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The Young Tradition

 
Artist: The Young Tradition

Group Members:

Royston Wood, Peter Bellamy, Heather Wood

Similar Artists:

Formal Connection With:

Royston Wood, Heather Wood, Peter Bellamy
  • Genres: Folk
  • Representative Albums: "The Young Tradition/So Cheerfully Round," "The Young Tradition," "Young Tradition Sampler"

Biography

Founded during the early 1960s British folk revival, the Young Tradition started out as an unaccompanied duo of Peter Bellamy, an art student from Norfolk, and Royston Wood, a former teacher, advertising executive and driver from Surrey, who sang sea shanties at folk clubs and college concerts. Apart from folk music, their interests didn't overlap, Bellamy being a rock & roll enthusiast while Wood was a fan of orchestral and chamber music. Heather Wood, a former army officer cadet and London university student, who was no relation to her bandmate, joined them in 1965, and the resulting trio was signed to Transatlantic Records the following year, cutting two albums for the company over the next two years. Their sound was surprisingly stripped down as a trio, with only one guitar and three voices, making the Young Tradition practitioners of a decidedly old tradition when compared with the folk-rock groups of their period. Their self-titled debut album showed the trio to be dedicated scholars, taking the trouble to unearth the most authoritative and authentic versions of the songs in their repertory.

By 1967, they'd added guest musicians to their lineup on their second album, So Cheerfully Round, including fiddle virtuoso Dave Swarbrick and two additional violinists, Rod Skeaping and Adam Skeaping, while Dolly Collins contributed additional vocals. The group cut its final album, Galleries, in 1968, which showed yet another change in the trio's direction, toward medieval music, with the Early Music Ensemble led by David Munrow backing them on the album. There was also an EP, "Chicken on a Raft," released that same year. In 1974, Decca Records' Argo imprint released a 45 rpm single, "The Boar's Head Carol" b/w "The Shepherd's Hymn." The trio split up in the early 1970s following a farewell concert at the Cecil Sharpe House in London. Peter Bellamy cut several solo albums, while Royston Wood, after starting a solo career, joined the Albion Country Band. He also cut the album No Relation with Heather Wood in 1977 for Transatlantic (on which Bellamy also sang, and Simon Nicol and Ashley Hutchings played). Royston Wood died in a car accident in 1990, and Bellamy died by his own hand in 1991. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Young Tradition
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The Young Tradition were a British folk group of the 1960s, formed by Peter Bellamy, Royston Wood and Heather Wood. They recorded three albums of mainly traditional British folk music, sung in arrangements for their three unaccompanied voices.

Contents

Biography

The Young Tradition were formed on 18 April 1965 by Peter Bellamy, Royston Wood (born 1935 died 8 April 1990) and Heather Wood (born Arielle Heather Wood, 31 March 1945, Attercliffe, Sheffield, Yorkshire) (who was unrelated to Royston Wood). Most of their repertoire was traditional British folk music, sung without instrumental accompaniment, and was drawn especially from the music of the Copper Family from Sussex, who had a strong oral musical tradition. They augmented the pure folk music with some composed songs which were strongly rooted in the English folk tradition, such as sea shanties written by Cyril Tawney, of which "Chicken on a Raft" was the most notable.

In the late 1960s, London became the centre of the English folk music revival and The Young Tradition moved there, sharing a house with John Renbourn, Bert Jansch and Anne Briggs.

They recorded three albums and an EP, on the Transatlantic Records label. They also collaborated with Shirley Collins on an album called The Holly Bears the Crown. Although recorded in 1969 it was not released in full until 1995. Transatlantic also released a compilation record in 1969: The Young Tradition Sampler.

Their later work became more influenced by mediaeval music. "Galleries", their last album together, was musically augmented by Dolly Collins, Dave Swarbrick, David Munrow and The Early Music Consort. It included a version of Agincourt Carol.

In 1969, the group split up on account of their different musical preferences, with Bellamy wanting to pursue pure traditional music.Their final concert was at Cecil Sharp House, home of the English Folk Dance and Song Society, in October 1969.

Royston Wood died after a car accident in 1990, and Peter Bellamy committed suicide in 1991.

Discography

  • The Young Tradition - 1965
  • So Cheerfully Round - 1966
  • Chicken on a Raft - 1968 (EP)
  • Galleries - 1969
  • The Young Tradition Sampler - 1969
  • Galleries Revisited - 1973 (Reissue of Galleries with additional sleevenotes by Heather Wood)
  • Galleries/No Relation - 1997 (Reissue of Galleries and the EP with additional tracks by Royston & Heather Wood on a single CD)
  • The Young Tradition/So Cheerfully Round- 1999 (Reissue of first 2 albums on a single CD)

References

  • Bob Copper, A Song for Every Season: 100 Years in the Life of a Sussex Farming Family, Heinemann, 1971. ISBN 0-434-14455-X

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Young Tradition" Read more

 

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