George
Papavgeris (“the bard of Salonika via Amersham” – John Breeze)
Vital
statistics: Inveterate white collar computer-basher; 30+
years with “the best girl north of the South Pole” (Vanessa);
a son (Martin, b1982); a daughter (Aliki, b1985); a grandson
(Timmy, b2002); a dog (Lyddie, b1997); and we all belong to the
amputee cat (Archimedes, spawned from the jaws of hell in 1993).
A short two years ago, if you’d asked me to write a song I would
have laughed dismissively, believing myself incapable of penning the
simplest tune, and deeply jealous of the many songwriters I admire.
Although always involved with music in some form or another,
and first exposed to folk music in the early 70’s at the Heritage
Folk Club in Oxford, my songwriting career begun much later, and
totally unexpectedly at that. Having
moved back to the UK after many years of living abroad, I rejoined the
folk scene through the Herga and Maidenhead Folk Clubs in late 2000. Suddenly,
in April 2001, a combination of personal circumstances with the
support of newly-found folk music friends acting as the catalyst
brought on a cascade of songs (50 in the first year alone, 80 so far).
Much to my surprise, many of the songs were liked and some were
getting “asked for” by other singers. Less than a year since I
started, on the 11th March 2002, I had the enormous
pleasure to hear “Heart of a sailor boy” by none other than Johnny
Collins and for the first time I started to believe that perhaps I
could make a small mark. Since
then, some 9 or 10 of my songs are sung by singers in the UK, US,
Canada, Australia, NZ and the Netherlands, and two early albums
(“Countryside like this” and “Perfect moments”) issued under a
“home label” with moderate success – for the non-commercial
world of folk music.
Being
Greek born and bred (Salonika, 1953), but having lived mostly in the
UK, Netherlands and Belgium after the age of 18, my influences are
naturally varied: Greek and Middle Eastern traditional, byzantine
music, European mediaeval, English traditional, American folk, ragtime
and blues. Being a child
of my time I carry a lot of 60’s and 70’s rock as well as Paul
Simon, Billy Joel, Jake Thackeray and Jeremy Taylor in my head. Somewhere
above all those stand Clive James and Pete Atkins.
In addition, I am a late, but fanatical, convert to the music
written by Stan Rogers, Dave Webber, Sydney Carter, Cyril Tawney, Dan
McKinnon, Robb Johnson, Steve Hughes and I keep finding new ones to be
jealous of all the time. So I suppose that qualifies my tastes as
“catholic”!
But
through all that hotch-potch of influences I carry a thread, which
must have always been there, though it became more obvious to me as I
started writing songs: I
am driven by a love of people with their imperfections – BECAUSE of
their imperfections and their constant struggle to improve themselves
and the society they live in. I
still carry idealism too, no longer naive but tainted already with the
compromises and stresses of adulthood. In
a way, my songs are a cry of fear – that I might one day lose my
idealism altogether. But
still, in my world all is not gloom and doom;
there are lots of perfect moments, and I am determined to enjoy
and celebrate them all.