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Research project: Traditional Folk music

The Sandman 28 Jan 07 - 05:01 PM
Richard Bridge 28 Jan 07 - 05:46 PM
GUEST,doc.tom 28 Jan 07 - 06:55 PM
GUEST,bill 28 Jan 07 - 10:32 PM
The Sandman 29 Jan 07 - 04:53 AM
GUEST 29 Jan 07 - 04:54 AM
GUEST,doc.tom 29 Jan 07 - 05:31 AM
The Sandman 29 Jan 07 - 07:37 AM
GUEST 29 Jan 07 - 02:42 PM
BB 29 Jan 07 - 03:13 PM
GUEST,Patrick Costello 29 Jan 07 - 03:24 PM
The Sandman 30 Jan 07 - 12:20 PM
GUEST 30 Jan 07 - 01:35 PM
Declan 30 Jan 07 - 01:50 PM
GUEST 30 Jan 07 - 01:55 PM
The Sandman 30 Jan 07 - 02:09 PM
BB 30 Jan 07 - 03:03 PM
The Sandman 30 Jan 07 - 03:23 PM
GUEST,Brian Peters 30 Jan 07 - 05:26 PM
Richard Bridge 30 Jan 07 - 06:01 PM
GUEST 31 Jan 07 - 03:31 AM
The Sandman 31 Jan 07 - 03:35 AM
The Sandman 31 Jan 07 - 03:45 AM
Richard Bridge 31 Jan 07 - 03:46 AM
Tradsinger 31 Jan 07 - 04:19 AM
GUEST,Brian Peters 31 Jan 07 - 04:54 AM
GUEST,Brian Peters 31 Jan 07 - 05:04 AM
The Sandman 31 Jan 07 - 08:09 AM
GUEST,Brian Peters 31 Jan 07 - 08:52 AM
The Sandman 31 Jan 07 - 09:28 AM
The Sandman 31 Jan 07 - 11:35 AM
Richard Bridge 31 Jan 07 - 11:57 AM
The Sandman 31 Jan 07 - 12:25 PM
Murray MacLeod 31 Jan 07 - 01:02 PM
The Sandman 31 Jan 07 - 01:05 PM
GUEST,Brian Peters 31 Jan 07 - 02:14 PM
Richard Bridge 31 Jan 07 - 03:06 PM
BB 31 Jan 07 - 03:26 PM
The Sandman 31 Jan 07 - 04:32 PM
Richard Bridge 31 Jan 07 - 05:02 PM
GUEST,Frank Hamilton 31 Jan 07 - 08:06 PM
The Sandman 01 Feb 07 - 05:42 AM
Folkiedave 01 Feb 07 - 06:06 AM
The Sandman 01 Feb 07 - 06:21 AM
Folkiedave 01 Feb 07 - 06:39 AM
The Sandman 01 Feb 07 - 07:25 AM
GUEST,Dave Hunt 01 Feb 07 - 09:06 AM
Folkiedave 01 Feb 07 - 01:30 PM
Leadfingers 01 Feb 07 - 02:17 PM
BB 01 Feb 07 - 02:52 PM
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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 28 Jan 07 - 05:01 PM

Brian Peters,They are meaningless claptrap to anyone who is interested in defining good singing,as a singer that is all that concerns me.
When I make a judgement of a singer, what label they have TRADITIONAL or REVIVAL does not affect my judgement,as its said you dont judge a book by its cover.
I get the distinct impression that some folk collectors,consider revival singers to be of less importance than traditional singers regardless of the quality of singers involved.
I believe MUSIC is about PERFORMING,.
my advice to christian is dont do it,throw away your dissertation and go out and play music.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 28 Jan 07 - 05:46 PM

Captain Birdeye

Anyone who believes what you just said devalues an art form and a history of people to mere entertainment.

Shame on you.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,doc.tom
Date: 28 Jan 07 - 06:55 PM

Oops!! been away two days p[erformiong, and the thread is acting like Topsy.

Okay, Dick,

"They are meaningless claptrap to anyone who is interested in defining good singing,as a singer that is all that concerns me." - So when can we hear you doing arias?

