Guitarist and composer John Renbourn co-founded the group Pentangle and went on to become revered by guitarists around the world. Renbourn was found dead of an apparent heart attack at his home in Scotland on Thursday, after failing to show up for a concert. He was 70 years old.
Renbourn was born in London at the end of World War II. He used to joke that the only place to hide during air raids was under his mom's piano. He joked a lot, as he did with the BBC earlier this month about his music education:
"I went to a school that specialized in boxing and cross-country running," Renbourn said, "and one day a new teacher came to the school and the headmaster said, 'This teacher can teach music. But should anyone want to take music, they will have to forgo cross-country running and boxing.' So my hand shot up and I became a music student."
That teacher introduced him to medieval and Renaissance music, which he went on to arrange for acoustic guitar.
By the mid-'60s, Renbourn was enthralled by American acoustic blues and R&B, like a lot of the British guitarists at the time. He hooked up with one of them, Bert Jansch, and together they created their own sound out of these influences.
The album they recorded in 1965, Bert and John, became hugely influential to a younger generation of guitarists, among them The Police's Andy Summers. But Jansch told the BBC in 2008 that they got tired of the folk scene.
"And me and John, because we were playing together at that point, we decided we should open a club that was just us and invite all sorts of people along that we fancied," Jansch said.
Those people became Pentangle: singer Jacqui McShee, bassist Danny Thompson and drummer Terry Cox. The group took its name, according to Renbourn, from the emblem on the title character's shield in the Arthurian poem "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight." Pentangle built its music on a mix of British folk songs, blues and jazz and played Carnegie Hall, the Newport Folk Festival and the Fillmore East and West. The group broke up in 1972 and Renbourn embarked on a solo career.
Renbourn recorded numerous albums alone and with his group. He even went back to school and earned a degree in composition and orchestration. But he never took himself too seriously — right up to the end, when he recalled the beginning of his career.
"It was just in the early '60s that I was faced with the terrible dilemma of having to get a job and found myself preferring to travel and play," he said.
A lot of people are grateful he did.
Transcript
SCOTT SIMON, HOST:
This is WEEKEND EDITION from NPR News. I'm Scott Simon. One of the most respected musicians of the British folk rock boom of the 1960s has died. John Renbourn, the guitarist and composer, co-founded the group Pentangle. He was found dead of an apparent heart attack at his home in Scotland this week at the age of 70. NPR's Tom Cole has this appreciation.
TOM COLE, BYLINE: John Renbourn was born in London at the end of World War II. He used to joke that the only place to hide during air raids was under his mom's piano. He joked a lot, as he did with the BBC earlier this month about his music education.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
JOHN RENBOURN: I went to a school that specialized in boxing and cross-country running. And one day a new teacher came to the school. The headmaster said this teacher can teach music, but should anyone want to take music they will have to forgo cross-country running and boxing. So my hand shot up and I became a music student.
COLE: That teacher introduced him to medieval and Renaissance music, which he went on to arrange for acoustic guitar.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "BRANSLE GAY")
COLE: By the mid-'60s, Renbourn was enthralled with American blues and R&B. He hooked up with fellow guitarist Bert Jansch and together they created their own sound out of these influences.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "TIC-TOCATIVE")
COLE: The album "Bert And John" became hugely influential to a younger generation of guitarists. And out of the collaboration grew the group Pentangle.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "PENTANGLING")
PENTANGLE: (Singing) Moonflowers bright with people walking.
COLE: Pentangle played Carnegie Hall, the Newport Folk Festival and the Fillmores East and West, but broke up in 1972. Renbourn embarked on a solo career.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "THE PELICAN")
COLE: John Renbourn went back to school and earned a degree in composition and orchestration, but he never took himself too seriously, right up to the end, when he recalled the beginning of his career.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
RENBOURN: It was just in the early '60s that I was faced with a terrible dilemma of having to get a job and found myself preferring to travel and play.
COLE: A lot of people are grateful he did. Tom Cole, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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