In 1956
Philip Donnellan, then a radio producer for
BBC Birmingham, met Larner in a pub. Donellan was looking for traditional singers to take part in radio programmes and recorded about 25 songs and speech from Larner in 1957 and 1958, using the material in two programmes,
Coast and Country: The Wash (broadcast in 1957) and
Down to the Sea (1959). Donellan brought him to the attention of
Ewan MacColl,
Peggy Seeger and
Charles Parker who were engaged in producing the first of the innovatory
radio ballads which used songs, sound effects and music combined with the voices of people involved in an industry or common experience. Larner took part in the third programme in the series,
Singing the Fishing, about the East Coast fishing industry. MacColl's song "
The Shoals of Herring", which describes a fisherman's progress from cabin boy to deckhand, largely based on Larner's life, was written for the programme.
Singing the Fishing won the
Prix Italia for radio documentary in October 1960. MacColl and Seeger recorded more material from Larner and he performed in their Ballads and Blues Club in London. In 1961
Now is the Time for Fishing, an LP using some of the songs and speech they had recorded, was released by
Folkways Records. In 1964 he was featured with fellow Norfolk singer
Harry Cox in a TV film by Philip Donnellan,
The Singer and the Song; this was released as an LP in 1966. ==Death==