Oysterband the Generals Are Born Again Release Date

British folk rock band

Oysterband

Oysterband headlining the 2006 Wickham Festival

Oysterband headlining the 2006 Wickham Festival

Background information
Origin Kent, England
Genres British folk stone, folk punk
Years agile 1976–present
Website world wide web.oysterband.co.united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland
Members Alan Prosser
Ian Telfer
John Jones
Sean Randle
Al Scott
Adrian Oxaal
Past members Will Ward
Cathy Lesurf
Chris Taylor
Ian Kearey
Chris Wood
Russell Lax
Lee Partis
Ray Cooper AKA Chopper
Dilwyn Davies
Pete Flood

Oysterband (originally The Oyster Ring) is a British folk rock and folk punk band formed in Canterbury around 1976.[one]

History [edit]

Early on history [edit]

The ring formed in parallel to Fiddler's Dram, and under the name "Oyster Ceilidh Band" played purely equally a dance band at first. The proper name Oyster comes from the group'southward early association with the coastal town of Whitstable, East Kent, known for the quality of its oysters. Their offset album, released nether the Oyster Ceilidh Band name, was Jack's Alive (1980)[2] on the Dingles record label. Subsequent albums, as "Oyster Band" (sometimes "The Oyster Band") were released on the band's ain Pukka Music label: English Rock 'north' Coil: The Early Years 1800–1850 and Prevarication Dorsum and Think of England, followed by Liberty Hall and 20 Golden Necktie-Slackeners.[ii]

The line-upwards of the band changed over these albums. The first recorded line-up was:

  • Cathy Lesurf – vocals;
  • John Jones – melodeon, vocals;
  • Alan Prosser – guitars, violin;
  • Chris Taylor – guitar, bouzouki, harmonica, one-row melodeon, mandola;
  • Ian Telfer – violin, English concertina, saxophone;
  • Chris Wood – bass guitar;
  • Will Ward – bassoon, recorders, crumhorn, keyboards

When Chris Woods left the band to go travelling in Canada, he was replaced on bass guitar past returning founder member Ian Kearey. Cathy Lesurf subsequently left to join Ashley Hutchings' Albion Ring, and Will Ward also departed and then that by the time they recorded Lie Dorsum and Think of England, the personnel had settled downward to John Jones, Ian Kearey, Alan Prosser, Chris Taylor and Ian Telfer.[3] For the anthology Step Outside they added Russell Lax on drums. Step Outside mixed self-penned songs, often with a political theme, with reworkings of traditional standards such equally "Hal-an-Tow".

After history [edit]

After the 1987 release Wide Blue Yonder Kearey left the band to exist replaced by Chopper (real name Ray Cooper).[2] Subsequent albums included Ride, Petty Rock to Leipzig and the June Tabor collaboration Freedom and Rain. Following this the ring proper name changed to Oysterband. Drummer Lee Partis (who for several years was billed just by his forename) replaced Russell Lax for 1992'south Deserters before Holy Bandits in 1993 propelled the band to the forefront of a booming folk stone scene alongside bands such as The Levellers.

In the 1990s, the band adopted a more than overtly political stance, recording the harder The Shouting End of Life and collaborating with Chumbawamba to record "Good day to the Crown", released as the B-side of the Tubthumping single. But recent releases Deep Dark Ocean, Here I Stand up, Rise Above and Meet You There have seen the band return to a softer, more melodic sound, while recent tours under the banner The Big Session have seen the band offer exposure to several young, emerging folk musicians similar Dan Donnelly, The Handsome Family unit, as well as veterans such as June Tabor. James O'Grady (Uilleann pipes, fiddle, flute, vocals) regularly appeared on the Oysters' albums and tours in the concluding few years.

John Jones, James O'Grady and Ian Telfer provided vocals and instrumentation on Chumbawamba's album A Singsong and a Fleck, and Oysterband provided vocals for the vocal "Hull or Hell" on The Boy Bands Have Won.

