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So what is *Traditional* Folk Music?

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The Sandman 23 Oct 06 - 07:01 PM
GUEST, PRS member 23 Oct 06 - 05:12 PM
GUEST 23 Oct 06 - 02:49 PM
The Sandman 23 Oct 06 - 12:27 PM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 23 Oct 06 - 10:35 AM
GUEST,Mike Miller 23 Oct 06 - 10:09 AM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 23 Oct 06 - 09:38 AM
Azizi 23 Oct 06 - 08:48 AM
The Sandman 23 Oct 06 - 08:15 AM
Rowan 23 Oct 06 - 01:15 AM
GUEST,Mike Miller 22 Oct 06 - 03:29 PM
GUEST,Trev 22 Oct 06 - 03:23 PM
GUEST,Guest TREV 22 Oct 06 - 03:04 PM
The Sandman 22 Oct 06 - 01:53 PM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 22 Oct 06 - 01:40 PM
Soldier boy 21 Oct 06 - 08:29 PM
Soldier boy 20 Oct 06 - 09:56 PM
Azizi 20 Oct 06 - 02:00 PM
Azizi 20 Oct 06 - 01:57 PM
The Sandman 20 Oct 06 - 01:06 PM
GUEST, PRS Member 20 Oct 06 - 12:52 PM
GUEST,Bob Coltman 20 Oct 06 - 12:15 PM
GUEST,Bob Coltman 20 Oct 06 - 12:03 PM
GUEST,PRS Member 20 Oct 06 - 11:45 AM
GUEST 20 Oct 06 - 10:26 AM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 20 Oct 06 - 10:11 AM
The Sandman 20 Oct 06 - 08:56 AM
GUEST,PRS Member 20 Oct 06 - 04:24 AM
GUEST 20 Oct 06 - 04:10 AM
Folkiedave 20 Oct 06 - 03:58 AM
The Sandman 20 Oct 06 - 03:31 AM
GUEST,Old Fart 19 Oct 06 - 10:14 PM
GUEST,booklyn rose 19 Oct 06 - 10:06 PM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 19 Oct 06 - 07:18 PM
Malcolm Douglas 19 Oct 06 - 06:34 PM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 19 Oct 06 - 05:39 PM
The Sandman 19 Oct 06 - 04:19 PM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 19 Oct 06 - 03:25 PM
GUEST 19 Oct 06 - 03:05 PM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 19 Oct 06 - 02:09 PM
The Sandman 19 Oct 06 - 01:57 PM
GUEST 19 Oct 06 - 10:39 AM
WFDU - Ron Olesko 19 Oct 06 - 09:30 AM
GUEST 19 Oct 06 - 09:28 AM
The Sandman 19 Oct 06 - 07:41 AM
GUEST,GUEST TREV 18 Oct 06 - 05:06 PM
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Wolfgang 18 Oct 06 - 07:46 AM
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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 07:01 PM

Interesting,.
In Bert Lloyds Folksong in England, Lloyd described Sharp as a socialist. but elsewhere I have read[ not Dave Harker], that Sharp disapproved of his sister being a suffragette.
If Sharp was a socialist, he would have surely approved of universal suffrage.
He may or may not have been a member of the labour party[ that doesnt make him anymore of a socialist than BLAIR].
But if he disapproved of the suffragette movement,then he does appear to have been Right wing.
to JIM CARROLL I was watching a programme last night, about a woman singer from Tyrone, Sarah Anne O Neill. It seems she was originally recorded by a Waterford man who wandered into the pub and taped away, and then subsequently came back with Sean o Boyle and informed her she was singing traditional songs, So now HERE is evidence OF someone who collected like that.[ POSSIBLY not the only one.]


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST, PRS member
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 05:12 PM

Ok Jim, I'll admit I have been deliberately taking an extreme position to stimulate debate, hence why I'm not posting under my name (I'm a reasonably high profile professional performer in the UK and this is a tactic I wouldn't normally condone). But I'm doing this for a good reason.

You point out quite rightly that the future for this music is uncertain because of cultural changes since (and some might say because of) the revival, and in particular the changes in recent years brought about by the advent of new technologies. (I personally think we all need to have a jolly good debate about this).

You also mention barricades, and it's these that I'm unhappy about.

We have a problem here in England. The population at large has become divorced from the music which used to be our heritage. To make matters worse, many of those who view themselves as champions of The Tradition appear to believe that the solution is to cast some kind of protective ring around this old music - and often give the impression that they would always elevate music that existed before the revival above that which has come after, purely because of its provenance. Many also give the impresion that the best bet is to keep 'the unwashed' out, to avoid polluting the tradition further.

It would also seem that, in this debate, quality is often viewed as less important than antiquity (history trumps music), and perhaps more seriously that the singer is more important than the song (sociology trumps music). There are plenty of posts in this thread which support these views.

Now, there's nothing wrong with this per se - and certainly nothing wrong with individuals holding these views as a personal preference, but when this attitude becomes insitutionalised within the 'folk industry,' as it sometimes seems to be in some quarters, we have a problem.

The music starts to look like some kind of archeological exercise, of importance and relevance only to an informed few - so you need some kind of qualification or apprenticeship to be let in. This phenomenon manifests in many ways: The way some clubs are run, the way some music is performed, the way credits are given, the way royalties are paid out (or rather not paid out), the way performances are judged, the way performers are treated and so on.

The result is that the rest of society, when it does happen upon 'folk' or 'traditional' music, is more likely to turn up their noses and go back to wherever they came from, than to embrace what they hear - and, crucially, seek out more. And that's mainly what I'm unhappy about.

But there are other problems too.

This debate has thrown up about five definitions of the word 'traditional' - some of them mutually exclusive - and it's clear that we have a language crisis on our hands. Language changes constantly, laws more slowly, and the language we use when debating this topic is letting us down badly - exacerabting the problems I outlined above - hence why I said the only one we can rely on is the legal term (I'm not saying that's a good thing - just that its a fact).

The word 'folk' has mutated to mean - well, I can't be bothered to type it all out - but we all know. It's no longer the same as 'traditional,' that's for sure. But what does Traditional actually mean anyway? Well I used to think I knew - and maybe I still do (for me, and me only), but it's far too big and broad a concept - or rather, as I said before, group of concepts - to have just the one word to describe it. It might have been fine in the old days - for the old boys and girls who had that clear hindsight we've talked about. But it's not today.

Using the one term for all of the concepts you can read on this web page is asking for trouble, and it leads ot all the conflicts we've seen here. Vis, those who associate the term with a ritual, those who think it refers to an age, those who think its a process, those who feel it's a style, those who think its a legal definition, though who think its a sound, an instrumentation, a point of view etc. etc. etc.

It's not me saying it's nebulous - this very page is saying it's nebulous! I return to my point - the only definition we can be sure of is the legal one - meaning out of copyright.

