Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST,Dave Ruch Date: 01 Feb 18 - 07:25 PM Thank you Tim! Looking forward to digging in. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Desert Dancer Date: 01 Feb 18 - 01:52 PM For those wanting a reasonably direct, clickable link: The James Madison Carpenter Collection A lot of how their site operates, at least the top layers of this archive, is thru Javascript (I think!), so things render in windows on the page without changing the url. ~ Becky in Long Beach |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: RTim Date: 31 Jan 18 - 09:36 AM I can update everyone regarding my comment below about - Not being able to manipulate Enlarged Images. I have received this noet from the Librarian: "To enlarge/decrease the image, you use the plus and minus signs to the top right of the screen. Then once you have zoomed in or out, you click on the image itself, hold the click and then drag the image left/right/up/down as required for viewing." Brilliant.... Tim Radford |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: FreddyHeadey Date: 26 Jan 18 - 07:59 PM I'm struggling with this. I can see a search\filter page to get, say, Bell Duncan with recordings https://www.vwml.org/search?advq=0|fm|Sound%20recording%20%20%20Record%20%20%20Other;0|tt|;0|pf|bell%20duncan&collectionfilter=G Is there some way to get Bell Duncan with recordings only where there is also a written or typed transcription? (such as black horse tam https://www.vwml.org/record/VWMLSongIndex/SN16871) |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: RTim Date: 26 Jan 18 - 05:15 PM I only have one complaint about the new version of the EFDSS Archives - that now includes Carpenter...........You can look at the Images of pages and you can enlarge them - BUT - you cannot manipulate the enlarged Image - eg. If you enlarge to read the top line - it doesn't appear on the screen area - and you cannot scroll the Image down - you could on the Old system....... a Small but annoying problem. But tanks for all the wonderful new stuff - including the Stubbs Recordings. Tm Radford |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Tradsinger Date: 26 Jan 18 - 12:45 PM This is huge and great deal of thanks is due to Dr Julia Bishop at Sheffield University and to the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library itself. If you search on the VWML Digital Archive for Carpenter as Collector, you get over 7,600 entries. Sharp himself only has a thousand more, so that gives you an idea of the amount of material that Carpenter collected and also shows how remiss the English collectors were between the wars. I am going to use this as an opportunity to plug the work done on the songs collected by Carpenter in Gloucestershire, which can be found transcribed with full song and performer notes on www.glostrad.com. Tradsinger |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Steve Gardham Date: 26 Jan 18 - 10:57 AM I got there following Tim's instructions, texts, dots and recordings but for Bell there are about 1500 entries so you have to go through a lot of bits and pieces before you get to some recordings and some texts but they are there and well worth the effort. Some of the recordings appear to be just one verse and then move onto the next ballad so you get a whole stream of ballads on one cylinder. I would imagine the discs are separate ballads. I'm going to print off the Child Ballad texts first and examine these alongside other versions. But I have other things I need to do first. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST Date: 26 Jan 18 - 10:09 AM Thanks Tim and Jim! |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: RTim Date: 26 Jan 18 - 09:43 AM Regarding Audio of Bell Duncan's Ballads - they are all on the EFDSS site as both Cylinders and Discs, however - they are mostly untitled if you just select Sound Recordings - If you search for her by name you will get the sound recordings with all the text material, etc.. Therefore it is possible to identify the ballad. Play with it - you can't do any hard.........at least I don't think so! Tim Radford |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Jim Carroll Date: 26 Jan 18 - 08:25 AM THe tapes (don't know if they have been digitised) were part of the Carpenter set at Cecil sharp House |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST Date: 26 Jan 18 - 08:14 AM A question, please: are audio recordings of Bell Duncan available to listen to through www.vwml.org? If so, whereabouts? |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Lighter Date: 25 Jan 18 - 07:06 PM It looks to me as though not all of the recordings were transcribed. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST,RA Date: 25 Jan 18 - 06:09 PM To hear the actual recordings try this: Go to www.vwml.org - click on ‘Archives Catalogue’ - then click on ‘James Madison Carpenter Collection’ - then click on ‘Cylinder Recordings'. The list of digitised recordings should appear. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Steve Gardham Date: 25 Jan 18 - 03:39 PM Thanks, Tim Will give it a go. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Richie Date: 25 Jan 18 - 03:14 PM Hi, TY Tim, this is great news!!! I've been waiting for 7 years to finish the English versions of the Child ballads. As far as you know-- is the complete collection available? And are there transcriptions available? If you listen to Flanders tapes from the 1930s and 40s they are poor too but you can figure out the text (in most cases). Richie |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: RTim Date: 25 Jan 18 - 03:03 PM Steve - You can get to the texts by selecting by Singer name - and in 2nd field enter "typescript" - this should give you all the text some handwritten and some typed....... Tim Radford |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Steve Gardham Date: 25 Jan 18 - 02:08 PM At the moment I'm more interested in the texts, particularly Bell Duncan's ballads and the chanteys, but I'm struggling to find anything other than lists and descriptions of what is contained. I regularly use the Full English and can cope with that fine but I can't find anything from Carpenter that is in the same format or accessible. Any chance that a kind techie can give a short list of instructions how to access the material please? Just the texts for now would be great. Regarding the recordings, this is not a disaster if we have the music and text transcriptions. If we can make out the tune reasonably well with the text in front of us that will be sufficient for most of us. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Lighter Date: 25 Jan 18 - 01:17 PM Great news indeed. Unfortunately the quality of the recordings I've listened to is uniformly awful! By that I mean the words can be almost indecipherable. Of course, it was the fault of the primitive technology, not Carpenter. And it's great to hear the actual voices of people born so long ago as 1840 (178 years ago)! |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST,Nick Dow Date: 25 Jan 18 - 11:38 AM Great News. How about this then! The escapologist on Tower Hill was my old friend 'The Gypsy Strongman' Johnny Eagle. I interviewed him and collected his memories and produced a Radio Documentary for the BBC about him. I also got a couple of songs from him. He lived out his declining years in Bacup, just below the traditional camping ground on Bacup Heights called 'The Moon' by the Irish travellers. I bought a wagon up there some 15 years ago restored it and sold it on. Old Johnny used to ask me to stand outside his house and hold a cigarette for him while he cracked a twenty foot bull whip over my head and flick the cig out of my hand. That's just one of the stories I have got. Ask me another! ....Sorry! Back to the post! Great news about the collection looking forward to it. kind regards Nick |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Steve Gardham Date: 24 Jan 18 - 04:55 PM At last. That's me occupied for the next couple of months then. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST Date: 24 Jan 18 - 11:44 AM If you go back in the thread it seems to have been finished ahead of schedule. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Jim Carroll Date: 24 Jan 18 - 11:41 AM Thanks for that Tim Haven't go the hang of the site yet, so I can't work out if there is a listening facility on it Carpenter recorded many of his informants (usually a couple of verses of each song) The recorded material, although often of poor sound quality, runs into 22 7" reels (recorded on both sides at three and three quarters) a lorra, lorra listening Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: RTim Date: 24 Jan 18 - 11:25 AM At Last At Last - the Carpenter Collection has at last been loaded to the EFDSS Archive and is now available in it's full glory. The Archive system and access has been changed and it is an all new learning exercise to both Search & Browse all the collections. However - fill you boots everyone.......... https://www.vwml.org/ Tim Radford |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Anglo Date: 20 Apr 17 - 08:13 AM I didn't know Ben Bright had recorded by Carpenter - great information. I knew of Ben from Ewan - Emily Friedman and I had dinner with Ewan and Peggy in the early 80s when were were visiting from the US, and I was talking with Ewan about the transition from sail to steam - I got so much good information that night, and Ewan gave me a copy of the monograph - and I did learn that version of the Campañero - from Ewan, though, not from Ben. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Jim Carroll Date: 20 Apr 17 - 05:42 AM He did Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST,bigJ Date: 20 Apr 17 - 04:58 AM The monograph was called "Shellback: Reminiscences of Ben Bright, Mariner" 44pp, published by History Workshop. In passing, didn't Peter Kennedy (illicitly?) release some of Carpenter's recordings on his Folktracks label? |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST Date: 20 Apr 17 - 03:52 AM I remember the escaplogost on Tower Hill. I should have paid more attention rather than just eating my sandwiches and getting back to work. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Jim Carroll Date: 19 Apr 17 - 07:24 PM Delighted that this is at last surfacing Bob Thomson told me about this not long before he went to America - I informed the Librarian at the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library - can't remember if Malcolm Taylor had started with them then They ordered it - since then, it has been like waiting for the other shoe to drop. A interesting story (I think so anyway) about one of Carpenter's singers, Ben Bright, recorded on the (Swansea?) docks in south Wales. Charles Parker was crossing Tower Bridge in London one afternoon, some time in the seventies when he saw an escapologist freeing himself from a straightjacket Charlie got into conversation with the escapologists assistant, who turned out to be Ben Bright, a retired Merchant Seaman. After a while Charlie realised that Ben would be worth recording, so he passed the name on to Ewan and Peggy, who made contact and began to visit him in his digs in Wood Green, North London. Not only did he have songs, but he told of how, in the thirties, he jumped ship in California and became a union organiser for the Wobblies (International Workers of the World - Joe Hill's organisation) - he worked alongside some legendary Union organisers, including T-Bone Slim and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn Part of Ben's story can be found in a small monograph Ewan and Peggy had privately published and distributed around the clubs they sang at. Based on the information they recorded, Ewan wrote one of his best songs (in my opinion), Shellback, which featured in Philip Donnellan's documentary film 'Before the Mast' Well into his seventies, Ben disappeared from his lodgings and got a passage as a deckhand on a ship heading for Australia. The last Ewan and Peggy heard of him was a postcard they received congratulating them on the birth of their daughter, Kitty. He had found a job (as a deckhand again) on a coaster sailing around Australia. He can be heard on the Carpenter recordings singing 'The Handy Barque Companero' A truly legendary man. Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST,Malcolm Storey Date: 19 Apr 17 - 06:39 PM Really pleased to hear about this. Good to know that the Elphinstone is also involved. Just hoping I have enough years left to get something personally pleasing out of the project. Makes being a member and supporting the EFDSS once more recognisably worthwhile - not that I ever doubted that. