Cecil Sharp

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Cecil Sharp
Born(1859-11-22)22 November 1859
Camberwell, Surrey, England
Died23 June 1924(1924-06-23) (aged 64)
Hampstead, London, England
NationalityBritish
Alma materClare College, Cambridge
Occupation(s)Folklorist and song collector
Notable workEnglish Folk Song: Some Conclusions

English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians

The Country Dance Book

Cecil James Sharp (22 November 1859 – 23 June 1924)[1] was an English collector of folk songs, folk dances and instrumental music, as well as a lecturer, teacher, composer and musician.[2] He was a key figure in the folk-song revival in England during the Edwardian period.[3] According to Steve Roud, Sharp was the country's "single most important figure in the study of folk song and music."[4]

Sharp collected over four thousand folk songs, both in South-West England and the Southern Appalachian region of the United States.[5][6][7] He published an extensive series of songbooks based on his fieldwork, often with piano arrangements, and wrote an influential theoretical work, English Folk Song: Some Conclusions,[8] which is now subject to widespread criticism.[9] He recorded examples of English Morris dancing, and played an important role in the revival both of the Morris and English country dance. In 1911, he co-founded the English Folk Dance Society, which was later merged with the Folk Song Society to form the English Folk Dance and Song Society.

Sharp's work has attracted criticism for its selectivity, bowdlerisation, and Nationalism, as well as claims of racism, exploitation, appropriation, and classism.[9][10][3][7]

Early life

Sharp was born in Camberwell, Surrey, the eldest son of James Sharp[11] (a slate merchant who was interested in archaeology, architecture, old furniture and music) and his wife, Jane née Bloyd, who was also a music lover. They named him after the patron saint of music, on whose feast he was born. Sharp was educated at Uppingham, but left at 15 and was privately coached for the University of Cambridge, where he rowed in the Clare College boat and graduated B.A. in 1882.[12]

In Australia

Sharp decided to emigrate to Australia on his father's suggestion.[11] He arrived in Adelaide in November 1882 and early in 1883 obtained a position as a clerk in the Commercial Bank of South Australia. He read some law, and in April 1884 became associate to the Chief Justice, Sir Samuel James Way. He held this position until 1889 when he resigned and gave his whole time to music. He had become assistant organist at St Peter's Cathedral soon after he arrived, and had been conductor of the Government House Choral Society and the Cathedral Choral Society. Later he became conductor of the Adelaide Philharmonic, and in 1889 entered into partnership with I. G. Reimann as joint director of the Adelaide College of Music.

He was very successful as a lecturer but around the middle of 1891 the partnership was dissolved. The school continued under Reimann and in 1898 developed into the Elder Conservatorium of Music in connexion with the university. Sharp had made many friends and an address with over 300 signatures asked him to continue his work at Adelaide, but he decided to return to England and arrived there in January 1892. During his stay in Adelaide he composed the music for an operetta Dimple's Lovers performed by the Adelaide Garrick Club at the Albert Hall on 9 September 1890,[13] and two light operas, Sylvia, which was produced at the Theatre Royal on 4 December 1890, and The Jonquil. The libretto in each case was written by Guy Boothby. Sharp also wrote the music for some nursery rhymes which were sung by the Cathedral Choral Society.

Return to England

In 1892 Sharp returned to England and on 22 August 1893 at East Clevedon, Somerset, he married Constance Dorothea Birch, also a music lover.[11] They had three daughters and a son.[14] Also in 1893 he was taken on as a music teacher by Ludgrove School, a preparatory school then in North London. During his seventeen years in the post, he took on a number of other musical jobs.[15]

From 1896 Sharp was Principal of the Hampstead Conservatoire of Music, a half-time post which provided a house.[14] In 1904 he met Emma Overd for the first time. She was a barely literate agricultural labourer with six children.[16] Sharp enthused about her singing and transcribed many of her songs. In July 1905 he resigned from this post after a prolonged dispute about payment and his right to take on students for extra tuition. He had to leave the Principal's house, and apart from his position at Ludgrove his income was henceforth derived largely from lecturing and publishing on folk music.[14][17]

