{"title":"Sheep-Crook and Black Dog","authors":"Brian M. Peters","doi":"10.4324/9781315645520-82","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Caroline Hughes. 2 x CD + 48pp. booklet. Musical Traditions MTCD365-6, 2014.116.00. In the early 1960s, Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger visited a Gypsy camp a few miles outside Poole, Dorset, and gained the confidence of the community's matriarch, 'Queen' Caroline Hughes, who allowed them to record her extraordinary repertoire of songs. Sympathetic and meticulous collectors, they included much of her material, accompanied by vivid biographical notes, in the excellent volume Travellers' Songs from England and Scotland. As for the recordings themselves, low-fidelity cassette copies were for years passed between aficionados of traditional song (I still have one myself). It's to the great credit of Musical Traditions and Peggy Seeger--who granted her permission - that these important recordings are now available to all, accompanied by extensive quotations from the book. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Caroline Hughes's singing is neither pure nor mellifluous. Nicotine-stained and roughened by years of hard, outdoor living, its rawness isn't easy on the ear, but it's intense and expansive, her deliberate pacing adding potent emotional gravitas to well- known songs like 'If I Were a Blackbird', 'The Butcher Boy', and 'The Running, Running Rue'. There's .a significant difference between these performances and the thirty songs from Peter Kennedy's 1968 visit that surfaced on I'm a Romany Rai (TSCD6782D), over half of which appear here too. By 1968 Mrs Hughes was in failing health (she died in 1971), sounding wearier and sometimes frail. The MacColl/Seeger recordings are stronger, more expressive, and pitched significantly higher; one suspects they are mostly from their first visit (in 1962, or 1963?), rather than a subsequent trip in 1966. It's sometimes claimed that Mrs Hughes's tunes are particularly distinctive; actually, the majority are pretty conventional, but here and there something unusual and beautiful strikes the ear. 'The Cuckoo' has a strange and gorgeous melody, flirting constantly with the seventh of the scale, while The Prentice Boy' - a magnificent and chilling performance - and 'Young but Growing' defy conventional modal assignation through irregular or microtonal pitching of thirds and sevenths. Mrs Hughes's lyrics are notoriously fragmentary; for a double CD running for over 140 minutes to include ninety-one titles indicates the vestigial nature of many items. In the longer pieces, stanzas from different ballads are intercut, character roles changed, and genders reversed, so that even the more coherent stories aren't necessarily conventional. In 'Sheep-Crook and Black Dog'--a fine version with its introductory verse set to a separate melody--the shepherd's lover is deceased rather than deceitful; while in 'The Broomfield Hill' the usually triumphant enchantress is murdered by her narcoleptic lover. Steve Roud, who helped out with the notes, clearly had a tricky task allocating to these textual collages their appropriate index numbers, creating new entries in several cases. …","PeriodicalId":40711,"journal":{"name":"FOLK MUSIC JOURNAL","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2015-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"FOLK MUSIC JOURNAL","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315645520-82","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"FOLKLORE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Caroline Hughes. 