jdms Posted June 2, 2011 Share Posted June 2, 2011 Here's an interesting thing... jdms Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rod Posted June 2, 2011 Share Posted June 2, 2011 Here's an interesting thing... jdms I understand that Kimber was a bricklayer by trade and may therefore have laid every single brick in that house. Another admirable achievement. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dirge Posted June 2, 2011 Share Posted June 2, 2011 It's a nice piece and great that the actual family are still keeping it going. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
swig Posted June 3, 2011 Share Posted June 3, 2011 I read this. What an awful article. Sharp the 'godfather' of folk music ? Don't think so. And what about that moronic quote from the EFDSS rep (if it's true). Without Sharp there would be no ceilidh dancing ? Ethnocentricity at its worst. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve Mansfield Posted June 3, 2011 Share Posted June 3, 2011 I read this. What an awful article. Sharp the 'godfather' of folk music ? Don't think so. And what about that moronic quote from the EFDSS rep (if it's true). Without Sharp there would be no ceilidh dancing ? Ethnocentricity at its worst. That's a bit harsh isn't it? I thought the quote from Katy Spicer (who is Executive Director of EFDSS btw) was entirely reasonable, and the whole tenor of the article is sympathetic and fairly error-free (and certainly pleasingly lacking the default aren't-morris-dancers-all-funny-nutters tone of most media coverage). Meeting Kimber and the Headington Quarry team was an important moment in Sharp's collecting activities, and did directly lead on to his investigation of morris and then social dance. Sharp's ruthless undermining and political outmanoeuvring of those with other philosophies (most notably Mary Neal), and the attitudes and emphases that Sharp's work and those of his supporters and followers put on the importance, performance style, and usage of the material they collected (and of course also the material they didn't consider worth collecting or promoting) is undeniable, and I'm no Sharp hagiographer by a long, long way. However it's pretty much unarguable that (in terms of English folk dance and song) we are largely where we are today, and we have a good proportion of what we have today, standing on the shoulders of the work of C# and the people he inspired or co-opted. EFDSS may have dropped the ball spectacularly in the second half of the 20th Century, but that's a whole different kettle of fish. The phrase 'the godfather of folk' does bug me as well though, but hey, it's a working soundbite for a soundbite culture. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave Rogers Posted June 3, 2011 Share Posted June 3, 2011 The phrase 'the godfather of folk' does bug me as well though, but hey, it's a working soundbite for a soundbite culture. We'll just have to hope that Ashley Hutchings doesn't threaten to sue. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MichaelF Posted June 4, 2011 Share Posted June 4, 2011 I read this. What an awful article. Sharp the 'godfather' of folk music ? Don't think so. And what about that moronic quote from the EFDSS rep (if it's true). Without Sharp there would be no ceilidh dancing ? Ethnocentricity at its worst. This is a newspaper article!!!!!! It's meant to catch peoples attention so they will read it. Remember most readers of the paper won't know anything about Sharp or Kimber, but they now be prompted to find out more especially with the placement of the blue plaque. At least the owners of the property know a lot more. Sharp the 'godfather' of folk music; maybe some of us wouldn't use the term 'godfather', but then using this word may make some become curious to know more about him. In the 1970s/early 1980s I remember a central Oxford hotel used to have old photographs of Headington Quarry Morris on the walls. They were removed early 1980s? Did the owners realise what they were? I hope they did, but maybe not. This article raises historical awareness. I think that, for a newspaper, it conveys the 'facts' quite well and reasonably accurately. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul Woloschuk Posted June 25, 2012 Share Posted June 25, 2012 I take it that Kimber's instrument is now in the hands of Headington Quarry MM and being regularly used? I recall back in the 1970s hearing that Father Ken was going to leave the concertina to EFDSS for display in C# House. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Franch Posted June 25, 2012 Share Posted June 25, 2012 I think the really important thing about Kimber for us (i.e., concertina nuts) is that he introduced the concertina to morris dancing. Sharp assumed that this was the way it had traditionally been done--but it was a tradition that started with Kimber! