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Old 07.31.2007, 10:49 AM   #81
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^^^I've been obsessed with James Blackshaw lately, his 'O True Believers' record is well worth checking out.

Also, Six Organs of Admittance, Scorces and Josephine Foster are a few other favourites of mine.
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Old 07.31.2007, 11:42 AM   #82
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yeah, James Blackshaw is great, but he ain't no folk.
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Old 07.31.2007, 11:59 AM   #83
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Fahey and Basho have been mentioned in this thread, and James Blackshaw is obviously influenced by both of them. He's worth checking out anyway.
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Old 07.31.2007, 12:29 PM   #84
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On dime:
Buffy Sainte-Marie 1991-05-06 Halifax, NS FM flac
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Old 07.31.2007, 05:17 PM   #85
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Originally Posted by Torn Curtain

Exc find. thanks.
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Old 07.31.2007, 07:21 PM   #86
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I about shit when I saw there were five pages for a thread called folk music. I thought I was alone. A thread on Harry Smith's Archive of American Folk music sunk like a rock, for some reason (essential listening, by the way).

Then I started reading. You're talking about English folk. That's different.

For some reason, I have trouble getting into English folk. To these American ears, Fairport Convention, for example, is just weird.

Can anyone else hear the difference? It's difficult to put into words, but English folk seems more complex, to a certain extent. Yeah yeah, I know Americans borrowed a bunch from the English (Barbra Allen is as much a staple here as it is there, for example), but it gets changed when that happens. Becomes simpler?

By the way, someone clue me in on "anti-folk." Thanx.
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Old 07.31.2007, 07:28 PM   #87
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This isn't an exclusively UK folk thread; many Americans have been mentioned here, and can continue to be discussed of course.
Personally, I tend to favor the UK stuff (especially regarding the 60s/70s era), but the USA has a lot to offer in this area as well, especially pre-WWII. But yeah, my tastes lean heavily toward UK people like Jansch, Graham, Martyn and some of the groups I mentioned earlier. There are definitely a lot of Americans doing some great stuff now. Stone Breath and their offshoots are totally the real deal.
And yes, one can definitely spot differences from different sides of the ocean. The USA stuff seems to go into more of a pure narrative with minimal chord structures and is sometimes "strummier" (with the notable exception of the Takoma label crowd), while the UK music seems to be more ornamental and places as much emphasis on intricate string work as on the story of the song. My perception anyway...
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Old 07.31.2007, 07:35 PM   #88
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^ You're right. Woody's been mentioned. He's regarded as this hip, pre-Beat cool guy in the States, where even people who aren't into folk will give him a thumbs up.

((On the other hand, there's the Carter Family, who on the surface of things are about as sqaure as you can get. But holy shit... One of my favorite bands of all time. "Single Girl, Married Girl" is a lovely place to start.))
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Old 07.31.2007, 07:40 PM   #89
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The Carter Family are great, but I think of them as being more country than folk. I know the line blurs severely at a certain period and there is quite the convergence of hillbilly/folk/country/blues, but I still think of the Carters as a country thing.

Buffy St Marie, Fahey, Basho, 6 Organs, Stone Breath, Metzger, and many others in this discussion are Americans. I just think you were hoping to go a little further back, which is definitely a worthwhile place to go.
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Old 07.31.2007, 07:41 PM   #90
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My parents used to be Bob Dylan-lovin' hippies. I grew up listening to Woody Guthrie.

So I don't think I'm that into actual folk in the "listens to actual folk instead of Dylan's Bring It All Back Home" way. Fuck that hippie shit. *ignorantly strums power chord*
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Old 07.31.2007, 07:42 PM   #91
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Just realized something re: US vs UK folk. The US has the blues tradition behind it, which, as far as I know, UK folk does not. This might be the crucial difference?

And yeah, to my ears, country/folk/blues/hillbilly(apalachian) are in the same family. Once I figured out that they're all using the same three chords and singing about the same things, the differences between the genres became harder for me to discern.
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Old 07.31.2007, 07:46 PM   #92
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The influence of blues/songster music on the hillbilly culture that grew up playing their (already evolving) versions of British Isles traditionals cannot be denied. There was quite a lot of cross-pollination going on there. The banjo was derived from African origins, the guitar from Europe, and the two changed hands and races pretty freely here. Same for the drum and fife music that survived in rural black tradition dating from the time of the American Revolution. Ever heard that Othar Turner's Rising Star Drum and Fife stuff? Pretty great.
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Old 07.31.2007, 08:10 PM   #93
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The differences between British and American folk traditions really fascinate me. I'm quite knew to both (and admitedly favour the UK style) but it would seem that given differences in both countries' history, the UK style has more of a medievelist slant to it - both in terms of structure and, at times, instruments used.

