Monday, 29 April 2013

Alex Hood's reminiscences of the Bushwhackers, at the National Folk Festival 2012

Click on pictures for full-screen image
 
Talks from BMC's 2012 National Folk Festival Themed Workshop on BMC's First 10 years.     


recording courtesy of Wayne Richmond, photos by Sandra Nixon





Alex & Bill Scott (son of founders Alan & Gay Scott) standing for 'Ballad of 1891'
Cast & audience stand for 'Ballad of 1891' as was done in the early days of the Bush Music Club
Sydney Trade Union Choir singing 'Ballad of 1891', Silvia Salisbury (holding music below her waist) was in the first production of Reedy River.

Sunday, 28 April 2013

John Meredith, The Bush Music Club & The Australian Folk Song Revival (1950’s)

Click on pictures for full-screen image

Memorial article by Bob Bolton on our website 

John Meredith was born in 1920, in Holbrook, NSW and raised in modest circumstances. His father was often away droving sheep - "Out along the lower Darling River and on the Murrumbidgee, down Balranald way where he was born".


Drawing from Singabout (BMC archives)

His mother looked after John and six more on a small block with "an old cow and a few chooks". He remembers that she sang a little as she worked and she entertained the kids with readings from Australian books and magazines such as the Bulletin.


Drawing from Singabout (BMC archives)

His father played the button accordion, an old and much patched "Mezon Grand Organ" model he probably learned to play whilst away droving and when he was at home he played the popular songs and dances of the Bush. He also played the mouth organ, using a tin pannikin as a resonator or playing the bones as he played on mouth organ. He died when John was only nine years old, but many of his tunes stayed in John’s mind.


Mezon Grand Organ accordion owned by John McKinnon of Ecklin
who gave it to Merro, who later gave it to Rob Willis (Rob Willis photo)

John’s mother encouraged him to learn the button accordion at fourteen with the promise of a brand new "Melba" model. He learned to play from the locals as well as learning some tunes from the gramophone. At seventeen or eighteen he began to assist with the playing at local dances and later would play for the entire evening if no other musician was available.
John rode away from Holbrook on his pushbike after WWII, eventually riding down to Melbourne and then as far as North Queensland, working at various bush jobs. When he first settled in Sydney (around 1950) he was interested in international folksongs but he also had a copy of Paterson’s "Old Bush Songs" and started searching at the Mitchell Library to see if there were tunes for these. 


Old Bush Songs, 1906 edition (Wikipedia commons)

He soon found this unsatisfactory due to vagueness of tune details and identity. In 1953 he bought a Pecotape tape recorder (then very bulky, inconvenient and expensive) after a friend told of an old shearer she knew who still sang the old bush songs. After recording him, John sought out and found more informants around Sydney.

Ilustrated ad for Pecotape tape recorder, SA advertiser, 9th Sept 1953 - bottom right of page

In June 1953 John formed a performing group to present this material with himself playing button accordion, Brian Loughlin introducing the Lagerphone (now sine qua non for Bush Bands) which he and John had met up with in Holbrook earlier that year and Jack Barrie playing the Bush Bass (a tea chest against which a broom-handle is pivoted to control the tension of a stout string). Later that year, they formed the nucleus of a band for the New Theatre’s Sydney production of Dick Diamond’s play Reedy River, along with Chris Kempster and Harry Kay.


Bushwhackers in Sydney production of 'Reedy River' (BMC Archives)

This group changed from the Heathcote Bushwhackers to The Bushwhackers, the band which launched the performing revival of Bush Music and inspired a myriad imitators. To contain and train them a club was formed: The Bush Music Club. John was also involved in the Australian Folklore Society, aimed to be the study and collecting arm of Australian folklore, but by 1958 this had merged in function and reality with the Bush Music Club, which performed, collected, published and promoted from under the one hat.

The Bushwhackers made records for Wattle Records (1955 to 1957) and their Bush Songs helped keep the wolf from Wattle’s door for a few years. (Their 78 rpm recording of The Drover’s Dream, with Alan Scott singing, sold 20,000 copies in 1956!)


The Drover’s Dream,(BMC archives)

John shared collected material and contacts with Nancy Keesing (who, with Douglas Stewart, greatly expanded Paterson’s Old Bush Songs and published Australian Bush Ballads) and with Russell Ward who published The Australian Legend in 1958 as a doctoral thesis. Both relationships proved rewarding on both sides.

