholding in South Shropshire, occasionally gigging with guitarist Kev Dempsey. In 1985, Polly was persuaded out of hiding by Ashley Hutchings, to sing on his album, “By Gloucester Docks I sat down and wept“. She also sang and recorded with the Albion Dance Band. Ashley produced her first solo album “No Going Back” in 1987. Polly has been much in demand as a guest solo singer working with Alan Stival on “The Mists of Avalon” and has sung on several Show of Hands albums and appeared at the sell-out 10 year anniversary gig at the Albert Hall in April 2001. She has also sung with Steve Knightlyon his solo album, “Track of Words“. ” There’s more on her website here  http://www.pollybolton.co.uk


This is a beautiful track from Polly Bolton 1980

You Must Be Joking
There is already a post on this about this play by Paul Spavan which “portrayed the harsh reality of the bicycle industry of the 1800’s and the modern car industry of the then present 1970’s.” and which featured the music and lyrics of Dando Shaft, so i won;t take up space here with it except to post a direct link here and Dave Cooper has kindly made some comments on it. http://coventryfolkclubs.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/you-must-be-joking-play-about-coventry.html

I went to see this at the Belgrade Theatre in 1971

A sample of the lyrics

Coventry City of Cycles and Slums,Everywhere in the air is the winding and grinding and factory hums,
and the men in the town making bicycle wheels whirl around.
There’s Standard and Singer and Hillman and Humber
Riley and Rudge and a very great number,
of bicycle makers that
work in the City,
side by side, it would be a great pity if business should die..

More found on the linked post.

From Hobo (Coventry Music and Arts Magazine) August 1973 – Edited by Trev Teasdel
DANDO – NEW PHASE
Dando Shaft may be reformed in the near future with original members Martin Jenkins on fiddle and mandolins, Ted Kaye on congos and other percussion and joined by Rod Felton on guitar and Baz Andruszko on bass and accordion. But at the moment they are fulfilling other commitments. Martin, who recently wrote and played the music for the Belgrade’s production Little Red Riding Hood has another production in London. Rod is due for a tour of Germany, I believe.

Two Coventry singer songwriters were involved in reformed versions of Dando Shaft in the early to mid 70’s – Rod Felton and Roger Williamson. Both are featured on this site if you follow the links.

From their first album on Youngblood. An Evening with Dando Shaft – Lazily Slowly.


Martin Jenkins with Bert Jansch Conundrum – Blues Run the Game – written by Jackson C. Franks

Martin Jenkins and Kevin Dempsey went on to play with Geordie folk outfit Hedgehog Pie and then joined forces with ex Fairport Convention fiddle player Dave Swarbrick in Whippersnapper. Martin’s son Ray Jenkins also plays.














Dando Shaft Mk 2 1972 with Billy Bones, Roger Williamson, Ted Kay and Martin Jenkins.

Stylusboy (Steve Jones and Rachel Grisedale).


Stylusboy’s “enchanting lo-fi folk” is the creation of Coventry

 Redwood Photography

chap Steve Jones and Northern lass Rachel Grisedale. With arresting melodies and poignant lyrics Stylusboy bring their particular brand of warm lo-fi folk to life.”






“Their music is deliberately tripped-back, purposefully honest, capturing raw emotion at its heart. Jones’ delicate guitar lines and Grisedale’s sumptuous harmony work create gorgeous melodies that bring to mind the first rush of love, the warm summer air and the English countryside bathed in sunlight.”


Stylusboy are a current act and so have an excellent website so i won’t duplicate too much here but refer you to their site http://www.stylusboy.co.uk/  which has info on their gigs, discography, photos and much more. The are also on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/stylusboy


‘You Must be Joking’ Play About the Coventry Car-workers c1970 – Dandon Shaft.


If anyone has the script to this play
please get in touch – Pete Willow and CVfolk are interested in putting this on again with remaining members of Dando Shaft.

About 1970, the Theatre in Education team at the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry produced a play which, in Paul Spaven (the Deputy Stage Manager), in a communication to Dave Cooper of  Dando Shaft, portrayed the harsh reality of the bicycle industry of the 1800’s and the modern car industry of the then present 1970’s.”.
the words of

Paul said ” Each night I stood in the wings and watched as Dando Shaft, onstage, wove the musical story that the actors verbalised……man it was magical.

I too saw the play, but not as a member of the production team like Paul and it made a lasting impression. later in 1976, while working as a Welfare Rights adviser for the Coventry Unemployed Workers Centre, Bardsley House, I attended my first WEA (Workers’ Educational Association) tutored by members of Coventry Workshop – A trade Union research Unit and the course looked into the economic and social history of Coventry and its industries. Among the books / resources we had to look at, the syllabus said “we shall also use transcripts of a play – You Must be Joking – on the history of the Coventry car worker, produced 5 years ago by the Belgrade Theatre.“.


