Wandering Minstrel: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Mass update links)
No edit summary
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{trope}}
[[File:Luteguy_8227.jpg|frame|Hmm-did someone call for ''whimsy?'']]
[[File:Frans Hals - Luitspelende nar.jpg|thumb|400px|Hmm-did someone call for ''whimsy?'']]


{{quote|''A wand'ring minstrel I, a thing of shreds and patches, of ballads, songs and snatches, and dreamy lullaby!''

{{quote|''A wand'ring minstrel I, a thing of shreds and patches, of ballads, songs and snatches, and dreamy lullaby!''|'''Nanki-Poo''', ''[[The Mikado]]''}}
|'''Nanki-Poo''', ''[[The Mikado]]''}}


The wandering minstrel is a classic fantasy character and a frequent feature in many [[Ensembles]]. He wanders the land, making music for money. Generally carries a lute, (or sometimes a [[Magical Flautist|flute]]) and always has a song in his heart.
The wandering minstrel is a classic fantasy character and a frequent feature in many [[Ensembles]]. He wanders the land, making music for money. Generally carries a lute, (or sometimes a [[Magical Flautist|flute]]) and always has a song in his heart.
Line 9: Line 9:
In a [[Five-Man Band]], this guy is [[The Chick]] and rarely has any fighting ability. Occasionally, he will have [[Magic Music]] that makes him slightly more capable in battle.
In a [[Five-Man Band]], this guy is [[The Chick]] and rarely has any fighting ability. Occasionally, he will have [[Magic Music]] that makes him slightly more capable in battle.


The trope goes back at least to Alan-a-Dale, the minstrel friend of [[Robin Hood]] (which is to say, Victorian times; Alan was a ''late'' addition). The word "minstrel" comes from Latin ''ministerialis''-- "a functionary living as a member of the knightly class, with either a lordship of their own or one delegated from a higher lord." Fiefs were very often not self-supporting, and poor knights were forced to supplement their income by other means, such as traveling from court to court to offer services to various patrons-- one of which was entertainment.
The trope goes back at least to Alan-a-Dale, the minstrel friend of [[Robin Hood]] (which is to say, Victorian times; Alan was a ''late'' addition). The word "minstrel" comes from Latin ''ministerialis''-- "a functionary living as a member of the knightly class, with either a lordship of their own or one delegated from a higher lord." Fiefs were very often not self-supporting, and poor knights were forced to supplement their income by other means, such as traveling from court to court to offer services to various patrons—one of which was entertainment.


There's also the French tradition of the troubadour/trouvere from the Middle Ages; singers and lutists that would wander around and compose songs of courtly love. They were one of the first groups to take music from the sacred to the secular realm.
There's also the French tradition of the troubadour/trouvere from the Middle Ages; singers and lutists that would wander around and compose songs of courtly love. They were one of the first groups to take music from the sacred to the secular realm.


If a [[Wandering Minstrel]] is very lucky and very good, he can get a settled job as a court bard in a [[Standard Royal Court]]. If unlucky, stuck as a [[Street Musician]].
If a '''Wandering Minstrel''' is very lucky and very good, he can get a settled job as a court bard in a [[Standard Royal Court]]. If unlucky, stuck as a [[Street Musician]].


Not to be confused with [[Spoony Bard]] or [[William Shakespeare|The Bard]]; and especially not with a [[Once-Acceptable Targets|Minstrel Show]].
Not to be confused with [[Spoony Bard]] or [[William Shakespeare|The Bard]]; and especially not with a [[Once-Acceptable Targets|Minstrel Show]].


{{examples}}
{{examples}}
== [[Comic Books]] ==

== [[Comics]] ==
* In ''[[Marvel 1602]]'', [[Daredevil|Matt Murdock]] is a travelling bard.
* In ''[[Marvel 1602]]'', [[Daredevil|Matt Murdock]] is a travelling bard.