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michael sam wild Posted June 25, 2012 Share Posted June 25, 2012 (edited) Hs father taught him So what dances did he play for?Fiddle, pipes and pipe and tabor would be played before the concertina Edited June 28, 2012 by michael sam wild Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave Rogers Posted June 26, 2012 Share Posted June 26, 2012 I take it that Kimber's instrument is now in the hands of Headington Quarry MM and being regularly used? I recall back in the 1970s hearing that Father Ken was going to leave the concertina to EFDSS for display in C# House. According to Roger Digby (27/10/2005 on this forum): "the concertina is now back in Headington with Julie Kimber-Nickelson (William’s grand-daughter)." http://www.concertina.net/forums/index.php?showtopic=2976&st=0 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Franch Posted June 26, 2012 Share Posted June 26, 2012 I probably got my idea about Kimber and the concertina in the morris revival from Stuart Eydmann's excellent "The concertina as an emblem of the folk music revival in the British Isles" at http://www.concertina.com/eydmann/folk-music-revival/index.htm, where he writes of Kimber, he "played a then 'trendy'instrument laden with connotations of music hall and popular dance and song . . ." It would be interesting to know what inspired Kimber to acquire a concertina and to know something of how he learned to play it, but he does seem to be the one who popularized it for the revival of morris dance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave Rogers Posted June 27, 2012 Share Posted June 27, 2012 It would be interesting to know what inspired Kimber to acquire a concertina and to know something of how he learned to play it Kimber appears to have learnt concertina from his father - Dan Worrall, referencing Neil Wayne, says: "He played for a rural Morris tradition that was in serious decline, where the number of all musicians on all instruments was small. In the late nineteenth century, only two other concertina players besides Kimber and his father (William Kimber, Senior) are known to have played for Morris in the southern Midlands. http://www.angloconcertina.org/files/Kimber_for_website.pdf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave Rogers Posted June 27, 2012 Share Posted June 27, 2012 Sorry, I've just noticed that Michael Sam Wild mentioned earlier about Kimber being taught by his father! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robin Harrison Posted June 27, 2012 Share Posted June 27, 2012 the really important thing about Kimber for us (i.e., concertina nuts) is that he introduced the concertina to morris dancing ...........but also the way he played as well. I've always thought that if William learnt from his father, then it would be fascinating to know how his father came upon this unique style. Did he develop it in isolation.......... did he learn it from someone else's playing. Was William or his father the creative force behind this wonderful way of approaching chording. We'll never know but it's an intruiging speculation . Robin Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michael sam wild Posted June 28, 2012 Share Posted June 28, 2012 There was a choral tradition, pianos and fairground organs all using chords so he may have picked stuff up thatw ay. Before that there were viol consorts playing parts in harmony. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RP3 Posted June 28, 2012 Share Posted June 28, 2012 Wonder if William Kimber was related to the famous founder of the MG Car Company, Cecil Kimber. As a lover of both concertinas and old MGs, that would be a wonderful convergence of interests for me. Ross Schlabach Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dirge Posted June 28, 2012 Share Posted June 28, 2012 the really important thing about Kimber for us (i.e., concertina nuts) is that he introduced the concertina to morris dancing ...........but also the way he played as well. I've always thought that if William learnt from his father, then it would be fascinating to know how his father came upon this unique style. Did he develop it in isolation.......... did he learn it from someone else's playing. Was William or his father the creative force behind this wonderful way of approaching chording. We'll never know but it's an intruiging speculation . Robin I'd always assumed that the chording happens naturally on an Anglo, that all it took was to grab several, not just one, button, and a lot of the time it harmonised automatically. Surely it's not clever to think of doing this? "I need more noise to compete with the crashing of hobnail boots I'll hit a few more buttons." would do it for starters, and hadn't all the Midnight Mohawks been doing exactly this for years? I didn't realise Kimber was seen as an innovator. I had the idea that he was exactly the opposite, someone keeping old traditions that had almost gone alive, famous mostly because it was HIM that Cec' tripped over and subsequently worked with. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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