Paul Micklethwaite is a musician who wrote this piece for the current issue of Socialist Resistance.

The newly-thriving British folk music scene has recently been disturbed to find itself attracting the attention of the far right British National Party.

The BNP evidently feels it may gain a sympathetic reception from the traditional folk audience. This has provoked a strong collective counterblast from the contemporary folk music world in the form of the Folk Against Fascism campaign

The anti-BNP response centres on a contention that “folk” music, as a contemporary cultural form, by its nature excludes the extreme nationalist politics and values of that far right party. Any attempt to claim solidarity is therefore misguided and unwelcome. But is this so clearly the case? Is there any basis in the BNP’s tactic?

The politics of folk music

Defining folk music, and it limits, is clearly a challenge. Folk performers are drawn to debate their genre more than any other musicians. The notion of tradition, and a healthy respect for it, is a strong consideration as is inclusivity.

The contemporary folk music scene might be characterised in terms of: respect for an inherited musical tradition; politically on the left (deriving from a recent Communist heritage); musically reactionary (the fact that folk musician Jim Moray is constantly billed as a controversial innovator proves the rule); white, middle-aged and middle class (despite the proletarian perspective of much traditional folk music). These are generalisations, but will be recognisable to anyone who participates in the culture of folk clubs and festivals, magazines, radio shows etc. Above all, the folk world is culturally homogenous.

The aspect of the folk scene which the BNP has apparently picked up on is its sometimes uneasy relationship with notions of place, region and national identity. The traditional folk repertoire is often concerned with specific regional locality and identity. Socialist songwriter and performer Ewan McColl famously insisted on performers confining themselves to the songs of their home county. The otherness of, for example, “gypsies” is also a common lyrical theme. What the BNP is perhaps trying to engender is a development of local and regional pride into nationalism, jingoism and perhaps even xenophobia.

Wolfgang Becker’s 2003 film Goodbye Lenin portrays the co-opting of (quite possibly invented) folk “traditions” to reinforce national identity by the government of the old East Germany. Unease surrounded the St George’s Day 2009 concert in Trafalgar Square, conducted under the auspices of Boris Johnson, Conservative mayor of London. While many leading folk performers were happy to take part in what was billed as a celebration of “the best of everything English” (1), some were uneasy with the association. A rival event took place simultaneously elsewhere, commemorating the historical protest in support of the Tolpuddle martyrs. Several performers intended to attend both events, seeing no tension. ‘You can’t not celebrate something for fear of somebody you don’t like misunderstanding the reasons’, commented Jim Moray.

BNP leader Nick Griffin is a declared fan of folk music. The BNP’s website sells British folk compilations under its imprint Excalibur Records, including an album of songs written (though not performed) by Griffin himself. According to journalist Marek Kohn “folk culture and myth are at the heart of the BNP’s vision”, and “the party is a folkish nationalist group based on a belief that peoples have essences that must be preserved by keeping blood and culture mixed together, and separate from those of other peoples.”(2)

A keen interest in regional authenticity is certainly an element in folk music culture. Much traditional folk music adopts the perspective of the dispossessed working class, and commonly portrays the otherness of “gypsies” and outsiders generally. Thus the BNP might see the folk audience as potentially sympathetic to the party’s far right political agenda. After all, the BNP has had success in appealing to just these kind of sensibilities in Burnley and other constituencies in the north of England.

Folk against Fascism

The folk scene is having none of it.

Folk against Fascism (FAF) is taking stand against “the BNP’s cynical and unsettling targeting of folk music and events in the UK”. It sees the party’s message of hatred and cultural purity as completely out of step with the inclusive and multicultural unity within the folk world. In a recent folk events email Folk Against Fascism said: “They (the BNP) have no right to associate themselves with us and a unified voice is needed to make this clear. Sign up now on the FAF website to see how you can help and partake in the celebratory events being run to show that the folk community as with most other communities actively does NOT support this party or their ideals!”(3)

Martin Simpson, one of contemporary folk’s biggest stars, began a recent show with a song he introduced as an English version of an American version of an Irish song. ‘That’s folk music right there, which the BNP should take note of. They should also fuck off,’ he said. He repeated this, more politely, at Cambridge Folk Festival, inviting the audience to participate in the Folk against Fascism response. For Simpson and most others, folk music performance is fundamentally about transmission of tradition though adaptation, not arbitrary historical preservation.

