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Is traditional song finished?

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Jim Carroll 11 Mar 10 - 07:08 PM
Jim Carroll 11 Mar 10 - 03:46 PM
Phil Edwards 11 Mar 10 - 03:44 PM
Don(Wyziwyg)T 11 Mar 10 - 03:24 PM
Brian Peters 11 Mar 10 - 02:24 PM
TheSnail 11 Mar 10 - 12:40 PM
GUEST,A sheepish and unhappy Tom Bliss 11 Mar 10 - 12:17 PM
MikeL2 11 Mar 10 - 11:35 AM
Will Fly 11 Mar 10 - 11:30 AM
Jim Carroll 11 Mar 10 - 10:26 AM
Jim Carroll 11 Mar 10 - 10:13 AM
Mavis Enderby 11 Mar 10 - 09:59 AM
GUEST,Ralphie 11 Mar 10 - 09:44 AM
glueman 11 Mar 10 - 09:22 AM
GUEST,Working Radish 11 Mar 10 - 08:45 AM
Will Fly 11 Mar 10 - 07:05 AM
Crow Sister (off with the fairies) 11 Mar 10 - 07:04 AM
GUEST,tom just popping his head in the window 11 Mar 10 - 06:59 AM
Crow Sister (off with the fairies) 11 Mar 10 - 06:57 AM
Brian Peters 11 Mar 10 - 06:55 AM
glueman 11 Mar 10 - 06:53 AM
Brian Peters 11 Mar 10 - 06:47 AM
Phil Edwards 11 Mar 10 - 06:34 AM
GUEST,Tom Bliss has left the building 11 Mar 10 - 05:19 AM
Crow Sister (off with the fairies) 11 Mar 10 - 05:18 AM
Jim Carroll 11 Mar 10 - 05:12 AM
Don(Wyziwyg)T 11 Mar 10 - 04:22 AM
Will Fly 11 Mar 10 - 03:54 AM
Jim Carroll 11 Mar 10 - 03:54 AM
Jim Carroll 11 Mar 10 - 03:44 AM
glueman 11 Mar 10 - 03:28 AM
Phil Edwards 11 Mar 10 - 03:15 AM
Tootler 10 Mar 10 - 07:38 PM
the Folk Police 10 Mar 10 - 07:01 PM
Tootler 10 Mar 10 - 07:00 PM
Jim Carroll 10 Mar 10 - 06:35 PM
TheSnail 10 Mar 10 - 06:32 PM
Jack Blandiver 10 Mar 10 - 03:46 PM
Jim Carroll 10 Mar 10 - 03:43 PM
GUEST,Ralphie 10 Mar 10 - 03:32 PM
TheSnail 10 Mar 10 - 03:08 PM
glueman 10 Mar 10 - 02:12 PM
The Sandman 10 Mar 10 - 01:56 PM
GUEST,Tom Bliss 10 Mar 10 - 01:12 PM
Spleen Cringe 10 Mar 10 - 12:52 PM
GUEST,Tom Bliss 10 Mar 10 - 12:30 PM
Jim Carroll 10 Mar 10 - 11:47 AM
Crow Sister (off with the fairies) 10 Mar 10 - 11:24 AM
GUEST,TB 10 Mar 10 - 10:53 AM
GUEST,TB 10 Mar 10 - 10:49 AM
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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 07:08 PM

"body of guests capable of running the club on their own"
Should read 'residents'- believe this to be essential to the running of a successful long-term club.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 03:46 PM

Tom:
Please don't be sarcastic - are you trying to do me out of a job?
If we are going to continue slugging at each other (or preferably, maybe learn from one another's different take on the music) perhaps it might be worth taking time out to look at each other's work without either of us trying to score points (yes - I do include me in that).
My attitude, from my first contact with the revival was based on my love of traditional music- Liverpool, Manchester, London and finally the west of Ireland.
I have always been involved in traditional or traditionally influenced clubs, and my aim, apart from the huge enjoyment I got as a listener and sometime singer, was to pass on that music in some way or other.
I stumbled across traditional music in my home city of Liverpool at the beginning of the sixties, attended and helped organise clubs and eventually became a resident in Manchester and London. I was part of self help workshops in both; the former I set up off my own bat with the help and advice of MacColl and Seeger.
None of the clubs I was part of were sing-arounds, but rather, resident-based, and while all of them were, I hope, friendly, welcoming places, none of them considered themselves get-togethers or social centres.
The most successful, longest running and best known was The Singers Club in London, which first emerged as The Ballads and Blues some time in the latter half of the 1950s with MacColl, and Lloyd along with Joe Heaney, Seamus Ennis, Fitzroy Coleman (West Indies), Dominic Behan (and later Peggy Seeger) as the main residents. Some time later it became The Singers Club and ran until MacColl's final illness towards the end of the eighties.
Throughout its existence it booked high quality guests from all over The British Isles and beyond, but its basis was a body of guests capable of running the club on their own - visiting artists being the decoration on the cake.
During its life/lives, the B&B/Singers opened up the ballad repertoire, the sea songs, industrial songs and the London repertoire, this latter encouraging other regions to examine their own local songs. It also pioneered 'feature evenings' - themed nights around specific subjects, often including relevant readings and poetry.
In the early sixties a number of singers asked MacColl for 'lessons' to help them develop - he declined, but instead set up and headed a self-help workshop, The Critics Group, which ran for around ten years and provided a pool of able residents for the club. From the setting up of the Critics Group the Singers put on an annual (nearly) agit-prop show entitled 'The Festival of Fools' based on newspaper cutting of the previous years events - a living newspaper with a leftward political bias.
Throughout its existence the aim of the singers was to promote traditional song and to some degree, storytelling, and to encourage the writing of new songs based on traditional (I'll use trad. rather than folk in the hope of our not leaping at each others throats) forms. In order to encourage the latter Peggy Seeger set up and edited a magazine booklet, The New City Songster which published new songs from all over the English-speaking world and ran into over 20 editions.
This is what the Singers Club did, and it is why it gained a world-wide reputation and attracted thousands of overseas visitors throughout its life.
I joined the Critics Group in 1969 and remained a member until it became a agit prop theatre group in the early 70s. I became a Singers resident some time in the early seventies and remained one for around two years till I dropped out in order to concentrate on collecting work. For a short time I edited three editions of a club magazine, 'The Lark'.
From then, I was resident/organiser at three clubs in the London area with similar policies, but not the advantages of the Singers. I also helped run the London Singers Workshop which worked with mainly new singers and ran for around sixteen years.
My main commitment to music was always traditional and traditionally based - doesn't mean I don't listen to other musics, just that it's this I have spent around two-thirds of my life listening to, performing and promoting.
Sorry (to all of you) far taking so long over this. Please feel free to comment on this, ignore it or burn it ritually - whatever takes your fancy.
Jim Carroll
PS Bryan - will respond to your question, but don't want it to be swamped in all this verbiage.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Phil Edwards
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 03:44 PM

I don't get to very many singarounds these days, but for some time now many of them (in England at least) have had their own distinct repertoire, the main feature being that pretty well every song should have a chorus.