Now, personally, I'd like to see even that changed. Because it allows people to credit a tune as Trad when the maker is known but has been dead - in this country - for 70 years. So O'Carolan is correctly credited as Trad. But then it's a small jump to crediting tunes like Dusty Windowsills and Spooter Skerry, or songs like Fiddlers Green as Trad. Well, they may be Traditional by one of the definitions espoused above - but they're sure as heck not out of copyright, and people recording these as Trad are denying the writers their legal due for their work.

It's like someone coming in to your car workshop on pay day and taking the pay packet out of your hands with the words - 'well, I drive a car, so...'

Now it's my view that this mainly happens because of this concept of The Tradition, and the value system attributed to it by the 'insiders (see above)' .

The idea seems to have gained currency that because the singers from whom the old songs and tunes were collected didn't actually own their material, no-one ever would or could in future. We've even seen this post-revival, particularly with Irish bands. And that's been unhelpful too - because we have only a shaky financial basis for our 'folk industry' here in England - when other countries, who treat their wirters and musicians properly, have a much healthier situaton all round.

It all needs thining about with open minds - and I see WAY WAY WAY too many closed minds here on mudcat.

To pick up on a couple of your points:

"By and large, one thing that distinguishes traditional songs is that they are anonymous." I think this view is unhelpful for all the reasons mentioned above. We SHARE ownership when we play or use the music - but we should never forget the maker.

"it isn't how the songs started life, but what happened to them as they were passed on from mouth to mouth and from group to group; this is what makes them traditional." Yes - very true, IF they are out of copyright, but even then the maker should be acknowledged if known. The trouble is that a lot of people call songs Traditional (correctly by their definition) that are not traditional by yours, and vice-versa. Ergo: Problem.

I din't use the term lefty. Actually Sharp had a right-wing agenda, but then everyone always has a political view and that will always be an issue for everything.

"You pass rather lightly over registering the arrangements of songs "because they let me". Basically all traditional songs are arrangements and by claiming ownership on behalf of an individual or company, you are effectively killing off their traditional nature." You maybe don't understand the UK system. Any number of people can register an arrangement of an out-of-copyright work. You only get paid when your particular arragement is used (usually when the track's played on the radio, or live by you yourself). Another singer or player can always make and register his own version, and no harm is done - though there are times when an artist will use another persons arrangement in a recording, credit it (I've done this myself) then the registered arranger gets the royalty. As I say I think it's a grey area which needs looking at, but the important point is that the arrangement and the work are considered separately. If there's been this system in pace through the ages no harm would have been done (and in effect, that exactly what this 'ownership' thing was all about anyway).

I'm stopping now, my fingers are sore and I need to practice something - a trad arrangement, as it happens, for my next album.

PRSM


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 02:49 PM

PRS Member,
Your point might have been better made if it hadn't come with the baggage of such phrases as (can't remember exactly) "leftie academics looking for a gig" and "romantics". Your current one of "some collector wandered in (to a pub) with a tape machine or a notebook" doesn't help much either. I don't know anybody who "collects" or has ever "collected" like that; to my mind it shows a great misunderstanding of how people like Sharp, Vaughan-Williams Grainger, Kidson, Broadwood, Hamish Henderson, Tom Munnelly, Mike Yates, Alan Lomax, Hugh Shields, Seamus Ennis et al worked. Sure, musicians or singers looking for tunes or songs to play or sing might sit in on a session with a recorder but that isn't collecting.
You wrote:
"The artform is nebulous except in one respect - that, like all art, it belongs to its maker and no-one else."
By and large, one thing that distinguishes traditional songs is that they are anonymous; (like most of the other characteristics applied to the tradition, there are exceptions, but it works for me as a general rule). As has been pointed out earlier in this thread (notably by Anahata), it isn't how the songs started life, but what happened to them as they were passed on from mouth to mouth and from group to group; this is what makes them traditional. You pass rather lightly over registering the arrangements of songs "because they let me". Basically all traditional songs are arrangements and by claiming ownership on behalf of an individual or company, you are effectively killing off their traditional nature. One of the overriding impressions I have been left with in my contact with traditional singers and storytellers has been their stunning generosity in passing on what they have. This, by the way, has also been the case with "leftie academics" (with a few notable exceptions – usually not lefties) who have been more than happy to pass on the results of their work and their ideas to others. I have always been lucky enough to encounter people who are involved in the music because of their love for it and not for any commercial or prestigious potential.   
You went on:
"If songs are well-written in the first place……………… they'll stand less chance of being changed over time".
Songs were changed for many reasons: adaptation into new situations, times and circumstances, disuse, poor memory not backed up with literacy, simple accident of the collector being in the right place at the right time… many, many more reasons. Survival is by no means a yardstick for quality.
You also wrote:
"The tradition is a poor term for such riches".
I can't really agree with that. It works for me as an indication of how the songs have been made, received, re-made, adapted and passed on. It is a term that traditional singers I have met have been comfortable with and have used as a way of acknowledging the debt owed to the people who passed on the songs to them.
Bob Coltman;
Thank you for such a thoughtful contribution to the discussion. Had past debates on the subject taken place with such thoughtfulness, without we various schools of thought crouching behind our respective barricades and hurling invective, I'm sure we would have moved on much further in our search for an agreement on definition.
Most of what you write I have no great argument with, apart from the occasional quibble.
I don't accept the idea tradition is in the ear of the beholder any more than I believe that the same can be said of classical music, jazz, hip-hop, reggae or any other musical form. If it were the case there would be little point of us discussing it as we would have no reference point of communication. In my experience, the same was not true of traditional singers, at least, not the ones I've questions.
I really don't want to re-argue my case, but if anybody is in the slightest bit interested they can hear what I, and some traditional singers have to say in the Enthusiasms section of the Musical Traditions web-site under the title 'A Folksong By Any Other Name'.
My main opposition of the present argument lies in the question 'where do we go from here?', or 'what future, if any, does traditional music have?'
None of the possible candidates you gave for future traditional songs fitted my bill for one reason. For me, one of the distinguishing features of English language traditional song is its narrative quality, the singers being storytellers whose stories come equipped with tunes. In the past these stories, as well as being entertaining, have carried the history, aspirations, experiences, emotions, values, etc. of the communities they served. I would argue that we no longer communicate in this way – I have written elsewhere in this thread of my belief that we have now more-or-less become passive recipients of our culture rather than participants. I would very much like to be proven wrong on this point.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 12:27 PM

but then if I sang hey mr tamburine man while I was milking my goat it becomes a folk song.
Many years ago I heard a radio interview with John Mearns Aberdeen song collector and he was saying that songs like Drumdelgie,were used to sing while doing farm chores , certain songs were suitable for the rhythym of horse ploughing and some wEre suitable for hand milking, This was before farm mechanisation.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 10:35 AM

So what you are saying is that if I were a pants presser and sang Abraham, Martin & John to time the mangle (whatever that is!!) then it is a folksong?


