Subject: Practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 02 Feb 18 - 06:04 AM I have just read the biography, Journeyman, by MacColl, he states that Peggy and he practised singing ballads and deliberately forgot verses and tried to ad lib. I think this is a good idea for various reasons, but primarily for learning the art of keeping composed when memory fails. obviously those people who perform with the safety net of words on stands will never be in this situation, their practising requiremets will be different, that is they bother to practise. I am interested in other peoples opinions on what I think was an unusual practising idea |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Mo the caller Date: 02 Feb 18 - 08:30 AM Not a lot of good if you sing in a choir. Is ad libbing when you know the words the same as in the panic of the moment? |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 02 Feb 18 - 08:40 AM Ewan and Peggy were fine performers who as a rule did duo gigs .practisin in a choir is hardly relevant, the whole point is that there should not be panic, that you are prepared mentally for a lapse of memory., Mo are you awre of alexander technique, Prof Alexander invented his technique to help perfomance as well as posture, mental perfomance as well as physical |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Jim Carroll Date: 02 Feb 18 - 08:41 AM There's an interesting, but unproven theory (from ballad scolar David Buchan) that many of the ballads had no set texts. but were remembered by singers as stories and remade at the point of singing I listened to Ewan sing for nearly thirty years and saw him begin to have difficulty in remembering words as he grew older. I cannot recall a time he ever dried up in a song - he ad-libbed successfully each time it happened He sometimes acknowledged his mistakes with a grin - but that was the only visible sign he was having problems Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 02 Feb 18 - 09:33 AM Jim the proof of the eating is in the pudding. I think the uk folk scene has much to learn [as regards performing and writing] from Ewan |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Jim Carroll Date: 02 Feb 18 - 09:59 AM Couldn't agree more Dick Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Will Fly Date: 02 Feb 18 - 05:37 PM So far (touch wood) in 50+ years of performing, I rarely forget the words of a song, but it happens to most of us now and then. One thing I never do is stop or pause or break the flow of a performance if I can help it. I'll sing something even if it's near gibberish, just to preserve the flow! An audience can be very forgiving. The secret of not forgetting words is, of course, in the thread title: PRACTISING songs - over and over again - until the words are embedded. I suppose you could say that ad-libbing is part of the Folk Process; singer A changes the words slightly; singer B hears and copies B's version and also changes a bit. And so on... By contrast, I played in a 1950s-style rock'n roll trio for some years, back in the 1980s, and I can tell you that dyed-in-the-wool rockers are sticklers for their music being performed word perfect. I was once taken to task very severely at a dance by an irate girl who enumerated every incorrect word I'd innocently substituted for a correct one in a particular song! |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Andy7 Date: 02 Feb 18 - 07:49 PM It's a very useful skill to be able to have the song continuing to play on in your head, even while you're forgetting the words. That way, you can accurately time some improvised words, or a humorous comment, or even a la-la-la, and then pick up the song again at the correct point. No harm, either, in throwing in a couple of extra, unplanned bars on your accompanying instrument (if you use one), to give your memory a second chance ... not many people will realise what you've done. Or if you're singing unaccompanied, smile, maybe subtly beat a couple of spare bars with your hand, and then pick it up again! But I agree, constant practice is definitely the key to all of this! The better you know your song, the easier it will be to save it. One example: at a singaround a couple of years back, during a weekend Song & Ale somewhere in Devon, I sang an unaccomapanied "I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen". I realised, as I was approaching the end, that I'd totally forgotten the penultimate line of the last verse, "And brightest rays of sunshine gleam". So instead, I sang the ending of that verse as, "There all your joys will come again, And all your grief will be forgot." A bit weak poetically - and it didn't even rhyme - but it was done almost seamlessly, and I don't think a lot of people noticed ... ... but only possible, because the song was engraved on my memory through countless practices, at home, in the car or walking down the street, during almost none of which I'd forgotten that particular line! |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: GUEST,Kristoffer Ross Date: 02 Feb 18 - 08:09 PM Slightly off topic, but at a concert a few weeks ago, I started singing one of my fellow shanty singer's verses in Johnny Leave Her- The audience noticed, since "Oh the skipper was bad but the mate was worse" had just been done. I had a "Leave her Johnny, leave her" to rhyme in "I believe I've sung the very wrong verse." It rhymed, and we got a good laugh. Learning all the easy to rhyme words is a good idea. (E.G. That chair rhymes with stair, mare, bear, there, hair, air, rare, tear, impair, compare, &c...) It's how improvisers can write whole blues songs on the spot, with