(Redirected from
Folk music)
Folk music, in the
original sense of the term, is
music by and of the people. Folk
music arose, and best survives, in societies not yet affected by
mass communication and the commercialization of culture. It
normally was shared and performed by the entire community (not by
a special class of expert performers), and was transmitted by word
of mouth.
During the 20th century, the term folk music
took on a second meaning: it describes a particular kind of
popular music which is culturally
descended from or otherwise influenced by traditional folk music.
Like other popular music, this kind of folk music is most often
performed by experts and is transmitted in organized performances
and commercially distributed recordings. However, popular music
has filled some of the roles and purposes of the folk music it has
replaced.
Defining folk music
"Folk music is usually seen as the
authentic expression of a way of
life now past or about to disappear (or in some cases, to be
preserved or somehow revived). Unfortunately, despite the assembly
of an enormous body of work over some two centuries, there is
still no unanimity on what folk music (or folklore, or the folk)
is." (Middleton 1990, p.127)
Gene Shay,
co-founder and host of the
Philadelphia Folk Festival,
defined folk music in an April 2003 interview by saying:
"In the strictest sense, it's music that is rarely written for
profit. It's music that has
endured and been passed down by
oral tradition. [...] And folk
music is participatory—you don't have to be a great musician to be
a folk singer. [...] And finally, it brings a sense of community.
It's the people's music."
The English term folk, which gained usage
in the
18th century (during the Romantic
period) to refer to peasants or non-literate peoples, is related
to the
German word Volk (meaning
people or
nation). The term is used to
emphasize that folk music emerges spontaneously from communities
of ordinary people. "As the complexity of social stratification
and interaction became clearer and increased, various conditioning
criteria, such as 'continuity', 'tradition', 'oral transmission',
'anonymity' and uncommercial origins, became more important than
simple social categories themselves."
Charles Seeger (1980) describes three
contemporary defining criteria of folk music (Middleton 1990,
p.127-8):
- A "schema comprising four musical types:
'primitive' or 'tribal'; 'elite' or 'art'; 'folk'; and
'popular'. Usually...folk music is associated with a lower class
in societies which are culturally and socially stratified, that
is, which have developed an elite, and possibly also a popular,
musical culture." Cecil Sharp (1972), A.L. Lloyd ().
- "Cultural processes rather than abstract
musical types...continuity and oral transmission...seen
as characterizing one side of a cultural dichotomy, the other
side of which is found not only in the lower layers of feudal,
capitalist and some oriental societies but also in 'primitive'
societies and in parts of 'popular cultures'." Redfield (1947)
and Dundes (1965).
- Less prominent, "a rejection of rigid
boundaries, preferring a conception, simply of varying practice
within one field, that of 'music'."
David Harker
(1985) argues that "folk music" is, in
Peter van der Merwe's words, "a
meaningless term invented by 'bourgeois' commentators".
Subjects of folk music
Apart from
instrumental music that forms a
part of folk music, especially
dance music traditions, much folk
music is
vocal music, since the instrument
that makes such music is usually handy. As such, most folk music
has
lyrics, and is about something.
Narrative verse
looms large in the folk music of many cultures. This encompasses
such forms as traditional
epic poetry, much of which was
meant originally for oral performance, sometimes accompanied by
instruments. Many epic poems of various cultures were pieced
together from shorter pieces of traditional narrative verse, which
explains their episodic structure and often their
in medias res plot
developments. Other forms of traditional narrative verse relate
the outcomes of
battles and other tragedies or
natural disasters. Sometimes, as in the triumphant
Song of Deborah found in the
Biblical
Book of Judges, these songs
celebrate victory. Laments for lost battles and wars, and the
lives lost in them, are equally prominent in many folk traditions;
these laments keep alive the cause for which the battle was
fought. The narratives of folk songs often also remember
folk heroes such as
John Henry to
Robin Hood. Some folk song
narratives recall
supernatural events or mysterious
deaths.