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: RTim Date: 19 Apr 17 - 05:52 PM Ebor Fiddler - I don't think it will be available until 2018....They are only saying they have the money......... Regards - Tim Radford |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Ross Campbell Date: 19 Apr 17 - 05:05 PM Catalogue available here:- https://www.hrionline.ac.uk/carpenter/ Tantalisingly close! just needs that final link to the material itself. Ross |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST,Peter Date: 19 Apr 17 - 04:00 PM As I read the press release it is announcing the start of the project not its conclusion which seems to be scheduled for next March. I think you need to actually go to the Library of Congress in person to access the material at the moment. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: GUEST,Ebor Fiddler Date: 19 Apr 17 - 03:27 PM RTim: Do you have a web reference for this please? I have only been able to trace a rough description of what the collection consists from the Library of Congress, but no sight of the material itself. Thanks, Chris B. |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Steve Gardham Date: 19 Apr 17 - 03:26 PM Likewise. Various luminaries have been working on the critical edition for some time now and it will be great to see it come to fruition. I look forward to seeing the commentaries from those who have been studying it. A massive coup for EFDSS. Well done to all! |
Subject: RE: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: RTim Date: 19 Apr 17 - 12:11 PM Looking forward - and have for sometime, browsing through the collection - so much of it interests me......... |
Subject: EFDSS and the Carpenter Collection From: Mick Tems Date: 19 Apr 17 - 11:48 AM Jo Cunningham, EFDSS Press Officer, sent me following Press Release: New project brings major folk song collection to the UK A new project to incorporate a pivotal collection into the world's largest online searchable database of folk songs and music has been announced. The digitised collection of James Madison Carpenter, which has previously only been accessible by visiting the Library of Congress in Washington, DC, will be added to the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library Digital Archive, thanks to a grant of more than £63,000 from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Follow-on Funding Scheme. Carpenter's work includes a wealth of traditional songs, ballads and folk plays, collected from performers in Scotland, England and Wales by the Harvard-trained scholar, mostly in the period 1929-35. As well as more than 2,000 items of traditional song and 300 folk plays, it contains some items of traditional instrumental music, dance, custom, narrative and children's folklore. The project is being delivered by the Elphinstone Institute, the centre for the study of Ethnology, Folklore, and Ethnomusicology at the University of Aberdeen, in partnership with the English Folk Dance and Song Society, which runs the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library and Archive (VWML) at Cecil Sharp House in London. A new learning resource for teachers will be created for the online EFDSS Resource Bank using a selection of material from the collection. EFDSS will also deliver a series of creative learning projects with young people, adults, and in schools to introduce the collection to a new audience. The project will culminate in a celebration concert at Cecil Sharp House in March 2018 featuring material from the Carpenter Collection. Laura Smyth, Director of the VWML, said: "The Carpenter Collection will be a fantastic addition to our digital archive with collected materials from the early 1930s – a period with little activity from English based collectors. "It also features a large number of audio recordings, allowing us to get even closer to the original performances." Dr Julia Bishop, leader of the James Madison Carpenter Collection Project, said: "'The Carpenter Collection has been hidden for so long. This is a wonderful opportunity to return it to the communities and places where so much of it originated." THIS is fantastic news! I first became aware of James Madison Carpenter through a project and a production I was researching and writing, about Carpenter's recordings of the South Wales shantymen and tall-ship sailors, including Rees Baldwin, 13, George Street, Barry (who became mayor of Barry, the docks town); William Fender of Sydenham Street, Barry, later renamed as Coronation Street; Richard Warner of Cardiff, who first went to sea aboard the Oxford in 1877; Hebron George Mathias and James Garricy. I first contacted Edna Robinson, who lived in Barry and who was Rees Baldwin's daughter, and Edna's son, Jeffery Robinson, a university lecturer who was passionately interested in his grandfather's life. I traced Rees Baldwin's family, including Alistair and Angela Duthie, postmasters in the village of Wick, along the Glamorgan coast. Carpenter recorded more than 50 shanties from the South Wales seamen, which were long-lost for all these years, but for a chain of incredible coincidences. When I toured in the US, I interviewed Professor Kenny Goldstein, head of the folk life department in the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, who was following the Grieg trail of Scottish traveller folk song; he was told of this strange American called Dr Carpenter, who passed that way 40 years before. I interviewed Alan Jabbour, director of the folk life department of the National Library of Congress in Washington (who brought me lunch!) He was examining some letters to folk song collector Alan Lomax from Carpenter, telling him of his massive collection of shanties, folk songs and mummers' plays; Alan traced Carpenter to Booneville, Mississippi, where he was astounded to find Carpenter still alive and living in "genteel poverty". Carpenter was ready to sell his collection, which Alan bought for the Library of Congress. (Alan, an expert old-time fiddler, unfortunately died in January this year. Carpenter remained in Booneville until his death on July 4, 1984; he never married and left no children. He was also practically unknown in his chosen field of folksong and folklore studies, and no obituaries appeared in any of the relevant scholarly journals in Britain or in America.) |
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