Genre
folk
Top Folk Artists
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About Folk
Folk is the music of people. It lives in songs passed from singer to singer, often rooted in a place, a story, or a common craft. It values melody and memory as vessels for everyday life—work tunes, love songs, political anthems, and nature sketches that feel as if they could have been sung around any kitchen table, any village square, any coastal campfire.
Its origins run deep in multiple traditions. In the British Isles, centuries of ballads, dance tunes, and sea shanties formed a living repertory that was learned by ear rather than learned from sheet music. In North America, enslaved and enslaved-adjacent communities, immigrants, and later rural musicians contributed spirituals, work songs, and fiddle tunes. By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, scholars and collectors such as Francis James Child, Cecil Sharp, and Alan Lomax began to document these voices, turning living practice into a published archive. Folk, in this sense, is both a living tradition and a field of study.
The modern era of folk—often labeled the folk revival—began in the mid-20th century and reshaped the genre for new audiences. In the United States, artists like Pete Seeger, Woody Guthrie, and the young Bob Dylan helped translate traditional repertoire into a contemporary language, while Joan Baez amplified the social dimension of folk with lucid, pointed songs. In the United Kingdom, the revival drew on regional traditions and reimagined them through a cleaner, more guitar-centered sound; groups such as Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span, and Pentangle—along with solo pioneers like Ewan MacColl and Bert Jansch—pioneered a blend that later fell under the umbrella of folk-rock. Dylan’s famous Newport Folk Festival appearance in 1965—where he plugged in electric guitar—became a symbolic turning point, signaling that folk could evolve without losing its core spirit of storytelling.
Today, folk remains a broad and flexible umbrella. Its modern ambassadors span decades and styles: Woody Guthrie’s restless optimism, Bob Dylan’s keen-eyed storytelling, Joni Mitchell’s intricate tunings and lyrical courage, Leonard Cohen’s spare, hermetic poetry set to simple chords, Nick Drake’s fragile delicacy, Simon & Garfunkel’s precise harmonies, and the heartland clarity of Neil Young. In the British and European scenes, Sandy Denny’s evocative voice and Fairport Convention’s reimagined trad tunes helped seed contemporary folk-rock. In recent years, a new wave of artists—Joan Armatrading, Laura Marling, Marissa Nadler, Father John Misty, Fleet Foxes, Bon Iver, and many others—have carried the form into intimate indie and expansive, studio-rich arrangements. Folk’s reach now spans the Americas, Europe, and beyond, thriving in both traditional forms and crossovers.
Common threads bind folk across landscapes: acoustic emphasis, conversational or narrative lyrics, and a sense of community—whether in a singalong circle, a living-room concert, or a concert hall. Instruments vary from voice and guitar to fiddle, banjo, mandolin, bouzouki, harmonica, and beyond, often paired with subtle electric textures in contemporary variants. For enthusiasts, folk offers a wellspring of history, storytelling craft, and a continuously evolving soundworld—where the past remains a living, singing presence in the music of today.
Its origins run deep in multiple traditions. In the British Isles, centuries of ballads, dance tunes, and sea shanties formed a living repertory that was learned by ear rather than learned from sheet music. In North America, enslaved and enslaved-adjacent communities, immigrants, and later rural musicians contributed spirituals, work songs, and fiddle tunes. By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, scholars and collectors such as Francis James Child, Cecil Sharp, and Alan Lomax began to document these voices, turning living practice into a published archive. Folk, in this sense, is both a living tradition and a field of study.
The modern era of folk—often labeled the folk revival—began in the mid-20th century and reshaped the genre for new audiences. In the United States, artists like Pete Seeger, Woody Guthrie, and the young Bob Dylan helped translate traditional repertoire into a contemporary language, while Joan Baez amplified the social dimension of folk with lucid, pointed songs. In the United Kingdom, the revival drew on regional traditions and reimagined them through a cleaner, more guitar-centered sound; groups such as Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span, and Pentangle—along with solo pioneers like Ewan MacColl and Bert Jansch—pioneered a blend that later fell under the umbrella of folk-rock. Dylan’s famous Newport Folk Festival appearance in 1965—where he plugged in electric guitar—became a symbolic turning point, signaling that folk could evolve without losing its core spirit of storytelling.
Today, folk remains a broad and flexible umbrella. Its modern ambassadors span decades and styles: Woody Guthrie’s restless optimism, Bob Dylan’s keen-eyed storytelling, Joni Mitchell’s intricate tunings and lyrical courage, Leonard Cohen’s spare, hermetic poetry set to simple chords, Nick Drake’s fragile delicacy, Simon & Garfunkel’s precise harmonies, and the heartland clarity of Neil Young. In the British and European scenes, Sandy Denny’s evocative voice and Fairport Convention’s reimagined trad tunes helped seed contemporary folk-rock. In recent years, a new wave of artists—Joan Armatrading, Laura Marling, Marissa Nadler, Father John Misty, Fleet Foxes, Bon Iver, and many others—have carried the form into intimate indie and expansive, studio-rich arrangements. Folk’s reach now spans the Americas, Europe, and beyond, thriving in both traditional forms and crossovers.
Common threads bind folk across landscapes: acoustic emphasis, conversational or narrative lyrics, and a sense of community—whether in a singalong circle, a living-room concert, or a concert hall. Instruments vary from voice and guitar to fiddle, banjo, mandolin, bouzouki, harmonica, and beyond, often paired with subtle electric textures in contemporary variants. For enthusiasts, folk offers a wellspring of history, storytelling craft, and a continuously evolving soundworld—where the past remains a living, singing presence in the music of today.