Martin Carthy
{{Short description|English singer and guitarist (born 1941)}}
{{EngvarB|date=September 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2014}}
{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Martin Carthy
| honorific_suffix = MBE
| image = Martin Carthy.JPG
| caption = Performing with The Imagined Village
at Camp Bestival, July 2008
| image_size =
| background = solo_singer
| birth_name = Martin Dominic Forbes Carthy
| alias =
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1941|5|21}}
| birth_place = Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England
| death_place =
| origin = London, England
| instrument = {{hlist|Vocals|guitar|mandolin|banjo|dulcimer|organ}}
| genre = {{hlist|English folk|folk baroque|British folk rock}}
| occupation = {{hlist|Singer|musician|songwriter|record producer}}
| years_active = 1960–present
| label = {{hlist|Topic|Fontana|Philips|Deram|B&C}}
| associated_acts = Waterson:Carthy
Blue Murder
The Watersons
Steeleye Span
Albion Country Band
Brass Monkey
The Imagined Village
Dave Swarbrick
| website =
| module = {{Infobox person
| embed = yes
| spouse = {{marriage|Norma Waterson|1972|2022|reason=her death}}
| children = Eliza Carthy
| relatives = {{unbulleted list|Mike Waterson
(brother-in-law)|Lal Waterson
(sister-in-law)}}}}
}}
Martin Dominic Forbes Carthy MBE (born 21 May 1941) is an English singer and guitarist who has remained one of the most influential figures in English folk music, inspiring contemporaries such as Bob Dylan and Paul Simon, as well as later artists such as Richard Thompson, since he emerged as a young musician in the early days of the folk revival in the UK during the 1960s and 1970s.
Early life
Carthy was born in Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England,{{cite book|title=The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music|editor=Colin Larkin|editor-link=Colin Larkin (writer)|publisher=Virgin Books|date=1997|edition=Concise|isbn=1-85227-745-9|page=236}} and grew up in Hampstead, North West London. His mother was an active socialist and his father, from a family of River Thames lightermen, went to grammar school and became a trade unionist and a councillor for Stepney at the age of 21. Martin's father had played fiddle and guitar as a young man but Martin was unaware of this connection to his folk music heritage until much later in life. His vocal and musical training began when he became a chorister at the Queen's Chapel of The Savoy.{{Cite web|last=Wilks|first=Jon|date=28 February 2018|title=The Martin Carthy Interview|url=https://tradfolk.co/music/music-interviews/martin-carthy/|access-date=9 February 2022|website=Tradfolk|language=en-GB}}
He picked up his father's old guitar for the first time after hearing "Rock Island Line" by Lonnie Donegan. He has cited his first major folk music influences as Big Bill Broonzy{{cite news|newspaper=Tradfolk|first=Jon|last=Wilks|date=24 September 2023|title=Not-so-rapid-fire questions with Martin Carthy|url=https://tradfolk.co/customs/customs-interviews/not-so-rapid-fire-questions-with-martin-carthy/}}{{cite web | url=https://folklondon.co.uk/2021/05/martin-carthy-at-80-trial-and-error-ive-built-an-entire-career-on-it/ | title=Martin Carthy at 80: 'Trial and error? I've built an entire career on it' | date=26 May 2021 }} and the syncopated guitar style of Elizabeth Cotten.{{cn|date=January 2025}} Carthy performed his first professional engagement at the age of 16 at The Loft, a coffee bar in Primrose Gardens.Interview on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs broadcast 13 January 2013 Although his father wanted him to go to university to study classics, Carthy left school at 17 and worked behind the scenes as a prompter at the open-air theatre in Regent's Park, then as an assistant stage manager (ASM) on a tour of The Merry Widow, and then at Theatre in the Round in Scarborough.{{cite book|first=Martin|last=Carthy|title=Martin Carthy: A Guitar in Folk Music|date=1987|publisher=New Punchbowl Music|location=Petersham, Surrey, UK|page=5}} He became a resident at the Troubadour folk club in Earl's Court in the early 1960s after his friend Robin Hall persuaded him to visit and listen to the piper Seamus Ennis. Carthy joined Redd Sullivan's Thameside Four in 1961 as a skiffle guitarist and singer.{{Cite web|url=https://mainlynorfolk.info/martin.carthy/biography.html|title=Martin Carthy: Biography|website=mainlynorfolk.info}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/redd-sullivan-mn0001392245|title=Redd Sullivan | Biography & History|website=AllMusic}}
In the early 1960s, Carthy visited Ewan MacColl's Ballads & Blues club to watch a friend, the singer Roy Guest. The main performer that night was Sam Larner. Carthy has since described how Larner's performance of "Lofty Tall Ship" altered his perception of how a traditional folk song could be sung, and how it was a key moment in his own development as an artist.
