Angeline Morrison

Last updated

Angeline Morrison is a British multi-instrumentalist musician, songwriter and academic.

Contents

Life

Angeline Morrison was born in Birmingham to a Jamaican mother and a father from the Outer Hebrides. She attended her first folk club at the age of 17, and became active in the Midlands music scene. [1] In 2002 she gained a PhD from the University of Plymouth with a thesis on blankness, silence and racial binarism. [2] That year she moved to Truro, Cornwall. [1]

Morrison is half of the duos We Are Muffy (with Nick Duffy of The Lilac Time), and Rowan: Morrison (with The Rowan Amber Mill). She also sings with freakbeat bands The Mighty Sceptres (along with Nick Radford, who has also released music and collaborated with Morrison as Frootful) and The Ambassadors of Sorrow. [1]

West African boy memorial St Martin's Churchyard, St Martin's 01.jpg
West African boy memorial

Morrison's self-released album The Brown Girl and Other Folk Songs was produced by the artist herself, with performances and additional mixing by Nick Duffy. [3] Her album The Sorrow Songs (2022), produced by Eliza Carthy, tries to reinsert Black British history into the tradition of British folk music. [4] The album's first song, 'Unknown African Boy (d.1830)' is told from the perspective of the mother of an eight-year-old West African boy, who was washed up on shore on the Isles of Scilly, when the slave ship Hope was wrecked there. [1] Morrison performed the song on Later... with Jools Holland in 2022. [5]

Discography

Solo albums

Collaborations

with The Rowan Amber Mill (as Rowan : Morrison)

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Squeeze (band)</span> British rock band

Squeeze are an English rock band that came to prominence in the United Kingdom during the new wave period of the late 1970s, and continued recording in the 1980s, 1990s and 2010s. In the UK, their singles "Cool for Cats", "Up the Junction", and "Labelled with Love" were top-ten chart hits. Though not as commercially successful in the United States, Squeeze had American hits with "Tempted", "Black Coffee in Bed", and "Hourglass", and were considered a part of the Second British Invasion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nick Drake</span> English singer-songwriter (1948–1974)

Nicholas Rodney Drake was an English singer-songwriter. An accomplished acoustic guitarist, Drake signed to Island Records at the age of twenty while still a student at the University of Cambridge. His debut album, Five Leaves Left, was released in 1969, and was followed by two more albums, Bryter Layter (1971) and Pink Moon (1972). While Drake did not reach a wide audience during his brief lifetime, his music found critical acclaim and he gradually received wider recognition following his death.

Stephen Anthony James Duffy is an English musician, singer, and songwriter. He was a founding member, vocalist, bassist, and then drummer of Duran Duran. He went on to record as a solo performer under several different names, and is the singer and songwriter for The Lilac Time with his older brother Nick. He has also co-written with Robbie Williams and Steven Page.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">June and Jennifer Gibbons</span> Welsh identical twins and writers (born 1963)

June Gibbons and Jennifer Gibbons were identical twins who grew up in Wales. They became known as "The Silent Twins", since they only communicated with each other. They wrote works of fiction. Both women were admitted to Broadmoor Hospital, where they were held for 11 years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Norma Waterson</span> English folk singer and songwriter (1939–2022)

Norma Christine Waterson was an English singer and songwriter, best known as one of the original members of The Watersons, a celebrated English traditional folk group. Other members of the group included her brother Mike Waterson and sister Lal Waterson, a cousin John Harrison and, in later incarnations of the group, her husband Martin Carthy.

Psychedelic folk is a loosely defined form of psychedelia that originated in the 1960s. It retains the largely acoustic instrumentation of folk, but adds musical elements common to psychedelic music.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alasdair Roberts (musician)</span> Scottish folk musician

Alasdair Roberts is a Scottish folk musician. He released a number of albums under the name Appendix Out and, following the 2001 album The Night Is Advancing, under his own name. Roberts is also known for his frequent collaborations with other musicians and writers, as well as for being a member of the folk supergroup The Furrow Collective.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martin Simpson</span> English folk singer and guitarist

Martin Stewart Simpson is an English folk singer, guitarist and songwriter. His music reflects a wide variety of influences and styles, rooted in Britain, Ireland, America and beyond. He builds a purposeful, often upbeat voice on a spare picking style.

"Man of Constant Sorrow" is a traditional American folk song first published by Dick Burnett, a partially blind fiddler from Kentucky. The song was originally titled "Farewell Song" in a songbook by Burnett dated to around 1913. A version recorded by Emry Arthur in 1928 gave the song its current titles.

Jools' Annual Hootenanny is a TV show presented by Jools Holland and broadcast on New Year's Eve as an end-of-year special edition of his series Later... with Jools Holland on BBC Two in the United Kingdom since 1994.

