Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Big Al Whittle Date: 08 Feb 19 - 07:10 PM well i don't want to belittle or question Jim's achievements but I do know, I've tried as hard as I could running folk clubs , trying to perform and write music. And by and large - people have thought of what I do as folk music. Even when I haven't been performing 'folk' - people have thought they discerned elements of folk music in what I did. I'm sure it makes no difference in the history of mankind. however having the artistic validity of what one has spent ones life doing is just rubbing it in that the middle and upper classes really do call the shots, and tell us what our own culture consists of. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Feb 19 - 03:56 AM "Where would we have been without you Jim?" Don't twist what I say Hoot - I said "we" and in doing so I was referring to those who found folk song, decided it was important and worked at it, not those who came along later and decided they would rather do something else with the folk clubs that the first lot had worked so hard to set up Why personalise it? "Who do you mean by the 'you' in "you know one when you hear it", Jim? " You too Andy? I believe folk song has a recognisable uniqueness - the example I gave was a Sean Nós singer from the est of Ireland who shows himself capable of picking out traditional songs other languages Anybody who has listened to MacColl's 'Song Carrier' programmes knows that he begins with two examples - an Azerbajani (I think a muezzin) singing an elaborate piece, which he then links to Irish singer, Paddy Tunney Then he plays a Spaniard singing Canto Hondo and links it to Margaret Barry, an Irish street singer - the cultures are different but all have recognisable similarities, MacColl argues that it is the fact they are from traditional cultures that cause those - it's always worked for me The sound of folk song is, of course, not the only thing that goes into the making of a tradition - there are many hundreds of works by people who have been researching the subject over the centuries to more than establish the fact - folk song is unique, it is different from any other art form The "we" are those who believe that uniqueness is important and still relevant Personalising things has become a way of avoiding argument, the favourite being "Jim's (or whosever's) definition" I don't have a personal definition of folk song - there is a nearly two centuries old definition of "folk" which I believe still works That's the one that identified the songs that established the folk revival and continued to do so till a few decades ago - we chose the clubs we went to because we knew more or less what music we would find there That no longer applies and the term folk has become meaningless when applied to folk clubs Can you tell be what I will find relating to folk when go to a folk club now? - I doubt it Can you give me a workable alternative definition that will allow me to choose what I am seeking at a folk club? - if you can you will be the first The folk scene has been subjected to a hostile takeover and an important art form has been put at risk There was a danger of that happening in Ireland a few decades ago - hard work on the part of groups of dedicated people have turned that around and guaranteed an at least two generation survival of Irish traditional music and youngsters are now streaming into the music for the love of it Can any of you say the same? What is your definition of the music you are offering as "folk" Once more - can we please stop personalising this and cut out the insulting ? Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Big Al Whittle Date: 09 Feb 19 - 07:40 AM 'Can you tell be what I will find relating to folk when go to a folk club now?' folk perchance.... |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST,Peter Date: 09 Feb 19 - 08:03 AM 'Can you tell be what I will find relating to folk when go to a folk club now?' folk perchance.... Depends on the club, you won't know until you get there. I know "folk" clubs where you would be lucky to hear one traditional song in a night and others where contemporary material will be unusual. Its a bit like kissing frogs to find a prince. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Big Al Whittle Date: 09 Feb 19 - 08:22 AM I was referring to folk, the species.... |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Feb 19 - 10:03 AM "folk perchance...." There should be no 'perchance' about it - not if the club scene is to survive Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Big Al Whittle Date: 09 Feb 19 - 11:04 AM make your mind up...you just pronounced it dead...defunct..subject of an unfriendly takeover by alien beings....no longer extant....thing of beauty gone forever...... attacked by sinister fifth columnists, working for the enemy. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Feb 19 - 11:19 AM I've never pronounced folk song "dead" - I have said the present scene has abandoned it I believe there are still enough dedicated people around to reboot the scene, if I didn't I wouldn't waste my time talking to people who neither know or care about folk song Why do you distort and misrepresent what I say Al - it really is beneath you Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Big Al Whittle Date: 09 Feb 19 - 12:12 PM i know...i'm a little tinker when i get going... |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Feb 19 - 12:19 PM Stop denigrating the Travellers Al - that is my friends you are talking about ! Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 09 Feb 19 - 01:37 PM I don't have a personal definition of folk song - there is a nearly two centuries old definition of "folk" which I believe still works I am genuinely intrigued, Jim. I am well aware of the 1954 definition, which I agree with apart from a couple of minor things. What definition was in existence in the early 1800s? |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Feb 19 - 02:48 PM "What definition was in existence in the early 1800s?" The term 'folk' was first used in 1846 by William Thom, antiquarian to identify people's culture - folklore in particular. It wasn't a definition - it was an acknowledgement that 'ordinary' people had a separate culture worth identifying and was later applied to song and music '54 has always been a red-herring,nobody has ever argued that it doesn't need updating - I seldom refer to it, if ever As far as I am concerned, traditional and folk are two inseparable terms - two sides of the same coin 'Folk refers to the people who almost certainly made, took ownership, adapted, re-adapted and distributed the songs, stories and music; tradition refers to the process the songs underwent to become 'folk' The term folk was taken up by Sharp and Co at the beginning of the 20th century and has continued to be used in the way it was first coined up to the present day, the last major use of it being the release of 'The J M Carpenter Folk song Collection', recently made available on line The use has never included pop songs, music hall songs, stage songs... etc., unless they have been subjected to the folk process God alone knows where loud, amplified, non narrative modern music fits into the picture and untl somone produces a fully accepted alternative definition, that is the one we are stuck with '54 was never more than an attept to clarify the earlier one Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST Date: 09 Feb 19 - 03:11 PM Ha! I am actually laughing. That very broad definition includes everything you claim it doesn't. Of course music hall, pop songs and modern amplified non narrative music are all literally part of the people's culture. Of course they are. That is exactly what they are. What they are separate from is classical music and church music (often the only kind of music you see discussed my so-called music historians). Where they fall into the picture is: music that you arbitrarily don't like and so exclude from your personal definition. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: The Sandman Date: 09 Feb 19 - 05:34 PM have been helping a few people in my neighbourhood to learn instruments and learn trad tunes and songs[ on a n unpaid basis] and have been cheered up by the fact that there are people that are interested. THE 1954 DEFINITION IS FLAWED, to include football chants and such that no one in their right mind would want to listen to outside of the context of a foofball match. example the song sung by Notts county foolball fans[ i understand there might be more than one] to the tune of old smokey.For those who haven’t heard it, to the tune of ‘Old Smoky’, it is simply; “I had a wheelbarrow, the wheel fell off, I had a wheelbarrow, the wheel fell off, County, County, County” |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Big Al Whittle Date: 09 Feb 19 - 05:51 PM you must send me the chords |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Feb 19 - 03:13 AM Thanks Jim but I am still confused. At 09 Feb 19 - 03:56 AM you say "there is a nearly two centuries old definition of "folk" which I believe still works" then at 09 Feb 19 - 02:48 PM, referring to what William Thom said in 1846, you say "It wasn't a definition - it was an acknowledgement that 'ordinary' people had a separate culture worth identifying..." going on to comment "'54 has always been a red-herring,nobody has ever argued that it doesn't need updating - I seldom refer to it, if ever". Sorry to Labour the point but this is important if we want to stop the hours of endless arguing. You often say you can no longer go to a folk club and hear folk song. I, amongst many, disagree with that and say we can go to many folk clubs and always hear folk music. Is it just that your definition of folk is as you state at 08 Feb 19 - 03:07 PM "even if you don't know how to define a folk song you know one when you hear it" and is different from that of some others? If you think 1954 is a red herring and 1846 is not even a definition, then how do you, personally, define a folk song other than you know one when you hear it? |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 03:31 AM "Of course music hall, pop songs and modern amplified non narrative music are all literally part of the people's culture." Folk songs have always been regarded as those made, remade and adapted and passed on from community to community Our oral traditions