• Thumbnail for Cecil Sharp
    Cecil James Sharp (22 November 1859 – 23 June 1924) was an English collector of folk songs, folk dances and instrumental music, as well as a lecturer...
    45 KB (5,635 words) - 23:11, 29 May 2025
  • Elliot Hobbs, Cecil Sharp, Ralph Vaughan Williams and Mary Augusta Wakefield. The English Folk Dance Society was founded in 1911 by Cecil Sharp. Maud Karpeles...
    19 KB (1,958 words) - 00:39, 1 May 2025
  • Constance Sharp, suffered a life-changing illness. Cecil Sharp referred to Karpeles as "the faithful Maud". On their many travels together, Sharp would introduce...
    21 KB (2,417 words) - 07:32, 1 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mary Sands
    passed down through previous generations. In 1916, English folklorist Cecil Sharp visited Madison County to collect and record traditional folk songs being...
    12 KB (1,516 words) - 21:00, 11 April 2023
  • Thumbnail for Folk music
    simply "Folk music is what the people sing." For Scholes, as well as for Cecil Sharp and Béla Bartók, there was a sense of the music of the country as distinct...
    166 KB (16,718 words) - 15:50, 30 May 2025
  • Birds: Cecil Sharp, Mary Sands, and the Madison County Song Tradition. Musical Traditions, 15 March 2002. Retrieved: 13 March 2009. Cecil Sharp, Maud Karpeles...
    7 KB (886 words) - 01:33, 12 September 2023
  • wrote of her woes in the symbolism of flowers; however, the folklorist Cecil Sharp doubted this claim. The versions allegedly written by Habergram would...
    11 KB (1,333 words) - 04:27, 2 May 2025
  • songs, the author and date of origin are unclear. The English folklorist Cecil Sharp collected and notated a version from Endicott, Franklin County, Virginia...
    7 KB (842 words) - 05:19, 2 April 2025
  • Thumbnail for Morris dance
    The word Morris apparently derived from morisco, meaning 'Moorish'. Cecil Sharp, whose collecting of Morris dances preserved many from extinction, suggested...
    56 KB (6,970 words) - 14:53, 25 May 2025
  • Thumbnail for Vaughan Williams Memorial Library
    Song Society (EFDSS), located in the society's London headquarters, Cecil Sharp House. It is a multi-media library comprising books, periodicals, audio-visual...
    12 KB (1,148 words) - 01:54, 24 May 2025
  • Shirley Collins (who probably learnt the song from a version collected by Cecil Sharp in Somerset) released a popular version in 1959 which inspired most of...
    13 KB (1,752 words) - 19:27, 23 March 2023
  • Williams, Folk songs of the Upper Thames (London, 1923) and C. Sharp, Cecil Sharp's Collection of English Folk Song, ed., Maud Karpeles, 2 vols (London:...
    98 KB (13,298 words) - 00:42, 30 May 2025
  • Bellowhead, Show of Hands, Cara Dillon, 17 Hippies, Kepa Junkera Band and the Cecil Sharp Project. 2012: Richard Thompson, Kate Rusby, Show of Hands, Dervish and...
    12 KB (1,436 words) - 13:54, 24 February 2025
  • Thumbnail for Appalachian music
    Scottish ballad "Bonnie George Campbell". According to the musicologist Cecil Sharp the ballads of Appalachia, including their melodies, were generally most...
    41 KB (4,702 words) - 21:44, 30 May 2025
  • The Cecil Sharp Project was a multi-artist, residential commission to create new material based on the life and collections of Cecil Sharp, founding father...
    3 KB (285 words) - 01:31, 30 January 2025
  • (Roud 1434) is a traditional English folk song. It was collected by Cecil Sharp and Maud Karpeles in 1909. It has been arranged by Benjamin Britten John...
    1 KB (68 words) - 00:01, 27 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Jean Ritchie
    head along with his dulcimer playing. In 1917, the folk music collector Cecil Sharp collected songs from Jean's older sisters May (1896–1982) and Una (1900–1989)...
    44 KB (4,386 words) - 05:48, 3 June 2025
  • Thumbnail for The Holly and the Ivy
    Cecil Sharp in the market town of Chipping Campden in Gloucestershire, England, from a woman named Mary Clayton. The following are taken from Sharp's...
    21 KB (1,966 words) - 23:40, 13 February 2025
  • performers and the music teacher Cecil Sharp was probably the most important in understanding of the nature of folk song. Sharp produced the five volume Folk...
    31 KB (4,171 words) - 04:56, 23 May 2025
  • dancing. It was introduced by traditional folk musician William Kimber to Cecil Sharp near the beginning of the twentieth century, then popularised by a diverse...
    7 KB (839 words) - 03:42, 6 March 2025
  • British origin.[citation needed] It remains popular in the 21st century. Cecil Sharp published the song in Folk Songs From Somerset (1906). The imagery of...
    15 KB (1,659 words) - 19:52, 9 February 2025
  • Thumbnail for Rain and Snow
    ballad. The song first appeared in print in Olive Dame Campbell and Cecil Sharp's 1917 compilation English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians,...
    9 KB (987 words) - 01:07, 21 March 2025
  • Thumbnail for Ashley Hutchings
    a one-man show about folk song collector Cecil Sharp, which resulted in the album An Hour with Cecil Sharp and Ashley Hutchings, (1986). From this point...
    16 KB (1,844 words) - 23:49, 21 April 2025
  • Williams catalogue is 1904, as collected in Somerset and arranged by Cecil Sharp. A later entry for 1908 gives the source as Jane Gulliford from Somerset...
    4 KB (420 words) - 20:34, 24 May 2025
  • Brasstown, North Carolina, and that of the English folk song collector Cecil Sharp, portrayed at the end of the film as professor Cyrus Whittle. The film...
    19 KB (2,042 words) - 21:57, 8 May 2025
  • drawn from the collection made by Vaughan Williams' friend and colleague Cecil Sharp. The suite consists of three movements: March, Intermezzo and another...
    17 KB (2,029 words) - 15:09, 7 January 2025
  • Thumbnail for Maresfield Gardens
    for both Anna and Sigmund Freud as well as the collector of folk songs Cecil Sharp. Cherry & Pevsner p.237 Wade p.54 Wade p.57 "20, MARESFIELD GARDENS,...
    4 KB (366 words) - 20:47, 4 April 2025
  • "(From South Carolina; country whites, MS. of Mr. Bryan; 1909)": When Cecil Sharp collected folksongs in the Appalachian Mountains in 1917 he found two...
    6 KB (581 words) - 10:44, 18 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Abbots Bromley Horn Dance
    Penguin. Sharp, Cecil J. (1911). The Sword Dances of Northern England, Together with the Horn Dance of Abbots Bromley. London: Novello & Co. Sharp, Cecil J....
    24 KB (3,102 words) - 10:27, 31 May 2025
  • William A Pond. Between 1904 and 1914, the famous English folklorist Cecil Sharp collected many different versions in the coastal areas of Somerset, England...
    12 KB (1,173 words) - 00:00, 27 October 2024