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,Mike Miller
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 10:09 AM

Ron, whatever you and your kids sing in the car does become your tradition if you guys sing those songs on a regular, or ritual schedule. For instance, my daughter has sung "George Washington Bridge" (to the tune of "The Loveliest Night Of The Year") every time she crosses that span into New Jersey because I told her that, if she does, she wouldn't have to pay a toll (There is no toll in that direction). That has become her tradition and she will probably pass that little joke on to my beloved grandson when he is old enough to be fooled. It is not the song that made the tradition, it was the ritual. It doesn't matter when the song was written, either. When she was a baby, I wrote her a song called "Ten Little Fingers". She called me yesterday to tell me that she has been using that song to sing to her son and would I record it, already, so he could hear me sing it. Tradition is a product of repitition. It is what keeps old songs new. It is why "Happy Birthday" is a folksong and "Mister Tamboureen Man" is not, why "We Shall Overcome" is and "Abraham, Martin and John" is not. "Folk" and "Tradition" are not defined by the songs but, rather, by their use. If you work as a pants presser and you use "Twist and Shout" to time the mangle, you've got yourself a folksong and, if you teach your Beatles inspired trick to others, you have started a tradition.

                     Mike


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 09:38 AM

"I have spent years defending trad from the encroachment of contemporary because I feel that orginizations like folksong societies need to differentiate one from the other. I have discovered that, while I am still convinced of my position, there are factors existant, today, that were not available when Greensleeves was written. First, the means of instant communication in the modern world make it less likely for a song to be spread, orally."

The problem, as I see it, is that we base our definition of "traditional" on the devices that were available in the past. Because "orally" was the main mode of transmission of the songs (due to lack of other types of recording and perhaps lack of fundamental reading and writing skills in some cases)we use "orally" as a deciding factor. Is that a true hallmark, or are we putting emphasis on it because we see it as "evidence" in the music we study?   

If a scientist were to do a study of people who write letters with pen and paper and discovered that 90% of letter writing is done by people over the age of 60 and only 10% of people under 60 sit down to write letters, what would that tell us?   Would we say that letter writing is a dead art, or would we look further to see that most people under 60 are now communicating by using e-mail?   Traditions are living customs - they do not have to be set in stone.   

Mike, you also said that "Traditions, however, need not be more widespread than a family whistle or automobile trip singalong."    Most families that I know grow. When my kids were young, we may have sung "row, row row your boat" on a car trip. Now that my kids are teenagers, the car trip singalong has evolved. We might singalong to a pop tune on the radio or pull out a favorite song from recent years, but the point is our tradition is still alive - even if the songs change.   

Yes, a point can be made that "row row row your boat" is more a "traditional" song - but what is the point? Why set such strict guidelines that end up clouding the picture of why songs were important in the first place?   A musicologist may have needs to do just that, but when it starts filtering down to influence just how music should be made - we all lose somethign.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Azizi
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 08:48 AM

Good points, Rowan.

I smiled at your comment about me doing notations for children's handclap rhymes. I would love to have some dancer or another person who is more detail oriented than me document how the handclap routines and other movements routines I've collected are done.
But, when that information is shared, I would be careful to add that this is a pattern that was observed at a particular place in time with some particular children. I would also say that, although the pattern appears to be very fixed in that particular locale with these particular children, the pattern of performing that particular rhyme may be different elsewhere.

I have seen x and o notations written above specific words in some books on children's rhymes. They are difficult [for me] to follow, though other people may "get it". I do better with word descriptions. However, my concern would be that some people would think that this is the only way these specific rhymes can be performed. Of course, it isn't.

That said, there does seem to be a basic pattern that I've seen children do for two, three, and four person handclaps. And I've also observed some basic patterns for group handclaps {some of which by the process of elimination, become two person handclaps}. I have also observed two basic patterns for foot stomping cheers {my term for identifiably formulaic patterns of rhymes that are chanted by groups of girls while they perform, synchronized, syncopated bass sounding foot stomps, individual handclaps, and body pats}.
I believe that for the historical/folkloric record these movement patterns should be documented in print and in video. But, I would not want any person to think that these were the only ways to say or to do these rhymes or cheers.

I've found that children are usually very inflexible when it comes to making changes in the performance activity and text of any rhymes or cheers that they've learned. However, I believe that we adults who have an interest in folk culture can help to lessen this inflexibility if we ourselves are more flexible.

My sense is that in time an increasing number of children & teens will be posting their examples of children's rhymes, cheerleader cheers, and footstomping cheers on Internet message boards, blogs, and discussion forums. I hope that we adults who also post to and/or moderate those Internet websites are proactive in explaining the concept that "variations aren't necessarily wrong" on those Internet forums as well as whereever & whenever we interact with children & youth.

In repeating this message we can help children & teens & adults learn to respect & appreciate their own traditions and other people's traditions.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 08:15 AM

To Rowan, as I am not very well informed about aboriginal music I thoght it better not to comment.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Rowan
Date: 23 Oct 06 - 01:15 AM

While very few of the arguments in this thread seem to be new it is interesting to have them all in the one spot, so to speak. Almost like a seminar and well worth reading thoroughly. I find it interesting that the discussion has kept almost completely to English language (in its accepted variants) songs; there was one mention of Yugoslav cafe songs but everybody seems to have kept their distance from introducing notions about world music into the discussion.

In the thread on music traditions I raised the question of Aboriginal singers singing in their own and other nonBalanda language, as well as in English, and how one would categorise items of such material. Captain Birdseye was gracious enough to acknowledge the point but ducked it and came back to this discussion. I suspect that you'd have to understand different notions of "community" to fully grasp the sense of locality and consequent possession that seems to accompany 'tradition'.

I tried reading the postings and substituting "dance" for "song" in the thread and found most of the postings still made the same sense their authors appeared to intend. I particularly liked the "So and so over the mountain sings this but she gets it wrong" (or words to that effect) and apologise to the writer for not naming them properly. Some dances are particularly susceptible to local variations becoming entrenched. The Lancers and the First Set are well known among Australian collectors for such behaviour. Other quadrilles don't seem to be so 'vulnerable', for want of a better word.

Lots of folk dances dances have no known author and lots are regarded as traditional. There are strong traditions among the various Country Dance organisations and many promulgate dances by known authors. There are popular dances (Twist, eg) and idiosyncratic ones. I suspect that when we get into the throes of these discussions, it is the fact that we are extremely literate about words, less literate about music notation and (sometimes) illiterate about choreographic notation that encourages the discussion of songs to become enlivened. And that's just the footwork! Heaven help us if Azizi (or anyone else) develops a notation that satisfactorily describes multiple-partner handclapping chants done while skipping elastics. Once you start discussing the finer points of terminology with ten-year-olds we'd get into definitions even more abstruse than Maud Karpeles or Captain Birdseye could envisage.

