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devised
by Ewan MacColl, Charles Parker & Peggy Seeger
A 16 page full colour booklet
(as reproduced here) describing the series and its background is
available separately (and at no charge). ... the work of a team of singers, songwriters, technicians, instrumentalists and others who were consciously attempting to apply the techniques of folk creation to one part of the mass media radio. |
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For today's listening public, the term radio-ballad may no longer carry that weight of meaning, but these programmes are as entertaining and stimulating as when they were first created. Perhaps this series of CD re-issues will help to put into context so much that followed in both radio and television and will find new resonance among older and younger listeners alike. The series was originally transmitted on the BBC Home Service as follows: The Ballad of John Axon 2
July 1958 Immediately after The Ballad of John Axon was first broadcast, letters started arriving at the BBC requesting that the programme be repeated, which it was, on 5 August l958. Several of the programmes were repeated one or more times on the Home Service after their first broadcast, during the period up to l964. Singing the Fishing, which won the Prix d'Italia in October 1960, was also re-broadcast on the BBC Home Service and later on Radio 4 a number of times. More significantly, there were quite a lot of people - particularly teachers - who wrote to Charles Parker singing the praises of the radio- ballad format as a learning resource and enquiring whether copies could be made for educational use. Parker was particularly inundated with requests for LP or tape copies of On the Edge, soon after its first transmission. Letters were also received from listeners who found the texture of some of the programmes sometimes so rich that they missed much of them in a single hearing, and felt frustrated.
Charles Parker recording for Singing the Fishing in 1960 After protracted negotiations between the BBC, Parker, MacColl and Seeger, and various record labels (including Topic and Folkways) during the sixties, the Argo label eventually acquired commercial LP rights from what was then called BBC Enterprises. Managed by Harley Usill, Argo was a satellite company of Decca, specialising in spoken word (particularly the Shakespeare plays, and classical and contemporary poetry), documentary recordings of steam railway sounds, early music and some traditional folk music. The LP versions of the radio-ballads were supervised by Charles Parker and Ewan MacColl and six of them were released on the Argo label between 1965 and 1970 with the following catalogue numbers: The Ballad of John Axon (1965
DA139)
They remained in
the Argo catalogue until 1980 when Decca took over the label
and all were soon deleted. This re-issue by Topic is the first
time the original masters have been released on CD. Song
of a Road and The Body Blow were never released on
LP; the Topic CD release is their first in any format. The radio-ballads are about the way we live now, attempting to give this life the quality of epic - 'to make', as John Grierson once said, 'the everyday significant.' |
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What we hear today in these recordings is a seamless, organic relationship between words and music, that gives dramatic form to different ways of life. A number of key elements contributed to the creation of this new form. These were summarised by Parker in one of his subsequent articles: the innovative use of the tape recorder; the re-assertion of oral tradition; the re-direction of the dramatist back from the 'slice of life' concept of drama to a concept of 'drama and ritual'; and the replacement of the actors in their usual role as mimic of experience by real people -the living voice of the past. But it was MacColl's experience in popular theatre combined with MacColl and Seeger's conscious use of folk style lyrics, melodies and instrumentation that allowed Parker to experiment and break new ground. In the Radio Times of 2 July 1958 Parker introduced The Ballad of John Axon and, aware of the effect that the radio-ballad form might have on an unsuspecting public, gently warned: 'we took liberties with conventions you may cherish'. Of course, this new form did not arise ready-made from these various strands, but evolved as the first programme was researched and developed. Parker later described how this came about: At first MacColl and I intended to produce a formal musical, i.e. with actors and dramatic scenes, but when we went to meet John Axon's widow to gain her permission to do the programme, we took a tape recorder with us, to record background material for preparation of the script, but talking with Mrs. Axon and John Axons workmates, we soon realised that here in the authentic words of the original men themselves as captured by our tape recorder, was the staple of such a programme.' The recorded material had to be used as an element in its own right, and not as a basis for words to be put into the mouths of actors. And so finally emerged the radio-ballad form, dispensing entirely with a narrator and with dramatic scenes, using simply the three elements of lyric, music and actuality recordings with effects. The seed of this creative breakthrough, from Parker's point of view, was attributed by him to his interest in the ballad