The Yetties


The Yetties were an English folk music group who took their name from the Dorset village of Yetminster, their childhood home. In 1975 they released an album entitled The Yetties of Yetminster. In 2007 The Yetties celebrated 40 years as a professional folk band.

History

There are two ex-members: Bob Common and Roger Trim. The former left during the 1970s, to spend more time with his family. Until Trim joined, The Yetties then operated as a trio. Trim introduced fiddle-playing to the group and their sound changed somewhat during his stay. Since the latter's departure, The Yetties have again operated as a trio. Sartin was lead singer and group-compere, addressing the audience more than the other two. However, his colleagues both led some songs and both joked with the audience. Shutler played keyboard, though mainly he was a very accomplished accordion player; McCulloch played guitar and banjo.
Since turning professional in 1967, their music took them from Dorset all over the UK; appearing extensively in Europe and, under the auspices of the British Council, they performed successfully in many countries, including Thailand, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Singapore, Pakistan, Sudan, India, Bangladesh, the Maldives, the Philippines, Ethiopia and Canada. One of the secrets of their success, and way of breaking down language barriers, has been their knack of audience participation.
Over the years they recorded 45 albums. Most of these were a mixture of songs, instrumental folk-dance music and poetry. They also undertook topic-based projects. The famous Dorset writer, Thomas Hardy, was also a musician; he and his family, over several generations, collected hundreds of folk tunes. The Yetties made two recordings on Thomas Hardy's own fiddle and other Hardy family instruments. Another Yetties' projects involved recording a collection of songs and stories about cricketers of the past with Hampshire's John Arlott.
The Yetties broadcast a regular BBC Radio 2 series, 'Cider & Song'. They also made numerous other radio and television appearances. Because of their popularity, they were often asked back to locations, becoming regular performers at various annual events, including the Farnham Beer Exhibition and many more.
The Yetties lived in Sherborne and drew on their personal experiences of country life for their concert programmes. Some songs recalled life when they were children, helping farmers harvest; scrumping apples; raiding hedges, fields and woods for food and eating rabbit for seemingly every meal. They talked of village characters and village occasions, conveying an atmosphere of bygone village society.

Retirement

The Yetties announced their retirement in early 2010, and their final performance was a ceilidh and concert at Sherborne in April 2011.
On the evening of 21 September 2014, it was announced on the official Yetties website that Pete Shutler had died in Sherborne Hospital.

Album discography

  1. Fifty Stone of Loveliness
  2. Who's A-fear'd?
  3. Keep A-Runnin'-It's The Yetties!
  4. Our Friends, The Yetties
  5. Dorset Is Beautiful
  6. All at Sea
  7. Up in Arms
  8. Let's Have A Party
  9. The World of the Yetties
  10. The Yetties of Yetminster
  11. The World of The Yetties
  12. The Village Band
  13. Upmarket
  14. Dorset Style
  15. Focus on The Yetties
  16. In Concert
  17. A Little Bit of Dorset
  18. A Proper Job
  19. Folk N Brass
  20. On the Fiddle
  21. Cider 'n' Song
  22. The Banks of Newfoundland
  23. The Sound of Cricket
  24. The Musical Heritage of Thomas Hardy
  25. The Yetties
  26. The Musical Heritage of Thomas Hardy
  27. Play it Again
  28. Singing All The Way
  29. Out in the Green Fields
  30. The Fiddler Knows
  31. Looking for the Sunshine
  32. Come to the Yetties' Barn Dance
  33. Dorset, My Dorset
  34. Singalong Party 'Cigarettes & Whisky & Wild Wild Singing'
  35. Top of the Crops
  36. Folk Music of England
  37. In Praise of Dorset
  38. Wild Mountain Thyme
  39. Musical Allsorts
  40. Rolling Home To England
  41. Messing About on the River
  42. Rambleaway