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Encyclopedia > Filk

Filk is a form of music created from within fandom, and performed generally late at night at science fiction conventions.


Originally "filk music" was a typo for folk music in a never-published essay on the influence of Science Fiction and Fantasy on folk music. Its first known deliberate use was by Karen Kruse Anderson in Die Zeitschrift für Vollstandigen Unsinn (The Journal for Utter Nonsense) #774 (June 1953), for a song written by the well known science fiction author Poul Anderson.


Fandom being what it was (and is), the term was adopted for the songs, and musical parodies enjoyed by SF conventioneers. Practitioners are known as filkers.


The phrase 'science fiction themed parody folk music' fails to capture the full range of filk music, not least because it stretches all the way from writing "funny" (or very deep) words to established or original melodies, through writing new (and witty) words to a tune another filker has created, to all-out Filk Opera - Gilbert and Sullivan have been filked a few times, as has Cats.


However, the word "filk" has also been applied to music with an original score written about a science fiction or fantasy theme.


Filk can even tell an original story such as the "Before the Dawn" song cycle.


Filk is still sung in late night filk circles at Science Fiction conventions but there are also dedicated Filk conventions each year in the US, Canada, UK and Germany. One of these conventions, the Ohio Valley Filk Fest (OVFF), presents the Pegasus Award annually for excellence in filk.


A broad, inclusive definition, lists filk as "A form of music not identified by its harmonic, rhythmic, rhyming, cultural, or similarly traditional determining qualities. It defies classification by regional origin or harmonic, melodic, or rhythmic traits; it is -rather- a form of music based upon its lyrical content. Regardless of musical style, filk songs are those that are about or inspired by science fiction, fantasy, horror, science, and/or subjects of interest to fans of speculative fiction." Given the last clause in this definition, a filk song can be about anything.


External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Filk music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1779 words)
Filk is a musical culture, genre, and community tied to science fiction/fantasy fandom, active since the early 1950s if concentrated primarily since the mid-1970s.
One definition focuses on filk as a genre: filk is folk music, usually with a science fiction or fantasy theme.
Whichever definition one chooses, filk is a form of music created from within science fiction and fantasy fandom, often performed late at night at science fiction conventions, though there are now dedicated filk conventions in Canada, England, Germany, and the USA.
About Filk (404 words)
Then again, some of filk's most prominent and best-loved performers are professionals who make their livings singing in bars and at weddings and recording CDs -- and using the same material in all those venues.
It is not a coincidence that "filk" is a derivation of "folk".
Filk circles at cons have a good deal in common with the "hootenannies" and college-campus coffeehouses of that time and place, and writers of filk lyrics (myself included) have borrowed tunes from many songs written or popularized in those years.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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