== [[Film]] ==
== [[Film]] ==
* ''[[A Knight's Tale]]'''s plot hinges on the fact that the protagonists meet a bard (and [[Comic Relief]]) who can help forge the documents they need to "prove" that [[The Hero]]'s of noble birth. Did I mention he just happens to be [[Geoffrey Chaucer]]?
* ''[[A Knight's Tale]]'''s plot hinges on the fact that the protagonists meet a bard (and [[Comic Relief]]) who can help forge the documents they need to "prove" that [[The Hero]]'s of noble birth. Did I mention he just happens to be [[Geoffrey Chaucer]]?
* Brave, brave Sir Robin of Camelot from ''[[Monty Python and The Holy Grail]]'', and again in the Broadway theatrical adaptation ''[[Spamalot]]'', has an entire band of minstrels follow him wherever he goes {{spoiler|until the rest of the party eats them during the winter}}.
* Brave, brave Sir Robin of Camelot from ''[[Monty Python and the Holy Grail]]'', and again in the Broadway theatrical adaptation ''[[Spamalot]]'', has an entire band of minstrels follow him wherever he goes {{spoiler|until the rest of the party eats them during the winter}}.
** [[And There Was Much Rejoicing]].
** [[And There Was Much Rejoicing]].
*** Yay.

== Folklore ==
* The Pied Piper has aspects of this.
* Blondel the Minstrel, in the 13th century legend of King [[Richard the Lion Heart]], went from castle to castle in Europe, trying to discover where his master was being held, by singing a song they had composed together, until he heard the king singing the refrain from his cell. (Note that this is pure fable; at no time was Richard's location unknown, as his captors wanted everyone to ''know'' they were holding him.)


