The Young Tradition Award was a competition for young players of traditional music which was awarded annually between 1988 and 1996. BBC presenter Jim Lloyd wanted to get funding and publicity for young folk musicians in the same way that young classical musicians were helped by the BBC Young Musician award, and in 1988 he created the Young Tradition Award with a grant of £500 from the Ralph Vaughan Williams Trust. The title was a tribute to the 1960s folk group The Young Tradition.[4]
The following year the award was adopted by the BBC programme Folk On 2 which Lloyd presented. Over the next six years, competitors included Carlene Anglim, Damien Barber, Pauline Cato, MacLaine Colston, Luke Daniels, Ingrid Henderson and Catriona MacDonald.[4]
In 1994 Lloyd wrote that the Award had been expanded to include traditional singers as well as instrumentalists, restricted to professional or semi-professional artists, and associated with a bursary of £1,000.[4]
Lloyd retired from the BBC at the end of 1997, and a Young Tradition big band including all the previous winners performed on his final Folk On 2 programme.[5][6]
The BBC recreated an award from 1998, calling it the BBC Radio 2 Young Folk Award. Until 2005, the competition was run by Folkworks on behalf of the BBC.[7] The entry criteria in 2005 were that the event was "open to anyone aged between fifteen and twenty, performing as a band, duo or soloist and performing traditional and acoustic music with roots in any culture",[7] and these criteria have remained largely unchanged in subsequent years.[8]
The short-listed finalists are invited to a residential weekend, as part of which they will perform in a public concert at which the winner is chosen by a judging panel.[8]
Since 2011 the winner of the Young Folk Award has been announced at the main BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, which are broadcast on BBC Radio 2 with some highlights also televised. However the selection process for the Young Folk Award remains independent.
Young Folk Award finalists (1998–present)
2019
Maddie Morris
The selection process changed again for the 2019 award. There were eight shortlisted acts, but only the winner was officially announced.[9] Some of the finalists have identified themselves, including Jon Doran.[10]
Thoumire notes that the finalists included Becky Taylor, and Coxon's article quotes her.[39][40] Damien Barber was also a finalist.[41]
1988
Lynn Tocker
Thoumire relates that he met duo partner Ian Carr among the finalists of the first competition, and Coxson's article quotes Andy Cutting on his participation. [39][4][40]
^"Jim Lloyd with Folk on 2". Radio Times. No. 3514. 18 April 1991. p. 102. Retrieved 28 October 2020. the Young Tradition Award Winner, Ingrid Henderson