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All Music Guide:
James Yorkston was born in Kingsbarns, a small village in Fife, Scotland. At the age of eight, Yorkston started playing music and fell in love with the craft. At the age of 17, he moved from Fife to the larger city of Edinburgh with his girlfriend. It was at the same time that he became involved with a garage rock and punk band called Huckleberry, with Yorkston being the group's bass player. In 1996, he performed his first acoustic show after a friend working in a record shop picked Yorkston as an opening act for Bert Jansch in Edinburgh. The acoustic and punk rock genres were something the musician loved equally, but he chose the acoustic folk route. In 2000, under the name "J. Wright Presents," Yorkston recorded a demo tape at home, sending it to John Peel, who played the song on his program immediately. Yorkston also sent a tape to John Martyn, requesting an opening slot on his Edinburgh show. Martyn invited Yorkston to be his opening act on his entire 30-date tour. "Moving Up Country" was released as a single in October 2000 on Bad Jazz Records. In January 2001, the song was released as a 7" single. Exactly a year later, Yorkston released a split single with the Lone Pigeon. In May 2002 Yorkston and his supporting cast the Athletes released an EP called St. Patrick. In June Yorkston released his debut album, Moving Up Country. Citing Anna Briggs, Lal Waterson, Nick Drake, and Malagasy guitarist D'Gary as musical influences, Yorkston also has opened for Lambchop, Turin Brakes, the Divine Comedy, and Gemma Hayes. The Someplace Simple EP appeared in December 2003. In February 2004 Yorkston and his group hit the studio with producer Kieran Hebden of Four Tet. The results of the session were released in late 2004 as Just Beyond the River on Domino. The following year the Spanish label Houston Records issued the EP Hoopoe, which included five new songs, among other things, and in 2007 Yorkston's third full-length, The Year of the Leopard, came out in the U.S. (it had already hit British shelves that previous fall). 2008's When the Haar Rolls In was a confident follow-up and in 2009 he joined forces with Sheffield's Big Eyes Family Players to produce an album of traditional material which was simply entitled Folk Songs. Yorkston's canon had always betrayed a literary slant and fittingly, in 2011, he published the effortlessly witty, It's Lovely to be Here: The Touring Diaries of a Scottish Gent. 2012 saw the release of I Was a Cat from a Book, his first album of self-penned material in four years.
Wikipedia:
James Yorkston is a Scottish folk musician.
Music career[edit]
A native of Fife, James Yorkston was an integral early member of the Fence Collective whose reach across contemporary music continues to lengthen: King Creosote, The Aliens, KT Tunstall, The Beta Band and The Pictish Trail. Yorkston is primarily a singer-songwriter, although he also tackles a variety of traditional songs, learned from singers such as Anne Briggs, Dick Gaughan, Nic Jones, Martin Carthy, Lal Waterson, John Strachan and Adrian Crowley. His quoted main influences are Anne Briggs, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Michael Hurley, Can and the Malagasy D'Gary.
Yorkston started out as bassist for punk band Miraclehead, which morphed into the band Huckleberry, who recorded a number of independently released records. Yorkston's solo career began when John Peel played a demo of his "Moving Up Country, Roaring the Gospel", proclaiming it had the "song title of the year, no doubt". This led to Bad Jazz Records scrambling for Yorkston's details and releasing that track as Yorkston's debut 7" under the name "J. Wright Presents".
At this time Yorkston had started to play solo gigs in Edinburgh — his debut supporting Bert Jansch in the Café Royal. Seeking more shows, Yorkston sent a copy of the single to John Martyn, asking Martyn for a support slot on his forthcoming Edinburgh date, and John Martyn responded by offering Yorkston all 27 dates on his UK and Ireland tour. While on this tour, Yorkston was seen by Laurence Bell of Domino Records, who was so impressed he had a recording contract sent to Yorkston's lawyer the following week. Subsequently he signed to Domino Records, recording music with a number of friends and associates credited as The Athletes on his records. Yorkston recorded and co-produced his debut album for Domino (Moving Up Country), alongside Simon Raymonde of the Cocteau Twins, which became Rough Trade Record Shops Album of the Year for 2002.
Yorkston also played at the inaugural Green Man Festival.
For Yorkston's second album, he asked Kieran Hebden (Four Tet) on board as producer, and they made Just Beyond the River. This album was extremely well received all round. Pete Paphides of The Times wrote, "Yorkston has reached a state of grace that writers can spend for ever trying to attain: songs that sound not so much written as carefully retrieved from your own subconscious, played with an intuition bordering on telepathy. What more could you ask for?" Yorkston's fan base continued to grow and he was offered tours with Beth Orton, David Gray, Tindersticks, Turin Brakes, Lambchop and Kathryn Williams, as well as a slot on the prestigious Accelerator tour of Sweden.
The follow-up, The Year of the Leopard, was produced by Rustin Man, who had recently worked with Beth Gibbons (lead singer with the band Portishead) on their Out of Season record. While promoting this, Yorkston was given the chance to play with Bert Jansch once more, this time in Paris. Yorkston also invited Martin Carthy to play and share a stage with him at London's Union Chapel on 24 May 2007. In 2007, Domino Records released Roaring the Gospel, a collection of unreleased songs, which led NME to say "Yorkston has talent as deep as a mine shaft".
Yorkston was invited to work as Musical Director with Oliver Knight and the Waterson Carthy clan for the BBC Electric Proms tribute to Lal Waterson. This was broadcast by the Mike Harding Show as well as by BBC Three. Alongside Waterson Carthy, the acts involved included Alasdair Roberts, Kathryn Williams and Lisa Knapp. Yorkston's involvement with the Fence Collective is also very much alive: he has toured extensively with King Creosote and contributes every year to the Fence Collective's legendary Homegames—mini-festivals featuring guest performances by artists such as The Concretes and Hot Chip. Yorkston also plays in the Fence Collective bands The 3 Craws, Pictish Trail and U.N.P.O.C..
His fifth album, When the Haar Rolls In, was released through Domino Records on 1 September 2008. Guests included Nancy Elizabeth Cunliffe, Norma Waterson and Mike Waterson. A special edition was released featuring an album of remixes and an album of James Yorkston covers by artists such as King Creosote, U.N.P.O.C. and Cathal Coughlan.
In August 2009, Yorkston released his sixth album on Domino Records, entitled Folk Songs. This is an album of traditional songs, arranged and performed by James Yorkston and The Big Eyes Family Players.
In March 2011 The Domino Press published Yorkston's debut book, "It's Lovely to be Here: The Touring Diaries of a Scottish Gent".
In 2011, Yorkston collaborated with The Fruit Tree Foundation, appearing on its debut album, First Edition.
In August 2012, Domino Records release Yorkston's seventh album, I Was a Cat from a Book.
Double-bassist Doogie Paul (Douglas Paul), one of The Athletes, died on 3 November 2012 in Edinburgh, from cancer aged 40.Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist}} template (see the help page).