When American singer Bob Dylan arrived in London for the first time in 1962 to perform in Madhouse on Castle Street, he visited Martin Carthy at the Troubadour, The King & Queen, and The Singers Club. He learned the traditional song "Scarborough Fair" from Carthy, which he later developed into his own song "Girl from the North Country".
In 1963 (possibly to 1964) on one or probably multiple occasions he recorded or contributed to 14 songs in front of a live television audience for the UK regional television folk and blues music series Hullabaloo, presented by the Scottish folksinger Rory McEwen; these sessions were released on DVD in 2020.{{cite web|url=https://mainlynorfolk.info/folk/records/hullabaloo.html|title=Hullabaloo|website=Mainly Norfolk|access-date=19 March 2025}}
Musical career
File:Maddy Prior, Martin Carthy and Norma Waterson (26631662262).jpg and Norma Waterson]]
Carthy is a mostly solo performer of traditional songs in a very distinctive style, accompanying himself on his Martin 000-18 acoustic guitar; his style is marked by the use of alternative tunings (notably CGCDGA), and a strongly percussive picking style that emphasises the melody.
In 1964, Carthy joined Marian Mackenzie, Ralph Trainer and Leon Rosselson in the group The Three City Four. The group concentrated on contemporary songs, including some of Rosselson's own, and made two albums – the first for Decca and a second, Smoke and Dust (Where the Heart Should Have Been), for CBS. The 1965 eponymous debut The Three City Four featured Carthy singing lead vocals on two tracks – Sydney Carter's "Telephone Song" and Rosselson's own "History Lesson".{{cite web |url=http://mainlynorfolk.info/leon.rosselson/records/threecityfour.html |title=The Three City Four |website=Mainlynorfolk.info |date=8 November 2013 |access-date=11 January 2014}} Roy Bailey would replace Carthy when he later left the group.
Carthy's debut solo album, Martin Carthy, was released in 1965, and also featured Dave Swarbrick playing fiddle on some tracks, although he was not mentioned in the album's sleeve notes. Carthy's arrangement of the traditional ballad "Scarborough Fair" was adapted, without acknowledgement, by Paul Simon on the Simon and Garfunkel album recording Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme in 1966. This caused a rift between the pair which was not resolved until Simon invited Carthy to sing the song with him on-stage at the Hammersmith Apollo in 2000.{{cite web |url=https://vimeo.com/371277124 |title=Martin Carthy - Paul Simon - Hammersmith Apollo - 25 Oct 2000 |website=vimeo.com |access-date=24 November 2020}}
Musical collaborations
He has also been involved with many musical collaborations. He has sung with The Watersons since 1972; was twice a member of British folk rock group Steeleye Span; was a member of the Albion Country Band 1973 line-up, with members from the Fairport Convention family and John Kirkpatrick, that recorded the Battle of the Field album; and was part of the innovative Brass Monkey ensemble, which mixed a range of brass instruments with Carthy's guitar and mandolin and John Kirkpatrick's accordion, melodeon and concertina. Carthy was also a member of The Imagined Village for all three of their albums (2007–2012).
For many years Carthy enjoyed a creative partnership with fiddle player Dave Swarbrick; more recently, Waterson:Carthy has provided the forum for his successful musical partnership with wife Norma Waterson and their daughter Eliza Carthy.
Carthy has inspired contemporaries such as Bob Dylan and Paul Simon,{{cite news |url=https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/sandiego/access/49630255.html?dids=49630255:49630255&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Feb+10%2C+2000&author=GEORGE+VARGA&pub=The+San+Diego+Union+-+Tribune&desc=The+unknown+folkie+|+Despite+his+small+following%2C+Martin+Carthy+has+left+an+indelible+mark+on+the+genre&pqatl=google |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629050549/https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/sandiego/access/49630255.html?dids%3D49630255%3A49630255%26FMT%3DABS%26FMTS%3DABS%3AFT%26type%3Dcurrent%26date%3DFeb%2B10%2C%2B2000%26author%3DGEORGE%2BVARGA%26pub%3DThe%2BSan%2BDiego%2BUnion%2B%2D%2BTribune%26desc%3DThe%2Bunknown%2Bfolkie%2B%7C%2BDespite%2Bhis%2Bsmall%2Bfollowing%2C%2BMartin%2BCarthy%2Bhas%2Bleft%2Ban%2Bindelible%2Bmark%2Bon%2Bthe%2Bgenre%26pqatl%3Dgoogle#124;+Despite+his+small+following%2C+Martin+Carthy+has+left+an+indelible+mark+on+the+genre&pqatl=google |url-status=dead |archive-date=29 June 2011 |title=SignOnSanDiego.com | The San Diego Union-Tribune | San Diego Green Guide |work= The San Diego Union|access-date=1 November 2010 |first=George |last=Varga |date=10 February 2000}} as well as later artists such as Richard Thompson.
