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jueves, 25 de junio de 2009

The Iron Muse A Panorama of Industrial Folk Song [Folk industrial]

folk industrial
Uno de los más famosos e influyentes de los registros de la reactivación popular británica, The Iron Muse ,reunió las canciones de las minas, molinos y fábricas en el documento musical poderosamente evocador de la Revolución Industrial y sus consecuencias. Canciones de Louis Killen, Anne Briggs, Ray Fisher y otros, están intercalados con canciones de los trabajadores cantaban,interpretadas por la banda y dirigida por Colin Ross . Del álbum original de 1956 se ha ampliado con canciones de Ewan MacColl,
Boardman Harry.Peggy Seeger, Dick Gaughan entre otros artistas.


What is folk song? The term is vague and seems to be getting vaguer. However, the songs on this record may conveniently be called “industrial folk songs” for without exception they were created by industrial workers out of their own daily experience and were circulated, mainly by word of mouth to be used by the songwriter's workmates in mines, mills and foundries. That other branch of workers' song, made by learned writers and musicians on behalf of the proletariat and passed on chiefly through print is not represented on this record. However excellent, such songs belong to a different order and require some other label than that of “folk song”. Here, we repeat, our concern is with songs made by working people out of their own traditions and for their own use.

The folk songs of industrial workers have not been much noticed. Cecil Sharp and other great collectors confined themselves to the rural past and rather shunned the industrial present. Thereby they allowed themselves only a partial view of Britain's musical folklore, for in fact the industrial community has much to show of traditional song native to itself, and indeed the creation of folk song has passed almost entirely into the scope of the working class of the towns within the last century or so as this record may suggest. Though the performance of folk song lingered on in the countryside, the composition of new stuff had to all intents ceased in the villages by the mid-19th century; but among industrial workers the creation of new songs celebrating strikes, pit disasters, workshop incidents etc. persisted and seems lately to have taken a fresh lease of life in somewhat altered circumstances.

We have said that industrial folk song has been neglected hitherto. As far as the light of present knowledge extends, the richest store seems to be found among miners and textile workers. Mining, spinning and weaving are occupations that provided themes for many songs well before the industrial revolution began to affect popular culture in the latter half of the 18th century. Subsequent industrial developments - steel, railways, etc. - which lacked this early fund of song, seem to have remained much weaker in poetry and music than the older traditional industries among whom good songmakers, some of them youngsters, are still to be found. But it must be said that as yet the ground is little explored and surprises may be in store for the searcher. What is so far found, of old stuff and new, is a reproof to those who profess to believe that the cultural horizon of the working class is bounded by the bingo hall and the idiots' lantern. It is true that most of these songs have only a limited circulation; it is also true that the circulation is widening. As yet the industrial community is only dimly aware of its own self-made cultural heritage; but that awareness is growing. This record, in a brief survey, presents but a few of the songs that working men and women have made out of their own lives. If it helps to make the songs wider known, good. If it inspires the making of new industrial songs, better still. The tradition is a fine one and worth perpetuating.






1. The High Level Ranters feat. Johnny Handle: The Sandgate Girl's Lament / Elsie Marley
2. The High Level Ranters feat. Johnny Handle: Doon the Waggonway
3. Tommy Gilfellon: A Miner's Life
4. Ewan MacColl acc. Peggy Seeger: The Coal-Owner and the Pitman's Wife
5. Louis Killen: The Trimdon Grange Explosion
6. Louis Killen: The Blackleg Miners
7. Dick Gaughan acc. Alistair Anderson: The Auchengeich Disaster
8. Ed Pickford: Ee Aye, Aa Cud Hew
9. Maureen Craik acc. Colin Ross: The Durham Lockout
10. The High Level Ranters feat. Johnny Handle: Aa'm Glad the Strike's Done
11. The Celebrated Working Man's Band: The Weaver's March
12. Ray Fisher: The Spinner's Song
13. Ewan MacColl acc. Peggy Seeger: Oh Dear Me
14. Anne Briggs: The Doffing Mistress
15. Dave Brooks: The Little Piecer
16. Harry Boardman acc. Lesley Boardman and Bob Diehl: The Hand-Loom Weaver's Lament
17. Ray Fisher: The Dundee Lassie
18. The Oldham Tinkers feat. John Howarth: Success to the Weavers
19. Ewan MacColl acc. Peggy Seeger: Fourpence a Day
20. Louis Killen: Up the Raw
21. Dick Gaughan: Bonny Woodha'
22. Louis Killen: The Banks of the Dee
23. Bob Davenport acc. The Celebrated Working Man's Band: The Row Between the Cages
24. Louis Killen acc. Colin Ross: Aw Wish Pay Friday Would Come
25. Louis Killen acc. Colin Ross: Keep Your Feet Still, Georgie Hinny
26. Louis Killen: Farewell to the Monty


DESCARGA

PASS:musicmund

1 comentarios:

  1. buen aporte y excelente blog, una coleccion impresionante de musica. probaré este album a ver que tal, suena bien.

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