Cecil Sharp: Difference between revisions
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== Cecil Sharp: Eye Witness Account of His Folk Song Notation == | == Cecil Sharp: Eye Witness Account of His Folk Song Notation == | ||
E. V Lucas (1914) London Lavender makes sporadic reference to Cecil Sharp and contains sheet music of his folk song harvest. The most interesting section is Chapter 18 (pp. 139 to 150): | E. V Lucas (1914) London Lavender makes sporadic reference to Cecil Sharp and contains sheet music of his folk song harvest. The most interesting section is Chapter 18 (pp. 139 to 150):<br> | ||
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''If the Director's methods were bewildering to me, what must they have been to these simple folk? For he takes out pencil and his little notebook ruled with staves, and the instant the singer has done he can go to the piano and play the song word for word, with all its peculiarities of movement, its hurryings and pauses, its unexpected cadences, its curious melancholy. Magic, surely! I can just begin to understand shorthand, but not this mystery. During the first verse he sits intent, with his pencil poised over the paper, waiting to strike. During the second verse he is recording all the time. During the third he makes little refining touches, and the tune is complete.<br> | |||
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PDF page images of the book are available from the Internet Archive.[https://archive.org/details/londonlavender00lucaiala]<br> | |||
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== External references == | == External references == | ||
Revision as of 17:47, 22 August 2018
Cecil James Sharp, collector of English folk-songs and dances.
Publications
- English folk song, some conclusions, London: Simpkin; Novello, 1907. First edition available online in various formats at http://www.archive.org/details/englishfolksongs00shar
A Lecture Delivered by Cecil Sharp
A lecture delivered Cecil Sharp to the Hampstead Conservatoire, probably in the mid 1890s, has been transcribed and annotated by C. J. Bearman, who has also added a brief scholarly introduction. The lecture is available as a PDF from here: Media:Cecil_Sharp_Hampstead_Lecture.pdf.
Cecil Sharp: Eye Witness Account of His Folk Song Notation
E. V Lucas (1914) London Lavender makes sporadic reference to Cecil Sharp and contains sheet music of his folk song harvest. The most interesting section is Chapter 18 (pp. 139 to 150):
If the Director's methods were bewildering to me, what must they have been to these simple folk? For he takes out pencil and his little notebook ruled with staves, and the instant the singer has done he can go to the piano and play the song word for word, with all its peculiarities of movement, its hurryings and pauses, its unexpected cadences, its curious melancholy. Magic, surely! I can just begin to understand shorthand, but not this mystery. During the first verse he sits intent, with his pencil poised over the paper, waiting to strike. During the second verse he is recording all the time. During the third he makes little refining touches, and the tune is complete.
PDF page images of the book are available from the Internet Archive.[1]
External references
- Michael Heaney, ‘Sharp, Cecil James (1859–1924)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, May 2006 http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/36040