Mike Harding
Mike Harding is an English singer, songwriter, comedian, author, poet, broadcaster and multi-instrumentalist. Harding has also been a photographer, traveller, filmmaker and playwright.
Early life and education
Harding's father, Louis Arthur "Curly" Harding, a navigator in the RAF, was killed in the Second World War, a few weeks before his son's birth. Harding is of Irish ancestry on his mother's side.He was educated at St Anne's, Crumpsall, and St Bede's College, Manchester. After a varied career as a road digger, dustbin man, schoolteacher, steel erector, bus conductor, boiler scaler and chemical factory worker, he took a degree in English and Education at the University of Manchester.
Professional career
Harding began performing as a folk singer and as a member of several local Manchester bands in the 1960s, making his first recordings for the Topic label. He began telling jokes between songs, eventually extending them into longer humorous anecdotes which became the main focus of his act. He released his first album, A Lancashire Lad, in 1972, followed by Mrs 'Ardin's Kid in 1974. In 1975, the single release of "The Rochdale Cowboy" reached #22 in the UK Singles Chart, and brought him national attention.As a stand-up comic he made several series for the BBC and appeared on numerous television and radio programmes, including two series of travel films in Ireland and the Appalachian Mountains of America. He also played rock and roll with his band, the Stylos, with the Lowe Brothers. He has had many albums and singles released, whilst the latter included "Man 'nited Song".
As well as comedy, he has released albums of serious songs, most notably Bombers' Moon, the title track of which tells of his father's death. The album also includes "The Accrington Pals" and cover versions of Bruce Springsteen's "Factory" and Eric Bogle's "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda".
Harding composed the music scores for DangerMouse, Count Duckula, The Reluctant Dragon and The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship for Cosgrove Hall Films.
As well as being an acclaimed musician and comedian, he wrote The Armchair Anarchist's Almanac, a humorous A to Z book; two collections of anecdotes, jokes and songs entitled The Unluckiest Man in the World and The 14½ Pound Budgie; and a comedy/thriller/fantasy, Killer Budgies.
His other books include a series covering aspects of his interest in British folklore and history – The Little Book of the Green Man, The Little Book of Stained Glass, The Little Book of Gargoyles, and The Little Book of Misericords; and the loosely factual autobiography, You Can See the Angel's Bum, Miss Worswick! He has also read two of his short stories for Afternoon Story on BBC Radio 4. In 1986, Harding wrote the foreword to Barry Pilton's book, One Man and His Bog.
He more recently made a series of fourteen short films on minority religions in England for the BBC's Heaven and Earth show. Harding has presented the annual BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, and from 1997 to 2012 he presented the weekly BBC Radio 2 flagship folk and roots programme, The Mike Harding Show. His last show was on 26 December 2012. According to Mark Radcliffe, who took over Radio 2's Folk Show, Harding had left reluctantly, claiming that the BBC had "sold the folk world down the river". In 2013 Harding launched his own internet radio show, broadcast at 5pm every Sunday and available as a podcast and on iTunes afterwards. This show went on hiatus in October 2017 after 252 regular episodes, although a special episode #253 was then published in December; further episodes continue to be released more sporadically.
Harding is a dedicated hillwalker and a former president, and now life vice president of the Ramblers' Association. He wrote, until a new format was sought for the magazine in 2008, a regular column for hiking magazine The Great Outdoors and campaigned for 'Right to Roam' legislation in the United Kingdom. He is one of the patrons of the Wensleydale Railway, a group set up to re-open the once mainly derelict line between Northallerton and Garsdale in Yorkshire, near where he now lives.
He is also the patron of Settle Stories, a charity based in Settle, North Yorkshire, that promotes traditional storytelling and runs the annual Settle Storytelling Festival. Harding contributed to a promotional leaflet for the Settle tourist board.
