Graham Dodsworth
Encyclopedia
Graham Dodsworth is a folklorist, performer of folk songs in Australia and an oral history interviewer for The National Library of Australia and the Australian National Film and Sound Archives.
Born in the Yallourn Hospital in Gippsland, Victoria, he lived his first five years in Moe, Gippsland after which his family moved to Vermont in the outer eastern suburbs of Melbourne where he attended Vermont Primary and Secondary Schools. Dodsworth moved to Hawthorn in 1969 and while attending Kew High School first heard the inspirational Danny Spooner
Danny Spooner
Danny Spooner is a traditional folk singer and social historian. Born in England, he left school at the age of 13 and worked as a salvage tug and trawler skipper before moving to Australia in 1962...

 conducting workshops demonstrating attitudes to the industrial revolution in England, Transportation and other aspects of Australian history via folk song performance.
Graham Dodsworth began a performance career in 1971 with performances at The Outpost Inn, Frank Traynors, The Dan O'Connel Hotel and Fogarty's Union Hotel in Melbourne. In 2001 Dodsworth achieved a Master of Arts degree at Monash University in Australian Studies with a thesis titled 'The Nature of Folk Song in Australia: Origins and Transmission.' and was awarded the 2005 National Library of Australia National Folk Festival Fellowship culminating in a concert in the Budawang Theatre at the National Folk Festival and in the foyer of the National Library of Australia in 2005.
Graham Dodsworth demonstrated the results of the above mentioned fellowship research at the 2007 Conference of the Australasian Sound Recording Association which also explored representation and portrayal techniques by National Institutions.
Dodsworth's performance techniques include the use of DADGAD
DADGAD
DADGAD, D modal tuning or Celtic tuning is an alternative guitar tuning most associated with Celtic music, though it has also found use in rock and other genres. Instead of the standard EADGBE tuning, the six guitar strings are tuned, from low to high, DADGAD...

tunings for many of his arrangements of Australian folk songs. On his 'In Good King Arthur's Day'cd for instance only one song is in normal tuning four are in DADGAD and the rest in dropped D (DADGBE).
Graham has written many articles for the Australian Folklore Journal and his Master of Arts Thesis, The Nature of Folk Song in Australia, is available world-wide in paperback format.
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