Filk
Music and the 
by
John Hall, Dorsai Irregulars - Archivist
john@kodak.com
Who Are
the Dorsai Irregulars?
The Dorsai
Irregulars, or D.I., are named after the planet Dorsai and its people
in
Gordon R. Dickson's Childe Cycle books. Since the Dorsai
planet was poor in natural resources, its inhabitants traded their services
as mercenaries for the interstellar credit they needed to live. In time
they became the finest soldiers in known space.
The legend
is that the Dorsai Irregulars are a group of misfit Dorsai who don't
fit the super-soldier mold of the "ideal" Dorsai. They live in a swamp
in a remote part of the Dorsai planet and prefer singing, drinking and
sleeping late to marching and saluting. They specialize in winning battles
by cleverness and stealth instead of by force of arms. Bob Asprin's
filksong, Dorsai Irregulars, says it well:
My uniform's green and my trappings are black,
And my distant ancestors tied Rome in a sack.
I am not regulation, I don't even try.
I'm a pain in the ass to the standard Dorsai.
We are practical jokers, we love dirty tricks.
We make deadly weapons from feathers and sticks.
We will honor a contract and stand by a friend,
But right about there is where our manners end.
That's the
persona. Behind it, the Dorsai Irregulars is an organization of science
fiction fans who volunteer their time and talents to provide operations
support, security, auctioneering, and other services to SF conventions.
What
do the Dorsai Irregulars have to do with filk music?
Filk music
has been a part of the D.I. from the beginning. At the Discon (1974
Worldcon) masquerade, Bob Asprin announced the formation of the Dorsai
Irregulars. In celebration of that event, in the hotel lobby that evening,
he ran an all-night filksing at which many of the classic D.I. filksongs
were first heard. That sing is acknowledged to have been the first big
open public filksing. It marked the emergence of filk from the hotel
room gatherings of a select few into the bright lights and open spaces
where it was accessible to all fans.
The filk
music that the D.I. are known for grew up and contributed to the development
of the "Midwestern" style of filking. It is rooted firmly in tunes and
styles of the 60's folk music revival, and in English, Irish and Scottish
folk music.
Some of
the Dorsai Irregulars who are also known as filksingers are Bob Asprin,
Gordy Dickson, Bob and Anne Passovoy, Murray Porath, Michael "Moonwulf"
Longcor, Hal (Al) Frank, Steve Simmons, Ellen McMicking and myself,
John Hall.
A lot
other people have written songs about the Dorsai and the D.I. including
Mark Bernstein, Frank Hayes, Kathy Mar, Clif Flynt and Catherine Kurtz.
What
are some of the Dorsai songs?
There
are songs about the literary Dorsai, such as Jacques Chretien, The
Green Hills of Harmony, Fal Morgan, and Brothers. There
are songs of the exploits of the D.I., both real and imagined, including
The Dorsai Rover, The Chicago Con, and Don't Ask.
The Irregulars
have an alter ego, the Klingon Diplomatic Corps, that they assume when
they work Star Trek conventions. There are songs about that too, such
as Imperialism for Fun and Profit and Come All You Kaydets.
No discussion
of the Dorsai Irregulars would be complete without a mention of their
favorite beverage, Tullamore Dew Irish Whiskey. This "water of life"
seems to get mentioned in a lot of their songs (and drunk at a lot of
their filksings).
Where
can I hear Dorsai filk music?
Several
years ago, Off Centaur Productions made a tape, Songs of the Dorsai
, of some of the more popular songs about the "literary" Dorsai of Dickson's
books. That tape is out of print, but can still be found in many filk
dealer's stocks. There is now an effort under way to produce some new
tapes which would also include songs of the Irregulars. No information
is available yet as to titles or release dates.
The D.I.
work at a number of conventions every year, mostly in the Midwestern
United States. It's easy to spot them when they're working by their
black berets with the distinctive insignia patch: (do you see the dollar
$ign?)
If you
find an Irregular, don't be shy, ask if there's going to be an open
Dorsai party and filksing later in the evening. Such parties are the
classic setting to hear the music of the Dorsai. When the D.I. unwind
after a long day, there is sure to be much singing, drinking and telling
of D.I. legends and war stories.
Even when
they aren't working the convention, when members of the Dorsai Irregulars
show up at convention filksings, it isn't too hard to get them to sing,
particularly if you offer them a drop of Tullamore Dew!
For more information about Dorsai filk music or the Dorsai Irregulars,
email me at john@kodak.com
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