The history of Les Cousins
Named after a 1959 Claude Chabrol film, Les Cousins operated as a folk club from 1964 to 1972, having taken over a basement in Soho run by John Jack as the Skiffle Cellar during the 1950s. On the ground floor was the restaurant of Loukas and Margaret Matheou, immigrants from Cyprus. Les Cousins, down a steep staircase, was run by their son, Andy. On stage at 49 Greek Street every night of the week he presented singers and musicians whose work would create a platform for the folk-rock and singer-songwriter movements of the late 1960s and early ’70s.
There were other important folk venues in London, notably Bunjie’s, just the other side of Charing Cross Road, and the Troubadour in Earl’s Court. But the Cousins had a special place in history, very well memorialised in a new three-CD box from the Cherry Red label, compiled and annotated by Ian A. Anderson, the singer, guitarist and editor of fRoots magazine.
It is, as you’d expect, a splendidly varied selection, starting and ending with big names — Bert Jansch and the Strawbs — and containing both even bigger ones (Paul Simon, Al Stewart, Ralph McTell, Nick Drake, Roy Harper and Cat Stevens) as well as many more of those whose reputations never really escaped the folk world, like the brilliant guitarists Davy Graham, Mike Cooper, John James, Sam Mitchell and Dave Evans.
So far I’ve mentioned only male performers, but the Cousins was a place where women shone: not just Shirley Collins, Sandy Denny, Bridget St John and Maddy Prior but Dorris Henderson, Jo Ann Kelly, Beverley Kutner (later Martyn) and Nadia Cattouse. And, of course, the sublime Anne Briggs. They’re all here, represented among the 72 tracks licensed from labels such as Topic, Island, Transatlantic, Village Thing and Harvest.
There are the traditionalists: Bert Lloyd singing “Jack Orion”, the Watersons delivering “The Holmfirth Anthem”, and Dave and Toni Arthur’s “A Maiden Came from London Town”. And there are the influential Americans: Jackson C. Frank (“Milk and Honey”), Dave Van Ronk (“Baby, Let Me Lay It On You”), and Tim Hardin (“If I Were a Carpenter”).
You can hear the music going off in all sorts of directions, with weirder stuff coming from the Third Ear Band, Kevin Ayers, the Incredible String Band and Dr Strangely Strange. Ron Geesin’s “Two Fifteen String Guitars for Nice People” is in a class of brilliant weirdness all by itself.
The well produced brochure includes facsimiles of a couple of pages from Andy Mattheou’s diary in April 1965, listing the people he’s booked: Sandy Denny for £3 on a Wednesday night, Davy Graham for £15 on the Saturday, Van Morrison for £3 on a Tuesday, the American guitarist Sandy Bull on a Friday for £10 against half the door takings. Sandy Bull! How I wish I’d been there for that.
The programme isn’t predictable. There’s no “Scarborough Fair”, no “May You Never”, no “She Moved Through the Fair”. The sequencing is thoughtful: tracks from John Martyn and Duffy Power follow immediately after those by their respective mentors, Hamish Imlach and Alexis Korner. I’d only quibble with the inclusion of a small handful of songs — including Drake’s “Northern Sky” and Beverley’s “Get the One I Want To” — where the presence of orchestral arrangements takes them away from the mood of a basement folk club.
If I had to pick some personal favourites, the first would be would be the dazzling violin and guitar of Dave Swarbrick and Martin Carthy on “Byker Hill” and the second would be the magical guitar interplay of Jansch and John Renbourn on “Soho”. The third would be the intense voice and bottleneck guitar of Sam Mitchell’s “Leaf Without a Tree”: a hellhound stalking the lanes of Soho, half a century ago.
* Les Cousins: The Soundtrack of Soho’s Legendary Folk & Blues Club is out now on the Cherry Red label. The image is the club’s logo, the wagon wheel a reference to a feature of its décor.


Lovely stuff Richard and nice to see mentions for Sam Mitchell and Mike Cooper amongst others. FYI there is, on YouTube, some quite extraordinary footage of Carthy and Swarbrick in uniform (the mind does indeed boggle!) playing ‘The Cutty Wren’ in a BBC Schools production of ‘Chips With Everything’ (circa 1969) starring a very young Simon Ward (and others). It’s well worth a watch. Keep up the good work. T
Richard
good piece (as usual) on Cousins…
why don’t you make blue the moments of Bachdenkel?
