Ian Campbell—vocals
Lorna Campbell—vocals
John Dunkerley—vocals, banjo, guitar, accordian, dulcimer, piano
Brian Clark—vocals, guitar
On this record they are assisted by Spike Heatley on double
bass and Derek Craft on flute and piccolo.
Sleeve Notes:
This record is produced in conjunction with a series of thirteen
television programmes from ATV. Ian Campbell, who devised and
presented the series, opened programme one with the following
statement:
In these programmes we are going to take a look at the changes
in social life brought about by the great upheaval we now know
as the Industrial Revolution. Unfortunately the people who were
most effected by these changes - the ordinary working people
were the inarticulate and the illiterate who were least likely
to have committed their reactions to paper for the benefit of
posterity.
They were not absolutely without means of expression, however;
they found a voice in their songs. Not only the traditional
folksongs of the purely oral culture, but also the songs that
they made their own by adoption, selected from the offerings of
the street ballad sellers and the music halls. In this series we
intend to let the working man speak to us through his songs.
Here is a selection of songs from the series, at least one from
each programme. The record is intended not only for those who
enjoyed the series and wish to have a more permanent momento,
but also for all those who appreciate good songs well sung and
who have come to realise that traditional songs have qualities
that go far beyond entertainment and mere diversion. Each of
these songs is a message from the past, from the mouths and
hearts of ordinary people who realised that in the conditions of
their life and work there was something to sing about.
Side One
1. Series signature tune. The Apprentice Song. (I. Campbell)
2. The Ox-plough Song. (Trad.)
Like the one which follows, this song reflects the static and
orderly rural society which was to be disrupted by the
industrial revolution. Land was the basis of wealth, the land
worker was the pillar on which a stable society depended. Every
man knew his place and was expected to be satisfied in it. The
rhythm of life and work was as regular and predictable as the
seasons of the year.
3. The Haymakers. (Trad.)
A beautiful and stately song, full of the sunshine that is
necessary for successful haymaking, and with that dreamlike
quality which in the listeners mind recreates a childhood
summer or some such golden age.
4. The Greasy Wheel. (Trad with words I. Campbell)
Collected in fragmentary form by Charles Parker of the BBC for a
radio programme about life on the narrow-boats, this song
captures the brief glory of the men who manned the steam barges
at the end of the last century. Their glory was brief because
the steam power which gave them their ascendancy had already, in
the form of the locomotive, made the canal system obsolete.
5. The Iron Horse. (Trad.)
This song records the wonder and awe of a simple rural Scot on
his first encounter with a steam loco. At a time when learned
men were debating whether the human frame could survive the
shock of travel at 30 mph the railway engine was indeed the
wonder of the age.
6. The Durham Lockout. (T. Armstrong)
One of the great songs written by Tommy Armstrong the collier
balladeer, this deals with the infamous occasion in 1892 when
Durham miners were locked out of the pits in order to force them
to accept a 10% cut in wages. After six weeks of hardship they
agreed to the cut but were told that it had been raised to 13
%. The miners refused to work on these terms, and the dispute
was eventually resolved when both sides agreed to the original
ten per cent reduction.
7. The Sheffield Grinder. (Trad.)
In the 1860s the Sheffield steel industry was notorious for the
abuse of child labour, made necessary by the underpricing of
Government contracts for Army goods. This song expresses the
bitter contempt of the Sheffield men for the Government enquiry
commission who reported that bad working conditions were largely
the fault of the workmen.
8. The Testimony of Patience Kershaw. (F. Higgins)
Although written fairly recently by Frank Higgins of Liverpool
this moving song is based very literally on the actual evidence
given by young Patience Kershaw before the Government Commission
of Enquiry into Child Labour in 1842. As a result of the enquiry
in that same year an Act of Parliament prohibited the
underground employment in the mines of women and boys under ten
years old.
9. Medley of Childrens Street Songs. (Trad.)
A remarkable indication of the strength and tenacity of oral
culture is provided by the subculture of our schoolchildren. A
vast store of street games, satirical and ribald songs and
rhymes, legalistic rituals for the claiming and transferring of
property, sexual and social lore and superstition is learned
from older brothers and sisters and duly passed on to the next
school generation purely by oral transmission. The selection of
street songs given here is from Aberdeen, Birmingham and London
and was gleaned from the recollections of the members of the
Group.
Side Two
1. The Flash Frigate. (Compiled by Hugill)
Not a shanty, this song comes from the Royal Navy of the 1850s
and gives a very clear picture of the rough discipline and hard
labour of life before the mast in a ship of the line.
2. Ask a Pliceman. (Rogers and Durandeau.)
Nowadays most people retain of this song only the first chorus
line and a vague memory of the tune; the implication of human
frailty or even corruption in the police force is late Victorian
music hall, however, it was a common belief that no drunk taken
in charge could hope to retain his watch and chain, and that
every bobby consequently owned several.
3. Rigs of London Town. (Trad.)
In the Victorian age with its astounding hypocracy popular art
was presenting a picture of the ideal woman as a delicate
creature who blushed at a mans smile and trembled at his frown,
and got the vapours at the sight of a naked-table leg. The legal
possession of her husband, her only interest was his domestic
comfort and the bearing and rearing of his children. Meanwhile
for the majority of working-class women life was an unending
drudgery from childhood to premature old age, stunted or even
deformed by the conditions of life and work in the mines and
mills of the industrial towns, marriage bringing merely the
brief interruptions of frequent child-birth and the occasional
surviving child to share the degradation. The only alternative
open to a poor woman was prostitution, and surprisingly few took
advantage of it. The common attitude to tarts expressed in this
song may explain why.
4. No Courage in Him. (Trad.)
The sentimental view of marriage found in drawing-room songs or
music-hall numbers like My Old Dutch is seldom repeated in
traditional song. Wife-beating, wife-selling and Taming of the
Shrew themes in which a woman suffers indignity at her
husbands hands are common, and they find their inevitable
answer in those songs in which the woman uses her only and
ultimate weapon and emasculates her oppresser.
5. The Girl I Left Behind Me. (Trad.)
Any song which becomes popular with the army eventually gains a
wider circulation among the people, and every campaign produces
a hit song which is likely to outlive the political consequences
of the military action. Tipperary, the great marching song of
the army that fought the Kaiser, was given a new lease of life
among the squaddies who fought Hitler, and is now in circulation
all over Europe. Break the News to Mother was a popular
tearjerker in the American Civil War; the British army sang it
in the Boer War, and it can still be found in the repertory of
our country singers. The Girl I Left Behind Me is still one of
the most popular army songs ever, and can be reliably dated from
1758.
6. The Cutty Wren. (A. L. Lloyd.)
This song is said to have been sung by the insurgents during the
Peasants Revolt of 1381, although the words refer to a much
earlier ritual of pre-Christian origin. We can only guess at the
tune that was used at the time. Green Bushes, the eminently
suitable one given her, was put to the song by A. L. Lloyd.
7. Leave Them a Flower. (Wally Whyton).
On a theme which is growing in importance among contemporary
songwriters, this song is a plea for a change in our treatment
of the precious environment which we have in keeping for future
generations.
8. Signature Tune. The Apprentice Song (I. Campbell)