Monday, March 9, 2026

THE CORBIES – The Corbies (Four Leaf Clover, 1977) / Fire Raisers (Four Leaf Clover, 1979) / Härtappat (Four Leaf Clover, 1981)

 
English vocals, instrumental
International relevance: *

If you didn't know it, you could swear The Corbies were an authentic Scottish band. But they were only a bunch of Swedes that nail the Scottish folk moves right down to the accent (at least a lot of the time). They pick trad's greatest hits, go through both vocal and instrumental tracks like ”Cam Ye O'er Frae France”, ”Mason's Apron”, ”Johnnie I Hardly Knew Ye”, ”Loch Lomond”, ”The Blantyre Explosion”, ”High Germany” and, sigh, ”Whiskey In The Jar”. The instrumentation is traditional, i.e. mainly acoustic, and the arrangements are meticulously faithful to Scottish folk bands from the 60s and 70s. And that's the crux of the matter: They're so true to their role models it's ridiculous. I'm sure The Corbies were a hit with the beer soaked pub crowds of the day, but give me one good reason why I should listen to their albums when there are probably hundreds of genuine Scottish albums out there, ranging from the mediocre (and less) to the excellent, from the dead cheap to the absurdly expensive.

The Corbies are a skillful charade, but a charade just the same. They put on an act, and no matter how well they do it, it's an annoying fake.

They also released one 45 in 1982, and another one in 1983. In 1997 they reunited for another album, plus one further three-track EP in 2020. Which only makes them even more annoying -- did they really had to tell the same joke over and over again when it wasn't funny the first time around?

The cover art of the debut album is great though.

The Corbies full album playlist (Spotify) 
Fire Raisers full album playlist (Spotify)  
Härtappat full album playlist (Spotify)

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