Paul Sartin (20 February 1971 – 14 September 2022)[1][2] was an English singer, instrumentalist, composer and arranger, specialising in oboe and violin. He was best known for his work with the folk band Bellowhead, but also played with three-piece Faustus and the folk/comedy duo Belshazzar's Feast.
Early life
Sartin was brought up in Willesden, London. He was educated at Anson Primary School, Highgate School, on an assisted place, and subsequently moved to the Purcell School for Young Musicians, again on an assisted place from Brent music service. Between school and university, he played oboe with a musical theatre troupe called Gloria, and the English National Opera's Baylis project. He then took up a choral scholarship at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he gained a 2:1 in music.[3]
Career
Upon leaving Oxford University, Sartin sang as a lay clerk at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, a post he held for five years. During that period, he gained a diploma – Licentiate of the Royal Schools of Music – and was invited to join the band Life Of Reilly, which at that time also included his future collaborator Paul Hutchinson. However, in 1995 they left to form the duo Belshazzar's Feast[4][5] The duo began performing for ceilidhs and social dances, but grew a concert repertoire and a reputation for musical comedy.
In 1998, he formed the folk band Dr Faustus, with Tim van Eyken, Benji Kirkpatrick and Robert Harbron, with the intention of playing English folk music.[6] The band undertook outreach work with charities Superact[7][8] and Live Music Now,[9][10] and produced two albums – The First Cut[11] and Wager[12] – before splitting in 2005.
In 2004 John Spiers and Jon Boden invited Sartin and Kirkpatrick to join their new 11-piece band Bellowhead. The band, with Sartin on violin, oboe and backing vocals, released one EP and five studio albums over their 12-year duration. Two of those albums went silver.[15] They were nominated and won many BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards over the years, including Best Live Act on five occasions. Their music was playlisted on BBC Radio 2, they made appearances on Later... with Jools Holland on BBC2, and appeared at festivals all around the UK, continental Europe and Canada, as well as touring regularly. Bellowhead ended in Spring 2016.[16]
Sartin achieved a distinction in his master's degree in Traditional Music in 2005, from Newcastle University, where he became a visiting tutor.[17]
Faustus, a continuation of Dr Faustus which combined Sartin and Kirkpatrick with Saul Rose, was formed in 2006. The band produced an album, Faustus in 2008,[18] had a hiatus during 2010–11, and made their second album Broken Down Gentlemen in 2013.[19] In Faustus Sartin shared lead vocals alongside his oboe, cor anglais, and violin duties.
All three members received English Folk Dance and Song Society 75th anniversary awards in 2007, to commemorate their significant contributions to the development and continuity of traditional English folk music, song and dance.[20] Faustus were nominated for Best Group at the 2009 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.[21]
In 2010 Sartin joined Jon Boden and the Remnant Kings, with whom he toured occasionally.[22] Belshazzar's Feast also received a nomination for Best Duo at the 2010 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.[23]
The Bellowhead Songbook, edited by Sartin, was published by Faber Music and issued in 2014.[24]Made In The Great War, a piece devised around the history of a pre-war violin in Sam Sweeney's possession, toured annually for several years from 2014. Sartin played oboe, cor anglais and violin in the work.[25]
He also composed, notably numerous works for theatre. Works include The Hartlepool Monkey for Streetwise Opera, nominated for a BASCA award; a revamp of Peter Bellamy's The Transports for Sidmouth Folk Festival in 2011; Changing Places… or What Dobbin Saw for Broadstairs Folk Festival; and The Seven Joys of Mary for the Choir of Somerville College, Oxford.[26]
Post-Bellowhead
Sartin compiled, composed and produced Community Choirs: Folk for Faber Music in 2016.[27] Faustus released a third album, Death and Other Animals, in Autumn 2016.[28] He was musical director, arranger and performer in a revised production of The Transports, which toured in 2017.[29] He was the co-founder of the Whitchurch Folk Club where he helped to further knowledge of the songs of Henry Lee, collected by George Gardiner.[30]
Sartin died suddenly of a heart attack on 14 September 2022 at the age of 51,[31] as confirmed by a statement put out by his family on 15 September. A subsequent statement, on 18 September, stated that he collapsed suddenly prior to taking the stage at an engagement in Oxford. He was in the company of his bandmate, Saul Rose, at the time.[32]
The BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards are an annual awards ceremony held to celebrate achievement among folk artists that year.