Dave Cooper recalled “I remember while we were rehearsing the Coventry Toolroom Rate rose to an unimaginable staggering £1 an hour! The title song had the lyric “£40 for 40 hours making motor cars, up and down the country we’re the engineering superstars

However by 1976, Coventry was transitioning from a perennial boom town (it had even survived the depression in 20’s and 30’s)  into a ‘Ghost Town‘. The Rootes Group (Humber, Hillman, Sunbeam, Singer etc) was sold to Chryslers between 1976 -78, eliminating many of the Rootes brands in favour of imported brands with resultant job losses and moving of the industry abroad. Later they sold the company to Peugeot.


I remember in 1976 lots of car workers coming in for welfare Rights advice, confident that they would be back in a job within the week. They had never known unemployment. Back then you could walk out of a job and into another and because of the rates the shop steward movement had achieved for them, many had mortgages and financial commitments they would no longer be able to afford on benefits.

It was sad, therefore, to see the same blokes come back in 6 months later, when their Earnings related supplements had ceased and their NI contributions, pushing them on to the lower Social security rates. These guys looked crushed – the jobs were no longer there, their finances and marriages were suffering. it was wasn’t going to get any better but a lot worse!

The contrast between Dave’s comment about the rate in 1970 and the decline in 1976 was stark. Callaghan “the end of our cosy world” and the gutter press went into overdrive (like now) attacking the unemployed as if it was their fault.
announced at the Labour Conference that year that it was “

We were studying this course and read the script to You Must be Joking against this background. I had seen the play back in 1970 and so was familiar with it.

The flyer for the WEA course –


Because of the course, i had a copy of the script but unfortunately can’t find it now, except for the cover picture of Dando Shaft, who wrote and played the musical score and the last page of the play. So I can’t share the script with you or tell who wrote the play. Maybe the script will turn up in some hidden corner but I’ve searched the house!

The final page of the script for You Must Be Joking.

Dando Shaft’s music and lyrics reflect the dialogue in the play and Paul Spaven remembered some of the lyrics  –

Coventry City of Cycles and Slums,
Everywhere in the air is the winding and grinding and factory hums,
and the men in the town making bicycle wheels whirl around.
There’s Standard and Singer and Hillman and Humber
Riley and Rudge and a very great number,
of bicycle makers that
work in the City,
side by side, it would be a great pity if business should die……………….

[lone worker enters stage left]….

To earn enough they work you off your feet,
no time for the wife in a factory workers life,
but at least we had enough to eat,
and the good times seem a long, long time ago.

Friday’s coming ’round again, I haven’t paid the rent,
Pay day is Saturday but each day seems like Lent.
Thinking of the future all the time,
Thinking of the young men who are wasted in their prim
e…and the good times seem a long, long time ago……

Of the music, Dave Cooper has said
” With regards to “You Must Be Joking” somewhere there was/is an in-house recording we made of the songs(6 or 7) we wrote for the production.”

If anyone has any further comments or information on this production – please let us know.

Here are some tracks from some Dando Shaft – not related to this play but excellent quality –

Dando Shaft


John Golding – Daventry Singer Songwriter

“About September 1973, I was doing a gig for the Birmingham Streetpress in Moseley (Birmingham) at Fighting Cocks and after the gig started to hitch my way back to Coventry. Most of the buses had finished and i walked into the center of Birmingham around Digbeth and hardly a car went by. This was Birmingham right. Tired and despairing of a lift home to Coventry (or even part of the way), I sat down on the curb strumming Vanity Fair‘s Hitchin’ a Ride. Out of the blue came a car – I never expected it to stop but when I got in, I noticed a guitar in the back! It was John Golding, the Daventry folk singer who had also had a gig in Birmingham that night and was travelling back to Daventry and so passing by Willenhall in Coventry. How neat was that! I didn’t know John up til then but we had a good chat and I went to see him perform in Coventry at the Antelope Folk Club in Coventry. John had just made an album and I gave it a plug in Hobo Magazine.” Trev Teasdel

About 1994 John Golding was getting nowhere with major record companies. They liked his material and gave him studio time but said his songs were just not commercial enough for general release. So John set up his own production company – Cottage Records and launched his first album Discarded Verse.

Read more in this Coventry Journal cutting from March 15th 1974



And the follow on in the Coventry Evening Telegraph when Decca took an interest.