"I get the distinct impression that some folk collectors,consider revival singers to be of less importance than traditional singers regardless of the quality of singers involved." - now there I have to agree but, of course, there may be reasons for that.

" My advice to christian is dont do it,throw away your dissertation and go out and play music." - Do I detect an anti-academic tendency here? Why shouldn't the lad want to study?

Tom


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,bill
Date: 28 Jan 07 - 10:32 PM

"In other words, i would like to hear from folk musicians, concerning how they would go about sourcing a song... would they learn it aurally in the age old tradition..."

My answer is yes. I use what sources I can. Being in the US I have access to some people who are part of the tradition of the music, and so learn from them aurally. There are also excellent sources, such as our Archive of Folk Culture that publish or otherwise make available recordings (See Smithsonian Folkways recordings). I use the internet primarily to check my sources and find alternative versions. I learn better by ear than by sight, just my learning style, so I lean toward various versions of aural learning techniques.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 04:53 AM

while collecting material is important,if there were nobody singing the material,there would be nothing to collect,therefore the performer is more important than the collector.
entertainment is an essential ingredient of music,to entertain, to engage an audience, to communicate ones feelings be they sad or happy,does not devalue the music.
what has good singing,got to do with [particuarly] singing arias,are you saying that opera singers are the only good singers.
many years ago[at the time I was anestablished professional] Brian Peters asked my advice about going professional,I recognised his talent and advised him to do it,Ihave always believed that while the academics have apart to play their part is not as important as that of the performer,without the performers there would be no collectors academics etc,http://www.dickmiles.com


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 04:54 AM

Cap'n,
I don't believe you!
You have taken part in (and started) enough discussions on academic subjects on this forum to show that you are not just interested in performing. Singing (of any type) is and never has been just about performing, and we've all been beneficiaries of that fact – Child, Sharp, Bronson, Greig, Munnelly, Breathnach, Shields Wimberly, Gerould, Grainger, Carpenter – the list is endless (and very few of the aforementioned were noted as singers, dancers or musicians).
Perhaps you have been unable to define traditional music to your satisfaction – some of us have no such problem. We have failed to reach a consensus, all the more reason why we should continue discussing it.
However, if you feel that this is all claptrap, feel free not to take part.
Tom Brown,
Hello Tom.
I think your point about the IFMC definition being flawed is only partly right – rather I suggest it is in need of fine-tuning.
There certainly have been communities 'uninfluenced (or only partially influenced) by popular and art music' in England for several centuries', up to fairly recently the Travelling communities for instance. This is why their traditional music and song remained as healthy as it did for so long after the settled communities' traditions declined.
Sure, there was contact with the culture of settled communities but by and large they remained fairly isolated and unaffected by it, certainly well into the twentieth century. It was devastating to watch the walls come tumbling down (somewhere between 1973 and 1975), when the Irish Travellers in London en mass acquired portable televisions and stopped singing and telling stories virtually overnight.
Apart from the Travellers, there has also been an active resistance to outside influences from other groups.
Winterton in Norfolk was one of the places that kept itself to itself, despite it being quite close to Yarmouth. We were told that right up to WW2, if a Winterton girl was found to be courting an outsider, the local men would picket the roads to keep him away.
We were also told of the old man who walked into The Fisherman's Return, the local pub where the fishermen would meet every Saturday night to sing. He saw one of the 'new-fangled' wirelesses on a shelf behind the bar, and on enquiring, was told that it brought news and music all the way from London. He reached across with his stick and pulled it to the floor, smashing it to pieces – it was never replaced.
There are plenty of examples from elsewhere. Here in Ireland in the forties there was a tremendous resistance to the attempts by church and state to deliberately destroy traditional dancing and music and replace it with the dance halls. There was, and still is, an opposition to the imposition of the Comhaltas style of dancing (not to mention Riverdance). There was also resistance from many musicians to the influence the records from America (Coleman, Morrison etc.) was having on local styles.
Fine-tuning!
You are right Tom about singers adding to their repertoire from books and broadsides (the records came relatively later). In Ireland the Travellers played an active (almost exclusive) part in the distribution of the ballad sheets. I found it interesting that the man we recorded who sold these, distinguished the singing of these songs in order to sell them from that which was done at home, which he described as 'fireside singing'. He, other Travellers (and certainly Walter Pardon) always regarded traditional and non-traditional songs as being different, though they may not have used those terms.
On the revival-traditional question, I agree totally with Mary Humphrey's very articulate statement.
Hi Mary; have you done any work on the Carpenter Collection yet?
Talking about revival and traditional singers is just as valid as referring to classical, opera, heavy metal, hip-hop, scat, blues, baritone, tenor – different types, different learning techniques, different backgrounds, different inputs and experiences.
If we are going to make any sense of the tradition we need to be clear on our references. As much I have enjoyed the singing of Tom and Barbara Brown in the past, I will never regard them as traditional singers – no way a criticism, just a definition.
I sometimes feel that the fact that we have borrowed our songs and music from those who have been generous enough to pass it on to us, might, just might mean that we will respect it that much more, and similarly pass it on to others relatively undamaged (and not hide behind the excuse that we are part of the tradition) – a thought!
Regarding the sourcing of songs, the Roud Index is probably the greatest contribution to finding and comparing versions, certainly in my lifetime.
Richard Bridge.
I agree totally with the sentiments of your posting, though it is worth remembering that the songs would not have survived if they hadn't been entertaining; perhaps 'solely entertainment' is a better term.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,doc.tom
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 05:31 AM

