Mally's Musical History
Hi
In late August 1969 I finished work for
the summer holidays. At 7.30 I put on my favourite radio programme,
Folk On Friday and heard the presenter, Jim Lloyd, say "Tomorrow
is the start of Whitby Folk Festival".
"Whitby Folk Festival" I said to myself, "I think
I'll have some of that. Why not? I'm on holiday with no plans."
As soon as the programme ended I packed
my rucksack complete with tent on the bottom and early next
morning caught the bus to Leeds, another to Malton and finally
one to Whitby. I swiftly marched up the Abbey steps, pitched
my tent on the cliff top camp site and walked back into town.
My first task was to visit the Chinese restaurant. Whilst waiting
for my meal the lady on the table behind was just leaving and
I overheard her say to her husband "Don't forget your melodeon."
"Melodeon" I said to myself, "What in the world is a melodeon."
Later that evening I discovered The Star
which, in those days, was the pub where music and song occurred.
I recognised the chap from the restaurant, he was playing a
musical instrument unlike any I'd seen before. I thought to
myself, "So that's a melodeon,
I rather like the sound, I'd like to play one."
When the initial enthusiasm cools, thoughts
such as these tend fade away but this time, it was not to be
the case. Melodeon was just as strong in my mind in January as it had been earlier
in August. One dismal January day, whilst at technical college
in Bradford, I was feeling somewhat depressed (who wouldn't,
studying metallurgy). I said to myself "How can I cheer
myself up? I know, I'll buy a melodeon."
Off I went to the local music shop, my luck was in, there was
one in the window. I was encouraged to try it and after ten
mind boggling minutes the laboured strains of a simple melody
could be heard. I bought the instrument for £56 and never
looked back.
In my teens I had played electric guitar
"Shadows style" but from the age of eighteen after
a visit to the Isle of Arran I became interested in folk music
and swapped the electric for an acoustic. I was hopeless at
singing and found tuning the guitar quite irksome so I was very
pleased to own an instrument that required neither.
Of course things weren't straight forward,
they never are in my life. The instrument was a Hohner
Double Ray Deluxe, a three voice instrument tuned
in B/C,
nowadays I would call it a button
accordeon or more often just accordeon.
A few weeks later I met an old school friend
at a ceilidh who told me he was forming a morris side. I mentioned
that I bought a melodeon. He asked me to be the musician. Although
I had barely a clue as to what this entailed I joined. My, my,
we were green in those days but we persisted and became good
enough to perform. This was just what I needed, mingling with
experienced musicians and having an achievable a goal to pursue
gave me the necessary encouragement to prevent me falling by
the wayside.

We really used
to live it up in those days
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Not long after there was a morris ring meeting
in the locality and the side danced out for the first time.
Boar's Head Morris made their debut. I played everything in
the key of B, no one would join in with me. I met a fellow who
played for Leeds Morris Men, he very kindly lent me his personal
transcriptions of dozens of Cotswold morris tunes. I spent the
next few weeks neatly copying them out. This music helped me
no end and became the basis of Mally's
Cotswold Morris Tune Books. I soon figured out that
I really needed a D/G instrument so I bought an A/D/G,
it cost £76, the whole of my month's pay. Now I could
join in with the others. I spent five years with Boar's Head
and really enjoyed myself.

At last I could
join in:
Boar's Head join Gloucestershire Morris around 1970
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Soon I discovered a ceilidh club and often
went to join in the band, this was great. Guess who was there,
the chap from the Chinese restaurant and The Star. I asked him
for advice, he replied "Practise,
practise, practise; when your fed up, do some more." The best bit
of advice I've ever been given, although I don't think it was
the answer I really wanted.
It wasn't long before I was playing in a
ceilidh bands. We formed a band called Reels on Wheels.

We were crazy back
then
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I discovered a pub in Leeds called the Regent
where Irish music was played. This was brilliant, I loved it,
this was the music I really wanted to play. Just a shame I didn't
discover it earlier because now I found that the B/C
system was what I really required. I went back to
my original instrument but was completely
baffled by the basses, not my fault, it turned out
they were incorrect. After giving the B/C a good try it was soon apparent that I had travelled the D/G road too far. I had to be realistic, it was too late to change
so I decided to stick to what I knew and understood. After a
lot of hard work I made sense of the reels and jigs, the
D/G system coped with the music admirably. I spent
every Sunday lunch time standing at the bar listening for a
year, then finally plucked up the courage to join in. I'm still
striving, nearly twenty years on to perfect the tunes we used
to play in those days. The fact that I'm a late starter and
not the greatest of players has always been to my advantage
in the publishing business. It makes me far more attuned to
the needs of beginners than many of the more accomplished players.
There were the many Folk festivals I attended
in those days, I never missed Cleethorpes and Sidmouth. I lived
and breathed traditional music, it was my whole life.

Sidmouth promenade
in the morning sunshine:
The craic was mighty
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On July 8th 1985 I started my business,
from that day on traditional music really was to become my way
of life. |