Hymns and
other forms of
religious music are often of
traditional and unknown origin. Western
musical notation was originally
created to preserve the lines of
Gregorian chant, which before its
invention was taught as an oral tradition in
monastic communities. Folk songs
such as
Green grow the rushes, O
present religious lore in a mnemonic form. In the Western world,
Christmas carols and other
traditional songs preserve religious lore in song form.
Other sorts of folk songs are less exalted.
Work songs are composed; they
frequently feature
call and response structures, and
are designed to enable the labourers who sing them to coordinate
their efforts in accordance with the rhythms of the songs. In the
armed forces, a lively tradition
of
jody calls are sung while
soldiers are on the march. Professional sailors made use of a
large body of
sea shanties.
Love poetry, often of a tragic or
regretful nature, prominently figures in many folk traditions.
Nursery rhymes and
nonsense verse also are frequent
subjects of folk songs.
Variation in folk music
Music transmitted by word of mouth though a
community will, in time, develop many variants, because this kind
of transmission cannot produce word-for-word and note-for-note
accuracy. Indeed, many traditional folk singers are quite creative
and deliberately modify the material they learn.
Because variants proliferate naturally, it is
naďve to believe that there is such a thing as the "authentic"
version of a
ballad such as "Barbara
Allen." Field researchers in folk song (see below) have
encountered countless versions of this ballad throughout the
English-speaking world, and these versions often differ greatly
from each other. None can reliably claim to be the original, and
it is quite possible that whatever the "original" was, it ceased
to be sung centuries ago. Any version can lay an equal claim to
authenticity, so long as it is truly from a traditional
folksinging community and not the work of an outside editor.
Cecil Sharp
had an influential idea about the process of folk variation: he
felt that the competing variants of a folk song would undergo a
process akin to biological
natural selection: only those new
variants that were the most appealing to ordinary singers would be
picked up by others and transmitted onward in time. Thus, over
time we would expect each folksong to become esthetically ever
more appealing — it would be collectively composed to perfection,
as it were, by the community.
On the other hand, there is also evidence to
support the view that transmission of folk songs can be rather
sloppy. Occasionally, collected folk song versions include
material or verses incorporated from different songs that makes
little sense in its context. A perfect process of natural
selection would not have permitted these incoherent versions to
survive.
The decline of folk traditions in modern
societies
Folk music seems to reflect a universal impulse
of humanity. No fieldwork expedition by
cultural anthropologists has yet
to discover a preindustrial people that did not have its own folk
music. It seems safe to infer that folk music was a property of
all people starting from the dawn of the species.
However, the development of modern
society--first literacy, then the conversion of culture into a
salable commodity--created a new form of transmission of music
that first influenced, then in some societies essentially
eliminated the original folk tradition. The decline of folk music
in a culture can be followed through three stages.
Stage I: Urban influence
One of the first folk traditions impacted by
modern society was the folksong of rural England. Starting in
Elizabethan times, urban poets
wrote
broadsheet ballads that (thanks
to printing) could be sold widely. The ballads probably didn't
need musical notation, since they would have been sung to tunes
that everybody knew, the folk tradition being very much alive at
the time. These ballads heavily influenced the folk tradition, but
did not override it. In fact, the folk tradition showed great
resilience. Through the process of folk transmission, the urban
ballads were modified, keeping the more vivid content and ironing
out the less "citified" material. The resulting body of folk
lyrics is widely considered to be a very appealing blend. Thus,
the printing press and widespread literacy did not suffice to
destroy the English folk tradition, but in some ways enriched it.
The English folk song legacy was probably
affected by urban melodies as well as words. The clue here is that
folk music in remote rural areas of the English-speaking world,
such as Highland
Scotland or the
Appalachian mountains, abounds in
tunes that employ the
pentatonic scale, a scale widely
used for folk music around the world. However, pentatonic music
was rare among the rural English villagers who first volunteered
their tunes to researchers in the late 19th century. A plausible
explanation is that life in rural England was far more closely
affected by the proximity to the urban centers. Music in the
standard major and minor scales evidently penetrated to the nearby
rural areas, where it was converted to folk idiom, but
nevertheless succeeded in displacing the old pentatonic music.
