Subject: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Phillip Date: 03 Jun 20 - 09:35 AM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiC5sCZgWjM I think we can all agree that Ewan MacColl could listen like fuBilly-O. It's not technically level 3, I don't think, but it's a certain level 2 and maybe supportive comments and nodding and shit would have woken Peggy. (I really wanted to call it "Critical Discussion of Ewan MacColl's Listening Style" but Mudcat wouldn't allow the length.)
-Joe Offer, Mudcat Music Editor- |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Jim Carroll Date: 03 Jun 20 - 12:13 PM HERE Wonderful Phillip, Sheila at her best and Ewan at his most typical - nice piece of film - brings back wonderful memories It's worth letting the clip run on to the next item, superb young Irish piper, Katherine Dickson playing the slow Air "Táimse im' Chodladh" and the jig, "King of the Pipers" on the Uilleann Pipes Thanks Not sure why it's in BS Jim |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: leeneia Date: 03 Jun 20 - 12:28 PM Anybody who endured that voice for 2:03 minutes deserves our heartfelt thanks. Nice cotton grass at 10 seconds. ` |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: punkfolkrocker Date: 03 Jun 20 - 12:28 PM seeing as we are down in BS.. wtf is "fuBilly-O"...!!!??? [ a pass code for a secret Billy Fury bootleg download site..??? - I wish...] |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Phillip Date: 03 Jun 20 - 01:17 PM It was going to be “Ewan can listen like fuck” but half way through I began to wonder if I could say fuck or not so I changed it to Billy O. |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Phillip Date: 03 Jun 20 - 01:18 PM No one understands my attempts at humour. Perhaps they aren’t, er, humorous enough. |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Phillip Date: 03 Jun 20 - 01:26 PM My tea was nice tonight though, so that’s a step forward. |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Jim Carroll Date: 03 Jun 20 - 01:52 PM "No one understands my attempts at humour. Sorry Phil - off form - I cracked a rib yesterday - (not laughing) Jim |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: punkfolkrocker Date: 03 Jun 20 - 02:47 PM Billy O is something I haven't heard for donkeys years.. Is it more northern slang..??? I'm down in the south west... |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Jim Carroll Date: 03 Jun 20 - 02:54 PM "Is it more northern slang..???" Didn't realise it was restricted to the North - if it is The Liverpool kids used it to sing: My Brother Billy-O Played the banjo Up the back-jigger O (back entry - whoops - back-alley; don't want that to be misinterpreted after the dirty-words thread) Jim |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: rich-joy Date: 03 Jun 20 - 07:56 PM Haven't heard that expression since my 1950s Aussie childhood!! (e.g. "Gee, it hurt like billy-o!") Anyway, I wanted to have my 2c's worth about the words "woken Peggy" in the O.P. I often close my eyes when listening to a singer or musician, the better to concentrate and hear, without visual distractions, and it royally pisses me off to have smartarse comments made to me to "wake up!" and being nudged ...... Jest sayin. R-J |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Phillip Date: 04 Jun 20 - 04:36 AM As the OP - old person? - I can honestly say that it was an attempt at humour, and not intended to cause anyone any unpleasant memories or thoughts at all, and I apologise to you for doing so. |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: Phillip Date: 04 Jun 20 - 04:37 AM (I do know what OP really stands for...) |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: rich-joy Date: 04 Jun 20 - 05:41 AM I don't usually react so quickly in print, so yes, obviously some memories of annoying people there, haha!! - sorry :) And at this point in time, there's probably only Peggy herself left, who could say whether she really was listening intently or "resting her eyes" !!! R-J |
Subject: RE: BS: Critical Row about EM's Listening Style From: The Sandman Date: 04 Jun 20 - 07:22 AM Thanks and thnks to joe stead for putting it up on youtube |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Phillip Date: 05 Jun 20 - 03:56 AM "The thread ended up in the non-music section wecause the thread title wasn't understandable. You're better off to be accurate, so that people know what's inside. I changed the thread title. I hope it's reasonably accurate now. -Joe Offer, Mudcat Music Editor-" Not exactly. It ended up there because that was where I deliberately put it, vainly hoping for a quiet laugh in a backwater, hoping not to attract too much attention or spark any anti-MacColl diatribes by the people who like to do that kind of thing. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 05 Jun 20 - 04:32 AM "And at this point in time, there's probably only Peggy herself left, who could say whether she really was listening intently or "resting her eyes" !!!" Not really Ewan and Peggy sat exactly like that week after week at Critics Group meetings while intense discussion on singing took place - they were very much part of those discussions - as I was I was the only one who ever fell asleep at a meeting - on my first day at work in London Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 05 Jun 20 - 06:43 AM Incidentally I suggest people take a peek at Phillip's wonderful clip agan Alec seems to have nodded off and Belle appears to be mouthing the words in her sleep Maybe they'd all had a late session the night before :-) Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Doug Chadwick Date: 05 Jun 20 - 08:03 AM Don't worry Phillip. I, at least, saw your opening post for the piss-take that it was intended to be. I didn't expect others to take it so seriously. DC |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 05 Jun 20 - 08:14 AM Phillip and I are non the same wavelength, I