Tom Lewis (songwriter)

Tom (Thomas John) Lewis (born 1943) is a British singer and writer of nautical songs.

Tom is perhaps best known for The Last Shanty (A Sailor Ain't A Sailor), which has been recorded by over 30 different groups around the world. He is also thrilled that Ilan Eskeri has used the melody from his song 'A Sailor's Prayer' (Send Down A Dove) as a major theme in the musical score of the recent BBC Films' production of 'Swallows and Amazons'.

Biography

Lewis was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland and grew up in Gloucester, England. He served in the Royal Navy from 1959 until 1983, mostly in the (diesel) Submarine Service.

He developed his interest in sea shanties while frequenting the Howff Folk Song Club of Dunfermline, Scotland, in the 1960s, and began to perform at clubs and festivals in his off-time. On completing his naval service, he emigrated to Salmo, British Columbia, Canada, "to be somewhere completely different to a large port city". In 1987, he began to record and to tour, due to popular demand.

Recordings

Lewis' first solo album, issued in 1987, was Surfacing and included two early favorites among his recordings, "The Last Shanty" and "Marching Inland." Those two songs later appeared on the compilation CD, A Taste of the Maritimes (1992), the former tune under the title "A Sailor Ain't a Sailor." In 1988 he recorded and toured with William Pint and Felicia Dale. Currently much of his touring happens in the U.K and Europe, giving him more opportunities to perform with his Polish compatriates (QFTRY).

His albums have been favorably reviewed in Dirty Linen magazine, Living Tradition magazine and Sing Out! magazine. (The latter calling his song "Radio Times" the "folk equivalent of 'American Pie.'") His songs have also been played on The Midnight Special folk music radio show.

In 2000, he won the Stan Hugill International Trophy when the competition was held in Douarnenez, France.

In 2008, he published his tunes and lyrics as Worth the singin': the Tom Lewis songbook.[1]

Since 2015 he has been Festival Patron of the Gloucester Shanty Festival.[2]

Discography

  • Surfacing (1987)
  • Sea-Dog, See Dog! (1990)
  • Making Waves (1992), with William Pint and Felicia Dale
  • Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Sailor Singer! (1995)
  • Mixed Cargo (1999)
  • Poles Apart (Polish Title: On, My Ocean) (2001) with a five-man shanty group from Poland (QFTRY). In English and Polish.
  • 360° All Points of the Compass (2003)
  • The Song Goes On (2011) Poles Part Too with QFTRY
gollark: As I said, I think A-level might be better, as I only do 3 (well, 4) subjects I actually like, with better teachers and not with people who don't care, but... well, based on past evidence of school stuff it might also be equally terrible?
gollark: > well, the actual purpose of schools is to teach people things, but most students do not learn anything even if they go to school. source: mean math score being about 4/40 in the university entrance exam.Exactly! It's mostly worthless!
gollark: If they run that whole cycle fast enough it'll average out as a reasonable situation!
gollark: Outside of high-level stuff (GCSE *maybe*, probably A-level) I think it's *mostly* irrelevant if you take a few weeks off.
gollark: I mean, you can socialize at school, which is important, but you can do that anyway.

References

  1. Moeller, Matthew (May 2008). "Worth the singin'" (PDF). Victory Review. 33 (5): 18. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 September 2008.
  2. http://www.gloucestershantyfestival.co.uk/
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