form, which had begun in the summer of 1942. He had been serving as a submarine officer in the Mediterranean, and was convalescing in a hotel in the mountains of Lebanon, where he met a group of US airmen and for a week all they had to do was drink, play bridge and sing. Later Parker wrote: 'mostly we sang, and in the course of that week I learned Casey Jones and many other American ballads'. For the next five years he sang Casey Jones whenever opportunity offered, but it wasn't until he joined the BBC that he realised there was an English industrial folklore as well as American. MacColl had first met Parker in the mid-Fifties when recording a talk for the North American Service of the BBC and was later invited to take part in a programme written by Alan Lomax and produced by Parker for Midland Region radio. But it was not until 1957 that Parker gave MacColl his first commission: the script for a radio feature about the steam-locomotive driver John Axon, posthumously awarded the George Cross for an act of heroism. The epic quality of the story had made a profound impression on Parker and the original brief was to write a dramatic tribute to one man's bravery, using the existing radio conventions of actors, narrators and caption voices. The initial field recordings (referred to in Parker's notes, above) were to have formed the basis of a dramatic reconstruction performed by actors and musicians, but the strength and depth of the material persuaded MacColl to rethink the concept. Imperceptibly, a hybrid format emerged in which the words and voices of those involved in the story became the building blocks on which the narrative and music were constructed. The difference was that, through careful tape-editing, the voices themselves would retell the story and communicate to the listener the excitement of the moment, without the need for actors or additional script. MacColl and Parker had returned from the field with over forty hours of recorded material. MacColl later wrote: The impact of this great mass of material was staggering and it was immediately apparent that what we had got in the can was a unique picture of a way of life, told in words which were themselves charged with the special kind of vitality which derives from involvement with a work process. Furthermore, it seemed to us that the railwaymans speech was full of the same kind of symbols and verbal nuances as those which inform the ballads and folk songs of our tradition, and it was obvious that one could not re-write it without reducing and falsifying it.
Parker had initial reservations about the use of actuality and the abandonment of narrator's and actors' voices, but despite this he realised that MacColl's conception was a formidable challenge and one that he was prepared to meet. In 1957, this was by no means a simple task: there were no multi-track recording facilities, everything being recorded on quarter-inch single track tape. Parker locked himself in an editing room at the BBC Studios in Maida Vale and transformed himself into a master editor, creating the sequence of music and actuality by splicing together tape 'ranging in length from pieces yards long to shreds and slivers of microscopic size'. When The Ballad of John Axon was first transmitted on 2 July l958, this marriage of the ballad form and tape recording technology was hailed in the national press as a remarkable innovation, and the response was described by Parker as 'staggering'. MacColl later recalled that the publicity it received was comparable with that of a controversial play or a piece of banned contemporary literature. The radio critic of the Sunday Times had written: 'As remarkable a piece of radio as I have ever listened to'. The Observer's reviewer had been equally enthusiastic: 'Last week a technique and a subject got married and nothing in radio kaleidoscopy, or whatever you like to call it, will ever be the same again.' The programme was described by Adrian Clancy in the Daily Mail as 'ruthlessly realistic... it is the strongest radio profile of a hero 1 have ever heard'. Tom Driberg, in an uncharacteristic congratulatory piece in the New Statesman, concluded: ,a generation from now, listeners will surely still be moved by the recording of The Ballad of John Axon.' Four years later, in an article in the magazine New Society, Parker wrote: It was immediately apparent that here was a form which could achieve something of a breakthrough in popular art; for by speaking in the unquestionable accents of everyday experience, we were able to evoke that thrill of recognition by which a listener was able to identify himself with the action; at the same time the musical setting gave overt dramatic or lyrical significance to that everyday experience, and in musical accents entirely appropriate to the speech, and able to awaken echoes of traditional popular modes - folk echoes if you like - in the listener. The effect was to infuse ordinary life with the sense of an ultimate reality, and judging by the response, this, despite Denmark Street and all their works, was what people wanted!Prophetically he added: I contend that the radio-ballad is, potentially at least, a new art form; that as such it has implications for an emergent popular art extending far beyond the confines of radio. The BBC chose it as the British entry for 1958 Prix d'Italia (the prestigious 'Academy Award' of its day for the radio medium, hereby putting its own seal of approval on the work.