think - I'm never sure of everybody else when it comes to discussing Ewan Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: rich-joy Date: 05 Jun 20 - 09:12 AM Re Belle mouthing the words in the clip - I thought that it was probably something she would be almost unable to stop herself from doing! I then read this interesting quote in Shelia's Obit in The Guardian, 17Dec2014 by Derek Schofield : " ..... Her mother, Belle, was the source of many of Sheila’s songs, although until Belle’s death in 1997 Sheila was not always allowed to sing them. The family repertoire was large, however, and ballads such as Twa Brothers and The Mill o’ Tifty’s Annie were performed superbly by Sheila. It was Belle’s brother, Donald MacGregor, who taught Sheila, when she was still a girl, many of the family ballads learned from his father. It was not simply a matter of learning the words and tune. Donald instilled in Sheila the “conyach” – his word for the emotional expression in the song that comes from the heart not the head. He taught her all the ballads orally – Donald could not read or write..... " Wish there were more clips of the younger Sheila singing! In this clip, Sheila sings Mill o' Tifty's Annie through and Belle explains about "conyach" : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZnorPhVjCo R-J |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: GUEST,Hootenanny Date: 05 Jun 20 - 04:28 PM Thanks for posting that link rich-joy. When I was working for PPL seeing vast sums in royalties going out to pop so called musicians. I was very pleased to be able to register Sheila to enable her to collect unpaid royalties due to her and her late mother. It wasn't a large sum but enough for her to thank me profusely. It was a pleasure to get some funds to people who really deserved. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: sciencegeek Date: 07 Jun 20 - 07:07 AM it was a great experience to see Belle and Sheila, along with their family, sing for our folk music association here in the USA back in the late 1980s... very special folk |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave Hanson Date: 07 Jun 20 - 08:52 AM Sheila performed at Ripponden Folk Club many years ago, a magic night. Dave H |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 07 Jun 20 - 09:13 AM Sheila and Belle stayed with us after their last appearance at The Singers Club Belle buggered off to bed early and Sheila, Pat and I got rotten drunk emptying a bottle of Glenmorangie (Sheila did the pouring) - wish I'd had the tape-recorder handy (I can only remember snatches of the evening) Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: r.padgett Date: 07 Jun 20 - 09:29 AM I understood Ewan recorded songs from Sam Larner ~ have they not been made available on Musical Traditions? Ewan's & Peggy's The Singing Island contains a collection of songs from a number of sources 1960 ~ and I think would include songs collected from Sam Larner ~ my copy was down at £1.50 which would have been after 1971 when we went decimal Ray |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 07 Jun 20 - 09:38 AM Ewan and Peg recorded a great deal of Sam If you want it, it's here Most of the songs are available on M T, Topic and Folkways but only a little of the talk was used for The Radio Ballad and a series of four programmes for children We also have a film of Sam and harry Cox (filmed separately - they never met) WE have that too If you want any of these PM me an e-mail address Jim, |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: r.padgett Date: 07 Jun 20 - 02:00 PM I have Harry Cox CD and Sam Larner as mentioned above, thanks Also MacColl's own book of written songs and Singing Island oh and the Song Carriers series of CDs Ray |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 07 Jun 20 - 04:04 PM Will put up what you have and once I have an e'mail address, will link you tow where to find and download it Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Raggytash Date: 07 Jun 20 - 04:22 PM Any royalties due on any of this? |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: GUEST,Derek Schofield Date: 07 Jun 20 - 04:32 PM Ray... double CD of Sam Larner on musical traditions... mainly maccoll recordings if i remember correctly... Derek |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 07 Jun 20 - 05:25 PM "Any royalties due on any of this?" Not unless Ewan stole them - he gave them to me Snide tules OK with some people who never give anything away Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 08 Jun 20 - 02:19 AM For the record - am now working on the Poetry and Song 14 volume set if people haven't been put off Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: r.padgett Date: 08 Jun 20 - 04:49 AM Yes MT Rod Stradling continues with his CD production ~ lots of words online too Ray |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 08 Jun 20 - 07:16 AM Rod is one of the people who has expressed concern at the pparent declining fortunes in Traditional song The sales (around half a dozen) of the magnificent set of Sam Larner's songs earned special mention DEspit this, Rod soldiers on and, I hope, will continue to do so I was pleased ro be able to assist with his recent North Yorksire collection and particularly happy to supply a large number of Scots Traveller singers for his MacColl Seeger Songbook CD rom These sort of productions need all the help they can get if the songs are going to survive Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Raggytash Date: 08 Jun 20 - 08:48 AM Jim, you have no idea of what I do or do not give away. You have no knowledge of if I do work, or do not do work, for charities. You do even know if I am generous or not when I go to the pub. What I would not do however is to pass on copyright work. So, could I suggest before you make any more wild accusations you ensure you have the correct and relevant facts before you. