Title: Folklore Tapes Calendar Customs Vol.II: Merry May
Artists: Various
Format: Embossed cassette box including screen printed cassette sleeve, research booklet, essay, maypole ribbon, download code.
Release Date: 01/05/15
Edition: 250
Estimated shipping: 24/4/15
Side A:
Carl Turney & Brian Campbell – SumerIsIcumenIn
; The Blue Funz - Beltane, Isle of Mull: Need-Fire and Milking Cows Through Cake
; Arianne Churchman - Minehead Hobby Horse ; Rob St John - Bringing in the May. Side B:
Ian Humberstone - The Hunting of the Earl of Rone
; Mary & David - Wish Before Sunrise (May Dewing)
; Children of Alice - Rite of the Maypole: An Unruly Procession
; Sam McLoughlin - I Want to Sing like the Birds Sing, Not Worrying About Who Hears or What They Think
; Malcolm Benzie - Hawthorne
Unite and unite and let us all unite,
For summer is a-come unto day
And whither we are going we will all unite,
In the merry morning of May.
May Day is one of the turning
points of the year, when the transformation from winter to spring is
ritually observed and celebrated. The Eve of May displays an obverse
face to Halloween’s soot-blackened mask, fixed on the opposite arc of
the annular globe. Both have origins in the Celtic pastoral year and the
solar festivals which lent it formal division. Superstitions
surrounding May Eve, May Day and the ensuing days at the start of the
month persisted well into the medieval period, and even into the
post-Reformation era. Fairies might steal or sour milk, or witches spell
maleficent harm on the herd.
May Day festivities are all about getting outdoors and inhaling the
first breath of summer; throwing the windows wide and heading for the
woodlands and meadows with a light skip in the step. The custom most
widely associated with May Day is the bringing in of the May. Boughs of
blossoming hawthorn would be cut and brought back from meadow’s edge and
strewn about town or village, some woven into garlands, others left as
they were found. Maypoles were erected in villages, towns and cities.
These towering columns would be painted with colourful stripes and hung
about with ribbons and flowers. They became the focal point for local
festivities, for dancing, whether in a wheeling, handlocked circle or
weaving approaches and evasions. Morris dancing featured frequently, and
there might be pipers and harpers, drummers and Fools to fuel the
festivities with music and general jollity. Mummers plays were sometimes
staged, the performers disguised, which gave them a certain license to
mock the high and mighty. Parades were peopled by stock figures of
British folklore, religious devotion and popular legend: George and the
Dragon, regional saints, Jack-in-the-Greens, Giants and Devils.
‘Merry May’ explores this world of Spring carousing sonically, with
contemporary music and sound informed by specific age-old traditions.
The artists contributing to this compilation have each researched a
particular May ritual and, informed by their findings, conjured a piece
in response. As such, the cassette takes its listeners on an
audiological journey where, mounted upon clacking Hobby horses, they
will meet with May Birchers and Dewers, reel around Maypoles and parade
the streets in the company of the Earl of Rone and the Fool.
Now available to pre-order from
http://folkloretapes.co.uk