 An   energetic American woman from Boston might turn out to be the keenest   person worldwide where Bulgarian authentic folklore is concerned. Her   passion to collect songs dates back to her years in college, where she   studied Russian Language and Literature, and at a certain point took a   course in Slavic Folklore. Her professor introduced her to authentic   folklore from Bulgaria. Martha Forsyth was fascinated – not at once, but   forever. She started visiting Bulgaria in 1976, met and cooperated with   Vergili Atanasov, Annie Ilieva and other scholars from the Institute of   Folklore and Musicology. Vergili Atanasov sent her to the villages of   Bistritsa and Zheleznitsa on the outskirts of Sofia, and also to   Velingrad, Southern Bulgaria. In Bistritsa Martha met with the   Alexandrov family who knew the local singers and introduced the American   to them. Here is more from her story, as she talked with Daniela   Konstantinova:
An   energetic American woman from Boston might turn out to be the keenest   person worldwide where Bulgarian authentic folklore is concerned. Her   passion to collect songs dates back to her years in college, where she   studied Russian Language and Literature, and at a certain point took a   course in Slavic Folklore. Her professor introduced her to authentic   folklore from Bulgaria. Martha Forsyth was fascinated – not at once, but   forever. She started visiting Bulgaria in 1976, met and cooperated with   Vergili Atanasov, Annie Ilieva and other scholars from the Institute of   Folklore and Musicology. Vergili Atanasov sent her to the villages of   Bistritsa and Zheleznitsa on the outskirts of Sofia, and also to   Velingrad, Southern Bulgaria. In Bistritsa Martha met with the   Alexandrov family who knew the local singers and introduced the American   to them. Here is more from her story, as she talked with Daniela   Konstantinova: 
Bulgarian village singing on Marth’s blog: http://martha.forsyths.org
Three Bulgarian village songs recorded by Martha Forsyth with her remarks below:
* Ja da ti zema (Nedelino 2000). This was recorded here in the US of the two sisters we arranged to have visit the US in 2000. We know this as "the victory song" because, when the girls went to the US Embassy to get their visa (for the second time - they were rejected the first time), the Embassy staff finally asked them, "Well, can you really sing?" and they sang this song!
* Oblagala se Dragana (Dragovishtica, 1980). This is one of my favorite solo harvest melodies! I find it "so beautiful it hurts...."
* Sabraja se os'm babi (Bistrica 1980), Bistrishki babi group 

Photos: courtesy of Martha Forsyth
Ritual food is an integral part of the Bulgarian ritual system. In the calendar of a Bulgarian village more than a century ago, food with meat was rarely consumed. People usually ate meat 4-5 times a year - on Christmas, St. George’s..
At the end of the 19th century, the Czech artist and folklorist Ludvík Kuba travelled to Bulgaria with one goal in mind: to explore the country's rich song heritage. The melodies he collected were published in a separate volume of his Slavic Song..
In the Bulgarian folk tradition, the feasts of Lazarus Saturday and Palm Sunday are related holidays. From Lazarus Saturday (Lazarovden in Bulgaria), girls prepare for the ritual kumichene, which is performed on the morning of Palm Sunday. A very old..
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