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 08 Jun 20 - 10:23 AM "Jim, you have no idea of what I do or do not give away. No, of course I don't, any more than you have any idea of the relationship I developed with Ewan and Peggy that leads me to believe thay wouldn't mind my passing on their albums to others as they did to people like me That doesn't stop you snideswiping when I try to echoe th "pass it on" generosity I got through working with them It is none of your business what I do with these albums - I do no more than most of us have done by sharing what we have with others to help them become better singers Were oir Peggy or one of the family who objected to doing what I do, you might have a pont When it comes from people who leave the impression that they don't even like the music we are talking about - what can you say !! Don't commenent on what I do in the unpleasant way you have and I's refrain from sticking my nose in your business Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Raggytash Date: 08 Jun 20 - 11:56 AM If you're happy to defraud the estate of MacColl then fine. All your bleating about Peggy knows about this is hogwash to cover your errors. PS I could suggest you let this drop you are doing yourself no favours. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 08 Jun 20 - 02:01 PM "If you're happy to defraud the estate of MacColl then fine." Just as you're happy to prevent his generosity from continuing - and you don't even like the music he stood for - money more important than art We know all about that attitude We are talknig about a pittance next to Ewan's art continuind Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: r.padgett Date: 08 Jun 20 - 02:04 PM Yes I have spent a while throwing stuff away as I couldn't find the Sam Larner double CD ~ found now thanks ~I must be one of the half dozen ~ it is entitled Cruising Round Yarmouth 1958 #1960 Ewan and Peggy recordings MTCD369~0 Ray |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Raggytash Date: 08 Jun 20 - 02:12 PM As long as you keeping posting about this Jim I will continue to remind you that you are defrauding his estate. I'll go one further if you carry this on I will remind you on every occasion on every thread every time you post about MacColl that you are defrauding his estate. Your choice. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 08 Jun 20 - 02:33 PM "As long as you keeping posting about this Jim I will continue to remind you that you are defrauding his estate." I can't stop you doing that, but at least I thought you might have the deceny to address the poinsti I'm making Why not just contact Peggy or the family and lt her sort it out ? Or would you rather just take your revenge publicly What you snided about above has nothing to do with Royalties - that was just childish spite I have a letter from Peggy which she sent when we made the 'Freeborn Man' programmes - (for which we received only expenses which neither covered our layout or the three days journey to Oxford and back or the editing time) - giving us carte blanche anything we had been given while we worked with them as we see fit All you are achieving with this spitefulness is to prevent me drawning the attention of young people to Ewan's work If that is your aim - good luck to you - you wouldn't be the first and I don't suppose you will be the last Finished here before you manage to close this thread You and Dave really have shown your true colours - did I get that wrong Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Raggytash Date: 08 Jun 20 - 02:57 PM I have no reason to want you not to draw young people attention to MacColl writings. He wrote some of the finest FOLK songs that are sung today, and hopefully will be sung for years to come. What I do object to is your damned near deification of the man. His shit stank, he couldn't pee straight just like the rest of us but you treat him like some kind of god at the same time as you deny his estate income that should be theirs. I will say this again so you are quite clear. Despite your "deification" and your professed undying admiration of him you are quite happy to give his material away, material that his family have every right to expect the income from. That is wrong, that is unethical, that is theft. I shall remind you each time you post ……………. if you wish. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 08 Jun 20 - 02:58 PM Incidentally Some time ago I linked one of you pair to my PCloud box containing the 'copyrighted' BBC collection and other similar stuff It was accepted with great thanks and an enquiry as to whether it was ok to pass it on Changes of heart seem to come more regular than changes of underwear with some people Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Raggytash Date: 08 Jun 20 - 03:03 PM Weren't me for sure. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: The Sandman Date: 08 Jun 20 - 03:55 PM Is it unethical, Jim Says I have a letter from Peggy which she sent when we made the 'Freeborn Man' programmes - (for which we received only expenses which neither covered our layout or the three days journey to Oxford and back or the editing time) - giving us carte blanche anything we had been given while we worked with them as we see fit. Jim is not making any money out of it, and has permission. how is it unethical. he is not making financial gain. he is trying to bring attention to MacColls work |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Raggytash Date: 08 Jun 20 - 04:09 PM Dick, if I copied one of your CD's for a friend you, quite rightly, would be incensed. There is no difference. If I claimed that I had done so to bring your work to the attention of other people you would still be incensed. There is no difference. