• Traditional Music Pages – Resources for people interested in traditional music; includes instrument tutorials, tune collections, session listings, profiles of Scottish performers, and a bibliography.
  • Tree Light Music Page – Celebrates traditional music; includes articles on playing the button accordion, learning music in sessions, and some resources on Irish and Greek music.
  • The Unbroken Circle – An exploration of folk music as it crosses over into stranger areas – alternative religion, folklore, magic, mysticism, surreality and the past. Includes artist profiles, discography, downloads and forums.
  • The Folk Rag – An independently produced free monthly publication which keeps people informed about the folk scene in Brisbane, Queensland, and interstate.
  • Folk Roots Magazine – Roots, folk and world music magazine, published in UK. Includes articles, features, reviews, radio, online CD sales, merchandise, and international festival listings.
  • The Folk Times – The Folk Times is a calendar of acoustic music performances in upstate New York.
  • The Mudcat Cafe – a magazine dedicated to blues and folk music; hosts Digital Tradition Folk Song Database
  • Music Matters Review – Interviews, features, concert and album reviews of singer-songwriter, blues, bluegrass, Celtic, Zydeco and other acoustic music.
  • Musical Traditions Home Page – E-zine: reviews, articles, discographies, pictures, and feedback.
  • ‘Come All Ye’ – The longest running folk / acoustic / roots program on Australian radio, presented by Bruce Cameron on 2MCE-FM in Bathurst and Orange, New South Wales.
  • Folk Alley – Folk, traditional, celtic, and world music with 24-hour streaming from 89.7 WKSU, Kent State University. Includes information on featured artists.
  • Folk Roots/Folk Branches with Mike Regenstreif – Montreal’s only broadly-defined folk music radio program. On CKUT–90.3 FM, is also heard around the world in RealAudio.
  • FolkMusic.Org Radio List – Links to folk radio related websites maintained by the folk music interest group folkmusic.org.
  • FolkScene – Program of traditional and contemporary music with interviews. Website based on radio program on Pacifica Radio Station, KPFK in Los Angeles, at 90.7 FM and in Santa Barbara at 98.7 FM.
  • From Albion And Beyond – Playlist archives for the weekly radio program of UK traditional/contemporary folk/roots music which airs Fridays at 11pm on KUAR 89 FM in Little Rock Arkansas, hosted by Len Holton.
  • KBCS radio: folk, world, jazz, and blues – Station is at 91.3 FM, and broadcasts from Bellevue College for Seattle and Puget Sound area. It can be heard on the web, through a link on the web site.
  • ezFolk – MP3 hosting for folk and acoustic artists along with educational material for banjo, guitar, ukulele, and harmonica. Over 1,000 MP3s from hundreds of folk artists .
  • The Folk Den Archive – Roger McGuinn (ex Byrds) carries on the song-collecting tradition on the internet; every month he adds another folk song in digital format with lyrics. Includes description of the project.
  • Folk Music Images – A collection of original folk music photos mainly in the North West of England. Also include other resources for folkies in the area – venues, festivals, artist profiles, and links.

Armenian folk musicians»Folk song is usually seen as the authentic expression of a way of life now, past or about to disappear (or in some cases, to be preserved or somehow revived). Unfortunately, despite the assembly of an enormous body of work over some two centuries, there is still no unanimity on what folk music (or folklore, or the folk) ‘is'» (Middleton 1990, p.127).

Gene Shay, co-founder and host of the Philadelphia Folk Festival, defined folk music in an April 2003 interview by saying: «In the strictest sense, it’s music that is rarely written for profit. It’s music that has endured and been passed down by oral tradition. […] And folk music is participatory—you don’t have to be a great musician to be a folk singer. […] And finally, it brings a sense of community. It’s the people’s music.»

The English term folk, which gained usage in the 18th century (during the Romantic period) to refer to peasants or non-literate peoples, is related to the German word Volk (meaning people or nation). The term is used to emphasize that folk music emerges spontaneously from communities of ordinary people. «As the complexity of social stratification and interaction became clearer and increased, various conditioning criteria, such as ‘continuity’, ‘tradition’, ‘oral transmission’, ‘anonymity’ and uncommercial origins, became more important than simple social categories themselves.»

