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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 March 2019
Folk song is too protean an affair to put into any tidy pattern of musical history. Yet even the most conservative popular traditions are liable to growth and change; and if the growth is slow, the change when it comes may be far-reaching and even violent. Hitherto it has been difficult to describe any stage in the evolution of folk song with scientific accuracy, for as a rule we lack a truly precise record of what existed before. But in this connection, a group of workers from the Rumanian Folklore Institute recently completed a survey of unusual scope and importance. Five specialists—musical, literary and choreographic—under the leadership of Miss Emilia Comisel, made a series of expeditions to the Padureni district of Hunedoara in south-western Transylvania.