Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
Folk music
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
===== Canada ===== [[File:Lumbermen violin and sticks 1943.jpg|thumb|French-Canadian [[lumberjack]]s playing the fiddle, with sticks for percussion, in a lumber camp in 1943.]] {{Main|music of Canadian cultures}} {{See also|Canadian folk music|Music of Canada|French-Canadian music}} Canada's traditional folk music is particularly diverse.<ref name="Canada1" /> Even prior to liberalizing its immigration laws in the 1960s, Canada was ethnically diverse with dozens of different Indigenous and European groups present. In terms of music, academics do not speak of a Canadian tradition, but rather ethnic traditions ([[Acadian music]], [[Irish-Canadian music]], [[Blackfoot music]], [[Innu music]], [[Inuit music]], [[Métis fiddle]], etc.) and later in Eastern Canada regional traditions ([[Music of Newfoundland and Labrador|Newfoundland music]], [[Cape Breton fiddling]], [[Quebecois music]], etc.) {{blockquote|Traditional folk music of European origin has been present in Canada since the arrival of the first French and British settlers in the 16th and 17th centuries....They fished the coastal waters and farmed the shores of what became Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and the St Lawrence River valley of Quebec. The fur trade and its [[voyageurs]] brought this farther north and west into Canada; later lumbering operations and lumberjacks continued this process. Agrarian settlement in eastern and southern Ontario and western Quebec in the early 19th century established a favorable milieu for the survival of many Anglo-Canadian folksongs and broadside ballads from Great Britain and the US. Despite massive industrialization, folk music traditions have persisted in many areas until today. In the north of Ontario, a large Franco-Ontarian population kept folk music of French origin alive. Populous Acadian communities in the Atlantic provinces contributed their song variants to the huge corpus of folk music of French origin centred in the province of Quebec. A rich source of Anglo-Canadian folk music can be found in the Atlantic region, especially Newfoundland. Completing this mosaic of musical folklore is the Gaelic music of Scottish settlements, particularly in Cape Breton, and the hundreds of Irish songs whose presence in eastern Canada dates from the Irish famine of the 1840s, which forced the large migrations of Irish to North America.<ref name="Canada1">{{cite encyclopedia|author=Kenneth Peacock, Carmelle Bégin |url=http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/folk-music-emc/ <!--Bot repaired link--> |title=Folk music |encyclopedia=[[The Canadian Encyclopedia]] |date=2010-01-19 |access-date=2012-12-29}}</ref>}} "Knowledge of the [[history of Canada]]", wrote Isabelle Mills in 1974, "is essential in understanding the mosaic of Canadian folk song. Part of this mosaic is supplied by the folk songs of Canada brought by European and Anglo-Saxon settlers to the new land."<ref name="Mills">{{cite journal |last=Mills |first=Isabelle |date=1974 |url=http://cjtm.icaap.org/content/2/v2art5.html |title=The Heart of the Folk Song |journal=[[Canadian Journal for Traditional Music]] |volume=2}}</ref> She describes how the French colony at Québec brought French immigrants, followed before long by waves of immigrants from Great Britain, Germany, and other European countries, all bringing music from their homelands, some of which survives into the present day. Ethnographer and folklorist [[Marius Barbeau]] estimated that well over ten thousand French folk songs and their variants had been collected in Canada. Many of the older ones had by then died out in France. Music as professionalized paid entertainment grew relatively slowly in Canada, especially remote rural areas, through the 19th and early 20th centuries. While in urban music clubs of the [[dance hall]]/[[vaudeville]] variety became popular, followed by jazz, rural Canada remained mostly a land of traditional music. Yet when American radio networks began broadcasting into Canada in the 1920s and 1930s, the audience for Canadian traditional music progressively declined in favour of [[Nashville sound|American Nashville-style country music]] and urban styles like jazz. The [[Americanization]] of Canadian music led the [[Canadian Radio League]] to lobby for a national public broadcaster in the 1930s, eventually leading to the creation of the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]] (CBC) in 1936. The CBC promoted Canadian music, including traditional music, on its radio and later television services, but the [[modernism|mid-century craze for all things "modern"]] led to the decline of folk music relative to rock and pop. Canada was however influenced by the [[American folk music revival|folk music revival]] of the 1950s and 60s, when local venues such as the Montreal Folk Workshop, and other folk clubs and coffee houses across the country, became crucibles for emerging songwriters and performers as well as for interchange with artists visiting from abroad.
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
Folk music
(section)
Add topic