Billy Bragg On Skiffle, The Movement That Brought Guitar To British Radio (2024)

Billy Bragg says he initially pursued songwriting as a way to escape working in the local car factory. Andy Whale/Courtesy of Faber & Faber hide caption

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Andy Whale/Courtesy of Faber & Faber

Billy Bragg On Skiffle, The Movement That Brought Guitar To British Radio (2)

Billy Bragg says he initially pursued songwriting as a way to escape working in the local car factory.

Andy Whale/Courtesy of Faber & Faber

It's hard to believe, but before the 1950s, guitars were rarely heard in British music. Billy Bragg says the first guitars to hit the British pop scene came as a part of skiffle, a musical movement inspired by African-American roots musicians.

Bragg, who's written a book on skiffle called Roots, Radicals And Rockers, describes the genre as "a bunch of British school boys in the mid-'50s playing Lead Belly's repertoire... on acoustic guitars."

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One of the most pivotal performances was Lonnie Donegan's 1954 cover of Lead Belly's "Rock Island Line," which Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin later described as a song that changed his life. But Bragg notes that the entire genre was transformative in that it opened the door for The Beatles, Van Morrison and other Brit rock bands that followed.

Hear the full Fresh Air interview, in which Bragg plays some of his favorite songs, at the audio link above, and read on for highlights.

Interview Highlights

On how skiffle took off

It starts with Lead Belly's repertoire, really. Lead Belly was probably the greatest folk musician that America produced. He played so many great styles. He was so much more than just a blues man. But what happened was when British kids got hold of that, they also started introducing some of their own folk music, sea shanties [and] calypso music. There was a large migration of people from the Caribbean, from 1948 onwards — they brought guitars with them, and a lot of cowboy songs as well.

On how British teenagers helped revolutionize the music industry

What happened in 1955, '56, was the first generation of British kids who were born during the war left school, and they left school at a time of high employment, so they were able to find work pretty quickly. So they were getting paid more, sometimes more than their parents, and the only expense they had was giving housekeeping to their mom.

Tiny Desk

Billy Bragg: Tiny Desk Concert

So what we're seeing is these young, working-class people with spending power, and these are people who have grown up in a time of rationing. They've led this kind of terribly restrained childhood and all of a sudden, they're in the metaphorical sweet shop and they're looking for things to define themselves. For young men, what defines them as different from their parents is the guitar, picking up the guitar and playing this roots — predominately African-American roots music. And it defines them as completely different from what their parents are listening to and what's on the radio at the time, because youth culture was mediated by the BBC.

On writing poems in school

Everybody at school writes poems, don't they? That's one of the things they make you do for homework. I just carried on doing it. I don't know why all the other kids in the class — why they didn't carry on doing it, but I just carried on doing it. It turned out to be something that I was pretty good at.

On why he wanted to try to be a songwriter

I realized you're not going to make a living reading poems out, and if I was going to escape working in the car factory — the town I grew up in was dominated by a car factory ... and everybody's dad worked there or worked for one of the ancillary companies like my dad did — so I didn't really want to work there. We went there with the school a couple of times and it just looked like Hades to me, the main body plant.

So when I told them I didn't want to do that ... the career officer literally said to me, "You have three choices, Bragg: the Army, the Navy or the Air Force," and gave me the forms, and that was it, so I thought, "You know, I'm going to have to think of something to get out of this." So I wasn't any good at boxing, couldn't play football, so I thought I might try my hand at writing songs. So the kid next door taught me how to play guitar, and everything since then has been a blur till we just started talking a few minutes ago.

Roots, Radicals and Rockers

By Billy Bragg

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On why he enlisted in (and later left) the Army

One of the reasons I did it, I think, looking back, is I was trying to get rid of this stupid idea that I could ever be a singer-songwriter and this seemed to be the best way to just smother it, kill it, forget it. Of course, I get to this place, this Army place, and I just start coming up with these great ideas for songs, and I suddenly realize, "Damn, I'm going to have to extricate myself and do this one more time."

That experience of basic training, I hate to say this: I was pretty good at it. When I said I was leaving, they were very disappointed, because I was actually pretty good at it. The whole thing. It kind of gave me a sense that I could do anything. In the end it ended up being like a sabbatical, because I'll be standing in a pub somewhere in South London and there'd be a leery audience and I'd think, "I've taken on the British Army, I can deal with these herberts, what have you got?"

On how he ended up getting a manager and a record deal

I was working with a guy who did video presentations for corporations at a time when people didn't have video, so we would carry a video machine around with us to do these presentations. So I'm in a record company, trying to get to see a guy to give him my [demo] tape and they're not letting me in ... and I'm sitting there, hours going by and nothing's happening and a young lady stuck her head around the door and said, "Are you the guy who's come in to tune in the video?" And without thinking much about it I said, "Yep, that's me!" So they let me in, they let me through the door upstairs into the place, I crawled under the telly, I tuned in their video like they asked me — wasn't a lie, I did it — and then I asked around [for] the guy I was looking for and they said, "Yeah, that's him over there," and I went and gave him my tape, and he ended up being my manager and getting me a record deal.

