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Child Ballads

The Child Ballads are 305 traditional ballads from England and Scotland, and their American variants, anthologized by Francis James Child during the second half of the 19th century. Their lyrics and Child's studies of them were published as The English and Scottish Popular Ballads. The tunes of most of the ballads were collected and published by Bertrand Harris Bronson in and around the 1960s.[1]

8 Volume collection of Francis Child English & Scottish Ballads, 1860
Francis Child English & Scottish Ballads, 1860, Vol 1
The 1904 Houghton Mifflin edition of Child's English and Scottish Popular Ballads

History edit

Age and source of the ballads edit

 
Illustration by Vernon Hill
of Child Ballad 2, The Elfin Knight

The ballads vary in age; for instance, the manuscript of "Judas" dates to the thirteenth century and a version of "A Gest of Robyn Hode" was printed in the late fifteenth or early sixteenth century.[2] The majority of the ballads, however, date to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Although some are claimed to have very ancient influences,[citation needed] only a handful can be definitively traced to before 1600. Moreover, few of the tunes collected are as old as the words. Nevertheless, Child's collection was far more comprehensive than any previous collection of ballads in English.

Many of Child's ballads were obtained from printed broadsides, but he generally distinguished the "traditional" ballads that interested him from later broadside ballads. As Child died before writing a commentary on his work, it is uncertain exactly how and why he selected some ballads and discounted others.[3]

Editorial history edit

 
Francis James Child collected the words to over 300 British folk ballads.
 
Illustration by Arthur Rackham
of Child Ballad 26, "The Twa Corbies"

Child's collection was not the first of its kind; there had been many less scholarly collections of English and Scottish ballads, particularly from Bishop Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (1765) onwards.[4] There were also "comprehensive" ballad collections from other countries. Child modelled his work on Svend Grundtvig's Danmarks gamle Folkeviser, classifying and numbering the ballads and noting different versions, which were placed side by side to aid comparison.[2] As a result, one Child number may cover several ballads, which Child considered variants of the same story, although they may differ in many ways (as in "James Hatley"). Conversely, ballads classified separately may contain turns of phrase, and even entire verses, that are identical.

The editorial history of Child's publication received a monograph study by Mary Ellen Brown in 2011.[5]

Bibliographic history edit

In 1860, Child published an eight-volume collection entitled English and Scottish Ballads, generally presenting just one variant of each ballad, via Little, Brown and Company.[6] However, as a scholarly edition this was superseded by his later and similarly named The English and Scottish Popular Ballads.

The first edition of Child's book was, once complete, The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, ed. by Francis James Child, 5 vols (Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, [1882–98]).[7]

It was printed in one thousand copies, and issued in ten parts, each with a half-title and title page. The final title pages for each of the five volumes, printed in red and black, were issued with part 10. Part 10 emerged after Child's death, and was edited by George Lyman Kittredge. Volume 5 contained a variety of scholarly apparatuses: the "Glossary" (V, pp. [309]-396); "Sources of the texts of the English and Scottish ballads" (V, pp. [397]-404); "Index of published airs of English and Scottish popular ballads, with an appendix of some airs from manuscript" (V, pp. [405]-424); "Index of ballad titles" (V, pp. [425]-453); "Titles of collections of ballads, or of books containing ballads" (V, pp. [455]-468); and "Index of matters and literature" (V, pp. [469]-502).[7]

The book was reprinted, this time physically in three volumes, in 1957 by the New York-based Folklore Press, in association with the Pageant Book Company.[8] It was reprinted again in 1965 in New York by Dover, this time with an essay by Walter Morris Hart entitled 'Professor Child and the Ballad' (reprinted from Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, vol. 21 [N.S. Vol. 14, no. 4]).[9]

Child's edition was also the basis for a number of shorter, popular editions, prominently including English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited from the Collection of Francis James Child, ed. by Helen Child Sargent and George Lyman Kittredge (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1904).[1]

