Jez Lowe is one of northern England's finest singer-songwriters. In addition to being featured on seven solo albums and three albums by
Lowe's band, the Bad Pennys,
Lowe's songs have been featured on albums by a lengthy list of performers including
Fairport Convention, the
Tannahill Weavers, the
Black Family and
Gordon Bok.
Lowe's best-known tune, "Back In Durham Jail," has been covered by more than 20 different artists.
Although his earliest musical roots were in Irish and Scottish music,
Lowe found his niche after becoming interested in the traditional music of the North East region of England. Many of
Lowe's songs, including "The Famous Working Man," "The Honest Working Way" and "Workhouse," reflect the struggles of the British working class. Several tunes, such as "These Coal Days," "Black Diamonds," "Pit Boy" and "A Small Coal Song," focus on the plight of the coal mining community.
Lowe first attracted attention in the late '70s in a duo that he shared with Northumbrian pipes and guitar player and vocalist
Ged Foley. After
Foley joined the
Battlefield Band in 1980,
Lowe continued to perform as a soloist and in a duo that he shared with hurdy-gurdy virtuoso
Jake Walton.
Lowe and Walton's partnership ended in 1989 with
Lowe forming a quartet, the Bad Pennys. The current lineup of the band features
Billy Surgeoner (fiddle, keyboards, whistle, vocals), Jez Luton (bass, keyboards, vocals) and Judy Dinning (keyboards, guitar, vocals).
Lowe's third album, Galloway, initially released in 1985, was expanded with tracks from his self-titled 1980 debut album and re-issued in 1996. In 1992, a greatest-hits album, Black Shift, featuring tunes recorded between 1980 and 1986, was released. ~ Craig Harris