To purchase items on this page just click on the link to download an order form. All you need to do then is fill it in and return it with cheque to the enclosed address
To purchase items on this page just click on the link to download an order form. All you need to do then is fill it in and return it with cheque to the enclosed address
Paul & Liz Davenport - Songbooks
HATRCD02
Sheffield has quietly become a bastion of folk music, and two of its foremost defenders are Paul and Liz Davenport, a Hull-bred singing couple with a deep love of traditional song. They are confident singers solo and in harmony. Their son Gavin lends his voice to this 53 minute CD, while Richard Arrowsmith plays melodeon on two songs. Gavin and Richard are members of Sheffield-based bands Crucible and Hekety.
I reviewed their previous album, Under the Leaves for TLT. This one also displays their pleasure in the grand old songs and ballads, their willingness to tweak them here and there and their interest in unusual variants or tune settings. For instance, there’s a great version of The Unquiet Grave, which turns it into a perfect chorus song. I was also delighted with Paul’s beautifully-phrased singing of Died for Love, a lesser known version of A Sailor’s Life from the singing of Joseph Taylor via Mike Waterson. Paul shows his ability to write within the tradition in The House that Jack Built and The Mermaid.
There are dark tales aplenty, with much evidence of humankind’s cruelties. But there is light as well as shade, and many songs have a singaround feel to them. I’m sure they’ve been heard in many a Sheffield pub. Two of the best are about country life; a Hampshire version of Stormy Winds; and The Guist Ploughman, a sowing song by Mike Barber. There are also two pieces of Victorian melodrama – one about Grace Darling, the other from the Indian Mutiny by Captain Darling (evidently not just a character from Blackadder goes Forth).
The photographs for Songbooks fit the title. Maybe they were taken in the Vaughan-Williams Memorial Library at Cecil Sharp House, or maybe they show a private library to die for. I’d ask to have those books as a Christmas present, but Paul and Liz are more deserving. They are steeped in this stuff and in helping to keep the tradition fresh through their research, their respectful refashioning and their community-based approach.
Tony Hendry
The Living Tradition – Issue 83
Publications
and Sales
Although we perform songs in the tradition and can be booked on very reasonable terms to entertain with a range of unusual material including some very powerful ballads, we also publish books and other materials to inform and enhance performance including some books of unusual and rare tunes from manuscript
South Riding
Tunebooks I & II
Dec 1997
South Riding
Songbook
March 1998
The Urban
Fiddler
June 2001
Kilvington’s
Country
Dances
May 1999
Played in
Sheffield
July 2002
Under the Leaves HATRCD01
Our first album is still available. This venture features a selection of songs which we have been singing for some time and includes both traditional songs together with a couple of our ‘family’ items.
Our new offering is called ‘Songbooks’ and contains a total of eighteen tracks of traditional and modern songs in the traditional style.
See the review below – one of many accolades.
Then see us and get your copy!