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Born: November 2, 1947
Bass
Played: 1979-1995

albums
> A
> Broadsword and the Beast
> Under Wraps
> A Classic Case
> Crest of a Knave
> Rock Island
> Live at Hammersmith '84
> Catfish Rising
> A Little Light Music
> Nightcap
> Roots to Branches
> Jethro Tull in Concert
> Living with the Past CD
> Christmas Album

radio and tv
Dave talks with WBZC's Gener Godfrey about "The Broadsword and the Beast," the "Crest of a Knave" tour, and much more (requires RealPlayer).

quick fact
Dave came to Tull, and left as well, from Fairport Convention. With sixteen years of service, he has the fourth longest tenure in the band (after Anderson, Barre, and Perry). He is still with Fairport Convention.

Dave returns on the "Living with the Past" CD as part of the "Zurich Dressing Room Tapes."

latest update
Dave continues to play with Fairport Convention and you can get his latest news at their website:

www.fairportconvention.com


Check tour dates for Fairport Convention.

Dave Pegg reflects on 40 years with Fairport Convention

Web admin note: Long-time Tull bassist and fan favorite Dave Pegg's first love has always been his original and current band "Fairport Convention," one of the most influential and best folk-rock bands in rock history. "Peggy" just hit 40 years since his Fairport beginnings and took a few moments to record his thoughts and reflections.

Dave PeggPeggy’s Conventional Story

Sunday, November 2, 1969, was Dave Pegg’s 22nd birthday. To celebrate, he took a night off from a seemingly perpetual stream of gigs with the Ian Campbell Folk Group. Instead he went along to Mother’s Night Club in Birmingham, a venue he knew from several years spent playing in rock, blues, jazz and folk bands on the Birmingham scene. Playing that night, with a band he had just joined, was the fiddle player who had left The Campbells around the time Peggy joined. Not only was he keen to see what his former band-mate was up to, Peggy was also interested to hear what they band had to offer with their innovative fusion of rock and folk. For just under an hour, they played a totally new genre that sat squarely between the two forms of music that Peggy had spent most of his working life to date playing.

The last time Fairport Convention had played there was on the night of the fateful road accident which nearly destroyed the band, but out of which this hugely influential musical experiment had grown. The songs Peggy heard that night would be released a month later under the title Liege & Lief. It was the last time that this band would play all the songs from that album on stage. It was the first time Peggy had seen them.

By the end of the year, he would have accepted an invitation to join the band he was watching as their bass player, replacing the band’s founder member Ashley Hutchings. Ashley decided to quit, as Sandy Denny had already, within a couple of days of the Birmingham gig. Peggy’s first rehearsal with Fairport was on December 7, 1969. He joined the band at the start of the next month, a life-changing ringing out of the old to mark the new decade.

It was a worthwhile career move: it saw him moving away from acoustic folk and back into an experimental form of rock music. To celebrate, egged on by a mischievous ex-band-member and a rather large intake of intoxicant, he publicly trashed his double bass at his final Campbells gig by jumping on it on stage. Only when he left the stage did someone point out that the performance had reached only the interval and he would somehow have to go back and perform the second half. That was on December 31, 1969 at the Jug O’Punch, where the Ian Campbell Folk Group saw in the new decade sharing the stage with Diz Disley and Harvey Andrews.

--*--

It’s 9.15pm on Friday, August 10, 2007, Dave Pegg has been celebrating Fairport’s 40th birthday at the annual festival which he co-created and co-curated for 25 years. Normally, in demand non-stop on stage or off, this year he can enjoy an hour’s respite. Although Fairport are on stage for the next hour, his presence is not required: with the exception of the late Sandy Denny, the band he is watching is the same one as saw 38 years earlier, before he ever thought of being a member of Fairport. For the first time since he first saw them, Fairport are about to play all the songs from their classic album Liege & Lief – “And I am the luckiest Fairport of all, because I get to watch them do it”, he had told me earlier.

Between those two performances of that great album, the one continuous thread in the Fairport story is Dave Pegg. Friends may come and friends may go, but Peggy-on-the-bass goes on forever!. Next day at Cropredy in 2007, I’d join him at a signing session for the box-set which celebrates his long career in music – from the proto-rock bands of Brumbeat through countless sessions, The Ian Campbell Folk Group, The GPs, The Dylan Project, Peggy & PJ and Jethro Tull. But, despite everything else he has achieved, Peggy remains, “the bass player with Fairport Convention.” On January 1, 2010, he celebrates the fortieth anniversary of occupying the enviable position.

The story begins simply: a journey to a London audition in a car that steadfastly refused to turn right; a choice between two Fs – The Foundations or Fairport Convention -, the discovery that two of Fairport’s key players (founder Ashley Hutchings and lead vocalist Sandy Denny) had both left since he saw the band, and then the audition itself. “Peggy’s audition”, says Richard Thompson, “was accompanied by the sound of collective jaws dropping.” “We thought Ashley had been impressively inventive with his folk-rock bass parts”, said Simon Nicol, “Peggy came along and could not only play them, but played them better.”
Through the seventies, it was Peggy and Dave Swarbrick who held the band together as line-ups changed around them. Aside from playing bass and mandolin, Peggy also contributed the occasional vocal and began writing songs; he remains rightly proud of the tune he created for Polly On The Shore, for example. “The mandolin was Swarb’s idea,” says Peggy, “He knew I played it in The Campbells, so suggested we build it in to Fairport material like Flatback Capers. When pay day came around, I was paid more because I was officially a multi-instrumentalist!”

