• Thumbnail for Cecil Sharp
    Cecil James Sharp (22 November 1859 – 23 June 1924) was an English collector of folk songs, folk dances and instrumental music, as well as a lecturer...
    45 KB (5,631 words) - 03:47, 27 June 2024
  • Elliot Hobbs, Cecil Sharp, Ralph Vaughan Williams and Mary Augusta Wakefield. The English Folk Dance Society was founded in 1911 by Cecil Sharp. Maud Karpeles...
    19 KB (1,948 words) - 14:40, 30 August 2024
  • songs, the author and date of origin are unclear. The English folklorist Cecil Sharp collected and notated a version from Endicott, Franklin County, Virginia...
    7 KB (848 words) - 11:51, 16 July 2024
  • The Cecil Sharp Project was a multi-artist, residential commission to create new material based on the life and collections of Cecil Sharp, founding father...
    3 KB (288 words) - 19:45, 16 November 2023
  • Thumbnail for Folk music
    simply "Folk music is what the people sing." For Scholes, as well as for Cecil Sharp and Béla Bartók, there was a sense of the music of the country as distinct...
    163 KB (16,421 words) - 22:04, 10 September 2024
  • wrote of her woes in the symbolism of flowers; however, the folklorist Cecil Sharp doubted this claim. The versions allegedly written by Habergram would...
    10 KB (1,311 words) - 12:05, 7 June 2022
  • Bellowhead, Show of Hands, Cara Dillon, 17 Hippies, Kepa Junkera Band and the Cecil Sharp Project. 2012: Richard Thompson, Kate Rusby, Show of Hands, Dervish and...
    11 KB (1,433 words) - 16:33, 31 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for Ashley Hutchings
    a one-man show about folk song collector Cecil Sharp, which resulted in the album An Hour with Cecil Sharp and Ashley Hutchings, (1986). From this point...
    16 KB (1,835 words) - 19:32, 10 September 2024
  • Constance Sharp, suffered a life-changing illness. Cecil Sharp referred to Karpeles as "the faithful Maud". On their many travels together, Sharp would introduce...
    20 KB (2,417 words) - 06:36, 3 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Morris dance
    The word Morris apparently derived from "morisco", meaning "Moorish". Cecil Sharp, whose collecting of Morris dances preserved many from extinction, suggested...
    53 KB (6,788 words) - 11:37, 13 September 2024