| BACK TO INDEX |
| __________________________________________________________________ |
I came from a very
musical/singing family. Grandfather Todd was a melodeon player and a tip drummer
in The Royal Scots Pipe Band.
All the Todds were singers, father played
guitar and sang Jimmie Rogers songs and Scottish Folk Songs only we did
not know they were called folk songs, just songs that everyone knew forever.
My father and mother moved to Coventry in
England in the mid 50s for a so called better life after having torn up sailing
tickets for Australia!!!!!!
I am left handed and because of that my Father
couldn’t pass on his guitar skills to me, a lack of patience from both of us,
I think. In 1962 I asked him to give me an old five string banjo he had, he
said I had to pay him 3 pounds which is what it had cost him, his reasoning
being that if I got it for nothing I’d do nothing with it, he was right. It
took 6 months and I had mastered the necessary 3 chords, started a folk group
and a folk club with my father, my cousin and my brother-in-law.
The club was called The Cofa’s Tree and
became the second biggest club in the Midlands, it was second only to The
Ian Campbell Folk Group’s club The Jug O’ Punch in Birmingham.
The Midland Federation of Folk Clubs was then formed with myself as secretary,
Dave Campbell (Ian’s father) and other committee members, I was
secretary for about eighteen months, there were many activities I was involved
with including Sunday afternoon seminars in the lovely garden of Charles
Parker’s house in Birmingham. Charles was the producer of Ewan McColl’s famous
series of programmes called the Radio Ballads, McColl himself
was present at quite a few of the seminars, heady stuff for an emerging folk
singer!
In 1966 our group, The Kerries
(my father’s first name was Kerry) entered a Ballad Contest sponsored
by an Irish newspaper and Pepsi-Cola, we won the heat in Camden Town, London
and later were flown to Kilkenny in Ireland for the final. The band won the
contest from 190 entries and were urged to go full time, sadly it didn’t happen,
too many financial commitments.
In 1968 we recorded an LP for Major Minor Records who had
just had a no.1 single with The Dubliners (who were old friends
by this time, they played our Folk Club many times). We embarked on a thirty night tour of the
U.K. opening for The Dubliners and our opening venue was The
Royal Albert Hall, SCARY!! but a wonderful experience. The old saying goes 'nothing lasts forever'
and within a year the band had split up, I moved back to Peebles with my family
(wife and three kids) and followed my trade as a quality control engineer
for about three years. I still played gigs and sessions at any opportunity until
I was offered a residency to play music in a hotel in Bermuda for a year so
off I went and that was me on the road from that day on. I returned from Bermuda
via New York and New England finishing back up in Coventry (my wife was from
there). I then took off to America for a year, then Bermuda again by this
time in a duo with Davy Wiseman, also a Scot, we toured Europe
consistently in the 70’s mainly Denmark and Germany where I spent many happy
times with the great Alex Campbell and Derrol Adams who became
major influences in my musical life.
In 1991 Finbar Furey asked me to support The Fureys for
a week in Belfast Arts Theatre, yes we stayed in The Europa
Hotel which was blown up the second night we were there while we were
at the gig!!!!!! I was then asked to open for them in all the major halls in
the U.K. which I did for the next four years, I also was doing the same thing
for The Dubliners who worked for the same agency. I also tour
managed both bands.
It was in 1993 at The first Celtic Connections Festival in
Glasgow that I met Colin Hynd, its director, he invited me to become
part of the fabric of the festival, not quite knowing what he would do with
me. I eventually became host /co-ordinator of The Festival Club and The Open
Stage which exposes wonderful unheard of performers to the world audience.
In November 2002 my wife Annie and I realised a long cherished dream and
came to live as permanent residents in Australia. We shall become citizens in
June 2005. My tenure at Celtic Connections continues, on January
the 4th 2005 and I was on a plane to my 12th Festival
in Glasgow. Over the past 12 years I’ve appeared with many of the worlds leading
performers, Tom Paxton, Dick Gaughan, Aly Bain, Kate & Anne McGarrigle,
Archie Fisher, Brian McNeill, Eddi Reader and many more, OH, YES I nearly forgot in September
2003 I was invited to Nashville to record my current CD Goin Home,
home being here in Australia!!!!!
My future plans are to keep on singing and playing as long as I am able.
I am a very fortunate man.
Gibb Todd
As Gibb has said, he and Annie moved to Australia a few years ago fulfilling
his life-long dream. They had visited on quite a few occasions before-hand and
Gibb guested along with local performers on BayFM's Acoustic Harvest Christmas
programme for a few years now. Gibb and Annie live near Beenleigh south
of Brisbane. Gibb still continues with world-wide folk music commitments as
well as local ones. ED
| BACK TO INDEX |