Internationalism may not have been encouraged in folk performance settings historically, but is increasingly the norm, as a glance at recent Cambridge programmes will show. ‘Our evenings … are for traditional folk music, and run along the lines of a traditional folk club… If you like traditional folk music, of any country or culture, do come along.’

British sociologist Anthony Giddens has written that “fundamentalism is beleaguered tradition” (4). It opposes cosmopolitanism and multiplicity of perspective, and focuses on the uncritical upholding of a politically or culturally expedient dogma. The nationalist fundamentalism of the BNP represents an attempt to cling to a carefully selective historical precedent which privileges the currently dominant cultural group in Britain.

It is possible to see the reasoning behind the BNP’s attempts to co-opt the British folk music scene. Yet the hostility of that scene’s concerted reaction demonstrates that the BNP’s relationship to (and indeed its idea of) British “tradition” is quite different to that found in contemporary folk music culture. The possibility that a concern with localism is a cover for xenophobia seems unfounded.

Further information: www.folkagainstfascism.com

Footnotes

(1) Irwin, Colin (2009) The battle over British folk music. The Guardian, Thursday 23 April.

(2) Kohn, Marek (2009) A faded vis
ion of folk. guardian.co.uk, Thursday 30 July.

(3) The Magpie’s Nest events email, 16 July 2009.

(4) Giddens, Anthony (1999) Tradition. BBC Reith lecture, number 3.

Paul Micklethwaite is a folk musician who has performed at or attended all the clubs and festivals mentioned here; hopefully they’ll welcome him back.

8 responses to “Contemporary British folk music and the BNP”

  1. Socialist songwriter and performer Ewan McColl famously insisted on performers confining themselves to the songs of their home county. The otherness of, for example, “gypsies” is also a common lyrical theme.

    “Famously” – yes, a bit too famously. In reality this was a policy that MacColl brought in at one club, to encourage people to seek out traditional songs that were getting lost. In no way was it an edict for the folk scene as a whole, which wouldn’t have listened anyway.

    I’m struggling to think of all these songs about the otherness of “gypsies”, or indeed of more than one. In terms of the folk revival the balance is rather the other way. Speaking of Ewan MacColl, that would be the MacColl who wrote Freeborn Man, Forty-Foot Trailer and the Moving-On Song?

    Born in the middle of the afternoon
    In a horse-drawn wagon on the old A5
    The big twelve-wheelers shook my bed
    “You can’t stop here,” the policeman said
    “You’d better get born in some place else –
    Move along, get along, move along, get along,
    Go! Move! Shift!”

    That’s a standard in folk clubs – as much so as The Manchester Rambler or the Fields of Athenry – and it’s one long denunciation of anti-Traveller racism. Plus it’s got a good beat and you can dance to it.

    Internationalism may not have been encouraged in folk performance settings historically, but is increasingly the norm

    Actually I think internationalism has been the norm in folk settings for quite a while now; folk only really survived the last couple of decades by hitching a ride on “world music”. The interesting recent development is a resurgence of interest in English and Scottish material – or rather, as Martin Simpson’s comment suggests, material that’s ended up in England or Scotland. I don’t think there’s anything to apologise for in this. Eliza Carthy summed it up well here:

    I have always made a point of performing English music almost exclusively, engaging in media discussions about what this means, and how to celebrate the ancient culture of where you are from without pushing anyone away; in fact treating a strong cultural history and music as an invitation, essentially “you show me yours and I’ll show you mine” – pride in oneself engendering mutual respect without hostility.

    And here‘s Eliza (with some friends).

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  2. I can’t imagine anything less amenable to fascist influence than the actual British folk scene at its peak.
    I was never a folkie myself, but my mate in the YS at school was.
    So when I was 16-17, I went to a few gigs at our local folk club.
    The audience was almost entirely made up of duffle-coat wearing CND types.

