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Encyclopedia > Broadside ballad

A broadside is the side of a ship; the battery of cannon on one side of a warship; or their simultaneous (or near simultaneous) fire in naval warfare.


Printed lyrics of folk songs were extremely popular from the 16th century until the early 20th century. They were commonly known as broadsides or broadsheets. Over time, the name came to refer to any printed matter confined to one side of a single sheet of paper, such as handbills, advertisements, posters, etc.


Broadsides were generally printed on one side of a single sheet of paper, and included only the lyrics and a note designating the tune. Since folk tunes were used and reused, people generally only needed to learn the words. It was a common practice to paste the sheets to a wall, and consult them until the song was learned, after which they were torn down or pasted over with another broadside.


One of the first known broadsides was A Lytel Geste of Robyne Hood, printed in 1506. They became immensely popular through most of western Europe, England and the United States. After a brief burst of popularity in the late 19th century, broadsides fell into decline and were completely supplanted by other media in the early 20th century.


It is not uncommon in the 21st century, however, to find broadsides published at local cultural events, in particular poetry readings or art show openings. In this case the broadsides commemorate the event with samples of the art in question.


A broadside is a large sheet of paper, generally printed on one side and folded into a smaller size, often used as a direct-mail piece or for door-to-door distribution. Traditionally, printed works were printed on broadside sheets, then folded and cut to produce books of a smaller page size than the original sheet.


Historical Broadsides (http://fax.libs.uga.edu/bro/) from 1849-1989 --searchable DjVu format; requires free plugin or JAVA




  Results from FactBites:
 
Golden Age of Balladry (1121 words)
Broadside ballads of the 18th century were of the whiteletter type (roman type) and on single slips of paper about 16 inches long and 4.5 inches wide.
Ballads were sold by the poor going door to door, in cheapjack stalls by chapmen, from peddlers' satchels or in the streets and fairgrounds (known as: chaunters, ballad mongers or sellers, patterers).
Shows excellent examples of 127 ballads from the 18th century including the woodcuts at the top of the ballads and references to where the tunes can be found but the words to the songs have been typed eliminating characteristics such as random italics.
broadside - Search Results - MSN Encarta (125 words)
Broadside, in printing and publishing, a single, large sheet of paper bearing printed matter, usually in a solid block of type.
Seeger, Pete, born in 1919, American folk singer, instrumentalist, and songwriter, often called the father of the 1960s folk-music revival.
Somewhat artificially, scholars divide the English-language ballads into traditional ballads, broadside ballads, and native ballads of former British...
  More results at FactBites »


 

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