a subject provided by the audience, no less. Best, Kristoffer |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Big Al Whittle Date: 02 Feb 18 - 09:02 PM i think its a common technique with people who have had drama training. i remember talking to some actors about it one night. |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 03 Feb 18 - 04:28 AM " I was once taken to task very severely at a dance by an irate girl who enumerated every incorrect word I'd innocently substituted for a correct one in a particular song!" can you imagine what she would be like in the scratcher, there one is[to quote the queen] shouting out hit me hit me with your rthym stick, and she belts you verbally and says its rythum not rythim. |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Howard Jones Date: 03 Feb 18 - 05:19 AM It's an essential performing skill, together with the ability (if you're accompanying yourself) to put in an instrumental break between verses and look is if it was planned. The great thing about ad libbing folk songs is that the words don't even have to rhyme, or the lines scan. The important thing is to do it with conviction so it doesn't look like a mistake. At the very least, keep going and mumble until you get back on track. |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: banjoman Date: 03 Feb 18 - 07:06 AM I was once told that if you practice too much you get very good at practicing |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 03 Feb 18 - 08:27 AM practising with an s, i am practising spelling |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: leeneia Date: 03 Feb 18 - 12:08 PM If the agency can find your song and tell you if it's copyright, then good. If the agency can't find it, then you are safe if the song was published before 1923. Re: Nelly. Black people in the south before Emancipation could be slaves or free. Unless Stephen Foster mentioned something about it in the lyrics, we will never know whether Nelly and her lover were slaves or free. However, I once read a historical novel set in New Orleans, and the author had written "She wore the red kerchief which indicated that she was a free woman." Does Nelly wear a red kerchief, perhaps? (Aunt Jemima does.) |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 03 Feb 18 - 03:21 PM As i reread JOURNEYMAN, what beomes evident is MacColls determination to do a job well, this is where analysing and practising are so important. |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 06 Feb 18 - 08:47 AM Subject: RE: practising songs From: banjoman - PM Date: 03 Feb 18 - 07:06 AM I was once told that if you practice too much you get very good at practicing...bollocks practising a lot is good but in my experience it is better to practise in periods of 30 to 45 minutes at one time rather than longer periods. practising when one is tired or run down is not a good idea, yes, how you practise is also important isolating problem parts of a song or tune is a good idea |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: GUEST,Knockroe Date: 06 Feb 18 - 09:58 AM Some great tips in this thread re how to get through a song when words fail memory. Thanks. God, I hate people using printed word sheets or, worse still, mobile phones while singing. It's gotta be from the head and heart |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Banjo-Flower Date: 08 Feb 18 - 05:58 PM I was once playing in an excellent tune (no songs)session in rural north lincolnshire UK where the tune sessions are few and far between where a melodeon player and myself were the only two playing from memory every one else had the music in front of them he leant over to me and said he did n't like to see people playing from music my reply was "do you want a session with people playing from music or no session at all" Gerry BTW we were the only older players there everyone else had probably just finished schooling/uni |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: GUEST,Kristoffer Ross Date: 08 Feb 18 - 11:01 PM Banjo-Flower, I agree - everything has it's place, and "it takes all kinds." If we judge people before they've gotten past the learning from a book stage, they're not going to stay with us. (This is just my teenage, homeschooled millennial point of view) Takk, Kristoffer |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: GUEST,Some bloke Date: 09 Feb 18 - 03:17 AM A smile and a reassuring sprinkle of panache.... To be fair, with traditional songs it?s not always noticed as ad Lib because even if it?s not what you intended to sing, anyone actually concentrating may assume a variation in the song. Which it is. And if the performance ends up on YouTube, it may get repeated. As I was delighted to hear when someone at a local club sang my ?version? of a verse to a song last year. (It wasn?t forgetfulness in that case, more of a mixed audience and realising a line was coming up where coal was referred to as a black devil. I changed it on the hoof to old devil.) |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Joe Offer Date: 09 Feb 18 - 03:40 AM I just can't get myself into the discipline of practicing songs by myself. I sing along with recordings, but that doesn't really help me master the song. What I find best, is to sing the song with or in front of forgiving friends, in a social singing situation. I learn songs much faster that way. Oftentimes, that's in a singaround group where I feel very comfortable. And usually, I'll sing from a lyrics sheet. When I have the song down solid, then I'll add it to my repertoire to sing in whatever situation. But in general, I find I learn songs best when I sing with others. