| Description | Track 1: Introduction, 0.53 mins Track 2: Roberta Flack sings ‘The First Time I Saw Your Face’, 3.54 mins Track 3: Ewan MacColl talks about writing ‘The First Time I Saw Your Face’ and songwriting, 3.01 mins Track 4: ‘The Manchester Rambler’ probably sung by Ewan MacColl, 3.26 mins Track 5: Ewan MacColl talks about the beginning of his interest in folk music, which came from Icelandic and American folk music, 2.47 mins Track 6: Ewan MacColl talks about writing the ballad opera ‘Johnny Noble’ and collecting folk songs, 3.08 mins Track 7: ‘Four Pence A Day’ sung by an unnamed man; Ewan MacColl talks about his involvement with the beginnings of the folk revival, with A.L. Lloyd and Alan Lomax, forming theatre groups such as Theatre of Action and Theatre Union and attempting to create a new kind of popular theatre, 3.42 mins Track 8: talks about meeting Alan Lomax and the inspiration he took from an essay about folk music by Bartok, 2.49 mins Track 9: talks about ‘winning a working class audience’, finding folk material, performing in unions; the BBC series ‘Ballads and Blues’ about the connection between American and British folk music, 2.43 mins Track 10: talks about traditional songs – the heroes are often urban figures, taking the music onto the streets, 2.51 mins Track 11: talks about his early contact with and dislike of The English Folk Dance and Song Society; 2.32 mins Track 12: a recording of Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger singing ‘I’m a Rover’ after receiving the award of a gold badge from the English Folk Dance and Song Society in 1987, 4.18 mins Track 13: continues Track 12 - Peggy Seeger and Ewan MacColl sing a song with chorus ‘The Public’s Not the Public Any More’, 2.42 mins Track 14: continues Track 13 -Ewan MacColl talks about a song he has written about his father, 1.02 mins
Total: 39.56 mins
Dubber's reference number: PLA 1 of 2 KF549C0073980 |