Last singaround I went to, somebody did Young Hunting. The one before that, I did Little Musgrave. We do have the odd shanty or Thousands Or More or Jones's Ale dotted about through the evening, particularly towards the end, but the other kind is welcome too. As for the Saddleworth sing, there were hardly any chorus songs, trad or otherwise (I did Bonny Bunch of Roses). Lots of songs by Gordon Bok and Keith Marsden and Tom Paxton and in one case Tom Bliss (nice song too).

A number of years ago I heard tirades from both Martin Carthy and Peter Bellamy about the 'fake folk songs' that were taking over from the old songs in the singaround repertoire.

Apparently great minds think similarly to me!

Snail: there are a lot of different points in that comment, some of which I haven't disagreed with. Which bit did you want me to comment on?


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 03:24 PM

""Whether we like it or not, no matter how wide their tastes, everybody compartmentalises their music - try singing a traditional ballad, or performing a piece of chamber music at a pop venue (which, it appears to me, many folk clubs have metamorphosed into) - and then get ready to run for the door.""

That just shows how out of touch one can get.

I regularly attend two different open mike nights where rock and pop are the staples. In both venues I am treated with the same well mannered acceptance as is accorded the occasional pop, or rock number that makes its way into a predominantly folk event.

Look again my friend, because the kind of tight arsed proprietorial attitude you describe is beginning to look very much like projection.

Don T.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Brian Peters
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 02:24 PM

Pip Radish wrote:
"At the big singaround at Saddleworth FF last year, I heard someone give a terrific rendition of I Live Not Where I Love, introduced with what was effectively an apology ("it's an old song, but if you listen to the words...") And I've seen (or rather heard) a 50-25-25 ratio (50% covers, 25% original, 25% everything else including traditional) in many different venues."

I don't get to very many singarounds these days, but for some time now many of them (in England at least) have had their own distinct repertoire, the main feature being that pretty well every song should have a chorus. That tends to rule out a lot of the ballads and lyrical traditional songs, but rules in a whole body of more recent material written with the chorus well to the fore in the composer's mind. Many a folk movement songwriter from MacColl onwards (think 'Manchester Rambler', or 'Thirty Foot Trailer') has been aware of the sticking power of a catchy refrain.

A number of years ago I heard tirades from both Martin Carthy and Peter Bellamy about the 'fake folk songs' that were taking over from the old songs in the singaround repertoire. I make no comment except that the best singarounds I ever went to were at the Girvan Folk Festival, which went on well into the wee hours and included excellent ballad singing alongside some of the best chorusing I've heard.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: TheSnail
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 12:40 PM

Pip Radish

The point Jim's been making is that the second movement has swamped the first - it happened years ago. From my much more limited experience I tend to agree. At the big singaround at Saddleworth FF last year, I heard someone give a terrific rendition of I Live Not Where I Love, introduced with what was effectively an apology ("it's an old song, but if you listen to the words...") And I've seen (or rather heard) a 50-25-25 ratio (50% covers, 25% original, 25% everything else including traditional) in many different venues.

The disagreement isn't just about Jim's method, it's also about how far this process has gone - and, to a lesser extent, how much of a problem it is.


Would you like to re-read and maybe respond to my post of 10 Mar 10 - 06:45 AM? The whole thing, not just the one senetence you've picked out so far.

It would be nice if Jim commented on it as well.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,A sheepish and unhappy Tom Bliss
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 12:17 PM

I know I shouldn't have looked. I tried, I really did, but I did take a little sideways peep and this was written on my screen.

"By the way Brian - yes; I do accept Tawney, McGinn... and others - all mentioned here somewhere. Not sure you mean by 'into the canon'; if you mean do I think they're folk songs, no I don't, but I'm delighted to hear any of them sung, wherever."

I lordy lordy lordy - that changes everything.

Jim I capitulate. I realise I have been wrong all along, and I understand your position now.

My diagram is no good to you because you can't put MacColl, Tawney, and McGinn into that smaller circle. They are not Trad.

But you are happy to hear them 'wherever,' including in a Folk Club.

So, therefore, we need a THIRD circle, yes?

In the middle is everything defined by the 54, including all the songs mentioned in that shelf-full of books you have there. Yes? This is called FOLK.

And then we need a slightly bigger circle which is labelled NOT FOLK (but Jim likes it and thinks it's folky so it's ok to do it in a Folk Club).

Outside that is my original large circle, labelled NOT FOLK (and anyone who tries to do it, or who permits it, in a Folk Club is a fraud and a cheat and is responsible for an intolerable assault on Proper Folk Music).

Is that right?

You've not been rejecting the 'invasion' of new material into the INNER circle, of course you haven't, (you know as well as me that Revival material cannot go into the inner circle).

You have been fighting stuff you don't like out of the MIDDLE 'Jim Carroll' circle. And because you are a bona fide Collector you ARE right to do this, and any offence you may cause in the process, and any negative impacts you create on the folk scene, are entirely justified.

I have been wrong all along.

You are correct that my music doesn't belong in folk clubs. Not because it isn't fully informed by the tradition, in a strongly traditional style (using tunes, language and stories from the tradition), but because Jim Carroll doesn't like it.

I stand corrected.

I'm now going into the garden to burn all my CDs, then I'm going to throw my instruments on top of the pyre. Then I'm going to sit down with my cheque book and pay back all the money I've ever earned at a gig with 'folk' in the title.

Tom

PS Apologies to everyone else. I know I've just blown my reputation as the Kofi Annan of Folk, but it was this, or call Jim by a very very rude name.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: MikeL2
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 11:35 AM

Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,Ralphie - PM
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 09:44 AM

Hi ralphie

I think you are right. But I think it applies to most performers, including singers.

