picture of Robin Hall

Robin Hall

b. 1936    d. 1998

“From the world of busy factories, crowded streets, tenement and public houses, come these five songs of Glasgow, sung by young twenty-two year old Robin Hall.
An itinerant folk singer, or as he prefers to be called “a singer of folk songs”, he has learned much of his large repertoire from their orginal sources; the factories and docklands of his home town Glasgow, and the farms and villages around the countryside of Scotland”
In his travels and search for songs, Robin has worked at many jobs ranging from farms to factories, and remained in each only until such time as he had absorbed the local folklore.
Robin started his musical career, as so many young people do today, by playing jazz, which gave him an interest in American Negro folk music. However, he has folklorist Hamish Henderson, from the Edinburgh University School of Scottish Studies, to thank for his present interest in Scottish folkmusic. Hamish showed him the wealth of song that was his own heritage, and indeed, taught him many songs from his own collection.
Whilst Robin has a great liking for the “Muckle Sangs” or “Big Ballads” of Scotland, his love lies with the songs of “Dirty auld Glesca” hich, even to this day, are constantly being made and absorbed into the folk tradition of Scotland”.
Bruce Dunnet 1958

For Dick Gaughan on Robin see:

http://www.dickgaughan.co.uk/chain/robin-hall.html

See also:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lY5RdjDym4o&feature=related


Recordings

  1. A man's a man for a' that

  2. Ballad of Johnny Ramensky

  3. Bleacher lassie o' Kelvinhaugh

  4. Coulter's Candy

  5. Day we went to Rothesay O

  6. Dundee weaver

  7. Ludgin wi' Big Aggie

  8. My love is like a red red rose

  9. My love she's but a lassie yet

  10. Rantin Rovin Robin

  11. Yer ma wee gallus bloke nae mair