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This should set folk music back 100 year

Chris Partington 23 Sep 09 - 06:23 PM
Stringsinger 23 Sep 09 - 06:20 PM
Don Firth 23 Sep 09 - 06:10 PM
Tim Leaning 23 Sep 09 - 05:43 PM
olddude 23 Sep 09 - 05:43 PM
Lonesome EJ 23 Sep 09 - 05:40 PM
M.Ted 23 Sep 09 - 05:40 PM
The Sandman 23 Sep 09 - 05:36 PM
Richard Bridge 23 Sep 09 - 05:28 PM
Lonesome EJ 23 Sep 09 - 05:24 PM
Bonzo3legs 23 Sep 09 - 05:18 PM
Stower 23 Sep 09 - 05:14 PM
TheSnail 23 Sep 09 - 05:07 PM
Don Firth 23 Sep 09 - 04:45 PM
sing4peace 23 Sep 09 - 04:27 PM
Don Firth 23 Sep 09 - 04:25 PM
Bill D 23 Sep 09 - 04:21 PM
dick greenhaus 23 Sep 09 - 04:19 PM
robomatic 23 Sep 09 - 04:14 PM
Don Firth 23 Sep 09 - 04:07 PM
Barry Finn 23 Sep 09 - 03:45 PM
Stringsinger 23 Sep 09 - 03:38 PM
Don Firth 23 Sep 09 - 03:35 PM
Richard Bridge 23 Sep 09 - 03:32 PM
Dead Horse 23 Sep 09 - 03:29 PM
Stringsinger 23 Sep 09 - 03:23 PM
Stringsinger 23 Sep 09 - 03:22 PM
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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Chris Partington
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 06:23 PM

Oh. I still enjoy "All Around My Hat" and it is an old song, even if the shirts do look a bit flouncy in that clip.


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Stringsinger
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 06:20 PM

Pete Seeger was singing with the Weavers.

Pop goes the folk!
It's interesting to see that folk music in this time period was treated with a Hollywood
brush. It was the "in" thing at the time. The Troubadour in Los Angeles featured groups like this as did Leadbetters with Randy Sparks on Westwood Boulevard in West L.A.
"Up With People" was popular at the time.   There was the Hollywood folk crowd coming through the Troubadour. It was there I was exposed to the likes of Michele Phillips,
(and I missed meeting the notorious John) but I heard Steve Mann play. "The Modern Folk Quartet" were actually talented people as was Terry Kirkman of the "Association".

I accompanied Hoyt Axton at the Troubadour during that time.
The folk scene became quickly rock-and-rollized and the clean-cut gave way to the scroungy. Eventually, I had to leave that scene. Hollywood had left a bad odor.
Nothing like drug-addled folks singing folksongs. Consciousness-expanding all over the place. One of the best descriptions of this time is "Long Time Coming" by Dave Crosby.
I was captivated by his book. I played opposite him at a defunct poor-man's Troubadour which eventually turned into a West L.A. laundry called the New Balladeer. He was a fixture at the Troubadour's Monday night "hoots" for quite a time. The Byrds signed a recording contract with Columbia the night they came down to the New Balladeer to see Dave. There was a guy making hamburgers in the kitchen named John Kay who eventually had a group called "Steppenwolf", after the novel by Herman Hesse.

Pop goes the Brits Folks!
Snail, the folkscene in Britain was not immune as Ted has pointed out. It might
recover from some of it's stuffiness. It certainly had it's pop flurry as well.
What about Lonnie Donegan? Then there was skiffle. Lonnie apparently approached
Moe Asch in New York at Folkways to claim royalties for Leadbelly tunes. Moe invited him to come by and he would personally break a few recordings of Leadbelly over his head.

Then there were these Teddy Boys from Liverpool.

Stringsinger


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Don Firth
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 06:10 PM

During the 1950s and before, there was a slowly increasing awareness and interest in American traditional music, fed by collectors such as the Lomaxes, poet Carl Sandburg, and others, also fed by performers such as Burl Ives, Susan Reed, Richard Dyer-Bennet, et al. It was in the very early 1950s that I became actively interested.