I have found that most musicians are usually very respectful for other styles. They are also keen to join in where they can and they help each other along.

In my own experience it is usually the non-participants that are picky about history and traditions.

Cheers

MikeL2


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Will Fly
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 11:30 AM

I think there is a real difference between singers and musos.

Couldn't agree more, Ralphie! (and not so much of the Fruit...).

There are few political, historical, social or class associations with most tunes - though I don't suppose I'd care to play the tune to "Deutschland Uber Alles" at a session - perhaps...

Mind you, I have an atheistic but sneaking liking for many of the tunes in "Hymns Ancient And Modern". "Saint Clement" ("The Day Thou Gavest Lord Is Ended), "Melita" (For Those In Peril On The Sea") and "Bethany" ("Nearer My God To Thee") are all very playable at a session, given enough drink.

I remember with affection some very drunken evening, after-work sing-songs up at Aly-Paly in the late 60s, with Colin Bowles (ex-Temperance Seven) playing these things on the BBC Club piano...


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 10:26 AM

Pete - sorry, cross-posted.
I was speaking in general terms.
Years ago at a conference (syposium given for MacColl on his 70th I think) a Scots academic proposed that we tore down the musical barriers and opened our doors to anybody who might want to perform at our clubs - her problem was she was talking about us tearing down our barriers - she didn't take too kindly to the idea of someone turning up to her local 'Songs From The Shows' gathering and giving them a blast of Chevy Chase (not the actor) - she thought it impractical!
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 10:13 AM

"I hope I'm not going to lose your respect over a mere difference of opinion, Jim."
Sorry Brian and others, - written in a head-in-hands moment last night - all gone now - meant to apologise for it.
"Men O'War or Hard Times on the Farm"
Do people still write such stuff? MacColl certainly didn't.
Apart from his political material, much of which was never meant to survive beyond the circumstances that gave rise to it, many of his compositions still resonate - for me anyway.
Tenant Farmer, Lag's Song, Kilroy, Freeborn Man (or any of the Travellers songs), Shoals of Herring (still going strong forty years after the herring disappeared from the North Sea), Driver's Song, Come Me Little Son, Rambler From Clare, Shellback, Joy of Living, Farewell To Ireland, My Old Man, Sharpeville, Ballad of the Carpenter, Sweet Thames.... (where do you stop?)   
By the way Brian - yes; I do accept Tawney, McGinn... and others - all mentioned here somewhere. Not sure you mean by 'into the canon'; if you mean do I think they're folk songs, no I don't, but I'm delighted to hear any of them sung, wherever.
Jim Carroll

PS Re MacColl's songs. A Traveller family has settled in the town here (much to the chagrín of some of the natives) and a number of the children have taken to popping into our local in the evening and giving a few songs in return for pennies.
Last week we were treated to a beautifully sung version of 'Freeborn Man' from a eight-year-old lad followed by an equally well sung 'Come Me Little Son' from his slightly older sister.
A busker in our market town, Ennis, can be heard regularly giving voice to Peggy's 'Lifeboat Mona' - may not work for everybody but obviously does for some - chacun son goût I suppose.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Mavis Enderby
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 09:59 AM

Jim:

"try singing a traditional ballad, or performing a piece of chamber music at a pop venue (which, it appears to me, many folk clubs have metamorphosed into) - and then get ready to run for the door"

Not always the case - I refer you to my post of 10 Mar 10 - 04:29 AM

Pete.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,Ralphie
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 09:44 AM

Hi Will old fruit.
I think there is a real difference between singers and musos.
Musos tend to be a more forgiving bunch by and large. (apart from the obvious Irish v The Rest of the World bun fight that pops up from time to time)
We don't really seem to mind much if we know the author of a particular tune. If it's a good tune we'll play it anyway. Jonah Lewies "Don't stop the Cavalry" is a case in point. Daarn Saarf, we hear it all the time.
And I've never heard anyone complain that someone is playing a fiddle tune on a melodeon (pick any other two instruments to taste).The reaction is more usually, "Oh, I'd never thought of playing that tune like that, how interesting"
Must be something in a musos DNA.
Or maybe it's just that we are more open to experimentation. Thinking about it, I can't name one tune that has the stamp of a particular musician stuck on it's forehead..
Tunes are open season for everyone to have their own take on it.
If I was to name the musos equivalent of "Athenry", it would have to be "Speed the Plough". But, even then, it's still quite fun to play (just not too often)
Maybe it's the fact that without words, tunes don't come with emotional baggage. Although I've known tunes that move me to tears.
Just a viewpoint from the larynxlly? challenged section of the "F" world!


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: glueman
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 09:22 AM

"Some of MacColl's songs, to my ear, bring it off"

Not to mine, at least as folk music though he wrote some decent pop tunes I admit. MacColl's stuff sounds more of an accompaniment to the 1950s Angry Young Man cycle, Osborne, Braine, Sillitoe but then so much of the revival original material does.
I agree with what you say about traditional music being pre-dated WR, but that sets off alarm bells that what we're really talking about is aesthetic choices retrospectively wrapped in theoretical trim until the ribbons and bows - the sound, the ambience, the aesthetic - are what really attract people after they've forgotten the music of the people inside.

Modern sensibilities can't really write about Men O'War or Hard Times on the Farm without tongues well into their cheek, so I fear SO'Ps 'wrung what yer brung' may well be what folk music really is when you get beyond the period detailing.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,Working Radish
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 08:45 AM

I could probably confess to the odd occassion on which I've sat through a long succession of performances of non-traditional material and muttered in curmudgeonly fashion, "it would be nice to hear some bloody folk music for a change", but generally I simply avoid the term as a useful descriptor.

If I were attending a conference on folklore or balladry, I'm sure that everyone in the room would share the older, narrower definition of 'folk'. For the rest of the world (and believe me, Tom B is not making it up), that train has left the station.


Thanks, Brian, for that outbreak of common sense. Been there, done that (first paragraph) and reluctantly agree (second graf).

I'd still like to know how MacColl is more acceptable than a load of other idiomatic, folk-lite material.

