Posts Tagged ‘John Perrault’

John Perrault to Perform in Portsmouth on October 4

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

Press Release

JEFFERSON’S DREAM at Discover Portsmouth Center

Sunday, 4 October at 2 p.m. – Portsmouth Historical Society presents JEFFERSON’S DREAM, a concert and reading presented by former Portsmouth Poet Laureate, John Perrault.

Based on Perrault’s new book, Jefferson’s Dream, and CD of the same title, just published by Hobblebush Books, the program focuses on eight great Americans—both women and men—who carried the values of the Declaration forward into our lives. Through the medium of ballads, John traces Jefferson’s vision as it dramatically broadens with Lincoln’s reading, and gives impetus to abolitionism and women’s rights. He will be joined by popular Seacoast musicians, Barbara London and Mike Rogers.

John Perrault

John Perrault in 2009. Photo by James Cummings

The program is part of the Sunday Salon Series at the Portsmouth Historical Society’s Discover Portsmouth Center. The DPC is located at the corner of Middle and Islington Street in downtown Portsmouth, NH. Tickets are $10 ($7 for PHS Members) and may be purchased at the door.

For information contact the Portsmouth Historical Society:
info@portsmouthhistory.org
603-436-8420.

For those who live outside of New Hampshire, especially if you teach history, you may be interested in John’s book, as offered on amazon:

This notice is brought to you as a public service announcement by Quilter’s Muse Publications.

John Perrault Presents Musical Ballad Program at Belmont (NH) Historical Society

Friday, September 18th, 2009

John Perrault

photo of John Perrault by James Cummings, Quilter’s Muse Publications

What a treat it was to hear the many old ballads that John Perrault sang tonight, accompanied by his guitar, which he plays proficiently. His love of history and the history of ballads was apparent, as he wove historical threads into the program, “The Ballad Lives!” His words connected us to certain countries of origin for the songs he sang, and to stories behind them. He revealed how and where these songs were collected and preserved and the names of certain individual folklorists who assisted in that quest.

Perrault gave a mention of the permutations that ballads undergo as they are passed from person to person, and generation to generation. Often, ballads are based on an historical event, but later become a blend of both myth and history. He states, “Many ballads focus on love, death, and tragedy – things universal in the human heart.”

We were treated to renditions of the familiar “Barbara Allen,” or “Barbry Allen,” as some singers pronounce the name. The presenter went on to describe and sing songs about murder, “Little Sadie,” (known by three other names); “Pretty Polly,” and “Cruel Mother” … adding anecdotes, commentaries, and of course, additional songs.

The song that most impressed me is called “The Ballad of Louis Wagner,” that recalls the murder of two women on the Isles of Shoals, off the coast of New Hampshire and Maine, on March 5-6, 1873. Louis Wagner was convicted for the crimes and was the last man to be hanged in Maine in 1875. John Perrault wrote an amazing and long poem and set it to music, delivering the ballad with a passion for the history it invokes and with parts of it presented in the first person, by “Louis” himself. The song states that the murderer wore a silver chain and had a silver Judas heart. I love the imagery. Apparently, the motive for the murders was to find and steal silver.

Overall, this was an amazing performance, and yet another cultural program brought to the public, at no charge, by a New Hampshire Humanities Council grant. John Perrault has taught high school, and has worked in law. He was the poet laureate of Portsmouth, NH from 2003-2005. We were very pleased with this program and we encourage others to visit John’s website, and to attend or book any of his future presentations. He has other programs available. His latest book, Jefferson’s Dream, is currently for sale.

Patricia Cummings
Quilter’s Muse Publications – The one ballad that I recorded for Quilter’s Muse Publications and Virtual Museum is a song called “Mary Hamilton,” a long English narrative about a woman who killed her babe, and whose fate was the gallows.

A second long Irish ballad that I sing is “Mrs. McGrath.”