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English folk music

The folk music of England is a tradition-based music which has existed since the later medieval period. It is often contrasted with courtly, classical and later commercial music. Folk music traditionally was preserved and passed on orally within communities, but print and subsequently audio recordings have since become the primary means of transmission. The term is used to refer both to English traditional music and music composed or delivered in a traditional style.[citation needed]

There are distinct regional and local variations in content and style, particularly in areas more removed from the most prominent English cities, as in Northumbria, or the West Country. Cultural interchange and processes of migration mean that English folk music, although in many ways distinctive, has significant crossovers with the music of Scotland. When English communities migrated to the United States, Canada and Australia, they brought their folk traditions with them, and many of the songs were preserved by immigrant communities.

English folk music has produced or contributed to several cultural phenomena, including sea shanties, jigs, hornpipes and the music for Morris dancing. It has also interacted with other musical traditions, particularly classical and rock music, influencing musical styles and producing musical fusions, such as British folk rock, folk punk and folk metal. There remains a flourishing sub-culture of English folk music, which continues to influence other genres and occasionally gains mainstream attention.

History edit

Origins edit

In the strictest sense, English folk music has existed since the arrival of the Anglo-Saxon people in Britain after 400 AD. The Venerable Bede's story of the cattleman and later ecclesiastical musician Cædmon indicates that in the early medieval period it was normal at feasts to pass around the harp and sing 'vain and idle songs'.[1] Since this type of music was rarely notated, we have little knowledge of its form or content.[2] Some later tunes, like those used for Morris dance, may have their origins in this period, but it is impossible to be certain of these relationships.[3] We know from a reference in William Langland's Piers Plowman, that ballads about Robin Hood were being sung from at least the late 14th century and the oldest detailed material we have is Wynkyn de Worde's collection of Robin Hood ballads printed about 1495.[4]

16th century to the 18th century edit

While there was distinct court music, members of the social elite into the 16th century also seem to have enjoyed, and even to have contributed to the music of the people, as Henry VIII perhaps did with the tavern song "Pastime with Good Company".[5] Peter Burke argued that late medieval social elites had their own culture, but were culturally 'amphibious', able to participate in and affect popular traditions.[6]

 
Original score of Pastime with Good Company (c. 1513), held in the British Library, London.

In the 16th century the changes in the wealth and culture of the upper social orders caused tastes in music to diverge.[6][7] There was an internationalisation of courtly music in terms of both instruments, such as the lute, dulcimer and early forms of the harpsichord, and in form with the development of madrigals, pavanes and galliards.[8] For other social orders, instruments like the pipe, tabor, bagpipe, shawm, hurdy-gurdy, and crumhorn accompanied traditional music and community dance.[9] The fiddle, well established in England by the 1660s, was unusual in being a key element in both the art music that developed in the baroque, and in popular song and dance.[10]

By the mid-17th century, the music of the lower social orders was sufficiently alien to the aristocracy and "middling sort" for a process of rediscovery to be needed in order to understand it, along with other aspects of popular culture such as festivals, folklore and dance.[6] This led to a number of early collections of printed material, including those published by John Playford as The English Dancing Master (1651), and the private collections of Samuel Pepys (1633–1703) and the Roxburghe Ballads collected by Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer (1661–1724).[4] Pepys notably mentioned in his famous diary singing the ballad Barbara Allen on New Year's Eve, 1665, a ballad that survived in the oral tradition well into the twentieth century.[11] In the 18th century there were increasing numbers of collections of what was now beginning to be defined as "folk" music, strongly influenced by the Romantic movement, including Thomas D'Urfey's Wit and Mirth: or, Pills to Purge Melancholy (1719–20) and Bishop Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (1765).[4] The last of these also contained some oral material and by the end of the 18th century this was becoming increasingly common, with collections including Joseph Ritson's, The Bishopric Garland (1784), which paralleled the work of figures like Robert Burns and Walter Scott in Scotland.[4]

 
The first page of an 1840 printed version of "Barbara Allen" one of the most widely collected English language folk ballads.

It was in this period, too, that English folk music traveled across the Atlantic Ocean and became one of the foundations of American traditional music. In the colonies, it mixed with styles of music brought by other immigrant groups to create a host of new genres. For instance, English ballads, along with Irish, Scottish, and German musical traditions when combined with the African banjo, Afro-American rhythmic traditions and the Afro-American jazz and blues aesthetic led in part to the development of bluegrass and country music.

Early 19th century edit

With the Industrial Revolution the themes of the music of the labouring classes began to change from rural and agrarian life to include industrial work songs.[12] Awareness that older kinds of song were being abandoned prompted renewed interest in collecting folk songs during the 1830s and 1840s, including the work of William Sandys' Christmas Carols Ancient and Modern (1833), William Chappell, A Collection of National English Airs (1838) and Robert Bell's Ancient Poems, Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England (1846).[13]

Technological change made new instruments available and led to the development of silver and brass bands, particularly in industrial centres in the north.[14] The shift to urban centres also began to create new types of music, including from the 1850s the Music hall, which developed from performances in ale houses into theatres and became the dominant locus of English popular music for over a century.[15] This combined with increased literacy and print to allow the creation of new songs that initially built on, but began to differ from traditional music as composers like Lionel Monckton and Sidney Jones created music that reflected new social circumstances.[16]

Folk revivals 1890–1969 edit

From the late 19th century there were a series of movements that attempted to collect, record, preserve and later to perform, English folk music and dance. These are usually separated into two folk revivals.

 
Cecil Sharp

The first, in the later 19th and early 20th centuries, involved figures including collectors Sabine Baring-Gould (1834–1924), Frank Kidson (1855–1926), Lucy Broadwood (1858–1939), and Anne Gilchrist (1863–1954), centred around the Folk Song Society, founded in 1911.[4] Francis James Child's (1825–96) eight-volume collection The English and Scottish Popular Ballads (1882–92) became the most influential in defining the repertoire of subsequent performers, and Cecil Sharp (1859–1924), founder of the English Folk Dance Society, was probably the most important figure in understanding of the nature of folk song.[4] The revival was part of a wider national movement in the period around the First World War, and contributed to the creation of the English Pastoral School of classical music which incorporated traditional songs or motifs, as can be seen in the compositions of Percy Grainger (1882–1961), Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872–1951), George Butterworth (1885–1916), Gustav Holst (1874–1934) and Frederick Delius (1862–1934).[17][18] In 1932 the Folk-Song Society and the English Folk Dance Society merged to become the English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS).[12] Some of these revivalists recorded folk songs on wax cylinders, and many of the recordings, including Percy Grainger's collection, are available online courtesy of the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library and the British Library Sound Archive.[19] The second revival gained momentum after the Second World War, following on from the American folk music revival as new forms of media and American commercial music appeared to pose another threat to traditional music.[17][20] The key figures were Ewan MacColl and A. L. Lloyd. The second revival was generally left wing in politics and emphasised the work music of the 19th century and previously neglected forms like erotic folk songs.[4] Topic Records, founded in 1939, provided a major source of folk recordings.[17] The revival resulted in the foundation of a network of folk clubs in major towns, from the 1950s.[21] Major traditional performers included The Watersons, the Ian Campbell Folk Group, and Shirley Collins.[22] The fusing of various styles of American music with English folk also helped to create a distinctive form of guitar fingerstyle known as 'folk baroque', which was pioneered by Davy Graham, Martin Carthy, John Renbourn and Bert Jansch.[23] Several individuals emerged who had learnt the old songs in the oral tradition from their communities and therefore preserved the authentic versions. These people, including Sam Larner,[24] Harry Cox,[25] Fred Jordan,[26] Walter Pardon,[27] Frank Hinchliffe[28] and the Copper Family,[29] released albums of their own and were revered by folk revivalists. Popular folk revival musicians based their works on songs sung by these traditional singers and those collected during the first folk revival.

There are various databases and collections of English folk songs collected during the first and second folk revivals, such as the Roud Folk Song Index, which contains references to 25,000 English language folk songs, and the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library, a multimedia archive of folk-related resources.[30] The British Library Sound Archive contains thousands of recordings of traditional English folk music, including 340 wax cylinder recordings made by Percy Grainger in the early 1900s.[31]

Progressive folk edit

 
Pentangle performing in 1969

The process of fusion between American musical styles and English folk can also be seen as the origin of British progressive folk music, which attempted to elevate folk music through greater musicianship, or compositional and arrangement skills.[32] Many progressive folk performers continued to retain a traditional element in their music, including Jansch and Renbourn, who with Jacqui McShee, Danny Thompson, and Terry Cox, formed Pentangle in 1967.[33] Others totally abandoned the traditional element and in this area particularly influential were the Scottish artists Donovan, who was most influenced by emerging progressive folk musicians in America like Bob Dylan, and the Incredible String Band, who from 1967 incorporated a range of influences including medieval and eastern music into their compositions. Some of this, particularly the Incredible String Band, has been seen as developing into the further subgenre of psych or psychedelic folk and had a considerable impact on progressive and psychedelic rock.[34]

There was a brief flowering of English progressive folk in the late 1960s and early 1970s, with groups like the Third Ear Band and Quintessence following the eastern Indian musical and more abstract work by group such as Comus, Dando Shaft, The Trees, Spirogyra, Forest, and Jan Dukes De Grey, but commercial success was elusive for these bands and most had broken up or moved in very different directions by about 1973. Perhaps the finest individual work in the genre was from artists early 1970s artists like Nick Drake and John Martyn, but these can also be considered the first among the English 'folk troubadours' or 'singer-songwriters', individual performers who remained largely acoustic but who relied mostly on their own individual compositions.[35] The most successful of these was Ralph McTell, whose 'Streets of London' reached number 2 in the UK Single Charts in 1974, and whose music is clearly folk, but without much reliance on tradition, virtuosity, or much evidence of attempts at fusion with other genres.[36]

British folk rock edit

 
Fairport Convention in a Dutch television show in 1972

British folk rock developed in Britain during the mid to late 1960s by the bands Fairport Convention, and Pentangle which built on elements of American folk rock, and on the second British folk revival.[17] It uses traditional music, and compositions in a traditional style, played on a combination of rock and traditional instruments.[37] It was most significant in the 1970s, when it was taken up by groups such as Pentangle, Steeleye Span and the Albion Band.[38] It was rapidly adopted and developed in the surrounding Celtic cultures of Brittany, where it was pioneered by Alan Stivell and bands like Malicorne; in Ireland by groups such as Horslips; in Canada by groups such as Barde; and also in Scotland, Wales and the Isle of Man and Cornwall, to produce Celtic rock and its derivatives.[39] It has been influential in those parts of the world with close cultural connections to Britain, such as the US and Canada and gave rise to the subgenre of Medieval folk rock and the fusion genres of folk punk and folk metal.[40] By the 1980s the genre was in steep decline in popularity, but has survived and revived in significance as part of a more general folk resurgence since the 1990s.[41]

Folk punk edit

In the mid-1980s a new rebirth of English folk began, this time fusing folk with energy and political aggression derived from punk rock. Leaders included The Pogues, The Men They Couldn't Hang, Oyster Band and Billy Bragg.[42] Folk dance music also became popular in the 80s, with acts like the English Country Blues Band and Tiger Moth.[43] The decade later saw the use of reggae with English folk music by the band Edward II & the Red Hot Polkas, especially on their seminal Let's Polkasteady from 1987.[44]

Folk metal edit

 
Eliza Carthy

In a process strikingly similar to the origins of British folk rock in the 1960s, the English thrash metal band Skyclad added violins from a session musician on several tracks for their 1990 debut album The Wayward Sons of Mother Earth.[45] When this was well received they adopted a full-time fiddle player and moved towards a signature folk and jig style leading them to be credited as the pioneers of folk metal, which has spread to Ireland, the Baltic and Germany.[45]

Traditional folk resurgence 1990–present edit

The peak of traditional English folk, like progressive and electric folk, was the mid- to late-1970s, when, for a time it threatened to break through into the mainstream. By the end of the decade, however, it was in decline.[46] The attendance at, and numbers of folk clubs began to decrease, probably as new musical and social trends, including punk rock, new wave and electronic music began to dominate.[47] Although many acts like Martin Carthy and the Watersons continued to perform successfully, there were very few significant new acts pursuing traditional forms in the 1980s. This began to change with a new generation in the 1990s. The arrival and sometimes mainstream success of acts like Kate Rusby, Bellowhead, Nancy Kerr, Kathryn Tickell, Jim Moray, Spiers and Boden, Seth Lakeman, Frank Turner, Laura Marling and Eliza Carthy, all largely concerned with acoustic performance of traditional material, marked a radical turn around in the fortunes of the tradition.[22] This was reflected in the adoption creation of the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards in 2000, which gave the music a much needed status and focus and the profile of folk music is as high in England today as it has been for over thirty years.[48]

