Tuesday, 8 September 2015

Frim folk and Yellowbellies

 
Some famous names, that you may know, have dwelt in Lincolnshire
That we should celebrate and name with pride
Come forth you men of science, politicians and the rest
From beneath those rocks and bushels where you hide.

Let's hear it for those Methodists, the Wesleys, Charles and John
Who brought about revival in this land.
Another good samaritan, Chad Varah was his name.
Who saw the need to lend a helping hand.

From Revesby came Sir Joseph Banks who made his name in Oz,
Like explorers Matthew Flinders and George Bass. 
From Spilsby there's John Franklin, who sailed in Arctic seas
As he searched through northern ice-flows for a pass.

Let's talk of Isaac Newton and of Maggie Thatcher too
Who left the streets of Grantham in their prime
Not forgetting Mr Parsons, that's Nicholas of course
Who gave us Just a Minute of his time.

I calculate that many folk won't know the name, George Boole
Who proposed a logic theory based on maths.
In contrast there's that teacher who featured in 'Please Sir'
John Alderton's brave efforts raised some laughs.

Remember Richard Todd, the actor known for busting dams
And big Geoff Capes, he put his shot nearby.
Not far away at Sleaford, Miss Saunders made us roar
She was Absolutely Fab, you can't deny.

Lord Tennyson from Somersby, composed a poem or two
The one about Child Harold left me bored
He wrote at length about some girl he took a fancy to
Down the garden he asked, "How about it, Maud?"

Before he made 'endeavours' in the town of dreaming spires
Colin Dexter lived in Stamford town.
The same place where Sir Malcolm Sargent spent his early years
As he practised promenading up and down

When Billy Butlin planned to build a campsite by the sea
Just north of Skeg he chose a 'bracing' site.
Yet the poem by Jean Inglelow it told a gloomy tale
Of a shoreline breached by storm and tidal might.

Cusha, cusha, cusha, calling; overture, beginners please
Come, Dame Sybil Thorndike take your bow
Miss Dickson sing your socks off, Joan Plowright strut your stuff 
Don't miss your cue, the limelight beckons now.

Jim Broadbent won an oscar and a bafta and a globe
He's an actor, not a runner in a race.
Tony Jacklin likes his birdies which does upset his wife
So he's under par, she's slapped him in the face

Now we've not seen much of royalty since Bolingbroke was here
Perhaps they never think of us as posh.
After crossing through the fens old King John turned up his toes.
He were miffed, he'd left Crown jewels in the wash.

Patricia Hodge and Robert Webb, some names you may have heard
Guy Martin's yet another off the 'telly'
But a better claim to fame is the fact you may have missed
They were fortunate to be born 'yellow-belly.'

So next time someone visits or stops you in the street
Just slap them on the back and call them, 'Fellow' 
Offer them a slice of chine, or better still, plum bread
And show them that your belly's rather yellow.

