vitanola
I'll Lock Up
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- 4,254
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- Gopher Prairie, MI
Well, I wouldn't know about that...
Well, "music of the people" is generally thought of as folk music and "real" folk music may or may not be popular and it may or may not be any good, either. The so-called folk music popularity beginning in the late 1950s had its roots far in the past but it's questionable whether or not it was really folk music. The fact that many folk musicians and groups of that era were decidedly left-wing and thus identified with "the people," some of them anyway, confuses the issue.
I happen to like European folk music, especially that of the German-speaking areas, as well as Czech and Slovenian. Even there, it has to be label "real" folk music, which I believe is written as "Echte Volksmusik."
And why do you disparage kazoo bands, Miss Maine?
Not to mention...what's wrong with handsome young country crooners from my hometown?
Which touches on a good point. You could argue that there really isn't any such thing as purely-American folk music, given our status as a nation built by immigrants, indentured servants, and slaves, all of whom brought their own influences to what's considered "American folk culture." A Yiddish swing band is just as much American folk music as Burl Ives singing "Blue Tail Fly" or Robert Johnson playing Delta blues.
A lot of what's thought of as "folk music" is just a variation of popular music. I love Woody Guthrie, but he was every bit as much an ASCAP songwriter as Irving Berlin.
Not to mention...what's wrong with handsome young country crooners from my hometown?
I think the closest things to pure American folk music are the rude little jingles kids sing in the street:
"Mine eyes have seen the glory of the burning of the school!
We have tortured all the teachers and have broken all the rules!
Now we're marching down the corridor to kill the principal!
Our troops are marching on!
Glory, glory hallelujah!
Teacher hit me with a rul-ah!
I hit her in the bean
With a rotten tangerine
And she sank like a German submarine!"
I often read with amazement and amusement about what they do, say, and eat in faraway Maine, and a lot of it I have never even heard of.
I often read with amazement and amusement about what they do, say, and eat in faraway Maine, and a lot of it I have never even heard of.
However, the song about school, teachers, and tangerines is almost exactly the same as what we sang. The slight difference is that I think we had a different last line (no German submarine), but I can't remember what it was. (seems like it was something about knocking her teeth out, but that's vague, and doesn't rhyme...)
What some enterprising anthropologist needs to research is how we (1000 miles away and almost twenty years difference) sang the same kid songs.
It seems that everyone knew it, but I can't think of anyone who taught it to the others.
Just remember, it don't mean a thing if it ain't got that certain je ne sais quoi.
That's the thing with real folk culture. Nobody knows where it really comes from, but once it erupts it spreads fast, and it's never particuarly respectful or respectable to those in the seats of authority.
"My mother and your mother were hanging out clothes.
My mother hit your mother right in the nose.
What color was the blood?"