BALLAD


Illustration by Arthur Rackham of the ballad ''The Twa Corbies''

A 'ballad' is a narrative poem, usually set to music; thus, it often is a story told in a song. Any story form may be told as a ballad, such as historical accounts or fairy tales in verse form. It usually has foreshortened, alternating four stress lines ("ballad meter") and simple repeating rhymes, often with a refrain.
If it is based on a political or religious theme, a ballad may be a hymn. It should not be confused with the ballade, a 14th and 15th century French verse form.

Contents
Traditional Poetic Form
Broadsheet ballads
Border ballads
Literary ballads
Ballad opera
Popular song
Famous ballads
Traditional
Modern
Traditional definition
Popular definition
See also
External links

Traditional Poetic Form


Stamp illustrating the Faroese ballad "The Ballad of the Harp"

# Normally a short narrative arranged into four line stanzas with a memorable meter.
# Typical ballad meter is a first and third line with four stresses (iambic tetrameter) and then a second and fourth line with three stresses (iambic trimeter).
# The rhyme scheme is typically abab or abcb.
# Often uses colloquialisms to enhance the story telling (and sometimes to alter the rhyme scheme).
# A Ballad is usually meant to be sung or recited in musical form.
# Contains iambic pentameter.

Broadsheet ballads


Main articles: Broadside (music)

Broadsheet ballads (also known as ''broadside ballads'') were cheaply printed and hawked in English streets from the sixteenth century. They were often topical, humorous, and even subversive; the legends of Robin Hood and the pranks of Puck were disseminated through broadsheet ballads.
New ballads were written about current events like fires, the birth of monstrous animals, and so forth, giving particulars of names and places. Satirical ballads and Royalist ballads contributed to 17th century political discourse. In a sense, these ballads were antecedents of the modern newspaper.
Thomas Percy, Robert Harley, Francis James Child, Sir Walter Scott and James Hogg were early collectors and publishers of ballads from the oral tradition, broadsheets and previous anthologies. Percy's publication of ''Reliques of Ancient Poetry'' and Harley's collections, such as ''The Bagford Ballads'', were of great import in beginning the study of ballads.

Border ballads


Main articles: Border ballad

Border ballads are a subgenre of folk ballads collected in the area along the Anglo-Scottish border, especially those concerned with border reivers and outlaws, or with historical events in the Borders.
Notable historical ballads include "The Battle of Otterburn" and
"The Hunting of Cheviot" or "The Ballad of Chevy Chase".
Outlaw ballads include "Johnnie Armstrong", "Kinmont Willie", and "Jock o' the Side".
Other types of ballads (including fairy ballads like "Thomas the Rhymer") are often included in the category of border ballad.

Literary ballads


Literary ballads are those composed and written formally. The form, with its connotations of simple folkloric authenticity, became popular with the rise of Romanticism in the later 18th century. Literary ballads may then be set to music, as Schubert's ''Der Erlkönig'' and The Hostage, set to a literary ballads by Goethe (see also ''Der Zauberlehrling'') and Schiller. In Romantic opera a ballad set into the musical texture may emphasize or play against the theatrical moment. Atmospheric ballads in operas were initiated in Weber's ''Der Freischütz'' and include Senta's ballad in Wagner's ''Der fliegende Holländer'', or the 'old song' 'Salce' Desdemona sings in Verdi's ''Otello''. Compare the stanza-like structure and narrative atmosphere of the musical Ballades for solo piano of Chopin or Brahms.

Ballad opera


Main articles: Ballad opera

A particularly English form, the ballad opera, has as its most famous example John Gay's ''The Beggar's Opera,'' which inspired the 20th-century cabaret operas of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill (''q.v.''). Ballad strophes usually alternate between iambic tetrameter and iambic pentameter, though this is not always the case.

Popular song


Main articles: Ballad (music)

In the 20th Century, "ballad" took on the meaning of a popular song "especially of a romantic or sentimental nature" (''American Heritage Dictionary''). Casting directors often divide songs into two categories: "ballads" (slower or sentimental songs) and "up" tunes (faster or happier songs). A power ballad is a love song performed using rock instruments.

Famous ballads


Traditional

Illustration by Arthur Rackham to ''Young Bekie''.


Akilattirattu Ammanai

The Ballad of Sal Villanueva

Ballad of Jesse James

Ballad of Chevy Chase

Ballad of Keawaiki

The Ballad of Reading Gaol

Barbara Allen (song)

The Battle of New Orleans

The Battle of Harlaw

The Battle of Otterburn

The Colour of his Hair

The Cruel Brother

Golden Vanity

The Great Silkie of Sule Skerry

Greensleeves

Henry Martin

The Hostage

John Barleycorn

Johnny Has Gone For A Soldier

La Belle Dame Sans Merci

Lady Isabel and the Elf Knight

Lochinvar

Edward

Lord Randall

Lord Willoughby

Lovely Joan

Lyke-Wake Dirge

Man From Snowy River, The

Mary Hamilton

Mary Tamlin

The Mines of Avondale

Molly and Tenbrooks (aka "The Racehorse Song")

Oh Shenandoah

★ Many ballads of Robin Hood

Scarborough Fair

Sir Patrick Spens

Tam Lin

The Three Ravens

Thomas the Rhymer

The Gypsie Laddie

Verner Raven - oldest Scandinavian ballad with music

Me and You

Vadakkan Pattukal
Modern

Traditional definition

Some of these also qualify under the pop definition.

Hey Jude

Ballad of the Alamo

The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins

The Ballad of Curtis Lowe

Ballad of Davy Crockett

The Ballad of Gilligan's Isle

Ballad of a Thin Man

Uneasy Rider

The Ballad Of Gerda And Tore

The Ballad of John and Yoko

The Ballad of Optimus Prime

The Ballad of The Sneak

Ballad of the Green Berets

The Devil Went Down to Georgia

Beautiful

Frankie and Johnny

Frankie Silver

Hotel California

Hurricane

I Don't Want to Miss a Thing

I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night

Me And Bobby McGee

Ode to Billie Joe

On Top of Spaghetti

Trapped in the Closet

Space Oddity

She's Leaving Home

A Day in the Life

Carry On Wayward Son

Ballad of the Green Berets

Tsunami

November Rain

Wonderwall (song)

The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald

Spread Your Wings

Tom's Diner

Still Loving You
Popular definition

Thousands of songs could be listed here. The few following may represent the variety.

American Pie

Candle in the Wind and Candle in the Wind 1997

Going to California

Goodbye to Romance

Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)

Smoke Gets in Your Eyes

Stardust

100 Years

See also



List of folk song collections

Francis James Child

Graves, Alfred Perceval

External links



Sample ballads

The Bodleian Library Ballad Collection: view facsimiles of printed ballads

The Traditional Ballad Index

Murder Ballads

English and some German ballads

Folk Music, Child Ballads, Popular Songs In American History, Sea Shanties etc.

Smithsonian Global Sound: The Music of Poetry - audio samples of poems, hymns and songs in ballad meter.

Velle Espeland, ...all for his maiden fair: The Scandinavian ballads

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