Re: [scots-l] Bruce Olson

2003-11-05 Thread sinclair
Title: Re: [scots-l] Bruce Olson




I gasped out loud when I read the obituary. The shame of the internet
is everyone seems so close but you assume they are far away. Both my
children were born in the same hospital Bruce died in. I still live
here. He was a neighbor and yet it never occurred to me I could have
met him in person! All the little private messages he so generously
sent me whenever I asked questions on the list about tune histories,
and we never once wrote, where do you live?

Ah, and now it's too late.

I just checked his website and there is a memorial service scheduled
for Friday afternoon. I'm planning to attend.

--Cynthia
Cathcart


Perhaps scots-l can send a card or
flowers?

Emma
long-time lurker



Re: [scots-l] Bruce Olson

2003-11-04 Thread Jack Campin
 Okay, I was able to save [Bruce Olson's] site. Can anyone volunteer
 to keep the site up-to-date, if give them write access to it?

I expect there will be many volunteers, from the ballad-l readership
as well as this list.  I'd certainly be prepared to help.  But I'd
also expect Bruce would have thought about this - perhaps we should
see what his will says about what should happen to his intellectual
property?  There are several options he might have chosen, and he was
well enough aware of the value of his work that he might have been
explicit about which he wanted.



-
Jack Campin: 11 Third Street, Newtongrange, Midlothian EH22 4PU; 0131 6604760
http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/jack/   *   homepage for my CD-ROMs of Scottish 
traditional music; free stuff on food intolerance, music and Mac logic fonts.


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Re: [scots-l] Bruce Olson

2003-11-03 Thread Toby Rider
Nigel Gatherer wrote:

Just read on Ballad-L that Bruce Olson, who often contributed to this
list, died on Friday, aged 73. Olson was a seemingly tireless scholar
and did much work on old Scottish song. His website is a treasure
trove, and it is to be hoped that his work will be stored for future
use. http://www.erols.com/olsonw


	Oh no! That's really bad news! He was cool and infinately knowledgable, 
although somewhat cantankerous at times :-)
	I will go and download his entire website and make sure it stays up on 
one of my servers, as a service to the traditional music community.



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Re: [scots-l] Bruce Olson

2003-11-03 Thread Toby Rider
Toby Rider wrote:

Nigel Gatherer wrote:

Just read on Ballad-L that Bruce Olson, who often contributed to this
list, died on Friday, aged 73. Olson was a seemingly tireless scholar
and did much work on old Scottish song. His website is a treasure
trove, and it is to be hoped that his work will be stored for future
use. http://www.erols.com/olsonw


Oh no! That's really bad news! He was cool and infinately 
knowledgable, although somewhat cantankerous at times :-)
I will go and download his entire website and make sure it stays up 
on one of my servers, as a service to the traditional music community.


 Okay, I was able to save the site. Can anyone volunteer to keep the 
site up-to-date, if give them write access to it?



Toby

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Re: [scots-l] Bruce Olson

2003-11-03 Thread Jeri Corlew
Here's the obituary on Bruce that was presumably written by Ed Cray and
posted to Ballad-L.  I'm quite sure Ed meant Jack *Campin*.

I didn't know Bruce very well.  I'd met him a couple of times and he seemed
a bit shy.  His knowledge of music was astounding, as was his willingness
to share it with others.

Jeri
--
William Bruce Olson, retired physical chemist and longtime song and
ballad scholar, died Friday afternoon, October 31, at Shady Grove Adventist
Hospital, Gaithersburg, Maryland.  He was 73.
The cause of death was listed as severe pancreatitis, Olson's son,
Kenneth, said.  His father, however, also suffered from kidney failure and
severe emphysema.
Olson -- who preferred to be known by his middle name -- entered the
hospital to treat breathing problems with a continuous oxygen supply.
Fatalistic, and complaining too of severe pains in his lower back, he told
a friend he was not sure he would survive.
Olson spent his professional career at the National Bureau of Standards
-- now the National Institute of Standards and Technology.  Hired as a
physical chemist -- in that subject he earned his doctorate -- Olson became
expert in both infra-red and molecular spectroscopy as tools for testing
materiels.
Caught up in the folk song revival of the 1950s, Olson became
interested not in performing but in researching the songs others were
singing.  Over time, he delved into the history of particular songs, and
through that began to catalogue the all but untouched body of 16th, 17th
and 18th Century song and music collections.  A hobby first became a
passion and then a consuming avocation, he explained to a friend.
Olson came to take special pleasure in the access he earned to
libraries devoted to what he deemed as serious scholarship, particularly
the Folger Library in Washington.  That library holds a large song
collection which Olson knew better than the staff.
At the same time, because of his lack of formal training and
credentials, he was never certain of his acceptance by academic
folklorists.
Even so, it was as a so-called private scholar, that is, a serious
student of both musical and textual relationships of stage, popular and
folk musics of the pre-Victorian British Isles that Olson earned an
international reputation among students of folk song.  (Indeed among this
last requests even as he lay in his hospital bed were for the personal
telephone numbers of two scholars in Great Britain, Steve Roud and Jack
Campion, and instructions how to dial them directly.  He also asked for the
number of American Norm Cohen, like Olson a retired chemist who conducts
research into folk song.  Olson intended to say goodbye personally to them,
he told a friend.)
Like all true scholars, Olson was generous with his research.  A
stranger's query on any of a half-dozen listserves to which Olson
subscribed would produce a lengthy reply culled from his large database --
and an addenda correcting errors in his first, hastily pasted message.
That was just like him, his son Kenneth said.  All his life he
couldn't just answer yes or no.  He always had to give a full answer, an
explanation.
It was that which drove his ballad research as well.
Olson is survived by his wife, Barbara T. Olson; three sons, Douglas of
Laurel, Maryland, Bryan of San Jose, California, and Kenneth of
Gaithersburg, Maryland; and two sisters, Beryl of Bremerton, Washington;
and Carol Kimsay, a resident of California.
Olson's voluminous research -- updated a final time just days before he
entered the hospital -- is posted at [EMAIL PROTECTED]  Arrangements will
be made, Kenneth Olson said, to permanently archive his website.

  #  #  #  #

OTHER WEBSITE PLEASE COPY
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