New England Folk Festival
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The New England Folk Festival is an annual weekend festival of traditional dance and music which takes place in the Boston, Massachusetts region each spring. It is conducted by the New England Folk Festival Association. Both the festival and the association are colloquially known by the abbreviation NEFFA. NEFFA is a participatory festival; attendees are encouraged to participate in dancing, singing, musical jam sessions, and other activities. It is run by volunteers and all the performers are volunteers as well.
The festival and the association has introduced thousands of New England and Massachusetts residents to the varied communities of traditional social and folk dance and folk music for more than 60 years, especially celebrating the living traditions of folk music and dance traditional to New England. Numerous New England folk dance callers, leaders and musicians have had formative experiences at the festival, and in turn have inspired and influenced thousands more through their performances, workshops, and enthusiastic participation. The festival has been influential in sustaining and reviving numerous folk dance traditions in New England.
As a social dance festival, it is a community experience, the largest in New England of its kind, with about 5,000 combined admissions in the festival's four session periods. It is the inspiration for other similar traditional dance and music festivals throughout the United States and North America. For contra dance and folk dance leaders from New England and the United States, the festival has been an annual opportunity to perform, share experiences, insights, and further living traditions. The association also conducts weekly and monthly contra dance series near Boston, Massachusetts.
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[edit] History
The idea for NEFFA came about in the summer of 1944, in a discussion over coffee after a square dance at the Boston, Massachusetts YWCA. The participants were Grace Palmer, director of the YWCA; Mary Gillette, head of the YWCA's physical education program; and Ralph Page, the popular New Hampshire caller who presided at the square dances. The series had been running for little more than a year, but was already drawing over two hundred people every week, most of them college students. As Ralph Page later recalled the conversation, they were discussing a recent attempt at a "New England Folk Festival" at the Boston Garden which had left them unimpressed: "Mary said: 'Why don't we have a real folk festival?' and so the idea was born". Mary Gillette envisioned a festival where New England's many ethnic groups could share their song, dances, and crafts and present them to a wider audience, in a simple, honest, straightforward manner. [1]
Grace Palmer offered the facilities of the Boston YWCA. Philip Sharples, who in 1940 had founded the Belmont Country Dance Group (one of the first square and contra dance series in the Boston area), joined with Mary Gillette and Ralph Page in calling local leaders to meet and talk it over. Many recreation agencies and ethnic groups sent representatives. From the start, the Festival Committee agreed to maintain an atmosphere of non-commercialism and high standards of performance and authenticity. The first festival took place on 28 October-29 October 1944 and attracted 200 attendees, mainly to watch performances of local ethnic dance performing groups. [1]
The festival continued at the Boston YWCA five more times. From 1951 onward, it was held in a variety of town and cities near Boston, also visiting Worcester MA several times, and once each Exeter NH, Manchester NH, North Kingston RI, Brockton MA and Lowell MA. It was held in Natick MA High School for the four years ending in 1970, then returned to Natick in 1974 where it has been held annually through 2006. (The plan for 2007 is to hold the festival in Mansfield MA High and Middle Schools.) Over the course of 60-plus years, the festival has grown to a three-day affair, with about 5,000 admissions.
[edit] The festival program and performers
In recents years, participatory dancing occurs simultaneously in three halls, most prominently contra dance, international folk dance, and English country dance, in addition to other genres of dance. A variety of concerts, discussions and other more intimate performances take place in numerous class room spaces. Family-oriented events occur during daylight hours on Saturday and Sunday. A courtyard outside is devoted to Morris dancing, Rapper Sword and Longsword dancing. Sunday afternnoons typically schedule dance and music demonstrations of a variety of ethnic dances, by local and distant dance groups, in the main hall. The hundreds of volunteer musicians, singers, dance callers, leaders and dance-demonstration performers are primarily from New England and every year a number arrive from more distant parts of North America. The performers apply in the fall, and the program is announced in the spring.
[edit] The NEFFA association
In additional to the annual spring fesival, NEFFA conducts the weekly Thursday Night Contra dance, formerly in Cambridge and as of 2006, held at the Concord Scout House.[2] The dance is nationally known in the contra dance community for its vibrancy and popularity.[3] NEFFA also conducts a separate annual winter festival called the Ralph Page Dance Legacy Weekend, in honor of one of the organization's founders, and to promote understandng of the history and development of traditional Anglo-American dance forms in New England, especially contra dance and square dance. NEFFA has also published influential books about traditional dance and choreography. NEFFA is an affiliate of the Country Dance and Song Society.
[edit] See also
- Social dance
- Contra dance
- Folk dance
- International folk dance
- Folk Music
- Shape note songs
- Zwiefacher
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b NEFFA History New England Folk Festival Association; Tony Parkes, editor. (Edited from writings of Ralph Page and Louise Winston, from the journal Northern Junket, Published by Ralph Page, and available online at the University of New Hamphsire, Special Collections Library: New Hampshire Library of Traditional Music & Dance. Also edited from annually published program books and a 10th Anniversary publication)
- ^ Arpine Babloyan. Contra dance interrupted The Alewife. January 6, 2006. Retrieved January 12, 2007.
- ^ Owen Kelley. Edited by Lisa Miotto. Review of: How the Friday Night Dance Came to Glen Echo Park See footnote 2 and 3 of this review, referring to large dances in the United States. The Friday Night Dancers. (Washington D.C.) 2002. Retrieved January 7, 2007.
[edit] External links
- Official web site: The New England Folk Festival Association
- The Ralph Page Collection. (Brief biography of NEFFA co-founder and influential caller Ralph Page.) University of New Hampshire Library Special Collections: New Hampshire Library of Traditional Music & Dance.