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: The Sandman Date: 08 Jun 20 - 04:44 PM no , it is more like this,I say to you i give you this cd, you can copy it and do what you want with it after my death you send it to a radio station to play so my work gets noticed. the essential point is that i gave you the cd and you being a very close and trusted friend are not trying to make money out of it, but trying to get my work noticed further. Iwould get off my cold marble slab play a jig on my concertina and do the hokey cokey with all the available nuns |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: The Sandman Date: 08 Jun 20 - 04:48 PM anyway after you are dead you do not get incensed, unless you are very high church, and i am a quaker |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Jun 20 - 02:42 AM Leave it Dick Ewan made albums in order that the songs and ballads he researched would be passed on and resung - I know hat for a fact He and Peggy mde them for a record company that specialised in Education and the Arts - much of their work was 'specialist' - it wan financed by a big record company, but rtheir output -folk (national and international), poetry, prose literature, and Classical music, was aimed at educating people into the betterment of society rather than profiting from it - Decca made enough money from the Music Industry to b able to allow Argo to do that Thet fitted in quite well with Ewaan and Peggy's own outlook on life, and they passed athat attude on to people like me - and they did it by making sacrifices, their time, their home weekly, a constant sharing of their knowledge As far as their records went, the important ones we hawked around to the clubs they performed at and sold at cost (pretty much as we do with the few we've put out) When they fell into money accidentally through a love song Ewan wrote to Peggy, thy ploughd a lump pf it back into the music they loved and thought important - making recordds of folk and their own songs for a small section of the folk music population they had always worked for Ewan told ne of his total bemusement when his first significant royalties cheche laded on the doormat of their somewhat cramped, three bedroom maisonette on the upper floors of a house in a London Suburb They never moved - they could have done - they never really upped their life-style, when they bought a tiny holiday home in the Scottish Borders they threw it open to people like Pat and I for our pleasure - the only payment they asked in return is that we took on a few hour long minor cleaning job in the house to help keep the house habitable for the next guest In all the twenty years I knew Ewan - and the thirty odd years after his death I have kept in contact with Peggy - the last thing you associated them with was "money" Anybody who now wishes to do that - especially those who don't appreaciate their art - and would make a major issue of a tiny possible amount of royalties to be made out of the faled of a minute number of specialist records which might be sold to a tiny number of people, (overpriced, in my opinion), then split between three sons, a daughter and several grandchildren - after a large lump having being taken out by the production company - shows no respect for Ewan as an artist, nor any real concern for his family Ewan's raison d'être was to popularise the People's music and to create new songs using its forms In a small, small way - that's the attitude I take - to echo what he taught me to do and be Anybody who wants to change that objective by hanging a pathetic few sheckles worth of price tag on Ewan's legacy, undervalues Ewan as an artist and is not worth t'the oxygen of publicity' (to borrow mad- Maggie's phrase) Incidentally - Ewan once boasted to me that if he had been paid the royalties owing to him by theatre companies in Eastern Europe like Brecht's Berliner Ensemble, and other Socialist groups still performing his plays up to the end of the last century, he could have retired wealthy - he was proud of that fact - nor resentful or litigious Ewan was prone to exaggeration, but whatever he claimed had a basis in fact, in my experience Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 09 Jun 20 - 03:49 AM You and Dave really have shown your true colours Which Dave are you referring to, Jim? Seeing as I have not contributed to this thread I guess either a) It is not me or b) It is me and you just want to provoke a reaction. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: GUEST,Pseudonymous Date: 09 Jun 20 - 04:20 AM I have to say it sometimes looks to me as if McColl and Seeger (and possibly Lloyd, who Jim appears to have taxied round) exploited Jim and his electric/technical skill. Expenses only. Was he paid the full union rate for all the re-wiring he did? Like the lady who was happy to be a childminder in return for lessons. She may have felt it a good deal, but it seems to me that this was because of some rather odd 'worship' or 'damn near deification' of the man as somebody above put it that seems to have gone on in some quarters. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Jun 20 - 04:39 AM " Was he paid the full union rate for all the re-wiring he did?" I was paid in kind - they fed me, gave me a bed, paid my fare and tld me to help myself to copies of all the recordings I could manage When I refused payment - they gave me a magnificent Appalachian Dulcimer belonging to their son Hamish who couldn't use it when he blew his fingers off in an accident Ewan and Pegy threw their home open to wannabe singers like me monthly for nearly ten years Ewan sweated blood preparing the evenings (I saw him) and both of them exhausted themselves The only charge was a levy to pay for group equipment and expenses One of the first 'out of Group' activities I attended when I joined was a magnificent 2-hour lecture Peggy gave at the Union Tavern on accompaniment (I have the recording) - it cost nothing, though Peggy had obviouly put a great deal o research into preparing it That type of things was common among the people I hung out with at one time until the Folk Scene became dominated by people who placed a placed a price-tag on everything - People who knew the