Wednesday 12 October 2022

Cyril Tawney born 12 October 1930

Cyril Tawney (12 October 1930 – 21 April 2005) was an English singer-songwriter and a proponent of the traditional songs of the West of England, as well as traditional and modern maritime songs. 

Tawney was born in Gosport, Hampshire, England.Perhaps because of the family tradition of maritime service, Tawney joined the Royal Navy at the age of sixteen, serving for thirteen years, several of which were spent in submarines. During this period he developed his lifelong interest in English traditional music. 

Inspired by the radio series As I Roved Out, Cyril visited the English Folk Dance and Song Society's London headquarters at Cecil Sharp House, Camden Town, in 1957, where he met the radio producer Charles Parker. He made his radio debut on Christmas Day 1957, in the Alan Lomax programme Sing Christmas, and his television debut the following Easter. Before long, he had a weekly television spot, as well as his own networked programme Watch Aboard, while still serving in the navy. Encouraged by these successes, Tawney left the Navy early in 1959 to become a full-time professional musician and broadcaster. 

Leaving the services gave Cyril the freedom to extend his repertoire and develop his broadcasting career to include radio plays, children's programmes and documentaries, and later a weekly folk record request programme, Folkspin. Meanwhile, he researched the songs of Devon and Cornwall collected by the vicar of Lew Trenchard, the Rev Sabine Baring-Gould. He also researched 20th Century Royal Navy songs, which resulted in his book Grey Funnel Lines (1987). 

His song "The Oggie Man" written in 1959, appeared on the album A Cold Wind Blows on the Elektra ’66 label. It reappeared in 1971 on the Decca Record Company Ltd album, The World of Folk. The song tells the story of the demise of the 'Oggie Man' from the Devonport Naval Dockyard, at a time when old-fashioned "fast food" was being replaced by the more modern purveyors of hot dogs (and all) (the "big boys" of the song). The Oggie Man had until that time offered his oggies (pasties) to sailors returning from sea, or from shore leave, from a box at the Albert Gate of the dock. It has been suggested that the sale of oggies here dated back to the 1700s. 


                    

In 1961, Cyril was one of the folk singers who took part in Arnold Wesker's Centre 42 project, aimed at taking the arts to a wider audience. Folk club engagements followed, and Cyril established his own folk club in Plymouth, where he met his future wife, Rosemary. He is often referred to as the founding father of the West Country folk revival.

Cyril's naval experiences also inspired his songwriting. Chicken On A Raft (navy slang for fried egg on fried bread) was written in the shanty call and response style, while The Oggie Man contrasted the disappearance of the oggie, or Cornish pasty, seller at Devonport docks with a sailor's lost love. Like many of Cyril's songs, the best known, Sally Free And Easy, was written in the late 1950s. Walking through a deserted dockyard one morning, Cyril was reminded of the opening sequence of the film On The Town, and also of WH Auden's Roman Wall Blues. By the time he reached his ship, he had composed the song in his head. Starting with Carolyn Hester in 1963, Dorris Henderson and John Renbourn, Davy Graham, Pentangle, Marianne Faithful and Dylan all recorded the song. 

Cyril's repertoire may have come largely from the English tradition, but a major stylistic influence was the American Burl Ives, whose gentle, deceptively simple style he emulated, including his soft, strumming guitar accompaniment. Cyril's recording career started with Rocket Along (1960) and continued with The Outlandish Knight, a selection of west country versions of folk ballads, for Polydor. Surprisingly, his only recording for the prestigious Topic label was on the compilation album of sea songs and shanties, Farewell Nancy (1964), but from 1969 several albums were released on the Argo label. Much later, he established his own recording label, Neptune. 

Beginning in 1972, Tawney studied English and History at Lancaster University.After he graduated, he admitted to a master's degree from the Leeds University Institute of Dialect and Folklife Studies. Tawney's last public performance was at Easter 2004, at the Lancaster Maritime Festival. He died of a bacterial infection at Exeter in 2005 after a long illness. 

