The story was based on an old ballad.
Cash sings “The Legend of John Henry’s Hammer” and “The Ballad of Casey Jones.”
“The Ballad of Josh Barton” suggests a close study of some early acoustic Neil Young.
Canadian Céline Dion’s power ballad “My Heart Will Go On”, the theme song to James Cameron’s hit film Titanic, has been bought more than 20 million times.
The ballad habit thus is unquestionably very ancient.
The ballad opera can be seen as a precursor to the light opera of W.S.
The term ballad is also applied to any narrative composition suitable for singing.
“ ‘The Ballad’ was a brilliant solution for someone who shoots like her,” Heiferman said.
A ballad opera in three acts by John Gay, The Beggar’s Opera was first produced in London in 1728.
The ballad also plays a critical role in the creation and maintenance of distinct national cultures.
His masterpiece is undoubtedly “A Ballad Upon a Wedding,” in the style and metre of the contemporary street ballad.
Other composers adapting or writing music for ballad operas included Thomas Arne, Charles Dibdin, Stephen Storace, and, in the 19th century, Sir Henry Bishop.
., also called hymnal stanza, a metre used in English ballads that is equivalent to ballad metre, though ballad metre is often less regular and more conversational than common metre.
After the publication of Thomas Percy’s ballad compilation Reliques of Ancient English Poetry in 1765, ballad imitation enjoyed a considerable vogue, which properly belongs in the history of poetry rather than balladry.
At the time, I wasn't all that familiar with the history of the ballad form, but very soon was excavating Americana's buried gold, devouring everything folk archivist and ballad anthologiser Harry Smith had ever assembled.
Border ballad, type of spirited heroic ballad celebrating the raids, feuds, seductions, and elopements on the border between England and Scotland in the 15th and 16th centuries, where neither English nor Scottish law prevailed.
Don Quixote was firmly persuaded that this was the Marquis of Mantua, his uncle, so the only answer he made was to go on with his ballad, in which he told the tale of his misfortune, and of the loves of the Emperor’s son and his wife all exactly as the ballad sings it.
The traditional folk ballad, sometimes called the Child ballad in deference to Francis Child, the scholar who compiled the definitive English collection, is the standard kind of folk ballad in English and is the type of balladry that this section is mainly concerned with.
A ballad is not technically a ballad unless it is sung; but though tunes and texts are dynamically interdependent, it is not unusual to find the same version of a ballad being sung to a variety of tunes of suitable rhythm and metre or to find the same tune being used for several different ballads.
Among the most notable of the former are an Ossianic ballad describing the fate of Finn’s enemy, Orree; the Manx Traditionary Ballad, a history of the island to the year 1507 made up of a mixture of fact and fiction; and the ballad on the death of Brown William; i.e., William Christian, shot as a traitor in 1663.
ballad
noun communication
- a narrative song with a recurrent refrain
noun communication
- a narrative poem of popular origin
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Among the most notable of the former are an Ossianic ballad describing the fate of Finns enemy Orree the Manx Traditionary Ballad a history of the island to the year 1507 made up of a mixture of fact and fiction and the ballad on the death of Brown William ie William Christian shot as a traitor in 1663