Subjects of the ballads edit

Child Ballads are generally heavier and darker than is usual for ballads. Some of the topics and other features characteristic enough of Child Ballads to be considered Child Ballad motifs are these: romance, enchantment, devotion, determination, obsession, jealousy, forbidden love, insanity, hallucination, uncertainty of one's sanity, the ease with which the truth can be suppressed temporarily, supernatural experiences, supernatural deeds, half-human creatures, teenagers, family strife, the boldness of outlaws, abuse of authority, betting, lust, death, karma, punishment, sin, morality, vanity, folly, dignity, nobility, honor, loyalty, dishonor, riddles, historical events, omens, fate, trust, shock, deception, disguise, treachery, disappointment, revenge, violence, murder, cruelty, combat, courage, escape, exile, rescue, forgiveness, being tested, human weaknesses, and folk heroes.[citation needed]

On one extreme, some Child Ballads recount identifiable historical people, in known events, embellished for dramatic effect.[10] On the other, some differ from fairy tales solely by their being songs and in verse; some have been recast in prose form as fairy tales. A large part of the collection is about Robin Hood; some are about King Arthur. A few of the ballads are rather bawdy.[11]

Modern recordings edit

 
Illustration by Katharine Cameron of a retelling of the story of Child Ballad 37, Thomas Rymer and Queen of Elfland
 
Illustration by Alexander George Fraser
of Child Ballad 275, Get Up and Bar the Door

Many Child Ballads have subsequently appeared in contemporary music recordings. Burl Ives's 1949 album, The Return of the Wayfaring Stranger, for example, includes two: "Lord Randall" and "The Divil and the Farmer".

In 1956 four albums (consisting of eight LPs) of 72 Child Ballads sung by Ewan MacColl and A.L. Lloyd were released: The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, Vols. 1–4.[12]

In 1960 John Jacob Niles published The Ballad Book of John Jacob Niles, in which he connects folk songs which he collected throughout the southern United States and Appalachia in the early 20th century to the Child Ballads. Many of the songs he published were revived in the Folk music revival, for example "The Riddle Song" ("I gave my love a Cherry"), which he connects with Child No. 1, "Riddles Wisely Expounded".

Joan Baez sang ten Child ballads distributed among her first five albums, the liner notes of which identified them as such.[13]

Loreena McKennitt performs Child ballad 170 The Death of Queen Jane on her album The Wind that Shakes the Barley recorded in 2010, and Child ballad 239 Annachie Gordon on her album Parallel Dreams in 1989.

British folk rock groups such as Fairport Convention, Pentangle and Steeleye Span drew heavily on the Child Ballads in their repertoires, and many other recording artists have recorded individual ballads. Harry Smith included a number of them into his Anthology of American Folk Music.

A rendition of child ballad 155 ("Fatal Flower Garden") appears on Andrew Bird's The Swimming Hour.

In 2003 English folk singer June Tabor recorded the album An Echo of Hooves consisting entirely of Child ballads (210, 212, 161, 195, 191, 106, 74, 215, 88, 20, 58).[14]

Child ballad 95, The Maid Freed from the Gallows has appeared in several recordings of blues and rock bands, notably by Lead Belly as "Gallis Pole" and on the album Led Zeppelin III under the name "Gallows Pole."

Child ballads also occasionally occur in the work of musical groups not usually associated with folk material, such as Ween's recording of "The Unquiet Grave" (Child 78) under the title "Cold Blows the Wind" and versions of "Barbara Allen" (Child 84) recorded by the Everly Brothers, Art Garfunkel, and (on the soundtrack of the 2004 film A Love Song for Bobby Long) John Travolta. In 2009, Fleet Foxes included "The Fause Knight Upon the Road" as the b-side to the 7" release of "Mykonos" (as "False Knight on the Road"). In 2013 US singer-songwriter Anaïs Mitchell and Jefferson Hamer released Child Ballads comprising seven songs from the Francis James Child collection and in 2014 American folksinger Martyn Wylde released eight of the Ballads on his album The Child Ballads, Volume 1.

Child Ballads are also referenced heavily in James A. Michener's novel The Drifters.

Virginia Woolf references Child Ballad number 173 "Mary Hamilton" in A Room of One's Own.