died with the advent of manufactured entertainment, the radio and eventually television - we became recipients of our culture rather than participants in it Spend any time in a community that still has emnents of a folk tradition and you will find that the people who were around when it was active regarded the songs and tunes as "ours" - Norfolk, West of Ireland, Travellers Walter Pardon, the last of the large repertoire singers, recorded hours for us, carefully explaining the difference between hisw "old folk songs" and "the modern stuff" (early twentieth century pop and Victorian Parlour Ballads mainly) Mary Delaney, a blind Travelling woman with a large repertoire of traditional songs and ballads, also had a repertoire of Country and Western songs which she refused to sing to us "they're not Travellers songs" she told us Tom Lenihan, West Clare small farmer, went on at length explaining not only what the "old traditional stuff" was but how he felt it needed to be sung The greatest myth in folk song research is the claim that traditional singers didn't think about their songs and didn't discriminate between the traditional songs and anything else they might have picked up The sad fact is that too many researchers were more interested in the songs as artifacts that they were of how the songs fitted into people's lives - they collected the songs without the information that came with them and assumed there was none to be got If everything is folk song then there is no need to discriminate between the songs people sing - we may as well give 'The Birdie song' or Abba's 'Waterloo' Roud numbers - that's what 'the folk' are singing nowadays Sorry - no cigar Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Feb 19 - 04:34 AM So, to save any further argument, what is your definition of folk song then, Jim? |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 04:47 AM "So, to save any further argument, what is your definition of folk song then, Jim?" I've given it several times Dace - the lat time half a dozen postings up If you cant be bothered reading it I really can't help - sorry Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 05:20 AM There y'go again "54 has always been a red-herring,nobody has ever argued that it doesn't need updating - I seldom refer to it, if ever As far as I am concerned, traditional and folk are two inseparable terms - two sides of the same coin 'Folk refers to the people who almost certainly made, took ownership, adapted, re-adapted and distributed the songs, stories and music; tradition refers to the process the songs underwent to become 'folk' The term folk was taken up by Sharp and Co at the beginning of the 20th century and has continued to be used in the way it was first coined up to the present day, the last major use of it being the release of 'The J M Carpenter Folk song Collection', recently made available on line The use has never included pop songs, music hall songs, stage songs... etc., unless they have been subjected to the folk process " Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Feb 19 - 07:13 AM Ok, got it, Jim. I am happy with that and I assume from your last line that it does include "pop songs, music hall songs, stage songs.." that have "been subjected to the folk process." If that is the case then there are many such songs that have been given the folk treatment by different communities and clubs while in other communities they have not been given the same treatment. That is where it gets complicated and contentious. In my old club, for instance, the song "Blue Moon" was given the treatment and over the course of 20 or 30 years it has become, as far as Swinton is concerned, a folk song. IE a song of the Swinton Folk community. I have now moved to Skipton where the song is not a folk song, but others like it may be. Complicated init! Little wonder the discussions are seemingly endless :-) PMd you about another matter BTW. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 07:30 AM "I assume from your last line that it does include "pop songs, music hall songs, stage songs.." that have "been subjected to the folk process."" That goes without saying Dave - ad children's adaptations of modern pop songs and tele adverts What happens in folk clubs is irrelevant though - change for change's sake is as irrelevant as simple repetition and folk clubs don't count as communities any more than do concert halls that put on adaptations of folk songs by Vaughan Williams, George Butterworth or Percy Grainger Now if a bunch of kids got hold of Bue Moon.... different kettle of dingbats One of the fature of songs in print or performed on stage is that they tend not to change or be adapted - they tend to remain as first heard. Print had the same effect - we spoke at length to singers who had learned from ballad sheets (the later form of broadside) who told us that they regarded the version in print as the right one and unalterable On e other hand, they had no problem with filling out songs they already knew with verses from print I's not really complicated, just a bit detailed, but once ou get the hang of it it makes sense and it really is agreat fun sorting out one from the other Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST,patriot