Mark Temple


Time 'for a song' gentlemen, please



When was the last time you enjoyed an old fashioned singsong down at your local?  I have thought it is rather sad that these days communities rarely have the chance to share in this enjoyable British tradition. Although we have numerous, trendy, wine bars and clubs offering karaoke these are quite different. They may give Tina Turner or Barry Manilow wannabes the chance to strut their stuff with their friends after a few drinks but these aren't community singalongs. I remember, as a student in the seventies, calling in a couple of loughborough, town-centre pubs where they still had an old upright piano in one corner of the public bar and where, for twenty minutes or so, twice a week, an enthusiastic local would sit down and reel through a repertoire of old songs. Specifically I remember, Mr Clarke at the Old Packe Horse (recently given a makeover and renamed the Organ Grinder). If I recall he had a rather gravelly voice which he used to launch most songs (largely to insure the revellers recognised which song he was currently playing)  before the whole room joined in. He rarely played with sheet music in front of him and songs were strung together with smooth dexterity. Every taste was catered for. Irish melodies were integrated with music hall ballads and wartime hits. Everything from Ivor Novello to Buddy Holly.  Occasionally soloists would be encouraged to lead a verse or two whilst the audience waited eagerly for the chorus. I remember he would pick out one of his personal favourites, which maybe less well-known, and he would continue to sing them through before returning to those more recognisable items. And I never heard him give up on a song even if no-one else in the room seemed to be singing.  
So, what has happened to this very British tradition? I heard on the radio a few weeks ago that a group in London (I think they were called PIPS: Pianos in Pubs for Singalongs) were trying to reintroduce pianos and pub singalongs into a couple of city pubs citing the fact that out of nearly 1000 London pubs surveyed only 7 still had pianos used regularly to accompany occasions of this type. I read in a magazine last year that in the Richmond area of Yorkshire, two students, just for a little bit of beer money in the summer holidays, were trawling around a number of willing inns nearby with an old piano in a horse-trailer simply to provide the locals with an opportunity for a good old-fashioned singsong.  I doubt there is any pub in my own county of Leicestershire that still has a piano available on the premises to be used in this way (I'd love to be corrected). It is very sad that this should be the case, more-so given the fact that one local lady, back in the 1960s, became a national treasure when her particular style of pub piano playing hit our television screens and rocketed her to stardom. I'm speaking of course of the village of ‘Our Glad’ also known as Hathern's Mrs Mills. I am no fan of jukeboxes playing incessantly in bars or restaurants and personally I shy away from pubs where football is screened non-stop from an overhead screen. Surely once a week a few minutes of live music, played by an enthusiastic pianist, would add something positive to the ambience and community spirit of any local hostelry.  The cockney 'knees up' had something of a revival in the eighties and nineties with the likes of Chas and Dave appearing on the Television but did it survive outside the confines of Shepherd's bush? Hardly. However, on a trip to London recently, I was pleasantly surprised to see that in the busy concourse within the St. Pancras and King Cross stations, several brightly painted, upright pianos had been installed to allow members of the public to play. Whilst sitting in one of the station cafes we heard several people playing a wide variety of pieces; songs from the shows alongside well-known, classical pieces. A crowd gathered for a few moments before disappearing again. Sadly there was no singing. 
The only time we get close to sharing anything like this in our village of Woodhouse Eaves is when a few locals gather to sing a few carols each Christmas in one of our village pubs. Such a pity, for back in the 1980s I recall going into a the Curzon Arms on more than one occasion to be entertained by a local amateur pianist and joining with the locals in such standards as, 'You are my sunshine, Pack up your troubles and forgotten classics like, You can't keep a horse in a lighthouse. They don't write 'em like that anymore.

Monday, 12 January 2015

Discovering Stoneywell

If you should pass through Charnwood on a sunny afternoon
You might just spot a sign to Stoneywell
And there beside the hornbeams and the heathers you will find
A haven with some tales still to tell.

James Bilson found a site to build in 1897
Two cottages for workman was his plan
Ernest Gimson, architect, was asked to do the job           
But he wanted someone else to share the land.

Gimson most admired the views he found at Ulverscroft.
At Chitterman, he toiled for just a year.
Then his brothers who were keen to leave the Leicester smog behind
Were persuaded they might come and settle here.

So Ernest set about the task of building yet again 
Two cottages for Mentor and for Syd.
Lea cottage, white and dressed in thatch, adjacent to the road
And Stoneywell secluded and well hid.

With the stable block behind you a footpath stretches forth.
Past fortresses where youthful limbs once played. 
Through the bilberries and ericas the sheep-walk leads you down
To a summer home where memories were made

The site that Ernest favoured lay beyond a twisted rowan
Thus a house was born, emerging from the granite
Along a zigzag path she stretched, tumbling down a slope.
Only genius would have the gaul to plan it.

Not only was he 'architect' he furnished them as well
From his workshop in the Cotswolds as his base
So he needed someone special to supervise the build
That's when Detmar Blow was brought in on the case

Now Detmar had a habit if he spied a rock he'd grab it.     
He'd take them from another fellah's land
He'd knock down some stone-wall, then he'd make it up again
So you might say, 'stones he used were second-hand.'

