Saturday, December 7, 2019

PERFECT PEARLS – SONGS FROM AUSTRALIA’S PEARLING TRADITION






From the 1860s to the 1970s, Australia’s northern coasts were an empire of pearl shell and pearls. Before colonization, Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders used these for cultural and trading purposes. Later, pearls and shell were large global industries, to which Australia contributed significantly.

Ethnographer and performer, Karl Neuenfeldt has produced a cd of traditional and contemporary pearling songs, featuring Seaman Dan, the Pigram Brothers, Ted Egan, Fred and Richard Kiwat, Roger Knox and the Pine Valley Cosmonauts, Nikki Doll, Enda Kenny, Karl Erikson, Rubina Kimiia and Stephen ‘Baamba’ Albert. 

As well as the music, there are some informative notes and some great historical photographs that convey the once large-scale pearling culture, as well as its continuing cultural influences.

Here’s an ABC interview with Karl and Baamba

CD available from Broome Museum 

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

STEP DANCING AND MORE ...



Dance historian, Heather Blasdale-Clarke recently gave a presentation on Australian step dancing at the Stepping On Conference at Cecil Sharp House in London.

Heather has also produced a related video which has now been uploaded to Youtube.

But wait, there's more! Heather has a post about eighteenth-century dance in London, complete with music and instructions, and a link with Captain Cook, on the wonderful Spitalfields Life blog.

And it gets even better for dancers - watch out for our upcoming post on traditional dance in Australia …

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

A TOUCH OF THE IRISH IN BILPIN





Taia de Burca was recently recorded by Rob and Olya Willis in Bilpin, NSW, singing a few Irish songs from her family tradition. Here she is on Youtube with a good rebel song, ‘The Tri Coloured Ribbon’.

And again, with a lovely version of ‘If I Were a Blackbird’ learned from her mother.

Rob writes:

Taia de Burca learnt many songs from her Irish mother both as a child and in later years. The family were involved in The Irish War of Independence, her Grandfather being one of the railway engine drivers who refused to carry British troops. Singing was important with the family in Ireland and the 'rebel' songs were a strong part of the repertoire. I find it interesting the way Taia sings this song, really putting her heart in to it… I am amazed we are still finding these songs passed down in the family, aural tradition.
Thanks Taia

Saturday, November 23, 2019

IT’S OFFICIAL! – AND UNOFFICIAL – MUSIC, THAT IS …



Here’s some interesting research on the universality of music and song. It more or less confirms what most of us probably thought was the case. But it is a very large project that, among other things, notes that there are both official and unofficial forms of music in every culture. Just what we say on Verandah Music!

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

AWARD FOR ROB AND OLYA WILLIS



Rob and Ollie have just been awarded the Australasian Sound Recording Association (ASRA) award 

for 2019 for ‘Their Outstanding Contribution to Oral History Collecting and Recording’.

 The Association is made up of private record collectors, professional sound archivists, radio broadcasters and social historians, consisting of individuals and institutions with a strong interest in sound recording history, its development and all related activities.

 Previous winners include academics, June Bronhill, Slim Dusty and John Meredith.

 This is a great recognition of the dedicated work Rob and Ollie have done over many years in documenting and preserving oral history, folklore and the culture of everyday life.

 Congratulations Rob and Ollie and watch out for more of their work on the Verandah Music blog and Youtube channel.

Friday, November 15, 2019

THE WALTZING MATILDA MYSTERIES CONTINUE…

Just when was Australia’s accidental anthem, ‘Waltzing Matilda’, first composed. In what circumstances, and where? 



These niggling questions have troubled historians and folklorists for a century or so, with any number of competing and conflicting theories being put forward in what seems to be a never-ending flow of books on the subject. At last, W Benjamin Lindner has come up with the most definitive answer to date. Applying the forensic skills of a criminal barrister and a rigorous historical approach to a decidedly ‘two pipe problem’, as Sherlock Holmes might have put it, Lindner’s detective work has convincingly solved the case. It’s all in his Waltzing Matilda: Australia’s Accidental Anthem. A Forensic History (Boolarong Press, 2019).

Not wanting to spoil the story, I’m not giving away his conclusion, so you’ll need to check out the book to find the answer. Despite its deep engagement with archival records and the other dry-as-dust stuff that historians like to engage with, it is a good read. While it sets out to prove a particular and important chronological point about the composition of the song, it necessarily tells the human stories of the people most closely involved with it, at the time, and later. 