The thing that gets me about an awful lot of 'revival original' material (McTell, Harvey Andrews, the Corries, that class of thing) is how dated it now sounds. It's similar to the way that the first few Steeleye albums sound less dated than those of the Mike Batt period. Trad songs aren't so much timeless as pre-dated - they don't get any older. That's the effect people writing 'in the tradition' are shooting for. Hardly anyone hits it. Some of MacColl's songs, to my ear, bring it off - although of course I've only got my own contemporary perception of what does and doesn't sound dated to go on.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Will Fly
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 07:05 AM

Would traditional music survive if it was never sung in clubs at all? The answer is surely "yes" - it's been collected and documented as far as it can be now, and much of it has been recorded. It won't die for those reasons - but whether people will sing it or not, or play it or not, will depend on whim, fancy, fashion, vogue.

I've been working my way through a recently-acquired s/h copy of the Northumbrian Pipers' Second Tune Book (1981) during the last day or two. It's a wonderful collection but - d'ye know - if I had to black out all the ones by known composers, I'd lose half the material. And what wonderful material! Here's a tiny sample:

The Carrick Hornpipe (Billy Pigg)
Gateshead Stadium (Forster Charlton)
The Road To Jack's (Richard Butler)
Elsey's Waltz (Archie Dagg)
The South Shore (James Hill)
The Biddlestone Hornpipe (Billy Pigg)
Rowantree Hill (Jack Armstrong)

and many, many others - all "second movement", as you might say, and nearly all composed within the last 80 years or so. How could we not play these because they're not "traditional"?


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 07:04 AM

Ooops.. That sounded way more stroppy than was intended Pip! Sorry about that! Not aimed at you or anyone.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,tom just popping his head in the window
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 06:59 AM

Pip - will you email me?

tom@slipjig.co.uk


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 06:57 AM

"The disagreement isn't just about Jim's method, it's also about how far this process has gone - and, to a lesser extent, how much of a problem it is."

Jim's entitled to his opinion, and I respect his efforts with traditional music! But as a 'younger' person (I say that as a thirtysumthing with some reserve) I KNOW in full flashing neon capitals style, that the 'folk' word is a dreadful barrier for anyone of my generation or younger, who doesn't know what traditional music and song is.

I KNOW that the word 'folk' will alienate anyone who isn't especially interested in 'acoustic guitar' type music. Because it alienated me for decades! And precisely ZERO of my peers know traditional song is a part of 'folk' music. This is why I preference 'traditional' as it cuts cleanly through that barrier and consequently people I speak to want to know more about it.

Focus on sharing the music, the word 'folk' can be buggered.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Brian Peters
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 06:55 AM

Hey, did I just get the 500 there? Not that I give a feck about it, but nyah nyah na nyah nyah, anyway.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: glueman
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 06:53 AM

I'd still like to know how MacColl is more acceptable than a load of other idiomatic, folk-lite material. And exactly where JC draws the line.
Meantime I've been trying to discover the ultimate version of Santy Anno (Santiano) one of my favourite songs and one I hope Jim would approve of. Odetta's must be it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V26i_cHlpgA&feature=related. Unless someone knows better?


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Brian Peters
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 06:47 AM

Jim wrote:
"Is this really what Bryan and Brian P and Sally and all the people I have a had a degree of respect for up to now see as folk music"

I hope I'm not going to lose your respect over a mere difference of opinion, Jim. The fact is that, from my very first visit to a folk club, and my very first experiences from the media of a kind of music they labelled 'folk', I've had to accept that 'folk music' (in popular perception, at least) is what the Blairites liked to call a broad church. It took me a while to realise that that the part I liked best was the traditional stuff. It pleases me now to find more people enjoying that end of the broad church than I've ever known in the time of my own involvement. I could probably confess to the odd occassion on which I've sat through a long succession of performances of non-traditional material and muttered in curmudgeonly fashion, "it would be nice to hear some bloody folk music for a change", but generally I simply avoid the term as a useful descriptor.

If I were attending a conference on folklore or balladry, I'm sure that everyone in the room would share the older, narrower definition of 'folk'. For the rest of the world (and believe me, Tom B is not making it up), that train has left the station.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Phil Edwards
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 06:34 AM

The Folk Revival continues, but alongside it and overlapping with it is something else, as yet unnamed (unless we allow 'folk music'), which has at its core the promotion of live acoustic music in both construction and performance, in a social setting among equals. This movement is not necessarily interested in Folk / Traditional Music for its 'heritage' or 'antique' values, but mainly because it works well for the purposes they require, and because the words and tunes are great.

I support this movement as much as I do The Revival - because I think society really really needs it.


So do I, as it goes. But something went wrong in the last sentence of the previous paragraph. I'm interested in traditional music precisely because it works well for my purposes and because the words and tunes are great - but I didn't have a chance to find out just how well it works, or just how much of it there is, until I went to a venue that explicitly specialised in traditional music (and didn't call itself a 'folk club').

there is some risk that the second movement may swamp the first (which is the thing you seem to fear).

The point Jim's been making is that the second movement has swamped the first - it happened years ago. From my much more limited experience I tend to agree. At the big singaround at Saddleworth FF last year, I heard someone give a terrific rendition of I Live Not Where I Love, introduced with what was effectively an apology ("it's an old song, but if you listen to the words...") And I've seen (or rather heard) a 50-25-25 ratio (50% covers, 25% original, 25% everything else including traditional) in many different venues.

The disagreement isn't just about Jim's method, it's also about how far this process has gone - and, to a lesser extent, how much of a problem it is.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,Tom Bliss has left the building
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 05:19 AM

Jim - as before I'm going to have to leave you to this as I realise you're never going to understand me.

Why? I can only guess. Everybody else does.

But I want to make my position clear for the record.

I'm sticking with song as that seems to be your main concern. Will's comments about tunes are spot on.

Let me start by saying that actually, privately, my own personal definition of folk song is almost exactly the same as yours. Where we differ is that I respect other people's different use of / definition (Bryan, the latter is merely a formalisation of the former) of it, and you don't.

My list A-Z is not MY idea of what constitutes a folk song, it is a comprehensive list of ALL the types of song that a significant community of people believe constitutes a folk song, and which therefore club organisers (and artists when doing promotion) have to deal with. You asked what definitions existed other than the '54' and the 'Anything in A Folk Club', so I gave them. Personally I think most of them are way off the mark, but these are genuine, common-usage definitions, so I don't get angry with people who use them. I might debate, advise, encourage - but I don't condemn as you do because I respect these people and their definitions because I know they were honestly acquired.

I understand and applaud your motives in wanting to separate out 'proper' traditional song and give it a space where it can flourish. But I think you are doing exactly the opposite in attacking honest, reasonable, hardworking club organisers and artists. And that's what I want to stop. The attacks. It's your method I abhor, not your objective.

