Folk Lore
Emily Hobson '97-98 researches the politics behind the folk music
revival
By John Marchetti
Special to the Gazette
Before rock 'n' roll and social protest became entwined in the mid-1960s,
folk music provided the soundtrack for the American counterculture. For
over a decade, this simple music brought college students, "beatniks,"
and activists together in song and spirit.
On college campuses and in coffeehouses, musicians joined poets at "hootenannies."
In the South, black and white civil rights protesters marched to the strains
of traditional African-American songs. And in Newport, R.I., tens of thousands
flocked each year to
the city's Folk Festival in a display of the music's mass appeal.
It was that appeal that activists hoped would galvanize listeners and
help bring about social change. For a while, it worked. Folk music contributed
significantly to both the civil rights movement and the early protests against
the Vietnam War. By 1965, though, its influence had begun to wane. Rock
overtook folk as the protest music du jour, and the counterculture
was soon rallying around the
sounds of the Beatles, Haight-Ashbury, and Woodstock. Folk music was
deemed "naive" and relegated to the place it remains today --
in the margins of popular culture.
The importance of folk has not been lost on Emily Hobson '97-98, however.
She has long been drawn to the music, and is investigating its boom during
the 1950s and 1960s for a senior thesis in history and literature.
"I realized that I wanted to work with folk music in my thesis this
past summer, on a long car trip down the Pacific Coast with my family,"
Hobson explains. "My family's listening interests range from jazz to
trucker songs, but on this trip we listened to a lot of folk. I
loved it; it's the music I grew up with."
"I know it helped shape my politics," Hobson continues. "It
gave me a sense of hope, with its message that if we all came together and
sang, we'd build a community."
Hobson has decided to use the folk revival as a means to look at larger
issues involving race and class in grass roots movements. "My interest
in those issues stems from my own political involvement," she says,
"and my questions about the relationships of people
working side-by-side with varying levels of privilege."
According to Hobson, the first traces of a folk music "revival"
can be found in the 1930s and 1940s, when American socialist and communist
groups championed the music as the true art of the proletariat. Folk music
is pure and noble, they claimed, and offers us a way to get back in touch
with the roots of America. This was essentially the same claim that the
more mainstream revivalists of the '50s and '60s offered.
Implicit in the folk revivalists' message was a dissatisfaction with
American society. "In the research I've done so far," Hobson says,
"I've found that the revivalists talked a lot about a general despair
in the country. They point to a cultural void, brought about perhaps by
McCarthyism and the nuclear and communist threats.
"The revivalists seemed to feel that society was running on empty,"
continues Hobson. "They saw the nation's political and cultural leaders
as soulless, and moving the country away from its truer heritage of a grass-roots
culture."
Folk music, the revivalists hoped, would help redirect the country. It
would replace the music of Top 40 radio and Tin Pan Alley with simple, authentic
songs that would connect with something essential in all Americans. The
idea, says Hobson, was to create "a singing country." At the concerts
of Pete Seeger and other popular folk singers, thousands of fans joined
together in song.
Yet Hobson finds a central contradiction within the revivalist message.
"Their critique of mass culture and of America was envisioned as a
grass-roots critique," she says. "In fact, it was an elite one.
The revivalists claimed that folk had a political and moral authority from
'the people,' but in fact the leaders of the movement were for the most
part white, middle-class, and college-educated. They romanticized the 'folk'
in folk music, and thought that by reviving a folk history, they would join
that tradition themselves."
For her thesis, Hobson will look closely at the role of the folk revival
in the civil rights movement. "Civil rights became the political
context for the revival," she says. "The relationship between
the two movements was quite complicated because they gave each other power."
The civil rights movement also provides a chart to trace the rise and
fall of the folk revival, according to Hobson. "At the beginning, the
leaders of the movement went back to the church songs of their grandparents,"
she says, "and consciously revived them as freedom songs. I don't think
that the usefulness of those songs to the movement can be overestimated."
By the mid-'60s, however, the civil rights movement changed, growing
more radical and less inclusive. Folk music was left behind. "This
change happened across the country," says Hobson. "Youth music
became angrier."
The Harvard College Research Program helped Hobson travel to Washington,
D.C., where she conducted research at the Library of Congress Folklife Center.
She also attended a symposium at the Smithsonian about Harry Smith, one
of the nation's first folk music archivists. "The trip was invaluable,"
she says.
Hobson is working with Tom Augst, a lecturer in history and literature.
"He's been very encouraging," Hobson says, "because he pretty
much tells me to trust my gut. Of course, he also tells me when my gut is
wrong!"
It was Hobson's "gut" that led her to write about folk music
in the first place. "As I grew older," she says, "I understood
why people make fun of folk music. It is naive. But that doesn't bother
me. It is that naive, hopeful folk revival music of the '60s that gave me
my
heritage."
Copyright
1998 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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