Folk music of England

"Sweet Kitty" transcribed from Lucy White by Cecil Sharp in 1906[18]
The Somerset folk singer Lucy White (1848–1923)

Sharp taught and composed music. Because music pedagogy of his time originated from Germany and was entirely based on tunes from German folk music, Sharp, as a music teacher, became interested in the vocal and instrumental (dance) folk music of the British Isles, especially the tunes. He felt that speakers of English (and the other languages spoken in Britain and Ireland) ought to become acquainted with the patrimony of melodic expression that had grown up in the various regions there. He began collecting folk songs in 1903 while visiting his friend (and lyrics editor) from his days in Adelaide, Charles Marson, now curate in Hambridge, South Somerset.[19] Over 1,600 tunes or texts were collected from 350 singers, and Sharp used these songs in his lectures and press campaign to urge the rescue of English folk song. Although Sharp collected songs from 15 other counties after 1907, the Somerset songs were the core of his experience and theories.[17]

Sharp became interested in traditional English dance when he saw a group of morris dancers with their concertina player William Kimber at the village of Headington Quarry, just outside Oxford, at Christmas 1899. At this time, morris dancing was danced in regional forms in rural areas across England; the interest generated by Sharp's notations spread the practice to urban areas, and resulted in certain Sharp-preferred morris styles to be popularised above other regional styles.[20]

The revival of the morris dances started when Mary Neal, the organiser of the Esperance Girls' Club in London, used Sharp's (then unpublished) notations to teach the dances to the club's members in 1905. Their enthusiasm for morris dance persuaded Sharp to publish his notations in the form of his Morris Books, starting in 1907.

Dorette Wilkie was the headteacher of the Chelsea College of Physical Education which was part of the South Western Polytechnic.[21] Starting in 1907 they set up a partnership with Sharp teaching Morris Dancing.[21] He and Wilkie were both at the Japan–British Exhibition on 9 July 1910 in London where the college students demonstrated their dances. Sharp accompanied them on the piano and Wilkie spoke about the importance of 20 minutes exercise each day. The following month Sharp and Wilkie undertook a similar exhibition in Paris at the International Congress of School Hygiene.[22]

Between 1911 and 1913 Sharp published a three-volume work, The Sword Dances of Northern England, which described the obscure and near-extinct Rapper sword dance of Northumbria and Long Sword dance of Yorkshire. This led to the revival of both traditions in their home areas, and later elsewhere.

Song books for teachers and pupils

At a time when state-sponsored mass public schooling was in its infancy, Sharp published song books intended for use by teachers and children in the then-being-formulated music curriculum. These song books often included arrangements of songs he had collected with piano accompaniment composed by Sharp himself, arrangements intended for choral singing. Although it has been alleged that, had they heard them, traditional singers (who in England virtually always sang unaccompanied) might well have found Sharp's piano parts distracting, the arrangements with piano accompaniment did help Sharp in his goal of disseminating the sound of English folk melodies to children in schools, thus acquainting them with their national musical heritage.[17]

Bowdlerisation

The schools project also explains Sharp's bowdlerisation of some of the song texts, which, at least among English folk songs, often contained erotic double entendres, when not outright bawdy or violent. However, Sharp did accurately note such lyrics in his field notebooks, which, given the prudery of the Victorian era could never have been openly published (especially in a school textbook context), thus preserving them for posterity. An example of the transformation of a formerly erotic song into one suitable for all audiences is the well-known "The Keeper." The immediate goal of Sharp's project – disseminating the distinctive, and hitherto little known melodies of these songs through music education – also explains why he considered the song texts relatively less important.

English Folk Dance Society, afterwards English Folk Dance and Song Society

In 1911 Sharp co-founded the English Folk Dance Society, which promoted the traditional dances through workshops held nationwide, and which later merged with the Folk Song Society in 1932 to form the English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS). The current London headquarters of the EFDSS is named Cecil Sharp House in his honor.

