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June Tabor

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Biography

Infobox musical artist | name = June Tabor| image = JuneTabor.jpg| caption = Tabor at Sidmouth Folk Week , 2010| image_size = | background = solo_singer| birth_name =| alias =| birth_date = Birth date and age|1947|12|31|df=y| death_date =| origin = Warwick , England | instrument =| genre = England|English Folk music|Folk | occupation = Singer | years_active = 1972–present| label = Topic Records
Rykodisc Records http://web.archive.org/web/20091027155932/ http://geocities.com/patmil007/5915.jpg| associated_acts =| website = http://www.junetabor.co.uk JuneTabor.co.uk| notable_instruments =
June Tabor (born 31 December 1947 in Warwick , England ) is an English people|English folk singer .

Early years


Tabor was inspired to sing by hearing Anne Briggs ' EP Hazards of Love in 1965.
"I went and locked myself in the bathroom for a fortnight and drove my mother mad. I learned the songs on that EP note for note, twiddle for twiddle. That's how I started singing. If I hadn't heard her I'd have probably done something entirely different."liner notes on the album A Collection by Anne Briggs.
Remarking on how she developed her now-characteristic style in an interview in 2008, she added,
"I have no musical education whatsoever...I just learned the songs and copied the phrasing by playing those records ad nauseam, trying out both Anne Briggs and Belle Stewart singers' styles. Then I tried putting the two together, and missing a few bits out - and that's approximately what I've been doing ever since. It's also why I don't do singing workshops, because that's about as much as I can tell anyone."HeraldScotland.com http://www.heraldscotland.com/art-of-the-interpreter-1.835677, Art of the Interpreter, pub. 26 January 2008


Her earliest public performances were at the Heart of England Folk Club, in the Fox and Vivian pub in Leamington Spa in the mid 1960s.

She attended St Hugh's College, Oxford University and appeared on University Challenge http://www.martin-kingsbury.co.uk/articles/june%20tabor.htm University Challenge in 1968, as captain of the college team. She joined the Heritage Society at Oxford University and sang with a group called Mistral. An appearance at Sidmouth Folk Festival led to folk club bookings and she contributed to various records. One of her earliest recordings was in 1972 on an anthology called Stagfolk Live . http://www.netrhythms.co.uk/reviewst.html stagfolk Live She also featured on Rosie Hardman's Firebird (1972) and The First Folk Review Record (1974). At the time she was singing purely traditional unaccompanied material but in 1976 she collaborated with Maddy Prior on the Silly Sisters (album)|Silly Sisters album and tour, with a full band that included Nic Jones . It provided the launching pad that same year (1976) for her first album in her own right, Airs and Graces . She later joined again with Prior, this time using the name Silly Sisters (band)|Silly Sisters for their duo. Starting in 1977 Martin Simpson joined her in the recording studio for three albums before he moved to America in 1987. (Simpson has returned from America to be a guest guitarist on albums in the 2000s (decade).) After his departure, she started working closely with pianist Huw Warren .

Tabor stopped performing professionally for a time after working for decades as a singer, although she made some guest appearances with Fairport Convention during this period. http://http%3A%2F%2Fwww.informatik.uni-hamburg.de%2F~zierke%2Fjune.tabor%2Frecords%2Findex.html& ei=YJYzT57zCsaK0AXW9fifAg& usg=AFQjCNEJYCA_Jws0amOEnh7oPrTxkyEZ8A During this time, she worked as a librarian http://www.brightfieldproductions.co.uk/june_tabor_biog.htm Librarian http://www.abctales.com/node/147154 Librarian http://www.thewire.co.uk/archive/charts/50rhythms.html The Wire - Librarian
http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/maddyprior/albums/album/183396/review/5945160/silly_sisters Rolling Stone - Librarian and, with her then-husband David Taylor, ran a restaurant called "Passepartout" in Penrith, Cumbria , England before returning to music professionally in the 1990s.

Solo work


In 1990, Tabor recorded an album with the folk-rock band The Oyster Band titled Freedom and Rain . She went on tour with the Oyster Band, and the Rykodisc label published a limited-run promotional live album the following year. Many of her current fans first discovered her through this tour and album with the Oyster BandCitation needed|date=August 2010. In 1992 Elvis Costello http://www.salon.com/weekly/music960513.html Elvis Costello wrote "All This Useless Beauty" specifically for Tabor, and she recorded it on Angel Tiger . Costello didn't record it himself until 1996, on his All This Useless Beauty|album of the same title.

In 1983 the BBC TV series "Spyship" http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0142054/combined Spyship was broadcast, with Tabor singing the title song. In 1997 she appeared on Ken Russell's "In Search of English Folk Song" http://www.mudcat.org/thread.cfm? threadid=99777& messages=12 Ken Russell broadcast of Channel 4. Tim Winton , author of the 2001 novel " Dirt Music " which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize, made a selection of music to echo the themes of the novel. The CD "Dirt Music" (2001) includes "He Fades Away" by Tabor, a painful tale of the slow death of a miner. (The song originally appeared on her 1994 CD "Against the Streams.") In 2002 the "Passchendale Peace Concert" http://www.greatwar.nl/frames/default-music.html Passchendale in Flanders had Tabor sharing the stage with Coope Boyes and Simpson . On 30th June 2006 BBC Radio 3 broadcast "Night Waves" to commemorate the anniversary of the Battle of the Somme. It was broadcast live, with World War I songs sung by Tabor, and a discussion with Michael Morpurgo and Kate Adie .

