Ladies of Pleasure

I posted a couple of Bledington morris tunes recently. Here’s another one – a jig this time. I learned it from Son of Morris On, where the arrangement is based around Martin Carthy’s guitar-playing. Back in the 1980s Bernard Brown, always one of Oyster Morris’ most athletic dancers, used to dance this jig, although unfortunately I don’t think I ever had the pleasure of playing it for him to dance to.

George Butterworth collected the tune in 1912 from fiddle-player Charles Benfield.

The GlosTrad website tells us that

Charles Benfield was the main informant for the Bledington tunes, most of which were noted by Cecil Sharp at Benfield’s house at Bould (Oxon), a hamlet about a mile from Bledington (Glos). William and Nancy was also collected by George Butterworth, who is our only source for Trunkles and Ladies of Pleasure.
CJ Sharp wrote, 2 September 1909
“Ch. Benfield was fiddler to the Bledington Morris till it lapsed about 15-20 years ago. He afterwards taught some younger men but could not induce them to continue. He is an agricultural labourer and a keen morris dancer. His fiddle was bridge-less and bow-less so he half hummed and half whistled this & following 2 tunes.”

Here’s the tune from Butterworth’s MSS

Ladies of Pleasure, as played by Charles Benfield, from George Butterworth's MSS.

Ladies of Pleasure, as played by Charles Benfield, from George Butterworth’s MSS.

 

Ladies of Pleasure

Played on C/G anglo-concertina

Young Collins

I’ve known ‘Young Collins’ pretty much forever; which in this case means since about 1977. It’s on Morris On, which I heard after Son of… and, I think, before Plain Capers.

Then in the 1980s South Downs, with Roger Watson as musician, started to dance ‘Young Collins’ with a very odd modal / minor key version, which I remember being told came from Bledington musician Charlie Benfield. I always assumed that Roger, or Phil Everett the side’s founder, had dug up this tune from some obscure source. But recently, to my surprise, I discovered that it was there in the Black Book all along, as an alternative to the more usual major key tune. I was also rather surprised to learn that both versions had been collected from Charlie Benfield, albeit 14 years apart. How could two such different versions of the tune come from the same musician? Well, here’s what I’ve discovered (I should point out that this isn’t the result of any in-depth research, just a bit of Saturday morning Googling).

Cecil Sharp first met Benfield at Bould (literally just down the road from Bledington) in September 1909. He collected three morris tunes from him, including ‘Young Collin’. Here it is from Sharp’s Folk Tunes.

Young Collin [Young Collins], collected by Cecil Sharp, 2nd Sep 1909

Young Collin [Young Collins], collected by Cecil Sharp, 2nd Sep 1909

Benfield was 68 years old when visited by Sharp, who wrote

Ch. Benfield was fiddler to the Bledington Morris till it lapsed about 15-20 years ago. He afterwards taught some younger men but could not induce them to continue. He is an agricultural labourer and a keen morris dancer. His fiddle was bridge-less and bow-less so he half hummed and half whistled this & following 2 tunes.

quoted from the GlosTrad website

As well as the morris tunes, Sharp collected several songs from him (including this rather nice ‘While Shepherds Watched’). He visited him again to collect morris dance tunes and steps, as did Clive Carey and George Butterworth. Then in 1923 the Travelling Morris danced their reconstructed versions of the Bledington dances to both Charlie Benfield and another old dancer, John Hitchman. It was on this occasion that Charlie played the unusual variant of the tune.

Robert Kenworthy Schofield, who was with the Travelling Morris on that trip, wrote about it in an article entitled ‘Morris Dances from Bledington’,  in the Journal of the English Folk Dance and Song Society , December 1934.

The visit of the Travelling Morris led to the collection of a number of dances not published in The Morris Book, some of which are recorded below. Of the tunes, the first version of “Young Collins” [the usual, major key version] was noted first from Richard Bond of Idbury and later from John Hitchman. The second version was obtained by Dr. A. F. Richards from Charles Benfield and later verified by the writer, but was not recognised by the other two men. It may have originated because Benfield’s old fingers found certain intervals on his fiddle easier than others, but be that as it may, the tune has somehow slipped into a very unusual mode, and for this reason alone is worth recording, although the first version is certainly nearer the original.

Given that Benfield’s tune was not familiar to either Richard Bond or John Hitchman it seems a pretty good bet that its idiosyncrasies can be attributed to age – and possibly lack of practice. We know that his fiddle was in a state of disrepair in 1909, suggesting that it wasn’t in regular use at that time. Sharp’s initial visit might have inspired him to restring his instrument and start playing again, but by 1923 he was into his eighties and, after a lifetime’s work as an agricultural labourer, probably not in the best of health. I wonder if, when this tune was collected from him, his fingers were struggling to remember a tune he’d not played for a decade.

For further information, check out the GlosTrad article on Charles Benfield and the Morris Ring page on Bledington. There’s also some interesting detail on morris dancing at Idbury – slightly further down the same road that takes you from Bledington to Bould, and famous in morris circles for its hill – on the Idbury village website.

Young Collins (Bledington) collected by Cecil Sharp, 1909

Played on C/G anglo-concertina

Young Collins (Bledington) collected by Robert Kenworthy Schofield, 1923

Played on G/D anglo-concertina