If I Had a Ribbon Bow explained

If I Had a Ribbon Bow
Type:single
Artist:Fairport Convention
B-Side:If (Stomp)
Released:23 February 1968
Recorded:10 August 1967
Studio:Sound Techniques, London
Label:Track 604020
Producer:Joe Boyd for Witchseason Productions
Next Title:Meet on the Ledge
Next Year:1968

"If I Had a Ribbon Bow" is Fairport Convention's debut single.

The song written by Hughie Prince and Lou Singer had been recorded previously by Maxine Sullivan (a.k.a. Marietta Williams) in 1936, Odetta (1956), Carolyn Hester (1961), Karen Dalton, The Simon Sisters and Mildred Bailey. Fairport Convention recorded their first album for Track Records in 1968. Their American producer Joe Boyd suggested they release a single. He suggested the old 1930s dance song "If I Had a Ribbon Bow."

The band cut the song with singer Judy Dyble playing the harmonium. Her legs were not long enough to reach the pedals/bellows so two other members of the group had to pump them. Tristan Fry, a friend of the group, played the vibes at the beginning and end of the song. Ian Matthews, who was then a new member of the group added a few spoken words. "If I had a Ribbon Bow" was released as a 45 with "If," a track from their first album, as the B-side. It was a minor hit on the BBC.[1]

Personnel

with

Notes and References

  1. The Accidental Musician: The Story of Judy Dyble