Influence on English classical music

Sharp's work coincided with a period of nationalism in classical music, the idea being to reinvigorate and give distinctiveness to English classical composition by grounding it in the characteristic melodic patterns and recognisable tone intervals and ornaments of its national folk music. Among the composers who took up this goal was Ralph Vaughan Williams, who carried out his own field work in folk song in Norfolk, Sussex and Surrey. The use of folk songs and dance melodies and motifs in classical music to inject vitality and excitement, is of course as old as "La Folia" and Marin Marais' "Bells of St. Genevieve" ("Sonnerie de Ste-Geneviève du Mont-de-Paris"), but the attempt to give music a sense of place was novel to the Historical particularism of late nineteenth century Romanticism.

In America

A sign commemorating Cecil Sharp's visit to Hot Springs, North Carolina

During the years of the First World War, Sharp found it difficult to support himself through his customary work in England, and decided to try to earn his living in the United States. He was invited to act as dance consultant for a 1915 New York production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and went on to give successful lectures and classes across the country on English folk song and especially folk dance. He met the wealthy philanthropist Helen Storrow in Boston, and with her and other colleagues was instrumental in setting up the Country Dance and Song Society.[20] He also met Olive Dame Campbell, who brought with her a portfolio of British-origin ballads she had collected in the Southern Appalachian mountains.[7] The quality of her collection convinced Sharp to make several song collecting expeditions into the remote mountain backcountry with his collaborator Maud Karpeles during the years 1916–1918, following in the footsteps of Olive Campbell and other collectors such as Lorraine Wyman and Katherine Jackson French.[7][23] Travelling through the Appalachian mountains in Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee, often covering many miles on foot over rough terrain, Sharp and Karpeles recorded a treasure trove of folk songs, many of British origin, though in versions quite different from those Sharp had collected in rural England, and some altogether extinct in the old country. In remote log cabins Sharp would notate the tunes by ear, while Karpeles took down the words, and they collected songs from singers including Jane Hicks Gentry, Mary Sands and young members of the Ritchie family of Kentucky. Sharp was particularly interested in the tunes, which he found very beautiful and often set in ‘gapped scales’.[7]

Mary Sands (1872–1949) of Madison County, NC, c. 1920

Sharp wrote the following words a few weeks after his arrival in Appalachia:

The people are just English of the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century.  They speak English, look English, and their manners are old-fashioned English.  Heaps of words and expressions they use habitually in ordinary conversation are obsolete, and have been in England a long time.  I find them very easy to get on with, and have no difficulty in making them sing and show their enthusiasm for their songs.  I have taken down very nearly one hundred already, and many of these are quite unknown to me and aesthetically of the very highest value.  Indeed, it is the greatest discovery I have made since the original one I made in England sixteen years ago.[24]

Olive Dame Campbell and her husband John had led Sharp and Karpeles to areas with a high concentration of white people of English or Scots-Irish ancestry, so the collectors had little sense of the cultural mosaic of White, Black, Indigenous and multiracial Americans that existed across Appalachia, or of the interactions between these groups that had resulted in a dynamic, hybridised folk tradition. For instance, having witnessed in white communities a form of square dancing that he christened the “Kentucky Running Set”, Sharp interpreted it inaccurately as the survival of a 17th-century English style, whereas in fact it contained significant African-American and European elements.[25]

In their search for communities rich in British-origin songs, Sharp and Karpeles avoided German-American communities,[7] and on one occasion turned back from a village when they realised it was an African-American settlement: "We tramped – mainly uphill. When we reached the cove we found it peopled by niggers ...  All our troubles and spent energy for nought."[24]

Sharp and Karpeles noted down a huge number of songs, many of which would otherwise have been lost, and contributed to the continuing tradition of balladry in the Appalachian Mountains. Their collection was described by ballad expert Bertrand Bronson as “without question the foremost contribution to the study of British-American folk-song”, and by Archie Green as a “monumental contribution… an unending scroll in cultural understanding”.[26][27] However, it can be argued that a fascination with Child Ballads and other old British material led him and the other fieldworkers of his era to misrepresent Appalachian folk music as an overwhelmingly Anglo-Saxon or Celtic tradition, and overlook its cultural diversity.[28]

Elizabeth DiSavino, in her 2020 biography of Katherine Jackson French, has claimed that Sharp had neglected to give proper acknowledgement to female and Scottish-diaspora sources, although in fact he mentioned both in his Introduction to English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians.[23][29]

