Trouble Over Bridgewater Trevor Crozier

funny worst album covers trevor crozier friends trouble over bridgewater Id like to know what the trouble is at Bridgewater. As opposed to the Bridge over Troubled Water. Cant be too bad Trevor Crozier seems happy enough. He's even getting into a nice glass of stout.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'd suggest that Trevor Crozier's 'trouble' over Bridgewater was that by the look of him he was too pissed to get over the bloody bridge!

Anonymous said...

He seems a bit too proud of the album name. Imagine how happy he was the night at the pub when he came up with it.. The music was probably an after thought.

Anonymous said...

Who Is Trevor Crozier?

Trevor Crozier was one of those multi-talented and fascinating people with seemingly endless interests that he is almost impossible to categorise. However, his influence on Scrumpy & Western music is undeniable. The fact that he co-wrote one of Scrumpy & Western's greatest classic songs Don't Tell I, Tell 'Ee would be enough justification alone for including him in these pages.

However, his involvement in Scrumpy & Western didn't end there. He recorded a few records which have become classics in the genre and are now much sought after by collectors - see below for further details. But this was just one of his musical interests - he was also at various times during his career involved in such diverse music as skiffle, jug-band music, trad jazz, medieval music and many types of folk music including Irish, English and Breton. Over the years he built up a considerable reputation as a multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, singer and entertainer as he performed at pubs, clubs and folk festivals. Perhaps his diversity of interests owed something to his much-travelled youth - born in Southampton, he spent time living in various parts of Africa. Cornwall and Devon, France, London and Ireland (and probably other places).

Trevor was a member of the legendary House Of David Jug Band while at Trinity College Dublin in the 1960s - he was a contemporary there of that other songwriter with Scrumpy & Western connections, Ian Whitcomb. After leaving university he formed the equally legendary Broken Consort, immortalised for their strange amalgam of medieval and Scrumpy & Western music. When Broken Consort lived up to their name and split up, Trevor (who was then living in Brittany, France) formed the Celtic folk group Lyonesse.

But back to Trevor's Scrumpy & Western credentials! As well as writing arguably one of the greatest songs in the Scrumpy & Western canon Don't Tell I, Tell 'Ee, he penned a nuber of other songs recorded Scrumpy & Western artists including The Piddletrenthide Jug Band (recorded by The Yetties, and retitled as The Charlton Mackerel Jug Band and recorded by Adge Cutler & The Wurzels), Dorset Is Beautiful (recorded by The Wurzels and The Yetties), The Verger (recorded by The Wurzels) and the classic he recorded himself Dead Dog Scrumpy.

Not content with staying in music, Trevor was spotted in a TV documentary having branched out into - of all things - the growing and marketing of loofahs in Africa! Sadly, this true eccentric and unique entertainer met an untimely death in a motorcycle accident in Malawi in 1995. As long as scrumpy drinkers gather together to sing Don't Tell I, Tell 'Ee, he will live on, like Adge Cutler before him, in song.

"So if ever you're in Devon and you goes into a bar
Just ask fer Dead Dog Scrumpy - it's the best there is by far.
Refuse all imitations, you'll sleep just like a log -
You can always recognise it by the hair of the dog!"

Trevor Crozier - Dead Dog Scrumy

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