Emeritus Professor
- About
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- Email Address
- ianrussell@abdn.ac.uk
- School/Department
- School of Language, Literature, Music and Visual Culture
Biography
Ian Russell took up the Directorship of the Elphinstone Institute at the University of Aberdeen on 1 September 1999 and was awarded a Personal Chair in 2011. His doctorate (1977) was based on the singing traditions of West Sheffield. In 2014 he relinquished the directorship, retired and was granted Emeritus status.
During the past forty-seven years, he has conducted extensive fieldwork in South Yorkshire and North Derbyshire and has researched, broadcast, made films, lectured and written on folksong, traditional drama, folk dance, crafts and traditional humour at home, in Europe and the USA.
He was the editor of the Folk Music Journal from 1980 to 1993 and was awarded the Harold Coote Lake Research Medal by the Folklore Society in 1986 in recognition of this work. Since 1994 he has directed the highly successful biennial Festivals of Village Carols at Sheffield.
In July 1998, he convened the international conference at the University of Sheffield to celebrate the centenary of the founding of the Folk Song Society, opened by the Rt Hon David Blunkett. He has written the entry 'Traditional Music: England' for the 2001 edition of New Grove and produced a CD of his field recordings for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC, which has been published under the title English Village Carols.
In 1998, he was awarded the English Folk Dance and Song Society's Gold Badge, the Society's highest honour. His carol research, which includes over a thousand hours of field recordings and hundreds of manuscripts, is currently being organized into a major archive called Village Carols. Copies of the recordings have been placed in the British Library Sound Archive. There are currently eighteen Village Carols publications including books, CDs and five carol collections.
His fieldwork in North-East Scotland includes sacred singing, free-reed instrumentalists, singers, and monologue performers. He has been researching the flute bands that lead the Annual Walks in the coastal communities of the 'Knuckle'; the 'soirées' and 'Sankey nights' for sacred singing, and the concert parties that perform in rural contexts. Research in Boddam and Peterhead has been undertaken into the craft tradition of making and sailing 'boaties'. These are models of the 'fifie' fishing boats that hunted the shoals of herring in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Through the Institute he has directed and organized (with others), the annual Traditional Singing Weekends at Cullerlie, the North Atlantic Fiddle Conventions (2001, 2006, and 2010), the annual Traditional Storytelling Weekends at Woodend Barn, Banchory, and the Free Reed Convention: 'Button Boxes and Moothies' (2003, 2007, 2011, 2015). He has convened conferences for the British Forum for Ethnomusicology in Aberdeen (2004 and 2008), and for the European Seminar in Ethnomusicology (2011).
He is the President of the North Atlantic Fiddle Convention, Convener of the Aberdeen and North East Branch of the Saltire Society, a member of the editorial board of Folk Music Journal, a member of the executive committees of the Folklore Society and the European Seminar in Ethnomusicology, a board member of Scottish Culture and Traditions Association (Aberdeen), the Traditional Music Forum (Scotland), and H-Net Network on Folklore: Humanities and Social Sciences Online, as well as a member of several other professional societies and special interest groups.
- Publications
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‘Sacred and Secular: Identity, Style, and Performance in Two Singing Traditions from the Pennines’
The World of Music, vol. 46, no. 1, pp. 11-40Contributions to Journals: ArticlesThe Singer’s the Thing: The Individual and Group Identity in a Pennine Singing Tradition
Folk Music Journal, vol. 8, no. 3, pp. 266-281Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] http://www.jstor.org/stable/4522687
Flute Bands and their Annual Walks in North-East Scotland: Music, Tradition, and Community
Review of Scottish Culture, vol. 15, pp. 99-111Contributions to Journals: Articles