Origins Many of the English folk musicians who emerged in the early 1960s as part of the
Second British folk revival began their careers in the short-lived
skiffle craze of the later 1950s and as a result were familiar with American blues, folk and jazz styles. Initially they copied these styles, occasionally using open D and G tunings, but by the early 1960s a distinctive way of playing acoustic guitar began to emerge as performers like
Davy Graham and
Martin Carthy attempted to apply these styles to the playing of traditional English
modal music. They were soon followed by artists such as
Bert Jansch and
John Renbourn, who further defined the style. A landmark in this early period was the release, by
Topic, of the
EP 3/4 A.D by
Alexis Korner and Davy Graham in April 1962. This includes the instrumental "
Angi" which was to become Graham's best-known composition, as well as the title track "3/4 A.D.", named after its time signature and the initials of the two performers. This instrumental piece took its inspiration from jazz sources such as
Miles Davis and
Charles Mingus, but was in the form of an acoustic guitar duet by Korner and Graham—one of the earliest recordings of folk baroque. The sleeve notes by Korner struggled to classify the music but twice resort to the term "baroque".
Development While Graham mixed this with a swathe of Indian, African, American, Celtic and modern and traditional American influences, Carthy in particular used the tuning in order to replicate the drone of
uilleann pipes,
hurdy-gurdy or the
fiddle found in British medieval and folk music, played by the thumb on the two lowest strings. The style was further developed by Jansch, who brought a more forceful style of picking and, indirectly, influences from jazz and ragtime, leading particularly to more complex basslines. Renbourn built on all these trends and was the artist whose repertoire was most influenced by Medieval and Renaissance music. In the early 1970s, the next generation of British artists added new tunings and techniques, reflected in the work of artists like
Nick Drake,
Tim Buckley and particularly
John Martyn, whose
Solid Air (1972) set the bar for subsequent British acoustic guitarists. Perhaps the most prominent exponent of recent years has been
Martin Simpson, whose complex mix of traditional English and American material, together with innovative arrangements and techniques like the use of guitar slides, represents a deliberate attempt to create a unique and personal style. ==Significance==