Personal life
Awards and honours
In June 1998 he was appointed an MBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours. He was named Folk Singer of the Year at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards in 2002, and again in 2005 when he also won the award for Best Traditional Track for "The Famous Flower of Serving-Men". In the 2007 Folk Awards Martin Carthy and Dave Swarbrick won Best Duo. In 2008 he was made an Honorary Fellow of the University of Central Lancashire. In 2014 he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.{{cn|date=December 2024}}
Discography
=Original/studio albums (solo, with Dave Swarbrick or with Eliza Carthy)=
{{div col}}
- Martin Carthy (1965) with Dave Swarbrick
- Second Album (1966) with Dave Swarbrick
- Byker Hill (1967) with Dave Swarbrick
- But Two Came By (1968) with Dave Swarbrick
- Prince Heathen (1969) with Dave Swarbrick
- Landfall (1971)
- Shearwater (1972 / 2005 with extra tracks)
- Sweet Wivelsfield (1974)
- Crown of Horn (1976)
- Because It's There (1979)
- Out of the Cut (1982)
- Right of Passage (1988)
- Life and Limb (1990) with Dave Swarbrick
- Skin and Bone (1992) with Dave Swarbrick
- Signs of Life (1998)
- Waiting for Angels (2004)
- Straws in the Wind (2006) with Dave Swarbrick
- The Moral of the Elephant (2014) with Eliza Carthy
{{div col end}}
=Compilations and live albums=
- This Is... Martin Carthy: The Bonny Black Hare and other songs (1971) with Dave Swarbrick [six tracks from Byker Hill and six tracks from But Two Came By]
- Selections (1971) with Dave Swarbrick [six tracks from Byker Hill; three tracks from No Songs EP, 1967; three tracks from But Two Came By]
- Selections (1972), New Zealand and Australia only
- Round Up (circa early 1970s) with Dave Swarbrick [second side of Martin Carthy and first side of Second Album]
- Brigg Fair (circa early 1970s) with Dave Swarbrick [reissue of Byker Hill]
- Tales of Long Ago (circa early 1970s) with Dave Swarbrick [reissue of But Two Came By]
- The Collection (1993)
- Rigs of the Time: The Best Of Martin Carthy (1993)
- The Kershaw Sessions (1994) [recorded for BBC Radio, 1987 and 1988]
- A Collection (1999)
- Both Ears and the Tail (2000, live recording from 1966) with Dave Swarbrick
- The Carthy Chronicles (2001), 4-CD 83-track box set
- The Definitive Collection (2003)
- Martin Carthy at Ruskin Mill (2005) [very limited release – only 200 copies]
- The January Man: Live In Belfast 1978 (2011)
- Walnut Creek: Live Recordings, 1989–1996 (2011)
- Essential Martin Carthy (2011)
- The Folk Vault: Martin Carthy, Live in Whitby 1984 (2013)
=Releases on other formats=
- No Songs (7-inch vinyl EP 1967) with Dave Swarbrick
- "The Bonny Lass of Anglesey" b/w "Palaces of Gold" (7-inch vinyl single 1976)
- 100 Not Out (1992), longform video with Dave Swarbrick
- British Fingerstyle Guitar (instructional VHS video released 1993, reissued on DVD 2006)
- Guitar Maestros (DVD 2006)
=As a member of [[Steeleye Span]]=
- Please to See the King (1971)
- Ten Man Mop, or Mr. Reservoir Butler Rides Again (1971)
- Storm Force Ten (1977)
- Live at Last (1978)
- The Journey (Live at The Forum, London, 1995) (1999)
=With [[Ashley Hutchings]], the [[Albion Country Band]] and the [[Albion Band]]=
- Battle of the Field (1976, recorded 1973)
- ''Son of Morris On (1976)
- Rise Up Like the Sun (1978), as guest
- Lark Rise To Candleford (1980)
- The BBC Sessions (1998) (tracks 1–4 recorded 1973)
=As a member of [[The Watersons]] and [[Waterson:Carthy]]=
File:mcarthy nwaterson.jpg performance in Cranleigh, April 2006.]]