Hi Jim,
Nice one! 'Rejected' and 'uninfluenced' are not mutually exclusive of course. I bow to superior expertise, cetainly on the travellers, but perhaps we're talking about degrees (that's 'degrees of' rather than academic degrees :-) ). If you want to e-mail us your address (via umbermusic.co.uk)I can now send you a copy of something I promised you years ago.
Hi Dick,
I think you missed the point about arias! If you don't intend singing them, why not? Or perhaps you are saying there is more than just 'good/bad singing'; perhaps there is thing called 'folk'? I just knew I shouldn't have tried irony.
Hi Brian,
Or (as a purely academic exercise, of course,) compare these two statements.
"The important point is not who is singing the song but how the song is being sung" Dic Miles (above)
" You can't damage a song by singing it. The only way you can damage the song is by not singing it". Martin Carthy (TV)

Tom


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 07:37 AM

jim,I am more interested in performing,I consider performing more important,FURTHERMORE I dont have to have an audience to enjoy music,I get a kick out of doing it,I often sit down and play/sing for my own enjoyment.
is that quite clear to everybody ,while I might take part in academic discussions ,I consider it of secondary IMPORTANCE.,for example this morning I sat down and practised for forty minutes before turning the computer on.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 02:42 PM

Cap'n,
That's your choice - just as we have made ours.
Nobody - to my knowlege, has told you you shouldn't perform so please don't tell people that they should give up reasearch and sing or play instead.
Taken to its logical conclusion, you wouldn't have anything to sing or play if people had followed that advice in the past.
Jim Carroll
PS Tom,
Could you confirm your e-mail address - that one keeps bouncing.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: BB
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 03:13 PM

Hello Jim,

E-mail us through the website at www.umbermusic.co.uk . Sorry, I tried to do a link, but it doesn't seem to be working properly - don't know why, as I've managed it before. Never was very good at these things. Or you could PM me with your e-mail address - I think you can do so even though you're not signed up.

Oh, and Tom did say that it was Brian's definition of a traditional singer - not ours!

Barbara


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,Patrick Costello
Date: 29 Jan 07 - 03:24 PM

I think the performing thing, the research thing, the playing thing and even the teaching all come down to a matter of balance.

Part of the overall craft of being a folk musician requires the ability to interact with an audience, digging into the past for insight and the ability to pass on the skill-set to a new generation of players.

If you go too far or not far enough in any one aspect of the craft everything kind of falls apart.

