East Anglia Festival Like many regions of England there are few distinctive local instruments and many songs were shared with the rest of Britain and with Ireland, although the distinct dialects of the regions sometimes lent them a particular stamp and, with one of the longest coastlines of any English region, songs about the sea were also particularly important. Along with the West Country, this was one of the regions that most firmly adopted reed instruments, producing many eminent practitioners of the melodeon from the mid-19th century. Also like the West Country it is one of the few regions where there is still an active tradition of
step dancing and like the Midlands the tradition of
Molly dance died out in the 1930s. The region was relatively neglected by folk song collectors of the first revival. Lucy Broadwood and Cecil Sharp collected in Cambridgeshire, as did and Vaughan Williams as well as in Norfolk and Essex from 1905, but most important regional figure was composer
Ernest John Moeran, who collected over 150 songs in Norfolk and Suffolk in the 1920s. The second folk revival led to the discovery of many East Anglian folk musicians, including Suffolk melodeon player Oscar Woods, Norfolk singers
Sam Larner (1878–1965),
Harry Cox (1885–1971) and
Walter Pardon (1914–96); Suffolk fiddler Harkie Nesling (1890–1978); Suffolk singer and bargeman
Bob Roberts (1907–82), many of whom recorded for
Topic Records. Perhaps the most influential folk dance musical album was
English Country Dance Music (1965), put together by Reg Hall and Bob Davenport with largely Norfolk musicians, it was the first instrumental recording of folk instruments. The Norfolk melodeon player and singer Tony Hall has given the tradition a unique style. East Anglia made a contribution to the British folk rock scene of the 1970s, producing the short-lived, but more recently reformed, bands Midwinter and Stone Angel, based in
Great Yarmouth and the more successful
Spriguns of Tolgus from Cambridge, who produced four albums. The most successful folk artists from the region in recent years are probably the Essex born
Billy Bragg and the Norfolk born
Beth Orton. The region is home to numerous folk clubs and hosts many folk festivals, including Steeleye Span's Spanfest at
Kentwell Hall, Suffolk and the
Cambridge Folk Festival, generally seen as the most prestigious in the calendar.
The Midlands Due to its lack of clear boundaries and a perceived lack of identity in its folk music, the
English Midlands attracted relatively little interest in the early revivals. However, in more recent years a distinct cultural heritage has been recognised including unique folk traditions and songs, many associated with the regions industrial connections. It has also produced a number of important performers and some particular local instruments, such as the Lincolnshire
bagpipes, however the last player, John Hunsley, died in the 19th century and no actual examples of the pipes have survived. From the 19th century the instruments used appear to have been much like those in other regions, with fiddles, accordions and eventually silver and brass. Although, some traditions, like
Molly dance died out in the 1930s, the Midlands retained strong traditions of both ceremonial and social dance, particularly in the south Midlands and
Cotswolds and in the distinctive
Border Morris from Herefordshire, Worcestershire and Shropshire. Folk song collecting in the first revival was much less comprehensive than for many other regions. In the 1860s Llewellynn Jewitt, collected songs from Derbyshire, and some songs were printed by Georgina F. Jackson in her study of Shropshire folk lore. Cecil Sharp's interest in the region was largely confined to the south, particularly the
Cotswold morris villages of Oxfordshire and Warwickshire, which provided him with an archetype of English ceremonial dance. It was not until the early 1970s that the broader heritage of the region, including the many industrial and work songs associated with mining or
The Potteries, began to gain serious attention. Despite this neglect there was an active folk scene in the region, which produced several key artists of the second revival from the 1960s, including
Anne Briggs from Nottinghamshire,
The Settlers from the
West Midlands and from Birmingham one of the most influential groups of the period, the Ian Campbell Folk Group, which numbered among its members later British folk rock musicians
Dave Swarbrick and
Dave Pegg. Birmingham's position as a centre for folk music has been emphasised by its place as the home of the
Birmingham Conservatoire Folk Ensemble, led by former
Albion Band fiddler Joe Broughton, which provides something of a clearing house of promising young folk musicians. The regions has numerous folk clubs and host many major folk festivals, including those of
Gainsborough, Lincolnshire;
Loughborough, Leicestershire;
Shrewsbury, Shropshire;
Warwick, Warwickshire; and
Moseley, West Midlands.