Folk clubs edit

Although there were a handful of clubs that allowed space for the performance of traditional folk music by the early 1950s, its major boost came from the short-lived British skiffle craze, from about 1956–8.[17] New clubs included the 'Ballad and Blues' club in a pub in Soho, co-founded by Ewan MacColl.[12] As the craze subsided from the mid-1950s many of these clubs began to shift towards the performance of English traditional folk material.[17] Many became strict 'policy clubs', that pursued a pure and traditional form of music.[12] By the mid-1960s there were probably over 300 in Britain.[17] Most clubs were simply a regular gathering, usually in the back or upstairs room of a public house on a weekly basis.[49] They were largely a phenomenon of the urbanised middle classes and known for the amateur nature of many performances.[50] There were also 'residents', who performed regular short sets of songs.[51] Many of these later emerged as major performers in their own right, including A. L. Lloyd, Martin Carthy, and Shirley Collins.[52] A later generation of performers used the folk club circuit for highly successful mainstream careers, including Billy Connolly, Jasper Carrott, Ian Dury and Barbara Dickson.[17] The number of clubs began to decline in the 1980s, in the face of changing musical and social trends. But the decline began to stabilize in the mid-1990s with the resurgence of interest in folk music and there are now over 160 folk clubs in the United Kingdom, including many that can trace their origins back to the 1950s.[53]

Folk music and the radio edit

The difficulty of gaining regular appearances on television in England has long meant that radio has remained the major popular medium for increasing awareness of the genre. The EFDSS sponsored the BBC Home Service radio program, As I Roved Out, based on field recordings made by Peter Kennedy and Séamus Ennis from 1952 to 1958, which probably did more than any other single factor to introduce the general population to British folk music in the period.[54] Also important were occasional radio shows, such as Lomax's Ballads and Blues (1951),[55] MacColl's Radio-ballads (1958–64) and The Song Carriers (1968).[54] John Peel frequently included folk music of his Top Gear show on Radio One from 1968, but dropped it when punk arrived in the 1970s.[54] The most consistent source of folk music on radio, has been BBC Radio 2. In 1967 "My Kind of folk" was broadcast on Wednesdays. In 1970 "Folk on Friday" began, presented by Jim Lloyd. In 1972 it became "Folk on Sunday".[56] "Folkweave" was presented by Tony Capstick 1975–8. "Folk on Two" (Wednesdays) began in 1980. In 1998 Jim Lloyd retired from the programme and was replaced by Mike Harding. In 2007 it was renamed "The Mike Harding Folk Show". In October 2012 it was announced that Mike Harding would be leaving the programme to be replaced by Mark Radcliffe.[57] Ian A. Anderson, editor of "fRoots", also presented the occasional series for Radio Two. He hosted a World music programme on "Jazz FM" and then spent 10 years broadcasting on the BBC World Service. He currently hosts "fRoots Radio" on the web.[58] For over twenty years, until 2006, Charlie Gillett presented World music on BBC London.

Folk festivals edit

 
The Cambridge Folk Festival 2008

Folk festivals began to be organised by the EFDSS from about 1950, usually as local or regional event with an emphasis on dance, like the Sidmouth Festival (from 1955) and the Keele Festival (1965), which was abandoned in 1981 but reinstituted three years later as the National Folk Festival. The EFDSS gave up its organizing role in these festivals in the 1980s and most are locally run and financed.[59] One of the largest and most prestigious English folk festivals at Cambridge was founded in 1965 and attracts about 10,000 people.[59] Probably the largest is Fairport's Cropredy Convention, which since 1979 has provided a venue for folk, British folk rock, and rock artists; it now attracts up to 20,000 people a year as well as performances for Fairport Convention and their friends.[60] Like rock festivals, folk festivals have begun to multiply since the 1990s and there are over a hundred folk festivals or varying sizes held in England every year.[61]

Forms of folk music edit

Ballads edit

A ballad is a form of verse, often a narrative story and set to music. Many ballads were written and sold as single sheet broadsides. They are usually narrative in structure and make considerable use of repetition.[62] The traditional ballad has been seen as originating with the wandering minstrels of late medieval Europe.[62] There have been many different and contradictory attempts to classify traditional ballads by theme, but commonly identified types are religious, supernatural, tragic, love, historic, legends and humour.[62] Many ballads were brought by English settlers to the New World, thus contributing in part to the bedrock of American folk music that had been established via the Afro-American rhythmic traditions, the blues aesthetic, and the cross-pollination of the American immigrant cultures at the time.

Carols edit

A carol is a festive song. In modern times, carols are associated primarily with Christmas, but in reality there are carols celebrating all festivals and seasons of the year, and not necessarily Christian festivals. They were derived from a form of circle dance accompanied by singers, which was popular from the mid-12th century.[63] From the 14th century they were used as processional songs, particularly at Advent, Easter and Christmas, and to accompany religious mystery plays.[64] They declined after the Protestant Reformation which banned many religious festivals, but some famous carols were written in this period, including 'The Holly and the Ivy' and they were more strongly revived from the 19th century and began to be written and adapted by eminent composers.[65]

Children's songs edit

 
John Newbery's A Little Pretty Pocket Book

The earliest vernacular children's songs in Europe are lullabies from the later medieval period.[66] From soon after we have records of short children's rhyming songs, but most nursery rhymes were not written down until the 18th century.[67] The first English collections were Tommy Thumb's Song Book and a sequel, Tommy Thumb's Pretty Song Book, are both thought to have been published before 1744, and John Newbery's, Mother Goose's Melody, or, Sonnets for the Cradle (c.1785), is the first record we have of many classic rhymes.[68] These rhymes seem to have come from a variety of sources, including traditional riddles, proverbs, ballads, lines of Mummers' plays, drinking songs, historical events, and, it has been suggested, ancient pagan rituals.[68] Roughly half of the current body recognised 'traditional' English rhymes were known by the mid-18th century.[67] From this period we sometimes know the origins and authors of rhymes, like 'Twinkle Twinkle Little Star', which combined an 18th-century French tune with a poem by English writer Jane Taylor and 'Mary Had a Little Lamb', written by Sarah Josepha Hale of Boston in 1830.[68] The first, and possibly the most important collection to focus in this area was, James Orchard Halliwell's, The Nursery Rhymes of England (1842) and Popular Rhymes and Tales in 1849.[69] At the height of the revival Sabine Baring-Gould produced A Book of Nursery Songs (1895), and Andrew Lang produced The Nursery Rhyme Book in 1897.[67] Children's songs, unlike folk songs, have remained part of a living and continuous tradition, for although added to from other sources and affected by written versions, most adults pass on songs they learned from oral sources as children.[68]

Erotic folk songs edit

It has been noted by most recent commentators on English folk song even if it was a bit immoral, that love, the erotic and even the pornographic, were major traditional themes and, if more than ballads are considered, may have been the largest groups of printed songs.[70] Many collectors in the first revival either ignored such songs, or bowdlerized them for publication, as Francis Child and Cecil Sharp did in their collections.[71] In the second revival, erotic folk song was much more accepted as part of the canon of traditional song, helped by the publication of books such as Gershon Legman's, The Horn Book: Studies in Erotic Folklore (1964) and Ed Cray's, The Erotic Muse: American Bawdy Songs, which printed many previously unpublished songs (1968).[72] In England A. L. Lloyd was the key figure in introducing erotic songs to the canon, lecturing and publishing on the subject. He recorded The Foggy Dew and Other Traditional English Love Songs in 1959, and then The Bird in the Bush, Traditional Erotic Songs in 1966 with Frankie Armstrong, and Anne Briggs.[73] He drew a distinction between erotic songs, i.e. those that dealt with love and suggested sexuality through innuendo (like 'The Bonny Black Hare' and 'The Bird in the Bush'), and pornographic songs that were explicit and therefore unworthy of attention.[74] Some authors, however, find these distinctions more difficult to maintain. Although erotic songs became part of the standard fare in folk clubs and among folk rock musicians, relatively few of the more explicit songs have been placed on record.[75]

Hornpipes edit

The hornpipe is a style of dance music thought to have taken its name from an English reed instrument by at least the 17th century.[10] In the mid-18th century it changed from 3/2 time to 2/2, assuming its modern character, and probably reaching the height of its popularity as it became a staple of theatrical performances.[76] It is most often associated with the Sailor's Hornpipe, but has formed the basis of many individual and group country dances into the modern period.[77] Like many dances it was taken up in Scotland and Ireland and given a distinctive national character and moved to America with emigration.[78]

Jigs edit

Jigs are a style of dance music developed in England to accompany a lively dance with steps, turns and leaps. The term jig was derived from the French 'giguer', meaning 'to jump'.[10] It was known as a dance in the 16th century, often in 2/4 time and the term was used for a dancing entertainment in 16th century plays.[79] The dance began to be associated with music particularly in 6/8 time, and with slip jigs 9/8 time.[78] In the 17th century the dance was adopted in Ireland and Scotland, where they were widely adapted, and with which countries they are now most often associated.[80] In some, usually more northern, parts of England, these dances would be referred to as a "Gallop" – such as the Winster Gallop from Derbyshire (though this owes its origins to the Winster Morris).

Morris dance edit

 
English Elizabethan clown Will Kempe dancing a jig from Norwich to London in 1600

A morris dance is a type of English folk dance, usually accompanied by music, and based on rhythmic stepping and the execution of choreographed figures by a group of dancers, often using implements such as sticks, swords, and handkerchiefs. The name is thought to derive from the term 'moorish dance', for Spanish (Muslim) styles of dance and may derive from English court dances of the period.[81] References have been found that suggest that morris dance dates back to the mid-15th century, but claims of pre-Christian origins are now largely dismissed.[3] Morris dance appears to have been widespread in England by the early 17th century, particularly in pastoral areas, but was suppressed, along with associated festivals during and after the English Civil War.[82] It recovered after the Restoration in 1660 but was in steep decline after agricultural and industrial revolutions by the 19th century, when collectors like Cecil Sharp recorded the practice, particularly from versions of dance he found in the Cotswolds.[12] This led to a revival of the tradition, although it may also have affected form and practice.[83] Morris dance took something of a back seat to unaccompanied singing in the second revival, but received a further boost when it attracted the attention of British folk rock musicians like Ashley Hutchings, who produced several albums of dance music, including the influential Morris On series from 1972.[84] Traditionally Morris dance was accompanied by either a pipe and tabor or a fiddle, but from the mid-19th century most common instruments were the melodeon, accordion, concertina and drums.[85] Particularly in Cotswold and Border morris, many tunes are linked to particular dances. Morris dance survives in the distinct local traditions of Cotswold morris, north-west morris, Border Morris, rapper dance and Long Sword dance.

Protest songs edit

Perhaps the oldest clear example of an English protest song is the rhyme 'When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?', used in the Peasants Revolt of 1381.[86] Songs that celebrated social bandits like Robin Hood, from the 14th century onwards can be seen as a more subtle form of protest.[87] With the Levellers and Diggers in the mid-17th century, more overt criticism surfaced, as in the ballad "The Diggers' Song".[88] From roughly the same period, songs of protest at war, pointing out the costs to human lives, also begin to appear, like "The Maunding Souldier or The Fruits of Warre is Beggery", framed as a begging appeal from a crippled soldier of the Thirty Years War.[89] With industrialisation from the 18th century.[90] A surprising English folk hero immortalised in song is Napoleon Bonaparte, in songs such as the "Bonny Bunch of Roses" and "Napoleon's Dream".[91] As labour became more organised songs were used as anthems and propaganda, for miners with songs like "The Black Leg Miner", and for factory workers with songs like "The Factory Bell".[92] These industrial protest songs were largely ignored during the first English folk revival of the later 19th and early 20th century, but were recorded by figures like A. L. Lloyd on albums such as The Iron Muse (1963).[21] In the 1980s the anarchist rock band Chumbawamba recorded several versions of traditional English protest as English Rebel Songs 1381–1914.[93] Ewan MacColl became the leading writer of English protest songs in the 1950s, with pro-communist songs such as "The Ballad of Ho Chi Minh" and "The Ballad of Stalin", as well as volatile protest and topical songs concerning the nuclear threat to peace, most notably "Against the Atom Bomb".[94] The leading voice of protest in Thatcherite Britain in the 1980s was Billy Bragg, whose style of protest song and grass-roots political activism was mostly reminiscent of those of Woody Guthrie.[95]

Sea shanties edit

 
Sailors working at a capstan with musical accompaniment

Sea shanties are a type of work song traditionally sung by sailors. Derived from the French word 'chanter', meaning 'to sing', they may date from as early as the 15th century, but most recorded examples derive from the 19th century.[96] Shanties were usually slow rhythmic songs designed to help with collective tasks on labour-intensive sailing and later steam ships. Many were call and response songs, with one voice (the shantyman) singing a lead line and the rest of the sailors giving a response together. They were derived from varied sources, including dances, folk songs, polkas, waltzes and even West African work-songs.[97] Since different songs were useful for different tasks they are traditionally divided into three main categories, short haul shanties, for tasks requiring quick pulls over a relatively short time; halyard shanties, for heavier work requiring more set-up time between pulls; and Capstan shanties, for long, repetitive tasks requiring a sustained rhythm, but not involving working the lines.[97] Famous shanties include, the 'Blow the Man Down and 'Bound for South Australia', some of which have remained in the public consciousness or been revived by popular recordings. There was some interest in sea shanties in the first revival from figures like Percy Grainger,[98] who recorded several traditional versions on phonographs.[99][100][101] In the second revival A. L. Lloyd attempted to popularise them, recording several albums of sea songs from 1965.[21]

