Beloved worldwide as one of the finest traditional singers of all time, Archie Fisher is recognised as Scotland’s foremost folk troubadour with a career spanning over four decades. A talent that transcends generations and genres (Scottish indie band Frightened Rabbit had him sing on their song, “The Work”), Fisher came out of the vital UK folk scene that spawned the Incredible String Band, John Renbourn, Steeleye Span and Bert Jansch. Archie is a singer with a warm voice and great interpretive flair, a songwriter whose compositions have been taken up by many of the country's leading singers and a musician of outstanding ability on several instruments.


Although Archie Fisher is a legendary figure in the Scottish folk music world—everybody's favorite singer and an enormously influential presence both musically and philosophically—he has remained largely unknown to the greater pop music mainstream. While the mainstream’s a poorer place for that, one gets the idea it suits Archie Fisher just fine.


“Even leaving aside, for a moment, his immeasurable contribution to Scottish folk music as a broadcaster, Archie Fisher’s achievements as a singer, songwriter, guitarist and producer make his place in the annals secure. He stands as a linchpin figure between that music’s rural past and its largely urban present; between the Celtic and American folk-song traditions, both old and new.


The son of a Gaelic-speaking mother, from Vatersay in the Outer Hebrides, and a father who sang in the City of Glasgow Police Choir, Archie thus absorbed his first lessons in songcraft from both the time-tested eloquence of traditional ballads, and the literary brio of light opera and music-hall. The 1950s skiffle boom drew his sights Stateside, where he discovered kindred spirits and role-models like Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, and through them the power of song as a vehicle for contemporary politics and protest.


Archie has described how he taught himself to write songs originally through patching up incomplete traditional material, following its example in the potent visual imagery and poetic economy which became his own trademarks. His first recordings, with his sister Ray and other family members, were followed by his self-titled solo debut in 1968, while Ray and Archie also won widespread popularity with their TV appearances, singing topical songs on the current-affairs magazine show Here and Now. This early apprenticeship in writing to order, on specific subjects (later continued in his work for BBC Schools Radio), helped reinforce the expertise in marrying rhythm, melody and language which has characterised his songwriting ever since, with many of his compositions having entered the contemporary folk-song canon.


As a guitarist, Archie—along with Martin Carthy and Davey Graham—was among the earliest steel-string players in British folk music, devising a mix of new tunings and inventive picking that has influenced generations of successors. The range of his talents has led to collaborations with such legendary names as Liam Clancy and Tommy Makem, Silly Wizard, Bert Jansch and Tom Paxton, while his specific contribution to the Edinburgh folk scene, which began when he ran the Howff club in the early 1960s, continued during his directorship of the Edinburgh Folk Festival, from 1988 to 1992.


Coming of age as he did at a time when folk music enjoyed its highest ever profile on the nation’s airwaves, Archie was also to emerge—in parallel with his performing career—as one of the genre’s most important ambassadors and advocates in the broadcasting world. As presenter of BBC Radio Scotland’s weekly flagship show Travelling Folk, which he took over in 1983, he has consistently and eloquently championed the very best of Scottish folk music, complementing his support for new artists with his vast knowledge of the music’s history and international context.”

From the Scottish Traditional Hall of Fame



 
Archie Fisher
Scottish Folk Legend
Performance: Sunday
November 13, 2016, 3:00 PM

“Archie is more than a singer, accomplished accompianist and songwriter; his is one of Britain's finest song interpreters, in the same league as Martin Carthy or Dick Gaughan. Listening to his Sunsets I've Galloped Into...drums in that lesson better than any words.”

— SING OUT!



What the Critics Say

Joy C. Bennett