Discography
Albums
- A Lancashire Lad
- There Was This Bloke with Tony Capstick, Derek Brimstone and Bill Barclay
- Mrs 'Ardin's Kid – UK No.24
- The Rochdale Cowboy Rides Again
- One Man Show – UK No.19
- Old Four Eyes is Back – UK No.31
- Captain Paralytic & The Brown Ale Cowboys – UK No.60
- On The Touchline
- Komic Kutz
- Red Specs Album
- Take Your Fingers Off It
- Rooted!
- Flat Dogs and Shaky Pudden
- Bomber's Moon
- Roll Over Cecil Sharpe
- Foo Foo Shufflewick & Her Exotic Banana
- The Best of Mike Harding
- Plutonium Alley
- God's Own Drunk
- Footloose in the Himalaya
- Chinese Takeaway Blues
- The Bubbly Snot Monster
- Classic Tracks
Singles
- "Rochdale Cowboy" / "Strangeways Hotel" – UK No.22
- "My Brother Sylveste" / "Uncle Joe's Mint Balls"
- "Talking Blackpool Blues" / "Bogey Man"
- Guilty, But Insane : includes "Born Bad" / "Jimmy Spoons" / "Manuel"
- "Christmas 1914" / "P.S. God"
- "Disco Vampire" / "For Carlo"
Other recordings
- "Ale is Physick for Me" / "Ten Per Cent" on Deep Lancashire
- "Sammy Shuttleworth" on Owdham Edge
- "Ale is Physick for Me" / "Ten Per Cent" / Sammy Shuttleworth" on Deep Lancashire
- "Ale is Physick for Me" on And We'll All Have Tea
Collaborations
- Plays tenor banjo and harmonica on "Jump Ararnd" with The Bar-Steward Sons of Val Doonican, Maartin Allcock, Eliza Carthy, Hugh Whitaker and Graham Oliver, on The Bar-Steward Sons of Val Doonican 2008-2018
- Plays the voice of The Devil on "The Devil Went Darn To Barnsley" with The Bar-Steward Sons of Val Doonican, Maartin Allcock, Eliza Carthy and Graham Oliver, on the album The Bar-Steward Sons of Val Doonican 2008-2018
Publications
- Napoleon's Retreat From Wigan
- The Unluckiest Man in the World
- The Singing Street
- The Witch That Nicked Christmas
- Folk Songs of Lancashire
- Fur Coat and No Knickers
- Barnaby Barnaby Boy Wonder
- The 14 lb Budgie
- Up The Boo Aye Shooting Pookakis
- The Armchair Anarchist's Almanac
- One Night Stand
- Hell Bent
- Dead Ernest
- Not With A Bang
- Killer Budgies
- When The Martians Land in Huddersfield
- You Can See The Angel's Bum, Miss Worswick
- Rambling On
- Walking The Dales
- Cooking One's Corgi
- Bomber's Moon
- Footloose in the Himalaya
- Last Tango in Whitby
- A Free Man on Sunday
- Daddy Edgar's Pools
- Walking the Peak and Pennine
- Tales from the Towpath
- The Virgin of the Discos
- Hypnotising the Cat
- Buns For The Elephants
- Footloose in the West of Ireland
- Crystal Set Dreams
- Comfort and Joy
- A Little Book of the Green Man
- A Little Book of Gargoyles
- A Little Book of Stained Glass
- A Little Book of Devils and Demons
- A Little Book of Misericords
- Yorkshire Transvestite Found Dead On Everest
- A Little Book of Angels
- A Little Book of Tombs and Monuments
- A Little Book of Miracles and Marvels
- The VW Camper Van A Biography
- The Adventures of the Crumpsall Kid
Awards
- Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society
- Shortlisted for the Boardman Tasker Award for Mountaineering Literature
- Ralph Lewis Poetry Award
- 1991 Outdoor Writers Guild Award for Excellence for Footloose in the Himalaya
- 1996 The Signal Award for Children's Poetry