Molly Drake
Mary Drake (née Lloyd; 5 November 1915 – 4 June 1993), known as Molly Drake, was an English poet and musician, best known as the mother of the actress Gabrielle Drake and the musician Nick Drake.
Molly Drake | |
---|---|
Born | Mary Lloyd 5 November 1915 Rangoon, Burma |
Died | 4 June 1993 (aged 77) Tanworth-in-Arden, England |
Occupation | Poet, musician |
Spouse(s) | Rodney Drake |
Children | Nick Drake Gabrielle Drake |
Relatives | Sir Idwal Lloyd (father) Georgie Lloyd (mother) |
Molly Drake never released any official publications of her poetry or compositions in her lifetime, but she had a profound impact on the musical style of her son. As Nick Drake's music gained a larger following after his death, Molly Drake's recordings have been released, which uncover the musical similarities between her and her son.[1]
Biography
Drake was born to her father Sir Idwal Geoffrey Lloyd (13 January 1878, Cheadle Hulme, Cheshire – 1946, Surrey) and mother Georgie Lloyd in Rangoon, Burma. She was christened as "Mary", but no one used the name as "Molly" was deemed more suitable. Both of her parents were involved in the military, and the country was not considered the ideal place to raise Drake and her siblings, so they were sent to England to be raised by the Dunn family, close associates of the Lloyds.
Drake and her siblings were placed in the Wycombe Abbey Boarding School where she struggled as a student, but managed to obtain her School Certificate.[2] Once her studies were complete, Drake returned to Rangoon and soon met her future husband, Rodney Drake. The couple's marriage was postponed until Molly Drake reached the age of 21, as required by her parents. On 14 April 1937 they married in the cathedral at Rangoon.[3]
In 1942, with World War II in full swing, Japan invaded Burma forcing Drake into refuge. She was separated from her husband, who enlisted for the Burma Campaign. Drake and her sister Nancy were evacuated to their uncle's home, which was in Delhi, India where the war hardly infringed on their lives. In order to find comfort, the sisters both sang and played the piano. They formed a duet, and Drake worked in her only musical career as a co-host on All India Radio. Molly and Nancy were known as The Lloyd Sisters while hosting the station. However, no known recordings of the sisters performing exists.[4] Although Drake enjoyed singing and playing the piano for friends and on the radio, composing pieces was a private affair. She would only share her drafts with her sister, Nancy.
Drake was reunited with her husband towards the end of the war, and she gave birth to her first child, Gabrielle Drake, on 30 March 1944. The family returned to Rangoon after the war and on 19 June 1948 their second child, Nick Drake, was born.[5] In 1952, the family moved to Tanworth-in-Arden, England where Molly Drake spent the rest of her life and wrote most of her compositions. Her home was a place of social gathering where Drake would play the piano for friends, but, again, she never showed interest in publishing or recording her work.
Drake was supportive of her son's and daughter's career choices and encouraged Nick Drake's musical career. Nick Drake was closer to his mother than to his father. She often wrote songs to play for her children, one of Nick Drake's earliest influences. As her son suffered through depression, her poetry would reflect the turmoil she knew her son was going through, and the inability to help improve his condition.[2] The toll of losing her son in 1974 took years to recover from, but through her family and composing, Drake was able to recover to live out the last part of her life. Drake died on 4 June 1993 and was buried in the Tanworth-in-Arden graveyard with her husband, who had died in 1988, and her son. On her tombstone it reads "And now we rise, and we are everywhere" as written by Nick Drake.[4]
Official releases
Molly Drake's material first met exposure on the documentary pertaining to her son's life, A Skin Too Few in 2000. The first official inclusion in an LP release was on the 2007 album, Family Tree. Two of her compositions, "Poor Mum" and "Do You Ever Remember?", were included on the release.[6]
Nick Drake's increasing cult following led to further interest in his mother. In 2011, an album entitled Molly Drake was released with the intent of focusing solely on the work of Molly Drake. The 19 songs were recorded on a rudimentary setup in the 1950s in seclusion at her home, engineered by her husband Rodney.[7] It features Drake's soft vocals accompanied by piano on tracks that mainly last two minutes. The tracks are poetic and heavy-hearted, similar to her son's musical style. The album was first released on Bryter Music complete with a small book of poems in a card black portfolio. The album was first released in the USA by the Squirrel Thing label and was engineered by Nick Drake's past engineer, John Wood. Joe Boyd has stated that this compilation is "the missing link in the Nick Drake story".[8][9]
Compilation albums
- Family Tree (2007)
- Molly Drake (2013)
- The Tide's Magnificence: Songs and Poems of Molly Drake (2017)
In popular culture
The song "Little Weaver Bird" plays over the closing scene of the 2020 series Mrs. America.
The Songs and Poems of Molly Drake is a 2017 album by the English folk group, the Unthanks. The band has, as of October 2017, released two albums of their recordings of Drake's songs.
References
- Richie Unterberger. "Molly Drake – Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- Gabrielle Drake, Molly Drake LP – Liner notes
- "Molly Drake". Tannforsen.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- "Molly Drake". Brytermusic.com. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- "Nick Drake – Biography". biography.com. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- "The Songs of Molly Drake, Nick Drake's Mother". Wnyc.com. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- "Week 506: "I Remember" by Molly Drake". Beautifulsongoftheweek.com. 20 January 2020. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
- Fred Thomas. "Molly Drake Album – Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- "Molly Drake, By Molly Drake". Bandcamp.com. Retrieved 18 February 2015.