Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The Holly Bears the Crown

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Released
  
1995

Release date
  
1995

Producer
  
John Selwyn Gilbert

Recorded
  
1969

Genre
  
Folk

Label
  
Fledg'ling Records

The Holly Bears the Crown httpsmainlynorfolkinfopeterbellamyimagesla

Artists
  
Shirley Collins, The Young Tradition, Dolly Collins

Similar
  
For as Many as Will, False True Lovers, Love - Death and the Lady, The Power of the True Love Knot, Within Sound

The young tradition with shirley and dolly collins the holly bears the crown


The Holly Bears The Crown is an album by The Young Tradition with Shirley and Dolly Collins and other guest musicians. The trio "The Young Tradition" (Peter Bellamy, Royston Wood and Heather Wood) sang a cappella folk songs in a style similar to the Copper Family.

Contents

This album was recorded in London in 1969. A few weeks later musical and financial differences caused the break-up of The Young Tradition. Following the break-up, the record company refused to issue the album, which did not appear until 1995. By then Royston, Peter and Dolly were dead. Guest musicians Adam and Roderick Skeaping, here credited as 'The Skeapings', were members of "Musica Reservata" and had played on Shirley Collins albums. The only tracks on which everyone appears are the first song ("The Boar's Head Carol") and the last ("Bring Us in Good Ale"). Peter Bellamy later carved out a successful solo career; both Shirley and Dolly Collins also had successful careers both before and after (Shirley Collins has done more work in the folk music field than her sister).

Two tracks are Shirley and Dolly Collins without the others. These later appeared on a compilation called The Classic Collection (ostensibly by Shirley Collins) in 2004.

Track listing

  1. "Prologue from "Hamlet"" (spoken) (Shakespeare)
  2. "The Boar's Head Carol" (Trad)
  3. Shirley Collins and Heather Wood – "Is It Far To Bethlehem?" (Frances Chesterton/ Trad)
  4. "Lullay My Liking" (Trad) (tune by Gustav Holst) From a fifteenth-century text
  5. "The Cherry Tree Carol" (Trad) (tune by Shirley Collins)
  6. "Shepherds Arise" (Trad) (Copper Family)
  7. Shirley and Dolly Collins – "I sing of a Maiden That Is Makeless" (to "I syng of a mayden", trad., tune by Dolly Collins). From the fifteenth century Sloane MS.
  8. "Interlude: the Great Frost" (spoken) (Virginia Woolf – "Orlando"). A winter scene in Jacobean London
  9. The Young Tradition with Dolly Collins and the Skeapings "Tomorrow Shall Be My Dancing Day" (Trad). A shortened version of the song.
  10. "A Virgin Most Pure" (Trad). A carol printed in 1822.
  11. "The Coventry Carol" (Trad). A song taken from the Coventry Mystery Plays
  12. "The Holly Bears the Crown" (Trad)
  13. "March The Morning Sun" (Royston Wood). Written as a Carol for St Stephen's Day
  14. "Bring Us In Good Ale" (Trad) song dated to about 1460.

Personnel

  • "The Young Tradition" consisting of Peter Bellamy, Heather Wood and Royston Wood – vocals
  • Shirley Collins – vocals
  • Dolly Collins – pipe organ
  • Adam Skeaping – bass viol
  • Roderick Skeaping – recorder
  • Narrations by Gary Watson
  • Instrumental arrangements by Dolly Collins
  • Songs

    1Prologue from Hamlet0:28
    2The Boar's Head Carol1:38
    3Is It Far to Bethlehem2:13

    References

    The Holly Bears the Crown Wikipedia