Political views

Sharp's contradictory political views are the subject of much controversy. While at Cambridge, he heard the lectures of William Morris, which may have influenced his later self-description as a ‘conservative socialist’.[30] He was a supporter of democracy, holding that “any form of collectivist government must also be democratic if it is to function properly”, and expressing scepticism about the Bolshevik revolution in Russia.[2][10] Despite being occasionally referred to as a socialist, his opposition to capitalism stemmed from to a suspicion of the Industrial Revolution and modernity in general, and a belief in the virtues of rural over urban life;[30][2] beliefs shared across the political spectrum from Morris to the Nazi party.[31] He was criticised by his own contemporaries, including Lucy Broadwood and Ralph Vaughan Williams, for his contradictory theories and his patronising attitude towards the rural peasantry,[9] making it difficult to discern his true views, except that his work was deeply Nationalist in character.[32]

Sharp an opponent of capital punishment, and a lifelong vegetarian. He was not, however, a supporter of the Suffragette movement.[2] Despite this, he maintained a friendly relationship with his sister Evelyn, an avid suffragist who was imprisoned for her activities; shortly after her release from Holloway she wrote to Sharp stating that she had no wish to quarrel over the matter.[33]

Criticism

Sharp's ideas held sway for half a century after his death, thanks in part to an uncritical and rose-tinted biography co-authored by his disciple Maud Karpeles, who also enshrined his thinking in the 1954 definition of folk song drawn up by the International Folk Music Council.[2][4][34] A. L. Lloyd, a Marxist and the chief theoretician of the second folk song revival during the 1960s, affected to repudiate Sharp's ideas but in fact followed much of his thinking.[10] He rejected Sharp's claim that folk song could be found only in isolated rural communities as “primitive romanticism”, and described his piano arrangements as “false and unrepresentative”, but praised his ability as a collector, admired his analysis of modal tunes, and used numerous examples from his manuscripts as illustrations.[35]

A more radical criticism was offered in the 1970s by David Harker, questioning the motivations and methods of the first folk revival, and accusing Sharp of manipulating his research for ideological reasons.[36] According to Harker:

"'[F]olk song' as mediated by Cecil Sharp, [is] to be used as 'raw material' or 'instrument', being extracted from a tiny fraction of the rural proletariat and... imposed upon town and country alike for the people's own good, not in its original form, but, suitably integrated into the Conservatoire curriculum, made the basis of nationalistic sentiments and bourgeois values."

Fakesong led to a widespread reappraisal of the work of Sharp and his colleagues.[37] Vic Gammon commented that Fakesong represented "the beginning of critical work" on the early folk music movement, although he stated later that, "this does not mean that Harker got it all right."[38][3] C.J. Bearman later criticised Harker's analysis for ignoring the difficulty of publishing erotic material in the Edwardian era, and argued that Sharp had privately preserved the original texts.[39] The theory that much of the material collected by Sharp and others had its origins in commercial print is now widely accepted, however, and the narrow definition advanced by Sharp of what constituted "folk song" has been broadened considerably.[4]

In 1993 Georgina Boyes produced her book The Imagined Village – Culture, Ideology and the English Folk Revival,[40] which critiqued the Victorian and Edwardian folk song revival for having invented a culturally anachronistic rural community – "The Folk" - and making unrepresentative collections of songs to support the idea. The book was also critical of Sharp's controlling tendencies, which many of his contemporaries complained of, resulting a power struggle with Mary Neal over control of the morris dance movement which Boyes suggested was a patriarchal refusal to share power with a woman. Daniel Walkowitz has made similar claims about Sharp's behaviour towards Elizabeth Burchenal during the early days of the US country dance movement.[20]

Sharp's song collecting in the USA has also been the subject of controversy amongst American scholars of cultural politics. Henry Shapiro held him responsible in a large part for the perception of Appalachian mountain culture as "Anglo-Saxon", while Benjamin Filene and Daniel Walkowitz claimed that Sharp had neglected to collect fiddle tunes, hymns, recent compositions, and songs of African-American origin.[41][42][20] David Whisnant made similar claims about his selectivity, but praised him for being "serious, industrious and uniformly gracious to and respectful of local people".[43] More recently, Phil Jamison has stated that Sharp "was interested only in English music and dances. He ignored the rest."[25] However, Brian Peters’ detailed analysis of Sharp's collection identified a large number of American-made songs, plus hymns, fiddle tunes, and songs which Sharp himself described as having "negro" origins.[7]