On something he learned from Woody Guthrie's songwriting

I think Woody — he's said as much in his writing, that he never wanted to write a song that made people feel down. When he wrote his political songs it was always about lifting people up and giving them hope and making them feel a better life was possible. He said he hated songs that made people feel like they were born to lose. So what I learned from that — it's something I've been feeling for a while, but I haven't been able to articulate, and that is the biggest enemy of all of us who want to make the world a better place is not capitalism or conservatism. It's actually cynicism. And not the cynicism of right-wing newspapers or news channels — the cynicism that is our greatest enemy is our own cynicism, our own sense that nothing will ever change, that nobody cares about this stuff, that all politicians are the same.

If we're gonna make a difference, we have to be able to overcome that. We have to be able to identify our cynicism — we all feel it, of course we all feel it — and we have to be able to curb it and put it to one side and go out every day and think the glass is half-full.

Sam Briger and Therese Madden produced and edited the audio of this interview. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Lars Gotrich adapted it for the Web.

Billy Bragg On Skiffle, The Movement That Brought Guitar To British Radio (2024)

FAQs

What happened to Billy Bragg? ›

While unable to tour over the pandemic years, Bragg began working on new material. This resulted in his thirteenth studio album, The Million Things That Never Happened, which was released in October 2021.

What kind of guitar does Billy Bragg play? ›

For acoustic duties, Bragg favours Gibson guitars to give him that low-down thump and bark. “I use a three-year-old Gibson J-45 now. I had a really nice Gibson 000-type guitar, but accidentally fell out of a window on top of it. That's a story for another time!

Was Billy Bragg in the army? ›

Bragg joins the army!

Unsurprisingly, he lasted only a few months before he bought himself out. Bragg said: "When I was at school growing up everyone worked at the Ford Motor Company nearby."At the last year at school I was taken round the factory. I didn't fancy it. "Joining the army was the only way to escape.

What genre is Billy Bragg? ›

Does Billy Bragg still live in Burton Bradstock Dorset? ›

Born, Stephen William Bragg, Billy now lives in Burton Bradstock near Hive Beach. Probably best known for his punk and political music, in the mid 1980s Billy Bragg wrote the song: 'A New England', sung by the late Kirsty MacColl.

What is Billy Bragg known for? ›

Billy Bragg (born December 20, 1957, Barking, Essex, England) is a British singer, songwriter, guitarist, and author who became a critic's darling and a champion of populist activism in the mid-1980s as he fused the personal and the political in songs of love and conscience.

What guitar did Allman Brothers play? ›

The Guitar

This 1961 Gibson Les Paul (SG)1 is one of the more significant in Allman Brothers history because it is the only guitar that I know of that both Duane and his guitar partner Dickey Betts played on a regular basis. Dickey throughout 1970, Duane in 1971.

What guitar does Dolly Parton use? ›

Martin 5-18 Terz Guitar.

Did Gregg Allman play guitar? ›

Like his brother, he was left-handed, but played the guitar right-handed. He and his brother often fought to play the instrument, though there was "no question that music brought" the two together.

Was Bragg a bad general? ›

Bragg was a “merciless tyrant” who had an “uncanny ability to turn minor wins and losses into strategic defeat,” wrote Sam Watkins, who served under the man historians call the South's worst and most hated general.

How many soldiers have been found dead at Fort Bragg? ›

Since 2020, more than 100 soldiers have died in various circ*mstances near the post, according to Rolling Stone reporting from Army veteran Seth Harp and other local outlets, an abnormally high figure, although there does not appear to be a specific pattern to the deaths.

Who was for Bragg named after? ›

The North Carolina base was originally named in 1918 for Gen. Braxton Bragg, a Confederate general from Warrenton, North Carolina, who was known for owning slaves and losing key Civil War battles that contributed to the Confederacy's downfall.

Who sings with Billy Bragg on Way Over Yonder in the minor key? ›

This is the third track from Wilco and Billy Bragg's first collaborative album, Mermaid Avenue.

Who originally wrote New England? ›

"A New England" is a song written and recorded by Billy Bragg, included on his album Life's a Riot with Spy Vs Spy, released in 1983. It remains a signature song from the early years of Bragg's recording career.

What year was the Wilco Band formed? ›

Wilco is an American rock band based in Chicago. The band was formed in 1994 by the remaining members of alternative country group Uncle Tupelo after singer Jay Farrar's departure.

What happened to Johnny Bragg? ›

died of cancer in December 1977 in Lebanon, Tennessee. Bragg's recording discography consists of other releases, including many un-issued songs, which were included on a CD from Bear Family, West Germany, in 1990.

What happened to Billy Walker? ›

On May 21, 2006, Walker died in a road accident when the van he was driving back to Nashville after a performance in Foley, Alabama, veered off Interstate 65 in Fort Deposit and overturned.

How old was Paul C Bragg when he died? ›

This led to various books mistakenly reporting Bragg to have died in his 90s. Bragg died of a heart attack in the emergency room of South Shore Hospital in Miami, Florida on December 7, 1976. He was 81 years old.

Does Billy Ray have a brother? ›

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