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| Although MacColl and Seeger considered they had failed to create something as interesting and innovative as John Axon, the playback of over 80 hours of recorded actuality taught them an invaluable lesson about the relationship of speech to social class and to traditional songs. The implications enabled them to analyse field recordings in the subsequent programmes, before construction of the musical framework and allow the selection of actuality to be controlled by MacColl and Seeger, thereby freeing themselves at an early stage from the typed transcript. The selection would be based on 'speed of utterance, rhythm, pitch and timbre of voice and the speaker's effort pattern.' Moreover, MacColl and Seeger decided that 'radio-ballads should not be primarily concerned with work processes, but with people's attitudes and responses to those processes; in other words, not with things, but the way people related to things and the way in which those relationships were expressed in words. 'Song of a Road was never released as an LP, but the programme did succeed in synthesising a variety of musical styles into a unity and, along the way, create several enduring songs, notably Hot Asphalt. Actuality was pre-edited, timed and assembled in sequence on master tapes with leader tape in between each cue. Sound effect sequences wore built up on additional tapes. Tape machines for feeding in actuality and sound effects were installed in the performance area of the studio and tape machine operators became members of the musical ensemble. Gramophone operators were upstairs in the cubicle, practising dropping the needle on exactly the right groove for effects that could not be pre-assembled. The studio layout was Charles's brainchild and by adopting it we found it possible to record complete sequences in one go, sections in which music, songs, actuality and sound effects dovetailed or flowed into one another. Singers and musicians were no longer working in the dark but could match every nuance of speech, could alter vocal density so as to ride with a speaker's changes of pitch, resulting from a rising or lowering of the emotional level. In the same way, pulses and rhythms of speech could be matched exactly by a musical instrument without destroying the guidelines of the musical arrangements. For the tape- machine operators it meant that actuality feed-ins could be conceived as continuations of a melodic line, that the first heavily accented word in a passage of speech could be made to coincide with the accented beats in a bar of music, that short passages of actuality could be interpolated between the verses of a song in place of musical tags or that they could be fed between two lines of a stanza and serve as refrains. In short, the tape machines became another instrument in the orchestra. Although it took nearly a week to record all the sequences and the process was exhausting for everyone concerned, Singing the Fishing was, without doubt, the first fully integrated work produced by the radio-ballad team and as such is remembered and quoted more than the others as a perfect example of the new form. The field recording, research, musical scoring and recording techniques were adopted for all the subsequent radio-ballads to greater or lesser extent. |
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The epic stories and locations that
lay behind John Axon, Singing the Fishing, The
Big Hewer and, to a lesser extent, Song of the Road,
seemed to many commentators the limit of the reach of the radio-ballad
form. But it was The Body Blow, the radio-ballad which followed
The Big Hewer, that MacColl and Seeger considered to be their
most innovative, stretching the concept further and creating an
appropriate form for themes and subjects on a smaller canvas. It was as if they had been waiting
for someone to listen to them and once started there was no stopping
them. |
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The final radio-ballad was considered
by MacColl to be the perfect subject for the new form: the gipsies
and tinkers, The Travelling People. Despite the pressures
of tighter budgets and production schedules, the team travelled
extensively in England and Scot land, recording over 300 hours of
Many broadcasters and writers working
today within radio and television are perhaps unaware of the contribution
made by MacColl, Parker and Seeger in the radio-ballads to their
medium. Some however will know that the radio-ballads continue -
in the words of Francis Newton in the New Statesman, 26 July 1963
- to be 'the most valuable products of the British folk-music
movement'. |
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