Print and electronic editions of Child's two collections edit

The two collections have about 200 ballads in common. Each of the two collections includes about a hundred ballads that the other does not.[15]

Digitisations of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads (1882–98) edit

Volume 1 edit

  • Part 1, ballads 1–28
  • Part 2, ballads 29–53

Volume 2 edit

  • Part 3, ballads 54–82
  • Part 4, ballads 83–113; another scan of part 4

Volume 3 edit

  • Part 5, ballads 114–155
  • Part 6, ballads 156–188

Volume 4 edit

  • Part 7, ballads 189–225
  • Part 8, ballads 226–265

Volume 5 edit

  • Part 9, ballads 266–305; another scan of part 9
  • Part 10 (glossary, ballad airs, bibliography, etc)
  • "Volume 5" (slightly later 2 volumes in one edition, has "Additions and Corrections" Section containing alternate versions not in earliest Part 10 edition)

All the variants contained in Child's edition are digitised, without apparatus, at http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ and http://www.peterrobins.co.uk/ballads/.

Digitisations of English and Scottish ballads (1860) edit

Volume 1; Volume 2; Volume 3; Volume 4; Volume 5; Volume 6; Volume 7; Volume 8.

Tunes in print and electronic editions edit

  • Child's 1882–1898 publication includes, in its final volume's second half, 55 music scores for 46 (of the 305) ballads.[16]
  • Bronson, Bertrand Harris (2009) [1st pub. Princeton University Press, four volumes, 1959–72]. The Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads: With Their Texts, According to the Extant Records of Great Britain and North America. Northfield, Minnesota: Loomis House Press.
  • Bronson, Bertrand Harris. The Singing Tradition of Child's Popular Ballads (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1976. Northfield, Minnesota: Loomis House Press, 2009 reissue)
  • The Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads: Digital Edition (New York: Camsco Music, 2009) is a CD-R of a scan of Bronson's above-listed four-volume publication.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Child, Francis James (1904). Sargent, Helen Child; Kittredge, George Lyman (eds.). English and Scottish Popular Ballads. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b A. N. Bold, The Ballad (Routledge, 1979), p. 5.
  3. ^ T. A. Green, Folklore: An Encyclopedia of Beliefs, Customs, Tales, Music, and Art (ABC-CLIO, 1997), p. 352.
  4. ^ B. Sweers, Electric Folk: The Changing Face of English Traditional Music (Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 45.
  5. ^ Mary Ellen Brown, Child's Unfinished Masterpiece: The English and Scottish Popular Ballads (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2011).
  6. ^ English and Scottish Ballads. ed. by Francis James Child (Boston: Little, Brown and company, 1860).
  7. ^ a b http://search.lib.cam.ac.uk/?itemid=%7Ccambrdgedb |3400905] 4 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^
  9. ^
  10. ^ "ballad". Encyclopædia Britannica. The minstrels manipulate the story with coarse explicitness.
  11. ^ J. E. Housman, British Popular Ballads (1952, Ayer Publishing, 1969).
  12. ^ "Ewan MacColl & A.L. Lloyd: The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, Volume I". Ewan MacColl's Discography. Retrieved 21 May 2014.
  13. ^ Baez's first, second, third and fifth albums (released in 1960–64) included these ten Child ballads, in this order: 173, 250, 54, 84, 113, 81, 209, 243, 78, 170.
  14. ^ "June Tabor – AN ECHO OF HOOVES ~ Released September 2003". June Tabor's Discography. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
  15. ^ In the first collection there are 115 ballads that are not in the second collection. In the second collection there are 90 ballads that are not in the first collection. The first collection has 369 ballads (219 plus 150 that come under the eight volumes' "Appendix" heading). The number of ballads in the second collection is nominally 305 but actually much higher because hundreds of the ballads that Child presented as versions of another ballad (because their story is basically the same or similar) are very different from that other ballad, in many cases sharing not even one stanza.
  16. ^ Which ballads are the 46 for which a tune was included in the 1882–1898 publication (The English and Scottish Popular Ballads) is indicated in this footnote's list of numbers, which are Child's index numbers for those 46. The number of occurrences of a ballad's index number in this list is the number of music scores included for it in that publication. The referents of the index numbers (the title that Child selected to be each ballad's main title) are listed in the List of the Child Ballads. Ballads 3, 9, 10, 10, 10, 11, 12, 12, 17, 20, 40, 42, 42, 46, 47, 53, 58, 61, 63, 68, 75, 77, 84, 89, 95, 97, 98, 99, 99, 100, 106, 114, 157, 161, 163, 164, 164, 169, 169, 173, 182, 222, 226, 228, 235, 247, 247, 250, 256, 258, 278, 281, 286, 286, 299.

