Saturday 26 September, 12-1 p.m.: Talk: Rhythms of the Loom: Weaving Songs with Vanessa Houlder at Museum of the Home
Museum of the Home, 136 Kingsland Road, London E2 8EA
The Museum of the Home is the only museum in the world dedicated to exploring the meaning and experience of home. Housed within historic almshouses in East London, the museum examines how domestic life has evolved over the past four centuries through period interiors, everyday objects and contemporary displays. Through exhibitions, collections and public programmes, the museum invites visitors to consider how homes reflect changing ideas about family, identity, work, technology and community.
Event Description
Discover the rich musical traditions of Britain’s textile workers, from the cotton mills of Lancashire to the crofts of the Outer Hebrides.
When weaving was a cottage industry, handweavers sang to the click of the shuttle. Later, as industrialisation reshaped communities and working lives, their songs reflected new realities of hardship, conflict, and change.
Using recordings of ballads, laments and protest songs, this talk by Vanessa Houlder describes how music enlivened labour, defined communities, and preserved workers’ stories. It also explores the practical benefits of using music to pace production, illustrated by the Scottish folk songs that synchronised the rhythmic beating of newly woven tweed.
Vanessa Houlder is studying for a PhD at Queen Mary University of London, in partnership with the Museum of the Home, after a long career as a journalist. She recently completed a master’s degree in economic history at the London School of Economics which helped fuel her interest in how ordinary people experienced the upheavals of the industrial revolution. These themes intersect with her PhD research into Soundscapes of Domesticity: Music and Lived Experience in Non-Elite English Homes, 1780-1870, which explores the emotional, cultural and social significance of music-making, including its role in family relationships and everyday domestic life.
Tickets from £8.00
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