Maggie Holland

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Maggie Holland
Maggie Holland of the English Country Blues Band at Goodwood Folk Festival.jpg
Maggie Holland on 7 August 1983, playing in the English Country Blues Band at Goodwood Folk Festival, Sussex
Background information
Born (1949-12-19) 19 December 1949 (age 74)
Alton, Hampshire, England
Genres Folk music
Years activeLate 1960s–present
Website www.maggieholland.scot

Maggie Holland (born 19 December 1949) [1] is an English singer and songwriter. She was born and raised in Alton, Hampshire, England, and became involved in the local folk club scene in the late 1960s. [1] She has played in a number of bands and formed a number of collaborations with other artists, but has become well known in recent times as a solo artist and songwriter. She enjoys singing songs with meaningful words and has named her major influences as Bob Dylan, Al Stewart, Dave Evans, Leon Rosselson, Billy Bragg, Bruce Cockburn and Robb Johnson. Several of her own songs have entered the repertoires of notable artists, such as Martin Carthy and June Tabor and, in 2000, Holland received the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards "Best Song of 1999" for her song "A Place Called England". [2] Colin Irwin wrote of her in fRoots magazine: "The proof that outstanding contemporary songs are still being written”. She now lives in Leith, Scotland.

Contents

Career history

Early collaborations

Her first work as a professional musician was as bassist and, later, singer in Hot Vultures, alongside Ian A. Anderson. [1] By this time she had moved to Farnham, Surrey. Hot Vultures toured and recorded from 1973 to 1979. [1]

Hot Vultures became the English Country Blues Band (ECBB) when Holland and Anderson were joined by Rod Stradling and Sue Harris (Sue Harris later being replaced by Chris Coe). [1] [3]

The ECBB expanded to become Tiger Moth, an electric country dance band, which lasted from 1984 until 1989. [1]

This was a further expansion of the Tiger Moth line-up, including occasional musicians from around the world, and represented a move away from purely English and American traditions to become one of the first "crossover" world music bands. Alongside Holland and the other Tiger Moth members, line-ups have included such respected international musicians as Flaco Jimenez, Dembo Konte, Kausu Kuyateh, Hijaz Mustapha and Abdul Tee-Jay.

Solo career

From 1980, Holland, whilst continuing as a member of the ECBB and its successor Tiger Moth, began performing occasionally as a solo artist, singing and accompanying herself on guitar or banjo, performing a mix of modern and traditional British and American songs. She released her first solo album, Still Pause, in 1983. [1] She also occasionally performed as a duo with Chris Coe, including a tour of the far east in 1985. [3] Also in 1985 she was the female lead singer in the National Theatre's three-month run of Tony Harrison's Mysteries trilogy. [1] Holland moved from Farnham to Oxford in 1986.

Holland continued to punctuate her solo career with collaborations with other artists whose work she admired.

Songwriting

In 1987, Holland began to write her first songs, encouraged by Jon Moore, one of her colleagues from Tiger Moth, with whom she had made an EP.

Notable works

"Perfumes of Arabia"

Holland wrote this in April 1991 about the Gulf War. It was first published on her 1992 album, Down to the Bone. Later in the year, Martin Carthy recorded it with Dave Swarbrick for their album Skin and Bone. An earlier live version sung by Martin Carthy on 17 October 1991 at Graffiti's, Pittsburg, was released in 2001 on The Carthy Chronicles.

The song was covered by VALVE on their 2023 album Tiny Pilots. [4]

"A Proper Sort of Gardener"

Credited jointly with Jon Moore, this is a sentimental journey back to her childhood in Alton, the nostalgia tinged with sadness at the changes wrought on small parts of all our lives by "progress".

"Sandy Hill"

Composed while she was living in Farnham, this collaboration with Moore focuses on the fact that it is not just inner cities which have their problem areas.

"A Place Called England"

The song which won Holland an award in the inaugural (2000) BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards was (in her own words) [5] inspired by Christopher Hill's book "The World Turned Upside Down", Leon Rosselson's song of the same name, Naomi Mitchison's "Sea-Green Ribbons", William Cobbett's "Cottage Economy", Hamish Henderson's "Freedom Come-All-Ye", Jean Giono's "The Man Who Planted Trees" and "animated discussions with (rightly) proud and passionate Scots like Dick Gaughan". A Loughborough Folk Festival programme stated: "Maggie Holland is one of the most inspiring singer/songwriters in Britain today. "A Place Called England" has become emblematic in the movement to reclaim a positive sense of English identity."

Recent collaborations

With Moore and Kevin Mason she formed Maggie's Farm in 1986. [1] The band's name is a reference to the Bob Dylan song of that name, Dylan being one of Holland's favourite songwriters. Maggie's Farm toured Bangladesh for the British Council in 1988. [1]

In 1989, she began to play bass in Robb Johnson's band. Holland much admires Johnson's songwriting and has recorded a number of his works.[ citation needed ]

During 2010, Holland participated in a project featuring the music of Derroll Adams, arranged and directed by Wiet Van Der Liest. The ensemble included seven female singers including Holland who also played five-string banjo, a 13 piece chamber orchestra, guitarist Roland Van Campenhout and Wiet van de Leest on violin. They performed the programme at the Brosella, Gent and Dranouter festivals in 2010.[ citation needed ]

Discography

Solo recordings

Collaborative recordings

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 1168. ISBN   0-85112-939-0.
  2. "Radio 2 Folk Awards: PREVIOUS WINNERS". BBC. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  3. 1 2 "Biography". Archived from the original on 5 September 2008. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
  4. https://thequietus.com/articles/33613-vlv-tiny-pilots-review
  5. Sleeve notes to Getting There