Showing posts with label solutions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label solutions. Show all posts

Monday, 7 February 2011

2011, or why I am not Laura Marling and sons...

Well, here we are: second month of a new year already... I have some catching up to do!

The first month passed me by pretty readily as I was preparing for a gig to launch my e.p (previous blog posts). The night was as long as it was incredible, thank you so much to Ali George, John Wilson, Rob Winder, Katie Stone-Lonergan for the music as well as all the people who came and supported the night!

Recently I have been musing on the idea of folk music; what it is, isn't and what it is that really bugs me when the term is thrown every which way at the current wave of acoustic singer-signwriters that pop up around the shelves of HMV.

I guess I could write a thousand word rant on what boils down to semantics and definitions, citing examples that can be broken down seconds later... I will try not to! This is because the term folk music originally had a very clear definition, it was an extension of the term folk lore, coined by William Thoms, meaning: "the traditions, customs, and superstitions of the uncultured classes."
I also like the further definition: "The folk song is one of the most functional, portable, adaptable and accessible arts of human history."

Highlighting the word adaptable is key as it helps us to address what has happened. From the original definition, another sprung up in the 19th-20th centuries, folk music became not just the music of a people but it also became music of the people. These I relate to as very different ideas, the latter being more linked into the music that came out of the (generally Northern) working populace through the 19th century. These are people in a different generation, a world away in terms of social and economic structure and relating their experiences accordingly, uniting themselves through song. In the changing political climate it is unsurprising that folk music and those who performed it went hand in hand with the socialist and communist parties as well as the unions, humans are sociable by nature but that nature was being broken down bit-by-bit by industry. The term subsequently got connected to several other genres: -rock, -adelia, -metal etc the overarching idea being that these genres were being linked back to and influenced by the former definition, the dichotomy made clear.

The development has continued, as has the need for people to find more and farther reaching definitions for each form, some wanting to stop at the collections produced during and before the early 20th century, collections that have come under (I feel unjust) criticism because of the material that had been selected, rewritten, written down at all. Others embrace the idea of folk music continuing to develop and be amalgamated into different styles and so on... everyone draws their lines and borders at some point now, hence the difficulty of definitions.

Chris Wood expressed his feeling on the term as "Folk music needs no definition. It emerges from the un-schooled to articulate the wonder and richness of the ordinary..."

My brother recently went to see Frank Turner perform in London where he said (paraphrased) "when did folk music stop?"

Does this debate get us anywhere? Does it really get me anywhere? This has filled my mind recently but I think I'm getting somewhere, personally at least.

After many debates between my friends and (patient) partner, I realised the songs that I choose to sing are good songs, they are songs that shouldn't die out nor be endangered as they are a living link that we hold to our history as a people, our national identity: something that we should be proud of.

I am English. I am proud of that and as such my belief is that our traditions and cultural history should be respected, taught and spread in the same way that other cultures have done with theirs, not through xenophobia and the closing up of borders (not always literal) but through respect of what people had to say about their lives and the methods that they used to achieve this. This isn't an argument purely about the music that is performed by others and how they choose to define it (though I have mistakenly centred it in such a way previously) but whether, when it comes to the performance of a song, it is a story that I wish to tell, that I wish to continue in the world.

and breathe

so, what does this mean in terms of my direction this year? Well over the last month I've started putting together a selection of songs and tunes for a new album, arranging them and planning a larger band to play with. These tracks will be focussing on my pondering and my clearer perception of what I personally want to achieve through my music, keep an eye on the myspace for the developments.

On a further note, June Tabor's new album is out on the 21st this month and is something I've been waiting a long time for!

Other singers I've been enjoying recently (old and new):
Alasdair Roberts
Pilgrims Way
Trembling Bells
Ali George
Davy Graham and Shirley Collins
Andy Cutting

Thursday, 22 April 2010

so what do I do?

Good eve one and all,

so thus starts another space of opinion and information... opinimation if you will (or informapinion). The idea for this was given to me by a friend during one of my rants about traditional/ folk music and how I have found that more and more recently that I have become rather pernickety about the people I will and will not listen to and the reasons, specific and spurious, by which I make those decisions. I assume that she felt strongly that my wise words needed to be heard by a wider audience...

More about me; I have been listening to folk all my life courtesy of keen parents, attending folk gigs since the age of four, singing and playing folk since my early teens and despite enjoying an eclectic array of genres, always find myself drawn back to the folk idiom like the pull of a favourite jumper or the pseudo-nostalgic comfort of a good Fred Astaire musical. I am currently based in Bath where I am playing some gigs, getting involved in the sessions and generally enjoying the scene which is young but it's daily growing http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Trees_They_Grow_So_High_(folk_song))

In this blog I will not be out to insight mass revolution or start arguments about which version of "seven yellow gypsies" is the best, where it came from, the verses that are historically accurate and who shot first (Han), this is a place for me to have my say about what I hear out there in a world embracing a nu-folk "revival" (a word that I say with dread). There is a lot of good music, passionate people and wonderful interpretations on our aural history out there and I hope that you, dear reader, will discover bands, songs and tunes that you didn't know even existed.

As a vague plan that I am making up right now, I will look at different tunes and songs and some of the versions and history around them, review new releases and specific albums that I really love or have problems with (Show of Hands and Martin Carthy, you will be mentioned).

This blog will not cater particularly to one specific country in terms of music although my background is heavily English with an Irish inflection, it will not be covering country 'n' western (we got both kinds) unless deemed absolutely necessary.

Also, there will be no mention of N****n F***kner

So I hope you enjoy this and I'll see you soon...