Stage II: Replacement of folk music by
popular music
The pattern of urban influence on folk music was
intensified to outright destruction as soon as the
capitalist economic system had
developed to the point that music could be packaged and
distributed for the purpose of earning a profit--in other words,
when
popular music was born. It was
around
Victorian times that ordinary
people of the Western world were first offered music as a mass
commodity, for example, in the phenomenon of
Music Hall.
The introduction of popular music was
simultaneous with the latter part of the
Industrial Revolution. This was a
time of great change in lifestyle for the great body of the
people, notably the migration of the old agrarian communities to
the new industrial ones. It is likely that the resulting social
disruption helped cut people's emotional bonds to their old folk
music, and thereby helped the shift in taste toward popular music.
As technology advanced, succeeding generations
became enticed with popular music in ever more accessible and
desirable forms.
Gramophone records became
LPs and then
CDs; the Music Hall gave way to
radio, followed by
television. With the
ever-increasing success of popular music, the musical life of many
individuals eventually ceased to include any folk music at all.
Moreover, since popular music for most people is passive music
(that is, listened to, but not created or performed), the
overwhelming success of popular music also entailed a sharp
decline of music as an active, participatory activity.
Stage III: Loss of musical ability in the
community
The terminal state of the loss of folk music can
be seen in the United States and a few similar societies, where
except in isolated areas and among hobbyists, traditional folk
music no longer survives. In the absence of folk music, many
individuals do not sing. It is possible that non-singers feel
intimidated by widespread exposure in recordings and broadcasting
to the singing of skilled experts. Another possibility is that
they simply cannot sing, because they did not sing when they were
small children, when learning of skills takes place most
naturally. Certainly it is very common for contemporary Americans
to claim that they cannot sing.
There is
anecdotal evidence that the loss
of singing ability is continuing rapidly at the present time. As
recently as the 1960s, audiences at American sporting events
collectively sang the American
national anthem before a game;
the anthem is now generally assigned to a recording or to a
soloist.
Inability to sing is apparently unusual in a
traditional society, where the habit of singing folk song since
early childhood gives everyone the practice needed to able to sing
at least reasonably well.
Regional variation
The loss of folk music is occurring at different
rates in different regions of the world. Naturally, where
industrialization and commercialization of culture are most
advanced, so tends to be the loss of folk music. Yet in nations or
regions where folk music is a badge of cultural or national
identity, the loss of folk music can be slowed; this is held to be
true, for instance in the case of
Hungary,
Ireland,
Brittany, and
Galicia, all of which retain
their traditional music to some degree.
Fieldwork and scholarship on folk music
Starting in the 19th century, interested people
- academics and amateur scholars - started to take note of what
was being lost, and there grew various efforts aimed at preserving
the music of the people. One such effort was the collection by
Francis James Child in the late
19th century of the texts of over
three hundred
ballads in the English and Scots
traditions (called the
Child Ballads). Contemporaneously
came the Reverend
Sabine Baring-Gould, and later
and more significantly
Cecil Sharp who worked in the
early
20th century to preserve a great
body of English rural folk song, music and dance, under the aegis
of what became and remains the
English Folk Dance and Song Society
(EFDSS). Sharp also worked in America, recording the folk songs of
the Appalachian Mountains in 1916-1918 in collaboration with
Maud Karpeles and
Olive Dame Campbell.
Around this time, composers of
classical music developed a
strong interest in folk song collecting, and a number of
outstanding composers carried out their own field work on folk
song. These included
Ralph Vaughan Williams in England
and
Béla Bartók in Hungary. These
composers, like many of their predecessors, incorporated folk
material into their classical compositions.
In America, during the
1930s and
1940s, the
Library of Congress worked
through the offices of musicologist
Alan Lomax and others to capture
as much American field material as possible.