War songs edit

In England songs about military and naval subjects were a major part of the output of ballad writers from the 16th century onwards, including one of the earliest British ballads 'The Ballad of Chevy Chase', which deals with the events of the Scottish victory of the Battle of Otterburn in 1388 and may date to the early 15th century.[102] The conflicts between England and Spain in the later 16th and early 17th centuries produced a number of ballads describing events, particularly naval conflicts like those of the Spanish Armada.[89] The English Civil War (1642–1653) produced a subgenre of "Cavalier ballads", including "When the King Home in Peace Again".[103] Many of these were adapted and reused by Jacobites after the 'Glorious Revolution' of 1688.[104] The Anglo-French Wars of the 17th and 18th centuries saw more descriptive works, usually couched in patriotic terms, but some, like 'Captain Death' (1757) dealt with loss and defeat.[89] As regimental identities emerged songs were adopted for marching, like 'The British Grenadiers', based on a 17th-century dance tune.[105] Output became a flood during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (1797–1815), seeing numerous patriotic war songs, like 'Heart of Oak' and the emergence of a stereotype of the English seaman as 'Jolly Jack Tar', who appeared in many ballads and on stage.[106] As the musical hall began to take over the lead in popular music and folk song declined, folk song ceased to deal with contemporary wars in the later 19th century.[citation needed]

Work songs edit

Work songs include music sung while conducting a task (often to coordinate timing) or a song linked to a task or trade which might be a connected narrative, description, or protest song. The two main types of work song in England are agricultural work songs, usually are rhythmic a cappella songs sung by people working on a physical and often repetitive task, like the 'Harvest song' common in south-west England.[107] The songs were probably intended to increase productivity while reducing feelings of boredom.[108] Rhythms of work songs can serve to synchronize physical movement in a group or gang. Industrial folk song emerged in Britain in the 18th century, as workers took the music with which they were familiar, including ballads and agricultural work songs, and adapted them to their new experiences and circumstances.[109] Unlike agricultural work songs, it was often unnecessary to use music to synchronise actions between workers, as the pace would be increasingly determined by water, steam, chemical and eventually electric power, and frequently impossible because of the noise of early industry.[110] As a result, industrial folk songs tended to be descriptive of work, circumstances, or political in nature, making them amongst the earliest protest songs and were sung between work shifts or in leisure hours, rather than during work. This pattern can be seen in textile production, mining and eventually steel, shipbuilding, rail working and other industries.[109]

Regional traditions edit

East Anglia edit

 
Molly dancers at Whittlesea Straw Bear Festival

Like many regions of England there are few distinctive local instruments and many songs were shared with the rest of Britain and with Ireland, although the distinct dialects of the regions sometimes lent them a particular stamp and, with one of the longest coastlines of any English region, songs about the sea were also particularly important. Along with the West Country, this was one of the regions that most firmly adopted reed instruments, producing many eminent practitioners of the melodeon from the mid-19th century. Also like the West Country it is one of the few regions where there is still an active tradition of step dancing and like the Midlands the tradition of Molly dance died out in the 1930s.[111] The region was relatively neglected by folk song collectors of the first revival. Lucy Broadwood and Cecil Sharp collected in Cambridgeshire, as did and Vaughan Williams as well as in Norfolk and Essex from 1905, but most important regional figure was composer Ernest John Moeran, who collected over 150 songs in Norfolk and Suffolk in the 1920s.[112] The second folk revival led to the discovery of many East Anglian folk musicians, including Suffolk melodeon player Oscar Woods, Norfolk singers Sam Larner (1878–1965), Harry Cox (1885–1971) and Walter Pardon (1914–96); Suffolk fiddler Harkie Nesling (1890–1978); Suffolk singer and bargeman Bob Roberts (1907–82), many of whom recorded for Topic Records.[113] Perhaps the most influential folk dance musical album was English Country Dance Music (1965), put together by Reg Hall and Bob Davenport with largely Norfolk musicians, it was the first instrumental recording of folk instruments.[22] Also from Norfolk was Peter Bellamy, who in solo projects, with the Young Tradition and in theatrical productions was probably one of the most influential musicians of the post revival period.[114] The Norfolk melodeon player and singer Tony Hall has given the tradition a unique style.[115] East Anglia made a contribution to the British folk rock scene of the 1970s, producing the short-lived, but more recently reformed, bands Midwinter and Stone Angel, based in Great Yarmouth and the more successful Spriguns of Tolgus from Cambridge, who produced four albums.[116] The most successful folk artists from the region in recent years are probably the Essex born Billy Bragg and the Norfolk born Beth Orton.[117] The region is home to numerous folk clubs and hosts many folk festivals, including Steeleye Span's Spanfest at Kentwell Hall, Suffolk and the Cambridge Folk Festival, generally seen as the most prestigious in the calendar.[61] Since 2000 the East Anglian Traditional Music Trust has been promoting folk music in the region, organising a 'Traditional Music Day' every year in August.[118]

The Midlands edit

Due to its lack of clear boundaries and a perceived lack of identity in its folk music, the English Midlands attracted relatively little interest in the early revivals. However, in more recent years a distinct cultural heritage has been recognised including unique folk traditions and songs, many associated with the regions industrial connections. It has also produced a number of important performers and some particular local instruments, such as the Lincolnshire bagpipes, however the last player, John Hunsley, died in the 19th century and no actual examples of the pipes have survived.[119] From the 19th century the instruments used appear to have been much like those in other regions, with fiddles, accordions and eventually silver and brass. Although, some traditions, like Molly dance died out in the 1930s, the Midlands retained strong traditions of both ceremonial and social dance, particularly in the south Midlands and Cotswolds and in the distinctive Border Morris from Herefordshire, Worcestershire and Shropshire.[22] The region also furnished some important material for folk songs, including a claim by Nottinghamshire for one of the most popular series of ballads, that of Robin Hood, while local places appear in songs such as 'The Leicester Chambermaid' and 'Oxford' or 'Worcester City'.[120] Folk song collecting in the first revival was much less comprehensive than for many other regions. In the 1860s Llewellynn Jewitt, collected songs from Derbyshire, and some songs were printed by Georgina F. Jackson in her study of Shropshire folk lore.[121] Cecil Sharp's interest in the region was largely confined to the south, particularly the Cotswold morris villages of Oxfordshire and Warwickshire, which provided him with an archetype of English ceremonial dance.[12] From 1905, Percy Grainger was actively collecting in Lincolnshire, acquiring recordings of songs that would provide the basis for his Lincolnshire Posy (1937).[122] It was not until the early 1970s that the broader heritage of the region, including the many industrial and work songs associated with mining or The Potteries, began to gain serious attention.[123] Despite this neglect there was an active folk scene in the region, which produced several key artists of the second revival from the 1960s, including Anne Briggs from Nottinghamshire, The Settlers from the West Midlands and from Birmingham one of the most influential groups of the period, the Ian Campbell Folk Group, which numbered among its members later British folk rock musicians Dave Swarbrick and Dave Pegg.[17] Slightly later a number of folk groups came out of Derbyshire, including The Druids, Ram's Bottom Band and Muckram Wakes, which included one of the most highly regarded modern performers John Tams.[17] Lincolnshire has produced Martin Simpson, perhaps the most highly regarded folk guitarist of his generation.[124] Birmingham's position as a centre for folk music has been emphasised by its place as the home of the Birmingham Conservatoire Folk Ensemble, led by former Albion Band fiddler Joe Broughton, which provides something of a clearing house of promising young folk musicians.[125] The regions has numerous folk clubs and host many major folk festivals, including those of Gainsborough, Lincolnshire; Loughborough, Leicestershire; Shrewsbury, Shropshire; Warwick, Warwickshire; and Moseley, West Midlands.[126]

The North West edit

Although relatively neglected in the first folk revival North West England had a rich tradition of balladry stretching back at least to the 17th century and sharing in the tradition of Border ballads, including perhaps the finest 'The Ballad of Chevy Chase', thought to have been composed by the Lancashire-born sixteenth century minstrel Richard Sheale.[127] Lancashire in particular was a common location for folk songs, including 'The Lancashire Miller', 'Warrington Ale' and 'The soldier's farewell to Manchester', beside several local Wassailing songs.[127] With a variety of dialects and acting as something of a crossroads for the cultures and immigrants of England, Scotland and Ireland, there is a distinctive local character to folk music, which expressed itself in local enthusiasm that emerged as a major factor within the wider folk movement in the second revival. The key event in the history of folk music in the counties of the north west of England was the Industrial Revolution, which divided the region economically and culturally into a northern, often highland and pastoral region, in Westmorland and Cumberland and a more urbanised and industrialised southern zone with large and growing conurbations like Manchester and Liverpool, where changing social and economic patterns emerged in new traditions and styles of folk song, often linked to migration and patterns of work, these included processional dances, often associated with rushbearing and the Wakes Week festivities and types of step dance, most famously clog dancing.[128] These were very different from the styles of dance that collectors like Cecil Sharp had encountered in the Cotswolds and were largely dismissed by him as contaminated by urbanisation, yet they were, and remain, a thriving tradition of music and dance.[12] A local pioneer of folk song collection in the first half of the 19th century in Lancashire was Shakespearian scholar James Orchard Halliwell, and he was followed a little later by John Harland, William E. Axon, Thomas T. Wilkinson and Sidney Gilpin, who performed a similar service for Cumberland.[129] Most of these works, although important in unearthing, and in some cases preserving, locally relevant ballads, largely depended on manuscript sources, rather than oral collection and often did not give tunes, but only lyrics.[127] It was not until the second folk revival that the full range of song from the region began to gain attention. The region not only produced one of the major figures of the revival in Ewan MacColl but also a local champion in Harry Boardman, who from 1965 onwards probably did more than anyone to popularise and record the industrial folk song of the region, in several albums and books.[130] The region produced no significant bands in the folk rock movement of the 1970s but can claim one of the most significant figures, as Maddy Prior was brought up in Blackpool. However, perhaps the most influential folk artists to emerge from the region in this period were folk troubadour Roy Harper and comedian and broadcaster Mike Harding.[131] More recently it has produced some significant performers including guitarist Ken Nicol and mother and daughter singer songwriters Chris and Kellie While.[132] The region is home to numerous folk clubs, many of them catering to Irish and Scots folk. Folk festivals include the Fylde Folk Festival at Fleetwood in Lancashire.[133]

Northumbria edit

 
Billy Purvis (1784–1853) one of the last travelling minstrel pipers of the south of Scotland and the north east of England.

Northumbria possesses a distinctive style of folk music with a flourishing and continuing tradition.[22] The region is particularly noted for the unique Northumbrian smallpipes and strong fiddle tradition that was already well-established in the 1690s. Northumbrian music is characterised by considerable influence from other regions, particularly southern Scotland, other parts of the north of England and Ireland.[22] Local tunes were collected from the mid-18th century by figures including Henry Atkinson and William Vickers and in the first revival by John Bell, Bruce. J. Collingwood and John Stokoe.[134] The short-lived Northumbrian Small Pipes Society was founded in Newcastle in 1893 and the Northumbrian Pipers' Society in 1928, and they are generally credited with keeping the distinctive tradition alive.[135] Border ballads were a major part of those collected by Francis James Child and make up most of the sixth volume of his ten volume collection of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads (1882–98).[136] The second folk revival saw a number of acts drawing on this work, and enjoying some success. Probably the most influential piper at that time was Billy Pigg.[20] Performers such Louis Killen, The High Level Ranters and Bob Davenport brought Northumbrian folk to national and international audiences.[22] The 1970s saw folk rock bands like Lindisfarne, and the more traditionally focused Jack the Lad and Hedgehog Pie.[22] More recently, Northumbrian folk music, and particularly the use of the Northumbrian pipes, has become one of the liveliest and most widely known subgenres of folk music in Britain, with artists like fiddler Nancy Kerr, piper Kathryn Tickell and Rachel Unthank and the Winterset gaining international reputations.[22] Currently the region has over thirty active folk clubs and hosts several major folk festivals, including the Traditional Music Festival at Rothbury.[137][138]

