Kiwifolk Blog
News, thoughts and opinions from the New Zealand folk scene, interviews and snippets from here and there as well as salient items from the nz-folk list.
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Thursday, December 06, 2007
Friday, August 03, 2007
Tommy Makem dies age 74
From the nz-folk list:
Irish singer, songwriter and storyteller Tommy Makem has died after a long battle with lung cancer. For over fifty years Makem entertained the world with self-penned songs and Stories. Makem died in Dover, New Hampshire (USA) where he lived.
Makem grew to international fame with The Clancy Brothers in the late 1950s and 1960s.
Listen to Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem:
When The Ship Comes In' (YouTube)
'Ballad Of William Bloat' (YouTube)
'Red Haired Mary' (YouTube)
VIEW PHOTOS: Makem's career spanned more than five decades
TALK ABOUT IT: Share your memories of Makem's life and work
ARCHIVE 11/21/06: He still sings to Irish ears
On the Web: http://www.makem.com
Monday, July 02, 2007
YouTube posts on the nz-folk List
Anton Karas plays Zither
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFz79SBnuk8
This is a most amazing piece of footage - you'll know the playing for sure. I bet you thought it was a guitar!.
Jake Shimabukuro plays "While My Guitar Gently Weeps"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9mEKMz2Pvo
Who says ukulele is not a serious instrument?
John Fahey - 1969
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lP3hY8HQFSE
"American primitive" open tuned guitar styles explained and played.
Bothy Band from 1977
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgXwIIHAmaw&mode=related&search=
Kevin Burke (fiddle), Triona Ni Dhomhnaill (vocals, clarinet, harmonium, keyboard), Michael Ni Dhomhnaill (guitar)
Paul Brady playing Arthur McBride, 1977
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBGkhPx529g&mode=related&search=
"Beautiful Pat, just beautiful. Genius at work. The album is still on my
most frequently played list - a treasure trove of stunning music. Lots
more clips of Brady there too. Thanks mate - Tony Hillyard"
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain - You Dont bring me Flowers
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ba1e9GkI4c&mode=related&search=
Who says ukulele is a serious instrument?
Friday, May 04, 2007
The Wrong Trousers
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M9Qi3gApUWc&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSUX9byu6NY&mode=related&search=
Couple of YouTube clips of a great young trio - double bass, mandolin and harp.
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Matthias Loibner: tiny hurdy gurdy concert
From the nz-folk list: Jimi Hendrix of the 'gurdy!
http://youtube.com/watch?v=oZKQf-JIvRU
Labels: nz-folk, performance, YouTube
Something from Okinawa
From the nz-folk list:
I particularly like the indigenous music of Okinawa, whose culture is quite distinct from what we recognise as "Japanese". (There are several Okinawan languages. The region has, in historical times, variously paid tribute to China or Japan and was, at one time, an independent kingdom.
The traditional music is central to the local sense of identity in the way that the music of Brittany, Scotland, Galicia or the Basque country is.)
Among the bands that have popularised Okinawan traditional music in Japan, Hawai`i and elsewhere are Shjoukichi Kina and his band Champloose. Here's a video of a slower song. It's played at a live gig, and the band includes the Chieftains and Ry Cooder.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmeJJiXc5oo
Here's something more typically traditional:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWkgWg4-6kw
Marcus Turner
==================
Hi Marcus
Recently, I heard (and was really taken with) some Okinawan folksongs by a singer called Choki Fukuhara, who started his own record-label in Osaka, Japan in the 1930s and released 78s. The Okinawan instrument he played, called the 'sanshin' (similar to the Japanese 'samisen') sounds really like a banjo.
I found this site with a sound clip of Fukuhara: http://rca.open.ed.jp/web_e/music/cards/list/fukuhara.html
And I also found some information here: http://www.pref.okinawa.jp/bunshin/english/con2/06_7shin.html
Cheers
Mike (Michael Brown)
Labels: nz-folk, performance, YouTube
Wednesday, March 07, 2007
YouTube - The Loudness War
YouTube - The Loudness War - An interesting look at how recording engineers and companies are fooling our ears, pushing up the perceived volume of tracks at the expense of the quality. This is considered 'necessary' to make your track 'radio friendly'.
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
An Interview with Phil Garland
I shared the stage with Phil at the Hokonui Moonshiner's Festival in Gore last weekend and I took the oportunity to ask him a few questions:
Perhaps more than Neil Colquhoun or any of the other veteran collectors of NZ folk songs and lore, you are the most well known and respected. What do you credit this to?