Charles Seeger (1980) describes three contemporary defining criteria of folk music (Middleton 1990, p.127-8):

A «schema comprising four musical types: ‘primitive’ or ‘tribal’; ‘elite’ or ‘art’; ‘folk’; and ‘popular’. Usually…folk music is associated with a lower class in societies which are culturally and socially stratified, that is, which have developed an elite, and possibly also a popular, musical culture.» Cecil Sharp (1972), A.L. Lloyd ().
«Cultural processes rather than abstract musical types…continuity and oral transmission…seen as characterizing one side of a cultural dichotomy, the other side of which is found not only in the lower layers of feudal, capitalist and some oriental societies but also in ‘primitive’ societies and in parts of ‘popular cultures’.» Redfield (1947) and Dundes (1965).
Less prominent, «a rejection of rigid boundaries, preferring a conception, simply of varying practice within one field, that of ‘music’.»
David Harker (1985) argues that «folk music» is, in Peter van der Merwe’s words, «a meaningless term invented by ‘bourgeois’ commentators». Jazz musician Louis Armstrong and blues musician Big Bill Broonzy have both been attributed the remark «All music is folk music. I ain’t never heard a horse sing a song.»

Apart from instrumental music that forms a part of folk music, especially dance music traditions, much folk music is vocal music, since the instrument that makes such music is usually handy. As such, most folk music has lyrics, and is about something.

Narrative verse looms large in the folk music of many cultures. This encompasses such forms as traditional epic poetry, much of which was meant originally for oral performance, sometimes accompanied by instruments. Many epic poems of various cultures were pieced together from shorter pieces of traditional narrative verse, which explains their episodic structure and often their in medias res plot developments. Other forms of traditional narrative verse relate the outcomes of battles and other tragedies or natural disasters. Sometimes, as in the triumphant Song of Deborah found in the Biblical Book of Judges, these songs celebrate victory. Laments for lost battles and wars, and the lives lost in them, are equally prominent in many folk traditions; these laments keep alive the cause for which the battle was fought. The narratives of folk songs often also remember folk heroes such as John Henry to Robin Hood. Some folk song narratives recall supernatural events or mysterious deaths.

Hymns and other forms of religious music are often of traditional and unknown origin. Western musical notation was originally created to preserve the lines of Gregorian chant, which before its invention was taught as an oral tradition in monastic communities. Folk songs such as Green grow the rushes, O present religious lore in a mnemonic form. In the Western world, Christmas carols and other traditional songs preserve religious lore in song form.

Other sorts of folk songs are less exalted. Work songs are composed; they frequently feature call and response structures, and are designed to enable the labourers who sing them to coordinate their efforts in accordance with the rhythms of the songs. In the armed forces, a lively tradition of jody calls are sung while soldiers are on the march. Professional sailors made use of a large body of sea shanties. Love poetry, often of a tragic or regretful nature, prominently figures in many folk traditions. Nursery rhymes and nonsense verse also are frequent subjects of folk songs.

Music transmitted by word of mouth though a community will, in time, develop many variants, because this kind of transmission cannot produce word-for-word and note-for-note accuracy. Indeed, many traditional folk singers are quite creative and deliberately modify the material they learn.

Because variants proliferate naturally, it is naïve to believe that there is such a thing as the single «authentic» version of a ballad such as «Barbara Allen.» Field researchers in folk song (see below) have encountered countless versions of this ballad throughout the English-speaking world, and these versions often differ greatly from each other. None can reliably claim to be the original, and it is quite possible that whatever the «original» was, it ceased to be sung centuries ago. Any version can lay an equal claim to authenticity, so long as it is truly from a traditional folksinging community and not the work of an outside editor.

Cecil Sharp had an influential idea about the process of folk variation: he felt that the competing variants of a folk song would undergo a process akin to biological natural selection: only those new variants that were the most appealing to ordinary singers would be picked up by others and transmitted onward in time. Thus, over time we would expect each folksong to become esthetically ever more appealing — it would be collectively composed to perfection, as it were, by the community.

On the other hand, there is also evidence to support the view that transmission of folk songs can be rather sloppy. Occasionally, collected folk song versions include material or verses incorporated from different songs that makes little sense in its context. A perfect process of natural selection would not have permitted these incoherent versions to survive.

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