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Jean Redpath

 
Artist: Jean Redpath

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Robert Burns, Dave Whyte, Jim Reid

Worked With:

Abby Newton, Serge Hovey
  • Born: April 28, 1937, Edinburgh, Scotland
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: World
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Song of the Seals", "First Flight", "Lowlands
  • Representative Songs: "Lassie Wi' the Yellow Coatie", "Blackwaterside", "Rose of Allandale

Biography

Blessed with a sweet, but slightly roughened mezzo-soprano as gentle as mist and haunting as the highlands, Jean Redpath is one of the definitive interpreters of Scottish traditional songs. She is also a noted folk music ethnographer who has played an important role in the reconstruction of nearly forgotten Scottish songs and has been a lecturer at Scotland's Stirling University since 1979, and has also lectured regularly at Weslyan University, CT, and other prominent institutions including Harvard.

She was born in Fife country outside Edinburgh. Her father played hammered dulcimer and her mother was well versed in Scottish oral history, most of which was passed from mother to daughter via songs. One of four daughters, their mother passed on the music to each. Her knowledge of the ancient songs proved useful while Redpath was attending the School of Scottish Studies at the University of Edinburgh and had begun formal research into her native ballads and compositions. She emigrated to New York in 1961 where she began singing in Greenwich village coffeehouses. Redpath also gave formal concerts at events such as the Lincoln Center's Mostly Mozart Festival and soon became an extremely popular performer on the folk circuit. Not only did they love her unique, sensitive voice, audiences were also impressed by her knowledge about the over 400 songs in her repertoire and the fascinating insights about the music that Redpath offered during her concerts. In 1963, she sang for the first time at the new School of Social Research and this led her to sign with Elektra where she recorded through 1975, when she switched to the Vermont-based Philo label. With them she has become one of folk music's most prolific recording artists. One of her most notable achievements has been an ongoing project to record all of the songs written by Scotland's poet laureate Robert Burns. Out of 22 planned volumes, only seven were completed due to the death of producer Serge Hovey. Other well-known Redpath series include a compilation of Scottish songs written by women, including Lady Nairne (1986).

In addition to recording and performing live, Redpath has also appeared on such radio programs as "Morning Pro Musica" on Boston's WGBH public radio station. Between 1974 and 1987 Redpath was also a regular on Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home Companion radio show. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Music Guide
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Jean Redpath
Born 28 April 1937 (1937-04-28) (age 72)
Edinburgh, Scotland
Genre(s) Folk
Occupation(s) Singer
Website www.jeanredpath.com

Jean Redpath MBE (born 28 April 1937) is a singer of folk songs and Scottish music.

Redpath was born in Edinburgh, to musical parents. Her mother knew many Scots songs and passed them on to all four of her daughters; her father played the hammer dulcimer. She was raised in Fife, Scotland, and later returned to Edinburgh, taking medieval studies at the university. Hamish Henderson was working in the School of Scottish Studies and Redpath took a keen interest in the archive of tapes and discs of music and songs. To help pay her way through her studies, she worked as a driving instructor and undertaker's assistant. She learned about 400 songs, together with the oral folklore that went with them.

In March 1961, at the age of 24, she went to the United States. Her first performance was in San Francisco. Later she met up with Ramblin' Jack Elliott and Bob Dylan in Greenwich Village. The natural warmth and power of her voice brought her to perform at Gerde's Folk City. In 1963, following a concert performance, she signed up with Elektra Records. In 1975 she switched to the Philo label. From 1972 to 1976 Jean was artist-in-residence at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. She lectured in folklore and gave talks in schools.

In 1976 Redpath embarked on a project to record all the songs of Robert Burns, some being folk songs, some Burns's own compositions, and most a mixture of the two. Twenty-two volumes were planned, but when her collaborator, composer Serge Hovey died after seven volumes, the project came to a premature end. Hovey did the instrumental arrangements for 323 songs, and Redpath felt that no other musician could replace him. The albums won critical praise from around the world. In 1986 she recorded Lady Nairne, a collection of songs written by Scottish women. Redpath has sensitively reconstructed many songs that might otherwise have been lost.

Between 1974 and 1987, Redpath appeared regularly on Garrison Keillor's "A Prairie Home Companion" NPR radio show. She has also appeared on Robert J. Lurtsema's "Morning Pro Musica" broadcast from WGBH in Boston.

Redpath has toured throughout the U.S. and Canada, has played venues in South America, Hong Kong, and Australia, including the Sydney Opera House, and has performed often at the Edinburgh Folk Festival. In 1977, Royal Jubilee Year, Redpath appeared at a royal banquet at Edinburgh Castle for Queen Elizabeth II. Redpath has been musically successful, despite never having had formal musical training.

Since 1979, Redpath has been a lecturer at the University of Stirling, Scotland, occasionally making a sojourn to Wesleyan University. For ten years she gave courses in Scottish Song at the Heritage of Scotland Summer School at the University of Stirling.

She was awarded the MBE, as well as being named a Kentucky colonel by the Governor of Kentucky. A portrait of Redpath by Alexander Fraser hangs in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh.

In 1996 she launched the Burns International Festival.

In 2009, Redpath made an appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman singing the song "Some Kind of Love" by the late John Stewart of the Kingston Trio. Letterman promoted her album 'By Request' during her appearance although the song 'Some Kind of Love' does not appear on that album. This has led to some confusion for those viewers who wanted to obtain a recorded version of the song. In fact, she has not yet recorded the song.

Discography

  • Scottish Ballad Book (1962)
  • Laddie Lie Near Me (1963)
  • Lilt and Laughter (1963)
  • Frae My Ain Countrie (1973)
  • Jean Redpath (1975)
  • Songs Of Robert Burns vol 1 (1976)
  • Song of the Seals (1978)
  • Father Adam (1979)
  • Lowlands (1980)
  • Songs Of Robert Burns vol 2 (1980)
  • Songs Of Robert Burns vol 3 (1981)
  • Songs Of Robert Burns vol 4 (1981)
  • Haydn: Scottish Songs (1984)
  • Songs of Robert Burns vol 5 (1985)
  • Lady Nairne (1986)
  • A Fine Song For Singing (1987)
  • Songs Of Robert Burns vol 6 (1987)
  • First Flight (1989)
  • Songs Of Robert Burns vol 7 (1990)
  • Leaving the Land (1990)
  • The Moon's Silver Cradle (1996)

 
 
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The Music & Song of Greentrax: The Best of Scottish Music (1996 Album by Various Artists)

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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