Tony Rose

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sweet Jenny Of The Moor 04:09 Tools
Blackwaterside 04:25 Tools
Jockie To The Fair 00:52 Tools
Searching For Lambs 03:10 Tools
Bridgewater Fair 02:22 Tools
Just as the Tide was Flowing 03:58 Tools
Basket Of Eggs 04:11 Tools
John Blunt 02:05 Tools
Lark In The Morning 02:56 Tools
True Lovers 03:24 Tools
'twas On One April Morning 04:07 Tools
Limbo 03:02 Tools
Big Blue Spruce 01:03 Tools
Grand Conversation 03:28 Tools
Sheath & Knife 06:33 Tools
The Tree's They Do Grow High 03:01 Tools
Day Today (Prod. DA) 03:01 Tools
Polly Vaughan 03:01 Tools
Sheath and Knife 03:01 Tools
Somebody (Prod. DA) 03:15 Tools
The Murdered Servantman 03:15 Tools
Compliments Returned 03:13 Tools
Opening Of The Newcastle & Shields Railway 07:34 Tools
The Fireman's Growl 07:34 Tools
The Wonderful Effects Of The Leicester Railway 07:34 Tools
Tom The Barber 07:34 Tools
Up to the Rigs 04:04 Tools
April Morning 07:34 Tools
Golden Vanitee 04:04 Tools
Boots Of Spanish Leather 04:04 Tools
Banks of Green Willow 04:04 Tools
Barley Mow 03:18 Tools
Robin Hood and the Bishop of Hereford 04:04 Tools
The Bonny Light Horseman 04:41 Tools
Devon Bell-ringing song 03:26 Tools
The Three Bells (Jimmy Brown) 03:26 Tools
Moses Of The Mail 03:26 Tools
The Jug Band Made the Charts 04:19 Tools
Come all you warlike Seamen 03:18 Tools
Rambling Sailor 02:10 Tools
Poor Man's Sorrows 02:10 Tools
The Bellringing 02:10 Tools
Lord Rendal 02:10 Tools
Clerk Saunders 03:18 Tools
Stormy Weather 03:18 Tools
Hennesy 03:18 Tools
Five Foot Flirt 03:18 Tools
Young Hunting 03:18 Tools
The Trees They Do Grow High 02:10 Tools
The Yarmouth Tragedy 02:10 Tools
Bold Archer 02:10 Tools
The Recruiting Sergeant 02:10 Tools
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The Independent's obituary for Tony Rose said "A beautifully relaxed interpreter of traditional song, with rare warmth and intimacy, Tony Rose made an indelible mark on the British folk scene. Emerging during the 1970s when folk clubs were still a force to be reckoned with, he was wholly committed to the grass roots scene, eschewing the seemingly sexier terrain of folk rock bands, modern song and political material that seduced so many of his contemporaries. He loved traditional music and while it never brought him riches – indeed he returned to his first job as a teacher when the folk clubs themselves hit a recession in the late 1980s – he saw no reason to deviate widely from it. Accompanying himself on guitar and English concertina, he established an easy style that was instantly identifiable, putting him on a par with such giants of the era as Martin Carthy and Nic Jones. Born in Exeter in 1941, Rose was smitten by folk song at Oxford University in the early 1960s, where he had won a scholarship to study Modern Languages at Queen's College. He first heard the British folk pioneers Louis Killen, Shirley Collins, Alex Campbell and Johnny Handle at the university's Heritage Society. He was also profoundly influenced by another West Country singer, Cyril Tawney, the ex-Navy man turned songwriter. Rose cut his musical teeth at his local folk club, the Jolly Porter in Exeter, where he became an occasional member of the resident band the Journeymen. He moved to London to become a teacher in 1965 but, offered more and more gigs on the burgeoning folk scene, he became a professional singer in 1969. His first album, Young Hunting, in 1970 had a huge impact, mixing West Country songs like "The Bellringing" and "Tavistock Goosey Fair" with comic ditties and testing ballads like "Golden Vanitee" and "Blackwater Side". With his rich, lyrical voice, a repertoire of largely unfamiliar material and erudite introductions, the long-haired Rose swiftly became an important member of the second wave of the folk revival. The subsquent albums Under The Greenwood Tree in 1971 (with more complex arrangements and also involving Dolly Collins and Peter Knight) and On Banks Of Green Willow in 1976 enhanced his reputation further. On Banks Of Green Willow particularly confirmed his status as a great singer, tackling epic ballads like "The Bonny Hind", "Lord Randall" and "Fanny Blair". Of all his recorded work this was his tour de force. In the late 1970s he formed a folk "supergroup", Bandoggs, with Pete and Christine Coe and his close friend Nic Jones, in which Rose played, among other things, mouth organ and performed a storming version of Loudon Wainwright's "Swimming Song". Despite acclaimed live work, the group suffered financial and logistical problems, and split up without recording. Rose returned to his solo career, releasing the 1982 album Poor Fellows (the title track was drawn from Peter Bellamy's groundbreaking folk opera The Transports). This encompassed contemporary song for the first time with thoughtful arrangements of Bob Dylan's "Boots of Spanish Leather" and Richard Thompson's "Down Where The Drunkards Roll". While the album also featured traditional material like "The Yarmouth Tragedy" and "Clerk Saunders", Rose's sense of the absurd was illustrated by the inclusion of his grave interpretation of the kitsch pop standard "The Three Bells," a song he was even occasionally prevailed upon to sing in French as an encore at gigs. But as the folk scene constricted, artists relying exclusively on the club circuit struggled and Rose ultimately returned to teaching. However, he remained a familiar figure on the scene, gigging occasionally and regularly turning up at West Country folk events such as the Padstow May Day celebrations and Sidmouth Folk Festival. He also worked as a folk journalist. In 1999 he retired from teaching and made an unlikely return with a new album, Bare Bones, released on his own Boneshaker label, which largely featured new versions of old songs no longer available. Sounding as good as he ever did, he was still easing himself back into the circuit when he was diagnosed with cancer in 2001. He died in June 2002." He recorded several LPs for the Trailer label in the 1970s, which outrageously have remained unavailable since Trailer's bankruptcy. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.