The South East edit

Even excluding Sussex and London, South-east England has been one of the key areas of English folk music and collection. It had retained a strong tradition of wassailing, and seafaring songs were important in the coastal counties of Kent and Hampshire. Arguably the published collection of oral material was made in this area by John Broadwood, as Old English Songs, As Now Sung by the Peasantry of the Weald of Surrey and Sussex (1843).[139] When the first revival was at its height in the first decade of the 20th century, George Gardiner and Alice Gillington both collected songs in Hampshire, Lucy Broadwood in Surrey, Hampshire and Oxfordshire, Alfred Williams in Oxfordshire and Berkshire and Cecil Sharp in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, and Kent.[140] In the second folk revival the region contributed several figures, with probably the most important being Martin Carthy from Hertfordshire. The most significant British folk rock group from the region were the Oyster Band, formed in Canterbury, while guitarist John Martyn came from Surrey and fiddle player Chris Leslie from Banbury in Oxfordshire. From the current crop of young folk musicians probably the most prominent are Spiers and Boden from Oxfordshire and Chris Wood, born in Kent. The region is host to numerous folk clubs, and festivals, including the Oxford festival and Fairport's Cropredy Convention in Oxfordshire and St Albans in Hertfordshire.[133]

London edit

 
Street vendors in a 16th-century print

Despite being the centre of both folk revivals and the British folk rock movement, the songs of London were largely neglected in favour of regional and rural music until relatively recently. London, unsurprisingly, was the most common location mentioned in English folk songs, including 'London is a Fine Town', and the 'London Prentice' and it was the centre of the broadside publishing industry.[89] From the 17th century to the 19th, street singers were characteristic of London life, often selling printed versions of the songs they sang.[141] The capital is home to the Folk-Song Society and the English Folk Dance Society since the late 19th century (now known as the English Folk Dance and Song Society), but the most distinctive genre of London music, its many street cries, were not considered folk music by mainstream collectors and were recorded and published by figures such as Andrew White in Old London Street Cries ; and, The Cries of To-day (1885).[142] Both Ewan MacColl and A. L. Lloyd gravitated to London in the 1950s, it was the base of Topic Records and it was there that the first folk clubs were formed before they spread out across the country.[4] It was also the home of folk musicians like Ashley Hutchings, Richard Thompson and Simon Nicol who formed Fairport Convention, and many artists, like Bert Jansch and Davy Graham, moved there in order to be able to pursue their careers or for the greater networks and opportunities the capital allowed.[143] More recent performers of folk music include Noah and the Whale, Emma Lee Moss, Mumford and Sons, The Border Surrender and Anna Tam.[144][145]

Sussex edit

Sussex has disproportionately affected the history of English folk music. This was due to a flourishing tradition of folk dance, mummers plays and folk song, but also in part because of the rural nature of the county in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and yet its relatively close proximity to London. It was thus a rich and convenient place for the collectors of the first folk song revival, including Kate Lee, Lucy Broadwood and W. P. Merrick.[146] Sussex material was used by the composers of the English pastoral school, for example in Percy Grainger's arrangement of 'The Sussex Mummers' Christmas Carol', Ralph Vaughan Williams' use of the tune 'Monk's Gate' as a setting for John Bunyan's 'To be a Pilgrim' and George Butterworth's arrangement of 'Folk Songs from Sussex'.[147] Most important of the collector's sources were the Copper Family of Rottingdean, who emerged as authorities on folk song and eventually as major recording artists.[148] Sussex folk song also had a formative effect on one of the major figures of the second revival, as it was as a child of five in Sussex that A. L. Lloyd first heard folk music.[149] Other performers include Scan Tester, Henry Burstow and the sisters Dolly and Shirley Collins. Sussex songs were also the foundation of the repertoire of the influential Young Tradition.[150] The county has over twenty folk clubs and other venues hosting folk music by organisations such as Acoustic Sussex. There are also annual folk music festivals at Eastbourne, Crawley and Lewes.[151]

The West Country edit

Cornwall edit

 
The red party attending the red 'obby 'oss in the Padstow mayday festival

The music of Cornwall is often noted for its similarity to that of Brittany and, as a result of the close physical and cultural ties between the two peninsulas, some older songs and carols share the same root as Breton tunes.[152] From the late Middle Ages the fiddle (crowd in Cornish), bombarde (horn-pipe), bagpipes and harp all seem to have been used in music. The Cornish bagpipes died out, as elsewhere in southern England, in the 16th century, but have recently been re-created.[153] From the mid-19th century accordions became progressively more popular as a folk instrument in the county, as in the rest of the West Country. There is long and varied history of Cornish dance from the medieval period, with records of strong traditions of morris dancing, mumming, guise dancing, and social dance.[154] These seem to have been interrupted by the Reformation and Civil War and Commonwealth in the 16th and 17th centuries.[155] However, there was revival from the late 18th century and seasonal and community festivals, mumming and guising all flourished.[156] In the 19th century a strong tradition of nonconformity and temperance may also have affected dancing and music adversely and encouraged choral and brass band movements, while traditional tunes were used for carols. Some community events survived, such as the 'Obby 'Oss festival in Padstow and the Furry Dance in Helston.[157] Folk songs include 'Sweet Nightingale', 'Little Eyes', and 'Lamorna'. 'Trelawny' is often sung at sporting events and is seen by many as an unofficial anthem.[158] Few traditional Cornish lyrics survived the decline of the language, but in some cases lyrics of common English songs became attached to older Cornish tunes.[159] Some folk tunes have Cornish lyrics written since the language revival of the 1920s.[159] Modern Cornish musicians include the former Cornish folk singer Brenda Wootton and the Cornish-Breton family band Anao Atao.[159] Recently bands like Sacred Turf, Skwardya and Krena, have begun performing British folk rock in the Cornish language.[160] The Cornwall Folk Festival has been held annually for more than three decades.[161]

The rest of the West Country edit

 
Seth Lakeman on stage in 2008

Outside Devon and Cornwall Celtic influence on music in the West Country is much less obvious, but folk music still retains many distinctive local characteristics. As in Cornwall there are very strong traditions of folk dance and mumming, the best known being the Hobby horse celebrations at Minehead in Somerset.[162] The maritime heritage of Devon made sea shanties, hornpipes and naval or sea ballads important parts of regional folk music.[98] From the 19th century accordions have been a popular and accepted part of the local folk sound. Folk songs from the West Country include 'Widdecombe Fair', 'Spanish Ladies' and 'The Seeds of Love.' The region was important in the first folk revival, as the Devon-born antiquarian Sabine Baring-Gould invested effort in collecting regional music, published as Songs and Ballads of the West (1889–91), the first collection published for the mass market. He later collaborated with Cecil Sharp who, with Charles Marson, produced a three volume Folk-Songs from Somerset (1904–09).[163] Other collectors included Henry and Robert Hammond in Dorset, the Reverend Geoffrey Hill in Wiltshire, Percy Grainger in Gloucestershire and, perhaps the most famous, Ralph Vaughan Williams' 'Folk Songs from Somerset', which provided themes for his English Folk Song Suite.[164] In the second folk revival the most famous West country musicians were melodeon-player Bob Cann and writer, performer and broadcaster Cyril Tawney, 'The Father of the West Country Folk Revival'.[165] In the 1970s there were figures such as Tony Rose.[166] The same period saw one of the most surprising hybrids in music history Scrumpy and Western with bands like the Wurzels and The Yetties, who took most of the elements of West Country folk music for comical folk-style songs with affectionate parodies of more mainstream musical genres, delivered in local West Country dialects.[167] More seriously, the West Country and particularly Devon, have produced some of the most successful folk artists of recent years, including Show of Hands, Mark Bazeley and Jason Rice, Paul Downes, Jim Causley, Seth Lakeman and his brothers.[168] The region has numerous folk clubs and annual festivals, including those at Portsmouth and the first modern English folk festival to be established at Sidmouth in Devon along with its associated 'Late Night Extra' venue at Bulverton .[169]

Yorkshire edit

Yorkshire has a rich heritage of folk music and folk dance including the Long Sword dance.[170] Folk songs were collected there from the 19th century but, though it probably had more attention than other northern counties, its rich heritage of industrial folk song was relatively neglected.[171] It was not until the second revival in the 1950s that Nigel and Mary Hudleston began to attempt to redress the balance, collecting Yorkshire songs between 1958 and 1978.[172] Yorkshire folk song lacked the unique instrumental features of folk in areas like Northumbria and was chiefly distinguished by the use of dialect, particularly in the West Riding and exemplified by the song 'On Ilkla Moor Baht 'at', probably written in the later 19th century and using a Kent folk tune (almost certainly borrowed via a Methodist hymnal), but often seen as an unofficial Yorkshire anthem.[173] Most Yorkshire folk songs were not unique and tended to be adapted to fit local geography and dialect, as was the case with probably the most commercially successful Yorkshire song, 'Scarborough Fair', recorded by Simon & Garfunkel, which was a version of the Scottish ballad 'The Elfin Knight'.[174] The most famous folk performers from the county are the Watersons from Hull, who began recording Yorkshire versions of folk songs from 1965.[175] Other Yorkshire folk musicians include Heather Wood (born 1945) of the Young Tradition, the short-lived folk rock group Mr Fox (1970–2), The Deighton Family, Julie Matthews, Kathryn Roberts, and the Mercury Prize nominated Kate Rusby.[175] Even considering its position as the largest county in England, Yorkshire has a flourishing folk music culture, with over forty folk clubs and thirty annual folk music festivals.[176] In 2007, the Yorkshire Garland Group was formed to make Yorkshire folk songs accessible online and in schools.[177]

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External links edit

  • Historical Notes on British Melodies
  • Folk Music of England
  • East Anglian Music Trust
  • Yorkshire Garland Group
  • Field recordings by various collectors from the British Library (See under Europe)
  • Hidden English: A Celebration of English Traditional Music Various Artists Topic Records TSCD600 (CD, UK, 1996)