== [[Literature]] ==
== [[Literature]] ==
* ''[[The Black Cauldron]]'' has Fflewddur Fflam, an inept minstrel whose lute is constantly breaking
* ''[[The Black Cauldron]]'' has Fflewddur Fflam, an inept minstrel whose lute is constantly breaking
* Thom from ''[[The Wheel of Time]]''.
* Thom from ''[[The Wheel of Time]]''.
* The nameless bard in ''[[Discworld/The Last Hero|The Last Hero]]''. It's not clear whether he was one before he got shanghai'd by the Grey Horde, but at the end of the story it's implied that he'd be singing their saga all over the Disc.
* The nameless bard in ''[[The Last Hero]]''. It's not clear whether he was one before he got shanghai'd by the Grey Horde, but at the end of the story it's implied that he'd be singing their saga all over the Disc.
* In ''[[Earth's Children|Shelters Of Stone]]'', there's a class of traveling story-tellers and musicians whose visits are higly anticipated in a world without TV or internet.
* In ''[[Earth's Children|Shelters Of Stone]]'', there's a class of traveling story-tellers and musicians whose visits are higly anticipated in a world without TV or internet.
* Phyllis Eisenstein's Alaric the Minstrel fits the bill perfectly. (He can teleport back to any place he's ever been, but not anywhere he hasn't, so wandering widens his teleport range.)
* Phyllis Eisenstein's Alaric the Minstrel fits the bill perfectly. (He can teleport back to any place he's ever been, but not anywhere he hasn't, so wandering widens his teleport range.)
Line 44: Line 38:
* Bards can be this in the ''[[Heralds of Valdemar]]'' series, but due to superior training and a touch of [[Magic Music]], they are seldom allowed to be just entertainment. Ordinary traveling minstrels wander The 'Verse, occasionally writing songs about the protagonists (to their embarrassment and/or irritation).
* Bards can be this in the ''[[Heralds of Valdemar]]'' series, but due to superior training and a touch of [[Magic Music]], they are seldom allowed to be just entertainment. Ordinary traveling minstrels wander The 'Verse, occasionally writing songs about the protagonists (to their embarrassment and/or irritation).
* In [[Mikhail Akhmanov]]'s ''Envoy from the Heavens'', Ivar Trevelian travels to a planet populated by [[Human Aliens]] whose culture has been stuck at Middle Ages for centuries with no push for progress or discovery (there's a whole continent waiting to be settled, but the population believes the world is flat). His job is to find out about this stagnation. He disguises himself as a member of the Rhapsod Brotherhood, a society of highly-respected wandering bards. He soon finds out they're much more than that, when a group of rhapsods wipes out a mercenary squad three times their number suffering only two casualties. Apparently, they also enact justice when [[The Empire]] fails to do so, usually when a nobleman is involved. They turn into vengeful warriors, all of them expert swordsmen and archers. After that, they return to their lutes and songs.
* In [[Mikhail Akhmanov]]'s ''Envoy from the Heavens'', Ivar Trevelian travels to a planet populated by [[Human Aliens]] whose culture has been stuck at Middle Ages for centuries with no push for progress or discovery (there's a whole continent waiting to be settled, but the population believes the world is flat). His job is to find out about this stagnation. He disguises himself as a member of the Rhapsod Brotherhood, a society of highly-respected wandering bards. He soon finds out they're much more than that, when a group of rhapsods wipes out a mercenary squad three times their number suffering only two casualties. Apparently, they also enact justice when [[The Empire]] fails to do so, usually when a nobleman is involved. They turn into vengeful warriors, all of them expert swordsmen and archers. After that, they return to their lutes and songs.
* The main characters and others in the ''Bardic Voices'' series by [[Mercedes Lackey]]. There's the Guild Bards and Minstrels, the Free Bards (those that are good enough to be in the Guild, but can't because they're women, or don't like the Guild), and ordinary minstrels.
* The main characters and others in the ''Bardic Voices'' series by [[Mercedes Lackey]]. There's the Guild Bards and Minstrels, the Free Bards (those that are good enough to be in the Guild, but can't because they're women, or don't like the Guild), and ordinary minstrels.
* Dandelion from ''[[The Witcher]]'' novels and games is a world-famous bard who often travels with the titular hero, Geralt of Rivia. He sometimes gets in trouble for singing about the parts of their adventures that are supposed to remain secret.
* Dandelion from ''[[The Witcher]]'' novels and games is a world-famous bard who often travels with the titular hero, Geralt of Rivia. He sometimes gets in trouble for singing about the parts of their adventures that are supposed to remain secret.
* In [[Michael Flynn]]'s ''[[Spiral Arm|The January Dancer]]'', a woman appears in the opening by going into the bar and beginning to play.
* In [[Michael Flynn]]'s ''[[Spiral Arm|The January Dancer]]'', a woman appears in the opening by going into the bar and beginning to play.


== [[Live Action TV]] ==
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
* Cantus in ''[[Fraggle Rock]]'' is a mystical example.
* Cantus in ''[[Fraggle Rock]]'' is a mystical example.
* Gabrielle from ''[[Xena]]'' becomes a wandering Bard for a while, before becoming [[Action Girl]] Jr.
* Gabrielle from ''[[Xena: Warrior Princess]]'' becomes a wandering Bard for a while, before becoming [[Action Girl]] Jr.


== [[Music]] ==
== [[Music]] ==
* The eponymous Bard of ''[[Blind Guardian|The Bard's Song]]''.
* The eponymous Bard of ''[[Blind Guardian|The Bard's Song]]''.
*** Yay.

== [[Oral Tradition]], [[Folklore]], Myths and Legends ==
* The Pied Piper has aspects of this.
* Blondel the Minstrel, in the 13th century legend of King [[Richard the Lion Heart]], went from castle to castle in Europe, trying to discover where his master was being held, by singing a song they had composed together, until he heard the king singing the refrain from his cell. (Note that this is pure fable; at no time was Richard's location unknown, as his captors wanted everyone to ''know'' they were holding him.)


== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
* The Bard class from [[Dungeons and Dragons]], at least when applied to adventurers.
* The Bard class from ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'', at least when applied to adventurers.
** [[Forgotten Realms]] got classical (mentioned from [[Dragon (magazine)]] #74 on) character Mintiper Moonsilver "the Lonely Harpist". As footnotes in "[http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=dnd/archfr/mc Mintiper's Chapbook]" tell, tales of the [[Author Avatar]] "Lunargent" are excerpts from Mintiper's own adventures he deemed most interesting, yet even some sages think it must be an embellished compilation, because even for a legendary figure like him it's too much. He [[Seen It All]], traveled everywhere and gave a concert even in Underdark (for drow and local fairies) at least once.
** [[Forgotten Realms]] got classical (mentioned from [[Dragon (magazine)]] #74 on) character Mintiper Moonsilver "the Lonely Harpist". As footnotes in "[http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=dnd/archfr/mc Mintiper's Chapbook]" tell, tales of the [[Author Avatar]] "Lunargent" are excerpts from Mintiper's own adventures he deemed most interesting, yet even some sages think it must be an embellished compilation, because even for a legendary figure like him it's too much. He [[Seen It All]], traveled everywhere and gave a concert even in Underdark (for drow and local fairies) at least once. Before that, he was a member of several mercenary companies and then led his own, the Moonlight Men (thought it mostly was caravan guard for hire on the roads around Silverymoon and was around for less than 10 years, then wiped out in one of those wars with orcs - only six members survived… and, of course, he wrote a song about that, too).


== [[Theatre]] ==
== [[Theatre]] ==
* This is Naki-Poo's disguise in ''[[Gilbert and Sullivan|The Mikado]]''
* This is Nanki-Poo's disguise in [[Gilbert and Sullivan]]'s ''[[The Mikado]]'':
{{quote| A wandering minstrel I -<br />
{{quote|''A wandering minstrel I -
A thing of shreds and patches,<br />
''A thing of shreds and patches,
Of ballads, songs and snatches,<br />
''Of ballads, songs and snatches,
And dreamy lullaby!<br />
''And dreamy lullaby!
My catalogue is long,<br />
''My catalogue is long,
Through every passion ranging,<br />
''Through every passion ranging,
And to your humours changing<br />
''And to your humours changing
I tune my supple song! }}
''I tune my supple song! }}
* Like in the film that inspired it, [[Blatant Lies|brave, brave]] Sir Robin of Camelot has an entire band of minstrels follow him wherever he goes in ''[[Spamalot]]''.
* Like in the film that inspired it, [[Blatant Lies|brave, brave]] Sir Robin of Camelot has an entire band of minstrels follow him wherever he goes in ''[[Spamalot]]''.
* In ''[[Henry IV]] part 2'', Hal and a friend disguise themselves as minstrels to get into Falstaff's house and prank him.
* In ''[[Henry IV]] part 2'', Hal and a friend disguise themselves as minstrels to get into Falstaff's house and prank him.