Date: 10 Feb 19 - 08:56 AM But why would a 'folk' singer bother to differentiate these categories in the first place and worse still, be guided by these arbitrary divisions, which are obviously an objective judgement anyway, or so this discussion seems to indicate? n interesting discussion, yes, but a good song is surely a good song so why not just get on with the singing and let the ethnomusicologists worry about it? |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 10:11 AM "But why would a 'folk' singer bother to differentiate these categories in the first place" Because they are different - why wouldn't they ? The old crowd actually had their own categories for their songs - Walter Pardon called his folk songs "folk songs", Tom Lenihan called them "the old tradition" Blind Traveller, Mary Delaney referred to hers as "my daddies songs" - she knew around a hundred, when we recorded her father he knew about six. Mary used her title as a description of the type of song she sang, not where she'd got them from Another Traveller, Mikeen McCarthy went further and described different ways of singing his songs - one way to sell his ballad sheets on the streets and in the fairs, another way to sing them in the pub and, most important to him, the "fireside songs" which were sung on the sites among friends and family A good song is only a good song if you like it and it does something for you Nothing to do with ethnomusicology - it's my experience that, even if well past their prime the older singer brought something into their songs which most younger ones never managed - conviction - they sang their songs with a lifetime of familiarity behind them If you can't learn from that you really are missing out The success of the present Irish scene was built on the fact that there were enough of the older generation still around to learn from and enough sensible youngsters to realise that fact and sit down with them to listen to what they said and did Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST,patriot Date: 10 Feb 19 - 11:30 AM Yes but if you say your folk/traditional songs are different, you need to draw lines and I really cannot see why! Any sensible singer in any genre makes a subjective decision about whether a song is 'good' for his or herself & I agree that it 's 'good' only if it means something/strikes a chord, however you define it. Whether it's folk, traditional, blues, jazz, hiphop or whatever has absolutely nothing to do with it. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 11:51 AM "you need to draw lines and I really cannot see why!" You don't need to draw lines, the lines are already there Different types of songs rattle different boxes You have no more right to tell me I shouldn't think about my songs any more than I have to tell you you should As far as I'm concerned, our folk songs are inseparable from the social history and information they carry If I wanted to know the details of The Battle of Trafalgar I would go to the Naval Records or the detailed research If I wanted to know how it felt for a farmworker to be torn up from his roots, pressed into the Navy and stuck into the middle of a lethal battle I would go to the folk songs - that's why they were made Same with the Transportation songs - a transportation ballad can tell me far more in a few minutes than a learned book on the enclosure can tell me in 300 pages Our songs are full of this sort of information - from social misalliance to enforced marriages arranged to further the aims of families rather than the feelings of the people effected These are interesting songs if you're interested in that sort of thing If you're not then I suggest you're looking in the wrong place Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Little Hawk Date: 10 Feb 19 - 12:02 PM Gentlemen? Just a little aside here, a momentary departure from the ongoing deep discussion... One doesn't see all that many rotary telephones these days either for some reason, specially the old black ones, and lava lamps have also become rather rare. Disturbing, isn't it? |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 12:10 PM We've got a working black phone in our lobby - always hated lava lamps If you are suggesting that fopl song is no longer relevant then perhaps you are on the wrong thread Mustt go - got a load of Shakespeare, Dickens and Hardy to burn before it goes dark Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Feb 19 - 01:14 PM Bit different with "Blue Moon". It had already undergone changes via Man City football supporters. Our club residents also inserted the tube into "Nancy Whisky" as a middle right (ish). When one of our club members, a staunch Man City supporter, passed away, her husband asked the residents to do a fuller version of "Blue Moon" at her wake and the rest is, as they say, the folk process :-) There are many other such stories at our club and I am sure it is the same elsewhere. These are the type of things that make sure it is never as straight forward as "this song is folk, that one isn't". Provides hours of fun in these debates but does not help to define anything! |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 01:20 PM If you stretch these things you could make them folk, but they're pale shadows of the main corpus Change is no more traditional creation than is forgetting the words Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Feb 19 - 02:36 PM Not sure what you mean by "been subjected to the folk process" then Jim. If a folk club community cannot subject a song to the folk process but a football crowd or children can, I am stumped :-( Still, we have at least a partial agreement so I am happy to leave it at that. