Search
Now showing items 1-10 of 28
Vernacular Song, Cultural Identity, and Nationalism in Newfoundland, 1920-1955
(Canadian Folk Music/Musique folklorique canadienne, 2006)
Although a force in Newfoundland politics and culture, nationalist sentiment was not strong enough in 1948 to prevent
confederation with Canada. The absence among many Newfoundlanders of a strong sense of belonging to an ...
Phil Thomas: An Odyssey in Song
(Canadian Folk Music/Musique folklorique canadienne, 2007)
Sampling The Alan Lomax Collection
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2002)
The Songs of the People for Me’: The Victorian Rediscovery of Lancashire Vernacular Song
(Canadian Folk Music/Musique folklorique canadienne, 2006)
Moira Cameron: Northern Balladeer
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2002)
Jewels Left in the Dung-hills: Broadside and other Vernacular Ballads Rejected by Francis Child
(Canadian Journal for Traditional Music/Revue de musique folklorique canadienne, 2002)
Although The English and Scottish Popular Ballads (1 882-1 898) was the
most systematic and scholarly collection of vernacular ballads published in the Victorian
era, Francis Child nonetheless omitted from his canon a ...
Some Other Field Recordings by Alan Lomax
(Canadian Folk Music/Bulletin de musique folklorique canadienne, 2002)
Newfoundland Traditional Song: The Legacy from the English West Country
(Canadian Journal for Traditional Music/Revue de musique folklorique canadienne, 2004)
Review of Andrew C. Rouse, The Remunerated Vernacular Singer: From Medieval England to the Post-War Revival
(Folk Music Journal, 2007)
Starting Over: A. L. Lloyd and the Search for a New Folk Music, 1945-49
(Canadian Journal for Traditional Music/Revue de musique folklorique canadienne, 2000)
In a previous article in this Journal (1997), the
author has outlined Lloyd's early involvement with
folk music during the decade 1934-1944 and
analyzed the significance of The Singing
Englishman. Here he continues the ...