Australian Bush Ballads, 1955 edition

In the latter part of the 1950s, John spent all his weekends and spare cash in collecting - mostly west of the Blue Mountains, under difficult conditions. The isolation which saved these songs from mass media influence also fought against him. The Meredith Collection, held by the National Library, contains over 1,000 items and their preservation is a monument to John’s endeavours, perseverance and skill.

Within the Bush Music Club John was a mover and innovator. He was the driving force of The Bushwhackers, 1953 - 1957, doing three or four engagements a week as well as radio performances. He was M.C. of the Club and closely involved in the Australian Folklore Society. During the week he sought out old-timers around the city and at weekends he lugged his 20 kg recorder west of the mountains to rural hamlets - where he often had to first arrange a supply of 240 volt a.c. before even starting to record!

He was (1956 - 1961) Editor of Singabout, the only regular publication for Australian Folklore in those days. He had the ideas which led to the Club’s first two books Songs From The Kelly Country and Songs From Lawson. He encouraged the formation of similar groups in other states and the bush music clubs of those states made valuable contributions to our folklore.


The Bushwhackers was the archetype of all Bush Bands. All current Bush Bands interpret their model, including the well known Bush/Rock group that approximated their name.

From the 1960s, John increasingly concentrated on writing books. Folksongs of Australia and the men and women who sang them, volume 1 is one of the major works of the Australian canon and the second volume, published by the University of NSW in 1987 continues John’s excellent work. His many other books have covered a wide area of Australian lore, language, personalities and events, while John’s collecting and writing work is a model for a whole generation of folklorists.


John’s contribution to Australian folk lore, heritage and tradition was recognised by an Order of Australia Medal in 1987 (for which much of the original version of this item comprised the citation) and, in 1992, he was made a Companion of this Order. 


John Meredith opened our eyes to the unsuspected wealth of real Australian tradition and heritage that has never been recognised or embraced by the authorities. Along the way he taught all the newer collectors what there was, how to find it and how to collect it - and taught the rest of us how to sing and play it. John’s other legacy (besides the great body of song, music and folk lore now lodged with the National Library of Australia) is the dedicated body of collectors that are carrying on the work he started. They will miss him, we will miss him but we are all grateful for a lifetime of dedicated work.

RLB

MAJOR SOURCES:

John Meredith,Folk Songs Of Australia,(1st Edition), Ure Smith,pp. 13 - 20.
Alan Scott,Mulga Wire #14, Aug. 1979, Let’s Hear It For Merro,pp. 5 & 6.
John Meredith,Mulga Wire #17, Feb. 1980,In The Beginning..........pp. 5 - 10.
Alan Scott,Mulga Wire #22, Dec. 1980,The Bushwhackers, part 1,pp. 3 & 4.
Alan Scott,Mulga Wire #23, Feb. 1981,The Bushwhackers, part 2,pp. 4 & 5.
Alan Scott,Mulga Wire #24, Apr. 1981,The Bushwhackers, part 3,pp. 3 & 4.

***********************************************************************

Thursday, 4 April 2013

Family Bush Dance. Instructions for Simple Bush Dances Suitable for Children & Family Groups

Click on pictures for full-screen image

Family Bush Dance. Instructions for Simple Bush Dances Suitable for Children & Family Groups

 






















We released our latest book
at our Family Bush Dance at the 2013 National Folk Festival!



 





























Thanks to Helen Romeo (compilation, cover & illustrations), Tony Romeo, Ralph Pride, Sally Leslie & the team for all the work they put into creating this very cute masterpiece. 















Cost is $10 + $5 postage & packaging. Copies will be available at the Beecroft Dance on Saturday.


For Mail Orders please send $15 cheque or money order (made out to Bush Music Club) to
Bush Music Club
GPO Box 433
Sydney 2001


Illustrations by Helen Romeo

************************************************************************************************* *************************************************************************************************

60th Anniversary Dance Competition



 





To celebrate the Bush Music Club’s 60th anniversary, the club is conducting a competition for dance composition. The new dances may be accompanied by new tunes, if desired. The aim of the competition is to encourage the writing of contemporary dances based on the established tradition.

Rules and Conditions

* Each entry must contain dance instructions and an accompanying tune or suggested tunes. 


* The dance instructions should be provided in 2 (two) forms:
        # A summary of the calls # Detailed explanation of movements

* Both forms should include bar counts for each movement. Where possible, and appropriate, use terms described in BUSH DANCE – Instructions to define each movement.

* The dance must be original and may be a couples' dance or formation (set) dance.

* The tune may be traditional or original (with a traditional form), i.e. Jig, Reel, Waltz, Polka, etc. (Please suggest alternative tunes to aid musicians intending to play for the dance.)

