| Jeannie
Robertson MBE
Jeannie Robertson is a monumental figure in Scottish
traditional song whose influence and importance as a preserver of
folklore will sustain for as long as traditional ballads are sung.
Regina Christina Robertson was born into a traveller
family in Aberdeen on October 21, 1908. Her father, Donald, who
died a year later, was a piper and her mother, Maria, was a singer
with a vast store of songs and stories.
There was music going back generations on both
sides of the family and as Jeannie grew up in the traveller life,
spending six months of the year in Aberdeen and spring and summer
on the roads up Deeside and down Donside, there were musical gatherings
round both hearthside and campsite. Music wasn’t just entertainment.
The songs and stories formed guides to traveller history and lessons
in life.
Jeannie began to learn songs in earnest during
the First World War. Her stepfather, James Higgins, and brothers
William, Robert and David had been called up and Jeannie’s
mother couldn’t sleep through worry. So Maria and her brother
would sing into the early hours to take their minds off the war.
Jeannie listened as Maria told the story behind
each song before singing it, a practice that as she grew into womanhood
gave Jeannie’s singing such authority. It wasn’t long
before Jeannie earned her first fee as her maternal grandfather,
who was renowned as a fine singer himself, loved to listen to her
singing and would give her a shilling for a song.
When, in 1953, folklorist Hamish Henderson visited
Aberdeen, looking for traditional singers and collecting songs,
Bobby Hutchinson, who had often attended ceilidhs at Jeannie and
her husband, Donald Higgins’ Causewayend flat, pointed him
in Jeannie’s direction.
So began Jeannie’s transition from a singer
who sang at family gatherings and to relieve the stresses of a hard
life into a tradition bearer of international standing.
The American folklorist Alan Lomax, like Henderson,
recognised the immense wealth of Jeannie’s song store and
Jeannie was soon invited to sing at the Third People’s Ceilidh
at Edinburgh Festival and to record for the BBC in London.
She sang in folk clubs and at festivals and recorded
for Topic Records’ songs and ballads series, and her home
became an open house for folklore students and young singers eager
to learn from this living source of folksong.
Some of the songs Jeannie sang weren’t
quite as old as her callers suspected, as she often made up songs
of her own while doing her housework. Her singing of ballads including
her most celebrated song, Son David, and the Battle of Harlaw was,
however, the long oral tradition at work and she gave battle songs
added realism through visualising swords clashing and men falling
as she sang.
In 1968, Jeannie was appointed MBE for services
to folksong, an event made all the more significant since she was
the first folksinger and the first traveller to receive this honour.
She died in March 1975 having passed on her songs to students including
her daughter Lizzie Higgins, her nephew Stanley Robertson, Ray Fisher,
Andy Hunter, and Jean Redpath, and having enriched the lives of
everyone who heard her sing.
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