english, folk, music, this, article, about, confused, with, ethnic, group, from, england, folk, music, england, tradition, based, music, which, existed, since, later, medieval, period, often, contrasted, with, courtly, classical, later, commercial, music, folk. This article is about English folk music It is not to be confused with ethnic group from England The folk music of England is a tradition based music which has existed since the later medieval period It is often contrasted with courtly classical and later commercial music Folk music traditionally was preserved and passed on orally within communities but print and subsequently audio recordings have since become the primary means of transmission The term is used to refer both to English traditional music and music composed or delivered in a traditional style citation needed There are distinct regional and local variations in content and style particularly in areas more removed from the most prominent English cities as in Northumbria or the West Country Cultural interchange and processes of migration mean that English folk music although in many ways distinctive has significant crossovers with the music of Scotland When English communities migrated to the United States Canada and Australia they brought their folk traditions with them and many of the songs were preserved by immigrant communities English folk music has produced or contributed to several cultural phenomena including sea shanties jigs hornpipes and the music for Morris dancing It has also interacted with other musical traditions particularly classical and rock music influencing musical styles and producing musical fusions such as British folk rock folk punk and folk metal There remains a flourishing sub culture of English folk music which continues to influence other genres and occasionally gains mainstream attention Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 16th century to the 18th century 1 3 Early 19th century 1 4 Folk revivals 1890 1969 1 5 Progressive folk 1 6 British folk rock 1 7 Folk punk 1 8 Folk metal 1 9 Traditional folk resurgence 1990 present 2 Folk clubs 3 Folk music and the radio 4 Folk festivals 5 Forms of folk music 5 1 Ballads 5 2 Carols 5 3 Children s songs 5 4 Erotic folk songs 5 5 Hornpipes 5 6 Jigs 5 7 Morris dance 5 8 Protest songs 5 9 Sea shanties 5 10 War songs 5 11 Work songs 6 Regional traditions 6 1 East Anglia 6 2 The Midlands 6 3 The North West 6 4 Northumbria 6 5 The South East 6 5 1 London 6 5 2 Sussex 6 6 The West Country 6 6 1 Cornwall 6 6 2 The rest of the West Country 6 7 Yorkshire 7 See also 8 Notes 9 External linksHistory editOrigins edit In the strictest sense English folk music has existed since the arrival of the Anglo Saxon people in Britain after 400 AD The Venerable Bede s story of the cattleman and later ecclesiastical musician Caedmon indicates that in the early medieval period it was normal at feasts to pass around the harp and sing vain and idle songs 1 Since this type of music was rarely notated we have little knowledge of its form or content 2 Some later tunes like those used for Morris dance may have their origins in this period but it is impossible to be certain of these relationships 3 We know from a reference in William Langland s Piers Plowman that ballads about Robin Hood were being sung from at least the late 14th century and the oldest detailed material we have is Wynkyn de Worde s collection of Robin Hood ballads printed about 1495 4 16th century to the 18th century editWhile there was distinct court music members of the social elite into the 16th century also seem to have enjoyed and even to have contributed to the music of the people as Henry VIII perhaps did with the tavern song Pastime with Good Company 5 Peter Burke argued that late medieval social elites had their own culture but were culturally amphibious able to participate in and affect popular traditions 6 nbsp Original score of Pastime with Good Company c 1513 held in the British Library London In the 16th century the changes in the wealth and culture of the upper social orders caused tastes in music to diverge 6 7 There was an internationalisation of courtly music in terms of both instruments such as the lute dulcimer and early forms of the harpsichord and in form with the development of madrigals pavanes and galliards 8 For other social orders instruments like the pipe tabor bagpipe shawm hurdy gurdy and crumhorn accompanied traditional music and community dance 9 The fiddle well established in England by the 1660s was unusual in being a key element in both the art music that developed in the baroque and in popular song and dance 10 nbsp Vihuela sample source source A vihuela playing Jamaica from Playford s 4th edition of The English Dancing Master Problems playing this file See media help By the mid 17th century the music of the lower social orders was sufficiently alien to the aristocracy and middling sort for a process of rediscovery to be needed in order to understand it along with other aspects of popular culture such as festivals folklore and dance 6 This led to a number of early collections of printed material including those published by John Playford as The English Dancing Master 1651 and the private collections of Samuel Pepys 1633 1703 and the Roxburghe Ballads collected by Robert Harley 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer 1661 1724 4 Pepys notably mentioned in his famous diary singing the ballad Barbara Allen on New Year s Eve 1665 a ballad that survived in the oral tradition well into the twentieth century 11 In the 18th century there were increasing numbers of collections of what was now beginning to be defined as folk music strongly influenced by the Romantic movement including Thomas D Urfey s Wit and Mirth or Pills to Purge Melancholy 1719 20 and Bishop Thomas Percy s Reliques of Ancient English Poetry 1765 4 The last of these also contained some oral material and by the end of the 18th century this was becoming increasingly common with collections including Joseph Ritson s The Bishopric Garland 1784 which paralleled the work of figures like Robert Burns and Walter Scott in Scotland 4 nbsp The first page of an 1840 printed version of Barbara Allen one of the most widely collected English language folk ballads It was in this period too that English folk music traveled across the Atlantic Ocean and became one of the foundations of American traditional music In the colonies it mixed with styles of music brought by other immigrant groups to create a host of new genres For instance English ballads along with Irish Scottish and German musical traditions when combined with the African banjo Afro American rhythmic traditions and the Afro American jazz and blues aesthetic led in part to the development of bluegrass and country music Early 19th century edit With the Industrial Revolution the themes of the music of the labouring classes began to change from rural and agrarian life to include industrial work songs 12 Awareness that older kinds of song were being abandoned prompted renewed interest in collecting folk songs during the 1830s and 1840s including the work of William Sandys Christmas Carols Ancient and Modern 1833 William Chappell A Collection of National English Airs 1838 and Robert Bell s Ancient Poems Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England 1846 13 Technological change made new instruments available and led to the development of silver and brass bands particularly in industrial centres in the north 14 The shift to urban centres also began to create new types of music including from the 1850s the Music hall which developed from performances in ale houses into theatres and became the dominant locus of English popular music for over a century 15 This combined with increased literacy and print to allow the creation of new songs that initially built on but began to differ from traditional music as composers like Lionel Monckton and Sidney Jones created music that reflected new social circumstances 16 Folk revivals 1890 1969 edit Main article British folk revival From the late 19th century there were a series of movements that attempted to collect record preserve and later to perform English folk music and dance These are usually separated into two folk revivals nbsp Cecil SharpThe first in the later 19th and early 20th centuries involved figures including collectors Sabine Baring Gould 1834 1924 Frank Kidson 1855 1926 Lucy Broadwood 1858 1939 and Anne Gilchrist 1863 1954 centred around the Folk Song Society founded in 1911 4 Francis James Child s 1825 96 eight volume collection The English and Scottish Popular Ballads 1882 92 became the most influential in defining the repertoire of subsequent performers and Cecil Sharp 1859 1924 founder of the English Folk Dance Society was probably the most important figure in understanding of the nature of folk song 4 The revival was part of a wider national movement in the period around the First World War and contributed to the creation of the English Pastoral School of classical music which incorporated traditional songs or motifs as can be seen in the compositions of Percy Grainger 1882 1961 Ralph Vaughan Williams 1872 1951 George Butterworth 1885 1916 Gustav Holst 1874 1934 and Frederick Delius 1862 1934 17 18 In 1932 the Folk Song Society and the English Folk Dance Society merged to become the English Folk Dance and Song Society EFDSS 12 Some of these revivalists recorded folk songs on wax cylinders and many of the recordings including Percy Grainger s collection are available online courtesy of the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library and the British Library Sound Archive 19 The second revival gained momentum after the Second World War following on from the American folk music revival as new forms of media and American commercial music appeared to pose another threat to traditional music 17 20 The key figures were Ewan MacColl and A L Lloyd The second revival was generally left wing in politics and emphasised the work music of the 19th century and previously neglected forms like erotic folk songs 4 Topic Records founded in 1939 provided a major source of folk recordings 17 The revival resulted in the foundation of a network of folk clubs in major towns from the 1950s 21 Major traditional performers included The Watersons the Ian Campbell Folk Group and Shirley Collins 22 The fusing of various styles of American music with English folk also helped to create a distinctive form of guitar fingerstyle known as folk baroque which was pioneered by Davy Graham Martin Carthy John Renbourn and Bert Jansch 23 Several individuals emerged who had learnt the old songs in the oral tradition from their communities and therefore preserved the authentic versions These people including Sam Larner 24 Harry Cox 25 Fred Jordan 26 Walter Pardon 27 Frank Hinchliffe 28 and the Copper Family 29 released albums of their own and were revered by folk revivalists Popular folk revival musicians based their works on songs sung by these traditional singers and those collected during the first folk revival There are various databases and collections of English folk songs collected during the first and second folk revivals such as the Roud Folk Song Index which contains references to 25 000 English language folk songs and the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library a multimedia archive of folk related resources 30 The British Library Sound Archive contains thousands of recordings of traditional English folk music including 340 wax cylinder recordings made by Percy Grainger in the early 1900s 31 Progressive folk edit Main article Progressive folk nbsp Pentangle performing in 1969The process of fusion between American musical styles and English folk can also be seen as the origin of British progressive folk music which attempted to elevate folk music through greater musicianship or compositional and arrangement skills 32 Many progressive folk performers continued to retain a traditional element in their music including Jansch and Renbourn who with Jacqui McShee Danny Thompson and Terry Cox formed Pentangle in 1967 33 Others totally abandoned the traditional element and in this area particularly influential were the Scottish artists Donovan who was most influenced by emerging progressive folk musicians in America like Bob Dylan and the Incredible String Band who from 1967 incorporated a range of influences including medieval and eastern music into their compositions Some of this particularly the Incredible String Band has been seen as developing into the further subgenre of psych or psychedelic folk and had a considerable impact on progressive and psychedelic rock 34 There was a brief flowering of English progressive folk in the late 1960s and early 1970s with groups like the Third Ear Band and Quintessence following the eastern Indian musical and more abstract work by group such as Comus Dando Shaft The Trees Spirogyra Forest and Jan Dukes De Grey but commercial success was elusive for these bands and most had broken up or moved in very different directions by about 1973 Perhaps the finest individual work in the genre was from artists early 1970s artists like Nick Drake and John Martyn but these can also be considered the first among the English folk troubadours or singer songwriters individual performers who remained largely acoustic but who relied mostly on their own individual compositions 35 The most successful of these was Ralph McTell whose Streets of London reached number 2 in the UK Single Charts in 1974 and whose music is clearly folk but without much reliance on tradition virtuosity or much evidence of attempts at fusion with other genres 36 British folk rock edit Main article British folk rock nbsp Fairport Convention in a Dutch television show in 1972British folk rock developed in Britain during the mid to late 1960s by the bands Fairport Convention and Pentangle which built on elements of American folk rock and on the second British folk revival 17 It uses traditional music and compositions in a traditional style played on a combination of rock and traditional instruments 37 It was most significant in the 1970s when it was taken up by groups such as Pentangle Steeleye Span and the Albion Band 38 It was rapidly adopted and developed in the surrounding Celtic cultures of Brittany where it was pioneered by Alan Stivell and bands like Malicorne in Ireland by groups such as Horslips in Canada by groups such as Barde and also in Scotland Wales and the Isle of Man and Cornwall to produce Celtic rock and its derivatives 39 It has been influential in those parts of the world with close cultural connections to Britain such as the US and Canada and gave rise to the subgenre of Medieval folk rock and the fusion genres of folk punk and folk metal 40 By the 1980s the genre was in steep decline in popularity but has survived and revived in significance as part of a more general folk resurgence since the 1990s 41 Folk punk edit Main article folk punk In the mid 1980s a new rebirth of English folk began this time fusing folk with energy and political aggression derived from punk rock Leaders included The Pogues The Men They Couldn t Hang Oyster Band and Billy Bragg 42 Folk dance music also became popular in the 80s with acts like the English Country Blues Band and Tiger Moth 43 The decade later saw the use of reggae with English folk music by the band Edward II amp the Red Hot Polkas especially on their seminal Let s Polkasteady from 1987 44 Folk metal edit Main article folk metal nbsp Eliza CarthyIn a process strikingly similar to the origins of British folk rock in the 1960s the English thrash metal band Skyclad added violins from a session musician on several tracks for their 1990 debut album The Wayward Sons of Mother Earth 45 When this was well received they adopted a full time fiddle player and moved towards a signature folk and jig style leading them to be credited as the pioneers of folk metal which has spread to Ireland the Baltic and Germany 45 Traditional folk resurgence 1990 present edit The peak of traditional English folk like progressive and electric folk was the mid to late 1970s when for a time it threatened to break through into the mainstream By the end of the decade however it was in decline 46 The attendance at and numbers of folk clubs began to decrease probably as new musical and social trends including punk rock new wave and electronic music began to dominate 47 Although many acts like Martin Carthy and the Watersons continued to perform successfully there were very few significant new acts pursuing traditional forms in the 1980s This began to change with a new generation in the 1990s The arrival and sometimes mainstream success of acts like Kate Rusby Bellowhead Nancy Kerr Kathryn Tickell Jim Moray Spiers and Boden Seth Lakeman Frank Turner Laura Marling and Eliza Carthy all largely concerned with acoustic performance of traditional material marked a radical turn around in the fortunes of the tradition 22 This was reflected in the adoption creation of the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards in 2000 which