Should be more of it!

Cheers, Rowan


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,Mike Miller
Date: 22 Oct 06 - 03:29 PM

I have spent years defending trad from the encroachment of contemporary because I feel that orginizations like folksong societies need to differentiate one from the other. I have discovered that, while I am still convinced of my position, there are factors existant, today, that were not available when Greensleeves was written. First, the means of instant communication in the modern world make it less likely for a song to be spread, orally. Ten minutes after it is composed, it is recorded, mixed, pressed and promoted. Even in this forum, songs are assosiated with the artists who perform them rather than the culture form which they arise. Still, tradition is an absolute, defined by practice, not by style. Tradition, in music, is no different than tradition in legend or belief. Tradition requires ritual of some sort. "Pomp and Circumstance" is not traditional because it is old, but, rather, because it has become ritual to play it at graduation ceramonies for years. There are newer songs that have become traditional through ritual usage. "God Bless America" is trad while the older, and more beautiful "Stardust" is not. "Sunrise, Sunset" has been a staple at Jewish weddings since Fiddler opened so it is trad while "If I Were a Rich Man", from the same show is not. It's a little early to label "Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer" as trad (God, I hope not) but, as you can see, if you want to write a traditional song, you would do well to link it to a holiday. I truly believe that a folk song should be an expression of a culture, not just of the poet.
Traditions, however, need not be more widespread than a family whistle or automobile trip singalong. I understand that families gathering around a piano for a songfest may be rarer than Republican introspection, but, modern though we may be, we still sing to our kids (those who haven't delegated that responsibility to Raffi).
So, if you are interested in having your favorite song become traditional, sing it a lot. Sing it at campfires and, more importantly, get everybody to sing it with you. There can be no such thing as a Bruce Springstien folksong any more than there can be an Al Jolson folksong. It just doesn't work that way. If quality writing was all that was needed for inclusion into "Folk", Matt Dennis would be O'Carolin.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,Trev
Date: 22 Oct 06 - 03:23 PM

Might I also suggest 'traditional' is whatever anyone decides is traditional:-)


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,Guest TREV
Date: 22 Oct 06 - 03:04 PM

On the question of a Sharp changing lyrics, the case of Elias Lonnrot (sp?) springs to mind.

EL collected many songs first hand from traditional singers and he used them to create the Kalevala. He justified his changes to the texts in that as he now knew the all songs he felt himself as good a singer of traditional rune songs as those he'd collected from. Therefore, changing the lyrics was in keeping with what they themselves did.

Lonnrot, of course, openly admitted his changes of lyrics and acknowledged his sources.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 22 Oct 06 - 01:53 PM

CONTEMPORARY Artists are writing their own material,.
If they are performing someone elses material, they need permission from the composer, if they are not the composer themselves, before they alter the lyrics,.
Do you mean contemporary artists doing to traditional song, then there is a difference the bowdlerisation of a song is changing its meaning.
Martin Carthy singing LOVELY JOAN, Tony Rose singing the sheath and knife, Nic Jones singing, the Wanton Seed, the BONNY BANKS OF FORDIE, are keeping the essence the same., ther is no alteration of meaning .


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 22 Oct 06 - 01:40 PM

I asked a question earlier, and no one has been able to answer it yet. How is what Cecil Sharp did (changing lyrics, writing arrangements) any different in spirit then what contemporary artists are doing to the song?

Maybe the answer is, there is no real difference. Folk music adapts to the individual and community as well as their purpose.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Soldier boy
Date: 21 Oct 06 - 08:29 PM

refresh


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Soldier boy
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 09:56 PM

These contributions keep on getting more and more complex and better and better.
It is, I now realise, a very complicated and contested subject.
Will we ever agree about the definition of what really is TRADITIONAL folk music ?
Probably not, but who cares, keep the debate going and we might eventually arrive at some kind of concensus. Mayhap.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Azizi
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 02:00 PM

Sorry, here's the link to the schoolyard games thread in http://blog.oftheoctopuses.com/000518.php


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Azizi
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 01:57 PM

Bob, you wrote in your 20 Oct 06 - 12:15 PM post to this thread that [people] "tended to view their own, or their family's, versions as the *correct* versions. "So and so over the mountain sings it too, but she don't sing it right."

With regard to children's rhymes {the genre of folk music I've been actively collecting for some years},I've no doubt that this is still the prevailing viewpoint. When I first started collecting children's rhymes, I can recall being surprised that there were any other versions of "Miss Mary Mack" and "Miss Lucy Had A Baby", two
rhymes I learned in my childhood. And if I had heard of another version, I probably would have thought that those people were "messing up" that rhyme.

However, I believe the Internet is changing this viewpoint.

If, for instance, you look at the comments made by posters on the Schoolyard games thread on this website:
http://blog.oftheoctopuses.com/000518.php, you'll find that there are multiple versions of the same children's rhymes. And, though there are some posters who write that a previously posted version is wrong, there are quite a numberof posters who preface their examples with a comment such as "this is the way I remember it" or "the way I learned it is ____".

As an aside, posters to that thread have been encouraged to include demographical information {such as geographical area and when they recited those rhymes}. And an increased number of posters are adding that information. So not only are Internet websites helping to demonstrate to the general public that there are multiple variants of rhymes and no one version is better than any other, but posting on the Internet is also proving to be means of collecting and preserving folkloric information.

Mudcat and other websites are helping to do this too. However, I am heartened by the fact that that particular thread whose link I provided seems to attract children & youth. And I'm happy to report that my website's pages on examples of contemporary English language children's rhymes and cheers, http://www.cocojams.com/ also seems to be attracting a number of submissions from children & youth {as well as adults}. And some of these posters are including demographical information.

This is not to say that the majority of children, youth, and adults don't still think that the folk songs & rhymes that they know are the only version-or the only right version-of a particular song or rhyme. However, it appears that that perception is changing.

And I believe that's a good thing.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 01:06 PM

There is a school of thought that folksongs are those songs sung at football matches,[ not necessarily my opinion ],some of these are not traditional,
Red Red robin[charlton]Fields ofathenry[celtic], I had a wheel barrow, but the wheel fell off[ NottsCounty], this is an interesting one, apparently composed by someone in the stadium, when the wheelbarrow [that was used for carrying the meat pies]wheel fell off at a match.Iam forever blowing bubbles [west ham].
if these are folk songs [songs sung by the people]they are not traditional, apart from perhaps TheWHEELBARROW SONG as the author is ANON.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST, PRS Member
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 12:52 PM

Good points Bob - specially about ownership. And I suspect that this belief of ownership goes way back to the originator of the song - whether its justified or not.

