the Ian Campbell Folk Group

The Rights Of Man
1966 — Elektra EKL 309 LP

Side One
Canny Miner Lad [2]
Come Kiss Me Love [1]
Death Come Easy
The Rights Of Man
Liverpool Lullaby
Four Pounds A Day
The Net Hauling Song

Side Two
Marilyn Monroe
Dirty Old Town
Thirty-Foot Trailer
My Donal
Battle Of The Somme
Hard Life On The Cut
Across The Hills [1]

Credits

Ian Campbell: Vocals
Lorna Campbell: Vocals
Brian Clark: Vocals, Guitar, Autoharp
John Dunkerley: Banjo, Guitar
Dave Swarbrick: Fiddle, Viola, Mandolin

a TRANSATLANTIC recording, England produced by Nathan Josseph
U.S. production supervisor Jac Holzman
Cover Photo: John Adams
Cover Design: William S. Harvey

Notes

It appears that The Rights of Man is the US release of Contemporary Campbells. However, there are 3 songs (The Dove, Bloody Orkney, D Day Dodgers) from Contemporary omitted and 3 songs from other ICFG albums (see below) are included.

1 Across the Hills
2 Coaldust Ballads

Sleeve Notes

Britains Ian Campbell Folk Group, if a quick hearing…is representative, may be the most exciting new folk group in years.

Thats what New York Times folk music critic Robert Shelton wrote when he first encountered the Ian Campbell aggregation — and he may not be too far wrong. There is something undeniably charming about British folk music groups that somehow doesnt carry over into the majority of our own, a certain gentleness and sweetness and just the right light touch that leaves everything tastefully and sensitively defined.

From the opening lilt of Davey Swarbrick's fiddle and the joyful tinkle of John Dunkerley's banjo, we know we are in capable hands, Ian Campbell and sister Lorna are urban singers who have studied the traditional nuance and mastered the graceful and elegant swing of British folk song. The Groups repertoire and musicianship are cut from the finest cloth; tradition and entertainment are the key words, and rarely have the two blended so honestly and pleasantly.

The Ian Campbell Folk Group may very well be the most exciting new folk group in years.

Paul Nelson


CANNY MINER LADDave Swarbrick, fiddle; John Dunkerley, banjo; Brian Clark, guitar; Ian Campbell, vocal
This was written for a TV programme on mining life and intended for use, one verse at a time, to connect the pictorial sequences. The tune is based on the traditional Balquidder Lasses.

COME KISS ME LOVEDave Swarbrick, mandolin; Brian Clark, autoharp; John Dunkerley, guitar; Lorna Campbell, vocal
The tune is derived from a Canadian song called Peggy Gordon, which is a variant of the English Banks of the Sweet Primroses. The words were compiled from several traditional sources.

DEATH COME EASYDave Swarbrick, mandolin; John Dunkerley, banjo; Brian Clark, guitar: Ian Campbell, vocal
Harvey Andrews, who wrote this song and many others, first sang them at our club in Birmingham, the Jug oPunch. He soon became a local celebrity, and is now becoming well known nationally through his concert performances and recordings. His songs are not much influenced by the folk tradition, but they present a very personal picture of life seen through the eyes of an urban Midlander.

THE RIGHTS OF MANDave Swarbrick, fiddle; John Dunkerley, banjo; Brian Clark, guitar
Although this is a traditional tune, it has become identified with the progressive movement in contemporary folk song, in that Dave Swarbrick has introduced it at many CND and Civil Rights concerts and events.

LIVERPOOL LULLABYJohn Dunkerley, banjo; Lorna Campbell, vocal
Stan Kelly escaped from Liverpool some time before the Beatles, and went to Cambridge University to become an expert in computer processing systems. While there he made a big impact on the British folk song revival, running one of the successful early clubs, and popularising his own, and many traditional, songs. Though his Liverpool origins show their influence in this song, the traditional lullaby of which it is a re-write actually comes from Tyneside.

FOUR POUNDS A DAYDave Swarbrick, mandolin; John Dunkerley, banjo; Brian Clark, guitar; Ian Campbell, vocal
Another Stan Kelly re-creation, this song was written when Stan was working on a building site before going to University. It seems to be a reaction against the tendency to romanticise the working man, detected by some in the work of MacColl-inspired contemporary songwriters, and is based on the pathetic folk song about child labour in the lead mines, Fourpence a day. Stans version has been called an affront to the dignity of labour, but he says, the lads on the site loved it.

THE NET HAULING SONGDave Swarbrick, fiddle; John Dunkerley, banjo; Brian Clark, guitar; Ian Campbell, vocal
The first time I ever sang on radio, was in the Parker and MacColl award-winning programme, Singin the Fishing. A unique group of leading jazz and folk musicians had been gathered together, and I vividly remember the exhilaration of the rehearsals when I first sang to the accompaniment provided by this great combination. It was perhaps the urge to re-create this exhilaration that encouraged me to form the Ian Campbell Folk Group. Net Hauling was the song I sang on that first occasion.

MARILYN MONROEDave Swarbrick, mandolin; Brian Clark, Guitar; John Dunkerley, auto harp; Lorna Campbell, vocal
I once watched a television documentary on M.M. which showed fiber becoming unhinged under the pressures of the publicity machine which ordered her existence. This song took on a new depth for me then, and I decided we should learn it. Sydney Carter wrote the words, and Rory McKwen put the tune to it.

DIRTY OLD TOWNJohn Dunkerley, guitar; Dave Swarbrick, mandolin; Brian Clark, vocal
A difficult song to perform well, because the tune has a quality which tends to make it sound like the background music for an old Western. Having overcome this, one finds a memorable song, full of the loneliness of the big city. I suppose one ought not be surprised to find it is written by Ewan MacColl.

THIRTY FOOT TRAILERDave Swarbrick, fiddle; John Dunkerley, banjo; Brian Clark, guitar; Ian Campbell, vocal
I lie influence of the British tradition is much more obvious in this other MacColl creation. It was written for The Travellers, one of the great series of radio ballad documentary programmes recorded for the BBC by MacColl, Peggy Seeger, and Charles Parker.

MY DONALDave Swarbrick, viola; Lorna Campbell, vocal
We first heard this sung by Glasgow singer Ray Fisher, who told us that it was written by her friend Owen Hand, from Edinburgh. At that time he was comparatively unknown, but since then he has become a popular figure in British folk clubs, as he sings just as well as he writes.

BATTLE OF THE SOMMEDave Swarbrick, fiddle; Brian Clark, guitar; John Dunkerley, banjo
Dave learnt this noble tune from his friend and teacher, Beryl Marriott, who, before emigrating to Canada, worked hard for many years, keeping traditional dance music alive in the Midlands of England. Dave says it was composed by the late Pipe Major Robertson of the Gordon Highlanders, an almost legendary figure in the world of piping, who created many other striking melodies. Some of them have had words put to them by Hamish Henderson.

HARD LIFE ON THE CUTDave Swarbrick, fiddle; John Dunkerley, banjo; Lorna Campbell, vocal
I wrote this for a Charles Parker documentary radio programme about canal life called Cry from the Cut. In our songbook we illustrated this song with an actual photograph of a commercial longboat being pulled along a canal by a bargee wife, while her husband handled the tiller

ACROSS THE HILLSDave Swarbrick, mandolin; John Dunkerley, banio; Brian Clark, guitar; Ian and Lorna Campbell, vocal
One of my favourite contemporary songs. Leon Rosselson who wrote it, seems to be strangely underrated. He is a fine musician and a sharp wit, and both qualities are reflected in his songs.

Song notes by Ian Campbell

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