
Roy Last
Personal Portrait No. 22
This article in our series of portraits of singers and musicians from East Anglia is written by EATMT director John Howson, who met and recorded singer Roy Last in the 1980s. Roy was born at Finningham near Stowmarket in 1901, lived in Stonham for many years, then moved to Mendlesham Green in retirement, where he died in 1990.
I
first met Roy when I was visiting another singer in Mendlesham Green, Gordon
Syrett. “Roy’ll give you a song” said Gordon and away went Roy with John
Barleycorn and that was the first of our many meetings. At that time he
rarely sang out any more, but in earlier days he had been a regular at Stonham
Brewer’s Arms (known locally as ‘The Tap’ and still visible at the point where
the A1120 crosses the A140 Norwich-Ipswich road) and the Green Man at Mendlesham
Green, a renowned pub for singing and stepping in the past.
Roy’s grandfather was a singer and Roy learned the unusual ballad William
Rufus from him - a song which tells the tale of how this ancient king of
England was killed. Many of Roy’s songs had interesting historical aspects to
them - he also sang The Battle of Balaclava and Botany Bay as well
as a fragment of a rare ballad (he called it Peter the Paynter) relating
a true story of a prisoner’s escape from Bury St Edmunds gaol in the 1840s. He
learned this song from his auntie, who had a broadsheet she had bought from an
itinerant ballad-seller. She used to sing the song Little Cock Sparrow to
Roy when he was a small boy, seated on her knee, and she would emphasise the
word naughty in the following line: ‘A naughty boy came with his bow and his
arrow...!’ He also learned songs from his father and uncle, so they were a
really musical family. Roy’s variant of John Barleycorn - a song dating
back around 400 years, is very unusual and he learned that from singer Bill
Lockwood, who used to sing in Needham Market Three Tuns and Creeting King’s Head
in the 1920s.
Roy always had a fund of stories, as well as a well-stocked garden and a brewery
in his shed and I would often come home from a collecting trip with several
songs, a basket of vegetables and a couple of pints of home-brewed beer! I took
the film maker Barry Callaghan to visit Roy and we filmed him singing and
talking about his life. Although there were a few technical problems, it is
fascinating footage, and we hope to show it at a future EATMT film show.
Discography:
VT130CD
Who Owns the Game (7 songs)
VTDC8CD Many A Good Horseman (1 song)
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