Average Jane’s Musical Secret

It had never occurred to me to write about this topic, but then Grace posted this on Facebook today:

Grace  

Of all of the types of music you might expect me to admit to liking, there's one I'll bet you'd never consider: traditional folk music. It's true – the queen metalhead herself has a soft spot for songs like "I Gave My Love A Cherry."

My mom used to sing it to me when I was a kid. It was in lullaby rotation with the theme song from "Branded," among other odd choices.

My mom wasn't a hippie – she was already married with a baby by the time the Summer of Love rolled around. No, the whole folk song thing can be laid squarely at the feet of Burl Ives.

Burlives

We had an extensive album of Burl Ives singing folk songs that included "Tam Pierce," "Foggy, Foggy Dew," "Leather-Winged Bat" and other aged traditional tunes. And when I say album, I mean album album: a book full of 45 rpm records in separate sleeves.

Because the music was perfectly suitable for kids (except for the fact that some of it was rather depressing), we listened to the songs a lot when I was growing up. You can imagine how excited I was when I first saw "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer." (Needless to say, I didn't know about him ratting out his friends to the House Unamerican Activities Committee until much later.)

So even today, I'm happy to stop and enjoy a traditional folk song now and then. Even at the risk of being overwhelmed by patchouli.

Comments

5 responses to “Average Jane’s Musical Secret”

  1. Donna W Avatar

    Now you’re speaking my language.

  2. Elisson Avatar

    Folk music? It’s folked up.

  3. Spyder Avatar
    Spyder

    I love folk music. Stan Rogers is my very favorite one.

  4. cagey Avatar

    God, my parents were TOTAL hippies, right now to the smoky blue bong, Lennon glasses, macrame, strobe light and LPs with the likes of Ian and Sylvia.

  5. Greg Avatar
    Greg

    I grew up on mostly 50/60’s American folk music like Guthrie, Phil Ochs, Gordon Lightfoot, Cohen, etc. It then evolved into the folk-pop/folk-rock of Dylan, The Band, Simon & Garfunkel, The Byrds and into the 70’s. The wife finally got to see my parents 8-track and album collection in July when we were packing them up for a move. Sometimes, a little 60’s folk-pop is needed just to let the speakers have a rest. Thank gawd Back in Black rescued me, though.

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