The Music Workshop Company Blog 

Each month the Music Workshop Company publishes two blogs. One blog, written by the MWC team addresses a key issue in Music Education or gives information about a particular genre or period of music. The other blog is written by a guest writer, highlighting good practice or key events in Music Education. We hope you enjoy reading the blogs. 
 
We embed multimedia content in many of our blog posts, if you have rejected cookies for this website, you may have white spaces where the multimedia content should be. This is due to a recent change of policy by YouTube, Spotify and other platforms. We are in the process of updating all our posts. If you come across white spaces in a blog post, you can open the link in another browser or private browser and approve cookies to access all the content. We are sorry for any inconvenience this causes. 
 
To contribute as a guest writer please email Maria@music-workshop.co.uk 

Posts tagged “FOLK DANCE”

George Butterworth is perhaps mostly remembered for the fact that his life was cut short at the Battle of the Somme. He left behind not only his own compositions, but a vast collection of folk songs and dances which he collected alongside his friends Ralph Vaughan Williams and Cecil Sharp. 
 
Butterworth’s ‘The Banks of Green Willow’ is strongly linked to the loss of the composer and many of his generation in World War I and is seen by some as an anthem for all 'Unknown Soldiers'. 
 
 
 
Image: photographer unknown - Photograph first published in the George Butterworth Memorial Volume, privately printed in the UK, 1918 
Music holds an important place in Welsh national identity – so much so that Wales is traditionally referred to as the ‘Land of Song’. However, despite the positive implications this moniker has in terms of the Welsh affinity with music, this is actually a modern stereotype based on the importance of 19th century choral music and 20th century male voice choirs, and in some ways it clouds a long and unique musical and social history. 
 
 
 
[Image: National Assembly for Wales] 

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