Alistair Watson—guitar & vocals
Alex Sutherland—guitar, tambourine & vocals
Dick Gaughan—mandolin & guitar
Jimmy Whiskers Greenan—whistle, boran, stylophone, spoons & forks
Les Honeyman—bass guitar & footbass
Take Me Back To The Jungle is a transition album in my collection
(don't know if it was for Matt) segue way between the Transatlantic years
and The Two Heided Man albums (Tinny Can On My Tail being the
other RCA release of this period). This is a splendid Matt album
with prime tracks that include: "Take Me Back To The Jungle,"
"With Fire And Sword," Have A Banana," "Cead Mile
Failte," "Tell Me What Tea Leaves Tell Me" (written for his
daughter Shonagh, I'm told).
Sleeve Notes:
The humour, uncanny perceptiveness and rare talents of Matt McGinn have made
him a household name in Scotland and in folk circles throughout
the world. It would be impossible to include a sample of all
Matt's natural gifts on one record, but a representative
cross-section are displayed here on his 'first RCA album. This
is certainly one of the most enjoyable recording sessions I have
worked on, and I hope the warm atmosphere Matt and his friends
created comes across to the listener. I hope also, that his many
fans agree with Matt when he says, "This is by far the best
album I've recorded to date". Matt McGinn is a native of
Gallowgate, one of Glasgow's less affluent areas, a bizarre part
of the old town in whose tenement closes and back courts grew
the seeds of his music, poetry, social observation and unique
humour. The eighth child in his family, Matt first saw the grey
light of the Gallowgate day in 1928, two years after the General
Strike. His childhood spanned the terrible Depression years of
the thirties, and in his early teens he lived through the
Second- World War and the drab, ration-book years that followed.
But the McGinn family was well accustomed to living on less than
the bare necessities of life long before food coupons were
introduced and the urchins of the tenements had to get their
"luxuries" the hard way, by raiding local dairies and bakers'
shops. The juvenile courts of the time had very definite ways of
treating these young unfortunates, and so Matt spent his 13th
and 14th birthdays in St. Mary's Remand Home, Bishopbriggs.
In April 1942, the liberated McGinn returned to the small room
and kitchen on the ground floor of the Gallowgate tenement,
which was his family home. Four days later, Matt's father died,
victim of a respiratory ailment, which was one of Glasgow's
plagues.
During the next four years, Matt moved from one job to another,
always hoping for that few extra bob to help his mother and the
other young McGinns. Then, partly due to the early influence of
his father, partly through the inquisitive awe inspired by
Glasgow's street corer soap-box orators, and partly due to the
bitter experiences of his own young life, Matt plunged sincerely
and deeply into back street politics. He also married and
settled into his own wee "single end" in the Gallowgate.
Other influences, broader and further seeking than those of the
Gallowgate thirties and forties, have made their mark on Matt
McGinn. His poems first became noticed in the early fifties, and
by the end of the decade, Matt's determination, natural gifts
and vision made him a prominent figure in the contemporary
Glasgow folk movement. His reputation spread to America where,
in 1962, he sang in a Carnegie Hall concert with Bob Dylan and
Pete Seeger. Today he is regarded as one of Britain's most
powerful folk writers with some 500 songs to his credit and, as
a performer of his inimitably potent songs; he is Scotland's
leading folksinger.
Matt McGinn has come a long way since the post-Depression years
in the Gallowgate, and yet he says... "TAKE ME BACK TO THE
JUNGLE". Perhaps the secret of Matt's success is that, deep
down, he never really left.