Nicholas John Duffy is an English musician, artist, illustrator, and filmmaker.

Dives and Lazarus is traditional English folk song listed as Child ballad 56 and number 477 in the Roud Folk Song Index. It is considered a Christmas carol and based on the parable of the rich man and Lazarus. The song traditionally used a variety of tunes, but one particular tune, published by Lucy Broadwood in 1893 and used in other traditional songs, inspired many notable works and appeared in several pieces composed by Ralph Vaughan Williams.

<i>Keep It Simple</i> 2008 studio album by Van Morrison

Keep It Simple is the thirty-third album by Northern Irish singer/songwriter Van Morrison, released in March 2008. It was Morrison's first US Top 10 album, and made the Top 10 in the UK, Canada and in some European countries. It was his first studio album of all new original material since Back on Top (1999), and includes elements of jazz, folk, blues, celtic, country, soul and gospel.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heidevolk</span> Dutch folk metal band

Heidevolk is a folk metal band from the Netherlands. The lyrical themes of their music are inspired by nature, the history of Gelderland, and Germanic mythology. Most of their lyrics are in Dutch; however, on their 2015 album, Velua, they have one original English song, "Vinland", and several English covers. Their 2018 album, Vuur van verzet, contains two English-language songs: "A Wolf in My Heart" and "The Alliance".

<i>Mickey Newbury Collection</i> 1998 box set by Mickey Newbury

The Mickey Newbury Collection collects the ten albums Mickey Newbury released on three labels between 1969 and 1981 on an eight disc set. The set was released and is available through Mountain Retreat, a label run by Newbury and later Newbury's family. While Newbury had an impressive reputation as an artist and songwriter, at the time of the set's release in 1998, these recordings had been out of print for years. The original master tapes were lost by the labels, and so the recordings on the collection are digital transfers from virgin vinyl copies. The packaging replicates the original album art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ben Howard</span> English singer-songwriter (born 1987)

Benjamin John Howard is an English singer songwriter, musician and composer. His self-released debut EP Games in the Dark (2008) was followed by two more EPs, These Waters (2009) and Old Pine (2010). Signed to Island Records, his debut studio album came in 2011 titled Every Kingdom. The album reached number four on the UK Albums Chart and was certified triple platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). Howard later released two more EPs, Ben Howard Live (2011) and The Burgh Island E.P. (2012).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paul Sartin</span> Musical artist (1973–2022)

Paul Sartin was an English singer, instrumentalist, composer and arranger, specialising in oboe and violin. He was best known for his work with the folk band Bellowhead, but also played with three-piece Faustus and the folk/comedy duo Belshazzar's Feast.

Jon Wilks is an English writer, folk singer, and guitarist, known for his work in the traditional folk music scene. He has gained recognition for his authentic interpretations of traditional English folk songs, as well as his own original compositions. fRoots magazine has described him as "one of the best of the New Wave Of Folk Blokes".

<i>& Love for All</i> 1990 studio album by the Lilac Time

& Love for All is the third album by English band the Lilac Time and was released by Fontana Records in 1990. It saw the band move away from the folk pop sound of their first two albums towards an electric guitar and keyboard heavy sound indebted to 60's pop and psychedelia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wet Leg</span> British indie rock duo

Wet Leg are a British indie rock group from the Isle of Wight, founded in 2019 by Rhian Teasdale and Hester Chambers. They debuted with the single "Chaise Longue" in 2021. Their self-titled debut album debuted in 2022 at number one on the UK Albums Chart, Australia's ARIA Albums Chart and the Irish Albums Chart. The album was shortlisted for the 2022 Mercury Prize. At the 65th Annual Grammy Awards, Wet Leg won Best Alternative Music Album for their debut and Best Alternative Music Performance for "Chaise Longue", and were nominated for Best New Artist. They also won Best New Artist and Best British Group at the 2023 Brit Awards.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Cartwright, Garth (7 October 2022). "Angeline Morrison: 'I can count on one hand the times I've been in a folk club with other people of colour'". The Guardian . Retrieved 16 October 2022.
  2. Morrison, Angeline Dawn (2002). Liminal blankness: mixing race and space in monochrome's psychic surface (PhD). University of Plymouth. OCLC   499311886.
  3. Wilks, Jon (27 April 2022). "Angeline Morrison, The Brown Girl and Other Folk Songs - a review". Tradfolk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  4. Wilks, Jon (16 December 2021). "Angeline Morrison - The Sorrow Songs Interview". Tradfolk. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
  5. "Angeline Morrison - Unknown African Boy (d.1830) (Later with Jools Holland)". YouTube. Retrieved 16 October 2022.