At that time, if you mentioned that you sang folk songs, most people thought you were talking about Country and Western or what was referred to as "Modern Western Swing." It wasn't until a fair number of people, particularly college kids, started getting together spontaneously for song fests and to swap songs (what were originally called "hootenannies") that the commercial music interests woke up to the idea that there might be profit to be made in this music. The big turning point was when the Kingston Trio's rendition of "Tom Dooley" made the Hit Parade in 1958, and then what became known as "the folk revival" was off and running.

Was it really a folk revival?

One of the problems with folk music as far as the commercial interests were concerned was—who gets the royalties? These songs are all public domain. So not us! We gotta do something about that!

So—a lot of goofy stuff started going on. At one time, some nineteen different people claimed copyright on "Greensleeves." And "folk songs" were being ground out by professional song writers for commercially oriented groups such as The New Christy Minstrels to sing and record. Songs that sounded a bit like folk songs, but with a known composer who could garner the proceeds. Plastic "folk songs." And, for that matter, plastic "folk groups."

The Weavers came together because they were all into folk music before all this got started. They formed a group "to introduce the American people to their own traditional music" and their first recordings came out, I believe, in 1949 or 1950. That's when I first heard them on juke boxes and on the radio. They sang traditional songs.

The group Peter Paul and Mary was put together some years later by impresario Al Grossman. So rather that coming together spontaneously, they were a "manufactured" group. They sang some traditional songs, but mostly recently written songs.

So—there were people who were interested in traditional folk music. And there was the commercial "pop-folk" phenomenon. The latter spawned a fair number of manufactured folk groups and equally ersatz folk songs that were written to be sung by such groups—and on which, royalties could be collected.

I'm not making this up. I knew a guy who sang with the New Christy Minstrels for about a year and wrote a lot of songs for them.

So when someone mentions "the folk revival," I'm not quite sure what they're talking about—in the same way as when they start talking about "folk songs." I need a little clarification.

NO! Let's not start that discussion yet again!

Don Firth


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Tim Leaning
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:43 PM

enjoying the clips they are ace guys.


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: olddude
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:43 PM

Be afraid, Be very afraid ... Oh my goodness scary stuff boys and girls


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Lonesome EJ
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:40 PM

and speaking of acid heads at the cocktail party, watch as Hugh and Jerry converse pleasantly, and then Mr Garcia provides a moment that transcends cultural boundaries.


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: M.Ted
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:40 PM

That was a nasty little jab, Snail--and given that the British Folk revival seems to have revolved around this sort of thing All Around My Hat--people who live in glass houses...


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: The Sandman
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:36 PM

is that string singer singing with the weavers?


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:28 PM

Oh well, I like modesty and humility.


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Lonesome EJ
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:24 PM

When world's collided.

Some of the video still available from that era is nearly surreal in the juxtaposition of the old vaudeville schtick overlapping with the music and performers of a completely seperate new era. There is a youtube video of John Lennon and Yoko Ono on the Merv Griffin Show with Henny Youngman that is striking in the same way.
In the Hullabaloo clip, the costumes, set, and performers are completely out of place with the song, and then in walk McGuinn and the Byrds, like acid freaks stumbling into a Manhattan cocktail party, to top it all off.


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Bonzo3legs
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:18 PM

Ah but totally sincere sincerity!


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Stower
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:14 PM

For me, Debby Reynolds singing "If I Had A Hammer" is so bad that it tips right over into (unwittingly) inspired: the silly choregraphy, the faked sincerity, the embarassing melodrama. Thank you, Stringsinger, I haven't laughed so much in ages.


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: TheSnail
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 05:07 PM

I'm sorry, but from the eastern side of the pond it was difficult to see that this was a parody. Isn't that what the US folk revival was like? (Yes, I have seen " A Mighty Wind".)

Was it really any more embarrasing than this -

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wik2uc69WbU

or this -

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCifK-vIG2k?


