1950
Ewan MacColl
The Asphalter’s Song
Ewan MacColl makes his recording debut with the '78 folk
single 'The Asphalter’s Song; I’m Champion at Keeping ‘em Rolling'. Although
previously a writer, actor and poet, this is the start of a highly influential
recording career in folk music.
1951
George Formby makes his comeback in the stage musical 'Zip Goes
A Million’. After opening in Coventry, it sees George return to Manchester,
breaking all the box-office records at The Palace Theatre
1952
Ewan MacColl
Dirty Old Town
Ewan MacColl releases the '78 single 'Dirty Old Town', a
folk song he wrote about his hometown of Salford. It becomes his most famous
track and is later covered by the The Pogues, Rod Stewart, Simple Minds, The
Dubliners, Brian Kennedy, Frank Black and Roger Whittaker amongst many
George Formby suffers
a heart attack. After recovering, he takes a break from show business.
1954
Phil Lynott attends Princess Road Junior School in Whalley
Range. At an early age, he moves to Dublin and is raised by his grandparents.
He returns to live with his mother in Manchester during school holidays.
1957
Ewan MacColl
The First Time I Ever Saw Your Face
Ewan MacColl releases his famous single with partner Peggy
Seeger. It is later a hit for both Roberta Flack and Celine Dion and is also
covered by Elvis Presley, George Michael, The Stereophonics, Johnny Cash, The
Temptations, The Chi Lites, Isaac Hayes, Barbara Dickson, Alison Moyet, Johnny
Mathis, Shirley Bassey, Andy Williams, Mel Torme, Harry Belafonte, Bert Jansch,
Lena Martell, Acker Bilk, June Tabor, Nils Lofgren, Marianne Faithful, Gordon
Lightfoot, Jeffrey Osborne, Timmy Thomas, Vanessa Williams, Christy Moore, Val
Doonican, Peter,Paul & Mary, X-Factor stars Leona Lewis and Journey South
as well as many others
Ewan MacColl
collaborates with Peggy Seeger & Charles Parker on the ground-breaking BBC
radio musical documentaries, known as the 'Radio-Ballads'. Mixing folk songs
with recorded speech and sound effects, the concept has since become a routine
procedure in TV and radio documentary making
An 11 year old David
Jones appears in Coronation Street as Ena Sharples' grandson. His appearance is
that good he is offered the role of the Artful Dodger in the West End
production of Oliver.
1958
The Gibb family from Chorlton-cum-Hardy in Manchester emigrate
to Brisbane, Australia.
1959
16 year old Clive Powell from Leigh moves to London and
changes his name to Georgie Fame, playing piano in many of Larry Parne's
backing bands for the likes of Marty Wilde and Vince Eager.
taken from Pride of Manchester
Ewan MacColl, best known to U.S. audiences as the author of the song "First Time Ever I Saw Your Face", played a vital role in initiating and extending what is now called the "folk song revival" in Britain. For sixty years, he was at the cultural forefront of numerous political struggles, producing plays, songs and scripts on the subjects of apartheid, fascism, industrial strife and human rights. He had a large impact on the North American folk music scene as well, not only through his songs but through the numerous articles he wrote on the subject for U.S. publications.
He grew up amongst a community of emigre Scots. From his earliest days he was as familiar with the cut-and-thrust of political discussion as he was with the songs and stories his parents had brought from Scotland. His parents often entertained themselves and friends with their large repertoire of songs. In 1930, after an elementary education, Jimmie left school. It was the middle of the Great Depression, and he went directly into the ranks of the unemployed. Seeking warmth at the Manchester Public Library he began a life-long program of self-education. He found intermittent work as, among other things, a mechanic, factory worker, builders' laborer, and street singer. He joined the Workers' Theatre but found it too pedestrian and conservative and departed to form his own agit-prop street-performing group, the Red Megaphones. His next two decades were devoted to theatrical and political activities.
World War II temporarily disrupted the work of Theatre Union. Within weeks the members were scattered and serving in the war effort. They continued to correspond about theatre art and techniques, however, and when the war ended a number of them pooled their armed forces gratuities and launched Theatre Workshop, inspired by the work and thoughts of Miller and Littlewood. It was around this time that Jimmie Miller changed his name. Like many of Scottish descent, he was inspired by the Lallans poets of the 19th century who attempted to create a standard Scots language and literature to preserve their identity in the face of English dominance. These contemporary writers took the names of earlier writers and Jimmie took the name Ewan MacColl, a pseudonym which eventually usurped his given name.
