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Jim Carroll interview

GUEST,iains 25 Mar 26 - 02:00 PM
The Sandman 25 Mar 26 - 02:47 PM
The Sandman 25 Mar 26 - 02:50 PM
The Sandman 26 Mar 26 - 03:59 AM
GUEST,Steve Shaw 26 Mar 26 - 09:12 PM
meself 27 Mar 26 - 11:40 AM
GUEST,Peter Laban 27 Mar 26 - 12:14 PM
GUEST 27 Mar 26 - 12:41 PM
GUEST,Keith Price 27 Mar 26 - 12:43 PM
GUEST,Steve Shaw 27 Mar 26 - 12:55 PM
The Sandman 27 Mar 26 - 05:34 PM
Nigel Parsons 27 Mar 26 - 07:22 PM
rich-joy 27 Mar 26 - 08:56 PM
Sol 28 Mar 26 - 12:27 PM
StephenH 29 Mar 26 - 02:06 PM
GUEST,Steve Shaw 29 Mar 26 - 05:17 PM
The Sandman 30 Mar 26 - 03:15 AM
GUEST,Steve Shaw 30 Mar 26 - 10:26 AM
GUEST,Steve Shaw 30 Mar 26 - 04:39 PM
Big Al Whittle 30 Mar 26 - 09:05 PM
GUEST,Steve Shaw 31 Mar 26 - 06:25 AM
Backwoodsman 31 Mar 26 - 07:48 AM
Nick Dow 31 Mar 26 - 10:27 AM
Richard Mellish 31 Mar 26 - 11:49 AM
GUEST,Wrong as usual, Shaw 31 Mar 26 - 12:30 PM
GUEST,Keith Price 31 Mar 26 - 12:54 PM
Jack Campin 31 Mar 26 - 03:08 PM
Big Al Whittle 31 Mar 26 - 03:36 PM
GUEST,Keith Price 31 Mar 26 - 03:59 PM
GUEST,Steve Shaw 31 Mar 26 - 04:18 PM
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Subject: Jim Carrol interview
From: GUEST,iains
Date: 25 Mar 26 - 02:00 PM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJHYr8zPHaA

An interesting narrative.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: The Sandman
Date: 25 Mar 26 - 02:47 PM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJHYr8zPHaA


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: The Sandman
Date: 25 Mar 26 - 02:50 PM

Very Interesting


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: The Sandman
Date: 26 Mar 26 - 03:59 AM

thankyou for putting this up.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: GUEST,Steve Shaw
Date: 26 Mar 26 - 09:12 PM

Well it's probably no secret (to anyone who took interest) that I was a staunch ally of Jim here (though in a few private exchanges with him I did tell him like it is) during the time that he was being harassed by several people here who were far inferior to him in most regards except for one: that Jim struggled to realise that the people taunting him here were people who were simply not worth his time and who he should have shrugged off. Quite simply, he was an amazingly insightful and supremely knowledgeable man who understood traditional music in a way that no-one else here could hope to match. This forum suffered one of its most severe losses when it failed to embrace his superb scholarship. Yeah, he was argumentative, opinionated and stubborn and didn't know when to hold back. But in the world of traditional music he is a mighty man - and we just let him go. Tragic.

.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: meself
Date: 27 Mar 26 - 11:40 AM

Well put, Steve (although I'm a little uneasy about your use of the past tense - I take it that's just in reference to his time here, and that I didn't miss something?).

Btw, some very interesting stuff in that interview, for anyone remotely interested in traditional song and singing.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: GUEST,Peter Laban
Date: 27 Mar 26 - 12:14 PM

A similar public interview was done some dark evening in Miltown Malbay. It was filmed/recorded but I fail to remember who holds the footage. It was mighty although it perhaps went on just a bit too long and Jim lost focus a bit. John Tunney chaired the night.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: GUEST
Date: 27 Mar 26 - 12:41 PM

Two questions, and a suggestion - was it Jim who farted in church?
Where's the oft mentioned song? Some misspelled subtitles be fun.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 27 Mar 26 - 12:43 PM