Actually, the current closest phenomen to 'traditional' singing is kareoke, (God help us)! And the big favourites there tend to be torch songs... maybe Coz I Am A Lady will be a survivor.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,Bob Coltman
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 12:15 PM

P.S. It does bear remembering that, as far as I can tell, traditional songs were always viewed by their singers as "old." Not that they wouldn't sing a new song. But they fairly reliably viewed the traditional songs as something tried and true that had originated well in the past, been handed down for a long time -- and they tended to view their own, or their family's, versions as the *correct* versions. "So and so over the mountain sings it too, but she don't sing it right."

So, along with the pastness of traditional songs, there's also a territoriality. "My version versus yours." The songs were at one and the same time everyone's, and personal possessions.

That variability, and that possessiveness, almost by definition cannot happen when a song is obviously manufactured elsewhere, as pop songs are. You may love "Blue Skies" and sing it around the house and your kids may learn it from you and teach it to their kids, but how long will it take before the song's origin is so eradicated that they'll think it's their own?

The traditional is the personal.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,Bob Coltman
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 12:03 PM

Fantastic discussion, and goes to show that there are many workable definitions but no real boundary. Some admittedly disjointed thoughts (and please excuse any errors of detail):

Bob Dylan once referred, interestingly I thought, to being among the last to have known the "traditional people." He meant singers like Victoria Spivey and the other bluespeople he ran into, plus some he didn't, like Blind Willie McTell about whom he wrote a song.
Same goes for those of us who collected songs in the field from traditional singers half a century ago.

Dylan's presumption clearly was that we have left that traditional era forever. In terms of an un-media-mediated, non-digitally reproducible culture, that's true. But I think most people recognize that pure traditional (AKA folk, or lately "roots") music has never been pure, and thus confounds all definitions.

The fine Virginia traditional singer Horton Barker, than whom there could scarcely be anyone more traditional -- his a cappella repertoire was first and foremost Child Ballads and traditional hymns, though in some cases those hymns had known authors) found that when he wanted to pick up a guitar and sing collectors the song he courted the girls with back in the early 20th century -- the Harry Williams-Egbert Von Alstyne "San Antonio" (1907) -- they spurned it. He knew the difference of course, but wasn't much bothered by the distinction.

When Vance Randolph, than whom there can scarcely be a more traditional music collector, published his wonderful 4-volume Ozark Folk Songs (1946-50), he was forced to acknowledge quite a number of permissions from publishers for songs people sang him out of the pop songbag that had passed "into tradition" (you might want to deny the term here) between the 1880s and the 1930s. "The Baggage Coach Ahead," "Lightning Express," and other oldies were firmly set in the repertoire of street songsters even in the 1920s.

The Carter Family, now seen as at least verging on traditional though their repertoire was mixed, were in their time criticized something like rockers more recently -- as ruining and obliterating the old styles.

We know the composers of many impeccably "traditional" songs. While for example, there are a number of obviously modern, not traditional-styled campfire songs nobody knows the origin of. "I Wear My Pink Pajamas" is as fully traditional in scouting as anything you could wish. So, by the way, in the same genre, is the known-author popular ditty "I Said My Pajamas." Catchy and sometimes cute is the rule in campfire singing.

The term "traditional" almost eludes proper definition. It's often used to describe, say, "traditional" selections in the classical repertoire. "Traditional" style in advertising. Etc. Phooey. After "folk song" got swiped by singer-songwriters, "traditional" seemed like a good replacement. Now it's been swiped, and we attempt "roots." But all our terms will ultimately be swiped.

If it's traditional *style* you're talking about, then what about black songsters like Blind Willie McTell picking up recently written commercial blues novelties like "Dying Crapshooter's Blues?" Virtually every bluesman was writing his own stuff. Robert Johnson was an innovator so drastic (though his debt to Kokomo Arnold is evident) that he created one-of-a-kind blues like none ever before or since. Yet he is considered a traditional bluesman. Papa Charlie Jackson, Clarence Ashley and other medicine show musicians performed a rounded repertoire of everything their hearers might like, from traditional songs to theatrical stuff.

What about "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down?" First notable occurrence c. 1926 with Charlie Poole in NC, and Frank Hutchison in WVA. Pretty obviously not entirely a folk lyric, and that distinctive melody with its influential A7-D7-G7-C chord change may yet be traced to a pop original. Not to mention all the "folk songs" like "Lynchburg Town: and "Whoa Mule" that have roots in the minstrel shows -- some of whose songs were adaptations of earlier traditional songs ... and so on and on back to (figuratively) Adam and Eve and whatever they sang.

What about the Yugoslav cafe ballad singers studied by Lord and Parry who spontaneously recomposed traditional ballads based on a repertoire of ancient orally learned ballad tags and cliches similar to those used by Homeric singers in performing the Iliad and Odyssey? What's traditional if that's not?

Truth is, even in the backwoods during wilderness days, wagoners were bringing pop songs into the hills from urban stages, and at least some traditional singers happily learned and sang them alongside their old family songs, eventually transforming some nearly out of recognition, in a genuine folk hand-me-down process.

Some of F.J. Child's ballads were traceable to single originals with at least a presumption that authorship might be traced. Quite a few of his contemporaries' collected songs were not at all traditional, traceable to known authors. Indeed this was half the point of Sir Walter Scott's, Ritson's, Chappell's, Percy's collections, et al.   We make a face and avoid the more blatant of these in favor of "Barbara Allen" and"Lord Thomas and Fair Elinore," but the two kinds stood side by side in many minds as fascinating OLD songs, valuable and interesting because they were rescued from oblivion.

The common elements in traditional, or roots song are: relatively old songs, passed down "from lip to ear," sometimes written down (19th century singers commonly kept "ballet books" full of their favorite songs, traditional or otherwise, so they wouldn't forget the words, though they trusted to their memories for the tunes, which therefore varied a good deal over time). The songs have in the past circulated in closely knit communities, sometimes isolated (backwoods, urban ethnic and everything between). They are a particular *type* of song, distinct from pop-music assumptions of any era. Thus perhaps "Knickerbocker Line" or "Pop Goes the Weasel" can never QUITE be thought a traditional song, though "Lavender Blue" and "Billy Boy," with not very dissimilar roots, may be thought so.

DT is in some ways a closely knit, if not isolated community, singing many of these very same songs, but DT's electronic. We're getting our songs from "lip to ear" in a new sense, copying lyrics off the site, sometimes changing them if we feel more comfortable with a different line or so, hearing the tunes from Mp3s, keeping our own ballet books and passing the songs along in singing gatherings and hoots and whatever you want to call them. And yet we perceive everything as different, distinct from that older world. Is that what every musical generation does? Are our traditional songs NOT traditional now because of something in the way we get them, sing them, pass them on? Or just because we're us, and our mindset is irretrievably different? Are printed folksong collections and the internet NOT a legitimate means of folk transmission? Are we just creating a museum, even for the more recent stuff?

