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Published: Tuesday, 17 September 2024 at 09:00 AM


Cecil Sharp. Practically a deity to folk performers. As legendary singer-guitarist Martin Carthy tells me, ‘We’d be absolutely lost without him’. However, this remarkable individual’s achievements as a collector of vast quantities of folk music at source were built on conventional classical music foundations.

Cecil Sharp, the early years

Sharp’s music-loving parents realised that his birth on 22 November 1859 (in London’s Camberwell area) had fallen on St Cecilia’s Day, named after the patron saint of music. Hence ‘Cecil’. His mother gave him early piano lessons, but things developed apace when Sharp boarded at Uppingham School, from 1869. Uppingham’s headmaster, the Revd Edward Thring, saw music as integral to school life. He employed as music master Paul David, son of the leading German violinist Ferdinand David and friend to Mendelssohn and Clara Schumann. Joseph Joachim, one of the great 19th-century violinists, appeared at an Uppingham concert. 

Sharp acquired the skills of a violinist as well as pianist. However, his parents baulked at the idea of a musical career – deemed insecure, perhaps, or too much of a ‘trade’. Unsure where his future lay after studying mathematics at Cambridge, he was packed off to Australia by his father in 1882 to sort himself out. In Adelaide, Sharp fell into legal work, but music dominated his life – as pianist-piano teacher, organist, violinist and choral conductor. He also dabbled in composition.

‘He enjoyed being away from the disapproving stare of his parents,’ observes David Sutcliffe, author of Cecil Sharp and the Quest for Folk Song and Dance. ‘Sharp wrote that his stay in Australia gave him the happiest years of his life.’ One reason for that was the friendship Sharp struck up with one Charles Marson, an Anglican clergyman. Their relationship was to prove pivotal to Sharp’s ultimate career path.

The moment that changed everything… hearing live folksong

On returning to Britain for good in 1892, Sharp adopted a multi-faceted musical life, including lecturing. A steady if modest income arrived via the role of director of studies at the Hampstead Conservatoire. Stability was also provided by marriage to the astonishingly patient and understanding Constance (Connie) Birch.

Then, the moment that changed everything – an uncanny parallel to what befell Ralph Vaughan Williams. Both had lectured on English folk song, but only in conceptual terms. Then, in 1903, each underwent a damascene experience of folk song performed ‘live’. Vaughan Williams heard septuagenarian labourer Charles Potiphar sing Bushes and Briars in Essex. Sharp’s revelatory moment came while visiting Charles Marson (also now returned home) at his Hambridge vicarage in Somerset. 

As one of Sharp’s future female collaborators (and his biographer) Maud Karpeles relates, he had been ‘sitting in the vicarage garden talking to Charles Marson… when he heard John England quietly singing to himself as he mowed the vicarage lawn. Sharp whipped out his notebook and took down the tune; and then persuaded John to give him the words. He immediately harmonised the song. And that same evening it was sung at a choir supper by Mattie Kay, Cecil Sharp accompanying.’