Wednesday, 18 December 2024

Patrick O'Sullivan sings Aunt Molly Jackson's Christmas Eve on the East Side

Patrick O'Sullivan sings Aunt Molly Jackson's Christmas Eve on the East Side

I have been asked if I have a second song ready to contribute to the traditional UK Autoharps Advent Calendar...

As it so happens, we have been looking at the life and work of Aunt Molly Jackson - and one of her songs has the word 'Christmas' in the title.

So...  that qualifies?

Here we go...

Patrick O'Sullivan sings Aunt Molly Jackson's Christmas Eve on the East Side

Video link

https://youtu.be/Slwx88LVBp0

 

1.

Aunt Molly Jackson

There is much information out there about Molly Jackson, some of it trustworthy.  I will try to be brief here - but I will revisit if you think I have been too brief...

Molly Jackson, 1880-1960, was a nurse, midwife, trade union activist and folksinger in early twentieth century Kentucky, USA - campaigning for safer working conditions, decent wages, decent housing, health care...

The story is that, in Kentucky, midwifes were usually called 'Granny' - Molly did not want to be a 'Granny', but did accept the honorific 'Aunt'.

There is a book...

Pistol Packin' Mama: Aunt Molly Jackson and the Politics of Folksong. By Shelly Romalis University of Illinois Press, 1999.

The title is daft, but it is a good book, tippytoeing through difficult research.

If you put that book title into a search engine, you will find reviews, comment and further information.

Then...  Information about Molly Jackson comes to us from many directions.  I will mention some sources as I go, but I home in on one song performance, and one ballad. 

 

2.

Song

Aunt Molly Jackson appears, briefly, in the standard works on folk music song discovery and revival, and folk's influence on the politics of mid twentieth century USA, and elsewhere - so her influence on Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger...

Reaching for the books to hand...

I met Molly Jackson in Will Kaufman's books...

Kaufman, Will. 2011. Woody Guthrie, American Radical. The University of Illinois Press.

Kaufman, Will. 2022. American Song and Struggle from Columbus to World War 2: A Cultural History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

https://www.uclan.ac.uk/academics/will-kaufman

(Will Kaufman is based at the University of Central Lancashire, just across the Pennines from my home.  Sometimes, he can be persuaded to put on the hat, pick up the guitar, and channel Woody Guthrie.)

Molly Jackson is mentioned in standard works, like

Cohen, Ronald D. 2006. Folk Music: The Basics. Basics. Routledge.

They key moment is in 1931, when Theodore Dreiser, and the 'Dreiser Committee', representing the National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners, investigate conditions in Harlan County, Kentucky.

And, for the Committee, Molly Jackson sings her song, Ragged, Hungry Blues.

Molly Jackson then comes to the attention of Alan Lomax and his Library of Congress projects, and to the attention of what would become the folk music revival...

 

3.

Ballad

In another part of the forest, we look at the Francis Child Ballads - the collections by Francis James Child, published as The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, 1860 and 1882–98. 

I now summarise many conversations, over the years - for example with my friend and colleague here in Bradford, Stephanie Hladowski.  And with our friends in the Glasgow Ballad Workshop.

In recent years I have found myself always speaking of 'The Child Ballads' as ‘The Francis Child Ballads' - just to put an obstacle in the way of the recurring misunderstanding that the ballads are about children or written for children.  (Things get even worse when Child is spelt 'Childe', guided, most probably, by the medievalisations of Robert Browning and George Gordon Byron, Lord Byron.)

So, 'Francis Child Ballads' it is.

Francis Child's project was a paper, book, and library project.  As far as I can make out it did not occur to him to seek out melodies for his texts, or to wonder if the ballads were still being sung by living people in his own time.  Francis Child gave us a CANON, of 305 ballads, and a CORPUS, the same 305 ballads.  With textual variants...  So, 305 songs, each with a Francis Child collection number, the 'Child Ballads'.

See, for example…

Francis James Child and The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

By Stephen D. Winick

https://www.loc.gov/item/ihas.200196779/

Child Ballads Concordance by Cathy Lynn Preston, University of Colorado

https://www.colorado.edu/faculty/preston/child-ballads-concordance

There has been much rumination about Francis Child's own selection procedures – why only 305, why that 305?  Let us not get bogged down. 

