Frankie Armstrong

Frankie Armstrong (born 13 January 1941 in Workington, Cumberland, England) is a singer and voice teacher.

She has worked as a singer in the folk scene and the women's movement and as a trainer in social and youth work. Involved with folk and political songs from the 1950s, she has performed and/or recorded with Blowzabella, The Orckestra (with Henry Cow and the Mike Westbrook Brass Band), Ken Hyder's Talisker, John Kirkpatrick, Brian Pearson, Leon Rosselson, Dave Van Ronk and Maddy Prior. She is blind from glaucoma.

Biography

Frankie Armstrong moved to Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, as a young child. She began singing in a group with her brother singing Elvis Presley and Little Richard numbers, and in 1957 joined the Stort Valley Skiffle Group which a few years later changed its name to the Ceilidh Singers as its repertoire moved towards folk music. The group founded the Hoddesdon Folk Club.

In 1963 she began working with Louis Killen and performing solo, then in 1964 she joined The Critics Group directed by Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger. (Louis Killen's advice led to her developing the harder voice quality for which she is noted.[1]) In 1965 sang at the Edinburgh Festival "Poets in Public", with John Betjeman, Stevie Smith and Ted Hughes. Her first recording, in 1965, was at the invitation of Bert Lloyd who as director of Topic Records was putting together an album of erotic songs with Anne Briggs, released as The Bird in the Bush (12T135, 1966).

In the mid-1970s Armstrong pioneered workshops based on traditional styles of singing. She was an initiating member of the NVPN - Natural Voice Practitioners' Network, and "The key figure behind the development of the network...".[2][3][4]

She was a member of the Feminist Improvising Group (FIG), co-founded in 1977 by vocalist Maggie Nicols, bassoonist Lindsay Cooper, keyboardist Cathy Williams, cellist and bassist Georgina Born, and trumpeter Corinne Liensol. Armstrong collaborated within the accomplished FIG after 1978, and also with free jazz pianist (and partly percussion playing) Irène Schweizer, saxophonist (and film maker) Sally Potter, trombonist and violist Annemarie Roelofs, flutist and saxophonist Angèle Veltmeijer, and saxophonist and guitarist Françoise Dupety.

The accompanying book to the Topic Records 70 year anniversary boxed set Three Score and Ten has a dust jacket picture of Frankie with Louis and The Crafty Maid's Policy from Lovely On The Water is the seventh track on the second CD in the set.

Discography

Solo

Collaborations

Reissues

Books

Literature

Footnotes

  1. Lifton, Sarah (1983) The Listener's Guide to Folk Music. Poole: Blandford Press; p. 23
  2. Bithell, Caroline (2014). A Different Voice, A Different Song: Reclaiming Community through the Natural Voice and World Song (Kindle ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-19-935457-3. The key figure behind the development of the network... was English folksinger Frankie Armstrong, who continues to act as the movement's most revered mentor.
  3. "Home page". Frankie Armstrong. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  4. "How The NVPN Was Born". Natural Voice Practitioners' Network. Retrieved 9 April 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.