Further reading edit

  • Würzbach, Natascha and Salz, Simone M. Motif Index of the Child Corpus: The English and Scottish Popular Ballad. Translated by Gayna Walls (Berlin and New York: de Gruyter, 1995). Alphabetical list of 163 motifs that cites the ballads in which each one occurs.
  • Cheesman, Tom and Rieuwerts, Sigrid, eds. Ballads into Books: The Legacies of F.J. Child (Bern: Peter Lang, 1997). Twenty-one of the papers presented at the 26th International Ballad Conference (1996, Swansea, Wales)
  • Atkinson, David. in the above-listed Ballads into Books: The Legacies of F.J. Child. This is a survey of academic research– not a guide for reading lyrics. But many of the articles in its bibliography are interpretations of an individual ballad.
  • Bronson, Bertrand Harris. The Ballad as Song (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1969). Eighteen essays, first published between 1940 and 1968, on the music and singing of the Child Ballads and related topics, written by the compiler of four thousand Child Ballad tunes

External links edit

  • of Child ballads, mostly unaccompanied, from 1956 to 1976 in Arkansas, Missouri and thereabouts: 137 recordings of 43 ballads by 69 singers, with each recording's version of the lyrics displayed on that recording's webpage. The Max Hunter Folk Song Collection of the Ozark Mountains
  • The title of each version of each Child ballad 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine, listed under Child's index number (one of 1 through 305) for that ballad; all 305 lists in one list. Each version's title is the one given in The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, which was the title given by the source (published, manuscript or oral) from which Child received that version. Each title in this list is a link to the lyrics (in The English and Scottish Popular Ballads) of that version. Child's commentary on each ballad is omitted. The University of Sydney's English Poetry Fulltext Database
  • An alphabetical list of every word in the ballads, showing (and citing the source of) the few words before and after every occurrence of it in any of the ballads. To use the concordance on a Macintosh computer, its four PDF files need to be downloaded to a Windows PC, then de-compressed on a Windows PC and then copied to a Macintosh. Cathy Lynn Preston
  • (his correspondence and other archived papers) for his two ballad collections. Harvard University's Houghton Library