Often, fieldworkers in folk song hoped that
their work would restore folk music to the people. For instance,
Cecil Sharp campaigned, with some success, to have English folk
songs (in his own heavily edited and expurgated versions) to be
taught to schoolchildren.
One theme that runs through the great period of
scholarly folk song collection is the tendency of certain members
of the "folk", who were supposed to be the object of study, to
become scholars and advocates themselves. For example,
Jean Ritchie was the youngest
child of a large family from Viper, Kentucky that had preserved
many of the old Appalachian folk songs. Ritchie, living in a time
when the Appalachians had opened up to outside influence, was
university educated and ultimately moved to New York City, where
she made a number of classic recordings of the family repertoire
and published an important compilation of these songs.
Folk revivals
As folk traditions decline, there is often a
conscious effort to resuscitate them. Such efforts are often
exerted by bridge figures such as Jean Ritchie, described above.
Folk revivals also involve collaboration between traditional folk
musicians and other participants (often of urban background) who
come to the tradition as adults.
The folk revival of the 1950's in Britain and
America had something of this character. In
1950 Alan Lomax came to
Britain, where at a Working Men's
Club in the remote Northumberland mining village of Tow Law he met
two other seminal figures:
A.L.'Bert' Lloyd and
Ewan MacColl, who were performing
folk music to the locals there. Lloyd was a colourful figure who
had travelled the world and worked at such varied occupations as
sheep-shearer in
Australia and
shanty-man on a whaling ship.
MacColl, born in Salford of Scottish parents, was a brilliant
playwright and songwriter who had been strongly politicised by his
earlier life. MacColl had also learned a large body of Scottish
traditional songs from his mother. The meeting of MacColl and
Lloyd with Lomax is credited with being the point at which the
British
roots revival began. The two
colleagues went back to London where they formed the
Ballads and Blues Club which
eventually became renamed the
Singers' Club and was the first,
as well as the most enduring, of what became known as
folk clubs. As the
1950s progressed into the
1960s, the folk revival movement
built up in both Britain and America.
Another example is the Hungarian model, the
tanchaz movement. This model
involves strong cooperation between musicology experts and
enthusiastic amateurs, resulting in a strong vocational foundation
and a very high professional level. They also had the advantage
that rich, living traditions of Hungarian folk music and folk
culture still survived in rural areas, especially in
Transylvania. The involvement of
experts meant an effort to understand and revive folk traditions
in their full complexity. Music, dance, and costumes remained
together as they once had been in the rural communities: rather
than merely reviving folk music, the movement revived broader folk
traditions. Started in the
1970s, tanchaz soon became
a massive movement creating an alternative leisure activity for
youths apart from discos and music clubs—or one could say that it
created a new kind of music club. The tanchaz movement
spread to ethnic Hungarian communities around the world. Today,
every major city in the U.S. and Australia has its own Hungarian
folk music and folk dance group; there are also groups in Japan,
Hong Kong, Argentina and Western Europe.
See also:
The emergence of popular folk artists
During the twentieth century, a crucial change
in the history of folk music began. Folk material came to be
adopted by talented performers, performed by them in concerts, and
disseminated by recordings and broadcasting. In other words, a new
genre of
popular music had arisen. This
genre was linked by nostalgia and imitation to the original
traditions of folk music as it was sung by ordinary people.
However, as a popular genre it quickly evolved to be quite
different from its original roots.
Confusingly, popular (i.e.,
commercially-disseminated) music based on a folk tradition is
called "folk music", no matter how different it may be from a folk
music rooted in the community. As a result, some individuals in a
modern society are unaware that folk music of the original variety
ever existed.
