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Robin Williamson |
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Robin Williamson (November 24, 1943, Edinburgh) is a Scottish multi-instrumentalist musician, singer, songwriter and storyteller.
He became a professional musician at the age of 16, and in the early 1960s traveled to London with Bert Jansch to play the metropolitan folk circuit. By 1965 he had returned to Edinburgh and formed a duo with Clive Palmer, specialising in fiddle and banjo arrangements of traditional Scots and Irish songs. Joe Boyd signed them to Elektra Records in 1966, by which time they had recruited 3rd member Mike Heron. As resident band at Clive’s Incredible Folk Club in Glasgow, they called themselves the Incredible String Band.
Between 1966 and 1974 the Incredible String Band, based around the duo of Williamson and Heron, released some 13 albums, becoming in the UK one of the most popular, best-loved and influential groups of the era. For more information, see the Incredible String Band main entry
Williamson released his first solo LP, "Myrrh", in 1971 when still a member of the Incredible String Band. After the band split up in 1974, he began living in Los Angeles and, for a while, turned his attention to writing, co-writing an espionage novel, "The Glory Trap".
By 1976 he had returned to music, forming
After the breakup of the Merry Band, Williamson returned to
the UK and started to tour solo, offering sets dominated by traditional
stories set to song. Releases of this period include "Songs of Love and
Parting" and "Legacy of the Scottish Harpers". Williamson's concern
with the British bardic tradition also manifested itself in several
books and tapes containing spoken renditions of traditional tales. He
has also written a tutorial book of English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish
Fiddle Tunes (
Williamson's live album with John Renbourn, 'Wheel Of Fortune' (1995), was nominated for a Grammy, (as was the ISB album 'Hangman's Beautiful Daughter', in 1968).
In the late 1990s he took part, with Palmer and Heron, in a reformed ISB. Williamson left the band some time around the start of 2003 - some rumours had it that he was forced out in acrimonious circumstances. The reformed band disbanded once again in 2006.
Meanwhile Williamson resumed his solo career, notably on record with a series of albums for the prestigious ECM label. "Seed-at-zero' (2000), 'Skirting The River Road' (2002) and 'The Iron Stone' (2006) featured him combining his own words with those of the likes of Dylan Thomas, William Blake, and Walt Whitman. Musically these records show him increasingly working in a fusion style (similar in some ways to the avant-garde work of the Incredible String Band in the 60's) which incorporates folk, jazz, Renaissance, Classical and Eastern influences. A group of distinguished jazz musicians accompany Williamson on the two most recent ECM records, notably violist Mat Maneri, bassist Barre Phillips, Swedish multi-instrumentalist Ale Moller, and English sax player Paul Dunmall.
for Incredible String Band albums see main ISB entry
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