    The only song I remember was in French not English.
    I only ever heard it once live, but can still remember the words to the chorus;
    “Ce soir nous allons danser
    Sans chemise, sans pantalons”

    A lot of the folkies ended up becoming Bob Dylan fans.
    Then British folk-rock came along with groups like ‘Fairport Convention’ and Steeleye Span.
    They could hardly be described as English Nationalists;
    One of Steeleyes greatest hits was a Finnish song in Latin called “Gaudete”.
    When I first saw ‘Fairport’ , it was at the hippy den known as ‘Middle Earth’, through a fug of stale dope and body odour.
    Richard Thompson is the son of a Scotsman, became a Muslim years ago and draws on very wide cultural influences in his lyrics;

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  3. Define “musically reactionary”? I’m not sure what you mean by it, but the notion that everything has to be innovative and new has a lot to do with capitalist marketing. The notion of a body of tradition, including but not limited to a connection to (and understanding of) the land, is not reactionary; it is the basis for the profound ecological understanding, for example, that many indigenous cultures have.

    I think also the search for ever new songs, riffs, beats, etc actually kills the thrill of innovation. Think of heavy metal (if you can, folkies!) as a “reductio ad absurdum” — always faster, louder and more dissonant in a kind of race to be the “heaviest”. Then there was Napalm Death in about 1988 or 1989 and no-one’s really worked out how to surpass them since. But in the frenzy, the bands thought up and used pretty much all the good riffs that were possible with the instruments at their disposal and after a while all there is to do is retro “back to Black Sabbath” movements or unlistenable “we are so the fastest” type stuff. Burnout.

    I like the traditionalism of folk. Originality is overrated, as an old friend used to say. It’s good to hear the fascists aren’t getting much traction and I really can’t think of any contemporary folk groups that are seriously reactionary. Except in regard to their livers, perhaps! German folk music has some great songs (I’m listening to Tine Kindermann singing some now) but I gather that for decades after the Nazis appropriated it for their “back to the land” crap, folk music was rather out of favour in Germany. Which is a pity. Don’t let the bastards steal it again!

    Speaking of bastard, and heavy metal again. The fascists have also used metal as a recruiting ground, mainly the folk-influenced “pagan” metal played by some scandinavian bands. I find it hard to take nazis seriously when they are anemic-looking skinny youths with eye make-up, but I’ve seen such mixing with the hard-case older skinhead nazis at heavy metal gigs sometimes in Melbourne… weird stuff, lucky they’re only a minor curiosity in Australian politics.

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  4. If the far right are trying to muscle in on music, I wonder if it’s not time for the unions to be passing resolutions on popular culture.
    Perhaps this is something that ‘Love Music Hate Racism’ should consider?

    It’s worth remembering that back in 1962 the TUC passed “Resolution 42”, which led to a tour around Britain to find local talent.
    Arnold Wesker and Ewan MacColl were put in charge of organising the tour.
    One of their finds was Anne Briggs, then an 18 year old living in Nottingham, now reclusive and not performing.
    She had a big influence on the style of subsequent female singers, like Maddy Prior and Sandy Denny.
    Some of this crossed over into the developing metal Acts like “Led Zeppelin” and Rory Gallagher’s “Taste”

    She’s widely believed to be the character described in Richard Thompson’s “Beeswing” (linked to above)
    Although he only met her on two occasions, on both of which she was drunk and unconscious!
    (cited in 2006 BBC documentary Folk Britannia)

    Anne Briggs She Moved through the Fair

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  5. Rebel folk music is alive and vibrant in Scotland amongst the young working class. The Wakes are particularly good.

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  6. Along with Thompson who is the folkie bard there is also Gallagher and Lyall also great.

    Off topic Liam, who are these Irish racist gypsy basher who post on facebook.Could you do a piece for more info.

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  7. […] Contemporary British folk music and the BNP « Mac Uaid […]

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  8. […] Folk You Fascists! Posted on April 17, 2010 by Liam Apparently Folk Against Fascism week is upon us. A piece exploring the link between the BNP and folk music is here. […]

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