Showing posts with label ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ireland. Show all posts
Friday, March 1, 2013
Margaret Barry - I Sang Through the Fairs (1953, 1998)
Life has been drastically changing in Ireland. Over the past two centuries, a land once stricken with famine and poverty had eventually turned into a center of technological achievement. This sort of revolution signaled the end of the traditional ways of life in rural, and as well as urban areas of Ireland. One such example is the diminishing number of a race of people in Ireland known as "tinkers", otherwise known as "gypsies" or "travelling people". These nomadic people would wander through Ireland in horse-drawn caravans, finding work by mending pots and pans, trading, various odd jobs that could help them survive get on their way. As modernization occurred these bands of tinkers would be split up by law enforcement and/or taken in for vagrancy. Their lines of work could not compare to the new industrious world they were living in; factories took over everything they were able to do. Before the end of the 20th century, the race of the tinker had died out.
Labels:
banjo,
celtic,
fiddle,
folk,
ireland,
irish,
margaret barry,
music,
traditional
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