Collection of Old Ballads

Collection of Old Ballads

A Collection of Old Ballads is an anonymous book published 1723 - 1725 in three volumes in London by Roberts and Leach. It was the second major collection of British folksongs to be published, following "Pills To Purge Melancholy" (published 1719 - 1720).

Ambrose Phillips was once credited as the editor, but this has since been challenged. Volume one contained "Chevy Chase", "Queen Eleanor's Confession", "The Suffolk Miracle", and "Bonny Dundee". The preface to volume two notes that readers had responded to volume one by sending some rare songs to the editor. It has fewer genuine folksongs than the first volume, and instead has some obvious literary concoctions. It has "The Merchant's Son and Beggar Wench of Hull" (a prototype of "New York Girls"), "The Wind Has Blown my Plaid Away", "The Bonny Grey-Eyed Morn" and 3 Robin Hood Ballads. The third volume is the poorest, with long historical songs about the kings of England, obviously not taken from the folk tradition. "The Baffled Knight" (Child Ballad 4) is genuine, and there is even a whaling song "The Greenland Voyage". There are a few Scottish items - "The Broom of Cowdenknowes", "Bessy Bell ands Mary Gray", "Muirland Willie" and "The Gaberlunzie Man". The collection also includes "The Merchant and the Beggar Maid" and "An Thou Were My Ain Thing" (later recorded by Maddy Prior).

Within a year of the publication of volume one, Allan Ramsay was inspired to publish his "Tea-Table Miscellany" (1724) in Edinburgh. "A Collection of Old Ballads" is the first printed collection to aim for songs that were genuinely old folksongs, but there are no tunes to the 159 texts. In a few cases the names of tunes are indicated.

Bibliography

  • "British Music Publishers, Printers and Engravers" by Frank Kidson (1900)
  • "The Ballad and the Folk" by David Buchan (1972)
  • "A Ballad History of England" by Roy Palmer (1979)
  • "Victorian Songhunters" by E David Gregory (2006)

External references

"The Merchant and the Beggar Maid"

"An Thou Were My Ain Thing"


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Old New Ballads Blues — Old, New, Ballads, Blues Studio album by Gary Moore Released 2 May 2006 …   Wikipedia

  • Old New Ballads Blues — Old New Ballads Blues …   Википедия

  • Old-time music — Stylistic origins British folk, African music, minstrel, Tin Pan Alley, gospel, Appalachian music Cultural origins English, Scottish, Welsh, Irish African, French, German, Spanish …   Wikipedia

  • Ballads & Blues 1982–1994 — Ballads Blues 1982–1994 …   Википедия

  • Old McDonald Had a Farm — is a children s song about a farmer named McDonald (or MacDonald) and the various animals he keeps on his farm. Each verse of the song changes the name of the animal and its respective noise. In many versions, the song is cumulative, with the… …   Wikipedia

  • Old Brown Shoe — Single by The Beatles A side The Ballad of John and Yoko Released …   Wikipedia

  • Old Golden Throat — Compilation album by Johnny Cash Released June 1968 Recorded August 8 …   Wikipedia

  • Old Golden Throat — Album par Johnny Cash Sortie juin 1968 en musique Enregistrement 8 août 1958, 12 janvier 1967 Durée 34 min 12 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Old Folks at Home — 1851 edition Music by Stephen Foster Lyrics by Stephen Foster Published 1851 Language English Form St …   Wikipedia

  • Old-Timey Concert — Live album by Doc Watson, Clint Howard, Fred Price Recorded 1967 at the Seattle Folklore Society, Seattle, WA …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”