Reg Meuross

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Reg Meuross
Reg Meuross at the Cockpit Theatre, London, on 5 October 2019
Reg Meuross at the Cockpit Theatre, London, on 5 October 2019
Background information
Birth nameReginald Lawrence Meuross
Born5 January 1953 (1953-01-05) (age 71)
Stockton-on-Tees, England
GenresFolk music
Occupation(s)Musician, singer-songwriter
Instrument(s)Guitar, banjo, dulcimer, voice, harmonica
Years active1986–present
LabelsHatsongs, Stockfisch Records
Websiteregmeuross.com

Reg Meuross is an English singer and songwriter based in Somerset. He has released 15 solo albums. His song-writing contains narrative, protest and commentary.

History[edit]

Meuross first appeared on the British acoustic music scene in 1986 when he formed The Panic Brothers[1] with comedian Richard Morton. He made an album called In The Red, produced by Clive Gregson. "The Brothers" appeared regularly on TV, including on Friday Night Live; and at Edinburgh, Sidmouth, Glastonbury and other festivals.

Following his work with The Panic Brothers, Meuross formed a roots band, The Flamingos, featuring former Graham Parker guitarist Martin Belmont, Bob Loveday from the Penguin Café Orchestra and Bob Geldof's band, and Alison Jones of The Barely Works. The Flamingos recorded an album, Arrested, in 1991.

Meuross toured until 2009 with Hank Wangford and The Lost Cowboys as a member of the band, and also as a solo artist with Hank Wangford on the "No Hall Too Small" tour.[2]

Meuross's solo recording and touring career began in 1996. He has released 15 albums as a solo artist. In a review in The Guardian in 2016, Robin Denselow described him as "one of the more versatile, under-sung survivors of the English acoustic scene."[3]

He co-wrote Seth Lakeman's first single, "Divided We Will Fall", from the album The Well Worn Path, released on the Cooking Vinyl label in November 2018.[4]

Solo albums[edit]

In 1996 Meuross released his first solo album, The Goodbye Hat.[5] It was followed by Short Stories in 2004, and Still in 2006.

Dragonfly was released in July 2008. One of its songs, "And Jesus Wept", was inspired by the story of Harry Farr, a first World War soldier in the trenches who suffered from shell-shock and was shot for cowardice and desertion. "Lizzie Loved a Highwayman" was the story of highwayman Dick Turpin, related by his widow. Meuross performed these two songs at the Royal Albert Hall on 25 March, 2009, as part of a concert for the Teenage Cancer Trust.[6] The title track of the album, "Dragonfly", was written about the events of 9/11[7] and the 7 July bombings in London.

In 2010, Meuross released All This Longing,[8] an all-acoustic album featuring Paul Sartin (Bellowhead), Andy Cutting on accordion, Jackie Oates on viola, Simon Edwards on bass and Roy Dodds (Fairground Attraction) on percussion. The album included the song "The Heart Of Ann Lee", which told the story of the Manchester-born, 18th century founder of the Shakers, Ann Lee, who was forced into marriage, bore four live children "taken before they were ten" and four stillborn, and fled to the United States to escape persecution.[8]

In 2011, Meuross released The Dreamed and the Drowned, a collection of previously unreleased tracks recorded between 2006 and 2011.[9] His next two albums were Leaves and Feathers, released in 2013,[10] and England Green and England Grey, released in 2014.

December, released in 2016, was the first in a trilogy of albums on which Meuross sang and played all the instruments (guitar, banjo, dulcimer, tenor guitar and harmonica[11]) himself. Martin Chilton of The Telegraph included December in his selection for Best Folk Albums of 2016.[12] In 2017, Meuross released Faraway People,[13] the title track of which was named "Song of the Year 2017" in Fatea Magazine's annual awards show.[14] Twelve Silk Handerchiefs was released in December 2018: the songs on this album told the story of the 1968 Hull triple trawler tragedy in which 58 men died, and the subsequent campaign for improved safety conditions. The solo trilogy was completed in November 2019 with the release of RAW.