In an attempt to create a popular theater for the masses, Theatre Workshop traveled extensively from 1945-1952. Littlewood directed and produced while MacColl rehearsed the actors and wrote 11 new plays (many of them were translated and performed in German, French, Polish, and Russian). He often played leading roles in the performances as well. In his plays, Ewan experimented with language in an effort to close the gap between literary and oral traditions, stressing speech rhythms and cadences, constantly challenging his audiences. He used many of the same ideas and techniques in his songwriting and radio work. In the 1970s he would co-author (with Howard Goorney, one of the TW actors) a book of political plays and reminiscences about the Theatre Workshop entitled Agit-prop to Theatre Workshop.
In the late 1940s Ewan and Joan Littlewood divorced. In 1949 he fell in love with and married the dancer Jean Newlove. They had two children, Hamish and Kirsty, both of whom became singers and musicians. Kirsty later established herself as a pop vocalist and songwriter. She placed a number of songs on U.K. charts over the years and was a backup singer on recordings by such top acts as Simple Minds, the Rolling Stones, Talking Heads, Robert Plant, Van Morrison, and Morrisey.
MacColl wrote an estimated 300 songs, many of them created for theatrical or media-oriented programs. Among his best known songs are "Dirty Old Town" about his childhood town of Salford, "The Shoals of Herring," "Freeborn Man," "My Old Man," "The Thirty-Foot Trailer," "The Manchester Rambler." Many of these songs were born out of MacColl's work in folk clubs. In 1953 Ewan and such notable folk stalwarts as Alan Lomax, Bert Lloyd and uillean piper Seamus Ennis founded the Ballads and Blues Club, later known as the Singers Club. The latter club launched the careers of many young singers and groups until it closed in 1991. Ewan sang there regularly until just a week before his death.
By the late 1950s, MacColl and Littlewood had were no longer working as a team in theatre. MacColl's marriage with Jean Newlove had split up and Peggy and Ewan were joined both in personal and public life, becoming well known as a singing duo. They toured in Britain and abroad as singers of traditional and contemporary songs from 1957-1989. Between 1959 and 1972, they had three children: Neill and Calum (both musicians) and Kitty (who works in desk-top publishing and public relations). They gave concerts, conducted workshops and toured widely, singing traditional and contemporary songs. They wrote scripts and music for films and commercial television shows. Their involvement in and influence upon both theory and practice in the British folk revival was legendary.
In 1965 they founded the Critics Group, a cooperative company of revival singers interested in studying and combining folksinging and theatre techniques. From 1965 to 1971 Ewan wrote an annual musical stage documentary called The Festival of Fools, a dramatic musical revue of the year's news performed by the Critics Group. Seeger and MacColl were avid folksong collectors, chiefly among gypsies and travellers in Britain. They produced two anthologies: Travellers' Songs of England and Scotland and Doomsday in the Afternoon., a profile of the Stewarts of Blairgowrie, a singing family of Scots travellers.
In 1979 Ewan suffered the first of many heart attacks. Nevertheless he continued to work, tour, lecture and write songs. In 1980 he wrote his last play, The Shipmaster, a story of a sailing ship captain who cannot adapt to the coming of steam. It was in many ways analogous to his personal and professional life as his health was deteriorating. In 1987 he began writing his autobiography, Journeyman, which he completed a year later. On October 22, 1989, he died of complications following a heart operation. The following year Journeyman was published by Sidgwick and Jackson, but it went out of print when MacMillan bought the company. It may be re-published in the near future.
In the summer of 1989 he recorded his last album with Peggy, Naming of Names (Cooking Vinyl, 1990). His sons Calum and Neill assembled a compilation of their father's music, Black & White - The Definitive Collection (also Cooking Vinyl,1990). In 1993 another compilation came out, The Real MacColl (Topic). He was also represented by his rendition of "Dirty Old Town" on Rhino's Troubadours of British Folk Era, Volume 1. As of 1999 the Rounder catalog included two albums by Ewan and Peggy, At the Present Moment, originally issued in 1973, and Freeborn Man, first issued in 1983. Ewan and Peggy were also represented on CD by Scottish Drinking and Pipe Songs on Legacy, and Scottish Voices and English and Scottish Folk Ballads on Topic. Ossian has re-issued a number of his early collections of Scottish songs - it is becoming quite difficult to keep up with leases and re-leases of his material. The best way to keep track is to keep an eye on Peggy's website.
taken from http://www.peggyseeger.com
Dirty Old Town by Ewan MacColl
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