General characteristics of folk music
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Creation and adaptation
Where a folk song originated is rarely known to its community, and thus the anonymity of the creative process was once considered a major criterion of folk music identification. It has become clear, however, that folk songs and other pieces are the result of individual creation, either by villagers or by professional or church musicians whose work is somehow taken up in the folk culture. The repertory of a folk community probably always included songs of very diverse origins.
The form of a folk song as heard at any one time, however, is likely to have been very much affected by the entire community because of its life in oral tradition. Once introduced, a song could be easily dropped from the repertory. More likely, however, as it was passed from parents to children and to friends and associates and coworkers, it would be changed. Numerous influences acted on a song, including creativity, forgetfulness, previously learned songs, and stylistic expectations. As a result, it might become shorter or more like new styles of popular or church music, for example. Any new song would be likely to undergo this process of communal re-creation. An important characteristic of a song or piece in traditional folk culture is, thus, its dependence on acceptance by a community—that is, by a village, nation, or family—and its tendency to change as it is passed from one individual to another and performed.
Transmission and variation
Because a folk song lives largely through oral transmission, it ordinarily does not exist in a standard form. In each region of a country, community, village, or family, and even in the repertory of each singer over time, it may have significant differences. Each performance of a song may be unique. In colloquial discussions of folk songs (or tales), the terms variant and version are used to highlight the differences in ways of singing the same song (or telling the same story). In the technical literature about folklore, the terms version, variant, and form may be used to express degrees of relationship. Thus, for example, several quite similar performances by one singer might constitute a version of a song. Several versions, not so similar to each other, would constitute a variant. Several variants, comprising a body of performances of the song that are clearly related but not homogeneous, might be designated as a form. Groups of songs (words or music) that appear, on the basis of analysis, to be related are called tune families or text types. Text types, such as narratives that form the basis of ballads, may have numerous variants and versions. The ballad usually known as “Lady Isabel and the False Knight,” studied by Iivar Kemppinen, has about 1,800 renditions, collected in nations throughout Europe and the Americas. Bertrand H. Bronson, assembling all available versions of the English ballad “Barbara Allen,” found 198 versions of the story sung in the English-speaking world, accompanied by tunes belonging to three tune families. (Accompanying this article are audio recordings of five renditions of “Barbara Allen” from collections at the Library of Congress.)
In the development of variants, for example, a song with four musical lines (e.g., ABCD) may lose two of these lines and take on the form ABAB. In turn, two new lines may be substituted for the initial two, giving it a form EFAB. Folk tunes also change when they cross ethnic or cultural boundaries. A German variant, for example, may exhibit characteristics of German folk music, while its variant in the Czech Republic, although recognizably related, will assume the stylistic traits of Czech folk music.
Folk cultures seem to vary greatly in the internal relationships of their repertoires. English folk music, for example, is believed to consist largely of about 40 tune families, each of which descends from a single song. And the majority of English folk songs appear to be members of only seven such tune families. Hungarian folk music, on the other hand, contains some 200 units that could be described as the equivalent of tune families. In the folk music of eastern Iran, some types of poetry—e.g., the widely loved quatrain type chahār-baytī—are all sung to versions of a single tune.
Compositional patterns
The process by which members of folk communities compose new songs is not well understood, although the study of how tunes are related may provide some insight. When it is first composed, each song is the work of one composer; as others learn and sing it, it is re-created constantly. The compositional process of folk music differs little from that of popular and classical music. For example, the composer may create new songs by drawing together lines, phrases, and musical motifs from extant songs, possibly combined with entirely new ones and with standard opening or closing formulas. The characteristic musical structures, scales, and rhythms of folk music are also found in the other types of music of the same culture. Systematic improvisation as a method of composition is found only occasionally, as in the epic songs of what was once Yugoslavia and of Ukraine. It is often difficult to ascertain whether the same composer created both the words and the music in a folk song; many songs are known to have separate sources for words and music.
In spite of its dependence on oral tradition, folk music has tended to be closely related to music in written tradition, and this relationship has intensified in periods of urbanization and revival. Many folk songs originated in written form. For many centuries, popular and classical composers have adapted folk music and in turn influenced the oral tradition. Music from art music culture, such as Franz Schubert’s songs “Heidenröslein” (“Little Moorland Rose”) or “The Linden Tree” and arias from Mozart’s The Magic Flute, found their way into folk tradition. A modern analogue of written tradition, recording, substantially influenced the oral tradition, as folk singers could hear various arrangements of folk music in private and commercial recordings. Thus, the transmission of folk music has not been an isolated process but one intertwined with other kinds of musical transmission.
