Work song

A work song is a piece of music closely connected to a specific form
of work, either sung while conducting a task (often to coordinate
timing) or a song linked to a task or trade which might be a connected
narrative, description, or protest song.

Contents
1 Definitions and categories
2 Hunting and pastoral songs
3 Agricultural work songs
4 African American work songs
5 Sea shanties
6 Cowboy songs
7 Industrial folk song
8 See also
9 Notes
10 External links



[edit] Definitions and categories
Records of work songs are roughly as old as historical records, and
anthropological evidence suggests that all agrarian societies tend to
have them.[1] Most modern commentators on work songs have included
both songs sung while working as well as songs about work, since the
two categories are seen as interconnected.[2] Norm Cohen divided
collected work songs into domestic, agricultural or pastoral, sea
shanties, African American (gang) worksongs, songs and chants of
direction, and street cries.[3] Ted Gioia further divided agricultural
and pastorals songs into hunting, cultivation and herding songs, and
highlighted the industrial or proto-industrial songs of: cloth
workers, factory workers, seamen, lumberjacks, cowboys and miners. He
also added prisoner songs and modern work songs.[1]


[edit] Hunting and pastoral songs
In societies without mechanical time keeping, songs of mobilisation,
calling members of a community together for a collective task, were
extremely important.[4] Both hunting and the keeping of livestock
tended to involve small groups or individuals, usually boys and young
men, away from the centres of settlement and with long hours to pass.
As a result it had been noted that tended to produce long narrative
songs, often sung individually, which might dwell on the themes of
pastoral activity or animals, designed to pass the time in the tedium
of work.[4] Hunting songs, like those of the Mbuti of the Congo, often
incorporated distinctive whistles and yodels so that hunters could
identity each others locations and those of their prey.[4]


[edit] Agricultural work songs
Most agricultural work songs are rhythmic a cappella songs sung by
people working on a physical and often repetitive task. The songs were
probably intended to increase productivity while reducing feelings of
boredom.[4] Rhythms of work songs can serve to synchronize physical
movement in a group or gang, as they are in parts of Africa with drums
as accompaniment to coordinate sowing and hoeing.[4] Frequently, the
usage of verses in work songs are often improvised and sung
differently each time. The improvisation provided the singers with a
sometimes subversive form of expression: improvised verses sung by
slaves had verses about escaping; improvised verses sung by sailors
had verses complaining about the captain and the work conditions. Work
songs also help to create a feeling of familiarity and connection
between the workers.


[edit] African American work songs
African American work songs originally developed in the era of
slavery, between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries. Because
they were part of an almost entirely oral culture they had no fixed
form and only began to be recorded as the era of slavery came to an
end after 1865. The first collection of African American 'slave songs'
was published in 1867 by William Francis Allen, Charles Pickard Ware,
Lucy McKim Garrison.[5] Many had their origins in African song
traditions, and may have been sung to remind the slaves of home, while
others were instituted by the slave masters to raise morale and keep
slaves working in rhythm.[6] They have also been seen as a means of
withstanding hardship and expressing anger and frustration through
creativity or covert verbal opposition.[7]

A common feature of African American songs was the call-and-response
format, where a leader would sing a verse or verses and the others
would respond with a chorus. This came from African traditions of
agricultural work song and found its way into the spirituals that
developed once slaves began to convert to Christianity and from there
to both gospel music and the blues. Also evident were field hollers,
shouts, and moans, which may have been originally designed for
different bands or individuals to locate each other and narrative
songs that used folk tales and folk motifs, often making use of
homemade instruments.[8] In early slavery drums were used to provide
rhythm, but they were banned in later years because of the fear that
black slaves would use them to communicate in a rebellion,
nevertheless slaves managed to generate percussion and percussive
sounds, using other instruments or their own bodies.[9] Perhaps
surprisingly, there are very few examples of work songs linked to
cotton picking.[10]


[edit] Sea shanties
Main article: sea shanty
Work songs sung by sailors between the eighteenth and twentieth
centuries are known as sea shanties. These songs were typically
performed while adjusting the rigging, raising anchor, and other tasks
where men would need to pull in rhythm. These songs usually have a
very punctuated rhythm precisely for this reason, along with a
call-and-answer format. Well before the nineteenth century, sea songs
were common on rowing vessels. Such songs were also very rhythmic in
order to keep the rowers together. Because many cultures used slaves
to row, these songs might also be considered slave songs. These songs
were performed with and without the aid of a drum.


[edit] Cowboy songs
Main article: Western music (North America)
Western music was directly influenced by the folk music traditions of
immigrants in the nineteenth century as they moved west. They
reflecting the realities of the range and ranch houses where the music
originated, played a major part in combating the loneliness and
boredom that characterised cowboy life and western life in
general.[11] Such songs were often accompanied on mobile instruments
of guitars, fiddles, concertina and harmonica.[11] In the nineteenth
century cowboy bands developed and cowboy songs began to be collected
and published from the early twentieth century with books like John
Lomax's Cowboy Songs and Other Frontier Ballads (1910).[12] As cowboys
were romanticised in the mid-twentieth century they became extremely
popular and played a part in the development of country and western
music.[11]


[edit] Industrial folk song
Main article: Industrial folk song
Industrial folk song emerged in Britain in the eighteenth century, as
workers took the forms of music with which they were familiar,
including ballads and agricultural work songs, and adapted them to
their new experiences and circumstances.[13] Unlike agricultural work
songs, it was often unnecessary to use music to synchronise actions
between workers, as the pace would be increasingly determined by
water, steam, chemical and eventually electric power, and frequently
impossible because of the noise of early industry.[14] As a result,
industrial folk songs tended to be descriptive of work, circumstances,
or political in nature, making them amongst the earliest protest songs
and were sung between work shifts or in leisure hours, rather than
during work. This pattern can be seen in textile production, mining
and eventually steel, shipbuilding, rail working and other industries.
As other nations industrialised their folk song underwent a similar
process of change, as can be seen for example in France, where
Saint-Simon noted the as the rise of 'Chansons Industriale' among
cloth workers in the early nineteenth century, and in the USA where
industrialisation expanded rapidly after the Civil War.[15] A.L. Lloyd
defined the industrial work song as 'the kind of vernacular songs made
by workers themselves directly out of their own experiences,
expressing their own interest and aspirations...'.[13] Lloyd also
pointed to various types of song, including chants of labour, love and
erotic occupational songs and industrial protest songs, which included
narratives of disasters (particularly among miners), laments for
conditions, as well as overtly political strike ballads.[13] He also
noted the existence of songs about heroic and mythical figures of
industrial work, like the coal miners the 'Big Hewer' or 'Big Isaac'
Lewis.[13] This tendency was even more marked in early American
industrial songs, where representative heroes like Casey Jones and
John Henry were eulogised in blues ballads from the nineteenth
century.[16] Industrial folk songs were largely ignored by early folk
song collectors, but gained attention in the second folk revival in
the twentieth century, being noted and recorded by figures such as
George Korson, Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie in the USA and A. L.
Lloyd and Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger in Britain.[17] The genre
declined in popularity with new forms of music and
de-industrialisation in the twentieth century, but has continued to
influence performers like Billy Bragg and Bruce Springsteen.[18]

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