price of everything and the value of nothing I met a lot of people like that when I began to do electrical for some of the wealthiest people in London People like that tend to think themselves as important but in fact they contribute nothing to their fellow human beings Tell me what you think again Pseud ??? No-ne here deifies MacColl - he was a flawed human being who left behind a legacy of work and thought that has yet to be climbed Pity there aren't too many climbers up to the job nowadays - it's still there Why the **** aren't you people prepared to discuss his ideas rather than constantly side at someone who has been dead for three decades and can't answer back What have you done to merit such arrogance ? Jim ? |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Phillip Date: 09 Jun 20 - 04:58 AM This is all why I put this in the BS section! I wish I hadn't bothered. Because it was obvious that eventually we would get to a series of posts of which the underlying motive force is something similar to this: "What I do object to is your damned near goddizing of the man." Why on earth should anyone object to what someone else thinks about another person, none of whom have done any harm? Or if you do, why bother pursuing it in an internet forum, when it clearly won't make any difference and even if it did that wouldn't be important? (I believe Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Bill Gates and the ghost of Thomas Aquinas are not gagging desperately to see who gives in first on this massively popular "discussion" on this bleeding-edge of popular opinion during the time of coronavirus, me too, and black lives mattering.) MacColl is dead, who cares if his shit stank? MacColl is dead and some of the people who really like him - Jim doesn't goddize him or anything like it, being a Catholic I can spot a believer when I see one - some of us who really like his work in theatre and folk song are heading more rapidly than we would like in that direction too, so maybe let us have some fun without trying to kick the shit out of us. MacColl is dead and his family almost certainly make far more from The First Time Ever I saw Your Face than they ever will from people on here sharing a few files. Maybe we should picket second hand record shops and stop them selling scratchy bits of vinyl because the MacColls want to sell copies of them instead? Although I suspect that the estates of the people whose record companies issued the vinyl in the first place might object to Bandcamp, actually. My son-in-law is a lawyer, I will ask him his learned opinion. As the OP do I have copyright to delete this whole topic? I wish I did. Joe Offer has a lot to answer for. (That's a joke by the way, Joe.) |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 09 Jun 20 - 05:45 AM That's not really the point, Phillip. As I am sure your son-in-law will tell you, copyright is a legal minefield. Whatever the rights and wrongs of this particular issue, I would hate to see Mudcat closed down or have a cease and desist notice issued for assisting in breaches of copyright. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: GUEST,CJ Date: 09 Jun 20 - 05:47 AM Just to pitch in - as a working musician, I'd rather my music was shared illegally amongst enthusiasts than listened via Spotify etc. The amount of money made from those places is ridiculously small. The McColl kickers I just don't understand. If you're not interested in McColl, just do something more positive with your time. Go for a walk. Write a song. Phone your mum. Your trolling of Jim is SO obvious and dull. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: GUEST,jim bainbridge Date: 09 Jun 20 - 05:51 AM In the early 60s, as a regular visitor to Collett's record shop I came across MacColl & Seeger's work for Folkways. I bought a cardboard covered Folkways LP of the Elliotts of Birtley there. It seems Folkways wanted material from the Durham mining industry & Johnny Handle pointed M & S to the family, some of whom who had been to the Newcastle folk club he'd set up in 1958 with Louis Killen. I'd never heard of them, and owe a lifelong friendship with the Elliotts to that production to Johnny, of course, but also to MacColl & Seeger. I also bought a Folkways LP called 'Bothy Ballads of Scotland' -the cover listed a lot of such songs I'd never heard of. However, although I did not expect that all the bothy ballads collected by M & S were not from the original singers. MacColl actually sang HIMSELF what had been collected, which I found disappointing to say the least. M & S had not done this with the Elliotts, and I have always been interested to know why they did this? I can't think of any other serious collector who has done this and, not being an aficionado, I don't know if this was a frequent practice afterwards? I would hope the original recordings are available somewhere, but I'd have thought what they did would be anathema to any serious collector? Did Folkways insist on it for some reason or is there another explanation? there are a limited number of people who might know- any idea, Jim C? |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Jun 20 - 05:51 AM I's be perfectly happy to stick with this thread if it would continue on the title theme and not this old-usual shit I wouldn't be too happy o see anything delete - won't repeat the old Liverpool saying of the advantage of knowing where the dog has been before you put your foot down I know the Mod's rule of not opening a thread on a subject when one has been closed This forum has far too many no-go areas without adding to the list I would ask, with respect, that you withhold your copyright, otherwise it would be yet another notch on the belt of the corpse-knockers It's heartening to have a 'fellow-feeler' on board - it's been quite a while Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Phillip Date: 09 Jun 20 - 10:27 AM Dave the Gnome, I disagree with you, in several ways and have lots to say