, 1957 Skiffle was a relatively obscure genre, and it might have been largely forgotten if not for its revival in the United Kingdom in the 1950s and the success of its main proponent,
Lonnie Donegan. British skiffle grew out of the developing post-war
British jazz scene, which saw a move away from
swing music and towards
trad jazz. Among these bands were
Bill Bailey Skiffle Group and
Ken Colyer's Jazzmen, a band formed by
Chris Barber. Lonnie Donegan played banjo for the Jazzmen, and also performed skiffle music during intervals. He would sing and play guitar with accompaniment of two other members, usually on
washboard and
tea-chest bass. They played a variety of American folk and blues songs, particularly those derived from the recordings of
Lead Belly, in a lively style that emulated American
jug bands. These were listed on posters as "skiffle" breaks, a name suggested by Ken Colyer's brother Bill after recalling the
Dan Burley Skiffle Group. After splitting from Barber, Donegan went on to make a series of popular records as "Lonnie Donegan's Skiffle Group", with successes including "
Cumberland Gap" (1957), "
Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavour" (1958) and "
My Old Man's a Dustman" (1960).
Johnny Duncan and the Bluegrass Boys, and
the Vipers, but the main impact of skiffle was as a grassroots amateur movement, particularly popular among
working class men, who could cheaply buy, improvise, or build their own instruments and who have been seen as reacting against the drab austerity of post-war Britain. The craze probably reached its height with the broadcasting of the BBC TV programme
Six-Five Special from 1957. It was the first British youth music programme, using a skiffle song as its title music and showcasing many skiffle acts. By the end of 1958, the boom was over as enthusiasts either abandoned music for more stable employment or moved into some of the forms of music that it had first suggested, including folk, blues and rock and roll. As a result, it has been seen as a critical stepping stone to the second folk revival, blues boom and the
British Invasion of the US popular music scene. It has been estimated that in the late 1950s, there were 30,000–50,000 skiffle groups in Britain. Sales of guitars grew rapidly, and other musicians were able to perform on improvised bass and percussion in venues such as church halls and cafes and in the flourishing coffee bars of
Soho, London, like
the 2i's Coffee Bar,
the Cat's Whisker and nightspots like Coconut Grove and Churchill's, without having to aspire to musical perfection or virtuosity. Most notably,
the Beatles developed from
John Lennon's 1957 skiffle group
the Quarrymen;
Paul McCartney was added after a few months and
George Harrison joined in 1958. In a 2010 radio interview,
Tony Sheridan recalls his encounter with skiffle: "I always felt a bit out of place anyway. So when the puberty thing started,
Lonnie Donegan came along, I think it was the end of '55, early '56.
Rock Island Line. All I heard was the beginning [of the song]... It sort of turned a switch in me. I'm sure
John Lennon on the other side of the country, in
Liverpool, I'm sure he felt something very, very similar... the first time he heard Donegan. It was usually Donegan with us, you know, before
Elvis." During summer 1970, the skiffle-like song "
In the Summertime" by British band
Mungo Jerry reached the top of the charts in several countries around the world. In 2017, performer
Billy Bragg's book
Roots, Radicals and Rockers, a history of the skiffle movement, was published. Bragg has compared the development of skiffle in Britain in the 1950s to
punk rock in the 1970s, noting that skiffle was a revolt by young people against the culture of their parents, and allowed them to create their own style of music without expensive equipment or great musical virtuosity. ==References==