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The Ballad of Britain

Mike Harding | 11:54 UK time, Friday, 11 September 2009

I'm part way through an interesting book at the moment, 'The Ballad of Britain (How Music Captured the Soul of a Nation)' by .

Armed only with a small digital recorder, and a minimal amount of knowledge, Will set off to travel round Britain doing 'field recordings' in a foul smelling, worse looking Vauxhall Astra.

What he comes up with is not farm labourers singing songs of love, death and the maiden, but a jumbled mix of the old and new; from traditional Cotswold Morris to rainy nights in Chorlton, Manchester listening to bands like the .

Hodgkinson ignores folk clubs and festivals and instead finds his music wherever he can; recording in his front room in Robin Hood's Bay, in a garret in Islington, and 'The Lakes of Shallin' sung by a lad from North London called .

Some of the stuff he recorded is folk as we might know it, some of it is "new folk" from people like and , but all in all it's a raggle taggle tale.

Old folkies might find themselves getting a little hot under the collar at the seeming lack of knowledge of this innocent abroad. However, it's important to remember that, after the boom years of the Sixties and Seventies, a whole generation have grown up not going to folk clubs or festivals, that don't know , Tony Rose, ,
and and that don't know how that second wave of the folk revival kept the flame burning and the music alive.

Ask me why the flame later faltered and burned low, and I will tell you that it is due to many things, but the greatest culprit is the mainstream media which has always sidelined acoustic, roots and traditional music in favour of the anodyne and the mainstream.

They simply don't like people doing it for themselves.

I like this book so far because it seems to be a celebration of that very thing - people doing it for themselves. There's a CD with tracks culled by Will Hodgkinson on his field trip and I'll get hold of a copy for the programme.

Meanwhile, back to the book.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    I read this book a few weeks ago and liked it too. Have to say he gets a few things wrong, though, in a sloppy-journalism kind of way: like spelling people's names wrong or not bothering to find out their names at all, which I find a bit inexcusable. But he put in a lot of legwork to track down some interesting people and tells their tales well. A good read from a refreshing perspective.

  • Comment number 2.

    I'm really looking to 'the concert of the book' at Cecil Sharp House on 22nd October. Martin Carthy & Norma Waterson, Gruff Rhys, Stephanie Hladowski, Sam Lee and Ed, Will & Ginger. It should be (to coin a phrase) cracking stuff!

  • Comment number 3.

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.

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