child, ballads, album, album, traditional, ballads, from, england, scotland, their, american, variants, anthologized, francis, james, child, during, second, half, 19th, century, their, lyrics, child, studies, them, were, published, english, scottish, popular, . For the album see Child Ballads album The Child Ballads are 305 traditional ballads from England and Scotland and their American variants anthologized by Francis James Child during the second half of the 19th century Their lyrics and Child s studies of them were published as The English and Scottish Popular Ballads The tunes of most of the ballads were collected and published by Bertrand Harris Bronson in and around the 1960s 1 8 Volume collection of Francis Child English amp Scottish Ballads 1860Francis Child English amp Scottish Ballads 1860 Vol 1The 1904 Houghton Mifflin edition of Child s English and Scottish Popular Ballads Barbara Allen source source Child Ballad No 84 1939 recording of Hule Queen Hines singing Barbara Allen recorded by John and Ruby Lomax Problems playing this file See media help Contents 1 History 1 1 Age and source of the ballads 1 2 Editorial history 1 3 Bibliographic history 2 Subjects of the ballads 3 Modern recordings 4 Print and electronic editions of Child s two collections 4 1 Digitisations of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads 1882 98 4 1 1 Volume 1 4 1 2 Volume 2 4 1 3 Volume 3 4 1 4 Volume 4 4 1 5 Volume 5 4 2 Digitisations of English and Scottish ballads 1860 5 Tunes in print and electronic editions 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editAge and source of the ballads edit nbsp Illustration by Vernon Hill of Child Ballad 2 The Elfin KnightThe ballads vary in age for instance the manuscript of Judas dates to the thirteenth century and a version of A Gest of Robyn Hode was printed in the late fifteenth or early sixteenth century 2 The majority of the ballads however date to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Although some are claimed to have very ancient influences citation needed only a handful can be definitively traced to before 1600 Moreover few of the tunes collected are as old as the words Nevertheless Child s collection was far more comprehensive than any previous collection of ballads in English Many of Child s ballads were obtained from printed broadsides but he generally distinguished the traditional ballads that interested him from later broadside ballads As Child died before writing a commentary on his work it is uncertain exactly how and why he selected some ballads and discounted others 3 Editorial history edit nbsp Francis James Child collected the words to over 300 British folk ballads nbsp Illustration by Arthur Rackham of Child Ballad 26 The Twa Corbies Child s collection was not the first of its kind there had been many less scholarly collections of English and Scottish ballads particularly from Bishop Thomas Percy s Reliques of Ancient English Poetry 1765 onwards 4 There were also comprehensive ballad collections from other countries Child modelled his work on Svend Grundtvig s Danmarks gamle Folkeviser classifying and numbering the ballads and noting different versions which were placed side by side to aid comparison 2 As a result one Child number may cover several ballads which Child considered variants of the same story although they may differ in many ways as in James Hatley Conversely ballads classified separately may contain turns of phrase and even entire verses that are identical The editorial history of Child s publication received a monograph study by Mary Ellen Brown in 2011 5 Bibliographic history edit In 1860 Child published an eight volume collection entitled English and Scottish Ballads generally presenting just one variant of each ballad via Little Brown and Company 6 However as a scholarly edition this was superseded by his later and similarly named The English and Scottish Popular Ballads The first edition of Child s book was once complete The English and Scottish Popular Ballads ed by Francis James Child 5 vols Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin and Company 1882 98 7 It was printed in one thousand copies and issued in ten parts each with a half title and title page The final title pages for each of the five volumes printed in red and black were issued with part 10 Part 10 emerged after Child s death and was edited by George Lyman Kittredge Volume 5 contained a variety of scholarly apparatuses the Glossary V pp 309 396 Sources of the texts of the English and Scottish ballads V pp 397 404 Index of published airs of English and Scottish popular ballads with an appendix of some airs from manuscript V pp 405 424 Index of ballad titles V pp 425 453 Titles of collections of ballads or of books containing ballads V pp 455 468 and Index of matters and literature V pp 469 502 7 The book was reprinted this time physically in three volumes in 1957 by the New York based Folklore Press in association with the Pageant Book Company 8 It was reprinted again in 1965 in New York by Dover this time with an essay by Walter Morris Hart entitled Professor Child and the Ballad reprinted from Publications of the Modern Language Association of America vol 21 N S Vol 14 no 4 9 Child s edition was also the basis for a number of shorter popular editions prominently including English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited from the Collection of Francis James Child ed by Helen Child Sargent and George Lyman Kittredge Boston Houghton Mifflin 1904 1 Subjects of the ballads editChild Ballads are generally heavier and darker than is usual for ballads Some of the topics and other features characteristic enough of Child Ballads to be considered Child Ballad motifs are these romance