...but typically a replacement of lyrics of an already existing piece of music.* Like oh, say, replacing the lyrics in the Beatles' song Penny Lane with an ode to Middle-earth:
From my copy of The Tolkien Scrapbook, Page 144. Apparently a lot of people on Goodreads don't understand that The Tolkien Scrapbook's origins are long before Tolkien himself was ever taken seriously by academia, much less the Peter Jackson films. |
Filk appeared with the rise of the SF&F convention scene, and I suppose you could argue that the bastardization of the words "folk music" is where "filk" got it's name. My guess is that we're talking about, oh, the 1960s or so given the rise of folk music in the popular consciousness at the time.
Despite it's age, some people have issues wrapping their heads around filk; even if they are inclined to accept cosplay there tend to be raised eyebrows at filk songs and performers. My suspicion is that because cosplay is primarily a visual medium --and let's be honest, there are a lot of attractive cosplayers out there-- it's easier to accept cosplay than filk.
You get the idea. From BlizzardTerrak via Pinterest. |
Now, if you like your football/soccer, you're probably familiar with the replacement --or insertion-- of lyrics specific to your team, such as that found with such creative editing of Classical Music or Hymns, so the basic concept isn't completely unfamiliar to people. This isn't the adoption of an existing song as your club's theme song, such as Cincinnati Bengals' Welcome to the Jungle, Liverpool FC's You'll Never Walk Alone, or Crystal Palace's Glad all Over by The Dave Clark Five,
but something like a full version of this sort of thing, taking the melody from Land of Hope and Glory to tell Nottingham Forest (among others) to go piss off:
***
You're probably wondering where the hell this post came from, and I'll be honest this wasn't what I had in mind when I sat down to write on Tuesday. (That post will come later.) In this case, I pulled up YouTube to listen to something --I was originally thinking of something mellow to get through my morning workload, such as French Impressionistic pieces, but instead this old chestnut appeared on my feed:
And so I went down that rabbit hole for the next half hour, listening to piece after piece, because when you start YouTube just starts throwing everything vaguely similar at you.
A lot of those pieces are listed as "WoW Parody" or "[insert franchise here] Parody", which I guess filk could fall under,
but I also would argue that the term parody makes light of what is clearly a labor of love. It's fine for the music to be self-aware and not take itself seriously, but I typically think of a parody as something that can be easily dismissed when people want to discuss "real music". Sometimes, however, the "real music" gets overshadowed by the parody to the point where the parody is more well known than the original piece it was based on, such as Weird Al's I Lost on Jeopardy eclipsing The Greg Kihn Band's (Our Love's in) Jeopardy.
This isn't a plea for filk to be taken seriously --after all, it already has its own website at Bowling Green State University in northwest Ohio-- but more a celebration of the form. Or raising some visibility to it.
Locally we have a true community radio station, WAIF-FM 88.3 MHz. There are only a handful of community radio stations in the US these days where you can donate money, become a member, and actually get air time for your show/program. These are distinctly different than public radio stations, which are far more organized and tend to be affiliated with colleges/universities or other non-profit organizations. Community radio stations are just that; they take their mission very seriously, even if the programs themselves can skew very oddball at times. (I personally recommend listening to the Rockin' and Surfin' Show on Saturday nights; if you like your surf music, you'll love that show.)
From WAIF-FM. |
And when I said anybody could put on a program, I meant anybody. Back when I first started working in IT in the mid-late 90s, I knew a guy from work who had a radio show on WAIF that was strictly filk music. You might think that a once a week hour long show might run out of filk music to play after a short time, but he was able to come up with new filk pieces on a regular basis. I've no idea when he stopped producing the show as it's no longer on their lineup, but it's still a nice reminder that there have been people out there, raising filk music's visibility.
So have a couple of pieces of filk music for your day...
It wouldn't be Christmas without
HP Lovecraft, I suppose...
For those Honor Harrington fans...
And it wouldn't be a filk session
without a Star Trek song, by way
of Kermit the Frog...
*That's not to say that some people don't expand the definition of "filk" to cover new pieces of music based on SF&F topics. Or RPG topics. Or video game topics. I mean, there is the band Harry and the Potters, after all.
I always thought filk was just parody songs in general; I didn't realise it was tied to specific genres.
ReplyDeleteMy own first exposure to it was on a Star Trek message board about two decades ago, where one of the forum members was obsessed with writing filk lyrics and would post them all the time, seemingly not caring whether anyone else even read them or not, heh. It just seemed to be her way of passing the time on some evenings.
I loved what I would call the peak of WoW's filk area during Wrath. You bet when I happen to hear "The Way I Are" somewhere, all I really hear is still "Ulduar"...
I'm showing my age when I say that my first exposure to filk was checking out The Tolkien Scrapbook from the library in the early 80s, but I'd never heard filk sung until my college years, courtesy of the Doctor Demento Radio Show and Leonard Nimoy's The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins.
DeleteAlas, poor Timbaland. Ulduar was so well done that I'm the same way; I never hear The Way I Are but rather the filk version Ulduar. Sharm is still active, putting out a lot of videos, but NYHM and others have since gone silent. I think you're right in saying that Wrath was the high point of WoW filk, which I'm glad I was there for it, but it's a shame that it has withered away like so much of WoW's fan base.
Oh wow! I loved Ulduar and thought it was a one off, silly me. Never heard of filk before. I'm going to go search for more.
ReplyDeleteOh jeez, there's a lot out there. Ulduar, two versions of Alexstrasza (based on Alejandro by Lady Gaga), and Holding Out for a Healer for starters...
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