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By
the time the first English colonists landed at Jamestown in
1607, British folk music was a thousand years old. Its earliest
direct roots stretched deep into the past, to chants, work
songs, and epic tales that were probably thousands of years
old when Jesus was born.
Ballads
were the British songs that had the greatest effect on the
development of American folk music. They went through several
fairly distinct stages of development from the age of the
epics to the days of British colonization.
Besides
the more realistic ballads, shorter, more personal songs began
to appear on the lips of the British folk singer during the
years in which trade and manufacturing were first starting
to bloom. People made up songs they could sing on the job
and at festivities. They sang lullabies to quiet their children.
They made up songs which expressed feelings of lover or hate,
fear or joy, songs which didn't necessarily tell a story,
but gave voice to some emotion.
All
these kind of songs, and a huge stock of fiddle, pipe, and
whistle tunes, were being created around the same time America
was being colonized; they were transplanted here when the
first settlers arrived.
The
location of America colonization can be divided into three
areas: the Northeast, the
South, and the West. Each
of the regions developed its own culture and became very influential.
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The
Northeast:
Since
the first white settlers of the northeast were mostly
English Puritans, there was a lot of fresh contact with
British folk song. Due to later immigration, the folk
music of the northeast stayed much closer to traditional
British forms than that of other parts of America.
The land
in the northeast was harsh. New English winters were
colder and the soil was rockier and harder to till than
anything the Puritans had ever before experienced. Some
of the early settlers died or were killed soon after
they arrived. But many survived. Those who did became
farmers, freshmen, shipbuilders, and loggers. Later,
after new waves of immigrants form England, Ireland,
Scotland, and Germany build up the population, trade,
mining, and manufacturing became important activities
in the north country.
Because
of these influences, many new style folk songs were
created, especially the songs of working men. And because
there was lots of movement among the trades, one work
song often generated many others. Lumbermen, cowboys,
miners, sailors, and even textile-mill workers sang
many songs which were similar to those of each other's
trades. These were all leisure-time songs, songs to
pass spare hours with.
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The
South:
By
the time the Civil War erupted, the north was already
developing into an industrial area with most of its
activities centered on its cities. The South, meanwhile,
was still almost completely rural and agricultural,
largely because the powerful slaveholders had kept it
that way. Even after the war, many Southerners remained
isolated from the rapidly expanding industrialization
that was sweeping the rest of the nation. Until radio
and the automobile finally broke through their isolation,
poor whites in the backwoods and mountain areas of the
South continued to live much as their frontier-clearing
great-grandparents had. Men hunted and fished, women
wove their own cloth and made their own clothing, and
people grew their own food, built their homes and furnishings,
and took care of their needs in the same ways their
ancestors had done.
The
backwoods and mountain people of the South drew on the
same batch of song their common ancestors had brought
with them, they just held on to them longer. They sang
many of the old British ballads, gradually Americanizing
them by substituting local names, places, and expressions
for British ones.
Their
lives were hard and poor, full of violence and sadness.
They favored the tragic songs, the stories of death
and bloody murder and the songs of unrequited love,
such as "Barbara Allen".
Southern
coal miners created another kind of song, wrought out
of hard and sometimes violent lives. They made up songs
about their harsh lives, and about their struggles to
improve them.
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The
West:
Thousands
of people, some of them on the run or out for adventure,
including whole families looking for a home, traveled
west across the Mississippi River, over the Great Plains,
the snow-tipped Rockies and through the desert.
Thousands
of fortune seekers made the hard trip to California
within a few years when James Marshall's discovery of
gold there in 1848. The prospectors who survived the
trip were a tough bunch. Some of their songs were sad
and bitter, but most are full of the excitement and
hope that must have made the journey bearable.
The west
was a refuge for men and women who had reason to put
their past behind them. They loved and respected the
hero of dozens of ballads from an earlier era, like
Robin Hood, enemies of the rich, and friends and benefactors
of the poor.
The most
familiar of the folk songs that have come down to us
from the Far West are the cowboys' songs. Most cowboy
songs were composed during the open-range period, the
thirty-five years between the end of the Civil War and
the turn of the century.
Cowboy
songs had no more in common with the country and western
music that comes out of Nashville than the cowboys'
lives did with the Western. They sang ballads, hymns,
popular tunes, and bawdy songs to stay awake on long
night watches. As they rode among the cattle, they sang
soothing, lullaby-like songs, the songs helped to quiet
the beasts' nerves and cover up noises that might otherwise
startle them into a stampede. During round-ups, the
cowboys shouted songs with a driving rhythm and endless
verse such as "The Old Chisolm Trail," probably the
most popular song among the cowboys themselves.
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