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Will Fly Date: 09 Feb 18 - 04:35 AM I think what you're touching on there, Joe, is the subtle distinction between singing in a supportive social environment, and performing to an audience. I make no distinction here in the work and effort required to do the singing - just to comment that the solo performer has no fallback position. He/she has to get it right. I think that, no matter how much a musical piece is perfected in private, public performances will sharpen it and shape even more. |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Feb 18 - 07:35 AM After returning to my large repertoire of songs I've come to the opinion that the secret of 'learning' a song is to absorb the individual function or statement of each individual song in the first place Words are merely vehicles to carry a story, opinion or emotion set in verse form with a tune added. I learned a long time ago that the best way for me to retain a song was to recite it using natural speech patterns Once you make the interpretation of the song emotionally your own, the song becomes fixed - I have managed to revive over two hundred songs I had not sung for decades with very little effort and my retentive memory has never been great There are no "correct" versions of traditional songs anyway - they are all individual re-interpretations to one degree or another Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: GUEST Date: 09 Feb 18 - 09:31 AM The only piece of paper I carry onstage is the set list. Everything else is memorised, and if I do forget a word or even a whole line, I carry on, not that I'm clever or anything, and laugh about it later. I'm only human, not a machine. I don't like to see singers with sheets of paper - you may as well be reading your shopping list - it often makes for emotionless, robotic singing, sorry, but it's down to laziness. My brother, singing for 40+ years, always had bits of paper because he "just couldn't remember the words." Well, he's had a cataract operation, doesn't see so well, and is managing to remember the words just fine now!! Because he HAS to. I rarely forget words because, I rehearse my songs over and over again. |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: BobKnight Date: 09 Feb 18 - 09:36 AM Sorry folks - that was me in the posting marked "Guest" above. |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: GUEST,Some bloke Date: 11 Feb 18 - 03:22 AM Have to agree with Jim Carroll. Knowing, appreciating and having story line knowledge of what the song is trying to say, especially when it tells a story, as ballads do, helps you remember them. I sang Streams of Lovely Nancy for years before finding out what it is all about. Far easier to remember it now. I suppose that?s why I used to struggle with Sweet Thames Flow Softly. The verses would have been easier if the geography of the river flowed with the names locations but they jump around and don?t follow a story till the end. That took perseverance and bloody mindedness to ram it in my skull. Still, forty years on, it?s still there I suppose. Word association is the main trick I use. When I sing Recruited Collier for instance. To this day, I can still struggle to sing ?stubble field.? As I?m getting near to it, I still concoct an image of Barney Rubble, rhymes with Stubble. And the rest.... |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Andy7 Date: 11 Feb 18 - 07:13 AM Mnemonics are useful for remembering guitar chords. For example, one song I play has the sequence C Em F C F C D G. I remember it as CEltic FC (Football Club) + FC DaGgers (Dagenham and Redbridge). |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Jim Carroll Date: 11 Feb 18 - 08:30 AM "Sweet Thames Flow Softly." Me too - it has no real narrative form to follow and geographically, it's all over the place Fortunately, most English and Scots traditional songs have a set, usually chronological narrative Some Irish lyrical songs can present a problem Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 12 Feb 18 - 03:15 AM here is what i suggest for sweet thames. I met my girl at Woolwich Pier beneath the big crane standing And all the love I felt for her it passed all understanding Took her sailing on the river, flow sweet river flow London town was mine to give her, sweet Thames flow softly Made the Thames into a crown, flow sweet river flow Made a brooch of Silver town, sweet Thames flow softly At London Yard I held her hand, at Blackwell Point I faced her At the Isle of Dogs I kissed her mouth and tenderly embraced her Heard the bells of Greenwich ringing, flow sweet river flow All the time my heart was singing, sweet Thames flow softly Limehouse Reach I gave her there, flow sweet river flow As a ribbon for her hair, sweet Thames flow softly From Putney Bridge to Nine Elms Reach we cheek to cheek were dancing A necklace made of London Bridge her beauty was enhancing Kissed her once again at Wapping, flow sweet river flow After that there was no stopping, sweet Thames flow softly Gave her Hampton Court to twist, flow sweet river flow Into a bracelet for her wrist, sweet Thames flow softly But now, alas, the tide has changed, my love she has gone from me And winter's frost has touched my heart and put a blight upon me Creeping fog is on the river, flow sweet river flow Sun and moon and stars gone with her, sweet Thames flow softly Swift the Thames runs to the sea, flow sweet river flow Bearing ships and part of me, sweet Thames flow softly since it is as jim said all over the place geographically, why not think of verse 2 and3 in alphabetical order, verse one I Met, london yard