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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
Britain: Bob Copper, foremost traditional singer dies
By Paul Bond
24 April 2004
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Bob Copper, who has died at age 89, was the most important
English traditional folksinger of the twentieth century. He was
a hugely accomplished musical performer of the songs that had
been passed down through his family. Just as importantly, his
love and enthusiasm for these songs (at a time when the environment
in which they had been sung was changing rapidly) became a key
factor in their transmission to subsequent generations of singers.
He was born in 1915 in the south-coast village of Rottingdean,
near Brighton. Documentary evidence exists of the family presence
there as far back as 1593. Rottingdean in the late-nineteenth
century was predominantly an agricultural village dominated by
two large landowners, although there was also a developing seasonal
tourist trade, as well as an influx of affluent families seeking
a rural residency.
Although not belonging to the upper echelons of village society,
the Copper family was a step up from the agricultural labourers.
Bobs grandfather James Brasser Copper (1845-1927)
was a farm bailiff. Brassers brother Tom, who sang with
him, was a pub landlord. It was from Brasser and his sons that
Bob first heard the songs he was to champion.
On the death of his wife, Brasser moved in with his son Jim
(Bobs father). Bob spoke in an interview last year of his
early memories of singing around the fire to while away the winter
evenings. Not a lot of talking went on...you didnt
make idle conversation.... But Grandad might say, Lets
have a song, isnt us?... So theyd decide on
a song and off wed go.
Brasser and his sons Jim and John (a shepherd) led the singing
of each song, but the family (including the young Bob and his
sister) would join in with their own contribution.
What marks the Copper family tradition as distinctive is that
this collective singing was not simply unison singing. Instead,
the family evolved a notable mixture of two-part harmony singing,
unison and octave singing. Their aurally-developed harmonic style
owed a great deal to both Church of England hymnody and the amateur
part-songs of the Victorian glee clubs.
The style is deceptively simple, and owes a great deal to the
subtleties of the performer. Hearing early recordings of Jim,
John and their respective sons Bob and Ron, the listener is aware
of the massive flexibilities of tempo and phrasing they employ
in each song, as well as their delight in exploring every corner
of every song. The best introduction to their style is to listen
to recordings, but Vic Gammon has written a useful analysis in
the booklet accompanying the 2001 CD Come Write Me Down,
released by Topic Records.
Even though theirs is largely an English rural repertoire,
Bob was a man of wide and sophisticated musical tastes. He described
coming to London in 1933 to see Louis Armstrong, and he remained
a passionate fan of blues records all his life. There is an extraordinary
recording of him singing Going Down to Brownsville,
accompanying himself on the concertina. It isnt, in his
hands, a blues record: it is, though, a respectful recognition
of something intense and musical to which he responded as a listener.
Bob often commented that performing to audiences led them to
sing songs relatively quickly. When singing within the family,
however, they would slow songs down, lingering over every opportunity
for harmonising. This is perhaps one of the reasons why their
style proved so influential within the folksong revival of the
1960s and 1970s, and why it remains so attractive today. It is
about participation and contribution.
It remains, though, an unusual style within collected folksong
in England, although a few family groups with similar styles are
known of in the south of England. The artistry of the Copper family
would mark them out as pre-eminent in a much more crowded field,
but it may be that their uniqueness is related to
the failure of earlier generations of collectors to record widely
enough.
Brasser and Tom were, in fact, recorded by the first wave of
the folksong revivalists. In 1898, collector Kate Lee came down
to Rottingdean. She recorded several songs by them, including
Claudy Banks, the first song published by the English
Folk Song Society on its inauguration that year.
Whilst the meeting did not acquire any significance within
the family until much later, they were interested in preserving
as many of their songs as possible. In about 1922, Brasser began
filling a notebook with the words of all the songs he could remember,
work enthusiastically continued by Jim. The family still uses
this notebook today. Bob, in turn, tried to learn by ear as many
of the tunes as he could. He also made abortive efforts to get
those tunes notated, so that they would not solely depend on his
memory. In later years, going through the notebook, he would sometimes
point to songs that got awaythe ones for which
he had not been able to learn tunes in time.
Bob and Ron still loved to sing the old family songs whenever
they could, but circumstances were changing, and they did not
sing together as often as they would have liked. Bob had spent
two years in the army before becoming a policeman. Ron, meanwhile,
had worked in the naval dockyards as an engineer. After the war,
they both ran pubsRon in Rottingdean and Bob in Peacehaven.
When they did meet up, the company often did not want to hear
their grandfathers songs, but popular contemporary pieces
instead.
Many of the finest traditional singers in England sang for
their own amusement when they could no longer find a local response.
