Confidence Building

I am coming towards the end of Module 4 and only the dissertation to complete.

During my time doing this MA, I have grown in confidence. Part of my work for Module 1, I presented at a conference in Cecil Sharp House the history of the dance Morpeth Rant. That was daunting, not only did I work on the development of the dance and pushed its known history back five years or so, members of the audience included a number of respected dance teachers and researchers.

For Module 3, part of my submission was about the development of the English Ceilidh Band. For this I interviewed a number of nationally known performers and record producers. All of these people allowed me to interview them and as far as I am aware, they considered and then answered my questions honestly.

This last Module I have written about he development of the 78rpm record with emphasis upon country dance and made a radio programme. Again I interviewed well-known people for both parts and again, they have been welcoming to me. It is funny, I have been involved with country dance for over 40 years, and when interviewing this time, especially for the radio programme it felt different. I was interviewing as an insider: people think you know more than you do. I was interviewing people from a generation ahead of me and they think I knew all about the people and events they are describing. Of course, I know some of them, but they talk about it in-the-moment, just like it took place yesterday.

My confidence, and especially as an insider interviewer has grown. This has been helped by undertaking projects on this course, such as essay and report writing and structure and having the ability to say ‘I can do this’ and can do it well.

Some of my research took place at the Vaughan William’s Memorial Library a Cecil Sharp House. The Librarian and the staff have been most helpful.

78 recordings

I am just completing part of my submission for Module 4, and I have done some work on English country dance 78rpm recordings. As an aside, I presented a conference paper on this subject at the Steeping Conference held at Cecil Sharp House on the weekend of 16 and 17 November 2019.

Here are some did you knows:

The first 78rpms of English country dances were recorded in the USA in 1915 and 16 and issued on Victor and Columbia records. At the first session supervised by Elizabeth Burchenal and using Cecil Sharp’s arrangements, the dance Goddesses was recorded at 124 beats per minute (62 bars). Interesting, Cecil Sharp suggested that there was no historical authority for speed, but recommend that 112 beats per minute would be adequate.

The tune Speed the Plough that is played widely by folk musicians was recorded by the Folk Dance Band on 16 July 1928. The Morris Motors Band recording that is usually cited as the source recording by Rod Straddling and others was recorded on 20 December 1937.

The recording of Circassian Circle in 1947 by The Square Dance Band was the first to have a change of tune!

If you want to listen to some of these 78s, the easiest way is to buy a copy of Listen to the Band, published by the English Folk Dance and Song Society and complied by Mike Wilson-Jones. Not all the tunes are suitable for dancing, as some are really fast, like Christchurch Bells that comes in at 136 beats per minute. In preparation for my presentation, I worked out my walking speed. 98 steps per minute.

Lastly, 78rpm records generally came in 260mm or 300mm diameter and a playback on each side was 03:30 or 04:30 minutes.  You could get 22 tracks on a CD. 22 tracks would mean 11 records and that would weigh 2.6kg, compared to 0.083Kg for a CD. What progress!

 

Radio programme. Recording hardware

I thought it’ll be a good idea to list the hardware I used when recording my radio programme. Readers might be interested and it will also be a reminder to me.

At home I used a Rode NT2 condenser microphone. This was brought as various reviews suggested it was a good around microphone and particularly suited for interviewing. It was attached to a desk mounted Rode microphone arm. Again bright because of excellent reviews, and specifically as one reviewer stated, you put it into position and it doesn’t move. I have had it mounted to my desk for 6 months with the Rode NT2 and it hasn’t Great investment.

Using a short xor cable, the microphone is plugged in to an Allen and Heath ZEDi8 mixer. This is small having just two xlr inputs with Phantom power (to provide power to the Rode NT2 microphone) and just sits on my desk. The mixer is then connected to my computer via an USB Audio Interface.

When ‘in the field’, I used an Apogee Mic for recording. This is smaller than the Rode NT2 and more portable and can be placed into a small microphone tripod. The sound is not quite as good as the Rode NT2. I also used a portable Sony PCM M10 as a back-up recording device.

There is a balance to be sought, recordings should be made to the highest standard against the availability of equipment. Using the equipment described hear, I feel that balance was achieved. My recordings are clear, recorded to .Wav files at 24bit recording and 48kHz.

Recordings are made in the moment and you never know what they will be used for in the future. They might be broadcasted so make them good!

 

Radio Programme

For part of Module 4 I made a radio programme. This was 28 minutes long and mirrored a BBC Radio 4 radio doc.

I really enjoyed this project and was confidence building.

Firstly I had to identify the subject. Well, it had to be within the country dance sphere, and I decided to look at the development of tunes on recordings between 1915 and 1974. The first country dance recording was made in 1915 in New Jersey by the Victor Band under the supervision of Elizabeth Burchenal. Elizabeth used Cecil Sharp’s arrangements and I used the dance Goddesses. Compared to modern speed, this is fast and goes along at 126 beats a minute.

Next I used recordings by George Remain who was a traditional melodeon player from Yorkshire. His playing is great, and compared to standards today still fast. Next up was the Country Dance Band under the leadership of Nan Fleming-Williams. The Country Dance Band, along with The Haymakers, Jolly Wagoners etc recorded for the EFDS in the 1950s. Lastly, I used the Waves of Tory recorded by Ashley Hutchings and the Sawdust Band in 1973.

The programme was interspersed with interviews from various experts and practitioners. Interviewing was great, having identified prospective interviewees they were contact via the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library in London who were very helpful. I had to identify their particular area of expertise and made sure it fitted into my programme subject.

I used a ‘home-made’ studio in my living room to record my links, and VinylStudio to cut my interviewees contributions to a basic length. Vinyl Studio is a programme for recording records to digital format. It is possible to import audio files in .WAV format and too edit them in a basic form. I then booked the radio studio at the University of Brighton for real editing. Using the multi-channel editing software, Adobe Audition I put together my programme. Using my newly honed techniques including fading each segment in and out, double tracking, precise editing of my selected tracks and interviewees contributions I made my programme. Using compression and other effects, I think I made a good attempt: it didn’t even sound like me! Almost professional and truly inspiring.

As well as all that I described able, I wrote the script and did all the recording. Recording my links was interesting. I lost count at the number of takes I did. Fumbling or mis-pronouncing words, breathing in the wrong place, a loud noise.

I found the whole project inspiring and grew in confidence throughout.