
What are the musical traditions of East Anglia?
Traditional Music Day Melodeons & More Workshops, classes & schools Community Projects
Profiles of traditional musicians Research Jig Dolls Dulcimers Stepdancing
Resources Shop Links Press Room
Harry Green
Personal Portrait No. 29
by John Howson
This article in our series of portraits of singers and
musicians from East Anglia features singer Harry Green, who died in 1969, having
lived in the same cottage in the village of Tilty, near Thaxted in north-west
Essex, for 93 years. In the 1960s, folksong collector Fred Hamer visited Harry
on a number of occasions and to recorded songs from him. Five of these were
published in Hamer's book 'Green Groves' (EFDSS, 1973) but it wasn't until the
late 1990s that the recordings were published, on a cassette on the Veteran
label. This has been unavailable for a few years, but now all the songs from
that cassette, plus previously unpublished recordings of other traditional
singers from Essex are due to be released on a new CD: 'The Fox and the Hare' on
Veteran in late 2010. Here are the memories of Harry’s daughter, Chrissie
Andrews, interviewed by John Howson in 1987.
“Well, he used to have a sing-song with his old
friends in the pubs. Most of the singing went on in the Rising Sun (in Duton
Hill) because his old friends lived there - 'Hunch' Ledgerton and George Perry.
There used to be accordion players and somebody would get up and stepdance. Then
there was 'Buster' Brown he used to sing lots of songs. When we went on coach
outings and that sort of thing he'd sing. Nobody else in our family used to
sing. Father was the only one but I can't remember him singing in the house, not
for any length of time. He might just sing the verse of a song or something like
that. Not like he did when Fred Hamer came along and he'd sing a whole song. He
came in with his tape recorder and Mrs Hamer used to sit on the settee and
father always sat on a chair. Oh, Father used to get a bit tired because they
used to come late-ish in the evening. Well, being well over ninety, he used to
say, "If they don't soon come, I'm going to bed". He'd say to him, “Well you've
had so many songs this time,” and then Fred used to show me the copies and ask
me was it right. Of course, it was only as far as I could remember because I was
never in the pub when father used to sing these old songs. One of them The
Highwayman and The Merchant's Daughter, he asked him where he first heard
that and he said Bill Patient used to sing it in the Rising Sun. You know, there
was more singing going on in the pub in those days than anywhere else.”
Apparently, Harry would limit Fred Hamer to five songs each visit, perhaps
rationing them out so that Hamer would return. Chrissie remembered her father
learning Down in the Fields from the radio, but also said he could remember
things from when he was a little boy. Harry told Fred Hamer that The Nutting
Girl came from 'Singing Jimmy' around the turn of the 20th century. Harry
was obviously quite a character, and you can almost see the sparkle in his eye
when he recites The Pear Tree or the epilogue to Down in the Fields
and Ladies Won't you Marry. Another of his favourites was Oh Joe the
Boat is Going Over. In recent years, the Rising Sun (now closed) in Duton
Hill once again provided a welcome to singers and musicians, and that very song
has been heard there, sung by Simon Ritchie and assorted instrumentalists, on
more than one occasion!
Discography:
VT135CD ‘The Fox and the Hare’ (17 tracks), available from
Veteran Mail Order.
Back
to Profiles contents page
What are the musical traditions of East Anglia?
Traditional Music Day Melodeons & More Workshops, classes & schools Community Projects
Profiles of traditional musicians Research Jig Dolls Dulcimers Stepdancing