The North West Although relatively neglected in the first folk revival
North West England had a rich tradition of balladry stretching back at least to the 17th century and sharing in the tradition of
Border ballads, including perhaps the finest '
The Ballad of Chevy Chase', thought to have been composed by the Lancashire-born sixteenth century minstrel Richard Sheale. With a variety of dialects and acting as something of a crossroads for the cultures and immigrants of England, Scotland and Ireland, there is a distinctive local character to folk music, which expressed itself in local enthusiasm that emerged as a major factor within the wider folk movement in the second revival. The key event in the history of folk music in the counties of the north west of England was the Industrial Revolution, which divided the region economically and culturally into a northern, often highland and pastoral region, in Westmorland and Cumberland and a more urbanised and industrialised southern zone with large and growing conurbations like Manchester and Liverpool, where changing social and economic patterns emerged in new traditions and styles of folk song, often linked to migration and patterns of work, these included processional dances, often associated with rushbearing and the
Wakes Week festivities and types of
step dance, most famously
clog dancing. These were very different from the styles of dance that collectors like Cecil Sharp had encountered in the Cotswolds and were largely dismissed by him as contaminated by urbanisation, yet they were, and remain, a thriving tradition of music and dance. Most of these works, although important in unearthing, and in some cases preserving, locally relevant ballads, largely depended on manuscript sources, rather than oral collection and often did not give tunes, but only lyrics. The region produced no significant bands in the folk rock movement of the 1970s but can claim one of the most significant figures, as Maddy Prior was brought up in Blackpool. However, perhaps the most influential folk artists to emerge from the region in this period were folk troubadour
Roy Harper and comedian and broadcaster
Mike Harding. More recently it has produced some significant performers including guitarist
Ken Nicol and mother and daughter singer songwriters
Chris and
Kellie While. The region is home to numerous folk clubs, many of them catering to Irish and Scots folk. Folk festivals include the Fylde Folk Festival at
Fleetwood in Lancashire.
Northumbria Northumbria possesses a distinctive style of folk music with a flourishing and continuing tradition. The short-lived
Northumbrian Small Pipes Society was founded in Newcastle in 1893 and the
Northumbrian Pipers' Society in 1928, and they are generally credited with keeping the distinctive tradition alive. Border ballads were a major part of those collected by
Francis James Child and make up most of the sixth volume of his ten volume collection of
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads (1882–98). The second folk revival saw a number of acts drawing on this work, and enjoying some success. Probably the most influential piper at that time was
Billy Pigg.
The South East Even excluding Sussex and London,
South-east England has been one of the key areas of English folk music and collection. It had retained a strong tradition of wassailing, and seafaring songs were important in the coastal counties of Kent and Hampshire. Arguably the published collection of oral material was made in this area by John Broadwood, as
Old English Songs, As Now Sung by the Peasantry of the Weald of Surrey and Sussex (1843). When the first revival was at its height in the first decade of the 20th century, George Gardiner and Alice Gillington both collected songs in Hampshire, Lucy Broadwood in Surrey, Hampshire and Oxfordshire,
Alfred Williams in Oxfordshire and Berkshire and Cecil Sharp in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, and Kent. In the second folk revival the region contributed several figures, with probably the most important being Martin Carthy from Hertfordshire. The most significant British folk rock group from the region were the
Oyster Band, formed in Canterbury, while guitarist John Martyn came from Surrey and fiddle player Chris Leslie from Banbury in Oxfordshire. From the current crop of young folk musicians probably the most prominent are
Spiers and Boden from Oxfordshire and
Chris Wood, born in Kent. The region is host to numerous folk clubs, and festivals, including the Oxford festival and Fairport's Cropredy Convention in Oxfordshire and St Albans in Hertfordshire. The capital is home to the Folk-Song Society and the English Folk Dance Society since the late 19th century (now known as the
English Folk Dance and Song Society), but the most distinctive genre of London music, its many
street cries, were not considered folk music by mainstream collectors and were recorded and published by figures such as Andrew White in
Old London Street Cries ; and, The Cries of To-day (1885). Both Ewan MacColl and A. L. Lloyd gravitated to London in the 1950s, it was the base of Topic Records and it was there that the first folk clubs were formed before they spread out across the country. More recent performers of folk music include
Noah and the Whale, Emma Lee Moss,
Mumford and Sons,
The Border Surrender and
Anna Tam.
Sussex Sussex has disproportionately affected the history of English folk music. This was due to a flourishing tradition of
folk dance,
mummers plays and folk song, but also in part because of the rural nature of the county in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and yet its relatively close proximity to London. It was thus a rich and convenient place for the collectors of the first folk song revival, including
Kate Lee,
Lucy Broadwood and W. P. Merrick. Sussex material was used by the composers of the English pastoral school, for example in
Percy Grainger's arrangement of 'The Sussex Mummers' Christmas Carol',
Ralph Vaughan Williams' use of the tune '
Monk's Gate' as a setting for
John Bunyan's '
To be a Pilgrim' and
George Butterworth's arrangement of 'Folk Songs from Sussex'. Most important of the collector's sources were the
Copper Family of
Rottingdean, who emerged as authorities on folk song and eventually as major recording artists. Sussex folk song also had a formative effect on one of the major figures of the second revival, as it was as a child of five in Sussex that A. L. Lloyd first heard folk music. Other performers include
Scan Tester,
Henry Burstow and the sisters
Dolly and
Shirley Collins. Sussex songs were also the foundation of the repertoire of the influential
Young Tradition. The county has over twenty folk clubs and other venues hosting folk music by organisations such as Acoustic Sussex. There are also annual folk music festivals at
Eastbourne,
Crawley and
Lewes.
