FOLK 228 001 Folksongs and Ballads
Steve Winick
Monday, Wednesday 3:00-4:30
With folksongs and ballads, ordinary people in every era have
turned language into poetry and their own voices into music. Our
folksong and ballad traditions contain some of the great poetic,
narrative and music artistry ever created. As stories told in
song, ballads tell takes of tender love and brutal murder, of
painful partings and joyous reunions, of outlawed men and warrier
women, of mighty nobles and downtrodden commons. Lyric songs express
humanity's basic emotions: love and hate, fear and desire joy
and sorrow. This course will exam folksongs and ballards in all
their forms, concentrating on English-language materials but making
excurions into other traditions as well. We will explore the themes
and meaning of different kinds of songs, from the classic medieval
ballads to the journalistic fare of thenineteenth century, from
homey songs of place to frightening tales of terror. We will explore
different regional and ethnic traditions, including British and
Irish songs, Appalachian ballads and African-American blues, Western
Cowboy songs and Mexican-American outlaw ballards. We will detail
how folksong traditions in American played a crucial role in the
development of popular music, inquire into the history of individual
songs, and ask how folksongs vary from singer to singer and from
country to country.
<< Return
to previous page