Rod Felton’s advert in Hobo Magazine mentioning John Golding (although spelt incorrectly)

I Might Change – John Golding
Sleep Easy

All My Words Were Taken Away

John Golding appeared on Whispering Bob Harris late night show for BBC Radio 1, along with Barclay James Harvest from 1974, here’s I Might Change.



Its True from Photographs Album produced by Bob Harris

Another – John Golding produced by Bob Harris





Do You Really Need To Keep On Asking 2:23
Getting Over You 3:25
All My Words Were Taken Away 4:21
It Only Hurts When You Laugh 2:31
Loner 5:09
Believe What You Feel 3:31
Here’s To The Sunnier Day 3:15
Bad Gigs 2:36
Photographs 2:05
All Gone 2:45
I Might Change
Acoustic Guitar – Dave Doddington
Acoustic Guitar, Electric Bass, Concertina – Bernard Wrigley
Backing Vocals – The Virgin Choir 
Banjo, Electric Bass – George Ristel*
Double Bass – Mike Hadley
Engineer – Bob Young (4), Nic Hatton
Producer – Monty Bird
Vocals, Acoustic Guitar, Tambourine, Songwriter, Producer – John Golding
Bird Sound Studio – 2000 copies pressed.

1974 album

Good Luck And Love To You 2:51
Home 3:01
The Coalman Song 2:50
It’s True 3:17
Sailor James 4:03
All My Words Were Taken Away 4:13
Oh Boy 2:57
Those Blue And Golden Sunny Skies 3:38
The Man Who Sells The News 3:43
Loving Is A One Sided Thing 2:01
Loner 5:04
Another

Acoustic Guitar, Bass Guitar – Pete Cosker
Acoustic Guitar, Dulcimer – Dave Doddington
Banjo, Mandolin – George Van Ristell
Engineer – Paul Tregurtha
Harmony Vocals – Roy Webber
Keyboards – Paul Garrett
Mastered By – George Peckham, George Peckham
Percussion – Roger Narraway
Photography – Barry Roberts
Producer – Bob Harris (6)
Saxophone – Jimmy Jewell
Sleeve – John Golding
Steel Guitar, Bass Guitar – Paul Middleton (4)
Tape Op – Georg Nicholson
Violin, Bass Guitar – Pete Sage
Vocals, Words By, Music By – John Golding

Issued on green and orange Atlantic labels; includes an insert with full lyrics and credits.
Recorded at Morgan Studios, London, August 1974.
Pressing and mastering credits derived from matrix.

Single 1970




Tracks on Discarded Verse


John Golding in Brinklow 2005



English singer songwriter John Golding. From the album Photographs released in 1974 on Atlantic Records and produced by Radio 2 DJ Bob Harris.


1976 album on Cottage Records

Tracks Another John Golding Album

Those Being Far Away From You Blues
Sleep Easy Tonight
What They Say (About You)
It Only Hurts When You Laugh
Floor Singers Blues
Why Don’t You Let It Be Me
Nothing At All
Discarded Verse
I Was Dreaming
Whither Away And Die
Getting Over You
The Good Times Always End

Bob Young
Engineer, Piano, Harmonium
Bob Plews
Acoustic Guitar
Dave Doddington
Acoustic Guitar
John McIntosh 
Bass Guitar
Monty Bird
Engineer
George Van Ristell
Mandolin, Banjo

New City Songster – Peggy Seeger Ewan MacColl

This post is not a specifically Coventry one, except in that I sent off for some copies of  New City Songster Peter Seeger has recently passed at the age of  94.

Peggy Seeger and Ewan MacColl


in the late 70’s and lived in Coventry at the time but I thought it would be an interesting post, especially as

I had read about Sing Out in Greenwich village in Scaduto‘s biography of Bob Dylan in 1973 and saw an ad in Melody Maker for New City Songster. “New City Songster was almost entirely the work of Peggy Seeger (who chose, edited and notated the songs) and David Scott (the artist for all but one of the issues). It featured songs by Peggy Seeger and Ewan MacColl and songwriters from all over the English-speaking world. It ran for 21 volumes, 1968-1985.” as it says in this site about about the New City Songster. http://www.wcml.org.uk/contents/activists/ewan-maccoll/music/new-city-songster/


The site tells ” NCS began in 1967, when there were nearly 2000 folk clubs in Britain. The reason for its formation was to circulate new songs before they became historical pieces, for communications between clubs in different regions was and still is fairly undeveloped. So truly speaking, NCS is a product of the folk revival, that invigorating resurgence of interest in our native music and song.” Read more on the above link.