The West Country Cornwall The music of
Cornwall is often noted for its similarity to that of
Brittany and, as a result of the close physical and cultural ties between the two peninsulas, some older songs and carols share the same root as
Breton tunes. From the late Middle Ages the
fiddle (
crowd in Cornish),
bombarde (
horn-pipe),
bagpipes and
harp all seem to have been used in music. The
Cornish bagpipes died out, as elsewhere in southern England, in the 16th century, but have recently been re-created. From the mid-19th century
accordions became progressively more popular as a folk instrument in the county, as in the rest of the West Country. There is long and varied history of
Cornish dance from the medieval period, with records of strong traditions of
morris dancing,
mumming,
guise dancing, and
social dance. These seem to have been interrupted by the
Reformation and
Civil War and Commonwealth in the 16th and 17th centuries. However, there was revival from the late 18th century and seasonal and community festivals, mumming and
guising all flourished. In the 19th century a strong tradition of nonconformity and temperance may also have affected dancing and music adversely and encouraged choral and brass band movements, while traditional tunes were used for carols. Some community events survived, such as the
'Obby 'Oss festival in
Padstow and the
Furry Dance in
Helston. Folk songs include '
Sweet Nightingale', '
Little Eyes', and '
Lamorna'. '
Trelawny' is often sung at sporting events and is seen by many as an unofficial anthem. Few traditional Cornish lyrics survived the decline of the language, but in some cases lyrics of common English songs became attached to older Cornish tunes. Some folk tunes have Cornish lyrics written since the language revival of the 1920s. The Cornwall Folk Festival has been held annually for more than three decades.
The rest of the West Country Outside Devon and Cornwall Celtic influence on music in the
West Country is much less obvious, but folk music still retains many distinctive local characteristics. As in Cornwall there are very strong traditions of folk dance and mumming, the best known being the
Hobby horse celebrations at
Minehead in Somerset. The maritime heritage of Devon made sea shanties, hornpipes and naval or sea ballads important parts of regional folk music. Other collectors included Henry and Robert Hammond in Dorset, the Reverend Geoffrey Hill in Wiltshire, Percy Grainger in Gloucestershire and, perhaps the most famous, Ralph Vaughan Williams' '
Folk Songs from Somerset', which provided themes for his
English Folk Song Suite. In the second folk revival the most famous West country musicians were melodeon-player Bob Cann and writer, performer and broadcaster Cyril Tawney, 'The Father of the West Country Folk Revival'. In the 1970s there were figures such as Tony Rose. The same period saw one of the most surprising hybrids in music history
Scrumpy and Western with bands like
the Wurzels and
The Yetties, who took most of the elements of West Country folk music for comical folk-style songs with affectionate parodies of more mainstream musical genres, delivered in local
West Country dialects. More seriously, the West Country and particularly Devon, have produced some of the most successful folk artists of recent years, including
Show of Hands, Mark Bazeley and Jason Rice, Paul Downes,
Jim Causley,
Seth Lakeman and his brothers. The region has numerous folk clubs and annual festivals, including those at Portsmouth and the first modern English folk festival to be established at
Sidmouth in Devon along with its associated 'Late Night Extra' venue at
Bulverton .
Yorkshire Yorkshire has a rich heritage of folk music and folk dance including the
Long Sword dance. Folk songs were collected there from the 19th century but, though it probably had more attention than other Northern counties, its rich heritage of industrial folk song was relatively neglected. It was not until the second revival in the 1950s that Nigel and Mary Hudleston began to attempt to redress the balance, collecting Yorkshire songs between 1958 and 1978. Yorkshire folk song is often described as lacking the highly distinctive instrumental traditions found in areas such as
Northumbria, although bagpipes such as
pastoral pipes were recorded in the region, these appear to have died out during the 19th century.Alongside this, the Yorkshire fiddle playing has been described as occupying an intermediate position between the Northumbrian tradition and more Southern English/Midlands styles. The tradition has chiefly associated with the use of dialect, particularly in the West Riding, as exemplified by the song On Ilkla Moor Baht 'at, probably written in the later 19th century and using a Kent folk tune (almost certainly borrowed via a Methodist hymnal), but widely regarded as an unofficial Yorkshire anthem. Many Yorkshire folk songs were not entirely unique in origin, reflecting a broader pattern of melodic adaptation common across British and European folk traditions, as with probably the most commercially successful Yorkshire song,
Scarborough Fair recorded by
Simon & Garfunkel, which was a version of the Scottish ballad '
The Elfin Knight'. The most famous folk performers from the county are
the Watersons from
Hull, who began recording Yorkshire versions of folk songs from 1965. Other Yorkshire folk musicians include Heather Wood (born 1945) of the
Young Tradition, the short-lived folk rock group
Mr Fox (1970–2),
The Deighton Family,
Julie Matthews,
Kathryn Roberts, Barnsley comedy folk band
The Bar-Steward Sons of Val Doonican and the
Mercury Prize nominated
Kate Rusby. In 2007, the Yorkshire Garland Group was formed to make Yorkshire folk songs accessible online and in schools. ==See also==