Copper family: Difference between revisions

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==Notes==
==Notes==
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{{reflist|2}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==

Latest revision as of 15:40, 4 September 2012

The Copper Family are a family of singers of traditional, unaccompanied English folk song. Originally from Rottingdean, near Brighton, Sussex, England, the nucleus of the family now live in the neighbouring village of Peacehaven.

History

The Copper Family have a tradition of the unaccompanied singing of traditional local songs that has been passed down through several generations. In 1898, they came to the attention of Kate Lee (d.1904), one of the founders of the Folk Song Society (later the English Folk Dance and Song Society). In his notes accompanying their archive CD Come Write Me Down, Vic Gammon notes that both the collecting of songs and their unaccompanied singing were less common than is often imagined at this time and that Lee, a singer herself, knew she had found something special when she encountered the Coppers.

James 'Brasser' Copper (1845-1924) and his brother Thomas (c.1847-c.1936) were made honorary members of the society, and 'Brasser' was prevailed upon to write down the songs that he knew. 'Brasser' had two sons, John (c.1879-1952) and Jim (1882-1954). In 1936, Jim wrote a further volume of songs. Jim had two children - Joyce (1910-?) and Bob (1915-2004).

In 1950, Jim and Bob were invited to sing on an episode of the BBC Radio programme Country Magazine and, over the next few years, the BBC would record them further, even producing a feature The Life Of James Copper, broadcast in September of 1951.

John's son was Walter Ronald, known as Ron (c.1913-1979). Together, Jim, John, Ron and Bob sang at the Royal Albert Hall and wider public attention followed the broadcast of a six-part television series Song Hunter, presented by Alan Lomax and featuring Jim, Bob and Ron. Bob wrote several books about the family and its songs, beginning with the widely acclaimed A Song For Every Season in 1971. The accompanying 4LP set (now a collector's item) found Bob and Ron singing alongside Bob’s daughter Jill and son John, bringing a further generation into the family tradition. The death of Ron was followed by the introduction of Jill’s husband Jon into the core line-up, and some of Bob's grandchildren began to appear with the group. The six grandchildren (Jill's children Mark, Andy and Sean Barratt, and John's children Ben, Lucy and Tom Copper) now also appear independently as The Young Coppers, singing the same family repertoire.

Various recordings of the family's singing have been made since the 1950s and some are still available, notably the aforementioned Come Write Me Down, which comes with two booklets full of biographical detail. Bob Copper died in 2004, a few days after receiving an MBE. The present generations of the family continue to sing unaccompanied traditional songs and, in 2006, BBC Four broadcast an hour-long programme[1] about the family. They are involved in The Imagined Village project.

Discography

  • Traditional Songs From Rottingdean (English Folk Dance & Song Society LP, 1963)
  • A Song For Every Season (Leader 4LP box set, 1971)
  • A Song For Every Season (Leader LP, selections from the box set, 1971)
  • The Banks of Claudy (Folktrax LP, 1975)
  • Twankydillo (Folktrax cassette, 1975)
  • Sweet Rose In June (Topic LP, 1977)
  • Come All You Bold Britons (Folktrax cassette, 1983)
  • Adam and Eve (Folktrax cassette, 1983)
  • Coppersongs: A Living Tradition (English Folk Dance & Song Society LP, 1987)
  • Coppersongs 2 (CD, 1995)
  • Coppersongs 3: The Legacy Continues (CD, 1998?)
  • Come Write Me Down (Topic CD, 2001)

Notes

  1. Coppersongs at BBC Four

Further reading

  • "Bob Copper - for the Sheer Joy of Singing" [radio interview transcript]. 2008. In Talking to Kinky and Karlheinz - 170 musicians get vocal on The Music Show ed. Anni Heino, 171-185. Sydney: ABC Books. ISBN 9780733320088.

External links

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