These are, of course, the two main characters, A B ‘Banjo’ Paterson and Christina Macpherson. Paterson thought so little of his dashed-off lyric that he sold the rights to his publisher for five pounds and hardly ever talked about it again. Repurposing a catchy Scots tune, often said to be one of the most recorded songs of all time, Christina Macpherson, mostly got lost in the condescension of posterity.  But now she is confirmed in her proper place as the composer of our national song. 

And there is a supporting cast of often-colourful other characters who were in on the original events behind the song, as well as later writers who put their efforts towards working out exactly what happened when and where. These include Sydney May, the first person to take an interest, starting seriously in the 1940s. He was misled by some of the accounts he collected but gets the credit for setting the Matilda hunt waltzing.

Then there was the no-nonsense bushman, Richard Magoffin, raised near the legendary site of composition, Dagworth Station. With a commendable disdain for academic historians and the complex copyright issues surrounding the song, he doggedly pursued Matilda through Queensland, across Australia and, ultimately, to the USA. Magoffin made a number of important contributions to the song’s history, though as Lindner shows, like most Matilda researchers, he got one or two things wrong as well. Nevertheless, his work has also been the basis of the Waltzing Matilda Centre at Winton, dedicated to preserving and representing the history of the song.

Folkies will be familiar with another important figure in the debate. The late and much missed Dennis O'Keeffe advanced the story by investigating family traditions about the song and linking it closely with violent events of the 1890s shearers’ strike in his Waltzing Matilda: The Secret History of Australia’s Favourite Song (2012). Lindner’s own findings mean he isn’t convinced by that argument but acknowledges the value of O’Keeffe’s contribution to the scholarship of the song. 

Many others have also had a crack at solving the mystery, putting forward various theories and speculations. But Lindner aims to avoid supposition and myth in favour of cold, hard facts.  Not too much escapes his steely eye. He combs old train timetables, ships’ passenger lists, letters, diaries and even considers a skull in the Queensland Police Museum to build his case. From all this evidence, he establishes a chronology for the creation and early diffusion of the lyrically sparse and – let’s be honest – pretty silly ditty about a swaggie knocking off a sheep and throwing himself in the billabong when the squatter and the cops turn up.

The rudimentary lyric of our great song is one of its many intriguing characteristics. I once had a literary colleague who studied the words of ‘Waltzing Matilda’ and concluded that it was nearly empty of semantic content. It was such a minimal story, told in so few words, that it was – almost – meaningless. We can take this either to mean that it’s one of the slightest pieces of literature ever scribbled, or that Paterson was a genius of narrative compression. Whatever, in my view, this is the secret of the song’s lyrical success. It is such an empty vessel that, like a cliché, it can be filled with just about any meaning we care to pour in - or out, as many have.

But that’s just my take on the song’s curious appeal. Lindner has nobbled the facts on behalf of us all. Apart from those invested in the tourism appeal of ‘Matilda country’ and a handful of researchers, not many people will give a flying jumbuck about his findings, alas. But anyone with even the faintest interest in the intriguing history of this amazingly durable ditty should ‘grab one with glee’ from any good bookshop or from the publisher.

Even after his research and writing epic, Lindner is still interested in the song, noting that ‘the history of the origins of Waltzing Matilda remains incomplete’, and is keen to hear from anyone with something to contribute to its ever-expanding mythology. He can be contacted at waltzingmatildahistory@gmail.com .You can also follow developments on Facebook at W.Benjamin Lindner, Author .

 Graham Seal

Sunday, August 25, 2019

JOHN MEREDITH AND SHIRLEY ANDREWS INTERVIEWS AND FACEBOOK PAGES


The Bushwhackers

See folklorist John Meredith talk with Philip Ashton about the early days of the original Bushwhackers band and many other topics at:

Phillip also interviewed folk dance doyenne, Shirley Andrews. You can download your own copy from here:

Jan Fallding has set up a Facebook page for those who knew John Meredith and travelled with him. Have a look


Thursday, August 22, 2019

MYSTERY SONGS SOUGHT BY BUSH MUSIC CLUB




Sandra Nixon is tracking down some historical songsheets in the  BMC archives and has encountered a few puzzles for all the folksong sleuths out there. Sandra writes:

Bush Music Club Archives contains many treasures, including a collection of early songsheets, some issued by BMC, other collected & typed up by a very early member, Fran Shaw who sang these newly collected songs, lectured about them & taught them. Some sheets are dated (1956-1961), but most are undated.

All songsheets have been scanned & are posted in 5 blog articles. Foolscap pages will be scanned again by a member with an A3 scanner!

I've been trying to locate the book where Fran found the following songs mentioned in Part 3. I've looked through Ron Edwards's books & John Meredith's Folksongs of Australia, & asked around but no-one recognises these songs, or knows this early book of more than 281 pages.