Stickability is the buzz word! Hopefully it's because I've been steadily collecting, researching, recording and performing for over 40 years now and if one keeps persisting with something you really love, then eventually you must get noticed. I do maintain a high profile and consequently manage to entertain all manner of audiences throughout New Zealand and Australia. Fortunately most of them all seem to like what I do.
Tell us about your recording label, Kiwi Pacific and your relationship with them. How many albums have you recorded?
It's an interesting relationship. I first joined forces with them back in the early 1970s - the original deal was done with the shake of a hand and they've been looking after me for some 35 years or more. They used to pick up the expense tab for all my recordings, but that changed after "How Are You. Mate?" in 1990. Since then I've either had to self finance all my projects or find sponsorship from other sources. Kiwi still take care of cover design, packaging and pressing, so I consider myself quite fortunate in this regard. If the albums didn't turn a profit, then I'm sure I'd have been an indie artist long ago.
I've recorded some 16 albums in all mostly with Kiwi Pacific bar one and been involved with or contributed to a further 6 with other companies over the years.
Your latest CD has a Southland theme. What brought this on? How much of this material is your own?
I was commissioned by Creative Southland to research and write appropriate material related to a tourism package combining arts and heritage trails around Southland. I wrote 8 songs for the Southern Odyssey project, and included a couple of trad songs plus some appropriate material from the likes of Paul Metsers, Dusty Spittle, Helen Henderson and Brendon Fairbairn.
The project isn't finished yet - I understand there are still another seven trails to come on board, which means I may well have to write some more songs in the near future.
You have a fairly simple, no nonsense approach to recording your songs. Do you worry that your recordings may become dated or is that consistency a plus for your audience?
Yes I try keep things as simple as possible in the studio. I normally record my voice and guitar at the same time, which I think helps give it a better feel of "live" performance - it sometimes requires a little more effort in miking up to obtain the best results, but it is the way I work best. I have had some very understanding musicians working alongside me over the years and I'm very grateful for their ongoingsupport.
I do my best to work within the parameters and boundaries of the tradition. I don't want to compromise my ideals too much, although I must admit I have made use of modern techniques when recording my backing artists. My feelings are that if the technology is available then why not use it.
I have never worried about my recordings becoming dated - I'm sure they must do over time, especially given the rate of modern technological advancements. If I started to worry unduly about such things then I'd probably never get anything started or finished. Regarding 'consistency' it's not something I've consciously thought about, but there may well be a stream of consistency lurking within!
I really can't answer for my audiences, although to be fair I have had the occsional person say they preferred an earlier and simpler arrangement of a song, to a more modern up to date treatment of the same piece.
I know you sell albums overseas. Is there a good level of interest in your material outside of New Zealand? What other artists recorded your songs?
There is a good level of interest overseas and in this regard a number of people make contact searching out my recordings of New Zealand songs. This has certainly been helped by the world wide presence of my website,enabling me to sell to people in countries I've never been to. Interestingly, whenever I perform at specialised outdoor events and a queue forms to buy albums afterwards - I can guarantee that over 90% of those purchasers are from overseas - In many ways I feel the cultural cringe is still alive and well in Aotearoa New Zealand.
There are a number of overseas artists, who have either incorporated my songs into their performing reperotires or in some instances even recorded them. A few that immediately come to mind are Gordon Bok and Schooner Fare in the USA - Martyn Wyndham Read and The McCalmans in the UK as well as such artists as Wongawilli Bush Band, Leaping Lizards, The Pioneers, Denis & Lynne Tracey, all of whom are from Australia. Graham Wilson - Mike Harding - The Worsfolds - Shona Lang and The Pog Band [oh yeah, that's right - Ed] all recorded something of mine down the years for which I'm eternally grateful as well.
What is your vision for New Zealand folk music and folklore?
I would like to see New Zealand folklore and music incorporated into the education syllabus and eventually made available as a fully fledged folklore studies unit in the Universities. I long to see more Kiwi songs being sung in schools and more people being exposed to our wonderful musical heritage. Radio NZ is the only network that does lend real support to the music via The National Programme. I'm convinced that if more people were made aware of the music it would start achieving better listening levels Maybe even better use of such music at overseas promotions marketing New Zealand. I live in hopes!
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Thanks Phil. You can see Phil on YouTube here and visit his website here.
Labels: interview, Phil Garland, YouTube

