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The Voice of the People: The Traditional Music of England, Ireland, Scotland & Wales A twenty volume series (20 CDs) “My favourite sit-down-and-listen records” Norma Waterson
This series makes available nearly 500 recordings of English, Irish, Scottish and Welsh traditional music drawn from the archives of Topic Records and from private collections. Compiled as thematic anthologies, each volume stands on its own, but the series as a whole presents an extensive and varied picture of traditional singing, instrumental music-making and dancing throughout the course of the 20th century. Many of the singers and musicians and their recorded performances presented here are classic, but the inclusion of some less well-known performers and genres broadens the horizon by offering glimpses at some little-known nooks and crannies of traditional music-making. This is the home-spun art and entertainment that enriched the lives of working people in pubs and cottages, in social clubs and village halls and on the street, and was made, in the words of one of the musicians in the series, “by people with dirt under their finger nails.” Society has moved on, but the artistry of these singers and musicians and the emotional impact of their performances are timeless. The timbres and textures of the language and musical expression, the performance skills and techniques, the social values contained in both the material and the performers’ life stories, and the subtleties of meaning in the song texts could easily be lost sight of forever. The cultural voices of these farm workers and men on the buildings, the housewives, the shepherds and cowmen, the gardeners and estate workers, the miners and trawlermen, the dealers in scrap, the country policeman and the village postman, the chambermaid and the hospital nurse are therefore worthy of serious and prolonged attention. Their singing and music-making have made a striking and significant contribution to the cultural roots of these islands. Best known as a dance musician, Reg Hall is a visiting research fellow at the University of Sussex and, in compiling and annotating this series, he has called on the experience of a long, personal involvement with traditional music-making and an academic historian’s view of its history and social context. His commentary pays tribute to the pioneer pen-and-paper folk-song-collectors of the Edwardian era and to those professionals in the early post-war years equipped with tape recorders. The 1960s and 1970s saw the rise of a small number of enthusiasts, both professional and amateur, who recorded traditional music and broke new ground in discovery and evaluation, and this series owes a great deal to their creative efforts and co-operation. Ever a critic of the concepts of ‘folk-song’ and ‘folk-dance’, Reg Hall challenges the ground rules of both movements and directs the emphasis in this presentation towards the lives of the performers and the communities and circumstances in which they performed. The songs and dance music had meaning and purpose for the singers and musicians, and the exploration of those realities, as far as we are able to understand them, is far more exciting than perpetuating the myths. Use the list below to see each individual release: TSCD651 COME LET US BUY THE LICENSE Songs of Courtship & Marriage TSCD652 MY SHIP SHALL SAIL THE OCEAN Songs Of Tempest & Sea Battles, Sailor Lads & Fishermen TSCD653 O’ER HIS GRAVE THE GRASS GREW GREEN Tragic Ballads TSCD654 FAREWELL, MY OWN DEAR NATIVE LAND Songs of Exile & Emigration TSCD655 COME All MY LADS THAT FOLLOW THE PLOUGH The Life of Rural Working Men & Women TSCD656 TONIGHT I’LL MAKE YOU MY BRIDE Ballads of True & False Lovers TSCD657 FIRST I’M GOING TO SING YOU A DITTY Rural Fun & Frolics TSCD658 A STORY I’M JUST ABOUT TO TELL Local Events & National Issues TSCD659 RIG-A-JIG-JIG Dance Music of the South of England TSCD660 WHO’S THAT AT MY BED WINDOW? Songs of Love & Amorous Encounters TSCD661 MY FATHER’S THE KING OF THE GYPSIES Music of English & Welsh Travellers & Gypsies TSCD662 WE’VE RECEIVED ORDERS TO SAIL Jackie Tar at Sea & On Shore TSCD663 THEY ORDERED THEIR PINTS OF BEER & BOTTLES OF SHERRY The Joys & Curse of Drink TSCD664 TROUBLES THEY ARE BUT FEW Dance Tunes & Ditties TSCD665 AS ME & MY LOVE SAT COURTING Songs of Love, Courtship & Marriage TSCD666 YOU LAZY LOT OF BONE SHAKERS Songs & Dance Tunes of Seasonal Events TSCD667 IT FELL ON A DAY, A BONNY SUMMER DAY Ballads TSCD668 TO CATCH A FINE BUCK WAS MY DELIGHT Songs of Hunting & Poaching TSCD669 RANTING & REELING Dance Music of the North of England TSCD670
THERE IS A MAN UPON THE FARM Working Men & Women In Song • “Voice Of The People is the most important and rewarding series of British folk song recordings ever issued.” Folk Roots • “This is truly a landmark collection. Quite simply, awesome.” The Times • “ … the single most important event in the world of traditional and roots music.” Songlines Magazine • “Themed individual albums, beautifully presented and simultaneously released to present a comprehensive panorama of the unheralded traditional musicians and singers who kept folk music alive” Mojo • “Great music in really vital – and absolutely unique – performances. An indispensable resource for anyone genuinely interested in traditional folk songs and their performance” NetRhythms TSCD651-670 TOPIC RECORDS 1998 |