I've tried really hard to understand why you reject outright my suggestion that these wider uses of the word are commonplace in the UK and US. All of the posts since I joined seem, largely, to support my view. I hesitate to say this, but I fear you might be a little out of touch. I wonder if you have spent so much of your life deep inside the 'expert' core if the folk scene that you simply don't know what's happening outside? Perhaps the fact that you live in Ireland and mainly communicate with others who are also deep in the core might be part of it too? I can't think of any other reasonable explanation.

By contrast, I have spent most of my life outside folk, in popular music and in the media. I live in Leeds and have a wife and teenage children with broad musical interests. But as a former folkie I have always noticed any references to folk. I've seen what the general public and the mainstream media thought about it. Then when I rejoined the fold I quickly acquired a comprehensive idea of what's going on in the UK scene today. So my suggestions are based on a very broad ranging cultural experience, rather than an expert 'folk' one.

I think you are setting yourself up for a fall in equating folk music with quantum physics. Jim, It's just some songs. There's no need to attack people over them.

I have met and frequently stayed with club organisers who do the things you decry. These are genuine souls who care about live music and about folk, and who give up a huge amount of time and effort to keep their clubs going, and they struggle to meet and manage people's expectations all the time. Many of them also care about traditional music and do what they can to promote and protect it. Many are expert in one or both subjects. For you to set up a conspiracy theory which has these good people, aided and abetted by charlatan song-writers like me, deliberately setting out to trick the public, to pollute the tradition, to promote poor standards in the name of what exactly - is not only bonkers, it is severely out of order.

I, and lots of other people, have told you that traditional music, (and by that I mean ALL the music that is ever called traditional), is alive and well in the UK - and the future looks pretty good too. If you are basing your arguments on a handful of recent visits to UK clubs and a few posts on Mudcat, then you are misinformed.

It seems to me that you have an almost religious fixation on the overriding validity of the 54 - or rather of your somewhat looser interpretation of it. Given your very dedicated career in the field I can understand why that should be, and I respect it. After all I share it, for the same reasons you do. But being an expert on a topic it doesn't give anyone the right to fling out insults at people who are just going about their normal legitimate business bumping alongside your subject, and who in fact may be doing much to further your own objectives.

I'd say we are no longer only dealing with a Revival. The Folk Revival continues, but alongside it and overlapping with it is something else, as yet unnamed (unless we allow 'folk music'), which has at its core the promotion of live acoustic music in both construction and performance, in a social setting among equals. This movement is not necessarily interested in Folk / Traditional Music for its 'heritage' or 'antique' values, but mainly because it works well for the purposes they require, and because the words and tunes are great.

I support this movement as much as I do The Revival - because I think society really really needs it.

Now, it is both a strength and an inconvenience that these two movements occupy, at times, the same territory. It is a strength because it means there can be healthy cross-fertilisation of ideas, knowledge, expertise and values, but it is an inconvenience because there is some risk that the second movement may swamp the first (which is the thing you seem to fear). It is a balance that most club organisers tussle with every week (some more than others). But I don't see much evidence of failure, and even if it IS happening, then surely the only way to stop it is to demonstrate the strengths of traditional music at every opportunity, and if that means setting up more 'trad only clubs' or trying gently to convert 'anything goes' clubs fair enough. But you HAVE to take people with you. You can't force anyone, and to attack people for not doing it just plain wrong.

It is fair to say that in the overlap the second movement may rob the first of its uniqueness, but that is just life. If this discussion teaches us anything it is that it never was possible to draw a line round Traditional music in the first place.

But even if we did, Jim, I want to to understand one thing which you have consistently failed to do.

Let us draw that circle on a piece of paper. Inside, let us describe the songs you believe may legitimately be called folk song (A-E of my list, was it?).

Now draw a much bigger circle which completely encloses the first one. Into the space between the two, copy most of my list D-Z (your division).

Now write the word FOLK inside the smaller circle.

Then write it again in the larger one.

See what happened? NONE of your jotting D-Z suddenly jumped into the smaller circle, did they? The inner circle remains unpolluted, showing only A-D.

But, yes, there may now be some confusion. We seem to have one circle with all of A-Z inside it.

So now, strike out the word FOLK from the inner circle, and write instead, TRAD.

All meanings / definitions A-Z are still in the same place, each in the correct circle. But anyone seeking one or the other has a clear label to guide them. FOLK means all of it, TRAD means just the middle bit.

Problem solved.

Ok, it's not perfect - but I want you to understand that no-one has written D-Z in the inner circle. Your definition is safe and you can relax.

OK, that's me. I'm out.

Tom

Dvorak is played on cellos in folk clubs too infrequently to matter in this discussion (it was Sean who answered you question, not me).


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 05:18 AM

Jim in his postings appears to be more concerned with what happens at folk clubs and amateur sessions than with traditional folk songs themselves and people enjoying them (I don't necesaarily think it's true, but it's how it comes over). I think why I'm not 'getting' some of his complaints is that my bias of interest is skewed entirely the other way - I'm not all that interested in folk clubs or their paying customers I'm soley interested in the songs and in people who like to enjoy them together, doing so.

As a kid my Mum would tell me about her own childhood as a member of the Irish diaspora, and I witnessed some of it first hand when young. At family gatherings everybody did 'a turn', which meant standing in the middle of the living room and singing or dancing or playing a tune. Some of the turns might be Irish rebel songs - and although too young to understand I still recall uncles with tears in their eyes and their voices breaking under the emotional weight of them (these were people effectively displaced by the troubles). Another 'turn' would be given by a young daughter with a casefull of trophies for Irish dancing (she now runs a school). Another turn might be an air on a whistle.. And so-on. Not a folk club setting (in fact I'm pretty darn sure the folk word was never used) but a home where people offered you tea and whiskey and a spontaneous social happening would be a part of the evening.

Now I hardly expect English homes to begin emulating such an example! But what I learned from that - and what I can get from a singaround to a lesser extent but it echoes it nevertheless - is it's simply about a community of people gathering together and being 'restored' somehow by sharing their music and culture for it's own sake, completely selfishly with no paying customer and no concerns about professional performance standards in mind.

So while I don't tend to use the folk word to describe the songs I sing, I still believe in the human value and essence of 'in the name of folk!' Not being a Christian and even less a Catholic, I'm not taken to fits of scripture, but with particular reference to what I wrote above, this works for me:

'For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.'