Tunes often migrate between neighboring countries. A few tune types are found throughout the European culture area, and textual types (such as ballad stories) are more widely distributed than tune types. Each country, however, tends to have a repertory of its own, with stylistic features as well as tunes that are not shared with neighbors.
Folk music in society
Traditional village society had a vigorous musical life, in which many songs in most genres were known to, and often sung by, a large proportion of the population. Nevertheless, a degree of musical professionalism must have obtained; instrumentalists, though not formally educated, were specialists, as were singers of epic narratives (in the Balkans and Finland, for example) and singers of occupational songs such as sea shanties. Western cultures generally share the same genres of folk music. One of the most important is the ballad, generally a short narrative song with repeated lines. Epics are longer narratives in heroic style, which sometimes require many hours to sing. Some songs are ceremonial, meant to accompany events in the human life cycle or in the community’s year (such as those related to the agricultural seasons). Other common genres are work songs, love and other lyrical songs, songs to accompany games, lullabies, and children’s songs for enculturation (e.g., alphabet songs, proverbs, and riddles). These genres are usually differentiated through their texts, but some cultures also make musical distinctions. Instrumental folk music is most frequently an accompaniment to dance.
By the 19th century in western Europe, and some decades later in North America and eastern Europe, folk songs had become less widely known in villages, and it seems that they were known to and sung largely by older individuals. At the same time, urban folklorists (stimulated first by Thomas Percy in Britain and Johann Gottfried von Herder in Germany and continuing with Cecil Sharp in England and the United States) began to collect and publish folk songs for an audience of urban intelligentsia, emphasizing the age of the songs and their national character. In the 19th century, songs were transcribed and notated from live performance, but then were often altered, “corrected” to conform to expected norms, and published. Composers of art music—including Johannes Brahms, Antonín Dvořák, and Joseph Canteloube—fashioned elaborate piano accompaniments, and folk songs were added to classical concert programs. Choral arrangements and their use by amateur choirs became part of folk music culture.
Further, by the 18th century a tradition had become established in urban working-class districts of composing songs, especially ballads, that narrated or commented on current events such as crimes and accidents. These songs, which might qualify as a predecessor of the “popular music” genre, were usually called “broadside ballads,” because they were printed on large sheets along with advertisements and sold on the streets. They were composed by urban poets and tunesmiths, usually anonymously, and they often passed into oral tradition, thus joining the body of more traditional folk music. These songs were current in villages as well as urban coffeehouses and bars. As nationalism developed, topical folk songs often found their way into the repertories of militant student organizations (e.g., in Germany) and soldiers, and they were sometimes (e.g., in the Habsburg empire) parts of the shows put on by traveling officers to recruit villagers in the provinces.
In the course of the 20th century, as the importance of folk music in rural cultures declined in the Western world, folk songs were taken up by political and social movements of many sorts. Thus, the Nazi and fascist movements of the 1920s to 1940s in Germany and Italy introduced folk songs into the canons of their military ceremonies. In the Soviet Union and elsewhere in eastern Europe after 1945, the folk music of ethnic groups was institutionalized, taught in special conservatories, and performed by professionals (sometimes in large orchestras of folk instruments), symbolizing the equality of folk and classical traditions. The Russian balalaika-and-domra orchestras, which also toured internationally, are typical. In North America, folk music, usually learned from songbooks and taught in ethnic clubs, often in choral or band arrangements, became a major factor in the expression and maintenance of group identity for urban ethnic groups, such as Polish Americans and Austrian Americans and their Canadian counterparts.
Most significant perhaps has been the use of folk music by dissident movements, such as those seeking social and economic reform, opposing wars, or protecting the environment. In the United States, the phenomenon began in the Great Depression of the 1930s. The first major composer of this protest music, Woody Guthrie, was said to have composed more than 1,000 folk songs (including “This Land Is Your Land” and “Union Maid,” the latter set to a traditional German tune); they are identified as folk songs because they voice the concerns of the rural and working-class “folk,” are stylistically similar to older folk songs, and were performed with acoustic guitar accompaniment. The best-known figure in post-World War II U.S. folk music culture is Pete Seeger, who helped to revive many traditional folk songs, performing them together with songs of liberal advocacy that he reworked or composed, including the antisegregation “We Shall Overcome” and the antiwar “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?” At the end of the 20th century, the concept of folk music was dominated by recent creations of current relevance drawing on musical and poetic features that associate them with older traditions. The relationship to popular music also intensified, through the creation of mixed genres such as folk rock and through the use of folk-music elements to help create distinct national variants of mainstream rock music.