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Folklore: Ballad Workshop gigs

11 Jan 12 - 10:37 AM (#3288742)
Subject: Folklore: Ballad Workshop gigs
From: randjgc

This is a message to EKAnne - wherever she may be. I understand that during the Celtic Connections period you are holding your own workshops? I've looked for details, but not finding the right thread. Can you help me here, please?


11 Jan 12 - 10:46 AM (#3288748)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Ballad Workshop gigs
From: Drumshanty

Thread is here

click

Trinki :)


11 Jan 12 - 12:16 PM (#3288775)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Ballad Workshop gigs
From: Anne Neilson

@ randjc -- hope you've found something to attract you in our mini-programme (maxi-quality!), and that you'll make yourself known to us if you manage to get there. However, booking is advised as numbers are filling up quite nicely.
And there should be something for everyone, touching American, English and Irish bases, together with a special tribute to our own, inimitable Ray Fisher -- not to mention contributions from the floor!

(Thread creep -- it may also interest you to know that a considerable number of our participants are YOUNG! Perhaps you can suggest a reason why the interest in ancient songs from the i-pod generation?)


11 Jan 12 - 02:02 PM (#3288824)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Ballad Workshop gigs
From: Paul Davenport

We encounter similar things south of the border. I sometimes wonder if there's really no difference between the mind that can listen to a long ballad and the mind that sits through the whole Lord of the Rings trilogy on DVD in a single sitting? If that's true then the ballads are in for a lively future, in line with their lively past. :-)


14 Jan 12 - 01:04 PM (#3290606)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Ballad Workshop gigs
From: Anne Neilson

Liking your analogy, Paul!

On another tack -- does anyone know how much reading to primary school pupils happens in the current system?
I well remember in P2/3 (60 or so years ago!) how the teacher often read to us for the final half hour of the day, and it wasn't wee, repetitious picture stories but extended versions of fairy stories etc. The whole class relaxed and lost themselves in a kind of magic -- but nowadays there are so many competing distractions (endless noise, flashing imagery, text messages and so on) that it seems to me miraculous if individual pupils can find any focus or concentration for more than two minutes at a stretch! [End of rant, you'll be glad to hear.]

Anyway, advance bookings are good, so there are obviously enough interested parties out there!