As for currently written songs, I'd say there may turn out, in the long term, to be something too arty, too self-conscious in quite a few of them, including mine, to allow them easy survival. By contrast, I do expect that the songs to survive will be the offhand lyrics, from "Good Golly Miss Molly" to "When Will I Be Loved" to "Mockingbird Hill" -- songs that "sing themselves," rather than songs that require a fairly artificial attitude (examples might be "City of New Orleans," "Chelsea Morning" or some of Stan Rogers' songs -- undeniably beautiful, but maybe too highly wrought to make for easy singing in future generations).

In general a great many songs popular now are too dependent on arrangement, ensemble singing, studio accompaniment or stage manner to translate effectively into tradition. I'd guess a song passing into tradition needs to be simple, straightforward, fairly unaffected, and most of all **singable by one person without undue vocal or attitudinal contortions.** That means, for example, that most doo wop songs will not translate easily, unless they're also capable of being hummed to oneself and successfully sung solo.

Songs that have nothing but a single hook might make it: "Like a Virgin?" Hip hop will definitely survive as style, just as Afro-American jazz has, but how many of its songs will be easy enough to remember or perform to make it into tradition? (I'd guess that memorable individual rap rhyme lines will become traditional even as individual verses or small groups of floating verses from Afro-American spirituals and blues did.)

Which leaves us...where?

Sometimes I just say the hell with it and say as a friend of mine once did: "Folk songs are all the songs I like." Are we all folk or aren't we? Bill Broonzy's famed line "I never heard no horse sing" applies.

So, yes if you want to keep your pop songs separate. I do too, sorta ... I like "Jeepers Creepers" and "Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone" and "Iko Iko" (which is a folksong and a pop song both) and "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" and "Fever" and "Heartbreak Hotel" and "Lucy In the Sky With Diamonds" and so on and on, but they're in a separate place for me.

I was delighted when Kate and Anna McGarrigle revived "Alice Blue Gown" though it's the farthest thing from folk -- it worked perfectly for them, and floating on the air at a folk festival it produced some of the same thrills as tradition. It was old. It made a connection with the past.

It's said "The past is a foreign country." Traditional songs, and some other oldies as well, have a magic-ship quality, transmitting like "A Beacon from Mars" -- the delight of strangeness, not unlike the delight of reading science fiction to grasp a visioned future. Sure, the present moment is all we have but we're great voyagers in other times and places. So "Tie Me Kangaroo Down" and "Me Donkey Want Water (Hold Him Joe)" and "Moscow Nights" and the incredible songs by Thomas Mapfumo that helped liberate Zimbabwe and "Froggy Went a-Courtin'" (with its backstory re Elizabeth I) and "Sheath and Knife" and "Backwater Blues" and "Rain and Snow" and so on all seem to zing the same nerve endings.

Ultimately all distinctions break down somewhere. But tradition is strangely more reliable for me than any other musical genre in producing shivers of mystery and discovery of something that is not the everyday. It's a delight being in contact with what Dylan might call the "traditional minds" in a sort of "traditional elsewhere." Many of those minds were, like our own, equally at home within and outside of tradition, but they still inform us. They have interior-decorated my imagination better than anyone else. Voyaging there, and fusing increasingly with it, is the stuff of life for me. What more could I ask?


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,PRS Member
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 11:45 AM

No-one's dissmissing the art form, or reducing the music to a legalistic term. The music stands for itself. We're discussing terminology.

The word Traditional, as applied to music, does have a legal definition, like it or not, whereas the artform is nebulous except in one respect - that, like all art, it belongs to its maker and no-one else.

That's my point.

Good songs will stand for themselves, with or without help from talented interpreters at any stage of their development, while the less good will probably go back into the soup for later.

If songs are well-written in the first place (and you can always tell which ones were) they'll stand less chance of being changed over time. And the person who made a work good enough to stand that test of time deserves recognition (and reward, if appropriate), for the pleasure they've brought to others.

Its important we that recognise that and its implications - and give credit where its due, rather than lionising some singer because he happend to be in the pub when some collector wandered in with a tape machine or a notebook (I'm not taking about you Jim - I'm going back a ways here).

I don't represent the PRS, I'm merely a member. And in fact I share your suspicion of some aspects of their policies re Traditional ownership. For example, I'm not sure that we should be allowed to register arrangements of anon tunes and songs (which I've done many times because they let me), unless we've really made some significant changes.

But this is always going to be a grey area (how much change before it becomes 'significant' for example), so the lawyers are bound to default to a position of trying to maximise revenue for members.

And there are a lot of other issues about PRS and traditional material that have been discussed before. Those were not in my post.

The term was seeking to question - because it's bandied about without, one feels at times, people stopping to think what they are actually saying - is 'THE Tradition'
- as if there was only one stream, one flow of musical development through history - when we all know it's a tumbling brook with many meanders, waterfalls, dams, divisions, diversions and confluences.

It's the notion of ONE mythical method of passage that I suspect may be misguided.

Surely the reality was that singers through history, like today, learned from family, friends, passing strangers, the Church, written music and broadsides - each of which had its own 'tradition' - and that everywhere one goes one finds regional manifestations of this process. THE Tradition is a poor term for such riches.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 10:26 AM

Sorry, I missed the PRS argument first time round – my experience with this organisation's Irish counterpart IMRO had led me very much to agree with Shakespere when he said, "Let's kill all the lawyers". Things have become a little quiet of late but that organisation, in league with Comhaltas, has spent considerable time and energy in attempting to corner the market on traditional music and stamping it with "Own Brand'. Why I should turn to self-appointed organisations with, as far as I know, no qualifications whatever in the music under discussion is beyond me. If further proof of my scepticism were needed I need look no further than the dismissal of people who have spent a great part of their lives in researching and performing this music with terms such as "academic and/or political types in search of a gig" and their conclusions as "a mere romantic notion of a rural idyll". God save me from legal profession! I can only say, I'll show you mine if you show me yours (track record, that is).
To reduce folk songs (the terms folk and traditional as far as I am concerned) to a legalistic term I believe does a great disservice to the people who created them and to belittle their contribution to our culture.
"Folk" was a term applied to an identifiable body of songs which were created in a certain way and evolved through a certain process to serve a certain part the population.
Before we decide to dismiss this art form as a romantic myth, let's discuss the characteristics that I would suggest go in to the making of these songs and see if they hold water.
Jim Carroll
PS Off to the UK till Sunday; please don't finish this before I come back…………..pleeeeeeeeeease


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 10:11 AM

"I thought you were referring to embellishment, improvisation of melody of the tuneETC .Which is certainly different from Sharps bowdlerisation of the Keeper."

Again, I'm really not seeing the difference.   People complain about "embellishment" or "improvisation" of a tune, yet it is acceptable that that people like Sharp changed words and created piano accompaniment?   How is that different?   Neither one remains true to the source.