about it. But deifying Jim as I do I will follow his line and shut up. Instead I will email him my answer so we can both nod our heads and say "Ah, good point well made." |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 09 Jun 20 - 11:51 AM Phillip :-D |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Jun 20 - 12:43 PM Im not sure which album you're talking about Jim Ewan did Bothy ballads of Scotland for Folkways which was, what is ays on the label - a collection of Bothy Ballads - not collected live but from Ord and Greig and other printed Scots collections maily - with some from the BBC singers like Jimmy McBeath - Ewan wasn't a 'serious collector' he was a serious singer - collecting was a by-product of that He also edited the 'Elliots of Birtly' made up entirely of recordings from that family - a wonderful production Thet was a follow-up to what I believe to be the best album ever of any tradional singer, Sam Larner's 'Now is the Time for Fishing' - an all-round picture of Sam singing and talking Ewan and Peg wanted to do a third on The Stewarts but Folkways backed out - a shame We have recordings of all these which I'm happy to let people have despite snides to the contrary This stuff should be available to all interested - it was collected for posterity - not so disinterested family members could inherit the price of a couple of pints wen the collectors popped their clogs Dave You joined Rag in saying I shouldn't pass stuff on - have you never received recordings you shouldn't have or dubbed records for friends You weren't quite as vicious as he was but it hurt just the same I really don't give a shit - I do what I do for the reasons I gave - I told you how I believed Ewan would have responded Ewan gave all his time sharing his talent - money was the last thing that entered any of our minds then - nor was it an issue with anybody we ever collected from They got our guarantees that the proceeds of anyything we issued was automatically theirs - not their graet aunts or their grandmother's brother in law - theirs Christ knows it was litle enough when it happened - most of the time it amounted to SFA Whwen we die the Clare and Travellers CDs we weer given half a dozen free copies to share our among the singers (about 10 singers per album) - you work it out - we had to burn off copies to make up the gap Now, if we want more copied - they still sell well - we have to buy them at cost and pay for the postage You know what - we're happy to do so idf it means people can still listen to Mikeen and Mart and Nora Cleary and Tom Lenihan.... It's a privilege to be a part of keeping this music alive in a worls that prefers Ed Shearan Onwards and upward - a iave one or ten articles to write Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Steve Gardham Date: 09 Jun 20 - 01:38 PM FWIW, and this does not happen very often, I am, on the points being raised here, 100% in agreement with JimC. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 09 Jun 20 - 01:38 PM You joined Rag in saying I shouldn't pass stuff on I made no contribution to this thread prior to you mentioning me. I had left any other thread behind. Why bring me into it? |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Jun 20 - 01:49 PM " I had left any other thread behind." What's the difference which thread you contributed to - you said what you said ? You brought yourself into it This insulting nonsense about "thieving from the family" began on the other thread Thank you Steve I knew we'd find something to agree on if we went at it long enough :-) Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 09 Jun 20 - 03:05 PM You brought yourself into it It's there for all to see, Jim. My first contribution to the thread was asking which Dave you were referring to. The simple fact that you wanted to dredge up old arguments underlines that fact that you simply want to fight. The number of threads you have ruined in this manner is growing by the day. I shall not fuel your need for conflict any further on this thread. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Steve Gardham Date: 09 Jun 20 - 03:59 PM Just to be clear, and I stand to be corrected if I'm wrong, the only scholarly collected book Ewan and Peggy had published was Travellers Songs from England and Scotland 1977. The rest were all anthologies or autobiographies. However, the Radio Ballads were pioneering and something else entirely: For me at least the peak of Ewan's creative output. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Jun 20 - 02:59 AM Steve Ewan wrote very little - articles maybe, that's all, he preferred word-of-mouth to express his ideas Some of those ideas are to be found in the series of interviews published 25 years after his death 'Legacies of Ewan MacColl, The Last Interviews' In my opinion, despite the somewhat unavoidable problems (in the circumstances), Ewan and Paggy's book, 'Doomsay in the Afternoon' is the most important book on source singers ever to have been published - traditional singers talking about their art is the biggest gap in our knowledge of folk song - this book goes further in filling that gap than has any other work Gower and Porter's book on Jeannie Roberson should have done that - Gower did a magnificent job with Jeannnie's personal life; unfortunately, the discussion of the songs was done by Porter rather than the singer, which I thought was a missed opportunity I have gathered many more exaples of his expressing his ideas on singing, dozens of seminars and lectures, many interviews, detailed song notes for albums and over 200 tapes of recorded Critics Group meetings - when put together, he probably had more to say on the subject than any other researcher on the subject of the folk arts After the Acting Group which broke away from the Critics Group folded, Ewan had a breakdown We were not part of that unpleasantness (on either side) and kept in touch and, when we judged the time right asked him would he be interviewed - we ere staggered when he jumped at the opportunity I had decided I didn't want to cover the same old-same biographical path and directed the interview(s) around Ewan's ideas on singing - those interviews lasted around a year and went into some detail THere was a misunderstanding between us - Ewan kept asking us what we were going to do with his 'biography' - that was the last thing on my mind When we finished - he went off and wrote 'Journeyman', which, in my opinion, although less detailed, was a far more accurate picture of Ewan that the dreadful 'Class Act' I have over 200 tapes of Critics Group meetings to transcribe and annotate one day , when I retire from an extremely busy retirement At the end of those meetings - which were a Group exercise (not Ewan "telling us how folk songs should be sung", Ewan would flop back in his chair, say, "I'm exhausted Peg, I'm going to bed, then launch into hour-long monologues on what had gone before, linking folk song to literature, theatre, comparisons to other musics... anything that had come to mind over the last three hours - the tape recorded was left running till Charlie Parker left - that was the nearest Ewan ever came to meeting the requests that first set up the Critics Group - that he should "teach folk song" One of the greatest problems of listing and annotating those tapes is that time and again, when I should be typing, I find myself listening and enjoying what is being said - it still inspires and makes me want to know more I've decided to mke sure all those recordings and writings that have been arcived here don't disappear - that's why I make myself the pain in the arse I do Ewan eschewed academia - he refused to be a 'folk luvvie' and chose to work with less experienced singers He often said he had learned as much as any other member of The Critics Group by being part of it, and when you listen through the tapes you realise that was a fact - we all developed by learning from one another - Ewan included I don't 'Idolise', Ewan - I enjoyed his company and I like his singing most of the time - not always Anybody who ever worked with MacColl for a length of time, whatever their personal feeling, had to admire his ability to analise what he did and his willingness to share what he found out and believed When he was out of his comfort zone, he tended to withdraw and listen - shy rather than stand-offish He enjoyed company - any company - when I lived with them for a short period we sat in the garden for hours, he would pump me about my background and pour out things he never mentioned in public - I'd much rather have done that than wasting my time on frivoulous things like looking for a job and somewhere to live, any-day Dave "to the thread was asking which Dave you were referring to" As I said Dave, your first comments on my giving MacColl's albums away came on a previous thread when you joined with Rag in criticising my doin it I don't wan't topo "fight" anybody, on the contrary I wish to continue promoting folk song the way I have chosen to do without being accused of being a "thief" If that is "ruining threads" go look in the mirror - I argue for my views of folk songs to the best of my ability - in the folk world we now live in where folk song proper has been brushed aside to make toom for something else, that has become "trouble-causing" Challenging what drove many thousands like me is not "picking a fight - it's standing your ground I have made my arguments for what happened and ruffled more than a few feathers in doing so If you disagree with what I argue - tear those arguments down - "picking a fight" doesn't hack it in my book Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Jun 20 - 03:30 AM If you disagree with what I argue - tear those arguments down You launched an attack on me in a thread I had not even posted in before. If that is not picking a fight, then I don't know what is. But we all know how this goes. You love to fight and hate to lose so you will bring in new arguments until everyone gets fed up of it and goes away or the thread gets closed at which point you will blame everyone but yourself. So be it. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Jun 20 - 04:02 AM Stop this Dave - did you not join Rag in criticising my handing out records because they were "copyrighted" ? You accepted a bundle of copyrighted stuff from me some time ago, were grateful for getting them and saked whether you could pass them on - I have your messages What's the difference ? now leave me alone to get on with what's important rather than enter yet another of oyur Black Holes Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Jun 20 - 04:29 AM I am not disputing that I am uncomfortable with the copyright issues. The only point I am making is that you launched an attack on me in a thread that I previously had nothing to do with. That is indisputable so what you are doing is making excuses for it instead. Simply accept that it is something you should not have done and that will be the end of it. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Jun 20 - 04:54 AM "The only point I am making is that you launched an attack on me in a thread that I previously had nothing to do with" It was on the subject Dave - I described the nature of yours and Rags behaviour - did I misrepresent you You have just confirmed that I didn't "I am uncomfortable with the copyright issues." You are "uncomfortable with something you are happy to benefit from personally and pass on to others What kind of double-think is that ? I'm moving on - you stay were you are if you wish Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Jun 20 - 05:34 AM Once again, the only point I am making is that you launched an attack on me in a thread that I previously had nothing to do with. Absolutely nothing to do with any other argument. You know you were in the wrong so you are trying a smokescreen. I'm sure everyone else has seen my point and is now bored with it. If you want to continue a completely different argument on another thread or by PM, feel free. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 10 Jun 20 - 05:43 AM "Once again, the only point I am making is that you launched an attack on me in a thread" For the lat time - you started it on the other thread - doeesn't matter were it bagan Blame your mate - he moved the sunject onto this thread from the other - not me He also dropped you in the Klarts - when I pointed out that one of the people who were making a copyright issue out of my passing Ewan's stuff areound was happy to accept and hand around such material, his response was "Not me" I hadn't mentioned names up to then - you were the only other making an issue of ownership - ker-plunk - in you went I'm only continuing this in the hope of stopping Rag's crusade and being allowed to do what I do without snide attacks from hypocrites Done, I think Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Dave the Gnome Date: 10 Jun 20 - 06:02 AM PM sent. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Steve Gardham Date: 10 Jun 20 - 02:29 PM Jim, Last I heard you were preparing some of your stuff to go in the BL Sound Archive. How is this going? I think one of your problems lies in sheer quantity from what you say. In 200 reels, there will be some overlap and repetition. The number of archivists and annotaters needed to deal with this quantity would exclude most archives from taking it on. The ideal would be public funding of a team of youngsters led by yourself. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 13 Jun 20 - 03:57 AM It's on hold, like everything else at present Our archive exceeds far more than 200 reels - that's just the Critics Group meetings The actual connection goes into the thousands - our own personal collection is around 1000, then there is tha material people have put in our care It's taken ten years to index this material and put it into a usable order (nearly) What I have to find immediately from NSA is whether they are going to use the interviews The songs are repeated, of course, but that was deliberate - if you are going to go beyond head-hunting, each different performance of a song contains information, especially with singers like Mary Delaney AS far as getting help, I can't see a problem in Ireland There is a growing interest in songs, which looks as if it iht catch up with the music The Clare Library Website has drawn youngsters in - we keep being contacted by them Limerick Uni once mooted the idea o a Traveller's web-site - they've already doe magnificent work with musicians The articles I put up on Academia, which I did for diversion, have 'taken feet of their own' In preparing the next, on Local Songs, I contacted local history groups - there might be a possibility of publishing a collection of local songs and republishing an important long-out-of-print one - more hands and heads I wouldn't know where to start in th UK - I can't see the beginnings of a re-stirring over there That we should all live long enough eh ? Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: GUEST,Keith Price Date: 13 Jun 20 - 04:58 AM I know you don't mean it Jim but " I wouldn't know where to start in th Uk - I can't see the beginnings of a re-start over there " is more than a little insulting to the likes of Steve Gardham and others who have done and are doing good work. There's lots of excellent young singers and musicians about who are helped and inspired by shall we say the more senior players. It just seems as if they're not too keen on the outdated concept of folk clubs.Just as well for I think there won't be a awful lot left when they sound the all clear. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 13 Jun 20 - 06:50 AM "is more than a little insulting to the likes of Steve Gardham and others who have done and are doing good work. " Far from it - while I strongly disagree with many of Steve's conclusions, his work on earliest printed versions is invaluable I find his attitude to the revival somewhat at odds with that of the tradition, but that's for him to sort out We have no longer a folk base for our folk song revival and never will have while people wandering around tapping white sticks and wailing "we don't know what folk song is anymore" You may as well go to Hindustan zoo and study elephants What we (Pat and I) have done has a future in Ireland now - it has no future in Britain (England) other than posterity I want to be around to see people discovering and enjoying Walter, harry and Sam the way many of us did Jim |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: The Sandman Date: 16 Jun 20 - 03:16 AM why are folk clubs an outdated concept, what complete bollocks, the concept that people can go to a venue a specifically to listen to a certain type of music and allow performers to be shown respect is not an outdated concept.As a performer folk clubs are my favourite place to performmuch more satisfying than open mics. |
Subject: RE: Ewan MacColl Song Collecting From: Jim Carroll Date: 16 Jun 20 - 04:50 AM Clubs breathed life int a dying art form - they began to die when people forgot what that art form was, or even that it was an art form If they are an "out dated concept" then so are jazz venues and classical concerts Folk clubs are an urban compromise on how fol songs were once sung - and a phenomenal successful one One of the main things they managed to retain was the human discourse and exchange of ideas That some people now seem to prefer the herding together 'cattle market' atmosphere of festivals or electronic alienation is their choice - a strange one, in my opinion There again, I prefer surrounding myself with books rather than having to switch something on first I can see no alternative to the successful format of the clubs and the enjoyment they brought yet As Old Bill used to say during WW! - "If you knows of a better 'ole, go to it" Jim |
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