CBC RADIO: THE PEOPLE'S MUSIC
New series explores folk roots
by MARSHA LEDERMAN
Globe and Mail July 5, 2008
VANCOUVER -- Across the country this summer, from Bonavista (or at
least St. John's) to Vancouver Island, thousands of people will attend
folk festivals. Featuring artists such as Ray Davies and the Sam
Roberts Band, these events have evolved far from the beginnings of the
folk-music movement.
For many, those beginnings are rooted in the familiar sounds of
legends such as Ian & Sylvia and Joni Mitchell - but, as Gary Cristall
reveals in a new do***entary series, the roots go back much further
than that. The People's Music explores the origins of the genre in
Canada, and starts tomorrow on CBC Radio One and CBC Radio 2.
Cristall, the co-founder and former artistic director of the Vancouver
Folk Music Festival, has spent eight years travelling the country,
interviewing folk-music artists, promoters and historians for a book
(which is still at least two years from completion). From the 150 or
so interviews he has conducted so far, Cristall has put together a
five-part series.
Even Cristall admits it's impossible to pinpoint the birth of folk
music in this land, but he has elected to start the series with Roy
Mackenzie, an ex-patriate academic who in 1909 returned home to Nova
Scotia to compile old ballads and preserve what he was sure was a
dying tradition. Almost 20 years later, these were published in his
seminal collection, Ballads and Sea Songs from Nova Scotia.
From early collectors of traditional ballads, Cristall moves, not
always chronologically, to the labour movement and left-wing politics,
ethnic folk festivals and finally the pop charts.
Cristall has an encyclopedic knowledge of the genre. But don't ask him
to define it or put walls around what can be categorized as folk. It's
nebulous, even contentious, he admits, and always has been.
"There were people who would sit at the back of the clubs and say
'that's not folk music,' " he explained during an interview this week
in the backyard of his Vancouver home. "We used to call them the folk
Nazis."
The series moves through a wide variety of music - popular and obscure
- everything from the old sea shanty Blow the Man Down to Ian Tyson's
Four Strong Winds. The fact, says Cristall, that Four Strong Winds was
selected in 2005 by CBC Radio's Canadian version of 50 Tracks as the
top Canadian song of all time says it all: Folk is still relevant. .
But Cristall also felt strongly that there were unanswered questions
about the genre. Where did these songs come from? How were they
preserved?
"There is no written history. There is no history. Nobody knows who
played at these clubs. I do - now."
This history is im****tant, Cristall says, in part because folk helps
to define Canada - not just to Canadians but to the rest of the world.
"I would make the case that Canada's greatest cultural ex****t are a
series of songwriters who have come out of the folk scene," he says.
"If you, say, stop somebody in the street in Italy and say 'what do
you know about Canadian art,' I'm willing to bet that they do not know
the films of Atom Egoyan, they do not know the animation of Norman
McLaren, they probably wouldn't know the Group of Seven if it bit
them. But I would be willing to guess that if you said 'do you know
any songs by Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen,' there would be
at least a glimmer of recognition."
The People's Music airs on Inside the Music Sundays at noon on CBC
Radio 2 and 8 p.m. on CBC Radio One, beginning tomorrow.
Linkname: globeandmail.com: New series explores folk roots
URL:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080705.FOLK0
5/TPStory/


|