-Patrick


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 12:20 PM

JIM CARROLL without the music, collectors would be redundant.
If the music hadnt been there,there would have been no collectors.
I have the right to give advice,christian is free to ignore my advice,thats freedom of speech,.
I honestly believe you learn more,by singing and playing and going out and meeting other musicians /singers,than by reading treatises by academics,Iam entitled to that opinion,other people are entitled to disagree,Tom Brown gave CRISTIAN different advice ,Cristian can make up his own mind.
I am still entitled to give an opinion,without you telling me that I shouldnt do so.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 01:35 PM

Cap'n
I partly agree with your first statement, but would qualify that with 'it depends on who the musician is'. You are not entitled to describe what many of us do and think and work at as 'claptrap', and to advise somebody who has asked for advice on something they are writing 'DON'T' strikes me as being somewhat arrogant and certainly unhelpful.
You may learn more by playing (I only have your word for that), but I have met plenty of people who play and sing a great deal and know nothing - they usually punctuate their conversation with 'that's claptrap'.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Declan
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 01:50 PM

Christian,

As you may have gathered there are some people around here who get very excited whenever the word Tradition is mentioned. Maybe you could use a word other than the 'T' word, or else define it and let us know what definition you are going to use in your paper. Then someone might even get around to answering your questions.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 01:55 PM

So, where do we pot people like the Rankin Family, Natalie MacMaster and otherrs who did grow up in the tradition but who are now very mainstream ? It sems to me that some of the definitions given above are rather narrow and do not allow for the fact that many people, though clearly not many contributors here, still do come from a along line of very traditional musicians.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 02:09 PM

Jim,I have been involved with music for 45 years,and while I dont claim to know everything, and freely admit i,m still learning new things,but to insinuate that I know nothing,is LAUGHABLE.
so lets beg to differ,.
what I would advise cristian to do when he has sparetime from his dissertation,is to seek out musicians and singers, playing the kind of music he is studying and have a good listen,and talk to the musicians,I think he will find they know a lot more than nothing,and may be very helpful to him and his project.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: BB
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 03:03 PM

I don't think anyone would disagree regarding your last piece of advice to Cristian, Dick, but that is very different from "don't do it, throw away your dissertation and go out and play music"! (Your words, 28th Jan.)

I think he was trying to seek out musicians and singers when he first posted on Mudcat, but hopefully he will also go out and find 'live' ones as well.

Barbara


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 03:23 PM

I will go and write out 100 times.
I mustnt tell cristian to throw away his dissertation and go and play music.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,Brian Peters
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 05:26 PM

Dick,
You're an old friend and I valued your advice all those years ago - I've certainly never regretted choosing a musical career. But I do find useful those concepts you called "claptrap". And I don't think you really believe that we could have done without all those collectors thanks to whose efforts you and I learned so much of our material.

Anonymous Guest:
My definition of "traditional" is quite wide enough to include Natalie MacMaster and the Rankins. They come from a geographically isolated culture that nurtures a lively, historically continuous and mainstream tradition, in the way that England (which is what I and our original questioner were talking about) sadly does not.

Declan:
I attempted to answer Cristian's original questions point by point. Read the thread.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 30 Jan 07 - 06:01 PM

Let's all do the Birdy Song.
"Tweet Tweet Tweet Tweet: (and shake your bum)".

People have cultures. Those cultures spring from history and belief. The ethos of "the singer not the song" condemns to rootlessness. A chameleon stands for nothing. A straw in the wind is not a wall.

What is done is at least as important as how well it is done. A dog maybe an excellent Pointer but it will not win a class as a Weimaraner. A dog has to have type as well as be sound.

