Lyrics by Fairport Convention

Do you love Fairport Convention's songs? Here you'll find the lyrics to Fairport Convention's songs so you can sing them at the top of your lungs, make your own versions, or simply understand them properly.

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by Fairport Convention.

Here you can find out which songs by Fairport Convention are the most searched.

  1. Sloth
  2. Who Knows Where The Time Goes
  3. A Sailor's Life
  4. After Halloween
  5. Angel Delight
  6. Autopsy
  7. Banks Of The Sweet Primroses
  8. Big William
  9. Book Song
  10. Bring 'em Down
  11. Cajun Woman
  12. Chelsea Morning
  13. Close The Door Lightly When You Go
  14. Come All Ye
  15. Come All Ye Rolling Minstrels
  16. Crazy Man
  17. Crazy Man Michael
  18. Dawn
  19. Decameron
  20. Doctor of Physick
  21. Eastern Rain
  22. Farewell, Farewell
  23. Flowers of the Forest
  24. Fotheringay
  25. Genesis Hall
  26. Gone, Gone, Gone
  27. Home Is Where The Heart Is
  28. I Don't Know Where I Stand
  29. I Still Miss Someone
  30. I'll Keep It With Mine
  31. I'm Already There
  32. If It Feels Good, You Know It Can't Be Wrong
  33. If Stomp
  34. Iron Lion
  35. It'll Take a Long Time
  36. It's Alright Ma It's Only Witchcraft
  37. It's Alright Ma, It's Only Witchcraft
  38. Jack O'diamonds
  39. Jack O'rion
  40. Jewel In The Crown
  41. John Barleycorn
  42. Lady of Pleasure
  43. Let It Go
  44. London River
  45. Lord Marlborough
  46. Matty Groves
  47. Medley: The Lark In The Morning/rakish Paddy/foxhunter's Jig/toss The Feathers
  48. Meet On The Ledge
  49. Million Dollar Bash
  50. Mr Lacey
  51. Night Time Girl
  52. No Man's Land
  53. Nottamun Town
  54. Now Be Thankful
  55. One More Chance
  56. One Sure Thing
  57. Part I
  58. Part Ii
  59. Part Iv
  60. Part Ix
  61. Part V
  62. Part Vi
  63. Part Vii
  64. Part Viii
  65. Part X
  66. Part Xi
  67. Percy's Song
  68. Pilgrims
  69. Pleasure and Pain
  70. Polly on the Shore
  71. Poor Will And The Jolly Hangman
  72. Possibly Parsons Green
  73. Quiet Joys Of Brotherhood
  74. Red And Gold
  75. Reno, Nevada
  76. Restless
  77. Reynard the Fox
  78. Reynardine
  79. Rising for the Moon
  80. Rolling Minstrels
  81. Rosie
  82. She Moves Through the Fair
  83. Si Tu Dois Partir
  84. Sickness and Diseases
  85. Sir Patrick Spens
  86. Sir William Gower
  87. Solo
  88. Some Sweet Day
  89. Stranger to Himself
  90. Sun Shade
  91. Suzanne
  92. Tale In A Hard Time
  93. Tale In Hard Time
  94. Tam Lin
  95. The Ballad Of Easy Rider
  96. The Bonny Black Hare
  97. The Deserter
  98. The Hexhamshire Lass
  99. The Hiring Fair
  100. The Journeyman's Grace
  101. The Lobster
  102. The Time Is Near
  103. The Widow Of Westmorland's Daughter
  104. Three Drunken Maidens
  105. Throwaway Street Puzzle
  106. Time Will Show the Wiser
  107. To Althea From Prison
  108. Trial Song
  109. Tried So Hard
  110. Walk Awhile
  111. What is True
  112. White Dress
  113. Wizard of the Worldly Game
  114. Ye Mariners All

Fairport Convention are an English folk rock band, formed in 1967 by guitarists Richard Thompson and Simon Nicol, bassist Ashley Hutchings and drummer Shaun Frater (with Frater replaced by Martin Lamble after their first gig). They started out influenced by American folk rock, with a set list dominated by Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell songs and a sound that earned them the nickname "the British Jefferson Airplane". Vocalists Judy Dyble and Iain Matthews joined them before the recording of their self-titled debut in 1968; afterwards, Dyble was replaced by Sandy Denny, with Matthews later leaving during the recording of their third album. Denny began steering the group towards traditional British music for their next two albums, What We Did on Our Holidays and Unhalfbricking (both 1969); the latter featured fiddler Dave "Swarb" Swarbrick, most notably on the song "A Sailor's Life", which laid the groundwork for British folk rock by being the first time a traditional British song was combined with a rock beat. Shortly before the album's release, a crash on the M1 motorway killed Lamble and Jeannie Franklyn, Thompson's girlfriend; this resulted in the group retiring most of their prior material and turning entirely towards British folk music for their seminal album Liege & Lief, released the same year. This style has been the band's focus ever since. For this album Swarbrick joined full-time, alongside drummer Dave Mattacks. Both Denny and Hutchings left before the year's end; the latter replaced by Dave Pegg, who has remained the group's sole consistent member to this day; Thompson left after the recording of 1970's Full House. The 1970s saw numerous lineup changes around the core of Swarbrick and Pegg – Nicol being absent for the middle of the decade – and declining fortunes as folk music fell out of mainstream favour. Denny, whose partner Trevor Lucas had been a guitarist in the group since 1972, returned for the pop-oriented Rising for the Moon album in 1975 in a final bid to crack America; this effort failed, and after three more albums minus Denny and Lucas, the group disbanded in 1979. They played a farewell concert in the village of Cropredy, Oxfordshire, where they had held small concerts since 1976, and this marked the beginning of the Cropredy Festival (since 2005 known as Fairport's Cropredy Convention) which has become the largest folk festival in Britain, with annual attendances of 20,000. The band was reformed by Nicol, Pegg, and Mattacks in 1985, joined by Maartin Allcock (guitar, mandolin, keys, vocals) and Ric Sanders (fiddle, keyboards), and they have remained active since. Allcock was replaced by Chris Leslie (mandolin, violin, vocals) in 1996, and Gerry Conway replaced Mattacks in 1998. Their 29th studio album, Shuffle and Go was released in 2020, and they continue to headline Cropredy each year. Despite little mainstream success – their only top 40 single being "Si Tu Dois Partir", a French-language cover of the Dylan song "If You Gotta Go, Go Now" from Unhalfbricking – Fairport Convention remain highly influential in British folk rock and British folk in general. Liege & Lief was named the "Most Influential Folk Album of All Time" at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards in 2006, and Pegg's playing style, which incorporates jigs and reels into his basslines, has been imitated by many in the folk rock and folk punk genres. Additionally, many former members went on to form or join other notable groups in the genre, including Fotheringay, Steeleye Span, and the Albion Band; along with solo careers, most notably Thompson and Denny. Sandy Denny, now regarded as being amongst Britain's finest female singer-songwriters, died in 1978; her song "Who Knows Where the Time Goes?" – recorded by Fairport on Unhalfbricking – became a signature song for herself and the band.

The lyrics of Fairport Convention's songs often follow certain patterns that you can discover if you pay close attention. Are you up for finding out what they are?

To discover the patterns in Fairport Convention's songs, you just have to read their lyrics carefully, paying attention not just to what they say, but how they are constructed.

Analyzing the lyrics of Fairport Convention's songs can be a lot of fun and if you enjoy composing, it can help you find formulas to create your own compositions.

Sometimes Fairport Convention's songs help us express what we think or feel. Is that the case for you?