Giving Voice to Traditional Songs: Jean Redpath's Autobiography, 1937-2014

Giving Voice to Traditional Songs: Jean Redpath's Autobiography, 1937-2014

Giving Voice to Traditional Songs: Jean Redpath's Autobiography, 1937-2014

Giving Voice to Traditional Songs: Jean Redpath's Autobiography, 1937-2014

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Overview

The singer tells her story from Scottish childhood to success on the Greenwich Village folk scene and beyond, and shares her passion for traditional music.

Jean Redpath is best remembered for her impressive repertoire of ancient ballads, Robert Burns songs, and contemporary folk music, recorded and performed over a career spanning some fifty years. In this book, Mark Brownrigg captures Redpath’s idiosyncratic and often humorous voice through his interviews with her during the last eighteen months of her life. Here Redpath reflects on her humble beginnings, her Scottish heritage, her life’s journey, and her mission of preserving, performing, and teaching traditional song.

A native of Edinburgh, Redpath was raised in a family of singers of traditional Scots songs. She broadened her knowledge through work with the Edinburgh Folk Society and Scottish studies at Edinburgh University, but prior to graduation, she abandoned academia to follow her passion of singing. Her independent spirit took her to the United States, where she found commercial success amid the Greenwich Village folk-music revival in New York in the 1960s—and shared a house and concert stages with Bob Dylan and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott. Soon a rave review in the New York Times launched her career and led to wide recognition as a true voice of traditional Scottish songs.

As a regular on Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion and a guest on Late Show with David Letterman, Redpath endeared herself to millions with her soft melodies and amusing tales—and her extraordinary career and extensive knowledge of traditional Scottish music history earned her prestigious university appointments, a performance for Queen Elizabeth II, and induction into the Scottish Traditional Music Hall of Fame. This is her remarkable story.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611178937
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
Publication date: 04/13/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 225
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Mark Brownrigg, retired from careers in banking and higher education, is now a freelance writer and novelist. He is the author of seven historical and contemporary Scottish novels, including Another Chance, Another Life, and a frequent contributor to the Scots Magazine, the Countryman, the the Dalesman, and other regional and leisure publications.

Table of Contents

Preface ix

Chapter 1 Family and Childhood Years 1

Chapter 2 Flying the Family Flag at University 18

Chapter 3 Flowers and First Steps 34

Chapter 4 A Fun Way of Living 50

Chapter 5 Living on the Road 69

Chapter 6 Moving into New Ventures 91

Chapter 7 My Trusty Friels 113

Chapter 8 Wherever I May Roam 132

Chapter 9 Honors? Have They Got the Right Person? 153

Chapter 10 What Do You Mean "We Have a Problem"? 169

Chapter 11 So Where Did My Journey Take Me? 181

Postscript 191

Glossary 193

Discography 195

What People are Saying About This

Living Tradition magazine - Pete Heywood

Jean was committed to teaching and passing on her love of Scots songs. She brought honesty, integrity, credibility, and soul to her performances. Her professional life was a Masterclass and her legacy in respect to traditional song is hard to overstate.

David McGuinness

This is a warm and compelling account of a life in music, lived with determination, humour, and independence. Along the way, Jean Redpath dispenses wise advice, provides insights into the U. S. folk scene of the 1960s and into her own character, and graciously acknowledges her good fortune alongside her talent.

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