Can anyone identify them, the author/s or the book?

Another Gundagai, page 7
Concertina Jack, page 76
The Immortal Dog, page 239
The Reformers, 
(about speakers in Sydney Domain, Billy Hughes is mentioned)  page 245
The Woolshed Ball, page 249
The Wedding at Willaroo, page 281

From the Archives - mixed Blessings of an Archivist - Mulga Wire, no.112, Singabout insert
http://bushmusicclub.blogspot.com/2018/11/from-archives-mixed-blessings-of.html

Fran Shaw's Songsheets - Part 1, Bush Music Club Song Sheets, dated 1956 & 1957, & undated  

Anniversaries - Bush Music Club's 2nd Anniversary, 1956 - Fran Shaw's Song Sheets, Part 2
http://bushmusicclub.blogspot.com/2019/01/anniversaries-bush-music-clubs-2nd.html
 

Fran Shaw's Songsheets, Part 3. Miscellaneous sets & papers (including the 6 mystery songs) 
https://bushmusicclub.blogspot.com/2019/08/fran-shaws -songsheets-part-3.html

Fran Shaw's Songsheets - Part 4. Camp Songs, Dept of Education, Phys Education Branch
http://bushmusicclub.blogspot.com/2019/08/fran-shaws-songsheets-part-4-camp-songs.html
 

Fran Shaw's Songsheets - Part 5, Talks on bush music

Sandra Nixon
Hon. Secretary, Archivist & Librarian
Bush Music Club Inc, Founded 1954
GPO Box 433, Sydney 2001
Website - http://www.bushmusic.org.au/
blog - http://bushmusicclub.blogspot.com.au/
Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCw8v2tPRJ1LeTvoTKNnbC3w
Email - bmcmail1954@gmail.com

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

‘A Factory Lad: The Songs of Colin Dryden' by Daniel Kelly out now!


As promised in a previous post on this project, the full album is now available to listen to free on YouTube: 

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mT6f4HBcZVDjqLEVXhtFPYJ9Of_TfRv90

It is also available to stream/purchase on most of the digital platforms (iTunes/Amazon/Google/Spotify/etc) - search for 'A Factory Lad'.

Daniel will be launching the album at Yazzbar, Yass, on Friday, 23rd August. Facebook event details here: 
https://www.facebook.com/events/2825601377513740/

He will have a handful of physical CD's available at the event and people can contact him on admin@folklounge.orgif they would like to buy a physical copy and have it sent to them ($20). 

Tuesday, July 2, 2019

VERANDAH MUSIC - AMERICAN SHANTY BOAT STYLE



Verandah music afloat – why not? Here’s a lovely blues on the river shanty boats by Jimmy Murphy, recorded in 1951, Knoxville, Tennessee.

This site is also the home of a great folklife project, ‘A Secret History of American River People: the lost narratives of river people, river communities, and the river itself’. And they’ve built their own shanty boat which they sail around the rivers collecting, documenting and learning …


Saturday, June 22, 2019

HOW TO MAKE A CABBAGE-TREE HAT – WITH SUE BRIAN

Boater-style cabbage-tree hat, MAAS

Sue Brian divulges all the secrets of this traditional craft – along with some fascinating yarns about Norfolk Island -  on the Verandah Music Youtube channel

Thursday, June 13, 2019

MANY VERANDAHS ...

The current edition of the National Library’s magazine, Unbound, holds a feast of verandah music:
Salvatore Rossano writes about Italian traditions in Australia https://www.nla.gov.au/unbound/sonu-songs-from-the-homeland

Salvatore Rossano, Angelo and Dora Marchese, Melbourne, 2017

Barry York writes on the life and achievements of the late Australian bluesman, Peter Gelling https://www.nla.gov.au/unbound/if-it-wasnt-for-the-blues
 
Barry York, Peter Gelling and Blues Band Blind Freddy, 1995

Jennifer Gall looks at domestic music in colonial house museums

J.R.B., Mary Cunningham, Griselda Dorothy Cunningham, T.J., Unity Alexandra Cunningham, A.C. and Alexander William Cunningham, Tuggeranong, between 1910 and 1914.


*

Monday, June 3, 2019

MEMORIES OF COLIN DRYDEN


 
Colin Dryden by Daniel Kelly
Some readers of this blog will remember the enigmatic Colin Dryden from the early years of the Sydney and Melbourne folk scenes. Colin was a prodigiously talented guitarist and singer, equally adept at traditional and contemporary British folk, as well as blues. He was later a member of the experimental fusion band, Extradition.