== [[Video Games]] ==
== [[Video Games]] ==
* The main character of ''[[The Bards Tale]]'' spoofs this character type.
* The main character of ''[[The Bard's Tale]]'' spoofs this character type.
* The main character of ''[[Dragon Quest IX]]'' poses as one/becomes one near the beginning of the game.
* The main character of ''[[Dragon Quest IX]]'' poses as one/becomes one near the beginning of the game.
** Dubious, its the jack of all none class you get after you fall to Earth. Also it seems your hero has that it as their class because the first person you meet mistakes you for a bard.
** Dubious, its the jack of all none class you get after you fall to Earth. Also it seems your hero has that it as their class because the first person you meet mistakes you for a bard.
* In ''[[King's Quest IV]]'', Rosella encounters a wandering minstrel who is terrible at making music. She helps him by giving him a book of [[Shakespeare]], which leads him to decide he wants to be an actor instead.
* In ''[[King's Quest IV]]'', Rosella encounters a wandering minstrel who is terrible at making music. She helps him by giving him a book of [[Shakespeare]], which leads him to decide he wants to be an actor instead.
* Leliana from ''[[Dragon Age]]'', at least in her life before the Chantry. Of course, "bards" are more often than not professional spies, but their job still involves considerable amounts of musical entertainment. In Orlais it's apparently an exciting spice to a party to know that the performing bard might be spying on you, or planning to assassinate you. Appropriately for a bard, Leliana is the most [[Genre Savvy]] person in your party.
* Leliana from ''[[Dragon Age]]'', at least in her life before the Chantry. Of course, "bards" are more often than not professional spies, but their job still involves considerable amounts of musical entertainment. In Orlais it's apparently an exciting spice to a party to know that the performing bard might be spying on you, or planning to assassinate you. Appropriately for a bard, Leliana is the most [[Genre Savvy]] person in your party.
* Hurdy of [[Final Fantasy Tactics a 2|FFTA2]] is one of these, and can [[Magic Music|use his music to cast buffs/debuffs.]] He's arguably one of the more useful support characters in the whole game.
* Hurdy of [[Final Fantasy Tactics A2|FFTA2]] is one of these, and can [[Magic Music|use his music to cast buffs/debuffs.]] He's arguably one of the more useful support characters in the whole game.
* Toyed with in ''[[Fire Emblem Jugdral]]''. Levin ''pretends'' to be one of these in the first part of ''Seisen'' when in reality he's a [[King Incognito]], whereas Homeros from ''Thracia 776'' is more of the real deal. Both of them are also [[Blow You Away|Wind Magic users.]]
* Toyed with in ''[[Fire Emblem Jugdral]]''. Levin ''pretends'' to be one of these in the first part of ''Seisen'' when in reality he's a [[King Incognito]], whereas Homeros from ''Thracia 776'' is more of the real deal. Both of them are also [[Blow You Away|Wind Magic users.]]
** Played somewhat straighter in ''[[Fire Emblem Elibe]]'', with Elphin and Nils. {{spoiler|The first is ''another'' [[King Incognito]], hiding after an assassination attempt; the second is a [[Really Seven Hundred Years Old]] half-dragon boy.}}
** Played somewhat straighter in ''[[Fire Emblem Elibe]]'', with Elphin and Nils. {{spoiler|The first is ''another'' [[King Incognito]], hiding after an assassination attempt; the second is a [[Really Seven Hundred Years Old]] half-dragon boy.}}
Line 84: Line 83:
* ''[[Okami]]'' introduces [[Mr. Exposition|Issun]] as "Wandering Minstrel Issun".
* ''[[Okami]]'' introduces [[Mr. Exposition|Issun]] as "Wandering Minstrel Issun".
* ''[[The Sims Medieval]]'': The Bard Hero Sim, whose duty is to gather inspiration from around the kingdom in order to write plays, perform poetry, and play the lute to entertain the populace.
* ''[[The Sims Medieval]]'': The Bard Hero Sim, whose duty is to gather inspiration from around the kingdom in order to write plays, perform poetry, and play the lute to entertain the populace.
* Wandering minstrels wander the streets in [[Assassin's Creed 2]], and they're always pestering people ([[Player Character|Ezio,]] in particular) for money.
* Wandering minstrels wander the streets in ''[[Assassin's Creed 2]]'', and they're always pestering people ([[Player Character|Ezio,]] in particular) for money.
** A mission in [[Assassin's Creed Revelations]] involves Ezio disguising himself as a minstrel. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=se4Aek5X4CM he gets rather creative with some of his lyrics]
** A mission in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]'' involves Ezio disguising himself as a minstrel. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=se4Aek5X4CM he gets rather creative with some of his lyrics]
{{quote| ''I am a tactless minstrel<br />
{{quote|''I am a tactless minstrel
[[Most Annoying Sound|I sing off-key for coins]]<br />
''[[Most Annoying Sound|I sing off-key for coins]]
If you see me in the street<br />
''If you see me in the street
[[Groin Attack|please kick me in the loins]].'' }}
''[[Groin Attack|please kick me in the loins]].'' }}


== [[Web Comics]] ==
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* Elan from ''[[Order of the Stick]]''.
* Elan from ''[[The Order of the Stick]]''.
* The protagonist of the old ''[[MS Paint Adventures]]'' comic ''Bard Quest''. He arrives to the king's castle as this, but quickly gets roped into dragon-slaying business instead.
* The protagonist of the old ''[[MS Paint Adventures]]'' comic ''Bard Quest''. He arrives to the king's castle as this, but quickly gets roped into dragon-slaying business instead.