The influence of that Harvard approach to anthropology spread out, to a number of overlapping disciplines and approaches - researchers would visit people in remote areas and listen to them.  There came a point when the technology changed.  Instead of visiting people and writing down on paper what they said, or sang, audio equipment was moved.  And people spoke, or sang, for the machine.

The most intriguing example, for people like me, is the work of Milman Parry - whose 1930s field recordings in Bosnia suggested to him that he was listening, two and a half thousand years later, to the still living techniques of Homer, and the culture-shaping ancient Greek epic poems.  Specifically, the use of formulaic phrases that will slot into the verse - familiar phrases like 'rosy fingered dawn' or 'wine-dark sea', much analysed by scholars, and poets, over the centuries. 

So, there is a process through which oral poets improvise, or create, or re-create poetry, on the hoof - and this explains why orally improvised poetry, or written poetry deriving from traditions of oral improvisation, has the characteristics that it does have.

I leave out a lot of detail here...  Let us move on to the next landmark text, Cecil Sharp, English Folk-Songs from the Southern Appalachians, first published in 1932.  Researchers, anthropologists, folklorists had entered remote areas - the Appalachian Mountains, for example - had listened to the people, and had found that some of the people were still singing songs already canonised by the Francis Child collection.  So, the CANON and the CORPUS now had a TRADITION, with AUTHENTICITY.

In other words - thinking about the commodification of culture – for researchers, some songs had greater value than others.

Bertrand Harris Bronson built on this, doggedly following the researchers, tracking down the melodies for the 305 songs, and publishing his 4 volumes, The Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads, dated 1957, 1962, 1966, 1973.  Princeton University Press, loyally, doggedly, stuck with him, over those decades.  See...

https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691652634/the-traditional-tunes-of-the-child-ballads-volume-1

...etc...

One of those researchers - it was Mary Elizabeth Barnicle - showed Molly Jackson a copy of a Francis Child volume - it was the 1904 Sargent and Kittredge selection…

English and Scottish popular ballads, edited from the collection of Francis James Child,

Sargent, Helen Child; Kittredge, George Lyman,

https://archive.org/details/englishscottishp1904chil/page/n11/mode/2up

…and Molly Jackson produced a version of Francis Child Ballad Number 102, The Birth of Robin Hood, very like the Peter Buchan text in Sargent and Kittredge.  A song which - Molly said - she had learnt from her grandmother.  And the researcher was deeply suspicious...

Molly Jackson’s melody is there in Bertrand Harris Bronson’s Volume 2, pages 509-510 – Bronson’s immediate source is the John Greenway recording.

 

4.

John Greenway

This is the John Greenway page on the Smithsonian…

https://folkways.si.edu/aunt-molly-jackson-and-john-greenway/the-songs-and-stories-of/american-folk-struggle-protest/music/album/smithsonian

The Songs and Stories of AUNT MOLLY JACKSON

Stories told by Aunt Molly Jackson/Songs sung by John Greenway

These are the John Greenway sleeve notes…

https://folkways-media.si.edu/docs/folkways/artwork/FW05457.pdf

In one of his articles, page 37, John Greenway calls Molly Jackson a ‘folk composer’…

Greenway, John. 1956. “Aunt Molly Jackson and Robin Hood: A Study in Folk Re-Creation.” The Journal of American Folklore 69 (271): 23–38.

An article that is really worth reading, as a folklorist and singer works through the complexities I have outlined here…

'Molly has her deficiencies as a model of the folk composer and adapter: she has had too much contact with urban culture to be acceptable as a pure representative of the American folk; her association with labor organizers and agitators, for instance, has colored nearly all the songs she sings.  Nevertheless she is a woman whose early environment and deepest influences were as purely "folk" as it is possible to be in this country and in this century, whose knowledge of the traditional ballad rivals that of any informant yet discovered, and whose talent as a folk composer - if that identification can be accepted for anyone - is far from contemptible...'

John Greenway gives the impression that, in her later years, Molly Jackson was hiding from folklorists – perhaps fearful that past connections with socialism and communism would endanger her small state pension…

 

5.

