Cyril Tawney

Cyril Tawney
Born (1930-10-12)12 October 1930
Gosport, Hampshire, U.K.
Died 21 April 2005(2005-04-21) (74)
Exeter, Devon, U.K.
Genres Folk, maritime

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.

Biography and notable works

Tawney was born in Gosport, Hampshire. 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.

While still in the Navy in 1957, he performed on an Alan Lomax radio show broadcast on Christmas Day, Sing Christmas and the Turn of the Year. He appeared on television on the following Easter Sunday. It went well and soon he had a weekly television spot and a networked show, Watch Aboard. Encouraged by these successes, Cyril left the Navy early in 1959 to become a full-time professional musician and broadcaster. He earned his living in this way for 44 years, making him Britain's longest-standing professional folksinger.

Tawney continued to work in broadcasting and had a weekly radio show, "Folkspin." Meanwhile, he researched the traditional songs of southwest England and 20th Century Royal Navy songs. In the early 1960s he established his first folk club in Plymouth, where he met his wife Rosemary. He founded the West of England Folk Centre and was instrumental in setting up folk clubs in other places in the region. He is often referred to as the Founding Father of the West Country folk revival.

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.[1] 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.[2]

The first verse of "Oggie Man" runs

And the rain's softly falling and the Oggie man's no more.
I can’t hear him calling like I used to before
I came through the gateway and I heard the sergeant say
"The big boys are a coming, see their stands across the way"
And the rains softly falling and the Oggie man's no more...

In addition to presenting traditional ditties, Tawney composed a number of his own songs, the majority being written when he was in the Royal Navy and relating to that period – for example, Chicken on a Raft, which belongs to the call and response style of sea shanties. The song makes reference to an unpopular dish served in the Royal Navy, consisting of fried egg on fried bread and called "chicken on a raft." The chorus is as follows:

Chicken on a raft on a Monday morning,
Oh, what a terrible sight to see,
The Dabtoes[note 1] forrard and the dustmen[note 2] aft,
Sittin' there a'pickin' at a chicken on a raft!

The song was recorded by The Young Tradition, on their 1967 EP also titled Chicken on a Raft.

Tawney's song, Sally Free And Easy, written in the late 1950s, was covered by numerous folk artists, including Carolyn Hester, Dorris Henderson and John Renbourn, Davey Graham, Pentangle, The Corries, Marianne Faithfull, Alan Stivell and Bob Dylan.[5] The song is about an affair Tawney had with a girl who cheated on him.

"... and when he was out in Gibraltar during the war, he was in the submarine service and he had rather an unfortunate affair with a girl, who two-timed him and her name was Sally and he wrote a song about it called "Sally Free and Easy". - Roy Williamson, introducing the song on the album "The Corries in Concert"

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. In 1987, Tawney's book Grey Funnel Lines: Traditional Song and Verse of the Royal Navy 1900 to 1970, was published by Routledge.

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.[6][7]

Discography

Songs

Songs written by Cyril Tawney include:

Notes

  1. Slang term for an able bodied seaman rating [3]
  2. Royal Navy slang for a stoker[4]
  3. Naval slang for any of several breakfast dishes involving a cooked egg and either toast or fried bread
  4. The Royal Navy, contrasted with merchant ships with colorfully painted funnels[8]
  5. "Tiffy" was a casual term for "artificer" (skilled craftsman), and Tawney would explain that although Shakespeare was beyond his normal scope, the title and lyric draw on the Bard: In King John[9] a character reporting the latest rumors says "Another lean unwash'd artificer / Cuts off his tale and talks of Arthur's death."

References

  1. The World of Folk, Decca Records, SPA-A 132
  2. 2002, Cyril Tawney on BBC Folkspan Program
  3. Ted Macey, Merry Swan (2009). Jack the Lad RN: The Collected Drivel, Doodles and Ditties of a Dedicated Dabtoe. Troubador Publishing. p. 174. ISBN 978-1-84876-189-6.
  4. "Eric Partridge, Paul Beale (2002). A dictionary of slang and unconventional English: colloquialisms and catch phrases, fossilised jokes and puns, general nicknames, vulgarisms and such Americanisms as have been naturalised. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-29189-7.
  5. The Guardian, Wednesday 27 April 2005, Obituaries: Cyril Tawney
  6. "Cyril Tawney: Singing songs of land and sea", The Guardian. Manchester (UK): 27 April 2005. Page 29
  7. "Obituaries: Cyril Tawney (1930-2005)", Roy Palmer. Folk Music Journal. London: 2006. Vol.9, Issue 1; page 141.
  8. RN nicknames
  9. Act IV, Scene 2, lines 1945-6 (close of second speech of Hubert de Burgh following his latter entrance in that scene)

External links


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