American folk music spans our country’s geography and draws on traditions that pre-date the nation’s founding. Broadly defined, folk music is the music of regular, everyday people, and is an integral part of daily life. Folk music functions as an accompaniment to specific activities associated with work, social gatherings, and religious celebrations and other rituals. These songs are easy to sing, are passed down through generations, and can often be traced back to origins in Africa, Europe, and indigenous communities. The folk revival of the 1960s brought many old folk songs to the fore as vehicles for social change, when artists such as Woody Guthrie, Lead Belly, Odetta Holmes, and Pete Seeger contributed to the popularization of the genre. 

Kaia is a musician who grew up in Toronto, Canada and lives in New York City. She went to college in Elkins, West Virginia to study folk music from the Appalachian mountains. She has performed original and folk music from all over the world–including the Savannah Music Festival!

Students learn and sing “John Henry” while understanding how music can be used to tell a story.

Go to Lesson 1: Learning “John Henry”

Students explore melody and banjo through the folk song “Freight Train.”

Go to Lesson 2: Learning “Freight Train”

Reading:

Listening:

Listen to the American Folk playlist on YouTube:

Viewing:

Additional Teaching Resources:

Track 1.1 – “John Henry” Song

Track 1.2 – “Freight Train” Song