In 2007, long-standing drummer Lee Partis took a break to concentrate on his work every bit a psychotherapist, counselling in prisons. In August 2008, he confirmed he would be leaving the band permanently. The band then appointed Dilwyn Davies as replacement drummer.

Following a 30th anniversary concert in December 2008 the band took a six-month sabbatical, during which John Jones and Chopper both made solo albums.

The band returned to the studio in 2011, teaming upward once over again with June Tabor and releasing Ragged Kingdom in September at a sell-out concert at London'due south Queen Elizabeth Hall. For at to the lowest degree some dates on the Ragged Kingdom tour, they are also joined on bass and guitar by Al Scott, who produced the album. On eight February 2012, June Tabor and Oysterband won All-time Traditional Vocal, Best Anthology and Best Group at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards for Ragged Kingdom, with Tabor as well winning Folk Vocalizer of the Year.

Ray Cooper announced in December 2012 that he would exit the band at the end of the Ragged Kingdom tour in Feb 2013, to pursue a solo career. Adrian Oxaal, formerly of rock band James, replaced him on a few gigs late in 2012, and took over in 2013, although it was unclear whether he would become a full-time member of Oysterband. The band also featured Al Scott on bass at some gigs. Pete Flood, formerly of Bellowhead replaced Davies on drums.

Current line-upwardly [edit]

  • John Jones – melodeon, atomic number 82 vocals
  • Alan Prosser – guitars, vocals
  • Ian Telfer – violin, keyboard, vocals
  • Sean Randle – drums, percussion, vocals
  • Al Scott – bass guitar, mandolin, vocals
  • Adrian Oxaal – cello, electrical guitar, vocals

Discography [edit]

Studio albums [edit]

As Fiddler's Dram

  • To See the Play – 1978
  • Fiddler'south Dram – 1980

As Oyster Ceilidh Ring

  • Jack'southward Alive – 1980

As Oyster Band

  • English Rock 'north' Roll: The Early on Years 1800–1850 – 1982
  • Lie Back and Think of England – 1983
  • 20 Golden Tie-Slackeners – 1984
  • Liberty Hall – 1985
  • Stride Outside – 1986
  • Wide Blue Yonder – 1987
  • Ride – 1989
  • Dearest Vigilantes – 1989 (10 inch EP on pinkish vinyl, embrace is a 6-fold poster)
  • Freedom and Rain – 1990 (collaboration with June Tabor)

As Oysterband

  • Deserters – 1992
  • Holy Bandits – 1993
  • Trawler – 1994
  • The Shouting End of Life – 1995
  • Deep Dark Ocean – 1997
  • Hither I Stand up – 1999
  • Rise Above – 2002
  • 25 – 2003
  • Encounter You lot There – 2007
  • The Oxford Daughter and Other Stories – 2008
  • Ragged Kingdom – 2011 (collaboration with June Tabor)
  • Diamonds on the Water – 2014
  • Read the Heaven - 2022

Live albums [edit]

  • Little Rock to Leipzig – 1990 (partially live)
  • Alive and Shouting – 1996
  • Alive and Acoustic – 1998
  • 25th Anniversary Concert – DVD – 2004
  • Northern Calorie-free – 2006
  • Burn down and Fleet – 2019 (collaboration with June Tabor, partially alive)

Compilation albums [edit]

  • The Rough Guide to Earth Music – 1994 (contributing the rail "When I'chiliad Up I Can't Get Down")
  • The Rough Guide to English Roots Music – 1998 (contributing the track "Canvass on By")
  • Pearls from the Oysters – 1998 (taking tracks from Footstep Outside, Wide Blue Yonder, Ride and Little Rock to Leipzig)
  • Granite Years (The Best of Oysterband 1986–1997) – 2000, double album
  • This House Will Stand (The Best Of Oysterband 1998–2015) – 2016, double album with "The Work Of My Own Ii Hands" plus alternate versions and demos

References [edit]

  1. ^ Chris Nickson. "Oysterband". allmusic.com.
  2. ^ a b c Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Pop Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 1885. ISBN0-85112-939-0.
  3. ^ LP sleeve

External links [edit]

  • Official website

gonzalezonswat.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oysterband

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