Yass songwriter and singer, Daniel Kelly, has a research and recording project going on Colin’s life and legacy. You can read all about it, starting at http://www.folklounge.org/2019/04/the-factory-lad-part-1/

If you have any memories, or better yet, recordings, of Colin in action, Daniel would love to hear from you as he winds up the project with a planned CD of his own interpretations of Colin Dryden’s core repertoire.

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

SHARING THE HARVEST – THE JAMBEROO RECORDINGS NOW ONLINE

Gay Charmers at Jamberoo
In 2001, the Jamberoo Folk Festival featured two concerts by traditional performers, including Bill Case, Lola Wright, Eileen McCoy and many more. Long sleeping in the National Library’s Oral History and Folklore Collection, the full recordings, together with interviews and talks by Edgar Waters, Mark Cranfield and Robyn Holmes are now available online at

Edgar Waters, Mark Cranfield and Robyn Holmes, National Library of Australia
Click on the link above, then click on this logo"
-
 This will take you to a user agreement, at the bottom of which is a green ‘I accept’ button, click that and it takes you straight to the list of the sessions, starting with the first one. Just click on the arrow at the right-hand side of each item to hear the riches within.

Bill Case and Rob Willis

FORBES AND THE LACHLAN REGION OF NSW THE FOLKLORE CENTRE OF AUSTRALIA!



 Here’s a reply to the Gundagai post, from Rob Willis:

Buried within 25 metres of each other in the Forbes cemetery are the remains of two of Australia’s best known bushranger dynasties, Ben Hall and Kate Kelly, the (in)famous sister of Ned.  Not buried however are the songs, poems and stories of these people along with the other well known bushrangers Frank Gardiner, Johnny Gilbert and of course stories and songs of the famous Escort Gold Robbery, the richest robbery in Australian history.  The Ben Hall  bushranger ballads are recognised as among the best in our folk song tradition. ‘The Streets of Forbes’ is probably Australia’s best known and most sung bushranger ballad. 

The cause of all this bushranging activity was the rich Lachlan (Forbes) diggings and here again we have a large number of songs, yarns and poems reflecting on this 1860’s era.  Thankfully many of these have been preserved in our National Library of Australia (NLA), Folklore collection.

After the gold petered out agricultural enterprise took over.  The poetry and songs of shearers, drovers, and women and men on the land that mention the Lachlan are numerous, what bush band worth its salt has not performed ‘The Lachlan Tigers’. “Hurrah for the Lachlan, “Across the Western Plains” are well known lines from other folk ballads.

From the gold rush to the golden age of wool, the Lachlan inspired the writings of Henry Lawson (whose birth was registered in Forbes), Banjo Paterson, Breaker Morant, Will Ogilvie and Paul Wenz.  Morant, Ogilvie and Wenz actually worked and wrote in the area.

Traditional music and dance – the regional, collected tunes of Harry Schaefer, Colin Charlton, Dave Mathias, Ebb Wren and others are played by musicians inAustralia and even worldwide.

There is also a strong regional dance tradition that has been recorded. 
Thankfully, many of these tunes, stories and dances are also preserved in the NLA collection.

Tales of ‘characters’ from our area have been recounted in books authored by Banjo Paterson and other writers and Graham Seal is on record saying that the Lachlan is a ‘land of legends’

I rest my case.

Saturday, May 11, 2019

IS GUNDAGAI THE FOLKLORE CAPITAL OF AUSTRALIA?


 
The tucker box statue before the snappy recent one, photographed in 1926
The small town on the Murrumbidgee River has always been well placed to become a folklore hub. Established from around 1830, it was a natural meeting and stopping place for travelers of all kinds, including bullockies, overlanders, riverboaters, hawkers and people coming and going for whatever reasons.

Aboriginal traditions are strong on the ground, including bunyips, spirit dogs and other ghostly figures. There are lots of bushranger connections, a few gold rushes and lots of floods, including one Australia’s worst natural disasters, the big flood of 1852 that swept the town away and killed more than 70 people. 

The shearing song ‘Lazy Harry’s’, in its numerous versions, is well known, aided by a thumping melody. ‘Flash Jack’ the shearer comes from Gundagai and, of course, Jack O’Hagan’s composition ‘On the Road to Gundagai’ has remained a hit ever since it was composed in the 1920s.

Most familiar, of course, will be the famous dog and whatever it did on or in the tuckerbox at Gundagai, as the bullocky who tells the dismal tale put it:

I can forgive the blinking team I can forgive the rain,
I can forgive the dark and cold and go through it again,
I can forgive my rotten luck but hang me till I die,
I can’t forgive that bloody dog nine miles from Gundagai.