Year
Nominee / work
Award
Result
2014
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Nominated
2013
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Nominated
Broadside (as part of Bellowhead)
Best Album
Won
2012
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Nominated
Best Live Act
Nominated
2011
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Won
Best Live Act
Won
Hedonism (as part of Bellowhead)
Best Album
Nominated
New York Girls (as part of Bellowhead)
Best Traditional Track
Nominated
2010
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Nominated
Best Live Act
Won
as Belshazzar's Feast
Best Duo
Nominated
2009
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Nominated
Best Live Act
Nominated
Fakenham Fair (as part of Bellowhead)
Best Traditional Track
Nominated
as Faustus
Best Group
Nominated
2008
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Nominated
Best Live Act
Won
2007
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Won
Best Live Act
Won
2006
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Nominated
Best Live Act
Nominated
2005
as part of Bellowhead
Best Group
Nominated
Best Live Act
Won
2004
as part of Dr Faustus
Horizon Award for Best New Act
Nominated
Other awards
In 2007 Sartin, as part of Faustus, received an English Folk Dance and Song Society 75th anniversary award to commemorate a significant contribution to the development and continuity of traditional English folk music, song and dance.
Bellowhead's Hedonism, featuring Sartin, won Best Album in the FRoots Magazine Critic's Poll in 2010.[36]
In 2011 Sartin's composition The Hartlepool Monkey for Streetwise Opera was nominated for a BASCA award. He was posthumously awarded the Fatea Lifetime Achievement Award for 2022.[37]
Selected discography
2019Cotton Lords EP Faustus (Westpark 87381) 2016Death and Other Animals Faustus (Westpark B01KYUOR3G) 2016Live: The Farewell Tour Bellowhead (Navigator B01BILZ0G8) 2014Revival Bellowhead (Universal/Island B00JSHKGOG) 2014The Whiting's On The Wall Belshazzar's Feast (Unearthed B00ISKT5NM) 2013Broken Down Gentlemen Faustus (Navigator B00AWKW13C) 2012Broadside Bellowhead, (Navigator B0085KAMOQ) 2012Stocking Fillers Belshazzar's Feast, (Unearthed B008YBADAO) 2010Hedonism Bellowhead, (Navigator 042) 2010Find the Lady Belshazzar's Feast, (Unearthed TPLP1080CD) 2009Frost Bites Belshazzar's Feast (WildGoose 366 CD) 2008The Food of Love Belshazzar's Feast, (WildGoose 353CD) 2007Faustus Faustus, (Navigator 5) 2007Matachin Bellowhead, (Navigator 17X) 2006Live at Christ Church Dublin Cathedral Choir 2006Burlesque Bellowhead, (Westpark 87132) 2005Wager Dr Faustus, (Fellside FTCD189) 2004Eponymous Bellowhead, (Megaphone 111) 2004Waiting for Angels Martin Carthy, (Topic TSCD527) 2003The First Cut Dr Faustus (Fellside B0000C666X) 1998Foot and Mouth Dansaul (Dansaul ds01)
^"EFDSS Awards". Wiltshire Folk Arts. July 2007. Retrieved 19 September 2016. The EFDSS 75th Anniversary Awards were a way of honouring many of the people who have made significant contributions to the development and continuity of traditional English folk music, song and dance.
^"Who is in the Show". Made in the Great War. Archived from the original on 1 August 2016. Retrieved 9 November 2022. Paul Sartin – oboe, cor anglais, fiddle, vocals