Did Cherry Red send you the box set “Rise and Fall”?
Best for many good blue moments in 2024
Karel Beer
I was there as often as I could, hitch-hiking home to Maidenhead at dawn. As someone said, the Cousins all-nighter was better than a hotel. Had I needed a room Judith Piepe was often around and would have offered a floor. I saw some great acts there, and some dire ones: a stoned Roy Harper blowing down his own sound-hole is best forgotten. My own performances, usually at about 3am, were also unmemorable. But lord, what fun it was then, to be young and in Soho.
A pity I reached London a little too late for this, though I loved the musicians. Lovely piece about lovely music!
Great piece – I still have my membership card with the picture on it. I was there when the Incredible String Band were recording – Robin Williamson made a crack about “Keep quiet if you don’t want people to know you’re here”. My girlfriend and I looked at each other in puzzlement. (We were very young at the time.)
What a beautiful post; taking a torch to a very miserable day. Especially this: “…a hellhound stalking the lanes of Soho half a century ago.” I just have to hear ‘Leaf Without A Tree’.
I made it there just once. I think it was around 1970. Bridget St John was playing. Lovely evening.
Terrific piece. I will seek it out.
Such a magical place.
I played there once …. just the once. Bert was there with Beverley and memorable Al Stewart performed the whole of Desolation Row.
Probably my finest hour.
I was invited to stay in the flat where Paul Simon, Jackson C Frank and Al Stewart were living.
I said ‘no ‘ …. what a chump!!!
Hears a sample of a recording I made in around 1965

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Do you know if any of the tracks are recorded live at Les Cousins?
None. The set is drawn from the previously issued recordings of artists who performed at the place.
So what?
As Colin says, none of the tracks in the Cherry Red box were recorded at Les Cousins. However Evan Parker reminds me that there are two tracks on a Spontaneous Music Ensemble CD called ‘Summer 1967’ that were recorded there by an SME trio line-up of John Stevens (drums), Peter Kowald (bass) and Evan (tenor saxophone): 25 minutes of excellent free improvisation. The other tracks on the CD are by the Stevens/Parker duo and were recorded elsewhere. The CD was released in 1995 and reissued in 1999.
Please see my reply below.
I went to Les Cousins maybe half-a-dozen or so times in 1966-1967, mostly to the all-nighters, and, like Chris above, I still have my membership card, on the back of which, a “Gisela” has written her address but I have no memory of her – nor why.
Alex Campbell, Alexis Korner, Long John Baldry, Les Bridger, Marc Sullivan, Peter Bellamy, Bert Jansch, John Renbourne, Duffy Power, Jackson C. Frank, Pete Stanley and Wizz Jones, Spider John Koerner, Noel Murphy and Al Stewart are among the names of those I saw there, as scribbled in surviving pocket diaries.
I’m pretty sure I saw Roy Harper there as well. I, too, remember his blowing down the sound-hole routine (though that was at the Enterprise, opposite Chalk Farm tube) and I recall Al Stewart singing “Desolation Row” with an introduction about the brilliance of Dylan’s songwriting (but that was at a Marquee folk night in late-1965).
Reading this thread has brought back so many memories. Thanks.
See also ‘Mostly Troubadour’, book of photographs by Alison Chapman McLean (with text by Jim Mclean) many of them taken in the Troubadour in the early 1960s.
Published by ‘The Living Tradition’ / (2022)
NB I’m just an owner of 1 of these books – no commercial interest.
See also ‘Mostly Troubadour’, book of photographs by Alison Chapman McLean (with text by Jim Mclean) many of them taken in the Troubadour in the early 1960s.
Published by ‘The Living Tradition’ / (2022)
p.s. I just own of a copy of this books – no commercial interest.
I’m an ocean away, but know the place a tiny bit from stories. When here in Minnesota I saw Spider John Koerner on a bill with John Renbourn, Renbourn commented that the last time they’d played the same place it was Les Cousins.
It should also be noted that this club featured early English free improvisation, as signalled by the Emanem Records release of the John Stevens/Evan Parker duo “Summer 1967” in 1999. This was a Spontaneous Music Ensemble retrospective, and was an invaluable contribution to the early history of this genre. What a fantastic period!
Thanks for recommending this. It is wonderful! There are so many great tunes on it – love it!