In October 2021, Meuross released Songs of Love and Death, a collection of traditional folk songs made in collaboration with folk duo Harbottle and Jones. Meuross said he had played over the years with some of the finest folk musicians in Britain, and folk songs were "in my breath and in my blood", but this was the first time he had thought of recording a folk album. He toured Songs of Love and Death with Harbottle & Jones in the UK in the Spring of 2022.[15]

His album Stolen from God was released in April 2023. The songs on the album, the product of four years' research, related to England's part in the transatlantic slave trade of the 17th and 18th centuries.

Discography[edit]

Albums[edit]

  • Panic Brothers – In The Red (Special Delivery 1987)
  • Reg Meuross with The Flamingos – Arrested (1991)
  • Reg Meuross – The Goodbye Hat (1996)[5]
  • Reg Meuross – Short Stories (2004)
  • Reg Meuross – Still (2006)
  • Reg Meuross – Dragonfly (Hatsongs; 2008)[7]
  • Reg Meuross – All This Longing (Hatsongs; 2010)[8]
  • Reg Meuross – The Dreamed and the Drowned (Hatsongs; 2011)[9]
  • Reg Meuross – Leaves & Feathers (Hatsongs; 2013)[10]
  • Reg Meuross – England Green & England Grey (Hatsongs; 2014)[16]
  • Reg Meuross – December (March 2016)
  • Reg Meuross – Faraway People (July 2017)[13]
  • Reg Meuross – Songs About A Train (February 2018)
  • Reg Meuross – Reg Meuross (April 2018) Released by Stockfisch Records
  • Reg Meuross – 12 Silk Handkerchiefs (December 2018)[17]
  • Reg Meuross – RAW (October 2019)[11]
  • Reg Meuross with Harbottle & Jonas – Songs Of Love & Death (October 2019)[18][19]
  • Reg Meuross – Stolen From God (April 2023)

Singles[edit]

  • Reg Meuross – "Shine On" (1 May 2020)[20]
  • Reg Meuross – "The Bevin Boys (Bill Pettinger's Lament)" (VE Day, 8 May 2021)

Musical style and subject matter[edit]

Meuross's work can be described as folk music in the living tradition. He writes about real people and their lives, delivering his songs on stringed instruments – primarily a restored 1944 Martin 017 guitar[11] – that are often played in a fingerpicking style. His subject matter is varied and his repertoire includes songs about historical characters and events, protest songs, political and social commentary, love songs, and flights of imagination inspired by personal experiences.[21]

Songs about historical figures and events[edit]

  • "And Jesus Wept" tells the story of British soldier Private Harry Farr, who was posthumously pardoned in 2017, having been executed in 1916 for alleged cowardice during the Battle of the Somme
  • "Emily's Pages" is about the 19th century American poet Emily Dickinson
  • "For Sophie (This Beautiful Day)" honours the courage of German student Sophie Scholl, who was guillotined by the Nazis for distributing anti-war leaflets
  • "Lizzie Loved a Highwayman" unravels the romanticised myths surrounding English highwayman Dick Turpin
  • "Martin" recognises the actions of Saint Martin of Tours
  • "Mr Rain The Tailor" is a tribute to the courage of PC Bill Barker, who was swept away and drowned while trying to save motorists by directing them off a bridge over the swollen River Derwent during the Cumbrian floods of November 2009[22]
  • "Shelley's Heart" is about the life, death and heart of Percy Bysshe Shelley, which was returned to his widow after not burning during his cremation
  • "The Angel Maker" tells of English nurse, baby farmer and serial killer Amelia Dyer
  • "The Ballad of Flora Sandes" is an interpretation of the life of the only British woman to serve in combat as an enlisted soldier in World War I
  • "The Band Played Sweet Marie" is the tale of the violin given to RMS Titanic bandleader Wallace Hartley by his fiancée Maria Robinson, as relayed in her voice
  • "The Bevin Boys (Bill Pettinger's Lament)" acknowledges the contribution to the war effort made by the Bevin Boys, whose civil conscription to dangerous work in the mines to boost coal production during World War II was widely misinterpreted as cowardly draft dodging, and only formally recognised by the British government in 1995
  • "The Bitter Wind" is the tragic story of the 1892 Peter Tavy murders of Emma Doidge and William Rowe by William Williams, whose attentions had been spurned by Emma[23]
  • "The Boundary Stone" relates the heartbreaking story of Emmott Sydall of Eyam and her fiancé Rowland Torre of Stoney Middleton, who were separated when the villagers of Eyam self-quarantined during the 1665-6 outbreak of bubonic plague in Derbyshire[24][25]
  • "The Crossbones Graveyard" reveals some of the horrors concealed in an old, unconsecrated burial ground near Southwark Cathedral in south London, where an estimated 15,000 prostitutes and paupers were buried before it was closed in 1853[26]
  • "The Dreamed and the Drowned" relays the tragic tale of Betty Corrigall, who was buried in the 1770s in unconsecrated ground on Hoy in the Orkneys, having taken her own life to escape the shame of being unmarried and pregnant after being abandoned by her lover, a whaler
  • "The Eyes of Ida Lewis" tells about the heroic American lighthouse keeper Idawalley Lewis, from the perspective of an imagined suitor
  • "The Heart of Ann Lee" considers the trauma suffered by the founding leader of the Shakers, who despite her aversion to sexual relations was forced to marry by her father, lost all her four children in infancy, and was frequently imprisoned for her religious beliefs and actions before she fled to America to escape the persecution she suffered in England
  • "Tony Benn's Tribute to Emily Davison" honours both Davison's having hidden herself in a broom cupboard in the House of Commons on the night of the 1911 census, and Tony Benn's erecting a plaque in the same cupboard to commemorate her actions[27][28]
  • "Victor Jara" remembers the Chilean folk singer and political activist who was imprisoned, tortured and murdered in Chile Stadium by military officers under dictator Augusto Pinochet's regime
  • "William Brewster Dreams of America"
  • "What Would William Morris Say?" asks the listener to consider what the 19th century poet, textile designer and socialist activist would think of modern-day England