gave the music a much needed status and focus and the profile of folk music is as high in England today as it has been for over thirty years 48 Folk clubs editMain article Folk clubs Although there were a handful of clubs that allowed space for the performance of traditional folk music by the early 1950s its major boost came from the short lived British skiffle craze from about 1956 8 17 New clubs included the Ballad and Blues club in a pub in Soho co founded by Ewan MacColl 12 As the craze subsided from the mid 1950s many of these clubs began to shift towards the performance of English traditional folk material 17 Many became strict policy clubs that pursued a pure and traditional form of music 12 By the mid 1960s there were probably over 300 in Britain 17 Most clubs were simply a regular gathering usually in the back or upstairs room of a public house on a weekly basis 49 They were largely a phenomenon of the urbanised middle classes and known for the amateur nature of many performances 50 There were also residents who performed regular short sets of songs 51 Many of these later emerged as major performers in their own right including A L Lloyd Martin Carthy and Shirley Collins 52 A later generation of performers used the folk club circuit for highly successful mainstream careers including Billy Connolly Jasper Carrott Ian Dury and Barbara Dickson 17 The number of clubs began to decline in the 1980s in the face of changing musical and social trends But the decline began to stabilize in the mid 1990s with the resurgence of interest in folk music and there are now over 160 folk clubs in the United Kingdom including many that can trace their origins back to the 1950s 53 Folk music and the radio editThe difficulty of gaining regular appearances on television in England has long meant that radio has remained the major popular medium for increasing awareness of the genre The EFDSS sponsored the BBC Home Service radio program As I Roved Out based on field recordings made by Peter Kennedy and Seamus Ennis from 1952 to 1958 which probably did more than any other single factor to introduce the general population to British folk music in the period 54 Also important were occasional radio shows such as Lomax s Ballads and Blues 1951 55 MacColl s Radio ballads 1958 64 and The Song Carriers 1968 54 John Peel frequently included folk music of his Top Gear show on Radio One from 1968 but dropped it when punk arrived in the 1970s 54 The most consistent source of folk music on radio has been BBC Radio 2 In 1967 My Kind of folk was broadcast on Wednesdays In 1970 Folk on Friday began presented by Jim Lloyd In 1972 it became Folk on Sunday 56 Folkweave was presented by Tony Capstick 1975 8 Folk on Two Wednesdays began in 1980 In 1998 Jim Lloyd retired from the programme and was replaced by Mike Harding In 2007 it was renamed The Mike Harding Folk Show In October 2012 it was announced that Mike Harding would be leaving the programme to be replaced by Mark Radcliffe 57 Ian A Anderson editor of fRoots also presented the occasional series for Radio Two He hosted a World music programme on Jazz FM and then spent 10 years broadcasting on the BBC World Service He currently hosts fRoots Radio on the web 58 For over twenty years until 2006 Charlie Gillett presented World music on BBC London Folk festivals editMain article folk festival nbsp The Cambridge Folk Festival 2008Folk festivals began to be organised by the EFDSS from about 1950 usually as local or regional event with an emphasis on dance like the Sidmouth Festival from 1955 and the Keele Festival 1965 which was abandoned in 1981 but reinstituted three years later as the National Folk Festival The EFDSS gave up its organizing role in these festivals in the 1980s and most are locally run and financed 59 One of the largest and most prestigious English folk festivals at Cambridge was founded in 1965 and attracts about 10 000 people 59 Probably the largest is Fairport s Cropredy Convention which since 1979 has provided a venue for folk British folk rock and rock artists it now attracts up to 20 000 people a year as well as performances for Fairport Convention and their friends 60 Like rock festivals folk festivals have begun to multiply since the 1990s and there are over a hundred folk festivals or varying sizes held in England every year 61 Forms of folk music editBallads edit Main article Ballads A ballad is a form of verse often a narrative story and set to music Many ballads were written and sold as single sheet broadsides They are usually narrative in structure and make considerable use of repetition 62 The traditional ballad has been seen as originating with the wandering minstrels of late medieval Europe 62 There have been many different and contradictory attempts to classify traditional ballads by theme but commonly identified types are religious supernatural tragic love historic legends and humour 62 Many ballads were brought by English settlers to the New World thus contributing in part to the bedrock of American folk music that had been established via the Afro American rhythmic traditions the blues aesthetic and the cross pollination of the American immigrant cultures at the time Carols edit Main article Carols A carol is a festive song In modern times carols are associated primarily with Christmas but in reality there are carols celebrating all festivals and seasons of the year and not necessarily Christian festivals They were derived from a form of circle dance accompanied by singers which was popular from the mid 12th century 63 From the 14th century they were used as processional songs particularly at Advent Easter and Christmas and to accompany religious mystery plays 64 They declined after the Protestant Reformation which banned many religious festivals but some famous carols were written in this period including The Holly and the Ivy and they were more strongly revived from the 19th century and began to be written and adapted by eminent composers 65 Children s songs edit Main article Children s songs nbsp John Newbery s A Little Pretty Pocket BookThe earliest vernacular children s songs in Europe are lullabies from the later medieval period 66 From soon after we have records of short children s rhyming songs but most nursery rhymes were not written down until the 18th century 67 The first English collections were Tommy Thumb s Song Book and a sequel Tommy Thumb s Pretty Song Book are both thought to have been published before 1744 and John Newbery s Mother Goose s Melody or Sonnets for the Cradle c 1785 is the first record we have of many classic rhymes 68 These rhymes seem to have come from a variety of sources including traditional riddles proverbs ballads lines of Mummers plays drinking songs historical events and it has been suggested ancient pagan rituals 68 Roughly half of the current body recognised traditional English rhymes were known by the mid 18th century 67 From this period we sometimes know the origins and authors of rhymes like Twinkle Twinkle Little Star which combined an 18th century French tune with a poem by English writer Jane Taylor and Mary Had a Little Lamb written by Sarah Josepha Hale of Boston in 1830 68 The first and possibly the most important collection to focus in this area was James Orchard Halliwell s The Nursery Rhymes of England 1842 and Popular Rhymes and Tales in 1849 69 At the height of the revival Sabine Baring Gould produced A Book of Nursery Songs 1895 and Andrew Lang produced The Nursery Rhyme Book in 1897 67 Children s songs unlike folk songs have remained part of a living and continuous tradition for although added to from other sources and affected by written versions most adults pass on songs they learned from oral sources as children 68 Erotic folk songs edit It has been noted by most recent commentators on English folk song even if it was a bit immoral that love the erotic and even the pornographic were major traditional themes and if more than ballads are considered may have been the largest groups of printed songs 70 Many collectors in the first revival either ignored such songs or bowdlerized them for publication as Francis Child and Cecil Sharp did in their collections 71 In the second revival erotic folk song was much more accepted as part of the canon of traditional song helped by the publication of books such as Gershon Legman s The Horn Book Studies in Erotic Folklore 1964 and Ed Cray s The Erotic Muse American Bawdy Songs which printed many previously unpublished songs 1968 72 In England A L Lloyd was the key figure in introducing erotic songs to the canon lecturing and publishing on the subject He recorded The Foggy Dew and Other Traditional English Love Songs in 1959 and then The Bird in the Bush Traditional Erotic Songs in 1966 with Frankie Armstrong and Anne Briggs 73 He drew a distinction between erotic songs i e those that dealt with love and suggested sexuality through innuendo like The Bonny Black Hare and The Bird in the Bush and pornographic songs that were explicit and therefore unworthy of attention 74 Some authors however find these distinctions more difficult to maintain Although erotic songs became part of the standard fare in folk clubs and among folk rock musicians relatively few of the more explicit songs have been placed on record 75 Hornpipes edit Main article Hornpipe The hornpipe is a style of dance music thought to have taken its name from an English reed instrument by at least the 17th century 10 In the mid 18th century it changed from 3 2 time to 2 2 assuming its modern character and probably reaching the height of its popularity as it became a staple of theatrical performances 76 It is most often associated with the Sailor s Hornpipe but has formed the basis of many individual and group country dances into the modern period 77 Like many dances it was taken up in Scotland and Ireland and given a distinctive national character and moved to America with emigration 78 Jigs edit Main article Jigs Jigs are a style of dance music developed in England to accompany a lively dance with steps turns and leaps The term jig was derived from the French giguer meaning to jump 10 It was known as a dance in the 16th century often in 2 4 time and the term was used for a dancing entertainment in 16th century plays 79 The dance began to be associated with music particularly in 6 8 time and with slip jigs 9 8 time 78 In the 17th century the dance was adopted in Ireland and Scotland where they were widely adapted and with which countries they are now most often associated 80 In some usually more northern parts of England these dances would be referred to as a Gallop such as the Winster Gallop from Derbyshire though this owes its origins to the Winster Morris Morris dance edit Main article Morris dance nbsp English Elizabethan clown Will Kempe dancing a jig from Norwich to London in 1600A morris dance is a type of English folk dance usually accompanied by music and based on rhythmic stepping and the execution of choreographed figures by a group of dancers often using implements such as sticks swords and handkerchiefs The name is thought to derive from the term moorish dance for Spanish Muslim styles of dance and may derive from English court dances of the period 81 References have been found that suggest that morris dance dates back to the mid 15th century but claims of pre Christian origins are now largely dismissed 3 Morris dance appears to have been widespread in England by the early 17th century particularly in pastoral areas but was suppressed along with associated festivals during and after the English Civil War 82 It recovered after the Restoration in 1660 but was in steep decline after agricultural and industrial revolutions by the 19th century when collectors like Cecil Sharp recorded the practice particularly from versions of dance he found in the Cotswolds 12 This led to a revival of the tradition although it may also have affected form and practice 83 Morris dance took something of a back seat to unaccompanied singing in the second revival but received a further boost when it attracted the attention of British folk rock musicians like Ashley Hutchings who produced several albums of dance music including the influential Morris On series from 1972 84 Traditionally Morris dance was accompanied by either a pipe and tabor or a fiddle but from the mid 19th century most common instruments were the melodeon accordion concertina and drums 85 Particularly in Cotswold and Border morris many tunes are linked to particular dances Morris dance survives in the distinct local traditions of Cotswold morris north west morris Border Morris rapper dance and Long Sword dance Protest songs edit Main article Protest songs Early protest songs from Britain Perhaps the oldest clear example of an English protest song is the rhyme When Adam delved and Eve span who was then the gentleman used in the Peasants Revolt of 1381 86 Songs that celebrated social bandits like Robin Hood from the 14th century onwards can be seen as a more subtle form of protest 87 With the Levellers and Diggers in the mid 17th century more overt criticism surfaced as in the ballad The Diggers Song 88 From roughly the same period songs of protest at war pointing out the costs to human lives also begin to appear like The Maunding Souldier or The Fruits of Warre is Beggery framed as a begging appeal from a crippled soldier of the Thirty Years War 89 With industrialisation from the 18th century 90 A surprising English folk hero immortalised in song is Napoleon Bonaparte in songs such as the Bonny Bunch of Roses and Napoleon s Dream 91 As labour became more organised songs were used as anthems and propaganda for miners with songs like The Black Leg Miner and for factory workers with songs like The Factory Bell 92 These industrial protest songs were largely ignored during the first English folk revival of the later 19th and early 20th century but were recorded by figures like A L Lloyd on albums such as The Iron Muse 1963 21 In the 1980s the anarchist rock band Chumbawamba recorded several versions of traditional English protest as English Rebel Songs 1381 1914 93 Ewan MacColl became the leading writer of English protest songs in the 1950s with pro communist songs such as The Ballad of Ho Chi Minh and The Ballad of Stalin as well as volatile protest and topical songs concerning the nuclear threat to peace most notably Against the Atom Bomb 94 The leading voice of protest in Thatcherite Britain in the 1980s was Billy Bragg whose style of protest song and grass roots political activism was mostly reminiscent of those of Woody Guthrie 95 Sea shanties edit Main article Sea shanties nbsp Sailors working at a capstan with musical accompanimentSea shanties are a type of work song traditionally sung by sailors Derived from the French word chanter meaning to sing they may date from as early as the 15th century but most recorded examples derive from the 19th century 96 Shanties were usually slow rhythmic songs designed to help with collective tasks on labour intensive sailing and later steam ships Many were call and response songs with one voice the shantyman singing a lead line and the rest of the sailors giving a response together They were derived from varied sources including dances folk songs polkas waltzes and even West African work songs 97 Since different songs were useful for different tasks they are traditionally divided into three main categories short haul shanties for tasks requiring quick pulls over a relatively short time halyard shanties for heavier work requiring more set up time between pulls and Capstan shanties for long repetitive tasks requiring a sustained rhythm but not involving working the lines 97 Famous shanties include the Blow the Man Down and Bound for South Australia some of which have remained in the public consciousness or been revived by popular recordings There was some interest in sea shanties in the first revival from figures like Percy Grainger 98 who recorded several traditional versions on phonographs 99 100 101 In the second revival A L Lloyd attempted to popularise them recording several albums of sea songs from 1965 21 War songs edit Main article War songs In England songs about military and naval subjects were a major part of the output of ballad writers from the 16th century onwards including one of the earliest British ballads The Ballad of Chevy Chase which deals with the events of the Scottish victory of the Battle of Otterburn in 1388 and may date to the early 15th century 102 The conflicts between England and Spain in the later 16th and early 17th centuries produced a number of ballads describing events particularly naval conflicts like those of the Spanish Armada 89 The English Civil War 1642 1653 produced a subgenre of Cavalier ballads including When the King Home in Peace Again 103 Many of these were adapted and reused by Jacobites after the Glorious Revolution of 1688 104 The Anglo French Wars of the 17th and 18th centuries saw more descriptive works usually couched in patriotic terms but some like Captain Death 1757 dealt with loss and defeat 89 As regimental identities emerged songs were adopted