Strolling through this home so many wonders are revealed
It's a 'curious and enigmatic place.'
Where artistry and craftsmanship are skillfully combined
Giving glimpses of the past in time and space.

Though this cottage is spectacular its style remains vernacular
Simplicity and workmanship are key
An architectural gem that's distinctly arts and craft
But I've said enough, so now you come and see.

Friday, 9 January 2015

A Walking tour through the Woodhouses

Proceeding from the hilltop overlooking Woodhouse Eaves,
Here, the remnants of a windmill can be seen.
If the viewing platform's open you could see to Loughbro' town 
If it wasn't for them Outwoods in between.

Descend the leafy bower from the windmill and you'll find
A wayside chapel, lower down the lane
Through a trio of arched windows, do I spy a wisp of smoke?
Mrs Mollart's burnt the welsh-cakes yet again!
 
Across the road to Maplewell, you'll spot a timbered hall 
Where the lib'rals often met, in days of yore.
Here they spouted rousing speeches from the balcony above,
Even though the peasants found it quite a bore.

From this hall of liberty, raise your eyes towards the arch
That still stands below the summit of Nanhill.
As a tribute to those lads who went off to fight a war
Gone forever, though the memories linger still.

There lies a hidden gem, just beyond these hedges tall
A roundhouse, 'neath the thatch, to store the game.
What sort of game? I hear you ask, I haven't got a clue
But the balls must have been massive all the same.

A stroll along the donkey slip, which posh folk call 'Church Walk,'
Leads us on towards the rect'ry of St. Paul's.
For those who like their facts, 'twas the home of Basement Jaxx
Though no longer does their music rock these walls.

The "stone hole" lies behind the school, some folks call it a cave
Where the village children played come rain or shine. 
But I think it is a shame, that they removed the old school bell
I would want to nab it back, if it was mine.     

The Forest Rock has bit the dust, the Pear Tree is still serving
They have pastas, pizzas even panacotta.
But I mustn't say much more now or they'll say this is an 'ad'
Yet given half the chance, I'd eat the lotta.

The charming Slaters' Row is quite a picture to behold.
Hydrangeas grace each plot and cottage door. 
All those blooming flowers, don't they make a lovely show?
'Bet you've rarely seen such bloomers here before.

With barely one more hop, you're at Oakwood, Chemist shop 
Where the staff dispense advice with caring smiles
They'll never make a fuss as they sort you out a truss 
Or recommend a cream for all those piles.

On your right, the village hall, just in time to make a call
If we're lucky we might find they've got a rummage
Young farmers, guides or cubs have been scrounging round the pubs
Get there early or it can be quite a scrummage.

The surgery lies straight ahead, they strive to keep us healthy
The Methodists, next door, will deal with sin.
And if you cry, "But I am fit and pretty close to perfect." 
Then you're a 'better man than I am, Gunga Din.'

Stroll across the King's Field, picnic here or watch the cricket.
To Woodhouse next, with little time to rest.
Through meadows, passed old Rawlins' school and on to 'Pepper Lane'
To that cottage which, quite frankly, is a Pest.

For here lived Thomas Rawlins, who escaped a horrid death
When a pedlar called for rest and B and B.
Thank goodness he did not unpack his rucksack full of plague
But carried on to Eyam after Tea.

With Garat's Hay behind your back, approach the Welbeck site
No photographs! They'll slap you in the cooler.
The milit'ry security is pretty tight round here.
So we don't mess with the forces, as a rule-r.

The Old Bull's Head is looming up, we've no time for a snifter
For it's on towards the Beacon we are bound.
If you jog up to the summit then back down to Broombriggs' walk
You must follow all the signs to bring you round.

There's a new fence round an orchard where they've planted sapling trees,
Autumn fruits; like damsons, pears and cherries
So don't try any scrumping, for it just ain't worth the risk 
And the warden of the trees might squeeze your berries.

Returning past the windmill. Many thanks, the tour is ended.
I'm heading for the Curzon, it's down here.
Oh! My wallets in the pocket of the coat I left at home,
So I'm hoping one of you will buy the beer!