It is obvious that everyone has a slightly different definition of the words "folk" and "traditional". You can argue semantics, but the bottom line remains the song.   If 100 years from now "folksingers" are sharing "I Gave My Love a Cherry" and "All You Need is Love", then it will probably be a healthier world.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 08:56 AM

I Agree with GUEST PRS,.when I think there is a grey area,I USE THE PRS DEFINITION, so the Mistletoe bough[ThomasBayley1884]Is not[Daisy Daisy]Harry Dacre 1892 is not SweetTHAMES [EWANMACCOLL]is not, My old Kentucky Home[S fOSTER] is not,God save the Queen is not, Yesterday is not.Fiddlers green [ Connolly]is not, Sailortown FoxSMITH/Miles[ [tune]is not.      Songs from broadsheets are, because although they were composed, the authorship is lost.
It is important, so that authors or their descendants get their due royalties. No one will be saying in a hundred years that any of the BEATLES SONGS ARE TRADITIONAL[ because their descendants are not going to let large revenue slip away].I giveyou me all my love, may be a traditional style song but it WONT be traditional .Dick Miles


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,PRS Member
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 04:24 AM

Thank you Old Fart. This thread (and the other about Musical Traditions which covers similar ground) has proved only one thing - that the term 'Traditional Folk Music' means whatever you choose it to mean - except in the legal sense, and there you have a bounden duty to attribute if you possibly can (which sadly a lot of folkies don't, to their shame and the deriment of talented writers down the ages) - then leave it to the PRS and equivalent authorities around the world to pay on royalties or not according to the copyright situation on the day.

All the other definitions are, by definition, retrospective, and thus mainly of romantic/emotional value only.

But one point strikes me, (from the Musical Tradions thread, actually). When that organisation and others seek to separate The Revival and The Tradition, how do they insert the fish slice?

Surely the Revival singers were only doing what the Source singers actually did, and which modern interpreters (and many writers) do today: Encountering a song, from whatever source, that they think is decent or half decent, and then either bowdlerising or rebuilding it or just giving it a bit of a polish to make it presentable to their particular audience.

I don't understand why any line needs to be drawn at all.

The whole notion of The Tradition, as opposed to 'some traditions' (note my capitals) seems a mere romantic notion of a rural idyll (with little basis in either musical or sociological reality) that has been seized upon by academic and/or political types in search of a gig - (let's not forget Sharp's quest for a 'posh' replacement for Germanic classical music).


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 04:10 AM

Surely we are not talking about altering the songs, rather on the nature of the songs being altered.
Butterworth, Vaughan Williams, Britten, Edward Elgar, Percy Grainger, EJ Moeran, Beethoven, Brahms - many, many more all altered traditional songs and music; was their finished product still traditional?
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Folkiedave
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 03:58 AM

Many of the songs collected by those that Dick lists were derived from 19th Century broadsheets.

Does that make them less traditional?


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 03:31 AM

Ron, I am not familiar with Bruce Springsteens music.You referred to other musicians, So I thought you were referring to embellishment, improvisation of melody of the tuneETC .Which is certainly different from Sharps bowdlerisation of the Keeper.
Malcolm Douglas,Cecil Sharp bowdlerised the song the Keeper, My comments are not uninformed.CECILSHARPS work was important , So was BARING GOULD ,LUCY BROADWOOD, FRANK KIDSON, Mary Neal, Peter Kennedy, Seamus Ennis,Sean O Boyle. Sadly the first four,have not had the same recognition as SHARP ,.
Iwould define the collections of Sharp, Broadwood, Baring Gould, Kidson,As traditional music, thats quite a lot of songs to start with., plus Hugills collection of shanties, plus the Child ballads.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,Old Fart
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 10:14 PM

I've been playing 'trad.' music to 'folk audiences' for thirty odd years (yes, they were odd) and although I certainly don't claim any degree of authority from that, would like to point out that a tradition can only be identified with hindsight. The only tradition I can see happening is that of taking old material and altering it to suit a contemporary audience. I also agree completely with both 'PRS Member' and 'Cynic' (above) that the only objective definition is the legal one, as used for marketing purposes. Nevertheless, an interesting discussion which I've thoroughly enjoyed reading and found most educational. Much thanks for that.

A Google search revealed this -
http://www.brampton-bugle.co.uk/jermarblunt.html


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,booklyn rose
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 10:06 PM

I think the word traditional is being used to distinguish older songs from those written more recently. It seems useful to be able to specify what you are talking about. As for pejorative overtones, my observation is that some people like the whole range of music, others have preferences. The polite people can enjoy their favorites without putting down what others prefer (in this case, I guess, traditional/contemporary??) The others KNOW that what they like is of higher quality than what others like. So, what else is new?
    That said, the NYC people are calling their November event "A Festival of Traditional Music." Have you seen the descriptions at www.eisteddfod-ny.org? I'm not sure how Eisteddfod informs this conversation. I guess it has more performers who do music they have learned (directly or indirectly) from older people, but also quite a few who write songs.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 07:18 PM

Come on, lets keep the discussion civil. Whatever past differences you have, is it necessary to draw them into a conversation?

I have heard some of the same points that Captain Birdseye was making - that Sharp turned "The Keeper" from song that dealt with rape to a song that was about hunting. Sharp is not the only collector accused of altering songs to meet their own moral standards.

My confusion with the Captain's comments is that I do not understand the point he was making about Barings Gould and also why is Sharps re-interpretation of the song different from what a contemporary musician, say Bruce Springsteen, is doing.   Both altered the songs to reach audiences of their times.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Malcolm Douglas
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 06:34 PM

You're wrong, Dick, because as usual you jump to conclusions without bothering to find out a little for yourself. Don't expect us to précis entire books for you. Visit a library and do a little reading on your own behalf before making pronouncements. At the moment you are just making uninformed assumptions. You are old enough to know better.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 05:39 PM

How is it different?


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 04:19 PM

Sharp bowdlerised the songs [occasionally[ the keeper ] changing their meaning, to make them acceptable morally to victorian style standards.
It was quite different to what musicians do to their music. Sharp also fell out with Mary Neal a keen suffragette.
Sharp was more conservative in many ways and the songs he collected suffered from his conservative prudish attuitude eg [ the keeper]. But now he is on a pedestal and has a smashing pad in camden town, Almost as good as Nelson in Trafalgar Square with four lions to guard him.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 03:25 PM

So Sharp made changes in order to reach an audience. I guess that really isn't different from what other musicians do with the music.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 03:05 PM

Ron,
Sharp changed his songs (among other reasons) to make them acceptable in schools.
This does not invalidate his definition, which is flawed but certainly worth a lookat as he was a pioneer breaking new ground.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 02:09 PM

I'm missing the point you might have been making when you posted about Barin Goulds.   Could you explain?


