Born: March 24, 1947Died: April 27th, 2026Beverley Martyn, a British singer poised for fame in the 1960s until a whirlwind romance with a guitarist turned into a nightmarish marriage, nearly killing her dream to make music of her own has died. She was 79.Her death was announced by the official website of the estate of her ex-husband, John Martyn.By the time she was 18, Martyn – then known as Beverley Kutner – was already the lead singer of a band, the Levee Breakers, which had come out with a promising single, Babe I’m Leaving You.When she sang at a London party in the mid-1960s attended by Barbra Streisand, Streisand came over and said with a warm smile, “I see I have competition,” Martyn wrote in her memoir, Sweet Honesty: The Beverley Martyn Story (2011). Around the same time, she also met Paul Simon, and the two became an item. He invited her to meet up with him and Art Garfunkel in the United States.She contributed vocals to the duo’s track Fakin’ It, released in 1968, and she performed at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967, listed on the same bill as Otis Redding, The Who and Jimi Hendrix. She went on a drive with Peter Fonda, chatted with Janis Joplin and was followed around “constantly,” she wrote, by Phil Ochs.Kutner and Simon broke up, but she returned to Britain in a mood of idealism. In an interview with the Coventry Standard, her hometown paper in England, she praised “the hippies’ beliefs in love and beauty” and LSD, which, she said, had taught her “to be my own psychiatrist”.After returning home, her friend Jackson Frank took her to a gig by a young guitarist with, she wrote in her memoir, “the eyes of a Botticelli angel”: John Martyn.Soon they were inseparable. The couple decided to travel together to the United States, where Warner Brothers wanted Kutner to record a solo album. They married before the trip.They holed up in an idyllic rural home in Woodstock, New York, There, at a local concert, Martyn met Bob Dylan, whom she later described as “my hero, my Jewish cowboy!” In her youth, Martyn’s family had been the only Jews on her block.They began talking, and Martyn was obviously enchanted. Then her new husband pushed them apart. “Don’t hurt her, man,” she heard Dylan say.Back home, Martyn saw a new side of her husband, she wrote in her memoir. He shouted and threw things, including a fork, which hit her below one of her eyes. Then he fell to his knees and apologised profusely.John Martyn was supposed to be her backup guitarist. But when they recorded, he finagled his way into becoming half of a musical duo – with his name listed first. Their album Stormbringer! (1970) would later be seen as heralding John Martyn’s influential, jazzy style of folk.Warner Brothers continued showing interest in Beverley Martyn, asking to release one of the tracks she had written, Can’t Get the One I Want, as a single. John Martyn said no. He also rejected Garfunkel’s request to record a cover of the song.“I wanted my marriage to work and so I let John dictate the terms,” Beverley Martyn wrote. “Looking back, it was the end of my career.”The Martyns recorded another joint album in 1970, The Road to Ruin, but John Martyn went solo after that.While he pursued his career, Beverley Martyn raised her three children, including a son from a prior relationship, in their new home in Hastings, on England’s southern coast.John Martyn’s visits became increasingly violent. In her memoir, Beverley Martyn described suffering a broken nose, a fractured inner ear and hairline fractures of the skull.In the biography Small Hours: The Long Night of John Martyn (2020), author Graeme Thomson portrays John Martyn as habitually violent, and he quotes a friend describing his abuse of women as an open secret.Scared of bringing new people into their lives, Beverley Martyn spent much of her time with one of the few people who had attended her wedding: folk singer Nick Drake. On his visits to Hastings, the two would spend hours drinking tea and looking out at the ocean.“He was the most introverted character I’ve ever met,” Beverley Martyn later told The Guardian. “I think he felt safe with me, and I tried to take care of him.”One night in 1979, John Martyn returned from a pub with a friend and asked Beverley Martyn to make them some food, she wrote in her memoir. She replied that she was too tired. He banged her head into meat hooks hanging in their kitchen, then ordered her to go to bed.Still barefoot, she slipped her feet into her elder son’s boots and crept out the front door.The couple never spent another night together. But Beverley Martyn’s musical breakthrough still lay decades ahead.She was born on March 24th, 1947, in Coventry. Her parents were refugees from Poland. Her father, Louis, a watchmaker, was violent and wrathful, much like her future husband, she wrote in her memoir. Her mother was a bookish former actress.She attended drama school in London, where she started hanging out at the clubs associated with the nascent folk revival. An impromptu jam session led to the formation of her first band.After her divorce, she spent years in poverty and played few gigs. Garfunkel and musician Loudon Wainwright III offered occasional artistic and financial support.Before Drake’s death in 1974 from a drug overdose, he said that he wanted Beverley Martyn to have a reel-to-reel of his first proper recording session. Many years later, after frequently listening to the tape, she decided to sell it. An album partly composed of that recording, The Making of Five Leaves Left, came out last year.Martyn’s survivors include her children Wesley and Mhairi.John Martyn’s death, in 2009, prompted a burst of productivity.Beverley Martyn’s memoir was published in 2011. Two years later, The Phoenix and the Turtle was released – her second-ever solo album, and the first to receive major public attention. “A successful comeback, at last, for one of the celebrities of the 1960s folk scene,” The Guardian wrote.At the end of her book, Martyn said that her voice was still as good as it had ever been. “Don’t be surprised,” she wrote, “if you wake up one morning and hear this phoenix singing its heart out. She’s been silent for too long.”
Beverley Martin obituary: British singer whose nightmare marriage nearly killed her music dream
The folk artist and songwriter worked with Simon & Garfunkel and drew Barbra Streisand’s envy. Then she sank into an abusive relationship