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Feb 19 - 02:43 PM If a folk club community cannot subject a song to the folk process but a football crowd or children can Not important to argue about tonight |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Stringsinger Date: 10 Feb 19 - 02:51 PM Hi Jim, Big Al has hit upon the answer. A folk tradition can't just be an audience and a performer. There has to be an active involvement in it to justify its importance. By this I mean that people have to be educated to appreciate traditional music and that kind of education has to contain the ability of young people to participate not just in listening but active performance of this music. There must be classes or instruction that teach people to sing and play this music for it to survive. I am involved in a Folk School that does just that. There are many folk song and music schools throughout the world. Some examples come to mind such as the Scoil Eigse in Drogheda county Louth put on by the CCE. Folk Festivals will sometimes offer classes. In short, if people can own the music by participation in the performance, it will survive The danger lies in academic elitism that weeds out participation.. Frank |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Stringsinger Date: 10 Feb 19 - 02:55 PM Jim, if you want English Trad music to survive you're going to have to teach people how to do it. Frank |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jack Campin Date: 10 Feb 19 - 03:12 PM I don't see "academic elitism" as a problem - every academic involved in folk music I've ever met has been uncondescendingly enthusiastic about passing on what they know to all comers. Passing knowledge on is their day job, so they think about how to do it and retain their sensitivity to younger people's situations and interests. The real dead weight is amateurs who learned everything they know decades ago and have no memory of or interest in what it's like to be new to traditional music. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Big Al Whittle Date: 10 Feb 19 - 04:24 PM you don't see many academics down the folk club. on mudcat, they tend to be a bit hoity toity. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jack Campin Date: 10 Feb 19 - 07:51 PM Someone's got one fuck of a chip on their shoulder. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST,Observer Date: 10 Feb 19 - 08:14 PM Don't know about the rest of you. I got "into" folk music", for that read songs, by the love of its ability to tell a story, sometimes a story of major importance and at other times something much lighter, but both in their own way equally important and significant. Pity the rest of you argue so vehemently with Jim, he certainly knows where the heart and soul of the folk music genre exists - hint it is not with wannabe pop artist singer/songwriters. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST,ripov Date: 10 Feb 19 - 08:52 PM Is some of the problem not with the folk clubs - in an upstair room, keeping themselves seperate from the community? So how can the average punter ever hear "folk music"? I'm not a singer but a fiddler. And many pubs (though certainly not all) are happy enough to let me sit in a corner, or in the garden, and play for a while. A few years ago I was in Oxford, in a pub garden on a beautiful warm afternoon. my son went to get the beers, and I sat and played. And a little girl came over and danced, till the beer arrived and we went back to talking. I hope she will always remember doing that. Isn't that the way music should be. And does it matter a damn what genre the music is? Isn't the important thing that people get involved in it? Surely that's what "folk" really means. I believe we have two things to attempt. One is on the academic side, to keep alive the original music, words, style of performance, instruments - and the other the use of this marvelous wealth of material asa base from which to continually produce things new. Surely both fall into what we call "The Tradition"? And Al, I think it's the folk clubs, not the academics, that can be a bit hoity-toity! We see many academics at sessions, not always the greatest performers, but usually with a big input to the music. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST,FloraG Date: 11 Feb 19 - 02:57 AM In Kent we not only have the Broadstairs, Rochester and Tenterden festivals, but a number of singing morris sides, who dance a bit, and then take the music/ singing into the pub. Although not compulsory, they encourage all members to do a turn, or just join in with the songs someone else is leading. It would be hard not to have heard some folk music in Kent. As for folk clubs, I think the most interesting is the Dartford one. They moved into a room in the working mens club, where the beer is modestly priced and the manager was wise enough to think ' real ale'. The format is to have a guest every week. The attendance is about 100 people a week, half of whom turn up regularly. Members of the club sit on the working mens committee, and the non folkie locals like the choice of beers. I think that to answer the original ' where have all the folkies gone' might be 'in Kent'. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Little Hawk Date: 11 Feb 19 - 03:01 AM Actually, folk music will always be relevant to me, but there are many different varieties of it, of course...so what I think of as "folk music" might be a bit different from what another person thinks about it. On the whole, though, it has always been my favorite type of music. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 11 Feb 19 - 03:15 AM "Jim, if you want English Trad music to survive you're going to have to teach people how to do it." Frank I don't believe folk singing can be 'taught' but I do believe it can be learned - it really has to be a joint effort MacColl, Seeger and the Critics Group mooted the subject for nearly a decade and produced a mass of study material in the shape of recorded group discussions and working sessions - theoretical and practical work, voice, singing and relaxation exercises.... all up for grabs if only there was the interest Our personal archive alone covers the British, Irish and American oral Traditions - our own personal field recordings contain many hours of source singers talking about their art I've recently been dipping into other archives - Lomax, Wilgus, School of Sottish Studies, Helen Hartness Flanders.... all on line and listenable to... virtually untapped resources of songs, music and information It's been my experience that the best way to 'teach'folk singing is to get a bunch of folk-loving folkies together and create an atmosphere where they can discuss each others singing critically (positively and negatively) - once you get over the initial nervousness of the idea that people are not going to tell you that your singing is the best thing since sliced bread everybody present begins to learn and develop. That will never happen, of course, while people chase their tails deciding what folk song is When the Irish decided what Irish Traditional music was here in Ireland 'A Thousand Flowers Bloomed' and the music was guaranteed another two generation lease of life - youngsters in their thousands are now flocking into the music and playing it as well as I've ever heard it played - there's a lesson to be learned there, I think 'Participation' has to fit in with the understanding that, like any other art form, to participate requires a degree of dedication and commitment I believe anybody can sing - to become a singer needs work - the more work, the better the singer Dave Folk songs aren't written, they evolve and are absorbed - you can no more plan to write a folk song than you can a hit-song You can only make your song and see what happens to it That's why I put a large question mark over football songs Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 11 Feb 19 - 03:22 AM Al "on mudcat, they tend to be a bit hoity toity." There are very few 'academics' on Mudcat - I don't know any personally and the few I have dipped into, like the ones who put up useful lists of ballads and sources, I've always found extremely useful We wouldn't have a pot to piss in if people hadn't got off their bums and done the work You really need to deep-fry that chip on your shoulder and swallow it with a dash of salt and vinegar Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Dave the Gnome Date: 11 Feb 19 - 04:16 AM Folk songs aren't written, they evolve and are absorbed Precisely the point I made over 'our' version of Blue Moon! |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 11 Feb 19 - 04:42 AM "Precisely the point I made over 'our' version of Blue Moon!" Then how can it be a folk song until it has 'evolved'? Can't happen in a room among friends - it has to leave the nest and make its own way in the world Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST,kenny Date: 11 Feb 19 - 05:01 AM To lighten things up a bit, Jim wrote : "School of Sottish Studies" . Now there's a Freudian slip, if ever I saw one ! :) |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 11 Feb 19 - 05:19 AM One of my lesser ones Kenny - must add it to the growing list Jim |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: The Sandman Date: 11 Feb 19 - 05:28 AM please, go off and sing some songs and play music its more productive than all this hot air. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: GUEST,kenny Date: 11 Feb 19 - 05:43 AM I will if you will. |
Subject: RE: Where Have all the Folkies Gone From: Jim Carroll Date: 11 Feb 19 - 06:15 AM "please, go off and sing some songs and play music its more productive than all this hot air." PLease don't interfere if you have no interest Dick You'll be getting yourself a reputation as a 'folk policeman' Jim Carroll |
Share Thread: |
Subject: | Help |
From: | |
Preview Automatic Linebreaks Make a link ("blue clicky") |