Less well-known is the legend of the ‘Gundagai cat’ that links the town back to the earliest days of convictism …

The Golden Grove was one of the First Fleet store shipssometimescalled ‘the Noah’s Ark of Australia’ due to the number and variety of livestock she conveyed to Botany Bay, including ‘one bull, four cows, and one calf; one stallion, three mares, and three colts; one ram, eleven sheep, and eight lambs; one billy-goat, four nanny goats, and three kids; one boar, five sows, and a litter of 14 pigs; nine different sorts of dogs; and seven cats’. 

In the 1870s it was said that one of these First Fleet cats was still living in at the amazing age of one hundred years at the New South Wales town of Gundagai. The centenarian moggy was so aloof she would only eat pork sausages. By the 1920s, the feline was said to have reached the even more advanced age of 190 years. This assertion was published in at least one English newspaper and picked up and reprinted in the American and Australian press. While the American’s swallowed the tale whole, the factoid was properly dismissed by Gundagai locals as what in those days was called a ‘mare’s nest’, meaning a grossly inaccurate claim, what we might today call an urban legend or just fake news. 


What a town! Have you got a better contender for Australia's folklore capital?

Monday, May 6, 2019

GAY CHARMERS STILL CHARMING AT LAKE CHARM

Gay Charmers at Yarrawalla, 1989

"You don't have to be a Rhodes scholar to sit down and play a piano or a banjo." That was Stewie Simms, stalwart piano player of the legendary Gay Charmers, the last continuing old time dance band in the country. In April, they celebrated sixty-plus years of playing for dances, deb balls and any other event where toe-tapping tunes were needed. Read all about it right here…, courtesy of the Gannawarra Times.

See also the Peter Ellis archive.

Thursday, May 2, 2019

CHEESESLAW - FOODLORE


Broken Hill's famous local delicacy is a classic example of folklore in action. In this case it's a traditional recipe that comes from - who knows where? It has become the signature dish of the town and its people and its name is now officially enshrined in the Macquarie Dictionary. Read all about it here.

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

YOUR TOP TEN BUSHRANGER BALLADS ...?

William Strutt (English, 1825–1915) Bushrangers, Victoria, Australia, 1852, 1887

What are your favourites? Here’s my list:

Jack Donohoe
Wild Colonial Boy
The Death of Ben Hall
Bold Ben Hall
The Streets of Forbes
Dunn, Gilbert and Ben Hall
Frank Gardiner
Stringybark Creek
Ballad of the Kelly Gang
My Name is Edward Kelly
ë
But there are a whole lot more to pick from. Chloe and Jason Roweth  have a couple of hundred in their repertoire and there might even be a few more lurking out there in folklore.

Take the once-mysterious ‘Johnny Troy’, for instance. There were several incidental mentions of him and his deeds in historical documents and folklore. He featured briefly in a poem titled ‘The Convict’s Tour to Hell’, probably composed by ‘Frank the Poet’ (Francis McNamara), in or before 1839. 

But that was about all anyone knew of this Irish bushranger until the 1950s, when American folksong collectors began to hear a ‘Johnny Troy’ ballad – mainly among lumber jacks. It seems that while Johnny Troy’s vigorous song had faded away in Australia, it had been well received by the Americans, who often sang it together with a couple of other Australian bushranger ballads, ‘Jack Donohoe’ and ‘The Wild Colonial Boy’. It is likely that these songs reached America during the California gold rushes, which explains how they got there. But there was still no news of the lost bushranger in Australia. Until some solid research by the late Stephan Williams turned up the whole true history of Johnny Troy.

You can read the full story on my Gristly History blog. You can also read some very interesting articles about bushrangers, murder ballads and associated delights on English journalist and author Paul Slade’s excellent website at PlanetSlade 

The hunt for the Governor gang of bushrangers. A posse of mounted police, aboriginal trackers and district volunteers (SLNSW)

Sunday, April 28, 2019

TIN SANDWICH FOLLOW-UP (The Harp Dude)



A while back I posted on the old Boomerang songsters and instruments, especially harmonicas (‘tin sandwich’, ‘mouth organ’, ‘harp’, ‘moothies’ in Scotland…). Imagine my delight to discover in the instrument makers’ stand at the National Folk Festival, ‘The Harp Dude’. With a table full of antique and reconditioned/improved tin sandwiches, Jamie told me about the wonderful things he does with old and new harps. It’s a labour of love and his website is definitely worth checking out.