Harry Boardman

Harry Boardman (19301987) was an English folk singer who was born in Failsworth, Lancashire. He sang both unaccompanied and accompanying himself on the Anglo concertina or banjo.[1] "Boardman has specialised in the lore, songs and dialect poems of his native Lancashire. A fine singer, his recorded and printed work has done much to preserve the otherwise ignored aspects of his local tradition."—Fred Woods.[2] He was active as a folk singer and collector of Lancashire folklore from the late 1950s with some collaboration from his wife Lesley. In 1991 the Harry Boardman Memorial Trust was established to increase public awareness of traditional music and related arts, including the folk music of the British Isles and local traditions of North West England.[3] Harry appeared regularly, together with Dave Hillery and Terry Whelan at the Wayfarer's Folk Club, at various locations, including the Pack Horse Hotel in Bridge Street, Manchester from the late 1950s. Boardman was a folk club organiser from 1954 until the year he died; the home of his club in the 1970s and 1980s was the Unicorn Hotel in Church Street, Manchester. His interest in the songs of working folk came from his socialist beliefs.[4]

The Unicorn Hotel, Church Street

Publications

  • Folk Songs & Ballads of Lancashire; compiled and edited by Harry & Lesley Boardman. London & New York: Oak Publications, 1973 ISBN 0-86001-027-9
  • Manchester Ballads: thirty-five facsimile street ballads; selected and edited by Harry Boardman & Roy Palmer. Manchester: City of Manchester Education Committee, 1983 ISBN 0904072029

Discography

Boardman's recordings:[5]

  • A Lancashire Mon, Topic Records (1973)
  • Golden Stream, AK Records (1978)
  • Personal Selection (1986)
  • Personal Choice, Cock Robin Music (2008)

Compilations

  • New Voices (with the Watersons & Maureen Craik), Topic Records (1965)
  • Deep Lancashire (with the Oldham Tinkers et al.), Topic Records (1968; 1997)
  • Owdham Edge (with the Oldham Tinkers et al.), Topic Records (1970)
  • Trans Pennine (with Dave Hillery), Topic Records (1971)
  • The Bonnie Pit Laddie, Topic Records (1975)
  • Steam Ballads (with Jon Raven et al.), Broadside (1977)
  • The Iron Muse (with Louis Killen et al.), Topic Records (1993)
Only features on the CD version
The Hand Loom Weaver's Lament from Deep Lancashire is track ten on the sixth CD.
gollark: I am willing to pay people absolutely nothing of "real" financial value for finding and reporting "personal data leaks". Partly because payments are irritating to do and have security problems and partly because it would possibly encourage stuff like finding my data somewhere and creating/reporting fake sites. However, I *can* pay you in krist, an entirely fake not-really-cryptocurrency on a few Minecraft servers, or melons.
gollark: That's... not really better?
gollark: ```<> 219.74.19.228 [11/Jun/2020:10:41:57 +0000] "POST /boaform/admin/formPing HTTP/1.1" 400 157 "-" "polaris botnet"```
gollark: When I'm bored, it can be fun to look at osmarks.tk access logs and laugh at bots trying to exploit software I do not actually run.
gollark: Technically it's kind of a horrible hack, it disables the native element appearance and then adds a background image containing the arrow, but oh well.

References

  1. "Harry Boardman: traditional and Lancashire; acc. concertina/banjo ... Gatley SK8 4HS".-- The Folk Directory; 1988. London: English Folk Dance & Song Society; p. 34
  2. Woods, Fred (1980) The Observer's Book of Folk Song in Britain. London: Frederick Warne; p. 93
  3. The Harry Boardman Memorial Trust: working for folk arts in the North West of England, 1991
  4. Peters, Brian (spring 1988) "Harry Boardman, 1930-87: Lancashire's most distinguished folk singer" folk Buzz; pp. 5-6
  5. "Harry Boardman - A Lancashire Mon".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.