
Hubert Freeman
This article in
our series of portraits of singers and musicians from East Anglia is written by
John and Katie Howson, co-directors of the East Anglian Traditional Music Trust,
who first met singer Hubert Freeman in the 1980s. Hubert died, aged 81, in June
2007, followed only a few days later by his wife, Violet.

Hubert
was born in Ashfield in 1925, and moved to Monk Soham as child. At twenty-three
he married Violet and moved to Bedingfield where he worked for most of his life
as a farm manager.
He came from a family of singers: his father and mother both had songs, as did
his uncle 'Hack' who used to keep the Bedfield Dog, where Hubert used to sing
sometimes, as well as at parties and other social gatherings. He sang 'One Fine
Morning Early in the Spring' which his mother used to sing, and in later years
made a point of singing the songs he remembered from his old friends, such as
'The Baby Boy', 'Do Let Me Have Another One Georgie' and 'The Wireless Song'
from Gordon Woods of Framsden. As a younger man, he had often been in the
company of the blind cobbler and melodeon player Walter Read from Bedfield and
when folksong collector Keith Summers discovered a tape recording of Walter,
Hubert asked whether his favourite song was on it. 'Feeding the ducks on the
pond' was indeed on the recording, and within days of getting a copy, Hubert was
regaling us with it.
He had a wicked sense of humour, and was good company on the numerous pub
sessions and outings that we shared with him over the last twenty and more
years. It wasn't long before the saucy stories he told became regular features
of Old Hat Music Nights at Stradbroke Queen's Head and other pubs and village
halls, and many audiences, once they'd managed to interpret Hubert's rich
accent, will remember him for his tales and jokes.
Abiding memories of Hubert will be when he gamely dressed as a rather lugubrious
Father Christmas in an inflatable suit for the EATMT Christmas party a couple of
years ago, and also of taking him up to Gateshead with the Old Hat Concert Party
in 1990, when two locals were heard to say “That Suffolk chap was good wasn't
he?” “Yes, very funny … couldn't understand a word!”

Discography:
VTC3CD
'Comic Songs Sung in Suffolk (1 track)
VTC4CD 'Down in the Fields' (1 track)
Photos: John Howson
Above: Hubert outside the Worlingworth Swan, his ‘local’ in recent years.
Right: Hubert (centre) with Simon Ritchie and Cyril Barber, pushing a
broken-down minibus on an Old Hat Concert Party outing to Gateshead.
Back to Profiles contents page
Home News Diary of events Community Projects Research Melodeons & More Workshops, classes & schools Resources Shop
Friends Links About EATMT Profiles of traditional musicians Traditional Music Day Jig Dolls Norfolk Playback project Stepdancing