Peggy joined a band which had just invented folk-rock….and continued to mould and redefine the genre. Through the seventies, various musical genres rose and fell, as Fairport’s folk rock resolutely resurrected itself, a veritable John Barleycorn of music. It rode the tide of prog and glam, disco and glitter, new wave and New Romantic. Then, as the seventies drew to a close and the band’s label Island finally ‘had to let them go’, it became obvious that Fairport should call it a day.
Peggy had already started a small recording studio in Cropredy. As soon as word got around that Fairport might be breaking up, Ian Anderson was asking if Peggy would like to join Tull on bass. Led Zeppelin invited Fairport to end their Farewell Tour by playing support at Knebworth and then it was back onto home turf to play what was to be their final gig on August 4, at Cropredy.
That was 1980 and it would have been the end of Fairport but for Peggy. Instead of holing himself away in the studio, where plenty of work was already coming in and relying on the sinecure of his Tull job, he set about selling by mail order the souvenir album recorded on the final Fairport tour. That was the first release on Woodworm Records, Fairport’s record label for years to come. The buyers of the mail-order album and subsequent releases became the basis of the mailing list by which the first and subsequent Fairport Annual Reunions and later Cropredy Festivals were sold.

The Festival grew from very small beginnings (literally a local fete in the manor house garden) to be a major international event and one of the summer festival season’s “hot tickets”. Thirty years on, it continues to go from strength to strength. The planning and vision of the Festival, from what acts to book to how to expand and develop all centred on the Pegg household, now decamped to Barford St Michael, where the Peggs’ home incorporated a company office, state-of –the-art recording studio and accommodation for any musicians recording there. Eventually, after a fistful of annual reunions, gradually lengthening Winter Tours and ‘official bootleg’ releases of live performances, it was decided that the time had come for Fairport to exist once more as a full-time entity. Peggy, Simon and DM set about recording a proper studio album (Gladys’ Leap) from which Dave Swarbrick chose to exclude himself. “At that point,” explains Simon, “Peggy became de facto leader of the group: everything was being organised through his home and all the money to do with the band was going through the office there. Fairport has to be very grateful for the careful stewardship of the Peggs who made it possible for the band not just to continue but to become increasingly successful in its own terms.”

Before the age when Indy was trendy, Dave Pegg created a cottage industry for Fairport where almost everything to do with the band could be handled literally in-house – even recording albums and the running of a major festival. Just as he had when the band struggled in the early seventies, Peggy was able to turn to his address book to find suitable musicians. Ric Sanders had worked with both Simon and DM; he had attended the Farewell Cropredy and even written a tune in its honour; but he was actually recruited because Peggy’s dad knew his dad through work! Peggy knew Martin Allcock (when he still spelled it like that) because Maart used to turn up at gigs and offer to help out lugging gear or replacing strings. Peggy’s social skills are a unique and unusual talent.

As it always had, Fairport evolved and mutated, but seismic shifts had given way to more subtle changes, a little erosion here, a new landmass there. Ahead of the fad for working unplugged, Fairport created an acoustic line up which allowed them to play small venues. The band became the house band for the expansive French Excalibur projects – again a Pegg connection through his second home in Brittany.

Eventually, Chris Leslie joined the band: one can trace another Pegg-related sequence of events – Peggy recorded Chris and his brother John at one of Woodworm’s earliest sessions; they had played together in a number of projects (with Steve Ashley, Beryl Marriott, and Captain Coco); Chris was called on to step in when an accident took Ric out of the frame for a while; when Maart left, Peggy knew who to call.

So influential has his presence been, that fans allocate “Pegg Numbers” to other musicians, based on the degrees of separation from performing on stage or on record with him.
--*--

In 2004, for personal reasons, Peggy took some time out from Fairport. He never actually left the band, but missed part of a US tour and sat out that year’s Acoustic tour. His absence was felt – one missed his stage presence and his role as master of camaraderie: he has often overlooked skills in PR and business negotiation which are deceptively understated but highly effective.

Never one to waste time, he used his brief sabbatical to form a hugely admired duo with P J Wright.

So this year, wherever you see Fairport – at a concert in a large hall, at an acoustic gig in a smaller venue, with 20,000 others at Cropredy – take time to celebrate four decades in the world’s greatest folk-rock band with the big guy with the bass guitar.

It was forty years ago today, Sgt Peggy brought his bass to play,
He’s played along in countless styles and he’s guaranteed to raise a smile
So may I introduce to you, the chap you’ve know for forty years
Sgt. Peggy and Fairport’s folk-rock band.


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