The rise of folk music as a popular genre began
with performers whose own lives were rooted in the authentic folk
tradition. Thus, for example,
Woody Guthrie began by singing
songs he remembered his mother singing to him as a child. Later,
in the
1930s and
1940s, Guthrie both collected
folk music and also composed his own songs, as did
Pete Seeger, who was the son of a
professional
musicologist. Through
dissemination on commercial recordings, this vein of music became
popular in the United States during the
1950s, through singers like
the Weavers (Seeger's group),
Burl Ives,
Harry Belafonte and the
Kingston Trio, who tried to
reproduce and honor the work that had been collected in preceding
decades. The commercial popularity of such performers probably
peaked in the U.S. with the
ABC Hootenanny
[1] (http://www.tvtome.com/Hootenanny/)
television series in 1963, which was cancelled after the arrival
of the Beatles, the "British invasion" and the rise of folk-rock.
The itinerant folksinger lifestyle was
exemplified by
Ramblin' Jack Elliott, a disciple
of Woody Guthrie who in turn influenced
Bob Dylan. Sometimes these
performers would locate scholarly work in libraries and revive the
songs in their recordings, for example in
Joan Baez's rendition of "Henry
Martin," which adds a
guitar accompaniment to a version
collected and edited by Cecil Sharp. Publications like
Sing Out!
[2] (http://singout.org/)
magazine helped spread both traditional and composed songs, as did
folk-revival-oriented record companies.
Many of this group of popular folk singers
maintained an idealistic, leftist/progressive political
orientation. This is perhaps not surprising. Folk music is easily
identified with the ordinary working people who created it, and
preserving treasured things against the claimed relentless
encroachments of
capitalism is likewise a goal of
many politically progressive people. Thus, in the
1960s such singers as
Joan Baez,
Phil Ochs and
Bob Dylan followed in
Guthrie's footsteps and to begin
writing "protest
music" and
topical songs, particularly
against the
Vietnam War, and likewise
expressed in song their support for the
civil rights movement. Such songs
were newly written, but took their instrumentation and stanza
forms from folk tradition.
In
Ireland,
The Clancy Brothers & Tommy Makem
(although the members were all Irish born, the group became famous
while based in New York's Greenwich Village, it must be noted),
The Dubliners,
Clannad,
Planxty,
The Chieftains,
The Pogues and a variety of other
folk bands have done much over recent years to revitalise and
repopularise
Irish traditional music. These
bands were rooted, to a greater or lesser extent, in a living
tradition of Irish music, and they benefitted from collection
efforts on the part of the likes of
Seamus Ennis and
Peter Kennedy, among others.
In
Hungary, the group
Muzsikas and the singer
Marta Sebestyen became known
throughout the world due to their numerous American tours and
their participation in the Hollywood movie
The English Patient and Marta
Sebestyen's work with the
Deep Forest band.
The blending of folk and popular genres
The experience of the last century suggests that
as soon as a folk tradition comes to be marketed as popular music,
its musical content will quickly be modified to become more like
popular music. Such modified folk music often incorporates
electric guitars,
drum kit, or forms of rhythmic
syncopation that are
characteristic of popular music but were absent in the original.
One example of this sort is contemporary
country music, which descends
ultimately from a rural American folk tradition, but has evolved
to become vastly different from its original model.
Rap music evolved from an
African-American inner-city folk tradition, but is likewise very
different nowadays from its folk original. A third example is
contemporary
bluegrass, which is a modified
development of American
old time music.
As less traditional forms of folk music gain
popularity, one often observes tension between so-called "purists"
or "traditionalists" and the innovators. For example,
traditionalists were indignant when
Bob Dylan began to use an
electric guitar. His electrified performance at the
1965
Newport Folk Festival was to
prove to be an early focal point for this controversy.
Sometimes, however, the exponents of amplified
music were bands such as
Fairport Convention,
Pentangle and
Steeleye Span who saw the
electrification of traditional musical forms as a means whereby to
reach a far wider audience, and their efforts have been largely
recognised for what they were by even some of the most die-hard of
purists.