And for heaven's sake learn to use a shift lock. It's no harder to work than a lavatory seat.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 03:31 AM

'I will go and write out 100 times.
I mustnt tell cristian to throw away his dissertation and go and play music.'
I suggest you not only write the quote above out 100, but you should read it that many times - and memorise it.
You're doing it again - why do you always take everything somebody writes as refering to you? There must be a name for this syndrome!
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 03:35 AM

The problem is in the title,I may have a definition of traditional folk music,but it is probably different from cristians tutor,.
CRISTIAN is to be marked on his dissertation.[by whom],and what qualification or knowledge does his tutor have.
what is his tutors definition of traditional folk music[does it include the songs sung on football terraces].
those of you, who argue that music shouldnt be competitive or be given marks,should also be against a dissertation,on something that, we here, have not been able to reach a consenus on.
to write a dissertation on a subject that cant be adequately defined,and then to be marked on it devalues the point of examinations, and does not make sense.
Jim I defined the tradtional/ revival singer description as claptrap,I never mentioned anybodys work.
In every other form of music,people are appraised on how they perform,
not on what process they used to learn the music .
that in my opinion is the correct way to appraise all music.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 03:45 AM

Jim Carroll ,BB adressed the remark to me,I replied with a joke, Iagree, I didnt phrase the remark very well[we can all make mistakes].


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 03:46 AM

"In every other form of music,people are appraised on how they perform"

Complete bolleaux (if, as it seems, it implies "solely on how they perform"). In every other form of music (and how do you know it is a form or an "other form" unless there is a defintion, a history, and an analysis?) there are music degrees (for example B. Mus) that depend in a large part on theory and only in a lesser part upon performance skills.

What we have here is an inverted snobbery that values ignorance because it is ignorance. In general, knowledge and understanding improves people, and knowledge and understanding of a field of endeavour improves the practice of that endeavour.

It is also a most extraordinary approach for a person who is largely known as a performer of traditional songs and other music - how would one know it was traditional unless there had been an analysis?


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Tradsinger
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 04:19 AM

Can I bring us back on track. Christian's original question was to do with how songs are transmitted from one person to another. Let me shed a little light on this from my years of collecting from source singers.

I spent many hours in the company of the late Wiggy Smith, singing, drinking and recording his songs. Wiggy was a local gypsy, and couldn't read. Where did Wiggy learn his songs? - well, many orally from friends and family, and others from commercial recordings of such diverse artists as Jimmy Rogers, George Formby and Norman Wisdom. Does that mean that some of his reportoire was more 'traditional' than others? Well, yes, no or maybe. Of the songs that he learnt orally and therefore traditionally from his family, it is probable that somewhere in their history, they (the songs, not the family) were given a leg up by being printed on a broadside, so how different is that from a singer of today learning a song from a book?

Yet Wiggy is rightly regarded as a 'traditional/source' singer, as he was singing independently of the folk scene/revival. The traditional/revival distinction is a very grey area. I know a lot of singers in the folk scene who have learnt folk songs from their families or otherwise outside of the revival.

Another thought - does my time spent with Wiggy make me a 'traditional' singer by association? Well, the answer is no, as there was a certain academic interest in my recording Wiggy, with my conscious knowledge of the totality of the folk scene. If, on the other hand, one of his sons had said 'Dad, I want to learn your songs. Sing them onto this tape.' Then the scene would be different. The son would probably be learning the songs to sing in the family or friends context, not in the folk scene. (Ah but what if his motive was to sing them at the folk club..?)

When I first started collecting, I never used to ask a singer where he/she learnt a song, as I was just happy to get the song down on tape. Now I always ask, and get a variety of replies, ranging from 'I learnt it from my great-grandfather' to 'I learnt the tune from a Vaughan Williams symphony and then found the words in a book'. Many traditional singers have learnt songs in exactly the same way as revival singers, by hearing a song, asking the singer for the words and going away and learn it like that. Scan Tester in Sussex learnt 'The Lakes of Cool Finn' in this way,not by hearing it many times from friends or family.

All this goes to show that oral transmission is a very complex business, very much bound up with context and motivation. WIth today's communications, we can learn songs by fax, answerphone, etc. I'm sure that more and more songs are now being passed on by mobile phone recording. Is that traditional or not? (discuss)

Good luck with the dissertation.

Gwilym (Tradsinger)


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,Brian Peters
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 04:54 AM

If Cristian is still following this thread (and I fear his eyes may have glazed over by now) he may be wondering how his original questions - most of which were focussed quite tightly on learning, disseminating and interpretating old material - have led to the present slanging match. It's quite true someone in his situation needs to have a good grasp of what 'tradition' means (and the conflicting ideas about that) but that wasn't his central concern.

