Shape-Note Singing with Norumbega Harmony at NEFFA '91

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2022
  • Shape-Note Singing with Norumbega Harmony at the 1991 New England Folk Festival, Natick, Massachusetts.
    Norumbega Harmony, founded by Stephen Marini in 1976, has been leading shape-note singing workshops annually at the New England Folk Festival (NEFFA) since the 1980s. The tradition of shape-note singing draws heavily on the tunebook, "The Sacred Harp," first published in 1844. When referencing songs from that book, it's standard practice to give those songs' page numbers, as well as their titles. See the notes below this song index for some background on both "The Sacred Harp" and NEFFA.
    0:05 "Coronation" - # 63 - led by Ginnie Ely
    2:15 "Northfield" - # 155 - led by Stephen Marini
    4:16 "Ecstasy" - # 106 - led by Ginnie Ely
    5:55 "Return Again" - # 335 - led by Susan Mampre
    8:43 "Wondrous Love" # 159 - led by Sharona Nelson
    11:45 "Redemption" - # 480 - led by Bill Holt
    14:59 "Evening Shade" - # 209 - led by Bob Parr
    17:43 "David’s Lamentation" - # 268 - led by Bruce Randall
    21:15 "New Jerusalem" - # 299 - led by Ed White
    23:23 "Stratfield" - # 142 - led by Chris Chalfant
    25:53 "Windham" - # 38 - led by Paul Gauthier
    29:15 "New Britain" - # 45 - led by Howard Katz
    31:39 "Invitation" - # 327 - led by Glen Wright
    32:54 "Schenectady" - # 192 - led by Pat McMahon
    35:01 "Sacred Throne" - # 569b - led by Cindy Bean
    39:18 "Russia" - # 107 - led by Jim Bean
    42:47 "Hallelujah" - # 146 - led by Ginnie Ely
    "Sacred Harp singing is a tradition of sacred choral music that originated in New England and was later perpetuated and carried on in the American South. The name is derived from 'The Sacred Harp,' a ubiquitous and historically important tunebook printed in shape notes. The work was first published in 1844 and has reappeared in multiple editions ever since. Sacred Harp music represents one branch of an older tradition of American music that developed over the period 1770 to 1820 from roots in New England, with a significant, related development under the influence of "revival" services around the 1840s. This music was included in, and became profoundly associated with, books using the shape note style of notation popular in America in the 18th and early 19th centuries." - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_...
    "The New England Folk Festival (NEFFA), founded in 1944, is an annual participatory weekend festival of traditional dance and music. It takes place in the Boston, Massachusetts region each spring. It is run by volunteers and all the performers are volunteers as well... As a social dance festival, it is a community experience, the largest in New England of its kind, with about 5,000 combined admissions in the festival's four session periods.
    "Participatory dancing occurs simultaneously in three halls, most prominently contra dance, international folk dance, and English country dance, in addition to other genres of dance. A variety of concerts, discussions and other more intimate performances take place in numerous class room spaces. Family-oriented events occur during daylight hours on Saturday and Sunday. A courtyard outside is devoted to Morris dancing, Rapper Sword and Longsworddancing. Sunday afternoons typically schedule dance and music demonstrations of a variety of ethnic dances, by local and distant dance groups, in the main hall. The hundreds of volunteer musicians, singers, dance callers, leaders and dance-demonstration performers are primarily from New England and every year a number arrive from more distant parts of North America." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Eng...
    This video is one in a series of videos I recorded at NEFFA 1991, with the assistance of Martin Kessel, intended for cablecasting on BNN-TV, Boston's public access television station. All of my NEFFA '91 videos, including one of the shape-note singing workshop led by Ginnie Ely, can be found at this RUclips playlist: bit.ly/NEFFA91
    ~ Rob McCausland
    Special Thanks To:
    Ginnie Ely, Bruce Randall, and Stephen Marini
    Norumbega Harmony
    norumbegaharmony.org/
    New England Folk Festival Association
    www.neffa.org/
    Boston Neighborhood Network
    bnnmedia.org
    Produced by Rob G.H. McCausland
    Copyright 2022
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Комментарии • 2

  • @CentralVirginian1
    @CentralVirginian1 Год назад +1

    This is great! Not so many videos from before cell phone cameras. Was this recorded via VHS or Hi-8?

    • @robmccausland9318
      @robmccausland9318  Год назад +1

      Thanks! That was recorded with a Panasonic AG-450 S-VHS Camcorder. (*Might* have been the 456, but most likely it was the 450.) The equipment was supplied by Boston public access TV station, Boston Neighborhood Network.