second putny bridge third, the fourth verse is defintely the concluding verse |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 12 Feb 18 - 03:16 AM yes i have always had problems with molly bawn |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: GUEST,Thebarleymow Date: 14 Feb 18 - 10:45 PM Glad to see that I am not the only one who works and works at getting the words of songs beaten in to my memory. I have always considered it essential to thoroughly know the words of a song. It leaves you free to then sing the words with feeling and tell the story. To do otherwise is an insult to the listeners - in my opinion. I do not have a good memory and I have seen me take months to learn the words to a lengthy, or awkward song. But it must be done. Then of course the musical accompaniment has to be arranged, learned and added in. Once this has been perfected, the only thing remaining is to perform in public and have all the mistakes appear (an inevitability), be remembered and be eliminated before the next performance. Such is as it should be. So many sessions are now like being in a library with books and sheets of paper everywhere. If i (with my poor and enreliable memory) can do it, then so can others - if they make the effort. Well, that’s my rant over for the day - ha! |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: Severn Date: 15 Feb 18 - 10:48 AM I find it good to learn songs while walking, getting a verse down and gradually adding more. It also lets me set a desired pace and comfortable key for the song and gives you plenty of time to choose what to emphasise and doesn't make me a slave to the version I learned from, while enabling me to check back to my original sources to brush up on things without wanting to go back to singing it in the source's key which may have been uncomfortable for me. I'll still have my own way of things down pat in my head and can make needed adjustments or readjustments. Luckily, I have a nearby lake to walk around, pausing when I pass other people....... |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: The Sandman Date: 15 Feb 18 - 11:05 AM I often prectise whilst walking also driving, washing up, or in bed |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: GUEST,Some bloke Date: 15 Feb 18 - 12:33 PM I used to practice in bed. More places to hide my stash. I'll get me coat |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: FreddyHeadey Date: 02 Mar 18 - 06:52 AM In an interview with Martin Carthy by Jon Wilks on Grizzly Folk "...Do you have a method of remembering those ballads? When you launch into a song with 30-odd verses, are you relying on visualisation or something? Erm… I’ve just got good at organising them. Sometimes it feels like a film script. “That scene notes a change of scenery, so go to there.” But when you’ve organised it in a particular way, then it becomes very personal indeed. To forget it in performance is almost unthinkable, but that’s not to say that it doesn’t happen. It happened fairly recently and I said, “Sorry, I’m going to have to stop. This has gone.” Instead, what happened was that I started to speak the story, and then the line came back to me so I dived back into the song again. I’d seen people do it and wondered how they did it, and on this occasion, spontaneously, I did it. The thing was, I wanted to tell people the story, and just by telling the story, the line I wanted came to me. I can’t guarantee that will work every time. I think it worked because it was spontaneous......." https://www.grizzlyfolk.com/2018/02/28/martin-carthy-the-mega-interview/ ~~~~~~~~ thread for the whole MC/John Wilks interview /https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=163719 |
Subject: RE: practising songs From: CupOfTea Date: 13 Mar 18 - 05:56 PM It's completely understandable that folks don't want a song performance "read" off a sheet, or, heaven forfend, a digital device. I've been annoyed at that myself, but I don't see it as an absolute rule. I like to have my "cheat sheet" available even if I don't use it, because there are times when I just blank on what comes next, even on things I've practiced extensively. I'd rather have a glance at my mnemonics than have to skip a critical verse or blow a punchline sort of ending. I don't want to endure someone trying to play/sing something only vaguely familiar from the page or device. If someone has MADE THE EFFORT, but still needs some props, that's a different thing to me. I've not been performing much beyond open mics and sings, and do get a bit sweaty nervous still. I don't want to be known for only the top 20 songs I have strongly in memory, and enjoy sharing as wide a range of songs as I can. So the first couple times I trot out a new song I've been working up, I've got key words or chord patterns where I can see 'em. If it's a song I know well enough to sing, but haven't done for awhile, might have to look up the chords or what key I do it in. Saves me from having a "Frank Harte moment" - though he had extensive lyric sheets he used in workshop settings. I don't have his standing to try the patience of folks searching for a key or lyric. Is it so bad to want an expanding repertoire, if it means occasional lyric sheets? Can we save the purist judgements for professionals who get paid decent bucks? I like the answers above about wanting to have a session or not - being one who is slowly moving from sheet music to memory at Irish sessions, because I find it harder to remember what something starts on without words. Joanne in Cleveland who has been known to make lyric sheets for song alongs |
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