>> to write a dissertation on a subject that cant be adequately defined,and then to be marked on it devalues the point of examinations <<

Even if I agreed that 'tradition' can't be adequately defined (there may be arguments about it but that doesn't mean there's no definition), that wouldn't be an argument against researching it. Quite the opposite, I'd say. If Cristian's research leads him to think beyond Baring-Gould and Child and consider football chants then his time won't have been wasted. And I'm sure he's planning to dig a bit deeper than Mudcat.

>> In every other form of music,people are appraised on how they perform, not on what process they used to learn the music <<

But we're talking about 'analysis' here, not 'appraisal'. There are certainly afficionados out there who prefer to listen to 'traditional' rather than 'revival' performers of English folk song, and they've every right to make that choice. As Tom suggested above, there *are* stylistic differences between 'revival' and 'traditional' performance which - though blurred at the edges - might well lead one to either preference. For every Rod Stradling there are a hundred Nic Jones, June Tabor and Kate Rusby fans who like their traditional songs served up in a certain way and might well dismiss Sam Larner as a "croaky old bloke". Each to their own.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,Brian Peters
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 05:04 AM

A valuable dispatch from the coal-face, thanks, Tradsinger.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 08:09 AM

rod stradling, nic jones, june tabor ,kate rusby are all revival performers.
I listen to both traditional and revival performers and appreciate both.
however there are mediocre traditonal singers as well as good ones,the same applies to revival singers.
I would rather listen to a good revival singer than a mediocre tradional singer,and a good traditional singer to a mediocre revival singer.
good traditional style or traditional singing does not have to be learned by actually learning the song from a traditional singer in the flesh,.
that has been where collectors with field recordings and videos,have played an important part,.
the advantage of learning a song directly from a traditional singer
is that you can hopefully locate the song in its environment, and possibly get background information first hand,although a THOROUGH collector like will undoubtedly supply that information in his notes.
it would undoubtedly be helpful to Cristian to meet both traditional and revival singers and musicians.Martin Carthy,Roy Harris are equally important as Kitty Hayes or Chris Droney.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,Brian Peters
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 08:52 AM

>> rod stradling, nic jones, june tabor ,kate rusby are all revival performers. <<

Maybe I didn't make myself clear: Rod Stradling runs the Musical Traditions website devoted to traditional singing and music-making, and he has a strong personal preference for that kind of music. He would be at the other end of the scale from, say, a Kate Rusby fan. Our questioner might benefit from a visit to his site: http://www.mustrad.org.uk/


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 09:28 AM

Yes, its a very good site.
on the subject of mobile phone recordings,only last night,I played a polka,For a banjo pupil,on to his mobile phone, so he could get the air of it,
in fact I find this way of teaching very useful.
I Dont care whether he has learned it by a traditional process ,as long as he learns it and gets pleasure from the music.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 11:35 AM

Cristian mentions preserving folk traditions,continuing would be better terminology.
TRADITIONS evolve,they dont remain static,without alteration.Padstow hobby hoss[and the MERRYMAKING ]is a case in point,.
preserved has several different meanings,but it has connotations of something that is locked up in a museum.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 11:57 AM

>> rod stradling, nic jones, june tabor ,kate rusby are all revival performers. <<


If analysis is a waste of time, how do you know?


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 12:25 PM

I never said analysis was a waste of time,please read what I said AGAIN.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Murray MacLeod
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 01:02 PM

I would be quite interested to know whether Brian Peters succeeded in getting his tax return filled in , and also how much he is having to pay.