Selected works

  • Cecil Sharp's Collection of English Folk Songs, Oxford University Press, 1974; ISBN 0-19-313125-0.
  • English folk songs from the southern Appalachians, collected by Cecil J. Sharp; comprising two hundred and seventy-four songs and ballads with nine hundred and sixty-eight tunes, including thirty-nine tunes contributed by Olive Dame Campbell, edited by Maud Karpeles. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1932.[44]
  • English folk songs, collected and arranged with pianoforte accompaniment by Cecil J. Sharp, London: Novello (1916). This volume has been reprinted by Dover Publications under ISBN 0-486-23192-5 and is in print.
  • English Folk Song: Some Conclusions (originally published 1907. London: Simpkin; Novello). This work has been reprinted a number of times. For the most recent (Charles River Books), see ISBN 0-85409-929-8.
  • The Morris Book a History of Morris Dancing, With a Description of Eleven Dances as Performed by the Morris-Men of England by Cecil J. Sharp and Herbert C MacIlwaine, London: Novello (1907). Reprinted 2010, General Books; ISBN 1-153-71417-5.

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. pp. 2238/9. ISBN 0-85112-939-0.
  2. ^ a b c d e Fox Strangways, A. H.; Karpeles, Maud (1933). Cecil Sharp. London: Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ a b c Gammon, Vic (2003). "Cecil Sharp and English Folk Music". In Roud, Steve; Upton, Eddie; Taylor, Malcolm (eds.). Still Growing: Traditional Songs and Singers from the Cecil Sharp Collection. London: English Folk Dance & Song Society. pp. 2–22. ISBN 0-85418-187-3.
  4. ^ a b c Roud, Steve (2017). Folk Song in England. London: Faber. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-571-30971-9.
  5. ^ Roud, Steve; Upton, Eddie; Taylor, Malcolm, eds. (2003). Still Growing: Traditional Songs and Singers from the Cecil Sharp Collection. London: English Folk Dance & Song Society. pp. 1–121. ISBN 0-85418-187-3.
  6. ^ Yates, Mike; Bradtke, Elaine; Taylor, Malcolm, eds. (2017). Dear Companion: Appalachian Traditional Songs and Singers from the Cecil Sharp Collection. London: English Folk Dance & Song Society. pp. 1–121. ISBN 0-85418-190-3.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Peters, Brian (2018). "Myths of 'Merrie Olde England'? Cecil Sharp's Collecting Practice in the Southern Appalachians". Folk Music Journal. 11 (3): 6–46. JSTOR 44987648.
  8. ^ Sharp, Cecil (1907). English Folk Song: Some Conclusions. London: Simpkin; Novello.
  9. ^ a b c Boyes, Georgina (2010). The imagined village : culture, ideology, and the English folk revival (rev ed). Leeds: Leeds No Masters. ISBN 9780956622709.
  10. ^ a b c Harker, Dave (1985). Fakesong: The Manufacture of British Folk Song, 1700 to the Present Day. Milton Keynes, Philadelphia: Open University Press. ISBN 0-335-15066-7.
  11. ^ a b c Sue Tronser, 'Sharp, Cecil James (1859–1924)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol. 11, MUP, 1988, pp 579–580. Retrieved 17 January 2010.
  12. ^ "Sharp, Cecil James (SHRP879CJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  13. ^ "Amusements". The Express and Telegraph. Vol. XXVII, no. 8, 031. South Australia. 10 September 1890. p. 7. Retrieved 20 February 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  14. ^ a b c Heaney, Michael (2004). "Sharp, Cecil James". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
  15. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica (23 June 1924). "Britannica online". Britannica.com. Retrieved 31 January 2010.
  16. ^ "Overd, Emma (1838–1928), folk-singer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/74829. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  17. ^ a b c Sharif Gemie. "The Oak and the Acorn: Music and Political Values in the Work of Cecil Sharp, 2019". Musical Traditions.