- Lal & Mike Waterson: Bright Phoebus (1972)
- The Watersons: For Pence and Spicy Ale (1975)
- The Watersons: Sound, Sound Your Instruments of Joy (1977)
- The Watersons: Green Fields (1981)
- Waterson:Carthy: Waterson:Carthy (1994)
- Waterson:Carthy: Common Tongue (1996)
- Waterson:Carthy: Broken Ground (1999)
- Waterson:Carthy: A Dark Light (2002)
- The Watersons: The Definitive Collection (2003)
- Waterson:Carthy: Fishes & Fine Yellow Sand (2004)
- The Watersons: Mighty River of Song (2004) 4-CD & DVD box set of Watersons and related recordings
- The Watersons: A Yorkshire Christmas (2005)
- Waterson:Carthy: The Definitive Collection (2005)
- Waterson:Carthy: Holy Heathens and the Old Green Man (2006)
- Norma Waterson & Eliza Carthy with the Gift Band: Anchor (2018)
=As a member of [[Brass Monkey (band)|Brass Monkey]]=
{{div col}}
- Brass Monkey (1984)
- See How It Runs (1986)
- The Complete Brass Monkey (1993) compilation of the previous two albums
- Sound and Rumour (1999)
- Going and Staying (2001)
- Flame of Fire (2004)
- The Definitive Collection (2005)
- Head of Steam (2009)
{{div col end}}
=As a member of [[Blue Murder (folk)|Blue Murder]]=
- No One Stands Alone (2002)
=Other notable releases=
{{div col}}
- Thamesiders & Davy Graham (1963) 7-inch EP
- Three City Four: Three City Four (1965)
- Dave Swarbrick, Martin Carthy & Diz Disley: Rags, Reels & Airs (1967)
- Hedy West, Serves 'Em Fine (1967) (as accompanist)
- Various Artists: Bright Phoebus: Songs by Lal & Mike Waterson (1972)
- John Kirkpatrick: Plain Capers (1976)
- Yuletracks (1986)
- Band of Hope: Rhythm And Reds (1994)
- Wood, Wilson, Carthy: Wood, Wilson, Carthy (1998)
- Dave Swarbrick: Swarb! (2003) 4-CD box set career retrospective with numerous Carthy tracks
- Martins4: Guitar Nights presents the Four Martins (2003) released on CD and DVD (DVD has additional tracks)
- Various Artists: The Imagined Village (2007)
- The Imagined Village: Empire & Love (2010)
- The Imagined Village: Bending The Dark (2012)
- Three City Four: Smoke & Dust (2010), compilation of tracks from two 1960s albums.
{{div col end}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category}}
- [https://mainlynorfolk.info/martin.carthy/ Mainly Norfolk's unofficial website]
- [https://mainlynorfolk.info/martin.carthy/records/rigsofthetime.html#notes John Crosby's 1993 Martin Carthy biography on Mainly Norfolk]
- [https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/artist/b5jw/ BBC Folk database]{{fv|date=February 2025}}
- [http://www.slipcue.com/music/international/celtic/artists/carthy.html discography on Slipcue e-zine]
- {{Discogs artist|Martin Carthy}}
- {{IMDb name|4533428}}
- [https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m00233z9/bbc-four-sessions-martin-carthy-and-friends "Martin Carthy and Friends"] at BBC Four Sessions, Union Chapel, Islington, 30 April 2002
{{Steeleye Span}}
{{Albion Band}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Carthy, Martin}}
Category:English folk guitarists
Category:English male guitarists
Category:Members of the Order of the British Empire
Category:British fingerstyle guitarists
Category:People from Hampstead
Category:Entertainers from Hatfield, Hertfordshire
Category:Steeleye Span members
Category:People from Robin Hood's Bay
Category:English folk rock musicians
Category:Musicians from Hertfordshire
Category:Waterson–Carthy members
Category:The Albion Band members
Category:The Watersons members
Category:Blue Murder (folk group) members
Category:Brass Monkey (band) members
Category:Topic Records artists
Category:Fontana Records artists
Category:Deram Records artists
Category:Philips Records artists