Traditional singers should be tax-exempt imo.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 01:05 PM

In Ireland artists and musicians are,thanks to Charles Haughey.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,Brian Peters
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 02:14 PM

Yes, Murray, the tax return was in a day ahead of deadline, which is why I've been back in the fray on this thread. My tax liability is, however, confidential - to divulge it would be to give away the dread secret of the pittance I earn as a folk musician. Perhaps you could write to Gordon Brown with your idea about exemption.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 03:06 PM

"as far as im concerned, far too much emphasis is put on traditional singers or revival singers, being a good singer is the only thing that is important.and in 100 years from now, will still be the oNly thing that is important,singing is about conveying feeling,not about what badge your wearing.http://www.dickmiles.com"

"we can get away from this nonsensical traditional /revival singer jargon,which is meaningless claptrap, as we cant even define what traditional is.http://www.dickmiles.com"

"They are meaningless claptrap to anyone who is interested in defining good singing,as a singer that is all that concerns me.
When I make a judgement of a singer, what label they have TRADITIONAL or REVIVAL does not affect my judgement,as its said you dont judge a book by its cover".

If it ain't what you mean, don't say it.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: BB
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 03:26 PM

Cristian states that *he* has decided to research..., etc., not that he has been told to research...

It isn't actually essential for a tutor or whoever marks the dissertation to know the subject inside out - many years ago when I was studying music, my final dissertation had to be something about music between 1800 and 1900, I think. Seeing that most of the collectors were doing the rounds in the early 1900s, it seemed logical to me that the songs therefore existed between the stated dates, so mine was on, if I remember rightly, 'The Character and Characteristics of Folk Song'. The tutor who marked it said that it was very interesting, and that he learnt a lot! I doubt that folk song, in the sense that Sharp, Lloyd, etc. talked about it, had ever entered his consciousness! But he was looking at how it was put together academically, and that, presumably, is what Cristian's tutor is going to be looking for primarily.

Barbara


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 04:32 PM

Richard Bridge,yes I do mean it,music is the most important thing in my life.
I did not say analysis was not important,that is how you choose to interpret my words.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 05:02 PM

"When I use a word, it means exactly what I intend it to mean, it's a matter of who is to be the master, no more, no less."

Alice in Wonderland.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,Frank Hamilton
Date: 31 Jan 07 - 08:06 PM

Hi Cristian

         " As part of my music degree i have decided to research to what extent text based representation encourages the transmission of Folk traditions."

Sam Hinton, the folklorist and performer from San Diego made an interesting point. The ballad Barbara Allen was out of circulation until it was revived in print.

" In other words, i would like to hear from folk musicians, concerning how they would go about sourcing a song... "

I think that the more you are exposed to the actual music, the more you understand what it is in the song when you see it in print. There is a musical tradition to be followed and absorbed in some way. I try to go to the root of the song as much as I am able. Sometimes through the history although that has to be cross-referenced as there are a lot of vague ideas that may not be correct. but my inclination is to find someone who has an understanding as a performer and absorb their approach...but not imitate it exactly.



" Another area i would be interested in hearing about is in how far it is acceptable or necessary to adapt and interpret a traditional song in your own way..."

The idea of "acceptable" would require an opinionated criteria which can be supported by some academics....but the word doesn't fit well in folk music.


"whether it is predominantly the words and the melody that convey the folk tradition and how important harmony is."

A song requires all of these things. Harmony is a problem for many because some like it simple and others can tolerate more complexity. The melody can be a vehicle for a story which by itself may be uneventful. A great tune can have a bowlderized lyric that's incomprehensible. A great simple tune can be as important as a complicated melody.
Answer, it depends.

