At the present, I am a PhD candidate in ethnomusicology at Royal Holloway,
University of London, while also working as a freelance musician and music
educator. Below is a selection of my qualifications, education, publications
and work experience.
For a full CV please contact me via the contact form to
the left of the page.
Work
Since 2011 I have been a returning tutor for the English Folk Dance and Song
Society, especially their youth folk music project, Get
Your Folk On!. I am also teaching the folk music ensemble at the Centre for
Young Musicians in Lambeth together with Laura Hewison, and have
been involved in various other shorter projects with both EFDSS and CYM. I
have also taught general instrument skills to beginners as well as more
experienced students. Before my beginning my doctoral studies at Royal Holloway
I also taught clarinet for Newham Council's Every Child a Musician project, as
well as teaching private students on melodeon and clarinet. Before moving to
London in 2009, I regularly taught music in both primary schools and music
services. During 2015 I have been a visiting lecturer and teaching assistant at
the Royal Holloway department teaching parts of the Introduction to World Music
course. At the moment I am also working with the Trad Academy to do a number workshops focusing
on Scandinavian music.
As a musician I have been performing at folk festivals in Sweden both as a
dance musician and on stage. I have also performed at weddings, funerals, and
other ceremonies and events. Since moving to London I have primarily been
teaching, but also performed at open-stage events at various folk clubs. I have
played as a supporting act to Brass Monkey at the Goose is Out folk club in
Nunhead, and played Swedish music at various events. Until 2009 I regularly
played with the Swedish-Vietnamese group [Ojzaioj] performing in both Vietnam
and Sweden.
Education
I hold a Swedish Teachers Degree in Music (Master of Education) from the
Malmö Academy of Music, University of Lund (2009), as well as a Master's degree
in Ethnomusicology from Goldsmiths, University of London (2010). Prior to my
university studies I did a one-year long course in traditional singing at the
Malung Folk High School (2002). In addition to full-length degrees, I have also
studied, contemporary philosophy (Södertörn University, 2012) and Medieval
History (University of Gävle, 2006). Since 2012 I am a PhD candidate at Royal
Holloway, University of London.
Publications
2008, “Tunes from
Enånger, Njutånger and Nianfors”. (Self published, copies and PDF's can
be bought from me)
2010, “Thang Long Ca tru Club -
New Ways for Old Music”. (Peer-reviewed article in the “Finnish Journal for
Music Education”, vol.13, nr 1, 2010.)
2012, “A meeting in Ninh Binh:
reflections on Buber and the ethnographic meeting point”. (Book
chapter in ‘If
I were a Drongo bird: Reflections on yearning, imagination and creativity - a
tribute to Håkan Lundström’ (Lund University Press; Berry, ed.))
2015(tbc), “Ca trù: the Revival and
Repositioning of a Vietnamese Music Tradition”. (Peer-reviewed chapter in
the edited volume ‘Sustainable Futures for Music Cultures: an Ecological
Perspective’ (Oxford University Press, Schippers & Grant, eds.),
co-authored with Prof. Hakan Lundstrom.)
Awards
In 2005 I was awarded the title Riksspelman [National folk musician] for my
performance of traditional music from the province of Hälsingland.
Swedish and Scandinavian music in London and beyond by clarinettist and melodeon player Esbjörn Wettermark.
Friday, 23 October 2015
Thursday, 15 October 2015
A melodeon polska
I learnt this tune many years ago, but it suddenly popped up again when I was sitting at home playing some tunes a few days ago. Its a sweet little polska from the fiddler Per Westberg's (1886-1975) handwritten music manuscripts. Per's son Arvid Westberg (1918-2013) let me copy his father's tune collection and I often used to play pieces from Per's repertoire when I when went to Arvid's house. If I remember correctly this particular tune, which can be found in many version around Sweden, was dated 1911. When I was little we used to sing one version in school while dancing around the Christmas tree; "Morsgrisar är vi allihopa, allihopa, allihopa...."
Swedish folk music lecture at Royal Holloway
At the moment I am preparing a lecture on
Swedish folk music revival, tradition and heritage, for the undergraduate
course in World Music at Royal Holloway, University of London.
The idea is that throughout the course the
students should meet different musics around the world, beyond the genres and
styles which they may already be familiar with, in addition to getting an
understanding of key concepts in ethnomusicology and music research.
It will be interesting to see how the
students react to the various takes on three-beat rhythm in Scandinavian dance music, but
also I hope to get them to critically engage with ambivalent concepts such as
tradition and heritage in relation to music.
I am planning to use my own work as a
musician as the subject for the lecture to, in a way, give a face to the real
musicians who often hides behind ethnographic descriptions in journals and
books. As such it will be a kind of
autoethnographic account on Swedish traditional music; which I think will be
interesting for me as well as the students.
The main reading will be an article by Owe
Ronström on Swedish fiddle music, tradition and heritage, and the additional reading
is David Kaminsky’s article on dancing, gender and eroticism. It is difficult to find English language academic
writings on Swedish traditional music, but I think Ronström’s and Kaminsky’s
very different texts will provide some interesting discussion in the seminars
after the lecture. In general I find it easier to engage groups if they get to
do something else in addition to listing so there will definitely be some student
participation in the lecture, maybe singing or dancing, and some live music on
clarinet and melodeon from me.
