Martin was born in May 1953 in Scunthorpe in Lincolnshire, a
particularly fertile tilth for English traditional music as Percy
Grainger and generations thereafter discovered. After leaving school in
1970 and abandoning a half-hearted stab at further education, he threw
it all in to become a professional musician in 1971. By the age of 12
he was playing guitar, by 13 banjo and at 14 he made his first paid
appearance. Like his friend and fellow Martin, Martin Carthy, he still
plays the British folk club circuit as eagerly as the grandest music
rooms that the world of music can offer.
It was back in 1975 that the singer Barbara Dickson (another so-called
'graduate' of the folk club scene) recommended Martin to Bill Leader
who went to see Martin perform. It led to Martin's first solo album,
Golden Vanity, (1976) for Bill Leader's Trailer label. Word got out
quickly. Within the year, he was supporting Steeleye Span and, by 1977,
he was accompanying that magisterial song-interpreter, June Tabor,
whose previous principal guitar accompanist had been Nic Jones, no easy
size 10s to fill. Their remarkable decade-long partnership produced a
triptych of highly influential albums in A Cut Above (1980),
Abyssinians (1983) and Aqaba (1988) and a body of performance pieces
that never received commercial release. Martin moved to the United
States in 1987 but it was not to be the end of their partnership. He
guested as her accompanist on her An Echo of Hooves (2003) and in her
television special in the BBC4 Sessions concert performance series
(2004).
Martin has continually added new colours to his palette, expanding on
his primary musical interests in British, Anglo-American and
Afro-American traditional forms and building on the foundations and
expressiveness laid down by Harry Cox, Blind Willie Johnson, Big Joe
Williams, Percy Webb and Blind Willie McTell. Gradually, hesitantly at
first - with the full flush of 20:20 hindsight - he found a singing
voice to complement his voice on the guitar. An influx of songs from
Bob Dylan, Bob Franke, John B Spencer, John Tams and Richard Thompson,
not to mention his own compositions on albums such as Bootleg USA
(1999) and Righteousness & Humidity (2003), showed other sides of
his musical character. Still, the basic rule of engagement remains:
that of balancing the traditional and the contemporary. That said, with
The Bramble Briar (2001), he concentrated on British story-telling of
traditional kinds, whether derived from the tradition or
tradition-based material from the likes of Peter Bellamy, Cecilia
Costello, Louis Killen and Cyril Tawney.
Much of Martin's music reflects the places where he has lived. Time
spent in England and the United States underpins his art, yet years ago
he learned to apply the artistry of experience in different contexts. A
Closer Walk With Thee (1993) explored the Christian Hymnal tradition as
planted and cross-fertilized on American soil. Later he collaborated
with musicians such as the great Wu Man of the Pudong School of Pipa
(Chinese Lute), with whom he recorded Music for the Motherless Child
(1996). The all-instrumental Cool & Unusual (1997) partnered him
with members of the Malagasy band, Tarika Sammy, Kelly Joe Phelps and
that musical saucier, David Lindley for one hell of a feast.
Martin's playing deploys a control of pace and dynamics that touches
the heart, like the best music, irrespective of whether the listener
has a bit of Lincolnshire, Mississippi or Ganges beneath their
manicured or careworn nails. In his playing he focuses upon economy and
how to make each note pay. Listen to him playing now and you will hear
how he measures not only the impact and length of each note, but,
tellingly how he delivers the space that frames each note.