Singing

This is an aside, for music friends…

There is a special skill to singing long narrative songs - for example, the Francis Child Ballads…

The Stephanie Hladowski sections of Will Hodgkinson’s book are built around Stephanie’s performance of Willie O Winsbury, Francis Child Ballad Number 100 – spooky, focussed, maintaining momentum and interest…  Friends who have attended Stephanie Hladowski’s performances at Cecil Sharp House will know what I mean.

Hodgkinson, Will. 2009. The Ballad of Britain: How Music Captured the Soul of a Nation. Portico.

I do not detect any great involvement with the Francis Child Ballads within the autoharp communities – which is a shame, because I think that the autoharp could maintain musical interest and momentum, as the story unfolds.  But the Francis Child Ballads do enter the repertoire, through long folkloric roads.  And a lovely example of the possibilities is still there on YouTube, from, much-missed, Bob Fish…

Pretty Fair Maid In The Garden - Bob Fish

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVuICtuO7mk

 

 

6.

Aunt Molly Jackson's Christmas Eve on the East Side

Let us begin with the title…

On the Library of Congress web site we can clearly see the original Lomax catalogue file card, which clearly says…

‘Christmas Eve in the East Side’

And we can see that the LOC cataloguer has over-ruled the file card and has typed

‘Christmas Eve on the East Side’

https://www.loc.gov/item/afc9999005.8629

When we listen to The Lomax Kentucky recordings

Performer Jackson, Aunt Molly

Date Recorded 1939-27-05

Collection Alan Lomax Recording of Aunt Molly Jackson, May 27 1939

We can hear Molly sing

‘I'm in the slums on the East Side’

Christmas Eve On the East Side (part 1)

https://lomaxky.omeka.net/items/show/1354

Christmas Eve On the East Side (part 2)

https://lomaxky.omeka.net/items/show/1356

We think that the LOC cataloguer is right – we are ‘in slums’, …’on the East Side…’

https://digital.library.pitt.edu/islandora/object/pitt%3AUS-PPiU-ais200703/viewer

Molly Jackson’s lyric works – in Homeric fashion – by placing formulaic, standard phrases onto the metric structure.  Some phrases, ‘a cup of tea’, come from commonplace conversation.  Others, ‘fellow workers’, ‘hard-working masses’, ‘Workers’ Alliance’, come from ‘her association with labor organizers and agitators…’ 

And I have signalled this in my little video.

Most of what we know about the Workers’ Alliance comes from the FBI archives…

Guide to the Workers Alliance of America Records, 1931-1999 AIS.2007.03

‘The Workers Alliance of America (WAA) was formed in 1935 as a merger of predominantly socialist and communist-led unemployment councils, unemployment leagues and independent state organizations throughout the country…’

https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/9f4fc6e0-73f0-0136-1b7d-1dc8fcda4f3b

My opening image of a ‘rear window tenement’ is from the New York Public Library…

https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/9f4fc6e0-73f0-0136-1b7d-1dc8fcda4f3b

But, in Diaspora Studies, we are cautious about slum photographs…

‘Slum photography was at the heart of progressive campaigns against urban poverty. And it was a weapon against poor people…

Sadie Levy Galeis a PhD candidate in the School of Journalism, Media and Culture at Cardiff University, Wales’

https://aeon.co/essays/slum-photos-were-weaponised-against-the-people-they-depict

…and my video follows Molly Jackson’s text elsewhere, into the snowy woods.

The song is a Complaint, a Holler, and a Come-All-Ye. 

We tried various ways of presenting the song, but settled on the Come-All-Ye.  I am not at all clear what key Molly Jackson is singing in.  Musician friends can listen to the original recording.

I sing it in C – and the chords are C and G and that’s it.  Anyone with a C chord can join in the Come-All-Ye – with a bit of G at the end of lines 2 and 4 of the 4-line verse.

Now…  You might think that this is a lot of background to a 3 minute song…  Well, yes, it is – but I do not make the rules.

Patrick O'Sullivan sings Aunt Molly Jackson's Christmas Eve on the East Side

Video link

https://youtu.be/Slwx88LVBp0

My thanks to Helen Slade and Jan Brodie, of UK Autoharps, for help and encouragement...

 

Patrick O’Sullivan

Bradford

December 2024

 

 

 

 

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