Given the limits of my knowledge, I also see this translate into a real sense of the pagan in lots of British folk, whereas American folk seems more interested in issues of social 'authenticity'. As such
the Brit tradition (at least during the 60s-70s) seems more escapist and therefore less tied to political issues than the American one.

That said, bands like Fairport Convention were heavily influenced by American rock from the '60s. Their American equiv. is probably The Band (who FC really admired) in that they both brought in trad. songs but played them in a more 'modern' style.
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Old 07.31.2007, 08:18 PM   #94
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Savage Clone
...

Buffy St Marie, Fahey, Basho, 6 Organs, Stone Breath, Metzger, and many others in this discussion are Americans. I just think you were hoping to go a little further back, which is definitely a worthwhile place to go.

and jack rose, man.

recommended listening for this thread is nick drake's family tree, you can clearly hear his roots on american folk and the blues...i think i should add something to this sentence but i'll let it slide unless someone brings it up.

recommended reading is dylan's chronicles, not so much for him but for his (and many of his contemporaries') influences and range and how he talks about them, not only in music but also in literature.

oh yeah and expanding on the previous c93 mention, last year's masterpiece, black ships ate the sky is definitely a great folk record.
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Old 07.31.2007, 08:36 PM   #95
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Everyneurotic
and jack rose, man.

recommended listening for this thread is nick drake's family tree, you can clearly hear his roots on american folk and the blues...i think i should add something to this sentence but i'll let it slide unless someone brings it up.

recommended reading is dylan's chronicles, not so much for him but for his (and many of his contemporaries') influences and range and how he talks about them, not only in music but also in literature.

oh yeah and expanding on the previous c93 mention, last year's masterpiece, black ships ate the sky is definitely a great folk record.

Nick Drake was a god in my eyes. I listen to Pink Moon almost every night before I go to bed (no joke, I really do)

I was reading some excerpts of chronicles on amazon (they have this 5 part thing called 'Bob Dylan's List Of Music You Should Hear') & he makes everything seem so good.

this post doesn't say much, now does it?
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Old 07.31.2007, 09:57 PM   #96
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For those unable to get hold of this month's copy of The Wire, the albums they recommend in their 'primer' of British Psychedelic Folk are:

I couldn't find a link to the list so I typed it out. Excuse typos if you're cutting and pasting into something like Amazon.

Martin Carthy and Dave Swarbrick, Prince Heathen

Lai and Mike Waterson, Bright Phoebus

Tim Hart and Maddy Prior, Heydays: The Solo Recordings 1968-76

Steeleye Span, Please See the King

Richard Thompson, Henry the Human Fly

Sandy Denny, The North Star Grassman and the Ravens

The Pentangle, Soloman's Seal

John Renbourn, The Lady and the Unicorn

The Sallyangie, Children of the Sun

Mark Fry, Dreaming With Alice

Heron, Upon Reflection: The Dawn Anthology

Synanthesia, Synanthesia

Fresh Maggots, Fresh Maggots

Trees, The Garden of Jane Delawney

Mellow Candle, Swaddling Songs

Shelagh McDonald, Let no Man Steal Your Thyme

Comus, Song to Comus: the Complete Collection (includes the album First Utterance)

Spirogyra, A Canterbury Tale

The Strawbs, From the Witchwood

Paul Giovanni/Magnet, The Wicker Man Soundtrack Album

John Martyn, One World
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Old 07.31.2007, 10:01 PM   #97
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Also, for those into reading up on the more mainstream end of this scene (F. Convention, Incredible String Band, etc) I've just started Joe Boyd's autobiography, White Bicycles, and find it really interesting/informative. Obviously, given Boyd's connection with Pink Floyd, a large part of the book concentrates on that story, but even so.

http://www.amazon.com/White-Bicycles...5937223&sr=8-1
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Old 07.31.2007, 10:25 PM   #98
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Just been listening to The Fall's Live at the Witch Trials album and sense a definite psych-folk influence in some of the tracks. Even more so in the Dragnet and Hex Enduction Hour albums.

Bands like C 93 and The Fall definitely seem to have opened up the genre even further into this almost psychotic, occultist area (picking up from bands like Comus, as someone already mentioned).

Another album that sort of hanesses this sort of energy is, of course, Charles Manson's Lies and the Family's Family Jams. Although I'm not sure if I'm making the association because of the music or because I know about the events associated with them.
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Old 07.31.2007, 11:20 PM   #99
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That Fresh Maggots LP is tremendous.
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Old 07.31.2007, 11:46 PM   #100
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Savage Clone
That Fresh Maggots LP is tremendous.

I haven't heard it yet, but for its cover alone I can't wait to get it.

 
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