What the Folk Festival can teach us

Music can be a lens to peer into our humanities chaos, it can magnify hidden flaws and surprising strengths that the rest of our circumstances fail to accentuate.

This article began when I was asked by the esteemed Dean Christesen to write my definition of Folk Music. This proved exceedingly difficult, as the boundaries of these kinds of things can be very slippery. The intellectualizing that is necessary to achieve a suitable answer is certainly not how I want to spend my afternoon, and I try hard to stay away from such matters. My enjoyment of the music, folk music or otherwise, can be malformed by the interfering fingers of academic pursuit.

Music, in this sense, is a jewel. There is no need to enjoy it on anything but its own terms. You do not have to bring politics or religion, any social or governmental issues–race, sexuality, academic criteria or bookish enthusiasm–into its sphere. It is beautiful all on its own.

However.

Music can often be used as a lens to peer into our humanity’s chaos. Perhaps it is because it stands, unmistakeably amoral and separated from our struggles, that it can be used to magnify hidden flaws and surprising strengths that the rest of our circumstances fail to accentuate.

I tried hard to phone-in an answer to Dean-O. I could care less what Folk Music is in an ethnomusicological sense; I don’t mind if the definition is strict or loose or upside down or sideways, if I like the music, let it be. But unfortunately for my Saturday and Sunday nights, I am concerned by something bigger.

Folk music can be many things and might be slippery to define but one thing that seems consistent is it is not viewed as art music — musical traditions implying advanced structural and theoretical considerations and a written musical tradition. This esteemed title is reserved for the Bachs and Beethovens of the world, maybe even the Steve Reichs, and possibly even the Duke Ellingtons (on a good day). Folk music often implies the opposite: “blue collar” music, oral traditions, sometimes even a simple nature to the music itself is implied (though certainly not always the case). My concern is that by classifying artists as “folk,” when their music clearly resides on the other side of the fence, we continue a long standing Western tradition of simplifying non-Western cultures and keeping them on the fringes of our playing field.

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A virtuoso classical musician, subject of a recent concerto performed by the Nashville Symphony, a prolific composer, child prodigy, and professor at Stanford University and Princeton, Zakir Hussain was the headlining Folk musician at last year’s folk festival. The year before Debashish Bhattacharya, an Indian classical guitar virtuoso and singer, played under the same tent. Bhattacharya has been giving recitals since the age of four, spent ten years training with the father of Indian classical guitar, and has done decades of disciplined study of Indian vocal technique. He, also, is a prolific composer and is truly a master of many Indian classical styles. This year, Imamyar Hasanov will appear at the festival. He began playing the kamancha at age 7, was the youngest soloist ever to appear in the Azerbaijan National Orchestra, has a masters degree in music from the state conservatory, and is the winner of several classical musical competitions in Azerbaijan.

— ∮∮∮ —

Do I think that watching Zakir Hussain headline the Folk festival is a small slap in the face to his ability and history?

Possibly.

Do I think this echoes a time where we consistently, as a nation, devalue the beautiful subtleties as well as the immense greatness in the ethnic cultures around us, namely Native American and African American?

Yes.

Do I think we, as a country, often see ourselves outside and often above the conversation of the global village?

Yes.

Does this effect how we view art that is not our own?

Yes.

Do I think that if one were white and American and had the résumé of the folks listed above one could play the folk festival?

No.

Do I think these folks deserve a different stage to tell their musical story?

Yes.

Do I think western “art music” musicians could do themselves a favor by acknowledging some of the populist roots of their music and try to find themselves an audience like we have at the folk festival?

Certainly.

Am I thankful that folks like Zakir Hussain play at the Folk Festival every year?

I am.

And I will go watch them every time. But I think, at the least, it begs a dialogue as to what message it is sending to a captive audience. Do we understand that these men are master musicians, in the bloodlines of history’s finest? Or, do we see them as foreigners with funny clothes and instruments that come from afar with their strange scales and exotic rhythms? Even if we see them as somewhere in between we are doing ourselves a disservice. Maybe we see them as both. I don’t know how one sees them, but I do know that the circumstances surrounding their performance hints at things that we may want to–at least–talk about.

Let me be clear. I think the Folk Festival is the best thing that happens every year in Richmond. It is my favorite thing that the city does. It is also an event that tackles race, culture, music, and an attempt to put them all inside a box: a box entitled the Richmond Folk Festival. This is a brave and exciting task. An unenviable one and one that will undoubtedly start a dialogue or two. This is all I mean this to be.

Please weigh in.

 

photo of Zakir Hussain by ritwikdey

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Matthew E. White

Notice: Comments that are not conducive to an interesting and thoughtful conversation may be removed at the editor’s discretion.

  1. Scott Burger on said:

    “Do we understand that these men are master musicians, in the bloodlines of history’s finest? Or, do we see them as foreigners with funny clothes and instruments that come from afar with their strange scales and exotic rhythms? Even if we see them as somewhere in between we are doing ourselves a disservice. Maybe we see them as both.”

    Definitely both.

    I don’t expect the Folk Festival to tackle politics. On the other hand, for example, when reggae groups are presented as folk music, I hope people maybe take the time to learn about Rastafarianism and the beliefs behind it.

    The other thing to realize is that these folk musicians may not be that exotic. Richmond has a population that comes from all over the world. One of the things that I like about VCU’s growth is that it has shared some of its internationalism with the area. Its great to see locals who are proud to share music and culture.

    I really like the Folk Festival. Not only is it one of the best things that Richmond does, its also one of the best things that local Richmond corporations support, and I am thankful to them for that because it keeps the Festival free (though donations are rightfully requested) for the public.

    The late Fela Kuti is often quoted as saying that ‘music is the weapon of the future’. At the risk of being all hippy dippy, hopefully the Richmond Folk Festival is contributing to a more educated, entertaining, nonviolent future.

  2. “Do I think western “art music” musicians could do themselves a favor by acknowledging some of the populist roots of their music and try to find themselves an audience like we have at the folk festival?”

    I find that a great many of the ‘greats’ in Western “Art Music” DO in fact acknowledge and in many cases are influenced by their populist roots. Dvorak wrote a whole piece based on folk themes of not even his country (New World), Chopin was heavily influenced by Eastern European rhythms and song. Villa-Lobos always retained an element of ethnic Brazilian music in even his more Baroque compositions.

    I feel that history has forgotten these facets of composers lives, and I believe even the big three (Bach, Mozart, Beethoven) were appreciative toward the popular songs of their day. Music Historians choose to see the Folk v. “Art Music” debate as a more “Them vs. Us” than I’d like to believe it played out during those composers lifetimes. The Conservatory system further emphasizes this chasm between the two forms as well.

  3. lindsey on said:

    THIS IS AWESOME. i don’t have anything to contribute yet, but i’m thinking about it, and i hope to hear more opinions. it’s an interesting conversation to start, and it reminds me of this:

    i was talking to a class of 5th graders the other day and I was telling them that folk music is the music of the people and can mean a lot of different things. a kid raised her hand and said “so i guess our folk music would be like rap then right?” i didn’t have a good answer for her. i said “maybe so, that’s interesting to think about.” if the people in her community, the people around her, are creating rap music without writing it down, and sharing it with one another, is the rap music in her community, folk? thoughts?

  4. To the posting above. Yes, rap is part of this continued tradition of “folk” music, and the festival has recognized it as such (they did a “wildstyle” 25 anniversary show a few years back)…. The thing about music, folk or not, is that it is ever evolving. The folk part is just the means by which is it communicated and passed on from one generation to the next. Sometimes that next generation learns and changes the music (which is why having both Magic Slim and Original P at the same fest is AWESOME) and sometimes it only changes the music ever so slightly. With non-western classical traditions, it has always been a bit tricky, since their means of transmission from master to student happen both through a more “folk” method and through means more in line with conservatory training. This is a crazy mized up cultural world we live in. I love the fact that we can see all of this great music and not have to create simple definitions as to what makes it what it is, but instead, we can appreciate the loose asthetic overtones that cross musical and expressive boundries.

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