Well said Steve Shaw.
I only occasionally look in on this site now. It seems to be mainly lyric requests and obituaries.
It really was a good informative group at one time, and not just Jim.
I wish Max and others well.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carrol interview
From: GUEST,Steve Shaw
Date: 27 Mar 26 - 12:55 PM

On reflection, I suppose I should have referred to traditional song rather than traditional music. Whatever both those things are! ;-) I'm far more of a tunester than a songster (though I'll be out this evening singing one or two shanties with the lads in my band, a new diversion!), but I always appreciated Jim's learned input here.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: The Sandman
Date: 27 Mar 26 - 05:34 PM

Steve I agree.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 27 Mar 26 - 07:22 PM

Jim did add a lot of erudition here.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: rich-joy
Date: 27 Mar 26 - 08:56 PM

I really enjoyed that JC interview - thanks, All :)

(and yes, I do miss Jim's erudition here on The Cat!)

Cheers!
R-J (Down Under)


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: Sol
Date: 28 Mar 26 - 12:27 PM

I've just finished watching the Jim Caroll video. It was a great. His depth of knowledge, sincerity and his informal presentation was a joy.

Thanks for putting up the link, Iain (and the Sandman for the blue clicky).


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: StephenH
Date: 29 Mar 26 - 02:06 PM

I'll add my thanks for the link - it really was a very informative and enjoyable interview.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: GUEST,Steve Shaw
Date: 29 Mar 26 - 05:17 PM

Looking back at the last ten minutes or so of the interview, it would be tempting to take umbrage over his critique of modern folk bands (he singled out Steeleye for example, characterising them as akin to "pop music", a view which one could easily take as pejorative)... but he didn't say that such takes on the music are invalid, just that he doesn't want the songs of the "old singers" to be lost. I do agree with that sentiment but I didn't hear Jim saying that all music thrives on evolution, whether it be folk, jazz, pop or classical, and that we should cheerfully espouse that evolution. The "old singers" are now mostly dead, and we simply have to move on...


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: The Sandman
Date: 30 Mar 26 - 03:15 AM

but liking particular musical evolution is a matter of personal taste, not all musical evolvement is bad, nor necessarily is it good. to cheerfully evolve everything is nonsense, it is all down to personal taste.
we do not have to move on, we move on if we like how it evolves. steeleye span were attempting to popularise the music and it was a form of pop music,at the same time a version of folk music
personally, i do not find their musical evolvement particularly inspiring.
i find some of the jazz folk fusion more inspiring, but that is personal taste
"we simply have to move on£" quote
no no no, we move on dependent on its musical, personal appeal and competence


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: GUEST,Steve Shaw
Date: 30 Mar 26 - 10:26 AM

Well you appear to be being contrary for the sake of it there. I didn't say we should "cheerfully evolve," did I. Every genre of music I can think of has evolved in some way or another down the centuries and if music stands still it will wither away. New people, new approaches, new experimenting. It's there for the taking and if one doesn't like something new that's going on then democracy dictates that we can ignore it. Personally, I like a bit of everything (except for bubblegum and modern jazz) because I like to see folk pushing the boundaries in interesting ways. That's all.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: GUEST,Steve Shaw
Date: 30 Mar 26 - 04:39 PM

Heheh! There's no "Guest Steeleye." Some damn great ad suddenly took over my screen just as I was typing and it completely bamboozled me. Something about mis-sold car finance...

Anyway, I was about to type as follows:

Steeleye, Fairport, Bothies, Planxty and a whole host of others...Don't call it folk if you don't want to (Jim wouldn't have) but if you can't tell it from "pop" well there's summat awry with your thinking. Calling it "pop" is no more than a lazy way of doing it down. For years I worked with a dance teacher who wanted me to edit "pop songs" for her. I did about three or four hundred in all, having to listen very closely and repeatedly in order to accurately do the cuts, splices, fades, blending... and the vast majority of that music was well performed, well put together and done with great production values. An eye-opener for me. One song I edited down to about four minutes was American Pie (don't tell Don...). Not exactly Freddie and the Dreamers, but both "pop?" Most of what I did was what we'd call "pop" of course. Not all great, but neither is a lot of what we call folk music. We should choose our pejoratives more wisely I feel...