Song cycles[edit]

  • Meuross's 2018 album 12 Silk Handkerchiefs[29] comprises a song cycle with narrated interludes, which together encapsulate the history of the 1968 Hull triple trawler tragedy in which 58 men died,[30][31] and the subsequent campaign led by fishwife Lillian Bilocca for improved safety conditions on trawlers.
Inspired by the book The Headscarf Revolutionaries by Brian W. Lavery,[32] the full song cycle was first performed as a multimedia show in Hull Minster on 8 November 2018, with Lavery narrating, and local Hull musicians Sam Martyn and Mick McGarry completing the musical line-up with Meuross.[33]
  • Stolen From God, released in 2023, is a 10-song cycle on England's part in the Transatlantic slave trade during the 17th and 18th centuries. The product of four years of research, the album documents the impact of the trade from various perspectives, including the benefits that accrued to the Crown, the church, and other British institutions.[34][35]

Protest and commentary songs[edit]

  • "England Green & England Grey" bemoans greed, corruption and the iniquities of government, and makes an oblique reference to questions that arose around practices at the BBC in the wake of the Jimmy Savile scandal. The melody incorporates elements of the Anglican hymn "All Things Bright and Beautiful".[21]
  • "Faraway People" criticises the UK government's allocation of welfare benefits, and pays tribute to those whose deaths can be linked to their inability to access various types of support for reasons such as their deemed fitness for work under a Work Capability Assessment, the withdrawal of housing benefits due to the bedroom tax (a result of the UK government's austerity programme), or not qualifying for a Jobseeker's Allowance. Among those remembered in the song are Stephanie Bottrill[36] and Christelle Pardo and her five-month-old son.[37]
  • "The Lonesome Death of Michael Brown" speaks out against police brutality after the 2014 fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown Jr. by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson.[38] The title of the song is a nod to Bob Dylan's "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll", which itself is a commentary on racism in 1960s America, being about the death in Baltimore of a bartender at the hands of a drunk patron, who struck her with a cane causing her to die of a brain haemorrhage.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Panic Brothers – Discography". Discogs. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  2. ^ BBC. "No Hall Too Small". www.bbc.co.uk.
  3. ^ Denselow, Robin (17 March 2016). "Reg Meuross: December review – a very English kind of Americana". The Guardian – via www.theguardian.com.
  4. ^ "Divided We Will Fall Archives - Folking.com". folking.com. 4 November 2018.
  5. ^ a b "Reg Meuross – The Goodbye Hat". Discogs. 26 October 1995. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  6. ^ "Teenage Cancer Trust 2009 Setlists". The Setlist Wiki. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  7. ^ a b Carter, Malcolm. "Reg Meuross: Dragonfly". Penny Black magazine. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  8. ^ a b c Davies, Mike (September 2010). "Reg Meuross — All This Longing (Hatsongs)". NetRhythms. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  9. ^ a b Davies, Mike (September 2011). "Reg Meuross — The Dreamed And The Drowned 2006–2010 (Hat)". NetRhythms. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  10. ^ a b Davies, Mike (February 2013). "Reg Meuross – Leaves and Feathers (Hatsongs)". NetRhythms. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  11. ^ a b c Pratt, David (3 October 2019). "Reg Meuross: Raw – Folk Radio". Folk Radio UK. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  12. ^ Chilton, Martin (19 January 2016). "The best folk music albums of 2016". The Telegraph – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  13. ^ a b Davies, Mike (29 July 2017). "Reg Meuross: Faraway People (Album Review) – Folk Radio UK". Folk Radio UK. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  14. ^ "FATEA – Home". www.fatea-records.co.uk.
