CELEBRATING
OVER 60 YEARS
The origins
of Topic Records, which has its roots in the Workers Music Association,
can be traced back to 1939. In those days, the organisation fostered
a belief that music should be used as a tool of revolution, in a
cultural and educational sense, and that folk music, passed down
through the generations, above all, gave a voice to the people.
On this theme,
first in the catalogue was Paddy Ryans
The Man that Waters the Workers Beer. Other early releases
were influenced by the work of Ewan MacColl
(singer and composer of Dirty Old Town, First Time Ever I Saw
Your Face etc.) and A.L.Lloyd (singer
and historian). Their original aims were to try and present a better
understanding of British Industrial or urban (as opposed to rural)
folksong.
At
the same time, Topic Records was also making available albums by
Pete Seeger, the icon of the
American folk movement , by the actor, singer and political figure
Paul Robeson, and by Woody
Guthrie, the roving troubadour and composer of This Land
is Your Land etc. The profile of the label was becoming firmly
established
Described
in the 50s as that little red label by a haughty major
label, Topic nevertheless became perfectly placed to release some
of the most influential recordings of the 60s. A blossoming
audience with an appetite for domestic folk music began to surface.
The best performers of the day included The
Spinners, Louis Killen, Jeannie Robertson, Joe Heaney and The Stewart
Family, Anne Briggs, Shirley & Dolly Collins and
The Watersons, and all of them recorded for the Topic label.
(Other notables included Vanessa Redgrave
singing Where Have All the Flowers Gone?).
However, Topics
focus was not exclusively on revivalist, traditional,
American or even British music. The catalogue already included wonderful
collections from Bulgaria, Albania, Yugoslavia,
Greece and Turkey - and has continued to grow since. In this
way, the label helped sow the seeds for the subsequent explosion
of independent roots and world music labels
in the 80s.
A very rich
period ensued in the 70s, after the arrival of present day Managing
Director, Tony Engle. Topic released a series of albums by seminal
artists including Nic Jones, Dick Gaughan,
The Battlefield Band and one of Britains most influential
singers and guitarists, Martin Carthy
(MBE), the performer widely acknowledged
to have influenced the work of Bob Dylan and Paul Simon, amongst
many others.
In recent
years, Topic has embarked on a programme of reissuing the cream
of its deleted vinyl collection on CD. As a consequence, many significant
anthologies of British and Irish singers, as well as collections
from the neglected instrumental traditions, continue to be widely
available.
In the late
1990s, folk performers were beginning to have a noticeable influence
on the musical landscape once again. Releases from Eliza
Carthy, Lal Waterson, Waterson:Carthy and
June Tabor, (recently voted one of the Top 100 greatest singers
of all time) have met with both critical and popular acclaim across
the board. Topic Records recently issued what is considered to be
the most comprehensive and important release of its kind, the 20
volume anthology of traditional music from England, Ireland, Scotland
and Wales, entitled The Voice of The People.
In their anniversary
year, Topic also released the ground-breaking Radio
Ballads; an 8 part series which revolutionised documentary
radio (and television) programme making in the 50s, constructed
by Ewan MacColl, Charles Parker and
Peggy Seeger.
During the
past 60 years, Topic Records has built a deserved reputation for
not compromising the nature of its work or that of the independent
spirit of the artists it represents. Irrespective of fads or fashions,
Topic has not simply survived, but it has grown and flourished too
- proof, if any were needed, that grass roots interest
in traditional music, the artists and the label itself, has remained
constant and strong.
So, not content
to merely rely on the undeniable splendours of the past, Topic Records
continues to look forward to the future with considerable optimism
for both itself and the genre to which it has long been central.
At the start of a new millennium, it is fitting that new recordings,
as well as old, emerge from one of the few truly independent labels
still in existence.
John Peel
recalls buying his first Topic record in 1955. "I have
been buying & scrounging Topic releases ever since" he
says. "It feels like Topic has always been there, quietly doing
good work, like a backbone." Another Radio 1 DJ, Andy Kershaw,
describes Topic as being simply "the most important record
label in Britain".
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