* Entries are restricted to 3 (three) per person.

* Entries must be submitted on forms available upon request and must be returned to:


60th Anniversary Dance Competition

Bush Music Club, 
GPO Box 433, 
Sydney NSW 2001
or emailed to - bmcmail1954 (at) gmail.com


*Deadline for entries is 31st December 2013

*The winning dances will be performed during the Goulburn Bush Traditions Festival held on the October long weekend 2014.

*There are 3 categories for entries and the judges may assign the dances to a different category. One entry shall be chosen from each category.


Popular Bush Dance - simple steps and movements suitable for inexperienced dancers 


Dancer’s Dance - involving more complicated steps or movements and suitable for experienced dancers and for displays. 


Multi-figure Quadrilles - simple steps and movements suitable for inexperienced dancers

* The prize in each category is $100.

* The Bush Music Club retains the right to publish any entries.

* The judges may choose to disqualify entries which are considered unsuitable, i.e. those without suitable bar counts or which are not danceable from the written instructions.

* For further information or entry forms please contact secretary on — 

bmcmail1954  (at) gmail.com

* It is highly desirable for entrants to have tested the dance and resolved any difficulties involved with movements or timing.







photo - Kim Nolan

*********************************



Monday, 25 February 2013

Citations of the term "Bush Music"

Click on pictures for full-screen image

Bob Armstrong found the attached citation on the ANL TROVE website, an advertisement for some sheet bush music in the Maitland Mercury of April 1863. Polkas and Schottisches for 1 shilling a copy including postage. 



Bob Boltons' reply  13/1/2013

I'm aware that many of the locally arranged / written / popularised music tunes and sets for the popular social dances of the latter part of the 19th century were published with Local / Australian / Popular titles ... often simply a naming of the full set ... not necessarily the individual tunes. Very few of the tunes collected by field folklorists - such as John Meredith (founder of the Bush Music Club) and his BMC associates and followers in other similar clubs and societies had such grandiose names. 

I haven't actually analysed the relationship of 'local' tune and/or set names but many were known only by association with a local player ... occasionally with local area names ... or just the name of the dance (with or without an associated player's name.) Some later researchers have done a fair amount of matching up 'Australian-collected' tunes and sets with tunes and dance sets published by British / American /Australian music publishers. 

A typical path for dispersal of tunes without attached names - testified to in field-recorded interviews associated with tune collecting - would be the way that many "folk" players have recounted attending the local dance (often a fund-raising event for the local town's hospital / school / whatever) ... and the kids humming / singing / playing on portable instruments tunes that had caught their ears at the dance ... and the boast that, by the time the buggy or dray had reached their bush home, they had memorised ( ... at least fairly well ...) the best of the tunes - and these might stay in the family ... devoid of name or provenance ... right up until systematic recording began in the 1950s! 

~~~~~~~~~~~~
further comments from Bob -
He picked up that reference as part of a lot of cross-posting centring around Peter Ellis , Keith McKenry,, Rob Willis ... and a few other folk historians who have become involved in a bit of niggling about the Bush Music Club "inventing" terms/events/practices under the name "Bush Music" / "Bush Dance" / "Bush dancing" / "Bush song" ... and that this wasn't reflected in "real Australian history' (... as some of them perceived it ...) My forward of a 1907 Reverend gentleman's newspaper account of "bush dancing" at a "bush dance" (noticed in the Dan Worrall CD ROM on world-wide late 19th / early 20th century traditions of (~) "House Dances" seems to have shaken some of them out of their dusty volumes of un-involved and dis-interested academics ... with their own barrows to push - and now we are finding lots of support for our preferred terminology ... via unbiased scans coming out of recent increases in access to 19th century publications - especially magazines and newspapers - with actual scanned texts of the entire publication visible over ... and linked to ... the downloadable text ( ... admittedly, as it comes straight out of [~] un-corrected OCR!)

 


*********************************************************************************************** ***********************************************************************************************

Monday, 3 December 2012

Pete Seeger and The Bush Music Club, 1963

Click on pictures for full-screen image

(updated 2020 & 2025)

In 1963 Pete & Toshi Seeger & their children left America for a trip around the world, visiting 22 countries in 10 months.

While they were in Australia Pete visited the (Sydney) Bush Music Club where Pete was very impressed by traditional singer Harold "Duke" Tritton, source of many traditional songs & an outstanding songwriter & poet. He even called Duke on stage to join him at a concert, a call not appreciated by a teenage folkie who wanted to hear Pete, not an old Australian bloke. Soon after the teenage folkie became a convert to bush music & an admirer of Duke. (source - Ralph Pride)

Email from Chris Woodland, June 2025 -   I missed that evening at the BMC when Pete Seeger turned up. It was most unusual for me to miss the BMC on Tuesdays, but Merro forgave me when I told him that I had been at the Mosman Town Hall where Jim Cairns was was talking at an anti-Vietnam session.

It was the month before Arthur Caldwell was shot outside the Mosman TH while sitting outside in a motor car.

(Weevils in the Flour) The song has an interesting history bound up with the folk song movement, Australian literature and Australian industrial history since the 1930s depression. A history so interesting that the song has accreted a fair amount of folklore itself. Sometimes it is published as an anonymous song written in Newcastle in the 1930s. It was one many new Australian songs that a small gathering of Sydney folkies in Barbara Lysiak's home sang to Pete Seeger during his visit in 1963.

Copies of the films taken by the Seegers during their visits to Sydney & Melbourne were given to the Sydney & Melbourne Bush Music Clubs at the time.


In 2009 a video Pete Seeger Live in Australia 1963 was published from recordings made on this tour.

Pete's interview with Duke This crackly video was made from a copy of the original film given to the Bush Music Club. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Earlier contact with Pete
Minutes Friday 26th June, 1957
mention a letter from Pete Seeger, which unfortunately has not survived.


Minutes 1957-1978. This was to thank BMC for a donation to his legal expenses relating to his appearance at the House Un-American Activities Committee - conversation with Dale Dengate 5th June 2020



Extract from minutes 3/7/1957, page 1

Extract from More than a Life - John Meredith & the Fight for Australian Tradition by Keith McKenry, p.189

~~~~~~~~~~~

Conference Discussion  
Suggestion arising out of Discussion, undated, filed before AGM Minutes, Friday 14th February 1958 (pages 16A & 16E) (Archives, Minutes 1957-1978)




Suggestion made by Brian that nights at private homes be held to hear Pete's records before raffles are held.




General Meeting minutes 2nd May, 1961 - Correspondence The Secretary wrote to "Singout" of America to find out the facts of the Pete Seeger case which who was reported in a Sydney newspaper as having been jailed for a year for contempt of Congress.


.

General Meeting minutes 30.5.61 - Correspondence - letter from Irwin Silber Editor of SingOut - Pete Seeger is on bail - legal expenses will cost 20,000 dollars. Business arising - Social evening proposed to raise finance to assist Pete Seeger, Sat 1st July - club to write to Irwin Silber for concise account of the charges from 1956 to read out on the night.

General Meeting minutes 10.7.61 -  Pete Seeger night was successful, 50 people attended, Ramblers played a new song Hooker-Rex, £14 was collected on the night, £2.10.0 was added. Engineering Union, BWIU, Actors Equity & other organisations will be approached with the aim of raising finance to help Pete Seeger. Secty feels that more details from Irwin Sieber are needed before asking other organisations to help.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Visitors Book, 9 Mar 1963 to 5 May 1970

Signatures of Pete & Duke Tritton, Tuesday 3rd Sept 1963.  
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Singabout 5(1), Oct 1964. (BMC Archives)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Foolscap leaflet sent out with Newsletter, Sept 1963 (Ken Fairey Collection)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



























The Sun, Sat Aug 31, 1963. Members Chris Kempster ( guitar), Frank  (tea-chest bass) & Jan Jones (bones), none of them University students, though they might have been accompanied by members of the Sydney University Folk Music Society.   (Ann & Frank Maher Collection)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------



























Invitation to Concert for Pete Seeger, Sat Sept 1, 1963 (Ann & Frank Maher Collection)











 







September 1971 Newsletter,  Article by Jamie Carlin about lagerphones -  Jamie built a lagerphone presented to Pete Seeger in 1963


Extract from Victorian Folk Music Club member David Lumsden's memories of Pete Seeger's visit
In 1961 my father was part of the organising committee of a concert to raise money to assist Pete Seeger during Pete's House of Un-American Activities trial. (Pete, of course, was only one of hundreds of people accused of being un-American during the McCarthy era.) At this concert I met fellow committee member, Wal Cherry, Director of the Emerald Hill Theatre Company 
...  early 1963. That same year, I recorded the LP Moreton Bay‚ with Martyn Wyndham-Read and Brian Mooney. (By this time I had taught myself to play guitar. Later I bought the 12string guitar that Trevor Lucas had bought from Peter Laycock. I still have that monster: it has a neck like a tree trunk!) I also traveled to Sydney with my parents to meet Pete Seeger and his family. I sang at a welcome concert with many Sydney performers, including Alec Hood and Chris Kempster. At Pete Seeger's Melbourne concert, held in the Town Hall, I sang one song with Pete, plus the (notorious!) National Anthem. (Vctorian Folk Music Club was est. in 1959 as Bush Music Club of Victoria)

-----------------------------
Song by BMC members Alan Scott & John Dengate

 
















Singabout 5(3), 1965, p.12  Pete Seeger's 1963 donation of microfiche of Sing Out! & Broadside to BMC was later given to Sydney University's Fisher Library.

extracts from Fisher Library catalogue
 
Broadside (on microfiche!) see record http://opac.library.usyd.edu.au:80/record=b1678370~S4
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Australian Tradition, May 1964, p.12

--------------------------------------------------------------------

Letter to Janet Wakefield from Pete Seeger 1966
Original found with Correspondence in 2016
 
enhanced image

Transcription by Chris Maltby 9th June 2020.

Aus Receipt No. 5     Sept 3 '66
Dear Janet Wakefield -
I've just been able to put time to go through Stan's songbook song by song, singing them through. Fine songs. Why didn't I hear any of them sung when I visited the Bush Music Club three years ago?
The club ought to get together and put out a record of the songs.
I enclose $5.00 with the request that you send copies to the following folk magazines.... I hope some of the songs will get picked up by singers here. The way things so often go, I suppose some Australians will have to hear them sung by outsiders before they realize they are good songs.

Broadside 215 West 98 St NYC USA
The Broadside PO Box 65, Cambridge Mass. USA
Sing Out, 165 W 46 St NYC USA
The Folklore Center 321 6th Ave NYC USA
Love to you all
Pete (plus banjo drawing)

Box 431
Beacon NY

PS tell 'em I sent it to 'em - it might help! (handwritten)
"The True Songs of Australia" should be a song known by every school kid in your country. (handwritten)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2009 -
In 2009 on the occasion of Pete Seeger's 90th birthday & the Bush Music Club's 55th, we sent him birthday greetings accompanied by copies of the articles in Singabout,1963, & Australian Tradition, 1964 & received the following reply, accompanied by a copy of his revised songbook, which Bob Bolton reviewed in the Singabout insert of Mulga Wire, Dec 2009.  






















































~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Where Have all the Flowers Gone – A Singalong Memoir

by Pete Seeger, Revised Edition, 2009 plus CD

A Sing Out! Publication with W.W. Norton & Co., New York & London

$?? From ???

This is a wondrous book … 320 pages of story, verse, reminiscences, music, photos and autobiographical tales from the long and fruitful life of Pete Seeger – all bound up in an American 11” x 8½” format song book.

This is the revised and expanded third edition of Pete’s book, originally published in 1993 and then revised and expanded in 1997 .. And a long way down the track from the little blue ‘Pete Seeger Song Book‘, the remnants of which, having survived my wanderings of the 1960s, are now held together which a bulldog clip so they don’t disintegrate all over my bookshelf.

This is much more than a song book. Pete gives the background, the sources of inspiration, the politics of the days of many seminal songs … the conscious (and, often unconscious) sources of tunes, rhythms and presentations that seem to many of us to have been around all our lives. As a consummate musician – growing up in a family of musicians and music educators – Pete’s knowledge of his sources shames most of us who seek to find and draw upon the traditional music forms of our own regions. As a man driven by moral awareness, he is often forced to admit to “stealing” tunes … either unconsciously (which is fine, within the “folk process”) - but also being aware of the appropriation – when the tune was just right for a noble purpose.

Whatever the sources (and they are all detailed in this magnificent volume!) Pete gives the music for every variant … from how he wrote it – to the versions developed in groups he sang with – to the inspired changes often made by other groups whose popular releases are often the ones we all know … and frequently adopted by Pete.
Anyone aiming to work through all the variants and developments detailed in the book will appreciate the included CD, which has musical examples from some 267 of the book’s songs. It is certainly a long way from my 1960s struggles trying to turn a rudimentary grasp of guitar into a convincing rendition of the “dots” on the crumpled pages of my little blue book.
I can’t find any evidence of a local distributor for this wonderful musical memoir. It is published for Sing Out! By W.W. Norton and can be ordered direct from <www.singout.org> … for US$24.95 + p/p. 
  Review in Mulga Wire, Dec 2009
*********************************