Song: Difference between revisions
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=== Books & Bibliographies=== | === Books & Bibliographies=== | ||
====Bibliographies==== | |||
[http://www.efdss.org/songbib3.pdf English Folk Song Bibliography: An Introductory Bibliography Based on the Holdings of the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library, Third Edition, edited by David Atkinson] | [http://www.efdss.org/songbib3.pdf English Folk Song Bibliography: An Introductory Bibliography Based on the Holdings of the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library, Third Edition, edited by David Atkinson] | ||
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'''Old English Popular Music''' by William Chappell ''Ed. H.E.Wooldridge'' ''Additions by Frank Kidson'' | '''Old English Popular Music''' by William Chappell ''Ed. H.E.Wooldridge'' ''Additions by Frank Kidson'' | ||
===Indexes=== | ===Indexes=== |
Revision as of 14:42, 28 March 2007
Category Editor: Dr Vic Gammon
There are many thousands of songs. There are many song collections and many versions of the same song. Where to start looking? That's the problem.
Note. Our intention is not to restrict this initiative to English Song, but to use the present headings as a starting point to view whatever develops from wherever it comes.
English Songs
Sea Songs
Traditional sea songs are usually divided into two groups. Shanties were the songs sailors sang to help them with the hard work on board the big sailing ships like the "windjammers" of the 19th century. The songs the sailor sang for enjoyment and relaxation when he was "off watch" are often called forebitters, and although many of them were stories about sailors or the sea, they could be any kind of song.
Rural Songs
Industrial Songs
The folk revival of the early 20th century revealed songs from the rural parts of England, and the songs reflected the life of farm labourers or rural craftsmen. Even at that time, these songs were seen by many as belonging to a bygone era. Most English working people by then lived in large cities and towns, and worked in factories, mines, and other places of intense mechanisation and industrialisation. Before the 1960s, it was assumed that these people did not have any "folk songs", but when the seond revival came about, the two people who are said to be most responsible for it both found this not to be the case. Bert Lloyd had been employed by the National Coal Board in the late 1950s to find songs from miners, and Ewan MacColl at the same time was engaged in researching the radio ballads, many of which were concerned with heavy industry.
Love Songs
Ceremonial Songs
Traditional Singers
English Source Singers
Scottish Source Singers
Irish Source Singers
North American Source Singers
Performance
section editor Chris Coe
This is a tricky section to think of including. One doesn't always associate folk song and 'performance' but some of the techniques applied by the traditional singers can bear scrutiny, especially by those who want to sing the same sort of songs.
The intimate fireside delivery of Walter Pardon.......
Lizzie Higgins taking a deep breath, expanding to be a 'giant' and setting forth..........
Johnny Doughty turning his cap sideways and singing the Herring's Head.....
And any one who has seen Jock Duncan perform the Two Sisters will have a vivid understanding of song delivery with gestures....
Watch this space.
--JohnnyAdams 22:46, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
Resources
Recordings
Commercially Available Recordings
Currently available or deleted
- Kyloe Records
- Leader Records
- Musical Traditions Records
- Topic Records
- Veteran
- Wildgoose Records
- New World Records
Books & Bibliographies
Bibliographies
Books
Percy's Reliques of Ancient Poetry is described in Wikipedia See
The contents might well be catalogued here but in the meantime here's one song to be going on with - The Bailiff's Daughter of Islington
Old English Popular Music by William Chappell Ed. H.E.Wooldridge Additions by Frank Kidson
Indexes
- The Vaughan Williams Memorial Library online index including
The site also gives you access to the Roud Index, compiled by Steve Roud.
'The Roud Folk Song Index is a database of 143,000+ references to songs that have been collected from oral tradition in the English language from all over the world.'