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Don Firth
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 04:45 PM

Listening to the perky blonde singing about how she's picked apples and harvested hay reminded me of the time Jesse Fuller sang in one of Seattle's better coffeehouses for two weeks. One evening, while introducing a song, he remarked, "I kinda get a laugh out of some of these clean-cut college boys singin' about bein' a 'steel drivin' man.' That's 'cause I have drove some!"

Don Firth


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: sing4peace
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 04:27 PM

That was a lot of fun.
Entertainment...
what a concept!

JK


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Don Firth
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 04:25 PM

A Spockumentary?

Don Firth


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Bill D
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 04:21 PM

So....have they done Child ballads yet? (MY demented mind wants to see the girls in shorts come out and then do a straight (except for costumes) version of "The Two Sisters"..)

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Second - it isn't folk. So why should it have any effect on folk."

Sadly, enough of this was done that many people have the idea that it IS folk. They have an acoustic guitar and they aren't singing "Rock Around the Clock"...it MUST be folk. (The horse will sing in the next video)


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: dick greenhaus
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 04:19 PM

Funny, I found it hard to distinguish between that and an awful lot of pop-folk from the 60s and 70s.


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Subject: RE: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: robomatic
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 04:14 PM

Check and mate:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnqqdZZddFE&feature=related


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Subject: RE: Review: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Don Firth
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 04:07 PM

". . . if we could perform to that standard, we would be out gigging not here posting."

What standard is that, Richard?

As far as that goes, many of us currently posting on Mudcat can—and have—performed to some damned high standards. And some continue to do so.

The standard I set for my own performances was to sing for general audiences as well as folk music fans (not just confine my efforts to folk clubs) and introducing them to traditional folk music, not what many people regarded as folk music (which would include the video Frank linked to). Some of my audiences included classical music and early music aficionados, who were used to some pretty high musical standards. And I made a living at it.

So snorting at that video is not exactly a case of "sour grapes."

Have you seen the movie (mockumentary) "A Mighty Wind?" Lots of people have seen that movie (including a surprising number of folkies) and didn't get the joke.

Don Firth


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Subject: RE: Review: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Barry Finn
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 03:45 PM

come on this was recorded back around 65' & Debbie Reynolds I think had a hand in it's production or something. I think some of the members belonged later to the goup "We 5" (you we're on my mind & walk right in?). Let's no get to over excited

Barry


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Subject: RE: Review: This should set folk music back 100 ye
From: Stringsinger
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 03:38 PM

I think that it's done very well as a spoof on ......well I hesitate to name the group.

Setting something back 100 years is a trope. "Trope (linguistics), a rhetorical figure of speech that consists of a play on words" not to be taken literally. The irony is that folk music is already set back. (It's a joke, son!)

It's what many think of as being folk and that's the point.

It's all "folked up"....another trope.

Frank


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Subject: RE: Review: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Don Firth
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 03:35 PM

Oh, Gawd! I wasn't ready for THAT!!

Does this mean that some totally demented Hollywood producer wants to do a remake of "Hootenanny Hoot?"

We are DOOMED!

Don Firth


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Subject: RE: Review: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 03:32 PM

Regrettably, the thread and the above posts vex me considerably.

First - maybe not for Stringsinger, but certainly for most of us, is we could perform to that standard, we would be out gigging not here posting. Not that I like it - but it is done better than average.

Second - it isn't folk. So why should it have any effect on folk.

Third - if folk wanted to go anywhere, back 100 years would be good, 200 better and so on.


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Subject: RE: Review: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Dead Horse
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 03:29 PM

So thats what the Everly Bros were doing before they made it big.


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Subject: RE: Review: This should set folk music back 100 ye
From: Stringsinger
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 03:23 PM

This is amazingly bad. Another one is Debby Reynolds singing "If I Had A Hammer".


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Subject: Review: This should set folk music back 100 year
From: Stringsinger
Date: 23 Sep 09 - 03:22 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFAhW0GvuTE#t=01m30s


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