enchantment devotion determination obsession jealousy forbidden love insanity hallucination uncertainty of one s sanity the ease with which the truth can be suppressed temporarily supernatural experiences supernatural deeds half human creatures teenagers family strife the boldness of outlaws abuse of authority betting lust death karma punishment sin morality vanity folly dignity nobility honor loyalty dishonor riddles historical events omens fate trust shock deception disguise treachery disappointment revenge violence murder cruelty combat courage escape exile rescue forgiveness being tested human weaknesses and folk heroes citation needed On one extreme some Child Ballads recount identifiable historical people in known events embellished for dramatic effect 10 On the other some differ from fairy tales solely by their being songs and in verse some have been recast in prose form as fairy tales A large part of the collection is about Robin Hood some are about King Arthur A few of the ballads are rather bawdy 11 Modern recordings edit nbsp Illustration by Katharine Cameron of a retelling of the story of Child Ballad 37 Thomas Rymer and Queen of Elfland nbsp Illustration by Alexander George Fraser of Child Ballad 275 Get Up and Bar the DoorMany Child Ballads have subsequently appeared in contemporary music recordings Burl Ives s 1949 album The Return of the Wayfaring Stranger for example includes two Lord Randall and The Divil and the Farmer In 1956 four albums consisting of eight LPs of 72 Child Ballads sung by Ewan MacColl and A L Lloyd were released The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Vols 1 4 12 In 1960 John Jacob Niles published The Ballad Book of John Jacob Niles in which he connects folk songs which he collected throughout the southern United States and Appalachia in the early 20th century to the Child Ballads Many of the songs he published were revived in the Folk music revival for example The Riddle Song I gave my love a Cherry which he connects with Child No 1 Riddles Wisely Expounded Joan Baez sang ten Child ballads distributed among her first five albums the liner notes of which identified them as such 13 Loreena McKennitt performs Child ballad 170 The Death of Queen Jane on her album The Wind that Shakes the Barley recorded in 2010 and Child ballad 239 Annachie Gordon on her album Parallel Dreams in 1989 British folk rock groups such as Fairport Convention Pentangle and Steeleye Span drew heavily on the Child Ballads in their repertoires and many other recording artists have recorded individual ballads Harry Smith included a number of them into his Anthology of American Folk Music A rendition of child ballad 155 Fatal Flower Garden appears on Andrew Bird s The Swimming Hour In 2003 English folk singer June Tabor recorded the album An Echo of Hooves consisting entirely of Child ballads 210 212 161 195 191 106 74 215 88 20 58 14 Child ballad 95 The Maid Freed from the Gallows has appeared in several recordings of blues and rock bands notably by Lead Belly as Gallis Pole and on the album Led Zeppelin III under the name Gallows Pole Child ballads also occasionally occur in the work of musical groups not usually associated with folk material such as Ween s recording of The Unquiet Grave Child 78 under the title Cold Blows the Wind and versions of Barbara Allen Child 84 recorded by the Everly Brothers Art Garfunkel and on the soundtrack of the 2004 film A Love Song for Bobby Long John Travolta In 2009 Fleet Foxes included The Fause Knight Upon the Road as the b side to the 7 release of Mykonos as False Knight on the Road In 2013 US singer songwriter Anais Mitchell and Jefferson Hamer released Child Ballads comprising seven songs from the Francis James Child collection and in 2014 American folksinger Martyn Wylde released eight of the Ballads on his album The Child Ballads Volume 1 Child Ballads are also referenced heavily in James A Michener s novel The Drifters Virginia Woolf references Child Ballad number 173 Mary Hamilton in A Room of One s Own Print and electronic editions of Child s two collections editThe two collections have about 200 ballads in common Each of the two collections includes about a hundred ballads that the other does not 15 Digitisations of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads 1882 98 edit Volume 1 edit Part 1 ballads 1 28 Part 2 ballads 29 53Volume 2 edit Part 3 ballads 54 82 Part 4 ballads 83 113 another scan of part 4Volume 3 edit Part 5 ballads 114 155 Part 6 ballads 156 188Volume 4 edit Part 7 ballads 189 225 Part 8 ballads 226 265Volume 5 edit Part 9 ballads 266 305 another scan of part 9 Part 10 glossary ballad airs bibliography etc Volume 5 slightly later 2 volumes in one edition has Additions and Corrections Section containing alternate versions not in earliest Part 10 edition All the variants contained in Child s edition are digitised without apparatus at http www sacred texts com neu eng child and http www peterrobins co uk ballads Digitisations of English and Scottish ballads 1860 edit Volume 1 Volume 2 Volume 3 Volume 4 Volume 5 Volume 6 Volume 7 Volume 8 Tunes in print and electronic editions editChild s 1882 1898 publication includes in its final volume s second half 55 music scores for 46 of the 305 ballads 16 Bronson Bertrand Harris 2009 1st pub Princeton University Press four volumes 1959 72 The Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads With Their Texts According to the Extant Records of Great Britain and North America Northfield Minnesota Loomis House Press Bronson Bertrand Harris The Singing Tradition of Child s Popular Ballads Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press 1976 Northfield Minnesota Loomis House Press 2009 reissue The Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads Digital Edition New York Camsco Music 2009 is a CD R of a scan of Bronson s above listed four volume publication See also editList of the Child Ballads Border ballad List of folk song collections Roud Folk Song Index List of folk songs by Roud number English Folk Dance and Song Society Mudcat CafeReferences edit a b Child Francis James 1904 Sargent Helen Child Kittredge George Lyman eds English and Scottish Popular Ballads Boston Houghton Mifflin Co Retrieved 30 October 2017 a b A N Bold The Ballad Routledge 1979 p 5 T A Green Folklore An Encyclopedia of Beliefs Customs Tales Music and Art ABC CLIO 1997 p 352 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford University Press 2005 p 45 Mary Ellen Brown Child s Unfinished Masterpiece The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Urbana University of Illinois Press 2011 English and Scottish Ballads ed by Francis James Child Boston Little Brown and company 1860 a b http search lib cam ac uk itemid 7Ccambrdgedb 3400905 Archived 4 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine cambrdgedb 3330807 collpwdb 107150 ballad Encyclopaedia Britannica The minstrels manipulate the story with coarse explicitness J E Housman British Popular Ballads 1952 Ayer Publishing 1969 Ewan MacColl amp A L Lloyd The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Volume I Ewan MacColl s Discography Retrieved 21 May 2014 Baez s first second third and fifth albums released in 1960 64 included these ten Child ballads in this order 173 250 54 84 113 81 209 243 78 170 June Tabor AN ECHO OF HOOVES Released September 2003 June Tabor s Discography Retrieved 11 June 2019 In the first collection there are 115 ballads that are not in the second collection In the second collection there are 90 ballads that are not in the first collection The first collection has 369 ballads 219 plus 150 that come under the eight volumes Appendix heading The number of ballads in the second collection is nominally 305 but actually much higher because hundreds of the ballads that Child presented as versions of another ballad because their story is basically the same or similar are very different from that other ballad in many cases sharing not even one stanza Which ballads are the 46 for which a tune was included in the 1882 1898 publication The English and Scottish Popular Ballads is indicated in this footnote s list of numbers which are Child s index numbers for those 46 The number of occurrences of a ballad s index number in this list is the number of music scores included for it in that publication The referents of the index numbers the title that Child selected to be each ballad s main title are listed in the List of the Child Ballads Ballads 3 9 10 10 10 11 12 12 17 20 40 42 42 46 47 53 58 61 63 68 75 77 84 89 95 97 98 99 99 100 106 114 157 161 163 164 164 169 169 173 182 222 226 228 235 247 247 250 256 258 278 281 286 286 299 Further reading editWurzbach Natascha and Salz Simone M Motif Index of the Child Corpus The English and Scottish Popular Ballad Translated by Gayna Walls Berlin and New York de Gruyter 1995 Alphabetical list of 163 motifs that cites the ballads in which each one occurs Cheesman Tom and Rieuwerts Sigrid eds Ballads into Books The Legacies of F J Child Bern Peter Lang 1997 Twenty one of the papers presented at the 26th International Ballad Conference 1996 Swansea Wales Atkinson David A Child Ballad Study Guide with Select Bibliography and Discography in the above listed Ballads into Books The Legacies of F J Child This is a survey of academic research not a guide for reading lyrics But many of the articles in its bibliography are interpretations of an individual ballad Bronson Bertrand Harris The Ballad as Song Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press 1969 Eighteen essays first published between 1940 and 1968 on the music and singing of the Child Ballads and related topics written by the compiler of four thousand Child Ballad tunesExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Child Ballads nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Child s Ballads Amateur audio of amateur solo singing of Child ballads mostly unaccompanied from 1956 to 1976 in Arkansas Missouri and thereabouts 137 recordings of 43 ballads by 69 singers with each recording s version of the lyrics displayed on that recording s webpage The Max Hunter Folk Song Collection of the Ozark Mountains The title of each version of each Child ballad Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine listed under Child s index number one of 1 through 305 for that ballad all 305 lists in one list Each version s title is the one given in The English and Scottish Popular Ballads which was the title given by the source published manuscript or oral from which Child received that version Each title in this list is a link to the lyrics in The English and Scottish Popular Ballads of that version Child s commentary on each ballad is omitted The University of Sydney s English Poetry Fulltext Database Concordance to the Child ballads An alphabetical list of every word in the ballads showing and citing the source of the few words before and after every occurrence of it in any of the ballads To use the concordance on a Macintosh computer its four PDF files need to be downloaded to a Windows PC then de compressed on a Windows PC and then copied to a Macintosh Cathy Lynn Preston Lists of Child s research materials his correspondence and other archived papers for his two ballad collections Harvard University s Houghton Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Child Ballads amp oldid 1216644748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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