
Geoff Ling
This article in our series of portraits of singers and
musicians from East Anglia was prompted by attending a party to celebrate Geoff
Ling’s recent birthday. The Ling family of Blaxhall in Suffolk were one of the
best known singing families in the county, and recordings were made of them from
the 1950s onwards. Geoff, born in 1916, was for many years the mainstay of the
famed sessions in Blaxhall Ship.
When we moved to Suffolk in 1978 I was
armed with heady tales told to me by Taffy Thomas and Keith Summers about the
awesome singing nights they’d had in the Ship at Blaxhall. I’d also heard Peter
Kennedy’s recordings of the Blaxhall singers he had made in 1953 and the LP Karl
Dallas had produced called ‘The Larks They Sang Melodious’, which was recorded
in the Ship and released in 1973. To me one singer stood out on these recordings
and that was Geoff Ling. Maybe not the sweetest of singers but one with a
twinkle in his voice. A singer who could tell a story.
We soon made a sortie to the promised land of Blaxhall and I finally heard
Geoffrey (as he was always known locally) sing in person. Green Bushes was
probably the first song I heard Geoff sing and he certainly lived up to my
expectations. He was in his early sixties then and not only had a twinkle in his
voice, but also a twinkle in his eye. We became good friends and I spent many a
happy hour sitting in his kitchen listening to his stories about the old times.
Geoff told me that he started singing in pubs when he was eighteen, going around
with his Dad to steel quoits games at pubs like Marlesford Bell, Aldeburgh Mill
Inn and Eastbridge Eel's Foot. But the most singing was just round the corner
from where Geoff lived, at the Blaxhall Ship, and that's where he picked up the
old songs. He would meet there with his mates Cyril Poacher and Eli Durrant who
were all about the same age. A lot of the old songs came from their relations
but they weren’t allowed to sing them because they ‘belonged’ to someone else.
So most of their first songs came off the wireless or from gramophone records,
until they could take on some of the older songs as the old boys died.
Geoff was always happy for me to take my tape recorder, when he’d “remembered
another one” and sometimes he’d get out his old melodeon and strike up a tune,
which we never saw him do in the pub. It is ironic and rather sad that, over the
years, the number of songs Geoff could sing steadily increased as he became the
last true carrier of the Ship’s singing tradition.
On 29th July 2006 a party was held at Saxmundham Market Hall to celebrate
Geoff’s 90th birthday, and Reg Reader, myself and Katie were invited to play
some tunes. The night was a joint party, and there was also a disco. When our
turn came, Geoff visibly perked up!. Within minutes he was on his feet (albeit
holding on to a chair) and giving us a step - something he’d done in the Ship
many a time, and then he gave us a couple of verses of two of his favourite
songs. A night to remember, and I have to say the twinkle is still there!
Discography:
VTC1CD Stepping it Out (1 track)
VTC2CD Songs Sung in Suffolk (3 tracks)
VTC3CD Comic Songs Sung in Suffolk (3 tracks)
VTC6CD It was on a Market Day - One (1 track)
VT154CD Good Hearted Fellows (1 track)
TSCD651 Come Let us by the Licence (1 track)
Photos: John Howson, Katie Howson
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