for marching like The British Grenadiers based on a 17th century dance tune 105 Output became a flood during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars 1797 1815 seeing numerous patriotic war songs like Heart of Oak and the emergence of a stereotype of the English seaman as Jolly Jack Tar who appeared in many ballads and on stage 106 As the musical hall began to take over the lead in popular music and folk song declined folk song ceased to deal with contemporary wars in the later 19th century citation needed Work songs edit Main article Work songs Work songs include music sung while conducting a task often to coordinate timing or a song linked to a task or trade which might be a connected narrative description or protest song The two main types of work song in England are agricultural work songs usually are rhythmic a cappella songs sung by people working on a physical and often repetitive task like the Harvest song common in south west England 107 The songs were probably intended to increase productivity while reducing feelings of boredom 108 Rhythms of work songs can serve to synchronize physical movement in a group or gang Industrial folk song emerged in Britain in the 18th century as workers took the music with which they were familiar including ballads and agricultural work songs and adapted them to their new experiences and circumstances 109 Unlike agricultural work songs it was often unnecessary to use music to synchronise actions between workers as the pace would be increasingly determined by water steam chemical and eventually electric power and frequently impossible because of the noise of early industry 110 As a result industrial folk songs tended to be descriptive of work circumstances or political in nature making them amongst the earliest protest songs and were sung between work shifts or in leisure hours rather than during work This pattern can be seen in textile production mining and eventually steel shipbuilding rail working and other industries 109 Regional traditions editEast Anglia edit nbsp Molly dancers at Whittlesea Straw Bear FestivalLike many regions of England there are few distinctive local instruments and many songs were shared with the rest of Britain and with Ireland although the distinct dialects of the regions sometimes lent them a particular stamp and with one of the longest coastlines of any English region songs about the sea were also particularly important Along with the West Country this was one of the regions that most firmly adopted reed instruments producing many eminent practitioners of the melodeon from the mid 19th century Also like the West Country it is one of the few regions where there is still an active tradition of step dancing and like the Midlands the tradition of Molly dance died out in the 1930s 111 The region was relatively neglected by folk song collectors of the first revival Lucy Broadwood and Cecil Sharp collected in Cambridgeshire as did and Vaughan Williams as well as in Norfolk and Essex from 1905 but most important regional figure was composer Ernest John Moeran who collected over 150 songs in Norfolk and Suffolk in the 1920s 112 The second folk revival led to the discovery of many East Anglian folk musicians including Suffolk melodeon player Oscar Woods Norfolk singers Sam Larner 1878 1965 Harry Cox 1885 1971 and Walter Pardon 1914 96 Suffolk fiddler Harkie Nesling 1890 1978 Suffolk singer and bargeman Bob Roberts 1907 82 many of whom recorded for Topic Records 113 Perhaps the most influential folk dance musical album was English Country Dance Music 1965 put together by Reg Hall and Bob Davenport with largely Norfolk musicians it was the first instrumental recording of folk instruments 22 Also from Norfolk was Peter Bellamy who in solo projects with the Young Tradition and in theatrical productions was probably one of the most influential musicians of the post revival period 114 The Norfolk melodeon player and singer Tony Hall has given the tradition a unique style 115 East Anglia made a contribution to the British folk rock scene of the 1970s producing the short lived but more recently reformed bands Midwinter and Stone Angel based in Great Yarmouth and the more successful Spriguns of Tolgus from Cambridge who produced four albums 116 The most successful folk artists from the region in recent years are probably the Essex born Billy Bragg and the Norfolk born Beth Orton 117 The region is home to numerous folk clubs and hosts many folk festivals including Steeleye Span s Spanfest at Kentwell Hall Suffolk and the Cambridge Folk Festival generally seen as the most prestigious in the calendar 61 Since 2000 the East Anglian Traditional Music Trust has been promoting folk music in the region organising a Traditional Music Day every year in August 118 The Midlands edit Due to its lack of clear boundaries and a perceived lack of identity in its folk music the English Midlands attracted relatively little interest in the early revivals However in more recent years a distinct cultural heritage has been recognised including unique folk traditions and songs many associated with the regions industrial connections It has also produced a number of important performers and some particular local instruments such as the Lincolnshire bagpipes however the last player John Hunsley died in the 19th century and no actual examples of the pipes have survived 119 From the 19th century the instruments used appear to have been much like those in other regions with fiddles accordions and eventually silver and brass Although some traditions like Molly dance died out in the 1930s the Midlands retained strong traditions of both ceremonial and social dance particularly in the south Midlands and Cotswolds and in the distinctive Border Morris from Herefordshire Worcestershire and Shropshire 22 The region also furnished some important material for folk songs including a claim by Nottinghamshire for one of the most popular series of ballads that of Robin Hood while local places appear in songs such as The Leicester Chambermaid and Oxford or Worcester City 120 Folk song collecting in the first revival was much less comprehensive than for many other regions In the 1860s Llewellynn Jewitt collected songs from Derbyshire and some songs were printed by Georgina F Jackson in her study of Shropshire folk lore 121 Cecil Sharp s interest in the region was largely confined to the south particularly the Cotswold morris villages of Oxfordshire and Warwickshire which provided him with an archetype of English ceremonial dance 12 From 1905 Percy Grainger was actively collecting in Lincolnshire acquiring recordings of songs that would provide the basis for his Lincolnshire Posy 1937 122 It was not until the early 1970s that the broader heritage of the region including the many industrial and work songs associated with mining or The Potteries began to gain serious attention 123 Despite this neglect there was an active folk scene in the region which produced several key artists of the second revival from the 1960s including Anne Briggs from Nottinghamshire The Settlers from the West Midlands and from Birmingham one of the most influential groups of the period the Ian Campbell Folk Group which numbered among its members later British folk rock musicians Dave Swarbrick and Dave Pegg 17 Slightly later a number of folk groups came out of Derbyshire including The Druids Ram s Bottom Band and Muckram Wakes which included one of the most highly regarded modern performers John Tams 17 Lincolnshire has produced Martin Simpson perhaps the most highly regarded folk guitarist of his generation 124 Birmingham s position as a centre for folk music has been emphasised by its place as the home of the Birmingham Conservatoire Folk Ensemble led by former Albion Band fiddler Joe Broughton which provides something of a clearing house of promising young folk musicians 125 The regions has numerous folk clubs and host many major folk festivals including those of Gainsborough Lincolnshire Loughborough Leicestershire Shrewsbury Shropshire Warwick Warwickshire and Moseley West Midlands 126 The North West edit Although relatively neglected in the first folk revival North West England had a rich tradition of balladry stretching back at least to the 17th century and sharing in the tradition of Border ballads including perhaps the finest The Ballad of Chevy Chase thought to have been composed by the Lancashire born sixteenth century minstrel Richard Sheale 127 Lancashire in particular was a common location for folk songs including The Lancashire Miller Warrington Ale and The soldier s farewell to Manchester beside several local Wassailing songs 127 With a variety of dialects and acting as something of a crossroads for the cultures and immigrants of England Scotland and Ireland there is a distinctive local character to folk music which expressed itself in local enthusiasm that emerged as a major factor within the wider folk movement in the second revival The key event in the history of folk music in the counties of the north west of England was the Industrial Revolution which divided the region economically and culturally into a northern often highland and pastoral region in Westmorland and Cumberland and a more urbanised and industrialised southern zone with large and growing conurbations like Manchester and Liverpool where changing social and economic patterns emerged in new traditions and styles of folk song often linked to migration and patterns of work these included processional dances often associated with rushbearing and the Wakes Week festivities and types of step dance most famously clog dancing 128 These were very different from the styles of dance that collectors like Cecil Sharp had encountered in the Cotswolds and were largely dismissed by him as contaminated by urbanisation yet they were and remain a thriving tradition of music and dance 12 A local pioneer of folk song collection in the first half of the 19th century in Lancashire was Shakespearian scholar James Orchard Halliwell and he was followed a little later by John Harland William E Axon Thomas T Wilkinson and Sidney Gilpin who performed a similar service for Cumberland 129 Most of these works although important in unearthing and in some cases preserving locally relevant ballads largely depended on manuscript sources rather than oral collection and often did not give tunes but only lyrics 127 It was not until the second folk revival that the full range of song from the region began to gain attention The region not only produced one of the major figures of the revival in Ewan MacColl but also a local champion in Harry Boardman who from 1965 onwards probably did more than anyone to popularise and record the industrial folk song of the region in several albums and books 130 The region produced no significant bands in the folk rock movement of the 1970s but can claim one of the most significant figures as Maddy Prior was brought up in Blackpool However perhaps the most influential folk artists to emerge from the region in this period were folk troubadour Roy Harper and comedian and broadcaster Mike Harding 131 More recently it has produced some significant performers including guitarist Ken Nicol and mother and daughter singer songwriters Chris and Kellie While 132 The region is home to numerous folk clubs many of them catering to Irish and Scots folk Folk festivals include the Fylde Folk Festival at Fleetwood in Lancashire 133 Northumbria edit Main article Music of Northumbria nbsp Billy Purvis 1784 1853 one of the last travelling minstrel pipers of the south of Scotland and the north east of England Northumbria possesses a distinctive style of folk music with a flourishing and continuing tradition 22 The region is particularly noted for the unique Northumbrian smallpipes and strong fiddle tradition that was already well established in the 1690s Northumbrian music is characterised by considerable influence from other regions particularly southern Scotland other parts of the north of England and Ireland 22 Local tunes were collected from the mid 18th century by figures including Henry Atkinson and William Vickers and in the first revival by John Bell Bruce J Collingwood and John Stokoe 134 The short lived Northumbrian Small Pipes Society was founded in Newcastle in 1893 and the Northumbrian Pipers Society in 1928 and they are generally credited with keeping the distinctive tradition alive 135 Border ballads were a major part of those collected by Francis James Child and make up most of the sixth volume of his ten volume collection of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads 1882 98 136 The second folk revival saw a number of acts drawing on this work and enjoying some success Probably the most influential piper at that time was Billy Pigg 20 Performers such Louis Killen The High Level Ranters and Bob Davenport brought Northumbrian folk to national and international audiences 22 The 1970s saw folk rock bands like Lindisfarne and the more traditionally focused Jack the Lad and Hedgehog Pie 22 More recently Northumbrian folk music and particularly the use of the Northumbrian pipes has become one of the liveliest and most widely known subgenres of folk music in Britain with artists like fiddler Nancy Kerr piper Kathryn Tickell and Rachel Unthank and the Winterset gaining international reputations 22 Currently the region has over thirty active folk clubs and hosts several major folk festivals including the Traditional Music Festival at Rothbury 137 138 The South East edit Even excluding Sussex and London South east England has been one of the key areas of English folk music and collection It had retained a strong tradition of wassailing and seafaring songs were important in the coastal counties of Kent and Hampshire Arguably the published collection of oral material was made in this area by John Broadwood as Old English Songs As Now Sung by the Peasantry of the Weald of Surrey and Sussex 1843 139 When the first revival was at its height in the first decade of the 20th century George Gardiner and Alice Gillington both collected songs in Hampshire Lucy Broadwood in Surrey Hampshire and Oxfordshire Alfred Williams in Oxfordshire and Berkshire and Cecil Sharp in Berkshire Buckinghamshire and Kent 140 In the second folk revival the region contributed several figures with probably the most important being Martin Carthy from Hertfordshire The most significant British folk rock group from the region were the Oyster Band formed in Canterbury while guitarist John Martyn came from Surrey and fiddle player Chris Leslie from Banbury in Oxfordshire From the current crop of young folk musicians probably the most prominent are Spiers and Boden from Oxfordshire and Chris Wood born in Kent The region is host to numerous folk clubs and festivals including the Oxford festival and Fairport s Cropredy Convention in Oxfordshire and St Albans in Hertfordshire 133 London edit nbsp Street vendors in a 16th century printDespite being the centre of both folk revivals and the British folk rock movement the songs of London were largely neglected in favour of regional and rural music until relatively recently London unsurprisingly was the most common location mentioned in English folk songs including London is a Fine Town and the London Prentice and it was the centre of the broadside publishing industry 89 From the 17th century to the 19th street singers were characteristic of London life often selling printed versions of the songs they sang 141 The capital is home to the Folk Song Society and the English Folk Dance Society since the late 19th century now known as the English Folk Dance and Song Society but the most distinctive genre of London music its many street cries were not considered folk music by mainstream collectors and were recorded and published by figures such as Andrew White in Old London Street Cries and The Cries of To day 1885 142 Both Ewan MacColl and A L Lloyd gravitated to London in the 1950s it was the base of Topic Records and it was there that the first folk clubs were formed before they spread out across the country 4 It was also the home of folk musicians like Ashley Hutchings Richard Thompson and Simon Nicol who formed Fairport Convention and many artists like Bert Jansch and Davy Graham moved there in order to be able to pursue their careers or for the greater networks and opportunities the capital allowed 143 More recent performers of folk music include Noah and the Whale Emma Lee Moss Mumford and Sons The Border Surrender and Anna Tam 144 145 Sussex edit Main article Music of Sussex Sussex has disproportionately affected the history of English folk music This was due to a flourishing tradition of folk dance mummers plays and folk song but also in part because of the rural nature of the county in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and yet its relatively close proximity to London It was thus a rich and convenient place for the collectors of the first folk song revival including Kate Lee Lucy Broadwood and W P Merrick 146 Sussex material was used by the composers of the English pastoral school for example in Percy