The American Sing Out

New City Songster

Peggy Seeger and Ewan MacColl’s note that came with the copies of New City Songster – 



































Coventry Area Folk Club Ads and Flyers

Here are some assorted folk club ads and flyers from the 70’s –


c1974


c 1974


c 1974


From Hobo Magazine Coventry – advert 1974


Hobo advert Feb 1974 – designed by Rod Felton


Advert from Foks Magazine c 1978 / 9






C 1974 / 5


Martin Jenkin’s One Day Thomas c 1973




c 1974


c 1974


c 1974


c 1979



c 1970 / 71




c 1974







Advert from Hobo Magazine c 1974



















1960’s




Advert hobo Magazine 1975


Advert Hobo Magazine 1975







Paddy ran a folk club at the Lanchchester Poly, Coventry.


This one’s not Coventry related, but I met them playing in folk club in Weston Supermare c 1973 and I included a mention in the small ads of Hobo Magazine.

‘Folk Crying Out Loud’ – Coventry’s Folk Club Magazine c 1967

In the late 70’s Pete Willow and his contributors put together a Coventry Folk Club Magazine called Folks
between 1978 and 1980. It was a lively and interesting magazine with lots of information, stories and articles and, thanks to Pete Willow, most of the issues are on here and some of the information has informed some of the articles too.

Ben Arnold


In one of the issues deal with Coventry’s folk club history, stemming back to the 60’s, Pete Willow mentioned an earlier Coventry Folk magazine called Folk Crying Out Loud – an excellent but short lived magazine in 1967 in which Ben Arnold had “pinpointed the exact beginnings of the present day format of Folk clubs in the city“. Two copies of the magazine were loaned to Pete Willow by Singer/songwriter Dave Coburn. Pete used the information in the earlier magazine for his Coventry Folk Club history series in Folks which is here http://coventryfolkclubs.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/the-history-of-coventry-folk-clubs-part.html

It would be interesting to have copies of the magazine here, so if, as seems unlikely, anybody has any copies they can send or scan for us, that would be great.

The Kerries

The Kerries

The Kerries

Line up
Kerry Todd plays guitar and sings in a range unattainable to the majority of singers. This with his uncanny sense of harmony and rhythm helps to make him the backbone of the group.

Ralph Overton aged 24, plays guitar, was originally a rhythm guitarist with a beat group until he became engaged to Kerry Todd’s daughter when he was wooed from rock to folk.

Gill Thurlow 24-year-old singer and “Tin Whistle” player was associated with rock groups in her early singing career but had a strong leaning towards blues which led her to the Kerries.

Lennie McIlhone lead singer. Had a solid grounding in songs from Northern Ireland where he comes from, Lenny also plays guitar and sings group harmony.

Gibb Todd Versatile to say the least, plays banjo, tin whistle, mandolin and sings. He is the organiser/arranger of the group and is 27.

The Kerries were named after Kerry Todd, a Scotsman who settled in Coventry, England, in the 1950s.
They began as a family group with Father Kerry Todd and son Gibb Todd, son-in-law Ralph Overton, Lenny Mcllhone and the one and only but very female Gill Thurlow.

This Scottish group was formed when family sing songs in the Todd household led to pub sessions and an Irish social club before they started their own Folk Club, which in turn has booked every folk singer/group from Ireland, America and this country in the last two years. In 1966 they entered the “Killkenny Beer Festival” Folk Group Competition and won it out of 181 entrants.

 They changed their name from The Kerry Singers because it “sounded like that of a Concert Choir.” They cut their teeth in an Irish Social Club, where they played for three hours a night twice a week. Later they decided to run their own folk club” http://www.nigelgatherer.com/perf/group1/kerry.html


Coulter’s Candy / The Kerries.

The Kerries Gallon Of Whisky And A Barrel Of Beer B Side 1967


The Kerries – McTaggart


EARLY COVENTRY FOLK CLUBS
“In June 1964, the Tavern Folk Club opened and met every Sunday at the Swanswell Tavern. Ben Arnold was the compere and among the many acts establishing themselves were the Kerry Singers. The venue was short lived, although the club was successful; they moved to the Wine Lodge in the Burges and the club became known as Cofa’s Tree, deriving its name from the Anglo-Saxon name for the Coventry. The Kerries were the resident band and top guest artists were booked. In 1965 the Coventry Folk Club also moved, forsaking the Binley Oak for the larger and more centrally located Craven Arms in the High Street – know known as the Bear. However it only lasted at this venue for about a year, to be re-opened at the Queen’s Inn, Primrose Hill St in September 1967. Trhis didn’t last long either. As the folk scene developed and became more complex with a bigger choice of clubs facing the audience and more and more musicians getting involved with them, it was probably inevitable that some of the venues would change more rapidly. ” Ben ArnoldFolk Crying Out Loud (Coventry folk magazine 1967) quote in Pete Willow’s later Cov folk magazine Folks and viewable on this site here http://coventryfolkclubs.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/the-history-of-coventry-folk-clubs-part.html

