- Radio-ballad
The radio-ballad is an audio documentary format created by
Ewan MacColl ,Peggy Seeger , and Charles Parker in 1958. It combines four elements of sound: songs, instrumental music, sound effects, and, most importantly, the recorded voices of those who are the subjects of the documentary. The latter element was revolutionary; previous radio documentaries had used either professional voice actors or prepared scripts.The radio-ballads were originally recorded for the
BBC . MacColl wrote a variety of songs especially for them, many of which have become folk classics. The trio together made eight radio-ballads between 1958 and 1964. They were: "The Ballad ofJohn Axon " (1958), aboutrailway men, "Song of a Road" (1959), about road-builders, "Singing the Fishing" (1960), aboutherring fishermen , "The Big Hewer" (1961), aboutcoal miner s, "The Body Blow" (1962), about people suffering frompolio , "On the Edge" (1963), about teenagers in Britain, "The Fight Game" (1963), aboutboxers , and "The Travelling People" (1964), about thenomadic people s of Britain.All eight radio-ballads were released on LP, by Argo Records, and later on
CD . They are also available via Listen Again on the [http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/radioballads/original/index.shtml BBC Radio 2 website] .2006 Radio Ballads
In 2006, [http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/radioballads/2006/index.shtml BBC Radio 2] broadcast six new Radio Ballads using the same format, with musical direction by
John Tams , and contributions fromKarine Polwart ,Jez Lowe andCara Dillon among others.The following ballads were broadcast between February and April 2006: "The Song of Steel" on the decline of the
Sheffield andRotherham Steel Industry (27 February); "The Enemy That Lives Within", onHIV /AIDS (6 March); "The Horn of the Hunter", onFoxhunting (13 March); "Swings and Roundabouts", on Travellers who runfairground s (20 March) "Thirty Years of Conflict"; on the sectarian conflict inNorthern Ireland (27 March); and "The Ballad of the Big Ships", on theshipyards of theTyne and the Clyde, (3 April).ee also
*
Ewan MacColl
*Peggy Seeger
*Charles Parker (producer)
*John Axon External links
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/radioballads/original/index.shtml Listen again to the original Radio Ballads on BBC Radio 2 website]
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/radioballads/2006/index.shtml Listen again to 2006 Radio Ballads on BBC Radio 2 website]
* [http://www.mustrad.org.uk/reviews/801.htm Musical Traditions article on The Ballad of John Axon]
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