Over the years she has worked in various genres including jazz and art song , but generally with a sparse and sombre tone to it. Her 2003 album An Echo of Hooves marked a return to the traditional ballad form after concentrating on other styles for several years, and was highly acclaimed. Allmusic said of this album "A stunning jewel in a remarkable career, and one of the best things Tabor’s ever released." Always (June Tabor album)|Always (2005) is a boxed set of four CDs, spanning her whole career and containing rare recordings.

Collaborations and recent developments


On 24 October 2003 Tabor appeared on Later With Jools Holland (BBC TV), http://www.bbc.co.uk/later/show/index_20031024.shtml Jools Holland singing "Hughie Graeme". This was later issued as part of a compilation DVD from the series. Folk Britannia was the name of a concert at the Barbican centre, and a TV mini-series (February 2006, repeated in October). She sang "Fair Margaret and Sweet William" at the Barbican, under the heading "Daughters of Albion". Tabor contributed one song to Ashley Hutchings' project Street Cries (2001) and one to a collection of folk musicians singing songs by the Beatles - Rubber Folk (2006). She chose to sing Lennon's "In My Life" a cappella . Tabor is frequently experimental but avoids modernism. For example, she frequently sings traditional songs with a piano accompaniment. On the album Singing The Storm (2000) she sings to the accompaniment of Savourna Stevenson 's harp, and Danny Thompson 's bass. In May 2004 she performed as part of "The Big Session" and sang an adaptation of Love Will Tear Us Apart as a duet with John Jones of Oysterband . In 1992, The Wire (magazine)|The Wire voted "Queen Among the Heather" one of the "Top 50 Rhythms of all Time".

The lighter side of her character can be seen in her work with Les Barker 's The Mrs Ackroyd Band which performs his comic work. So far Tabor has performed on three of their albums, the 1990 Oranges and Lemmings (singing "The Trains of Waterloo", a parody of the folk song "The Plains of Waterloo" in a duet with Martin Carthy), the 1994 Gnus and Roses (singing "The January June", a send up of her perceived sombre character) and the 2003 Yelp! (singing "There's a Hole in my Bodhran", to the tune of "There's a Hole in my Bucket"). She sang two songs on Beat The Retreat , a tribute to Richard Thompson (musician)|Richard Thompson .

Discography


Duo with Maddy Prior
  • Silly Sisters (album)|Silly Sisters (1976)

  • No More to the Dance (1988) (as The Silly Sisters)


  • Solo albums
  • Airs and Graces (1976) (including And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda )

  • Ashes and Diamonds (1977)

  • A Cut Above (1980)

  • Abyssinians (1983)

  • The Peel Sessions (1986) - recorded January 1977

  • Aqaba (album)|Aqaba (1988)

  • Some Other Time (1989)

  • Angel Tiger (1992)

  • Against the Streams (1994)

  • Singing the Storm (1996) - with Savourna Stevenson and Danny Thompson

  • Aleyn (1997)

  • On Air (1998)

  • Reflections (1999) 3-CD box set. Contains June's first three solo albums: Airs & Graces, Ashes & Diamonds, A Cut Above

  • A Quiet Eye (1999)

  • Rosa Mundi (2001)

  • An Echo of Hooves (2003)

  • ''At the Wood's Heart (2005)

  • Apples (2007)

  • Ashore (album)|Ashore (2011)


  • Collaborations with The Oyster Band
  • Freedom and Rain (1990)

  • ''June Tabor and the Oyster Band Tour '91 Sampler (1991) - eight song promotional disc.

  • Ragged Kingdom (2011)


  • Collaboration with Flowers and Frolics
  • Bees on Horseback (1977)


  • Collaboration with Fairport Convention (Live Album guest appearances)
  • In Real Time (1987) (video release of that year's Cropredy Festival , not the similarly titled album).

  • The Third Leg (1990


  • Collaborations with The Mrs Ackroyd Band
  • The Stones of Callanish (1989)

  • Oranges and Lemmings (1990)

  • Some Love (1992)

  • Gnus and Roses (1994)

  • The Wings of Butterflies (1999)

  • Airs of the Dog (2001)

  • Yelp& #33; (2003)

  • Guide Cats for the Blind (2004)


  • Anthologies
  • Anthology (1993)

  • The Definitive Collection (2003)

  • Always (2005) 4-CD box set and booklet - retrospective, with many rarities (67 tracks in total).


  • Awards


  • In 2004 she was named Folk Singer of the Year at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards .

  • In 2011 Ragged Kingdon was named "Album of the Year" in the fROOTS critics poll

  • In 2012 Folk Singer of the Year at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards .


  • References


    Reflist

    External links


  • http://www.junetabor.co.uk/ The official June Tabor web site

  • http://ectoguide.org/alpha/t/tabor.june June Tabor page on the Ecto Guide

  • http://www.mrsackroyd.com/ The Mrs Ackroyd Band web site

  • http://www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/~zierke/folk/records/insearchoftheenglishfolksong.html In Search of the English Folk Song

  • http://www.free-reed.co.uk/frrr18/ Free Reed's Flowers & Frolics page


  • Persondata | NAME =Tabor, June
    | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
    | SHORT DESCRIPTION =
    | DATE OF BIRTH =31 December 1947
    | PLACE OF BIRTH =
    | DATE OF DEATH =
    | PLACE OF DEATH =
    DEFAULTSORT:Tabor, June Category:1947 births
    Category:English female singers
    Category:English folk singers
    Category:Alumni of St Hugh's College, Oxford
    Category:Living people
    Category:People from Warwick
    Category:University Challenge contestants

    de:June Tabor
    it:June Tabor
    nl:June Tabor
    simple:June Tabor

    Copyright Citations

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