  18. ^ "Lucy White at Vaughan Williams Memorial Library". www.vwml.org. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  19. ^ Sharp, C and Marson, C Folk Songs from Somerset vols 1–3 1904–1906 Simpkin
  20. ^ a b c d Walkowitz, Daniel (2010). City Folk: English Country Dance and the Politics of the Folk in Modern America. New York: New York University. ISBN 9780814794692.
  21. ^ a b Clarke, Gill; Webb, Ida M. (22 September 2005). Wilkie [formerly Wilke], Dorette (1867–1930), promoter of women's physical education. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/63387.
  22. ^ "Wilkie, Dorette - Cecil Sharps People". cecilsharpspeople.org.uk. Retrieved 10 March 2023.
  23. ^ a b DiSavino, Elizabeth (2020). Katherine Jackson French: Kentucky’s Forgotten Ballad Collector. Chapel Hill: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0813178525.
  24. ^ a b "Cecil Sharp in America". www.mustrad.org.uk. Archived from the original on 24 April 2000. Retrieved 29 September 2021.
  25. ^ a b Jamison, Phil (2015). Hoedowns, Reels, and Frolics: Roots and Branches of Southern Appalachian Dance. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 9780252080814.
  26. ^ Bronson, Bertrand (1969). The Ballad as Song. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 249.
  27. ^ Green, Archie (1979). "A Folklorist's Creed and Folksinger's Gift". Appalachian Journal. 7: 39–40.
  28. ^ "Rhiannon Giddens Keynote Address IBMA Conference 2017".
  29. ^ Peters, Brian (2021). "Book Review, Katherine Jackson French: Kentucky's Forgotten Ballad Collector". Folk Music Journal. 12 (1): 137–138.
  30. ^ a b Bustin, Dillon (1982). ""The Morrow's Uprising: William Morris and the English Folk Revival"". Folklore Forum. 15: 17–38.
  31. ^ Holmes, Kim R (1982). "The Forsaken Past: Agrarian Conservatism and National Socialism in Germany". Journal of Contemporary History. 17 (4): 671–688.
  32. ^ Knevett, Arthur (2018). "The Forsaken Past: Agrarian Conservatism and National Socialism in Germany". Folk Music Journal. 11 (3): 47–71.
  33. ^ Letter from Evelyn Sharp to Cecil Sharp, 8 Aug 1913, Vaughan Williams Memorial Library, CJS1/12/18/11/2. https://www.vwml.org/record/CJS1/12/18/11/2
  34. ^ Pakenham, Simona (2011). Singing and Dancing Wherever She Goes: A Life of Maud Karpeles. London: English Folk Dance & Song Society.
  35. ^ Lloyd, A. L. (1967). Folk Song in England. London: Lawrence & Wishart.
  36. ^ Harker, Dave (1972). "Cecil Sharp in Somerset: Some Conclusions". Folk Music Journal. 2 (3): 220–240.
  37. ^ Pickering, Michael (1990). "Recent Folk Music Scholarship in England: A Critique". Folk Music Journal. 6 (1): 37–64.
  38. ^ Gammon, Vic (1986). "Two for the Show. Dave Harker, Politics and Popular Song". History Workshop Journal. 21: 147.
  39. ^ Bearman, Christopher (2000). "Who Were the Folk? The Demography of Cecil Sharp's Somerset Singers". Historical Journal. 43: 751–775.
  40. ^ Boyes, Georgina (1993). The Imagined Village: Culture, Ideology and the English Folk Revival. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0719045711.
  41. ^ Shapiro, Henry (1978). Appalachia on our Mind: The Southern Mountains and Mountaineers in the American Consciousness, 1870–1920. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4158-7.
  42. ^ Filene, Benjamin (2000). Romancing the Folk: Public Memory and American Roots Music. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0807848623.
  43. ^ Whisnant, David (1985). All That Is Native & Fine: The Politics of Culture in an American Region. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0807815616.
  44. ^ Campbell, Olive Arnold (Dame); Sharp, Cecil James (10 October 1917). "English folk songs from the southern Appalachians". Archive.org. New York and London : G. P. Putnam's sons. Retrieved 10 October 2021.

External links