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Jo of the Gates wrote:erm . . . before the Europeans arrived, the natives weren't american! While I do play flute and drum as taught by my Caddoan Grannie in the native style, the hymns my group sings were composed mostly in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries by Christians of European and English ancestry. But it is a living tradition, with many songs composed in the 20th and 21st centuries as well. The tradition almost died out around the mid-20th C, due to the eagerness of American congregations to "modernize" but it's enjoying a global revival. To hear samples from our recordings, go to http://www.fairfolk.org and on the right side are links to sound files. Ironicly, while the songs are all deeply Christian-themed, I am about as far unchurched as one can be! We are a folkloric rather than a religious choir, preserving and sharing a uniquely American musical form.
Jo of the Gates wrote:erm . . . before the Europeans arrived, the natives weren't american!
ChristianBecker wrote:Jo of the Gates wrote:erm . . . before the Europeans arrived, the natives weren't american!
Hm..., but how would I refer to the native inhabitants of a continent several thousand miles west of Europe that is nowadays called America without calling it America or constructing long sentences in which I paraphrase that I mean what is today known as America?

ChristianBecker wrote: Hm..., but how would I refer to the native inhabitants of a continent several thousand miles west of Europe that is nowadays called America without calling it America or constructing long sentences in which I paraphrase that I mean what is today known as America?
Jo of the Gates wrote:
There was a movie a few years ago "Songcatcher" about a 19th century musicologist from New England who traveled to Apalachia to research their song tradition, only to rediscover recognizable English and Irish ballads. Good movie - unique sound track. I don't recall if Child was mentioned in the movie. During the era when Sacred Harp/Shape Note was at its lowest ebb, there were isolated communities in the deep south of the US where the tradition remained strong.
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