Frank Hamilton


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 05:42 AM

cristian,traditional folk music,has been passed on in many different ways,.
Patrick Kelly[west clare fiddler]made the famous remark that the worst thing that happened to the clare fiddle style,were the recordings of sligo fiddler Micheal Coleman on 78 RPM.,
Traditional music performed by revival singers/musicians and traditional singers /musicians has been passed on by the radio[80 years] ,television[60 years]recordings[at least80years]mobile phones[5 years].
very few musician[be they traditional or revival] in the western world,have not learned a song/ tune,from one of these sources.
Fred Jordan originally had a repertoire,that he learned from his family,he then expanded his repertoire from the folk revival.
Bob Blake[at first thought to be a tradional singer] ,a fine singer,was evasive about his sources,and it would appear he was actually a revival singer.,Peter Kennedy[Clearly thought this mattered]but was prepared to dub on his own revival work on to existing traditional recordings.
Peter Kennedy was one of the major collectors of the twentieth century,but when he saw fit,he dubbed on his own melodeon,to traditional recordings he had collected,yet was not prepared to collect from a fine revival singer, because he was pretending to be a traditional singer,this is what prompted my earlier remarks about the nonsense of tradional /revival labels,and my remark about quality being important.
quality should also be important when it comes to a dissertation,but to assess quality/knowledge of the subject,the tutor /lecturer,should know at least as much as the student.
If a student writes a dissertation about house construction,it would be expected that the tutor understood pythagoras theorem[to enable the house to be built square].
BB wrote a dissertation on the Character and Charecteristics of folk song,She admits her tutor knew less than her on the subject,to my mind that devalues the status of her degree.
my advice is to seek out the following people, who should be able to advise you properly.Pete Seeger,Doc rowe,Vic Gammon,Frank Hamilton,Martin Carthy,Nicolas Carolan,Packie Byrne,louis killeen,RoyHarris


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Folkiedave
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 06:06 AM

Dick,

my advice is to seek out the following people, who should be able to advise you properly.Pete Seeger,Doc rowe,Vic Gammon,Frank Hamilton,Martin Carthy,Nicolas Carolan,Packie Byrne,louis killeen,RoyHarris

How do you know these people you are recommending have time to help a student? A lot of them would if they have time - but a lot of them don't have time. Pete Seeger is a very old man and should definitely left alone.

One of the others you mention I know is extremely busy writing a book. One already has enough students of his own thank you. I know one of the others is extremely busy too.

And whilst your opinion can always be expressed freely - it doesn't mean to say you are right.

On this occasion Christian, take no notice......but you knew that already I suspect.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 06:21 AM

your right folkie dave ,I should have said providing they are prepared to help.APOLOGIES
BB on reflection I would like to rephrase,.
That to my mind that devalues the status of degrees,apologies. not your degree.
knowing you reasonably well, i,m sure your degree was well written and that you deserved your degree.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Folkiedave
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 06:39 AM

Dick I accept your gracious apology - but even that is not quite right.

I am suggesting the student doesn't even contact them.

Most of the people you mention are either old or busy or both.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: The Sandman
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 07:25 AM

yes, your right,I was trying to be helpful,Ishouldnt have suggested it.


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: GUEST,Dave Hunt
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 09:06 AM

Folkiedave said - 'How do you know these people you are recommending have time to help a student? A lot of them would if they have time - but a lot of them don't have time. Pete Seeger is a very old man and should definitely left alone'

And Packie Byrne is 90 on the 18th Feb!
Dave Hunt


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Folkiedave
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 01:30 PM

Aside and thread drift.

Packie is 'lucky to be alive' and I confess it was me and three friends I lived with that nearly killed him.

He stayed with us years ago - when I lived in Hull - and after the folk club we were having a laugh and a drink, and Packie began to tell us all sorts of stories about in particular his cattle smuggling days but other items he took across the border. Those who have spent time with him will know the stuff I mean.

"And" he said "what do you lads do for a living", pausing to take a swig of his drink.

We took great delight in telling him we were all customs officers!!


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: Leadfingers
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 02:17 PM

Long may packie continue ! I have a hoard of fond memories of him over the years !


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Subject: RE: Research project: Traditional Folk music
From: BB
Date: 01 Feb 07 - 02:52 PM

I understand what you're saying, Dick, but I don't believe that you are necessarily correct. Many academics when marking degree dissertations are looking at the academic rigour with which they are researched and presented, rather than the actual content - this can be deduced from the arguments put forward, the extent of the bibliography, all sorts of things, within a general subject framework - we don't know exactly what department Cristian is part of. My tutors knew sufficent about music generally to know whether what I said made sense, and this may well be true of the tutors within Cristian's college - in fact, as it's Dartington, they almost undoubtedly do.

Thanks for the PM, by the way - no problem.

Barbara


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