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East Anglian Folklife on Radio 4

08 Apr 10 - 06:40 AM (#2881994)
Subject: East Anglian Folklife on Radio 4
From: Fred McCormick

Alan Dein, who recently presented the excellent AOF programme on Fascist atrocities in 1970s London is now presenting a programme on George Ewart Evans, the legendary chronicler of East Anglian folklife. Called Ask the Fellows That Cut the Hay (the title is taken from one of Evans'books), the programme is one hour long and starts on Saturday 10th April at 20;00 hrs on BBC Radio 4.

The programme blurb is reproduced below, but can be found at Archive on 4 .

Synopsis
"In this week's Archive On Four, historian Alan Dein celebrates the centenary of his mentor George Ewart Evans, collector of Suffolk farming tales. Evans began by chatting to his neighbours over the fireside in the 1950's and transcribing stories about poaching shepherding, smuggling and ditching.

"The talk was of a hardscrabble life, of leaky roofs and meals of pea soup and pollard dumplings and beef only at Christmas with occasional festivities like the Whitsun fair.

"With the help of BBC producer David Thomson, Evans recorded many of these tales and they were broadcast on the Third Programme.

"Evans came from a Welsh mining village and he sympathised with the labourers' stories about the tyranny of the trinity of the parson, squire and farmer. He was a sympathetic listener who asked allowed his community to speak for itself and he captured the stories of people whose traditions had been unbroken for generations, who worked on the land before mechanisation and who believed in magic and folk wisdom and had intuitive understanding of working with animals.

"Evans' eleven books about the working lives and folk stories of Blaxhall are a portrait of every facet of his village and paved the way for books and programmes, both fiction and not fiction, about British agricultural life.

"Alan Dein talks to people who remember him in the village of Blaxhall and to his son Lord (Matthew) Evans and youngest daughter Susan as well as historian Owen Collins."