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"In the filthy
attic of a two-storey bungalow, set amongst the industrial wastes of Barnsley,
Burland's official biographer, and part time traditional singer, Arthur
Parrott, surrounded by sly-eyed mutant mice and countless aged tomes,
(the famed and feared Necronomicon of the Mad Abdul al Hazarad and the
journals of the English Folk Dance and Song Society, all redolent of mildew)
focuses his waning powers to the task of remembering and regurgitating
all that has gone before ....."
Even as a schoolboy,
Dave and an acoustic guitar (borrowed) managed to incense the headmaster,
who gave him a sound thrashing (leggo, you bounder) for the grave offence
of interrupting the headmaster's lesson with a spirited rendition of "I
know the Lord laid his hand on me" from the next classroom.
The world of work
was a necessary fill in by day until the night when Dave became the lead
vocal in the Riversiders Skiffle group. Being a bank clerk was not without
its challenge, however: trying not to sing in those hallowed bankers'
halls was often more than a body could bear, the branch manager being
heard to say that he could quite like Burland if he would only stop singing
"Danny Boy".
In l961 Burland left
the bank and became a policeman for a period of seven years. Without doubt
he would have become Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis had he
not discovered folk music and folk clubs, in l962. Work and performing
sat uneasily side by side for the next seven years or so until, in 1968,
Burland became a self unemployed musician.
For the next 31 years
Burland performed all over the world, mainly in a solo capacity but with
occasional forays into team handed music making, with groups sporting
promising names such as Hedgehog Pieand the Lost Nation Bandand
latterly a blues and rock and roll band, Shagpile. There have been
about eight solo albums, two with other people and quite a few session
appearances: Richard Thompson, Nic Jones, Mike Harding, Albion Band, Sid
Kipper and many more too numerous to remember.
I had occasion to
ask him quite recently, on reflection how he thought it had gone. "It's
hard to tell," he said, "I think folk music has ruined my life".
As he appeared to be talking himself into one of his truculent turns,
I hurriedly made my goodbyes and left.
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