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 05:12 AM

Sorry Will;
Laziness on my part; it was an |(almost) block selection of Tom's random wish list rather than taking out the ones that did make some sort of cohesive sense (though would quibble with the 'family' bit for reasons already stated.
"a degree of exclusion that saddens me."
It saddens me to; regretfully I have reached the stage of my life where I now have to decide how best to spend the rest of it - pissing against the wind doesn't feature highly on the list I'm afraid.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 04:22 AM

""If I said. "I hope you have a gay old time when you go out tonight"
What meaning would you percieve from that statement?
""

That would depend on the person to whom you are speaking, wouldn't it?

So it could still have either of the two meanings.

Don T.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Will Fly
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 03:54 AM

Well, Jim, if we exclude from folk clubs:

G: Songs which have been passed orally through a family or other community.
K: Protest songs
L: Songs played on acoustic or otherwise 'folky' instruments.
M: Songs performed with a solo guitar or similar instrument.
P: Story songs.
U: Songs that have a similar construction to traditional songs
V: Songs on similar topics to traditional songs
W: Songs about The Olden Days (whatever you mean by that)

How the devil is the concept of new songs being performed in the "folk idiom" (your phrase) to be advanced? What in God's name is so different about songs which have been passed orally through a family or other community, for example, to "traditional" songs in their making?

If you're really sniffy about these categories then traditional music, by your definition, is dead, defunct, pickled in aspic. The problem is, Jim, that you make a statement about new song developing in the folk idiom, but you haven't been able to make a statement of your own opinions about how far that can develop. From your post above - obviously not very far at all. Furthermore, your position appears to be based solely on songs and, as I've banged on endlessly in previous threads, traditional music is not just about songs - it's about tunes. You'll find much less of a hidebound attitude to the music in tune sessions, I can assure you.

To imply that tunes like Tom Anderson's "Da Slockit Light" or songs like Roger Bryant's "Cornish Lads", for example - should remain on the shelf to see if posterity can make a better job of it is a degree of exclusion that saddens me.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 03:54 AM

Sorry Glueman - missed that particular pearl of wisdom.
"I often wondered if it was the kind of thing Jim would approve of, everyone attending in a suitably solemn mood"
Why should I - the thing that stands out for me in the time I spent listening to good singers, was the sheer enjoyment both the singers and the listeners got out of it. Why solemnity should come into it is as far beyond me as is the idea that anybody would get a buzz out of the discomfort of others - but it takes all kinds, I suppose.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 03:44 AM

"Does it really matter if all of D - X above are sung alongside traditional songs as long as the traditional songs are being sung,"
Yes it does - it robs it of its uniqueness, especially as there are those, here and elsewhere, who, for one reason or another, would argue that the tradition is no more than a collector's/researcher's wet-dream.
I played with interest a clip put up by somebody here of a selection of what goes on in their club. I was knocked out by one of the examples, but found that, by the end of my listening them all, I needed to replay it as it had merged into the 'imo' mundaneness of some of the others - a luxury you are not offered in a folk club.
Whether we like it or not, no matter how wide their tastes, everybody compartmentalises their music - try singing a traditional ballad, or performing a piece of chamber music at a pop venue (which, it appears to me, many folk clubs have metamorphosed into) - and then get ready to run for the door.
I think Pip just summed it up perfectly.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: glueman
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 03:28 AM

"Does it really matter if all of D - X above are sung alongside traditional songs as long as the traditional songs are being sung..."

Our three year old sings shanties, twinkle little star and whatever rock music his elder brother teaches him untroubled by the juxtaposition.
One of my mother's last unsuccessful attempts to keep me within the bosom of mother church was by tempting me with something called a 'folk mass'. I often wondered if it was the kind of thing Jim would approve of, everyone attending in a suitably solemn mood, with a restricted and solemn canon and leaving with the sense they've done the right thing to acieve their place at the right hand of Walter Pardon.

I fear it was roundhole with guilt, out of tune singing and hair that had never seen a hint of conditioner.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Phil Edwards
Date: 11 Mar 10 - 03:15 AM

What matters (I think) is that in a lot of venues they're not being sung very much. At a couple of our local clubs, a preference for singing English traditional song is treated a bit like a preference for singing Donovan - it's a bit perverse, but if you can do it well, good luck to you (and there'll be someone else on in a minute anyway).


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Tootler
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 07:38 PM

So next to Walter Pardon's, Tom Lenihan's, Martin Reidy's, Mary Delaney's, Bill Cassidy's, Mikeen McCarthy's songs.... and all those given to us by other such wonderful people, all of whom were so generous with their time, knowledge and experience we have to include:
D: New songs that have...
etc., etc., etc.,

Does it really matter if all of D - X above are sung alongside traditional songs as long as the traditional songs are being sung, which they are.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: the Folk Police
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 07:01 PM

Jim, I think you worry too much. Regardless of popular conceptions of what folk is, the evidence presented time and time again is that people are singing traditional songs and enjoying doing so. It might be that they sing at a mainly trad night (such as the Beech in Chorlton) or it might be that a couple of trad songs are slipped in at a largely non-trad night (such as Chorlton Folk Club). The point is they are being sung. And not only that, but also young singers of traditional song are headlining folk festivals and playing gigs at arts centres, village halls, rock venues and - gasp - even folk clubs, up and down the country. Different hands to the ones you're used to, for sure. Safe hands? Absolutely.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Tootler
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 07:00 PM

I asked you was the lady with the cello 'folk' - you replied that there is nothing to stop Dvorak 'becoming' folk - you didn't venture to suggest it had.
One of your definitions of folk (your first one) was 'anything that is performed in a folk club' - therefore Dvorak is now folk


There are precedents. Around 200 years ago a village shoemaker wrote down a tune he had heard in his manuscript book which he labeled "Waltz". Subsequently someone discovered this book and started playing the Waltz and it became popular in the folk music world. It subsequently transpired that the tune was the top line from the trio of German Dance no. 6 by one W A Mozart. The tune - Michael Turner's waltz, a popular session tune which has become absorbed by the folk music world. A number of themes from classical composers have been adopted in the popular music world so it is perfectly possible for music by Dvorak to be adopted by folk musicians and to become assimilated. There is someone in a folk club I go to who does an arrangement of the theme from the slow movement of the New World Symphony and he does a good job of it. I think maybe the advert for a certain brand of bread may have had some influence.

