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 Post subject: Harvey Andrews
PostPosted: Tue Sep 25, 2007 12:11 pm 
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Harvey Andrews is on at The Studio Arts Centre on Fiday 28th September. Harvey Andrews is one of this country's greatest contemporary folk singer songwriters and has been on the folk scene since the late 60s. One of his early albums 'A Writer Of Songs ' is one of those albums that you quite often find in lists of the 100 most influential albums - and it is that good. His most famous track is 'The Soldier' about a soldier giving up his life in Northern Ireland. It was a hit in the early 70s but banned by the BBC - its now a GCSE English set piece. If you like well crafted songs he's well worth a listen.

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 Post subject: Re: Harvey Andrews
PostPosted: Tue Sep 25, 2007 12:17 pm 
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Location: The people's democratic illegal republic of Catalonia
Can't make it. Can you do a bootleg recording for me?

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 Post subject: Re: Harvey Andrews
PostPosted: Tue Sep 25, 2007 12:22 pm 
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Try this one

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=LyB17MhNsGg

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 Post subject: Re: Harvey Andrews
PostPosted: Tue Sep 25, 2007 12:28 pm 
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I just did. That song completely escaped my knowledge. I must have been away too long.

Very good. A bit like a cross between Roy Harper and Vinn Garbutt.
It's very reminiscent of something I can't quite put my finger on.

Anyway, don't bother bootlegging; just do a video of the whole concert! :grin:

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 Post subject: Re: Harvey Andrews
PostPosted: Tue Sep 25, 2007 12:48 pm 
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Location: Just down the road from the Telstar
I had only heard 'The Soldier' once before, in 1976. I was in Oman, or rather just off the coast on an island called Masirah. We had our own radio station there, and I can remember it being played, it's still a very emotive song, but was even more so then. I'm fairly certain that the 'DJ' was told not to play it again.

While there I was invited on as a guest, to talk about my job (there was a very limited audience), and pick my favourite records, which I remember included Bohemian Rhapsody. rolfl But certainly didn't include regulars on the playlist at the time of The Three Degrees - When Will I See You Again and Demis Roussos - Happy To Be On An Island In The Sun.

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 Post subject: Re: Harvey Andrews
PostPosted: Tue Sep 25, 2007 1:44 pm 
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'Soldier' by Harvey Andrew is about Sgt Michael Willetts GC of the Parachute Regiment. From memory I think he was from Mansfield. He won the George Cross about 71/72 after using his body to shield a group of women and children from the blast of a bomb whilch the PIRA has thrown into the reception of a Police station in Belfast. He died in the process. RIP Sgt Mick Willetts, an Emperor amongst men.


The lyrics:

Quote:
n a station in the city, a British soldier stood
Talking to the people there, if the people would
Some just stared in hatred and others turned in pain
And the lonely British soldier, wished he was back home again

'Come join the British Army' said the posters in his town
'See the world and have your fun, come serve before the Crown'
The jobs were hard to come by and he could not face the dole
So he took his country's shilling and enlisted on the roll

For there was no fear of fighting, the Empire long was lost
Just ten years in the army, getting paid for being bossed
Then leave a man experienced, a man who's made the grade
A medal and a pension, some memories and a trade

Then came the call to Ireland as the call has come before
Another bloody chapter in an endless Civil War
The priests they stood on both sides, the priests they stood behind
Another fight in Jesus' name, the blind against the blind

The soldier stood between them, between the whistling stones
And then the broken bottles, that led to broken bones
The petrol bombs that burned his hand, the nails that pierced his skin
And wished that he had stayed at home surrounded by his kin

The station filled with people, the soldier soon was bored
But better in the station than where the people warred
The room filled up with mothers, with daughters and with sons
Who stared with itchy fingers at the soldier and his guns

A yell of fear, a screech of brakes, a shattering of glass
The window of the station broke to let the package pass
The scream came from the mothers as they ran toward the door
Dragging children crying from the bomb upon the floor

The soldier stood and could not move, his gun he could not use
He knew the bomb had seconds left, not minutes on the fuse
He could not run to pick it up and throw it on the street
There were far too many people there, too many running feet.
'Take cover' yelled the soldier, 'take cover for your lives'
And the Irishmen threw down their young and stood before their wives
They turned toward the soldier, their eyes alive with fear
'For God's sake, save our children or they'll end their short lives here'

The soldier moved towards the bomb, his stomach like a stone
'Why was this his battle, God, why was he alone?'
He lay down on the package and he murmured one farewell
To those at home in England, to those he loved so well

He saw the sights of summer, felt the wind upon his brow
The young girls in the city park, how precious were they now
The soaring of the swallow, the beauty of the swan
The music of the turning earth, so soon it would be gone
The muffled soft explosion and the room began to quake
The soldier blown across the floor, his blood a crimson lake
They never heard him cry or shout, they never heard him moan
And they turned their children's' faces from the blood and from the bone

The crowds outside soon gathered, and the ambulances came
To carry off the body of a pawn lost to the game
And the crowd they clapped and jeered, and they sang their rebel songs
One soldier less to interfere where he did not belong

And will the children growing up, learn at their mothers knee
The story of the soldier who bought their liberty
Who used his youthful body as the means towards the end
Who gave his life to those, who called him 'murderer' not 'friend'


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