Topic Records to issue remastered Frost And Fire

The Watersons
Cover photograph by Sally Shuel

Frost And Fire: A Calendar of Ritual and Magical Songs first found its way into record collections in 1965, and it has been an essential purchase for the folk-curious ever since.

On October 28th, a new generation gets the chance to fall under its spell as a fresh edition appears on Topic Records. The vinyl edition has been re-cut 45 rpm for optimal sound quality, and the sleeve is a replica of the original (with minor adaptations for 2022), including the original sleevenotes by legendary folklorist, A.L. Lloyd.

It’s hard to overstate the importance of The Watersons, and this album, to the world of folk music.

In 2018, Anne Briggs explained, “First hearing the Watersons live was a shock, a revelation. Their voices and their musicality were unique. Raw, passionate and brilliant, and so were they. Their musical instincts were perfect and they redefined the possibilities of the British folk scene, they had somehow opened a door wide and it’s still open. Home grown, international, and pure magic.”

 A family folk ensemble from Hull, Yorkshire, Norma, Mike and Lal Waterson formed the crux of the group, joined by their cousin, John Harrison, who occasionally performed guitar accompaniment. For the most part, they were known for their head-turning four-part vocal performance, often unaccompanied, of traditional songs from around the United Kingdom.

They signed with Topic Records after a brief appearance at the Troubadour in Earl’s Court, London.

As Norma Waterson recalled in Singing From The Floor (J.P. Bean, 2014), “Martin Carthy was running the night and he asked us if we wanted to do two or three, so we did. We got a good reception and in the interval this man came up to us and said, ‘Do you want to make a record?’”

 The man in question was producer Bill Leader, and the record they put together was Frost And Fire, a debut collection that quickly became Melody Maker’s Album of the Year. A clutch of traditional songs taken from all corners of the calendar year, it took traditional music out of the folk clubs and made them must–listens for the hip young things of the 60s.

Songs like ‘Hal-an-Tow’, ‘Pace-Egging Song’ and ‘Wassail Song’ enchanted, and continue to enchant, music lovers with an interest in what came before. If you were the kind of person who looked at record sleeve notes and followed mentions of artists’ influences back through time, then this album pointed further back than you might have thought possible. For an album that has since taken on legendary status, however, its beginnings were humble indeed.

“I did many of the recordings in my flat”, Leader told the author, J.P. Bean,“a two-room, kitchen and bathroom on the first floor of an Edwardian house [in Camden]. The back room was lined with books and tapes – that’s a great acoustic treatment. We’d be monitoring and recording in the front room, and the room that they were recording in was the bedroom. We did Frost And Fire there.”

Mike Waterson recalled that many of the recordings were suggested by A.L. Lloyd, who sent the group a collection of calendar songs to flesh out their repertoire.

“He was a guru to us. We sang one and he said, ‘Mmm… we shan’t use that one. It’s too subservient.’ It was a harvest home song, where they’re praising the farmer all the time. Then we sang another one and he said, ‘Sing it again… sing it again… sing it again.’ We sat there in this back room, singing it again and again, and Norma said, ‘What’s the matter with it?’ He said, ‘Nothing, my dear, just self-indulgence.’”

Over the years, these recordings have formed a gateway for many a journey into the world of traditional English folk song. The album has had a marked effect on generation after generation, from Martin Simpson right through to Lisa Knapp, Burd Ellen, Lankum and Angeline Morrison. Albums such as the recent Landworkers Alliance compilation, Stand Up Now, owe a debt to the calendrical wisdom of Frost And Fire, and artists finding mindful, eco-conscious audiences post-pandemic, whether they’re musicians or the likes of Ben Edge, Matthew Stoppard, Lucy Wright and Nick Hayes, follow the tracks marked out across the wheel of the year by this seminal piece of work. As an introduction to the time-worn beauty of the traditional English canon, there is no greater album.

Frost And Fire: A Calendar of Ritual and Magical Songs is re-released on 28th October 2022 on Topic Records.

Label website: https://www.topicrecords.co.uk/

Pre-order Frost And Fire: https://thewatersons.lnk.to/frostandfire

‘Here We Come A-Wassailing’: