Kevin
Puritan Board Doctor
After reading an other thread that had a lot of chatter about differing musical styles, and the*unsuitability* of DWG music i felt an overwhelming urge to listen to some Alison Krouss.
Here is some of the most overlooked of all of the DWG music, shape note singing. Called shape note because the 4 notes are writen not in normal musical notation but by 4 shapes. Originaly this was a method of teaching simple psalm tunes to illiterates. Often asserted to be of American origin, it probably was devised in Scotland & transported to America.
The singers usually sit in a square divided by parts. The singing is unaccompanied. The singers first sing the song by note, then by word. For this reason it is also called "Fa, So, La" singing. Some also refer to it by the name of the most popular hymnal in this tradition, The Sacred Harp. Or Sacred Harp Singing.
I have attended "singings' in both Georgia & SC & I love this!
Here is Sacred Harp #373
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ckxBb222Tc"]YouTube - Sacred Harp 373, Homeward Bound. For Amanda[/ame]
Here is some of the most overlooked of all of the DWG music, shape note singing. Called shape note because the 4 notes are writen not in normal musical notation but by 4 shapes. Originaly this was a method of teaching simple psalm tunes to illiterates. Often asserted to be of American origin, it probably was devised in Scotland & transported to America.
The singers usually sit in a square divided by parts. The singing is unaccompanied. The singers first sing the song by note, then by word. For this reason it is also called "Fa, So, La" singing. Some also refer to it by the name of the most popular hymnal in this tradition, The Sacred Harp. Or Sacred Harp Singing.
I have attended "singings' in both Georgia & SC & I love this!
Here is Sacred Harp #373
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ckxBb222Tc"]YouTube - Sacred Harp 373, Homeward Bound. For Amanda[/ame]