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 30 Mar 26 - 09:05 PM

I enjoyed the interview. It was nice to hear from Jim again.From his stuff on mudcat I had gained theimpression that he was with MaColl in the 1950's when the Singers Club was having ructions with Alex Campbell amongst others. Whereas he only met MacColl in 1969.
I suppose I had come into contact with MacColl's name in the 1960's when he was giving interviews to NME saying that Donovan wasn't folk music, plus The First Time Ever I saw Your Face was printed in all the Oak publications books of folksongs tht I bought to educate myself - I was a dumb kid. As well as that I'd seen Ewan's name as a school kid in the 1950's in the Singing together booklets.
My great grandparents were travellers, who came over to build the railways and canals in the early 19th century , so it was interesting to me to hear about what they got up to music wise. My grandad knew a lot of songs but I think they were mainly music hall things - very definitely written to entertain, rather than to tell folk stories - so really by the 1880's, my family was out of the folk music loop.
Years ago I bought a Joe Sweeny cd off Pete Coe and I read a folk tale off the cd cover and had a go at telling the story in a song. I have no doubt Jim wouldn't like what I tried to do to an Irish folk song, but anyway yer tis:-


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DIWBp9PEBc&list=RD5DIWBp9PEBc&start_radio=1


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: GUEST,Steve Shaw
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 06:25 AM

Well if Jim didn't/doesn't like what you did with it, he has options, the easiest of which is to not listen to it! The only harm you can do to a folk song is to not sing it. A good traditional song that's worth having can easily stand up to whatever treatment is meted out to it. It'll still be there in the end.

I'm reminded of Minnie Caldwell and Martha Longhurst in Coronation Street, who wouldn't dare say boo to a goose unless Ena Sharples had given her approval first. Jim might not quite be Ena, but Ewan definitely was!

And All Around My Hat by Maddy and Steeleye is one of my Desert Island eight...


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 07:48 AM

At last, Steve, you’ve found something that you and I completely, totally, and absolutely agree upon!


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: Nick Dow
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 10:27 AM

If Jim had behaved on Mudcat as he did in this interview, nobody would have had a problem with him. Quite the opposite.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: Richard Mellish
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 11:49 AM

I have met Jim a couple of times. I like him on a personal level and have great respect for his knowledge and dedication, not so much for some of his opinions. It was a shame that he felt unable to agree to disagree on here.

In particular he seemed determined to argue that because ordinary people (however defined) in Ireland made songs, therefore ordinary people in England could have make songs, therefore ordinary people in England did make songs, therefore most of the songs that we like were made by ordinary people. Steve Gardham in particular has amassed substantial evidence to the contrary.

On the whole, anyway, I am more inclined to Steve Roud's position; that how a song started is of less interest than its subsequent history. James Reeves' description "the dross of centuries" has merit.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: GUEST,Wrong as usual, Shaw
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 12:30 PM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84MUlINrcjw


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 12:54 PM

Richard Mellish
"Steve Gardham in particular has amassed substantial evidence to the contrary." no he hasn't. Steve states his research does not prove origin, at best probability.
I believe the origin and the development of the songs are of equal importance.
I don't see why it has to be one or the other. If the origin is ignored it would suggest an ethnomusicology approach to me.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: Jack Campin
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 03:08 PM

I won't be watching that. Jim did such a determined and effective job of representing traditional music as a fiefdom for embittered self-important old curmudgeons that I would be quite happy to see his entire memory erased. His impact has been overwhelmingly negative.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 03:36 PM

well you can't help it if you're a bit of a miserable old sod.   I have very similar personality traitts.
there is very little you can do about it. The world calls me a twat and denies itself my great insights into the human condition.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 03:59 PM

Jack Campin
If only Jim was a reasonable man, like yourself
It must be a miserable existence to be so embittered for so long.


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Subject: RE: Jim Carroll interview
From: GUEST,Steve Shaw
Date: 31 Mar 26 - 04:18 PM

Well I'm not sure what I was supposed to be wrong about but I did enjoy that clip - cheers!


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