Since the
1970s a genre of "contemporary
folk", fuelled by new singer-songwriters, has continued to make
the coffee-house circuit and keep the tradition of acoustic
non-classical music alive in the United States. Such artists
include
Steve Goodman,
John Prine,
Cheryl Wheeler,
Bill Morrisey,
Christine Lavin and
Gundula Krause. Lavin in
particular has become prominent as a leading promoter of this
musical genre in recent years. Some, such as Lavin and Wheeler,
inject a great deal of humor in their songs and performances,
although much of their music is also deeply personal and sometimes
satirical.
Traditional folk music forms also merged with
rock and roll to form the hybrid
generally known as
folk rock which evolved through
performers such as
The Byrds,
Simon and Garfunkel,
The Mamas and the Papas, and many
others. More recently the same spirit has been embraced and
expanded on by performers such as
Ani DiFranco. At the same time, a
line of singers from Baez to
Phil Ochs have continued to use
traditional forms for original material.
A similar stylistic shift, without using the
"folk music" name, has occurred with the phenomenon of
Celtic music, which in many cases
is based on an amalgamation of
Irish traditional music,
Scottish traditional music, and
other traditional musics associated with lands in which
Celtic languages are or were
spoken (regardless of any significant research showing that the
musics have any genuine genetic relationship; so
Breton music and
Galician music are often included
in the genre).
One of the more unusual offshoots of modern folk
music is the genre now known as
filk, a form of music defined
primarily by who its audience is.
Folk music is still extremely popular among some
audiences today, with folk music clubs meeting to share
traditional-style songs, and there are major folk music festivals
in many countries, eg the
Port Fairy Folk Festival is a
major annual event in Australia attracting top international folk
performers as well as many local artists.
Pastiche and parody
Popular culture
sometimes creates
pastiches of folk music for its
own ends.
One famous example is the pseudo-ballad sung
about brave Sir Robin in the film
Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
Enthusiasts for folk music might properly consider this song to be
pastiche and not
parody, because the tune is
pleasant and far from inept, and the topic being lampooned is not
balladry but the medieval heroic tradition. The arch-shaped
melodic form of this song (first and last lines low in pitch,
middle lines high) is characteristic of traditional English folk
music. A more recent similarly incisive send-up of folk music,
this time American in origin, is the film
A Mighty Wind by
Christopher Guest and
Eugene Levy.
Another instance of pastiche is the notoriously
well-known theme song for the television show
Gilligan's Island (music by
George Wyle, words by
Sherwood Schwartz). This tune is
also folk-like in character, and in fact is written in a
traditional folk
mode (modes are a type of
musical scale); the mode of
"Gilligan's Island" is ambiguous between Dorian and Aeolian. The
lyrics begin with the traditional folk device in which the singer
invites his hearers to listen to the tale that follows. Moreover,
two of the stanzas repeat the final short line, a common device in
English folk stanzas. However, the raising of the key by a
semitone with each new verse is an unmistakable trait of
commercial music and never
occurred in the original folk tradition.
Folk music is easy to
parody because it is, at present,
a
popular music genre that relies
on a traditional music genre. As such, it is likely to lack the
sophistication and glamour that attach to other forms of popular
music. Folk music satire ranges from the worst excesses of
Rambling Syd Rumpo and
Bill Oddie to the deft and subtle
artistry of
Sid Kipper,
Eric Idle and
Tom Lehrer. Even "serious" folk
musicians are not averse to poking fun at the form from time to
time, for example
Martin Carthy's devastating
rendition of the "All the Hard Cheese of Old England", to the tune
of "All the Hard Times of Old England",
Robb Johnson's "Lack of Jolly
Ploughboy," and more recently "I'm Sending an E-mail to Santa" by
the
Yorkshire-based harmony group
Artisan. Other musicians have
been known to take the tune of a traditional folk song and add
their own words, often humourous, or on a similar-sounding yet
different subject; these include
The Wurzels and
The Incredible Dr. Busker
Filk music
is a closely related musical genre which originated as parodies of
folk songs, and parody remains a dominant theme of the style.
See also