Sunday, 11 October 2015
Friday, 9 October 2015
Being Laurel
Last Monday (5th of October), I taught Laurel Swift's Monday music session in West Ealing, as she was away for the week. Over a couple of hours we played through some of the group's tunes and I taught them a great if somewhat quirky polska from the repertoire of the Delsbo fiddler Erik Ljung. It was a lovely group of musicians and a lot of fun! This is the tune I taught, 'Persapojkarna' (filmed by Mary Doody).
A Swedish Folk Musician in London
I am a clarinettist and melodeon player based in
Southeast London. Swedish and Scandinavian music has been my main interest for
many years, and I have a large repertoire of dance and ceremonial music and
herding tunes.
An important aspect of my
musicianship has been to research and learn music from my home province Hälsingland, in Northern Sweden.
Especially, I spent many years interviewing and talking to older singers and
musicians in the area. Most influential for my own music making have been and
still is the blacksmith and singer Arvid Westberg (b.1918 - d.2013), and
fiddlers Vänster-Olle Olsson (b.1924 - d.2015) and Bertil Westling (b. 1927). I
also spent many hours trawling through archives, recordings, manuscripts, and
drank countless cups of coffee in various kitchens talking to people about
their and others music. I have written about some of this work in another blog
(in Swedish), Hälsingelåtar
for which I received the Hudiksvall local council’s culture award in 2011. I
have also produced a tune book with a selection of pieces from Hälsingland
(contact me to buy a copy).
I was awarded the title Riksspelman, 'National Folk Musician',
in 2005. In addition to my focus on music in Hälsingland, I particularly enjoy
playing tunes from Älvdalen and Särna in Dalarna, and Värmland towards the
border to Norway.
Although I had
played the clarinet in the local music service since I was 10 years old, it was
not until my late teens that I came into contact with traditional music.
Influenced by a friend I went to Malung Folkhögskola (2001) to do a
year-long course in folk singing with Maria Röjås and Anders Larsson, which in turn
became a door into the Swedish folk scene and led me on to study traditional
music and music education at the Malmö Academy of Music in Southern Sweden
(2003-2009). At the academy I studied clarinet with Dan Gisen Malmqvist,
one-row melodeon with Mats Eden, and took further lessons with fiddler Tuva
Härdelin.
During a break in my
studies (2006-2007) I moved back to Hälsingland to spend more time playing with
Olle, Bertil and Arvid. I also played with Bollnäsbygdens Spelmanslag and worked
as an archive assistant in a local folk music archive.
When I finished my
studies at the Academy of Music in 2009 I had been involved in an exchange
project with the Hanoi Academy of music in Vietnam for several years and developed
a more serious interest in ethnomusicology. Influenced by Vietnamese music
expert Barley Norton, I moved to London to do an ethnomusicology master with
him at Goldsmiths, University of London. At the moment I am finishing a PhD
thesis on music and sentiment in Vietnamese traditional opera, at another
University of London college, Royal Holloway.
Parallel to my
research in Vietnam, I have continued to teach and perform both Swedish and
increasingly English traditional music. In London I have worked with the English Folk
Dance and Song Society, the Centre for Young Musicians, and the Trad Academy. I am a musician for the
Blackheath
Morris Men, and also perform as a solo musician on clarinet and melodeon,
and when possible with my Swedish band, Syndens Kapell (see video), or in
other constellations.
I am always on the look
out for gigs or teaching opportunities, so feel free to contact me if you are
in need of some Swedish or Scandinavian music!
Ethnomusicology – Ca trù – Vietnam
Photo by Esbjorn Wettermark |
In 2010 I wrote an article in the Finnish Journal of Music Education about the Thang Long Ca tru Club, a traditional music group in Hanoi, Vietnam. This was my first academic publication and the result of several years engagement with the clubs founder Pham Thi Hue, who I first met in 2003. The article (in English) deals with the Hue's and her groups attempts to revive, learn and teach ca trù, a style of traditional chamber music which has been on the verge of disappearing. The issue which contains the article can be found here.
Ca trù and the Thang Long Club also became the subject of my 2010 Master's thesis in ethnomusicology at Goldsmiths, University of London, entitled 'Shifting Mindscapes in the Vietnamese Historical Consciousness and its Impact on Music Revivalism: Ca trù and the Thang Long Ca trù Club'.
Since then I have done further research on the ca trù revival and sustainability within the international research project 'Sustainable Futures for Music Cultures: towards an ecology of musical diversity'. The results from the project is to be published in a edited volume, 'Sustainable Futures for Music Cultures: An Ecological Perspective' (Schippers & Grant) and will include a chapter based on my fieldwork in Vietnam between 2009-2015, 'Ca trù: the Revival and Repositioning of a Vietnamese Music Tradition' (co-written with Håkan Lundström).
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)