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 01:57 PM

Baring Goulds entire song collection, songs collected BY Frank Kidson[some of which are available from Brewhouse music][ThePedlarsPack].


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 10:39 AM

It is possible for a tradition to have a known starting point, and still be a tradition.
In Tudor times brides wore green, if they had a change of clothes at all. Now the traditional bridal gown is white.
The traditional Christmas with turkey and all the trimmings and a Christmas tree is a Victorian invention.
Even more recently, you will often see yellow ribbons tied round a tree, marking an impromptu shrine to a road accident victim.
This custom was unknown in the UK until the song "Tie a Yellow Ribbon" was released in the 1970's, creating a new tradition.
The PRS definition of "Trad=No writer, no royalties" is fine for copyright disputes, but the traditions and and customs of the people of a country or a region are a much more fluid thing- and they do change with the times.
Perhaps it is the same with Folk. I think so.
Cheers
Dave


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 09:30 AM

I have not really paid as much attention to Sharp's work as I probably should. My main intrest has been in American folk traditions, but of course Sharp played a great role in that.

My understanding is that Sharp often changed the lyrics of the songs he collected for publication. I believe he also added piano accompaniment to the publications, which were his own creation.

If that is true, his "definition" must have been very liberal.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 09:28 AM

Try
English Folk Song - Some Conclusions, but try to get hold of a first edition as Peter Kennedy's aunt edited the later ones.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: The Sandman
Date: 19 Oct 06 - 07:41 AM

does anyone know, how Cecil Sharp defined traditional music ,or folk songs as he called them.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST,GUEST TREV
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 05:06 PM

What I find interesting is how variations of well-documented contemporary tunes develop.

One example would be "No Man's Land" by Eric Bogle. The Furies learned it from the singing of someone who didn't sing Bogle's words to the letter. They recorded it as "Green Field's of France" and used the non-original (wrong!) lyrics. Due to the huge success of their recording it is now considered as the definitive lyric by many people who have never heard Bogle's version. This version has now, arguably, entered the tradition.

In a few hundred years will researchers be finding more variations and arguing about the 'original' or 'traditional' version.

With regards to the suggestion that 'traditional' = no known author. This is questionable as often the author is unknown simply through lack of research. Likewsie, if we consider people like Lonnie Donnegan we see a bigger problem. He used to credit works as 'trad' when the author was still alive, hence getting out of paying roayalties (intentionally or not).

The story of "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" is another illustration of 'invented tradition' where a recent composition was 'hijacked' and reconstructed under the notion it was traditional.

Bruno Latour makes interesting reading when he states that being modern is a very traditional thing.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 02:57 PM

Re Daisy Daisy,
There's the story of a couple cycling down the road on a tandem when a dog ran out and threw a bucket of water over them.

But I don't suppose anybody wished to know that!
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: GUEST
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 02:39 PM

Misteltoe Bough, Yesterday, Mull of Kintyre,Daisy Daisy, Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney, spaghetti - have I missed something here?
None of the above(Mistletoe Bough appears in the repertoires of some source singers but..........) come anywhere near my definition of traditional (or folk) song.
Ron Olesko says "The study of folklore should be approached as a science" - I'll drink to that. As far as I can see we nearly all came into a poetical and musical art form which had already been defined by those who came before us. We have been provided with a definition (of Folk Song) by The International Folkmusic Council. There have been numerous books written on the subject - notably (for me) A L Lloyd's 'Folk Song In England' and David Buchan's 'The Ballad And The Folk'. Both of these deal at some length with the creation and dissemination of what I have come to understand as folk song. We can't really take into consideration what the traditional singers thought about traditional song because it appears nobody ever really got round to asking them!
We can either accept conclusions that have been previously arrived at or we can disprove them - I don't think it is either valid or helpful to ignore them.
Jim Carroll
PS Small, relatively isolated communities, particularly rural ones, appeared to have provided the ideal conditions for supporting healthy, living traditions. Folk clubs don't fall into my definition of communities as the only thing the participants appear to have in common is the songs and music, which makes them mutual interest organisations rather than communities. I know some American academics disagree with this point of view and would class say a group of office workers as a community - hmmmm.


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: Wolfgang
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 07:46 AM

A traditional spaghetti sauce is a sauce
(1) for which there is no known first cook,
(2) which is passed on orally,
(3) for which you don't have to pay any royalties if you cook it, and
(4) for which there are still new variants discovered each year.

The tomatoe sauce is just one possible traditional variant. My personal preference is spaghetti alla putanesca, that is spaghetti the whores' way, which is a very hot sauce indeed (I like to add pepperoni and sardines). It has led to the famous quote by the Italian cook Big Giordano Bruno (who knew better than any other cook what really hot meant):
"I've seen many different folks cook but I've never yet seen any whores cook."

Wolfgang (who actually likes and reads with great interest the many serious posts in this thread)


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Subject: RE: So what is 'TRADITIONAL' Folk Music ?
From: WFDU - Ron Olesko
Date: 17 Oct 06 - 08:43 PM

Dick, I never claimed that "it's all trad". Pop music is manufactured for different reasons and if anything, traditions build around that music. Popular entertainment does effect our culture, but "folk" music is a product of the culture - not the other way around. Popular music is more of an "inactive" artform - the audience sits there and is entertained.

With "folk", the music is meant to be more participatory. The music that I believe you and others consider traditional was used by "folks" as part of their lives - worksongs, protest songs, play songs, and even celebratory music that required participation.

I can honestly say that many of the modern singer-songwriters are creating their songs not for the same purpose that pop writers have. These songwriters are closer to the field workers and family songbooks then they are to the works of Irving Berlin or Cole Porter.

The study of folklore should be approached as a science. If there is a preconceived idea of what the outcome should be, the experiment will be guided in a set direction which may give a false outcome. I honestly feel that folklore and folk music requires an impartial study in order to really understand and draw conclusions.

My understanding is that many collectors such as Francis Child had some religious and moral standards that prevented them from collecting certain songs and ballads. Child's intent was to collect every ballad that was in existence. Does anyone think that he accomplished that? Look at the publication of Stan Hugill's works - did he get to publish all the songs he wished? Does anyone think that the version of "Drunken Sailor" that we all know is an accurate folk song?

I really think part of the problem that we have with labels is that many of us are active participants in the process. From some of the previous replies I am seeing a number of people who are deeply involved with folk music - performing, promoting, selling.   How can that not help shape a definition?   What you consider folk and feel strongly about may be quite different than what someone else will label.

Lastly - just because someone considers something "folk" or "from a tradition" does not mean that all of us are required to enjoy it. No, I do not expect everyone to enjoy the work of Bruce Springsteen or Bethany Yarrow for that matter. I do feel comfortable saying that the are linked to a tradition and may be creating a new tradition that will be celebrated in the future.


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