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The
Johnstons
The Johnstons, Adrienne, Lucy her younger sister and brother Michael
started life in the early 60's as a talented family singing group in
Slane, County Meath in Ireland's east midlands. Moulded in the folk
style popular at the time, they sang Irish ballads and contemporary
folk songs, Michael playing 12-string guitar and the girls singing harmonies.
Offered a recording deal around 1965 on Pye records they had an unlikely
stroke of fortune in that one of their first releases, a Ewan McColl
song 'The Travelling People' went straight to the number one spot in
the Irish pop charts setting them off on a whirlwind of touring, television,
radio and more recording.
After a
year or so and realising that they needed to develop musically, they
recruited Mick Moloney from Limerick, a singer and instrumentalist whose
influences stretched from the skiffle era heroes like Lonnie Donegan
and Chas McDevitt, to the Clancy Brothers, to folk singer-songwriters
like Pete Seeger and Ewan McColl.
Moloney
also was beginning to become an Irish traditional music virtuoso and
authority, an attractive asset to The Johnstons. With groups like Sean
O'Riada's Ceoltoiri Chualann, traditional music was beginning to come
out of hibernation in Ireland in what was the genesis of what is now
the huge worldwide Celtic music phenomenon. Moloney quickly established
himself as the dominant musical force within the Johnstons.
At this
time (1966) Paul Brady was in his R'n' B phase while studying (supposedly)
Irish and French at UCD in Dublin. Living in an apartment in a house
in Ranelagh with some Derry boys, he heard the music from the room below
where Moloney, Donal Lunny and Johnny Morrissey as the Emmet folk group
rehearsed into the night. A friendship was struck up. Moloney and Brady
were both at UCD, Lunny at the Art scool in Kildare St. Things were
changing for Paul Brady. In a period of transition at college where
he had quit the r'n'b band Rockhouse in a futile attempt to concentrate
on studying, he was at a loose end musically. The huge crossover between
music forms, folk, blues, soul, pop and traditional music which was
the hallmark of the 60's worldwide was beginning to hit Dublin. At after-pub
parties, get-togethers, people were playing records of a guy called
Bob Dylan. Heady times.
Paul drifted
closer to folk music. Folk clubs were opening up throughout the city
and before long he was back doing folk concerts in UCD or on stage in
Harcourt St's '95' club, The Coffee Kitchen, The Old Sheiling in Raheny
or The Embankment Tallaght, this time singing acoustic blues, Leadbelly
and Mississippi John Hurt, Mike Seeger and Hank Williams opening in
bars for headlining acts like The Johnstons. Moloney and the Johnston
girls noticed. It was inevitable that Moloney, who was getting frustrated
with the musical limitations of group member Michael Johnston would
want to make some changes. Paul Brady's increasing interest and expertise
in Irish folk music, (plus the fact that he lived upstairs!) made him
an attractive alternative. The Johnston sisters, also wanted to develop.
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After some
familial soul searching and 'negotiations' Michael reluctantly left
the band and Paul Brady began his career as a full time musician joining
the band in the summer of '67. Things quickly developed. The Johnstons
success in Ireland snowballed bringing them to the notice of Transatlantic
records, one of the successful new folk/ acoustic music labels in London.
Visits were made, deals were signed and in 1968 the new look Johnstons
released their first UK distributed album called simply The Johnstons
known affectionately at the time as 'the white album'. A year later
they were the first act ever to release two albums on the same day,
The Barleycorn and Give A Damn. Albums didn't take a year to make or
a fortune to produce in those days. The 'two records' idea was to show
the two sides of the band.
The Barleycorn
was an album of traditional songs and instrumentals while Give A Damn
was entirely contemporary with fully arranged versions of songs by Leonard
Cohen and Joni Mitchell, Ewan McColl, Jacques Brel and closer to home,
Jon Ledingham and Shay Healy.
The band
moved to live in London in January 69 leaving behind Lucy who wanted
to stay in Dublin and as a three-piece they based themselves in England
for the next three years, appearing regularly on British television
and radio and touring all over the UK. Frequent trips to Germany, Scandinavia
and Holland followed. Eventually, on the back of a minor US hit with
a cover version of Joni Mitchell's 'Both Sides Now' they went to the
States where they appeared at the Philadelphia Folk Festival in 1971,
played support to a young Bonnie Raitt in Tuft's College Boston, did
a couple of week long sessions at Gerde's Folk City where Dylan had
started off some years before and were the first act to open the legendary
Bottom Line club in New York city.
Strains,
however, were beginning to appear in the artistic direction of the band,
Moloney favouring the traditional direction while Adrienne and Paul
wanted to move into uncharted waters. Inevitably, Mick Moloney left
around the end of '71 and though talented English musician, Gavin Spencer,
joined for a year or so, the band's days were numbered and in 1973 things
ground to a halt and they went their separate ways. The Johnstons made
four other albums, Bitter Green, The Johnstons Sampler, Colours Of The
Dawn and If I Sang My Song between 1969 and 1972 all of which were deleted
later in the ’70‘s.
Recently,
however some have been re-released on Essential records, a division
of Castle Communications PLC. A hugely popular and influential band
of the period, The Johnstons slipped into relative obscurity over the
past two decades. Their influence remains however in that many of the
songs they introduced to the 60's folk world on record, The Lark In
The Morning, The Lambs On The Green Hills, Fiddlers Green, Paddy's Green
Shamrock Shore, The Curragh Of Kildare have become classics and are
essential items in the repertoire of any self respecting Irish Ballad
group from Vancouver to Tasmania.
Adrienne
Johnston, the lead singer died tragically in 1981 having remained in
USA after the band split. Mick Moloney went back to college eventually
becoming head of the folklore dept at Penn State University PA and getting
deeply involved in the development of Irish folk music in North America.
He still plays regularly and makes records from time to time. Lucy Johnston
is a well known and successful photographer in Dublin. Paul Brady has
moved on a little bit too.
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