Kerry Todd himself played guitar and sang harmony; he was reluctant to take lead vocals as his voice “isn’t what it used to be”. The group’s leader and arranger was Kerry’s son Gibb Todd who played banjo, mandolin and whistle. Ralph Overton played guitar (and was engaged to Gibb’s sister!). Singer Gill Thurlow was poached from rock and blues singing, and even played tin whistle when she wasn’t singing. Finally, Ulsterman Lennie McIlhone completed the group, playing guitar and singing lead and harmony vocals.” Gill Thurlow, who later married David McWilliams of “Days of Pearly Spencer” fame.

The Kerries recorded one LP that I know about on the Major Minor label in the summer of 1967. Gibb Todd remained in the folk scene, touring the world with various groups and ensembles. He has been a regular at Glasgow’s Celtic Connections festival, hosting the Open Stage feature initiated by Danny Kyle. He released his first solo recording, Connected, in 1999, followed by Goin’ Home in 2004.

Albums and Singles
The Kerries: The Kerries (Major Minor Records MMLP9, 1967)




Side One: Coulter’s Candy; Big Mansion Hoose; McTaggart (The Kerries); He Wrapped Me In His Coat; The Gallows Tree; Bonny Laddy; Oh dear What Will I Do; Gallant Forty Twa
Side Two: A Gallon of Whisky and a Barrel of Beer (D Behan); Bonny Lass o’ Fyvie O; Follow the Rovin’ Ploughboy; Never Wed An Old Man; Coory Doon (McGinn); Will Ye Go Lassie Go; Bonny Lass; I’ll Tell Me Ma.


The Kerries: Coulter’s Candy (Major Minor Records MM541, 1967 – 45rpm single)
Side One: Coulter’s Candy
Side Two: A Gallon of Whisky and a Barrel of Beer (D Behan);

Lochan: Lochan (Celtic Music CM018, 1983)
Side One: Someday We’ll See Them (Alex Campbell)/Battle o’ the Somme; O Gin I Were a Baron’s Heir; Sandy Anderson; The Dark Island (MacLachlan)/MacLeod o’ Mull/Barbara’s Jig; The Man You Don’t Meet Everyday
Side Two: Blue Bonnets Ower the Boder/Pibroch o’ Donald Dhu; The Lea Rig; Songs o’ Glencoe; Drummond Castle Laudry; Carraighdoun; Kate Dalrymple/Minnie Hynd; Scotland the Whitt??


Gibb Todd: Connected (Lochshore CDLDL1292, 2000)

Lonely Belnahua; Someday We’ll See Them; No More Stravaigin’; My Love is Like a Red Red Rose; The Final Trawl; Do You Think I Do Not Know; Sister Maureens Waltz; The Last Of The Tinkler; George Campbell; Blackwaterside; Scarborough Settlers Lament; Carrickfergus; Will Ye No Come Back Again



Gibb Todd: Goin’ Home (Compass Records 4374, 2004)

Bell of Byron Bay; Where the Bangelows Are; The Band Played Waltzing Matilda; The Last Trip Home; Don’t Put Taxes on the Women; Canada; Come All Ye Fair and Tender Ladies; Goin’ Home; Strong Women Rule Us All; Cape Cod Girls; Norlin’ Wind.

Sources – 


Info and photo The Dubliner’s site http://itsthedubliners.com/ref_prog_1967_cp.htm


Coventry Folk Clubs – Ben Arnold from an early Coventry folk magazine Folk Crying Out Loud 1967 – via a later article on Coventry folk History by Pete Willow in his magazine Folks c 1978 and reprodcued on this blog here http://coventryfolkclubs.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/the-history-of-coventry-folk-clubs-part.html
Lenny Mcllhone – Photo from Myra Butler Taken Glascote Lock Cottage Back Garden mid 90’s

Tavern Folk Club – Swanswell Tavern, Coventry




Gill Thurlow married David McWilliams who recorded the single Days of Pearly Spencer. A biography of him can be found here http://www.davidmcwilliams.com/biography.htm



Between 1972 and 1974 three albums were released: “Lord Offally” (released on Pye in the US) with front

David McWilliams
Gill Thurlow (McWilliams)


and back cover artwork and inner sleeve photo by Gil McWilliams (Thurlow) (David’s first wife, who met him while working as a singer with The Kerries)
.