(Edited from article by Derek Schofield @ The Guardian & Wikipedia)

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “ Cyril Tawney – Navy Cuts - The Songs Of Cyril Tawney (2001 Ada)” go here;

https://www.imagenetz.de/geBdf

1 Chicken On A Raft 3:18
2 On A Monday Morning 3:17*
3 Five Foot Flirt 3:18*
4 The Suit Of Grey 3:16
5 Lean And Unwashed Tiffy 2:39
6 Sally Free And Easy 4:56
7 Stanley The Rat 1:08
8 The Oggie Man 3:08
9 Nobby Hall 2:01
10 Sammy's Bar 3:58
11 Diesel And Shale 7:14
12 Six Feet Of Mud 3:44
13 Grey Funnel Line 4:09
14 Cheering The Queen 3:34
15 The Drunken Sailor 2:13
16 Reunion 4:09

This album of maritime songs show a wealth of talent from Cyril Tawney, the West Country's most loved artist. Cyril was most known for his nautical songs and here is a collection of 16 of his most remembered works. 14 of the tracks were originally released on a cassette in 1989 titled “Sally Free and Easy”, with two additional tracks marked*. It features Cyril's unmistakable West-country-tinged vocals backed by his almost distinctive nylon-strung acoustic guitar.

boppinbob said...

For “Cyril Tawney: The Song Goes On (2007 Ada)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/iUxix

CD 1

1. I Wonder As I Wander (Roud 15015) (1.31)
2. The Roving Journeyman (Roud 360; G/D 7:1397) (1.38)
3. Baby Lie Easy (Roud 357) (3.29)
4. The Merry Golden Tree (Roud 122; Child 286; G/D 1:37) (3.51)
5. Soldier, Soldier (Roud 489) (1.54)
6. Chase the Buffalo (Roud 1026) (2.49)
7. All Through the Grog (Roud 475; G/D 3:580) (2.32)
8. William Coombe (Crantock Games) (Roud 3318) (2.57)
9. Cruising Round Yarmouth (Roud 2432) (2.54)
10. A Jug of This (Roud 1191) (2.17)
11. Van Diemen's Land (Roud 519; Laws L18; G/D 2:252) (3.05)
12. As Soon As This Pub Closes (2.14)
13. Cheering the Queen (3.35)
14. Bluey Brink (Roud 8838) (2.32)
15. Stanley the Rat (1.13)
16. Banks of the Roses (Roud 603; G/D 7:1444) (2.04)
17. The Wild Rover (Roud 1173; G/D 7:1480) (2.28)

CD2

1. The ‘Reuben James’ (Roud 17624) (2.07)
2. Farewell to the Whisky (Roud 845; G/D 3:587; Henry H807) (2.54)
3. Early One Evening (2.51)
4. The Ball of Yarn (Roud 1404) (1.55)
5. Five Foot Flirt (3.23)
6. All Through the Beer (Roud 475; G/D 3:580) (4.06)
7. Noble Fleet of Whalers (Roud 285) (3.20)
8. The Lean and Unwashed Tiffy (2.43)
9. Seeds of Love (Roud 3; G/D 6:1180) (3.01)
10. Cruise of the ‘Calabar’ (Roud 1079; Henry H502) (2.46)
11. The Ship ‘Nightingale’ (Roud 1093; Laws M37; G/D 1:18; Henry H75a) (2.32)
12. Haul Boys Haul (Roud 1788) (1.33)
13. The Man at the Nore (Roud 22257) (4.04)
14. The Barley Mow (Roud 944) (3.59)
15. Roll Down (3.47)
16. The Song Goes On (4.06) sung by Mick Ryan and friends

This double CD was compiled for the “Celebrating Cyril” Day held at Cecil Sharp House, London, on 14 April 2007. It comsists of “tracks from the Cyril Tawney archive, re-mastered recording of traditional and self-penned gems, with the odd exception, plus an especially recorded version of Mick Ryan's The Song Goes On, written for Cyril and dedicated to him at the Sidmouth Festival Tribute Concert 2005.”

Track 1 is from Sing Christmas and the Turn of the Year (recorded 1957);
Tracks 2-3, 6, 17, 26 are from Baby Lie Easy, HMV 7EG 8738 (1962);
Track 32 is from The Transports (1977);
Tracks 13, 15, 25 are from Sally Free and Easy: Navy Songs written and performed by Cyril Tawney, NEP 002 (1990);
Tracks 9, 30 are from Sailor's Delight: Songs of Seafarers and the Fairer Sex, NEP 003 (1990);
Track 28 is from In Every Port: More Songs of Seafarers and the Fairer Sex, NEP 004 (1992);
Track 24 is from Seamen Bold: Songs of Vocages, Battles and Shipwrecks Vol. 1, NEP 005 (1992);
Tracks 4, 27 are from Little Boy Billee: Sea Songs for Children, NEP 006 (1992);
Tracks 7, 10, 12, 14, 19-20, 23, 31 are from Down the Hatch: Songs about Drink and Drinkers, NGL 101 and NGL 101CD (1994);
Track 22 is from Man of Honour: The Non-Maritime Songs, NGL 102 (1997).

lemonflag said...

Thanks
Great post.