I must now hang my head in shame and confess that I have played some Mozart on my flute in a folk club. Dear Dear!


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 06:35 PM

So next to Walter Pardon's, Tom Lenihan's, Martin Reidy's, Mary Delaney's, Bill Cassidy's, Mikeen McCarthy's songs.... and all those given to us by other such wonderful people, all of whom were so generous with their time, knowledge and experience we have to include:
D: New songs that have become associated with some traditional activity such as football.
E: New songs that have become very popular and are starting to be adapted in small ways.
F: New songs that are not traditional but which people think are traditional in ignorance.
G: Songs which have been passed orally through a family or other community.
H: Anything sung in a folk club
I: Anything performed by artists who play at folk clubs and festivals.
J: Anything broadcast on a radio station that has a folk handle.
K: Protest songs
L: Songs played on acoustic or otherwise 'folky' instruments.
M: Songs performed with a solo guitar or similar instrument.
N: Songs with a certain brittle style.
O: Songs with big choruses that suit pub singing etc.
P: Story songs.
R: All public domain songs
S: Anything more than X years old (x varies from person to person).
T: Songs that sound like traditional songs.
U: Songs that have a similar construction to traditional songs
V: Songs on similar topics to traditional songs (work or lifestyle -specially if Olden Days)
W: Songs about The Olden Days
X: Songs about Nice Places, specially if they've got cliffs in.

Sorry - can't do it; they would have hated the idea as much as I do, especially Walter.
For all the mealy mouthed insistence on the part of 'good club organisers' that we owe it to these people to make their material available - I think my instincts were right in the first place and they should remain on the shelf to see if posterity can make a better job of it.
You asked for evidence of the state of the revival Bryan - there you have it - enjoy.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: TheSnail
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 06:32 PM

Jim Carroll

Tell me again Bryan that our music is in safe hands, or is this what I can expect to find at Lewes?

Sincee you ask, what you can expect to find at Lewes Saturday Folk Club is spelled out clearly here - Lewes Saturday Folk Club. On the whole, we "do what it says on the tin" although, with our policy of giving a floorspot to anyone who wants one, we get some interesting surprises. A few weeks ago, we had one young woman who gave us a bit of Italian light opera (I didn't catch the details but I gather she was a student studying at Glyndebourne.) and another who gave us a song which I think she said was from the singing of Norah Jones. Both were superb singers and both were friends of the booked guest. It would have been a bit embarrasing and counter-productive to drag them off stage as soon as I realised they weren't singing material within our remit. I don't think the future of folk music was damaged by the experience.

Back to the subject, I think Tom is confusing definition with usage. As I have pointed out, the term "folk music" has been used since at least the nineteen forties to describe music that does not fit the 1954 definition by people who have never heard of the 1954 definition. They simply used the words that other people were using to describe a concept. That's how language works.

Do I think "our" music will survive? Who knows, but if it does, it will survive on its merits as music, not on the strength of the label you put on it, nor will it be damaged by someone calling Annie's song a folk tune.




Who is Sally?


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jack Blandiver
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 03:46 PM

If I said. "I hope you have a gay old time when you go out tonight" What meaning would you percieve from that statement?

Definitely something to do with having a yabba-dadda-doo time with a prehistoric modern stone-age reinvention of The Honeymooners. A page right out of history indeed!


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 03:43 PM

Still unable to spare the time and respond to all the points made, so - quickly again on what I believe to be a major stumbling block- sorry.
Tom:
I asked you was the lady with the cello 'folk' - you replied that there is nothing to stop Dvorak 'becoming' folk - you didn't venture to suggest it had.
One of your definitions of folk (your first one) was 'anything that is performed in a folk club' - therefore Dvorak is now folk - or if it isn't you are overriding the wishes of the nameless and faceless 55 million (was that the figure?).
Can we please either substantiate or drop this silent majority nonsense.
Neither you nor I have the faintest idea what the majority, minority, anybody outside of our own immediate experience, believes 'folk' to be and it is extremely dishonest to claim we do. Some few people I have asked have come up with what they experienced in the folk boom, or what they were given in school - via the Sharp influence; others have expressed a total ignorance, and usually disinterest in the term.
Do we even start to base what we do and understand on that?
I know nothing whatever of quantum physics; should I desire or need to know I will consult a dictionary. If I need to know more I try to find someone who does know and ask them. Failing that I obtain a book which will explain in layman's terms.
The last thing I would do was stand in the street with a clipboard and ask every passer-by.
Even if we were to accept your list of 'definitions' that would only underline my point.
"Anything passed orally through a family"
My father did a hilarious rendition of 'I Dreamed I Dwelt in Marble Halls' which I could make a fair stab at given the opportunity. My mother could turn out a fair imitation of Bing Crosby's 'When The Blue of the Night', I don't do a bad job of it myself. I'm sure many reading this could come up with similar. Folk my arseum!!!!
'Anything performed with a guitar or similar instrument'
Now I've always thought Les paul and Stephan Grapelli Jazz, silly me.
Songs with big choruses that suit pub singing etc.
Viva Espana???
............................
Is this really what Bryan and Brian P and Sally and all the people I have a had a degree of respect for up to now see as folk music - oh dear - whatever happened to my judgment?
Your suggestion that these are "valid, correct and reasonable uses of the word." is utter and complete nonsense and totally rubbishes communication - though it does relieve you of the moral responsibility you appear to have discarded both toward any audience, present or potential, seeking folk music, and to the music itself and the people who gave it to us.
Tell me again Bryan that our music is in safe hands, or is this what I can expect to find at Lewes?
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,Ralphie
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 03:32 PM

To be more precise.
If I said. "I hope you have a gay old time when you go out tonight"
What meaning would you percieve from that statement?


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: TheSnail
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 03:08 PM

Pip Radish

"There's no use sitting and complaining that THEY arren't supporting traditional music." [TheSnail]

I never understand this objection. Sitting and complaining (well, discussing!) is all that any of us are doing here*


Speak for yourself. I'm here to engage with like minded people who share my interest in folk music in the hope that we can all benefit from an exchange of ideas.

- you seem to be saying that sitting around complaining about folk clubs is dreadful,

Well, "dreadful" is putting it a bit strong, just a bit pointless and rather irritating.

but sitting around complaining about people who sit around complaining about folk clubs is just fine.

As someone involved in running a folk club, I think I'm entitled to grumble about non-constructive criticism.

