The Hoot'nanny Show - Volume 1
1963—Waverley ZLP 2025 LP
Side One
Jug O Punch → Corrie Folk Trio & Paddie Bell
Leave Her Johnny → Ray and Archie Fisher
Poor Bill → Ray and Archie Fisher
What Have They Done to the Rain → Eleanor Leith
Still I Love Him → Eleanor Leith
Hanging Johnny → Corrie Folk Trio & Paddie Bell
Side Two
Finnegan's Wake → Corrie Folk Trio & Paddie Bell
She Moved Thro' the Fair → Paddie Bell
Puirt-a-beul → Dolina McLennan
Backgreen Ballad → Ray and Archie Fisher
I Aince Loved a Lad → Eleanor Leith
We Shall Overcome → Entire Cast
Credits
Corrie Folk Trio & Paddie Bell Ray and Archie Fisher
Eleanor Leith Dolina McLennan
Recorded at Leith Town Hall, November 1963
Produced and Introduced by W. Gordon Smith
Sleeve Notes
Scotland has given many things to mankind and if we seem to have colonised
the world the world must forgive us. We have been particularly
generous with our songs, sending their influential melodies and
rhythms into the folk cultures of many lands. In recent years it
is possible to argue that the success of Scottish folk-singers
on radio and television, the most persuasive of all the mass -
communication media has been the major factor in bringing a vast
new audience to the sort of folk-song recital from which these
recordings were taken. One has to think only of Ewan MacColls
prize-winning radio ballads, Rory and Alex McEwen blazing the
trail on " To-night," succeeded by Robin Hall and Jimmie
Macgregor, followed up fast by the Corrie Folk Trio and Paddie
Bell as the resident group on a highly successful network
series on BBC TV.
As it happens these recordings were made before "The Hoot'nanny
Show" appeared on television and planned long before that. For
over a decade hoot'n-anny has been the traditional title for a
folk-song sing-around. But, inevitably, all the artists on this
disc and many of the songs have appeared on the television show.
And of course the audience, an integral part of any folksong
performance, also comes from Edinburgh. We can thank the
Edinburgh Festival and its basement sideshows for the fact that
the Scottish capital now ranks with Liverpool and Greenwich
Village as one of the capitals of the folk world.
The Corrie Folk Trio and Paddie Bell, led by Bill Smith, begin
Side 1 with that rollicking piece of Irish whimsey. Jug o*
Punch. This is typical of their treatment of a standard folk
number — dynamic, fresh, and delivered with great gusto.
Ray and Archie Fisher have established themselves as a
compelling brother and sister duet. Ray's voice, carrying as it
does some of the earthy drive of the late Edith Piafs is ideally
suited to Leave Her Johnny, a strident song of the sea. Archie
explains what they have done to Poor Bill.
One of the most successful of the young singers from the
northeast of Scotland - always a stronghold of folk
performers—is Eleanor Leith. Unlike many Scots singers, however,
she has brought the songs of many lands into her repertoire. On
Side 1 she sings the modern song What Have They Done to the Rain
alongside the traditional Still I Love Him.
The Corrie Trio and Paddie return to close the side with Roy
Williamson on concertina and leading Hanging Johnny. Ronnie
Browne and the other Corries get Side 2 off to a rumbustious
start with Finnegan's Wake. Of all the great comic Irish songs
this one is amongst the best, with its strong narrative, jigging
choruses, and disconcerting good humour. Another great Irish
song. She Moved Thro' the Fair, is a real test for any singer
and Paddie Bell's performance of it reveals all of its haunting
beauty and sadness.
The Gaelic culture still survives in Scotland and is
represented here by Dolina McLennan who comes from the Outer
Hebrides. Dolina sings traditional peurt a beul and follows up
with a Lowland lyric Dee an Auld Maid in a Garret, a song of
working-class Glasgow.
From the same scene comes Backgreen Ballad, a comic fragment,
which Ray and Archie Fisher remember from their childhood
around the close-mouths of Glasgow. Eleanor Leith returns to
sing I Aince Loved a Lad, and Ray Fisher leads the company and
the audience in We Shall Overcome, the "freedom song" of the
American negroes, which Ray has sung so often and well that it
is now identified with her all over Britain.