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Carthy & Swarbs


Martin Carthy and Dave Swarbrick

To Celebrate the 70th birthday of the world's oldest record label, Topic Records.

We present this unique evening of folk music

Friday 25th September

The Union Chapel

Islington London N1

Doors open 7pm, bar available

www.wegottickets.com/event/46242

£15

Visit Topic’s website for information on artists and more forthcoming birthday concerts www.topicrecords.co.uk

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Win Tickets!

We are running competitions with various publications and websites to offer you the chance to win tickets.

Many thanks to fRoots for working with us on our competition - to see the question and hopefully win your tickets, go to the Forum on the fRoots website.

http://froots.net/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=4654


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Martin Carthy

Martin Carthy is one of the finest singers and interpreters of British traditional music and an innovative and highly influential guitar player.

He made his first solo album, Martin Carthy in 1965, recording this and his second album with Dave Swarbrick. From 1970 to 72, Martin was in Steeleye Span. In 1972, he began recording on his own, marrying Norma Waterson the same year and joining her family's group, The Watersons. He also joined The Albion Band, working with them on the album Battle of the Field.

Between and during group ventures, Martin maintained a busy solo career, recording such acclaimed albums as Crown of Horn (1976) and Because It's There (1979).

In the early nineties Martin renewed his partnership with Dave Swarbrick, producing two more fine albums, Life and Limb and Skin and Bone. By then Martin was working alongside his wife and daughter, Norma Waterson and Eliza Carthy (both Mercury Music Prize nominees and successful artists in their own right) as Waterson:Carthy. The albums Waterson:Carthy (1994) and Common Tongue received great praise. His new solo album Waiting for Angels is now available.


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Dave Swarbrick

Dave Swarbrick was born in London in April 1941and moved to Yorkshire when only three months old. At the age of six he learnt the rudiments of the fiddle from the local fiddler, Mr. Bootham. When he was eight years, old the family moved to Birmingham. Dave left school there and at the age of fifteen became apprenticed to I.C.I. as a letterpress printer.

During his indentured years Dave toured and recorded extensively. Amongst the huge back catalogue from that time are three Radio Ballads with Ewan McColl, Peggy Seeger and Charles Parker. Dave's lifelong passion for folk music was born in those busy years.

Amongst the many performers Dave met, worked and recorded with during those years were Beryl and Roger Marriott, A .L. Lloyd, Alf Edwards and, of course, Ian Campbell.

Dave joined the an Campbell Folk Group in the early 1960s and left printing shortly afterwards. In 1966 he teamed up with Martin Carthy and this remarkable pairing played an important part in the tremendous shake up given to British folk music in the middle to late 1960s. When they parted in 1969, Dave joined Fairport Convention and his contribution to folk and folk/rock music is legendary and well documented.

In 1984 Dave left Fairport and, along with Kevin Dempsey, Chris Leslie and Martin Jenkins, formed Whippersnapper, a group renowned for its drive and acoustic prowess. In 1989 Dave decided to leave to concentrate on solo work and revive his partnership with Martin Carthy.

In the early 1990s, Dave and Martin were members of the folk "supergroup" Band of Hope, along with such luminaries as Roy Bailey, Steafan Hannigan, John Kirkpatrick and Chris Parkisnon. The band toured twice and produced one CD, Rhythm and Reds.

In 1993, Dave moved to Australia and for the next three years he lived in the Blue Mountains. It was there that he met and began working with Alistair Hulett. Their partnership has produced two highly acclaimed CDs, Saturday Johnny and Jimmy The Rat and The Cold Grey Light Of Dawn.

Dave returned to England in 1996. He and Kevin Dempsey started making music together shortly afterwards. He also regularley tours with Martin Carthy.


Friday 25th September 2009

The Union Chapel

Compton Terrace

Islington

London N1

Nearest Tube: Highbury & Islington (2 minutes) or Angel

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