Geoff Heslop

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Geoff Heslop
Born (1947-06-03) 3 June 1947 (age 76)
Corbridge, Northumberland, England
Occupation(s)Record producer, musician, songwriter
Instrument(s)Guitar
Years active1960s–present
LabelsRubber Records, Black Crow Records, Shipbuilders, Shipyard
Website[1]

Geoff Heslop (born 3 June 1947 in Northumberland, England) is an English record producer and musician.

Career[edit]

After training as a recording engineer, Geoff turned to record production, producing albums for the Rubber Records label in Newcastle upon Tyne. He went on to set up the Black Crow Records label, the Coquetdale Music Publishing company (with Kathryn Tickell) and Redesdale Studios (with singer Dick Gaughan. In the 1990s he put together a 2nd publishing company with his songwriter wife Brenda Heslop named Ribbon Road Music and issued 5 albums. He now owns and runs Shipyard Studios with his daughter Jill and produces music by himself and others on their Shipyard label.

Records produced by Geoff Heslop[edit]

Source:[1]

1970s[edit]

1972
1973
  • Very Good Time (Derek Brimstone)
1974
  • Life of a Man (The Buskers)
  • Punch and Judy Man (Tony Capstick)
  • There Was This Bloke (Mike Harding, Tony Capstick, Bill Barclay and Derek Brimstone)
1975
  • Mrs 'Ardin's Kid[2] (Mike Harding)
1976
  • Songs and Buttered Haycocks (Dave Burland)
  • The Rochdale Cowboy Rides Again[2] (Mike Harding)
  • Shuffleboat River Farewell (Derek Brimstone)
  • Broken-down Gentlemen (John Leonard and John Squire)
  • 5 Hand Reel (Five Hand Reel)
  • Jimmy the Moonlight (Pete Scott)
1977
  • Alba (Alba)
  • Mike Harding's Back (Mike Harding)
  • Tony Capstick Does a Turn (Tony Capstick)
  • Out of the Brown (Mike Elliott)
1978
1979
  • Kingdom (Dando Shaft)
  • You Can't Fool the Fat Man (Dave Burland)
  • Up the Town (The Buskers, Sean McGuire and Winter's Armoury)

1980s[edit]

1980
  • Roll on the Day[5] (Allan Taylor)
  • Port of Call (Tom McConville and Kieran Halpin)
1981
  • The Champion String Band (The Champion String Band)
1982
  • At Last It's (Mike Elliott)
  • The Streets of Everywhere (Tom McConville and Kieran Halpin)
  • Wish We Never Had Parted (Bob Fox and Stu Luckley)
  • Joe Hutton of Coquetdale (Joe Hutton)
1983
  • Double Trouble (Maxie and Mitch)
  • Circle Round Again (Allan Taylor)
  • Harthope Burn (Joe Hutton, Will Atkinson and Willy Taylor)
  • On the Other Side (Alan Hull) (with Mickey Sweeney)
1984
1985
  • Shake Loose the Border (Chuck Fleming and Gerry Kaley)
1986
  • Borderlands (Kathryn Tickell)
  • From Sewingshields to Glendale (Kathryn Tickell, Alistair Anderson, Joe Hutton, Willy Taylor, Will Atkinson, Mike Tickell, Allan Wood, The John Dagg Band)
1987
  • The Grand Chain (Alistair Anderson)
  • Mouthorgan (Will Atkinson) (with Alistair Anderson)
1988

1990s[edit]

1990
1991
  • Syncopace (Syncopace)
  • The Kathryn Tickell Band (The Kathryn Tickell Band)
  • Warksburn (Mike Tickell) (with Kathryn Tickell)
  • Blue Skies, Dark Nights (Roly Johnson)
  • The Border Piper (Joe and Hannah Hutton)
  • Jane of Biddlestone (Adrian D. Schofield)
  • Frisco Bound (Ray Stubbs)
  • Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is (Ray Stubbs R and B All Stars)
1992
  • Signs (The Kathryn Tickell Band)
  • Welcome to the Dene (Willy Taylor)
  • A Difficult Fish (Johnny Handle)
1993
  • The Music of My Heart (Ribbon Road)
  • Waltzes for Playboys (Simon Thoumire Three)
  • The Mortgaged Heart (Ribbon Road)
1994

2000s[edit]

2001
  • The Tender Coming (Ribbon Road)
2008
  • Golden Bells (Brenda Heslop and Ribbon Road)
2009
  • As the Stories Burn (Martin Heslop)
  • "Speaking Out" (Mission Shift)
  • It's a Silk Cut World (Mission Shift)
2010
  • It Couldn't Last (Ribbon Road)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Artist's page on Shipbuilders". theshipbuilders.com. Retrieved 14 September 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Biography by Steven McDonald". Allmusic.com. Retrieved 14 September 2009.
  3. ^ Porthole Issue 2 Summer 1996 Archived 4 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Allan Taylor Discography". Archived from the original on 2 October 2009. Retrieved 15 September 2009.
  5. ^ "Allan Taylor Discography". Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2009.

Further reading[edit]

  • 'Standing on the Shoulders of Giants', article in issue 62 of The Living Tradition Magazine, May/June 2007.
  • 'Selling Coals to Newcastle' by Judith Murphy, published by North East England History Institute 2008
  • 'The Mocking Horse' by Alan Hull, illustrated by Geoff Heslop
  • 'Dazzling Stranger, Bert Jansch and the British Folk and Blues revival' by Colin Harper, published by Bloomsbury Publishing, London 2000

External links[edit]