2 x CD + 48pp. booklet. Musical Traditions MTCD365-6, 2014.116.00. In the early 1960s, Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger visited a Gypsy camp a few miles outside Poole, Dorset, and gained the confidence of the community's matriarch, 'Queen' Caroline Hughes, who allowed them to record her extraordinary repertoire of songs. Sympathetic and meticulous collectors, they included much of her material, accompanied by vivid biographical notes, in the excellent volume Travellers' Songs from England and Scotland. As for the recordings themselves, low-fidelity cassette copies were for years passed between aficionados of traditional song (I still have one myself). It's to the great credit of Musical Traditions and Peggy Seeger--who granted her permission - that these important recordings are now available to all, accompanied by extensive quotations from the book. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Caroline Hughes's singing is neither pure nor mellifluous. Nicotine-stained and roughened by years of hard, outdoor living, its rawness isn't easy on the ear, but it's intense and expansive, her deliberate pacing adding potent emotional gravitas to well- known songs like 'If I Were a Blackbird', 'The Butcher Boy', and 'The Running, Running Rue'. There's .a significant difference between these performances and the thirty songs from Peter Kennedy's 1968 visit that surfaced on I'm a Romany Rai (TSCD6782D), over half of which appear here too. By 1968 Mrs Hughes was in failing health (she died in 1971), sounding wearier and sometimes frail. The MacColl/Seeger recordings are stronger, more expressive, and pitched significantly higher; one suspects they are mostly from their first visit (in 1962, or 1963?), rather than a subsequent trip in 1966. It's sometimes claimed that Mrs Hughes's tunes are particularly distinctive; actually, the majority are pretty conventional, but here and there something unusual and beautiful strikes the ear. 'The Cuckoo' has a strange and gorgeous melody, flirting constantly with the seventh of the scale, while The Prentice Boy' - a magnificent and chilling performance - and 'Young but Growing' defy conventional modal assignation through irregular or microtonal pitching of thirds and sevenths. Mrs Hughes's lyrics are notoriously fragmentary; for a double CD running for over 140 minutes to include ninety-one titles indicates the vestigial nature of many items. In the longer pieces, stanzas from different ballads are intercut, character roles changed, and genders reversed, so that even the more coherent stories aren't necessarily conventional. In 'Sheep-Crook and Black Dog'--a fine version with its introductory verse set to a separate melody--the shepherd's lover is deceased rather than deceitful; while in 'The Broomfield Hill' the usually triumphant enchantress is murdered by her narcoleptic lover. Steve Roud, who helped out with the notes, clearly had a tricky task allocating to these textual collages their appropriate index numbers, creating new entries in several cases. …
卡洛琳·休斯,2张CD + 48页。小册子。音乐传统MTCD365-6, 2014.116.00。20世纪60年代初,尤恩·麦科尔和佩吉·西格参观了多塞特郡普尔几英里外的一个吉普赛人营地,并获得了社区女族长卡罗琳·休斯的信任,她允许她们录制她非凡的歌曲曲目。他们是富有同情心和一丝不苟的收藏家,收录了她的许多材料,并附有生动的传记笔记,收录在优秀的《来自英格兰和苏格兰的旅行者之歌》一书中。至于唱片本身,低保真度的盒式磁带在传统歌曲爱好者之间流传了很多年(我自己仍然有一个)。这些重要的录音现在可以向所有人开放,并附有大量的书中的引文,这要归功于音乐传统和佩吉·西格(Peggy Seeger)——她同意了她的许可。卡洛琳·休斯的歌声既不纯净也不流畅。由于多年艰苦的户外生活,这首歌被尼古丁所染,变得粗糙,听起来并不容易,但它是强烈而广阔的,她刻意的节奏为《如果我是一只黑鸟》、《屠夫男孩》和《奔跑,奔跑的街》等著名歌曲增添了强烈的情感庄严。这些表演与1968年彼得·肯尼迪访问期间的30首歌曲有很大的不同,这些歌曲出现在《我是罗姆人》(TSCD6782D)中,其中一半以上也出现在这里。到1968年,休斯夫人的健康状况每况愈下(她于1971年去世),听起来疲惫不堪,有时虚弱不堪。麦科尔/西格录音更强,更具表现力,音调明显更高;有人怀疑,它们大多来自他们第一次访问(1962年,还是1963年?),而不是1966年的后续访问。有时人们认为休斯夫人的曲调特别独特;实际上,大多数都是很传统的,但偶尔也会有一些不寻常的、美丽的东西进入耳朵。《布谷鸟》有着奇特而华丽的旋律,不断地在七度音阶上摇摆,而《学徒男孩》——一场华丽而令人心寒的表演——和《年轻但在成长》通过不规则的或微音的三度和七度音高来挑战传统的调式分配。休斯夫人的歌词是出了名的支离破碎;一张长达140多分钟的双CD包含了91个标题,这表明许多项目都有退化的性质。在较长的作品中,不同民谣的诗节是交错的,人物角色改变了,性别颠倒了,所以即使是更连贯的故事也不一定是传统的。在《羊克鲁克和黑狗》(Sheep-Crook and Black Dog)中——这是一个很好的版本,它的引言部分采用了一种单独的旋律——牧羊人的情人是死去的,而不是骗人的;而在《布鲁姆菲尔德山》中,通常胜利的女巫被她患有嗜睡症的情人谋杀了。史蒂夫·鲁德(Steve Roud)帮忙做笔记,他显然有一项棘手的任务,即为这些文本拼贴画分配适当的索引号,在一些情况下创建新条目。…