The lucky oneslike the Copper familymet up with people
interested in retrieving their music for a wider audience. The
collecting of folksongs in England had waned since the heyday
of the Edwardian collectors like Cecil Sharp. The First World
War had shattered many facets of an earlier agricultural way of
life that had enshrined singing. It had also decimated a generation
of singers and collectors.
The next major wave of collection did not begin until after
the Second World War, fuelled in part by the American experiences
of John and Alan Lomax. The BBC radio programme Country Magazine
played sanitised arrangements of traditional songs. Jim heard
here a song the family sang. He was not much impressed with the
arrangement and told Bob so. Bob advised his father to write to
the BBC (but dont criticise) to let them know
that this was one of the songs they still sang regularly as a
family. Within a week, the collector and producer Francis Collinson
was in Rottingdean collecting their songs.
Bob agreed that he and Jim would take part in a live broadcast
for Country Magazine. Jim was angry at being imposed upon,
but participated to honour his sons promise. The broadcast
was a great success, and Jim warmed to the idea of performing
to a wider audience.
It was only after this first broadcast (in 1950) that Collinson
asked Jim if he might be related to the two Coppers from whom
Kate Lee had collected songs in 1898. Jim then told Bob about
the meeting. The English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS),
as it had now become, was active in recording the Copper family,
as well as in bringing them to a wider audience. John, Jim, Bob
and Ron appeared at an EFDSS festival at the Royal Albert Hall
in 1952, and Bob and Ron were guests of honour at EFDSSs
diamond jubilee in 1958.
Encouraged by the success of Country Magazines
limited presentation of arranged folksongs, and spurred on by
the arrival of Alan Lomax, the BBC set about a new programme of
traditional song. As I Roved Out was groundbreaking in
many ways, not least because of its active involvement in collecting.
Lomax, Peter Kennedy, Brian George and Seamus Ennis recorded traditional
singers across the British Isles. Bob, still running his bar,
also took part-time contracts as a BBC researcher.
He was a persistent and sympathetic interviewer, and he recorded
many fine singers around the south coast. Many of the singers
trusted him precisely because he was like them. He also proved,
when he wrote up his experiences as Songs and Southern Breezes,
to be an entertaining writer.
The BBC axed As I Roved Out and ended its field-recording
programme. However, various individuals (notably Kennedy) continued
their recordings, and there was a renewed impetus for the music.
Bobs son John started singing with Bob and Ron. The EFDSS
issued a limited-edition album by Bob and Ron, while in the US,
Caedmon Records released the Folk Music of Britain series.
The existence of such records created an interest amongst a
younger generation of performers. When the folk revival took off
in the mid-1960s, younger professional acts (most notably The
Young Tradition) were already performing the Copper familys
songs and employing its harmonising style. They beat a path to
Bobs door and stressed the importance of the Copper family
in their music. (Bobs daughter Jill made her first impromptu
appearance on stage at farewell performance of The Young
Tradition.)
What cemented the familys reputation was the publication
of Bobs first book A Song for Every Season (1971)a
nostalgic look at the social background to the songs. There was
also a four-album boxed set of the same name (currently unavailable),
which featured the songs contained in the book and Bobs
narration. The Copper family became, at this point, regulars on
the folk club and festival circuit.
After the death of Ron in 1978, Bob sang with his son John,
daughter Jill and her husband Jon Dudley. What pleased him most
about the family performances was when his grandchildren started
singing. He had become the patriarch of the family, and of a traditional
style of singing as well.
What strikes on as odd about such a fine singer are the limitations
to his repertoire. It has been noted, for example, that there
are no songs about seductions or illegitimate births. Apparently,
his grandmother refused to allow these songs to be sung in the
house.
Where other singers had songs that (even tangentially) referred
to the hardships of life, the Copper familys songs are mostly
paeans of praise to a farming life that is hard work, but rewarding.
(One exception stands outthe extraordinary Hard Times
of Old England.) In a radio broadcast with the veteran American
protest singer Pete Seeger, Bob said explicitly that the difference
between them was that you have put your talents and your
repertoire to a good social purpose. We, Im afraid, have
been a bit dilatory, we just sing for the sheer joy of singing.
For many people, the world is not, as it was for Bob, a
lovely place to be in, and no one would deny the nostalgic
conservatism running through his preservation of the family songs.
He recognised, though, the artistic merits of what he was preserving
and passing on. His tenacious defence of this musical heritage
allows other listeners to experience it, other musicians to use
it.
He knew the effect music can have on the listener: I
love poetry, but I think music is the most violent reaction. It
physically buggers me up, or lifts me up.... But I can be sent
by Beethovens piano concertos and things, I can turn myself
inside out.
Thanks to his tenacity in preserving these songs, and his artistry
in performing them, they also can have that effect on their audience.
See Also:
The singer and the
song explored
The Voice of the People:
A 20 CD collection of folk song by Topic Records
[5 March 1999]
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