Grainger s arrangement of The Sussex Mummers Christmas Carol Ralph Vaughan Williams use of the tune Monk s Gate as a setting for John Bunyan s To be a Pilgrim and George Butterworth s arrangement of Folk Songs from Sussex 147 Most important of the collector s sources were the Copper Family of Rottingdean who emerged as authorities on folk song and eventually as major recording artists 148 Sussex folk song also had a formative effect on one of the major figures of the second revival as it was as a child of five in Sussex that A L Lloyd first heard folk music 149 Other performers include Scan Tester Henry Burstow and the sisters Dolly and Shirley Collins Sussex songs were also the foundation of the repertoire of the influential Young Tradition 150 The county has over twenty folk clubs and other venues hosting folk music by organisations such as Acoustic Sussex There are also annual folk music festivals at Eastbourne Crawley and Lewes 151 The West Country edit Cornwall edit Main article Music of Cornwall nbsp The red party attending the red obby oss in the Padstow mayday festivalThe music of Cornwall is often noted for its similarity to that of Brittany and as a result of the close physical and cultural ties between the two peninsulas some older songs and carols share the same root as Breton tunes 152 From the late Middle Ages the fiddle crowd in Cornish bombarde horn pipe bagpipes and harp all seem to have been used in music The Cornish bagpipes died out as elsewhere in southern England in the 16th century but have recently been re created 153 From the mid 19th century accordions became progressively more popular as a folk instrument in the county as in the rest of the West Country There is long and varied history of Cornish dance from the medieval period with records of strong traditions of morris dancing mumming guise dancing and social dance 154 These seem to have been interrupted by the Reformation and Civil War and Commonwealth in the 16th and 17th centuries 155 However there was revival from the late 18th century and seasonal and community festivals mumming and guising all flourished 156 In the 19th century a strong tradition of nonconformity and temperance may also have affected dancing and music adversely and encouraged choral and brass band movements while traditional tunes were used for carols Some community events survived such as the Obby Oss festival in Padstow and the Furry Dance in Helston 157 Folk songs include Sweet Nightingale Little Eyes and Lamorna Trelawny is often sung at sporting events and is seen by many as an unofficial anthem 158 Few traditional Cornish lyrics survived the decline of the language but in some cases lyrics of common English songs became attached to older Cornish tunes 159 Some folk tunes have Cornish lyrics written since the language revival of the 1920s 159 Modern Cornish musicians include the former Cornish folk singer Brenda Wootton and the Cornish Breton family band Anao Atao 159 Recently bands like Sacred Turf Skwardya and Krena have begun performing British folk rock in the Cornish language 160 The Cornwall Folk Festival has been held annually for more than three decades 161 The rest of the West Country edit nbsp Seth Lakeman on stage in 2008Outside Devon and Cornwall Celtic influence on music in the West Country is much less obvious but folk music still retains many distinctive local characteristics As in Cornwall there are very strong traditions of folk dance and mumming the best known being the Hobby horse celebrations at Minehead in Somerset 162 The maritime heritage of Devon made sea shanties hornpipes and naval or sea ballads important parts of regional folk music 98 From the 19th century accordions have been a popular and accepted part of the local folk sound Folk songs from the West Country include Widdecombe Fair Spanish Ladies and The Seeds of Love The region was important in the first folk revival as the Devon born antiquarian Sabine Baring Gould invested effort in collecting regional music published as Songs and Ballads of the West 1889 91 the first collection published for the mass market He later collaborated with Cecil Sharp who with Charles Marson produced a three volume Folk Songs from Somerset 1904 09 163 Other collectors included Henry and Robert Hammond in Dorset the Reverend Geoffrey Hill in Wiltshire Percy Grainger in Gloucestershire and perhaps the most famous Ralph Vaughan Williams Folk Songs from Somerset which provided themes for his English Folk Song Suite 164 In the second folk revival the most famous West country musicians were melodeon player Bob Cann and writer performer and broadcaster Cyril Tawney The Father of the West Country Folk Revival 165 In the 1970s there were figures such as Tony Rose 166 The same period saw one of the most surprising hybrids in music history Scrumpy and Western with bands like the Wurzels and The Yetties who took most of the elements of West Country folk music for comical folk style songs with affectionate parodies of more mainstream musical genres delivered in local West Country dialects 167 More seriously the West Country and particularly Devon have produced some of the most successful folk artists of recent years including Show of Hands Mark Bazeley and Jason Rice Paul Downes Jim Causley Seth Lakeman and his brothers 168 The region has numerous folk clubs and annual festivals including those at Portsmouth and the first modern English folk festival to be established at Sidmouth in Devon along with its associated Late Night Extra venue at Bulverton 169 Yorkshire edit Yorkshire has a rich heritage of folk music and folk dance including the Long Sword dance 170 Folk songs were collected there from the 19th century but though it probably had more attention than other northern counties its rich heritage of industrial folk song was relatively neglected 171 It was not until the second revival in the 1950s that Nigel and Mary Hudleston began to attempt to redress the balance collecting Yorkshire songs between 1958 and 1978 172 Yorkshire folk song lacked the unique instrumental features of folk in areas like Northumbria and was chiefly distinguished by the use of dialect particularly in the West Riding and exemplified by the song On Ilkla Moor Baht at probably written in the later 19th century and using a Kent folk tune almost certainly borrowed via a Methodist hymnal but often seen as an unofficial Yorkshire anthem 173 Most Yorkshire folk songs were not unique and tended to be adapted to fit local geography and dialect as was the case with probably the most commercially successful Yorkshire song Scarborough Fair recorded by Simon amp Garfunkel which was a version of the Scottish ballad The Elfin Knight 174 The most famous folk performers from the county are the Watersons from Hull who began recording Yorkshire versions of folk songs from 1965 175 Other Yorkshire folk musicians include Heather Wood born 1945 of the Young Tradition the short lived folk rock group Mr Fox 1970 2 The Deighton Family Julie Matthews Kathryn Roberts and the Mercury Prize nominated Kate Rusby 175 Even considering its position as the largest county in England Yorkshire has a flourishing folk music culture with over forty folk clubs and thirty annual folk music festivals 176 In 2007 the Yorkshire Garland Group was formed to make Yorkshire folk songs accessible online and in schools 177 See also editEnglish country music term used in 1960s to 1970s to describe a genre of instrumental traditional music List of selected noteworthy folk musicians and bands with an emphasis on artists from Britain and the U S A as contained in the Guinness Who s Who of Folk Music pub 1993 Notes edit R I Page Life in Anglo Saxon England London Batsford 1970 pp 159 60 C Parrish The Notation of Medieval Music Maesteg Pendragon Press 1978 a b J Forrest The History of Morris Dancing 1458 1750 Toronto University of Toronto Press 1999 p 48 a b c d e f g h B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 45 9 D Starkey Henry VIII A European Court in England London Collins amp Brown in association with the National Maritime Museum Greenwich 1991 p 154 a b c Peter Burke Popular Culture in Early Modern Europe London Billing 1978 pp 3 17 19 and 28 D C Price Patrons and Musicians of the English Renaissance Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1981 p 5 J Wainwright P Holman From Renaissance to Baroque Change in Instruments and Instrumental Music in the Seventeenth Century Aldershot Ashgate 2005 M Chanan Musica Practica The Social Practice of Western Music from Gregorian Chant to Postmodernism London Verso 1994 p 179 a b c J Ling L Schenck and R Schenck A History of European Folk Music Woodbridge Boydell 1997 pp 123 160 and 194 Never heard of Barbara Allen The world s most collected ballad has been around for 450 years www bbc co uk Retrieved 2020 10 03 a b c d e f g G Boyes The Imagined Village Culture Ideology and the English Folk Revival Manchester Manchester University Press 1993 p 214 W B Sandys Christmas Carols Ancient and Modern London 1833 W Chappell A Collection of National English Airs London 1838 and R Bell Ancient Poems Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England London 1846 D Russell Popular Music in England 1840 1914 A Social History Montreal McGill Queen s University Press 1987 pp 160 90 D Kift The Victorian Music Hall Culture Class and Conflict Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1996 p 17 W Boosey Fifty Years of Music 1931 Read Books 2007 p 161 a b c d e f g h i j M Brocken The British Folk Revival 1944 2002 Aldershot Ashgate 2003 pp 6 8 32 38 53 63 68 70 74 8 97 99 103 112 4 and 132 S Sadie and A Latham The Cambridge Music Guide Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1990 p 472 Percy Grainger ethnographic wax cylinders World and traditional music British Library Sounds sounds bl uk Retrieved 2020 10 03 a b J Connell and C Gibson Sound Tracks Popular Music Identity and Place Routledge 2003 pp 34 6 a b c B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 32 6 a b c d e f g h i S Broughton M Ellingham R Trillo O Duane V Dowell World Music The Rough Guide London Rough Guides 1999 pp 66 8 and 79 80 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 184 9 Roy Palmer 2004 Larner Samuel James Sam 1878 1965 fisherman and folk singer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 57088 Retrieved 2020 09 09 Subscription or UK public library membership required Roy Palmer 2004 Cox Harry Fred 1885 1971 farmworker and singer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 57087 Retrieved 2020 09 09 Subscription or UK public library membership required Fred Jordan A Shropshire Lad CD review The Living Tradition Magazine www folkmusic net Retrieved 2021 01 20 Roy Palmer 2004 Pardon Walter William 1914 1996 carpenter and folk singer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 63074 Retrieved 2020 09 09 Subscription or UK public library membership required david Frank Hinchliffe In Sheffield Park Topic Records Retrieved 2020 09 08 Sansom Ian 2011 08 05 Great dynasties of the world The Copper Family The Guardian Retrieved 2021 10 05 Archive collections www vwml org Retrieved 2020 10 03 Percy Grainger ethnographic wax cylinders World and traditional music British Library Sounds sounds bl uk Retrieved 2021 10 05 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 203 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 40 J DeRogatis Turn on Your Mind Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock Milwaukie MI Hal Leonard 2003 p 120 P Buckley The Rough Guide to Rock the definitive guide to more than 1200 artists and bands London Rough Guides 2003 pp 145 211 12 643 4 Sold on Song BBC Radio 2 retrieved 19 02 09 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 21 5 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 84 97 and 103 5 J S Sawyers Celtic Music A Complete Guide Cambridge MA Da Capo Press 2001 pp 1 12 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 240 57 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 pp 266 70 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford University Press 2005 pp 197 8 S Broughton and M Ellingham World Music Latin and North America Caribbean India Asia and Pacific Volume 2 of World Music The Rough Guide Rough Guides 1999 p 75 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford University Press 2005 p 136 a b Rivadavia Eduardo AMG The Wayward Sons of Mother Earth Review Allmusic Retrieved 2008 03 10 V Bogdanov C Woodstra and S T Erlewine All music guide to rock the definitive guide to rock pop and soul Backbeat Books 3rd edn 2002 pp 1354 5 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 94 D Else J Attwooll C Beech L Clapton O Berry and F Davenport Great Britain London Lonely Planet 2007 p 75 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 37 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 113 R H Finnegan The Hidden Musicians Music Making in an English Town Middletown CT Wesleyan University Press 2007 pp 57 61 B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 45 Folk and Roots http www folkandroots co uk Venues North East html Archived 2009 05 30 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 24 02 09 a b c B Sweers Electric Folk The Changing Face of English Traditional Music Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 p 119 Lifton Sarah 1983 The Listener s Guide to Folk Music Poole Blandford Press p 9 S Street A Concise History of British Radio 1922 2002 Tiverton Kelly Publications 2002 p 129 BBC Press release http www bbc co uk mediacentre latestnews 2012 mark radcliffe adds folk to radio 2 roster html retrieved 18 10 2012 fRoots radio http www frootsmag com radio fRoots radio retrieved 17 02 09 a b B Sweers Electric Folk 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Collection of the Ballads Melodies and Small Pipe Tunes of Northumbria Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle upon Tyne 1882 and F Kidson English Folk Song and Dance Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1915 Read Books 2008 p 42 A Baines Woodwind Instruments and Their History Mineola NY Courier Dover 1991 p 328 J Reed Border Ballads A Selection London Routledge 2004 p 10 Folk and Roots http www folkandroots co uk Venues North East html Archived 2009 05 30 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 15 02 09 R Denselow Rachel Unthank and the Winterset The Bairns Guardian 24 August 2007 https www theguardian com music 2007 aug 24 folk shopping retrieved 5 07 09 J Broadwood Old English Songs As Now Sung by the Peasantry of the Weald of Surrey and Sussex and Collected by One Who Has Learnt Them by Hearing Them Sung Every Christmas from Early Childhood by the Country People Who Go About to the Neighbouring Houses Singing or Wassailing as It Is Called at that Season The Airs Are Set to 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Virgin Publishing Ltd 2nd edn 1997 pp 7 9 Folk music in the City Independent 06 02 09 retrieved 03 12 15 folkandhoney co uk Anna Tam Folk Band Gig Listings Artist Listed on Folk and Honey www folkandhoney co uk Retrieved 2021 01 21 W P Merrick Folk Songs from Sussex English Folk Dance and Song Society 1953 J R Watson T Dudley Smith An Annotated Anthology of Hymns Oxford Oxford University Press 2003 p 108 Copper Family Website http www thecopperfamily com index html retrieved 13 02 09 E D Gregory A L Lloyd and the English Folk Song Revival 1934 44 Canadian Journal for Traditional Music 1997 Obituaries Bob Copper 1 April 2004 The Independent 1 dead link Folk and Roots http www folkandroots co uk Venues Sussex html Archived 2009 02 14 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 13 02 09 Folk in Sussex Folk in Sussex Archived from the original on 2008 08 20 Retrieved 2009 02 25 retrieved 13 02 09 K Mathieson ed Celtic music San Francisco CA Backbeat Books 2001 pp 88 95 H Woodhouse Cornish Bagpipes 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Kellett On Ilkla Mooar baht at the Story of the Song Smith Settle 1988 F J Child The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Dover Publications New York 1965 vol 1 p 8 a b R Nidel World Music The Basics London Routledge 2005 pp 90 1 Folk Roots Folk and Roots the Guide to Yorkshire Folk Venues Clubs Resources and Artists Archived from the original on 2013 02 09 Retrieved 2012 12 15 retrieved 12 02 09 Folk songs of traditional Yorkshire to be celebrated on group s heritage website Yorkshire Post http www yorkshirepost co uk video Folk songs of traditional Yorkshire 3166419 jp retrieved 12 02 09 External links editEnglish Folk and Traditional Music Historical Notes on British Melodies Folk Music of England East Anglian Music Trust Pepys Ballad Archive Yorkshire Garland Group Field recordings by various collectors from the British Library See under Europe Hidden English A Celebration of English Traditional Music Various Artists Topic Records TSCD600 CD UK 1996 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title English folk music amp oldid 1192935956, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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