A ballad is a story in a song, usually a narrative song or poem. Any form of story may be told as a ballad, ranging from accounts of historical events to fairy tales in verse form. It is usually with foreshortened alternating four- and three-stress lines ('ballad meter') and simple repeating rhymes, and often with a refrain.
If it is based on political or religious themes, a ballad may then be a version of a hymn. Ballads should not be confused with the ballade, a 14th and 15th century French verse form.
Broadsheet ballads
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. Some of the collectors also wrote new ballads. Many ballads are referenced in scholarly works by their number in Child's compilation (see the Child Ballads). The American poet Carl Sandburg was influenced by ballads, and published a collection he had assembled as The American Songbag (1927).
The form of a ballad was much used in nineteenth century poetry. Wordsworth and Coleridge signalled the populist intent of their first major work, Lyrical Ballads. The vogue continued through such Victorian poets as Dante Gabriel Rossetti, who used the form for early work ("The Blessed Damozel") and toward the end of his career (1881 Ballads and Sonnets). Ballads have also been imitated in modern poetry— most notably by the Canadian ballads of Robert W. Service, in Kipling's "Road to Mandalay," and in "Casey at the Bat." "The Ballad of the Bread-man" is Charles Causley's re-telling of the story of the birth of Jesus. Many modern written musical ballads are in the repertory of American folk music.
Murder ballad
A specific subgenre of the broadsheet ballad is the
murder ballad. Usually told from the point of view of the killer, murder ballads typically recount the details of the crime — who the victim is, why the murderer decides to kill him or her, how he or she is lured to the murder site and the act itself — followed by the escape and/or capture of the murderer. Often the ballad ends with the murderer in jail or on their way to the gallows, occasionally with a plea for the listener to learn from the evils committed by the speaker.
Border ballads
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 ballads.
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, set to a literary ballad by
Goethe (see also
Der Zauberlehrling). 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 Fliegender 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
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 strophs usually alternate between iambic tetrameter and iambic pentameter, though this is not always the case.
Power ballad
See also
Power ballad. Not really a ballad at all but a love song performed using rock instruments.
Famous ballads
Ballad- A short narrative poem with stanzas of two or four lines and usually a refrain. The story of a ballad can originate from a wide range of subject matter but most frequently deals with folk-lore or popular legend
Epic- a long narrative poem celebrating the adventures and achievements of a hero...epics deal with the traditions, mythical or historical, of a nation.
Ode- An Ode is a poem praising and glorifying a person, place or thing.
Sonnet- A Sonnet is a poem consisting of 14 lines (iambic pentameter) with a particular rhyming scheme.
External links
See also
Ballads | Folk music | Musical forms | Poetic form | Song forms
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