Would you like to comment on the rest of the post that you lifted that line from?


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: glueman
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 02:12 PM

This has all gone a bit flat earth. You can show people satellite pictures of the planet, you can provide diagrams of how the earth orbits the sun but if they're convinced you'll fall off into a place where anything goes if you travel too far, there's very little one can do to persuade them. After all, where was the committe that said Copernicus's heliocentric cosmology was correct?

Here be dragons. And round hole.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: The Sandman
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 01:56 PM

the problem is that as regards melodies, tradtional songs of the British islands[andIreland] are limited to several different modes[and this defines style],so inevitably tunes will be recycled,so the music is limited , lyrics are a different matter


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,Tom Bliss
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 01:12 PM

Nice one.

I've used this with Jim before to no avail, but I'm really really hoping for a breakthrough this time, because I desperately need some light relief from this film I'm making about Armageddon.

Jim.

Once up on a time the word 'mouse' only described a small furry creature.

Then, by association, it began to describe a colour - specially of hair.

Saying someone had 'mousy' hair did not mean you thought they literally were a small rodent. And it began to describe a character too.

Then many, many years later someone was looking for a word to describe a new computer pointing device they had invented. It looked a bit like a mouse, so they co-opted the word. They changed the language - deliberately - but they were not fascists or tyrants. They chose a word, (probably as a joke initially) which had one meaning and applied it to another meaning, and it caught on. If it hadn't caught on, it would not have changed the language, but it did. (Advertising may have had something to do with that, but then it often does).

Now most of us use the word mouse to refer to that thing in your hand now far more often than we do to refer to a small rodent.

When we say 'plug in the mouse' we don't mean bodge a small furry animal into the USB port (or not usually, anyway).

By EXACTLY the same token, someone who calls Annie's Song a Folk Song is not saying it conforms to the 54 definition. They are just using - borrowing, if you must - a word that used to mean only one thing for a second purpose.

Jim . Do you follow this one?


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Spleen Cringe
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 12:52 PM

We have no right as individuals or as a group to alter that language and those who do get books written about them - have you read 1984?

There is a world of difference between language getting altered by committee or by state dictat and language changes evolving as a result of changes in popular understanding and use of a word or phrase.

The change in the meaning of the word "folk" is a case in point. Ask most people in the UK what they mean by folk and they'll probably come out with some variation on "quiet stuff done on acoustic guitars". They'll probably also link it with singer songwriters and may give examples like "The Times They Are a Changing" or "Streets of London" or "Annie's Song". They'll also probably make a few jokey references to fingers-in-the-ear and hey-nonny-no. They may even come up with something about Irish music.

What they won't have is an understanding to 1954 definition folk (hell, most people in folk clubs don't) or any variant thereof. They won't know about the folk process or the difference between traditional songs and anything else that floats out under the folk banner. and why should they. Counting angels on the head of a pin is seriuosly specialist stuff.

That's because popular use of the word folk is far less specialist than folk music listeners' use of the word folk, which is far less specialist than folk club regulars' use of the word folk, which is far less specialist than '54ers' use of the word folk.

Despite, with some justification, seeing themselves as the guardians of the "true" meaning of the word, the '54ers don't own or control the use of the word any more than anyone else. To presume otherwise is to live with the same confusion as the man who thought he was going for a dance at a "carefree and happy" nightclub.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,Tom Bliss
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 12:30 PM

"We have no right as individuals or as a group to alter that language"

Actually we can and do.

Poets and writers alter language by creative abuse with people notice and copy. Slang that starts as a joke is gradually assimilated. But mostly it is not deliberately altered. It happens as a natural, democratic evolution over time. This is why you are so terribly, terribly wrong to blame people. They are not doing it on purpose. They are just going with a flow which has eddied and tumbled beautifully down the ages. Why else is your prose different to William Shakespeare's?

So yes: "the definition is a summary of the component parts, not a random sample of society at large's opinion." Exactly so.

But the word used to label that summary of component parts ("Folk") now ALSO has OTHER meanings, which do NOT seek to label that summary of component pats, but to label OTHER things. And that is what it does.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 11:47 AM

Tom"
We own a common language, that is the basis of our contact with one another. We have no right as individuals or as a group to alter that language and those who do get books written about them - have you read 1984?
"It uses/used the word Folk as a LABEL"
No Tom, the definition is a summary of the component parts, not a random sample of society at large's opinion.
"There are no vested interests here."
Tell that to someone who is likely to believe it Tom.
""Definitions don't get voted out of existence"
Bugger - did I miss that referendum?
Isn't this fun?
More later
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 11:24 AM

I thought with all the grumblies we see about 'anything goes' folk clubs and singarounds, it might be worth flagging up Suegorgeous' shiny new thread by way of contrast and by way of example to anyone frustrated by what they find out there in folk club land:

Bristol based 'Explore Unaccompanied Traditional Songs' group

Problem is IMO, as has been said, anyone under fifty who might potentially have their interest piqued by the idea of learning to sing traditional songs for their own entertainment, simply isn't likely relate that to the "folk" word. Yung-traddy bands might start to alter public perceptions about the F-word, but even they won't necessarily be likely to get people thinking - "Hey, I think I'll go learn an unaccompanied ballad!"

On the other hand, amateurs love to dabble in all kinds of creative stuff - be it throwing pots, loom weaving or calligraphy and lots of peeps find native history and culture interesting - be it steam trains, Victorian sanitation or Anglo-Saxon burials, and lots of folk like to have a warble - in choirs, in the shower or Karaoke!

Put all that together and there could be SHED-LOADS of possible interest out there among peeps at large in dabbling in these old songs. But IMO all this quibbling over the F-word is simply a red herring, and frankly I think it needs to be ditched pronto.


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,TB
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 10:53 AM

Bother, pressed return instead of tab

Z: Most important of all: Songs Sung By People Who Also Sing Some Traditional Songs! (Hence how Dylan did wot he did)


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Subject: RE: Is traditional song finished?
From: GUEST,TB
Date: 10 Mar 10 - 10:49 AM

Yes. I should add

T: Songs that sound like traditional songs.

U: Songs that have a similar construction to traditional songs

V: Songs on similar topics to traditional songs (work or lifestyle -specially if Olden Days)

W: Songs about The Olden Days

X: Songs about Nice Places, specially if they've got cliffs in.

Y: Songs about the Sea

Heck - I'm out of alphabet!


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