  15. ^ "Reg Meuross Songs of Love and Death".
  16. ^ Chilton, Martin (4 September 2014). "Reg Meuross, England Green & England Grey, album review". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  17. ^ Blake, Thomas (29 November 2018). "Reg Meuross: 12 Silk Handkerchiefs (Album Review) – Folk Radio UK". Folk Radio UK. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  18. ^ Davies, Mike (25 October 2021). "Reg Meuross, Harbottle & Jonas - Songs Of Love & Death - Folk Radio UK". Folk Radio UK. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  19. ^ Carter, Malcolm (1 March 2022). "Reg Meuross and Harbottle & Jonas - Songs of Love and Death - Review". Pennyblackmusic. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  20. ^ "SINGLES BAR 52 – A round-up of recent EPs and singles". Folking.com. 18 May 2020. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  21. ^ a b Heywood, Fiona (30 October 2016). "The songs of Reg Meuross – Living Tradition". The Living Tradition. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  22. ^ Carter, Helen (20 November 2009). "Policeman dies as devastating deluge strikes Britain". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
  23. ^ Sandles, Tim (26 March 2016). "Tavistock Murder – Legendary Dartmoor". Legendary Dartmoor. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
  24. ^ Hall, Colin (7 November 2014). "Lost love of Rowland Torre and Emmott Sydall". Stoney Middleton Heritage Centre. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  25. ^ Beaumont, Peter (15 March 2020). "Eyam recalls lessons from 1665 battle with plague". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  26. ^ "Crossbones". Crossbones. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  27. ^ "Plaque to Emily Wilding Davison". UK Parliament. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  28. ^ Kelly, Mike (4 April 2016). "What links Jeremy Corbyn, Tony Benn and Morpeth suffragette Emily Davison?". Chronicle Live. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  29. ^ Carter, Malcolm (22 February 2019). "Reg Meuross – 12 Silk Handkerchiefs CD". Penny Black Online Music Magazine. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  30. ^ "Triple Trawler Tragedy". Hull Daily Mail. Mail News & Media. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  31. ^ "Triple Trawler Tragedy – Hull Live". Hull Daily Mail. Mail News & Media. 23 May 2019. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  32. ^ "The Headscarf Revolutionaries". Barbican Press. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  33. ^ Robinson, Hannah (4 March 2019). "Moving tribute to Triple Trawler Tragedy and Headscarf Revolutionaries is returning to Hull – Hull Live". Hull Daily Mail. Mail News & Media. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  34. ^ Martin, Tim (23 March 2023). "Reg Meuross Stolen from God". Americana UK. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
  35. ^ Johnson, Steve (28 March 2023). "Great Songs for Anti-Racist Demos". Morning Star. Croydon, London. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
  36. ^ Dugan, Emily (12 August 2014). "Stephanie Bottrill, who blamed the bedroom tax for her suicide, had history of depression, inquest hears". The Independent. Independent Digital News & Media Ltd. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  37. ^ Russell, Jenni (8 January 2009). "Christelle and her baby died at the hands of a callous state". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  38. ^ "Michael Brown: Ferguson officer won't be charged for 2014 killing". The Guardian. 31 July 2020. Retrieved 16 August 2020.

External links[edit]