
Billy Bennington
This article in our series of portraits of singers and musicians from East Anglia comes from John Howson, co-director of EATMT, who recorded the masterful Norfolk dulcimer player Billy Bennington in the 1980s, and whose recent research into the dulcimer will be presented during the Playback project.

Billy Bennington was born in 1900. His mother played melodeon and his father played tin whistle but
it was his grandmother who gave Billy his first instrument, a glockenspiel, when he was about six. He
first heard a dulcimer when he went to Hingham show where Billy Cooper was playing. His father had
taught him and subsequently taught Billy Bennington. Mr Cooper also played euphonium in the
Hingham and Watton Band and as Billy said ‘He taught me in the band master style. He used to
stand by the side of me with his little baton and if I went wrong I got a tap. Of course me being a boy,
I was a bit nervous of him. I used to bike to Hingham and I was so afraid I was going to make a
mistake I used get off about a mile before I got there and get into a gateway, take the dulcimer off my
back and have a tune at the side of the road.’
After the First World War, Billy Cooper lodged with the Benningtons, who then
kept the King’s Head
in Barford. The two Billys used to go around to different
villages, to play for village hops and other social occasions, together with the
fiddler Walter Baldwin. The three of them travelled in a motorbike and sidecar,
with the two dulcimers and fiddle in a basket and Billy Bennington standing up
at the back hanging on for dear life! At other times Billy would cycle with the
dulcimer on his back, and with the ends of it sticking out above his shoulders,
earned himself the nickname of the ‘Barford Angel’.
Billy had a variety of ways of playing the dulcimer, the more usual one being
striking the strings with cane beaters, but for some particular tunes, he would
pluck the strings with the nails of the first finger and thumb. He was a
gardener and diligently wore plastic gloves for any task that might threaten to
break the nails of his dulcimer-plucking finger. He played one particular tune,
Lovely Lucerne, by plucking with one hand and using a beater in the other hand.
He knew a wide range of tunes, including hornpipes for stepdancing, polkas and
schottisches for couple dancing, a jig or two for the Norfolk Long Dance and
also played song tunes and a number of marches and more complex pieces. In his
later years, Billy taught several people, and also gave pairs of traditional
cane beaters to many more. These beaters, bound with wool, give a very
distinctive mellow sound, and a number of Billy's are still in use today.
In the early 1980s, we went out with Billy a lot, and we always seemed to have
some adventure or other! As well as performing at his local folk festival in
Norwich, he was also a guest at Sidmouth and Dartmoor festivals in Devon in
1982, accompanied by his ever-supportive wife, Iris. They were the most elderly
of the party we took that year, but never lacked in energy when it came to
playing music! The dulcimer was Billy’s life, and he welcomed interested
visitors to his home, Rose Cottage, where Iris supplied the tea and home made
cake while Billy supplied the talk - and, of course, the music! Billy died on
18th October 1986 and we are unlikely to see his kind again.
Discography
VT152CD The Barford Angel - Billy Bennington
(24 tracks)
VTC4CD Down in the Fields (1 track)
VTVS07/08 I Thought I Was The Only One (10 tracks)
Photograph: John Howson
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