== [[Web Original]] ==
== [[Web Original]] ==
* The Music-Human from ''[[Water Human]]'', who pops up at the end of episode three to [[Medium Awareness|play the outro]]. In episode four, he inexplicably has a new look: a costume decorated with musical notation.
* The Music-Human from ''[[Water Human]]'', who pops up at the end of episode three to [[Medium Awareness|play the outro]]. In episode four, he inexplicably has a new look: a costume decorated with musical notation.


== [[Western Animation]] ==
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* The singing nomads the GAang encounters in ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'' are half wandering minstrels, half [[New Age Retro Hippie|New Age Retro Hippies]] <ref>"[[Ear Worm|Secret tunnel! Secret tunnel!]]"</ref>.
* The singing nomads the GAang encounters in ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'' are half wandering minstrels, half [[New Age Retro Hippie]]s.<ref>"[[Ear Worm|Secret tunnel! Secret tunnel!]]"</ref>
* On ''[[Muppet Babies]]'', during a [[Medieval European Fantasy]] sequence, Rowlf took the role until Piggy could take no more of his music.
* On ''[[Muppet Babies]]'', during a [[Medieval European Fantasy]] sequence, Rowlf took the role until Piggy could take no more of his music.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Stock Characters]]
[[Category:Stock Characters]]
[[Category:Music Tropes]]
[[Category:Music Tropes]]
[[Category:Wandering Minstrel]]

Latest revision as of 18:10, 17 February 2023

Hmm-did someone call for whimsy?

A wand'ring minstrel I, a thing of shreds and patches, of ballads, songs and snatches, and dreamy lullaby!

Nanki-Poo, The Mikado

The wandering minstrel is a classic fantasy character and a frequent feature in many Ensembles. He wanders the land, making music for money. Generally carries a lute, (or sometimes a flute) and always has a song in his heart.

In a Five-Man Band, this guy is The Chick and rarely has any fighting ability. Occasionally, he will have Magic Music that makes him slightly more capable in battle.

The trope goes back at least to Alan-a-Dale, the minstrel friend of Robin Hood (which is to say, Victorian times; Alan was a late addition). The word "minstrel" comes from Latin ministerialis-- "a functionary living as a member of the knightly class, with either a lordship of their own or one delegated from a higher lord." Fiefs were very often not self-supporting, and poor knights were forced to supplement their income by other means, such as traveling from court to court to offer services to various patrons—one of which was entertainment.

There's also the French tradition of the troubadour/trouvere from the Middle Ages; singers and lutists that would wander around and compose songs of courtly love. They were one of the first groups to take music from the sacred to the secular realm.

If a Wandering Minstrel is very lucky and very good, he can get a settled job as a court bard in a Standard Royal Court. If unlucky, stuck as a Street Musician.

Not to be confused with Spoony Bard or The Bard; and especially not with a Minstrel Show.

Examples of Wandering Minstrel include:

Comic Books

Film

Literature

  • The Black Cauldron has Fflewddur Fflam, an inept minstrel whose lute is constantly breaking
  • Thom from The Wheel of Time.
  • The nameless bard in The Last Hero. It's not clear whether he was one before he got shanghai'd by the Grey Horde, but at the end of the story it's implied that he'd be singing their saga all over the Disc.
  • In Shelters Of Stone, there's a class of traveling story-tellers and musicians whose visits are higly anticipated in a world without TV or internet.
  • Phyllis Eisenstein's Alaric the Minstrel fits the bill perfectly. (He can teleport back to any place he's ever been, but not anywhere he hasn't, so wandering widens his teleport range.)
  • On Gor the Caste of Poets (or Singers) is basically this. They can go from town to town and spread news as well as poetry/songs, despite the normally xenophobic nature of many City-States.
  • In the Dragaera novel Athyra, Vlad encounters a female one of these from the house of Issola (Issola are often courtiers, but it's suggested that this would be the typical job of a lower ranking Issola), and a later novel, Iorich, suggests he might have had an affair with her at some point.
  • Jon Tom from Spellsinger is this plus Magic Music.
  • Sangfugol from Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn is an example of this. Aside from being a more or less useless companion to the protagonists, his sole claim to plot relevance is when it's suggested that he, having a similar build and hair color, impersonate Prince Josua during the Final Battle. Needless to say, he reacts to the notion with horror.
  • Bards can be this in the Heralds of Valdemar series, but due to superior training and a touch of Magic Music, they are seldom allowed to be just entertainment. Ordinary traveling minstrels wander The 'Verse, occasionally writing songs about the protagonists (to their embarrassment and/or irritation).
  • In Mikhail Akhmanov's Envoy from the Heavens, Ivar Trevelian travels to a planet populated by Human Aliens whose culture has been stuck at Middle Ages for centuries with no push for progress or discovery (there's a whole continent waiting to be settled, but the population believes the world is flat). His job is to find out about this stagnation. He disguises himself as a member of the Rhapsod Brotherhood, a society of highly-respected wandering bards. He soon finds out they're much more than that, when a group of rhapsods wipes out a mercenary squad three times their number suffering only two casualties. Apparently, they also enact justice when The Empire fails to do so, usually when a nobleman is involved. They turn into vengeful warriors, all of them expert swordsmen and archers. After that, they return to their lutes and songs.
  • The main characters and others in the Bardic Voices series by Mercedes Lackey. There's the Guild Bards and Minstrels, the Free Bards (those that are good enough to be in the Guild, but can't because they're women, or don't like the Guild), and ordinary minstrels.
  • Dandelion from The Witcher novels and games is a world-famous bard who often travels with the titular hero, Geralt of Rivia. He sometimes gets in trouble for singing about the parts of their adventures that are supposed to remain secret.
  • In Michael Flynn's The January Dancer, a woman appears in the opening by going into the bar and beginning to play.

Live-Action TV

Music

Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends

  • The Pied Piper has aspects of this.
  • Blondel the Minstrel, in the 13th century legend of King Richard the Lion Heart, went from castle to castle in Europe, trying to discover where his master was being held, by singing a song they had composed together, until he heard the king singing the refrain from his cell. (Note that this is pure fable; at no time was Richard's location unknown, as his captors wanted everyone to know they were holding him.)

Tabletop Games

  • The Bard class from Dungeons & Dragons, at least when applied to adventurers.
    • Forgotten Realms got classical (mentioned from Dragon (magazine) #74 on) character Mintiper Moonsilver "the Lonely Harpist". As footnotes in "Mintiper's Chapbook" tell, tales of the Author Avatar "Lunargent" are excerpts from Mintiper's own adventures he deemed most interesting, yet even some sages think it must be an embellished compilation, because even for a legendary figure like him it's too much. He Seen It All, traveled everywhere and gave a concert even in Underdark (for drow and local fairies) at least once. Before that, he was a member of several mercenary companies and then led his own, the Moonlight Men (thought it mostly was caravan guard for hire on the roads around Silverymoon and was around for less than 10 years, then wiped out in one of those wars with orcs - only six members survived… and, of course, he wrote a song about that, too).

Theatre

A wandering minstrel I -
A thing of shreds and patches,
Of ballads, songs and snatches,
And dreamy lullaby!
My catalogue is long,
Through every passion ranging,
And to your humours changing
I tune my supple song!

  • Like in the film that inspired it, brave, brave Sir Robin of Camelot has an entire band of minstrels follow him wherever he goes in Spamalot.
  • In Henry IV part 2, Hal and a friend disguise themselves as minstrels to get into Falstaff's house and prank him.

Video Games

  • The main character of The Bard's Tale spoofs this character type.
  • The main character of Dragon Quest IX poses as one/becomes one near the beginning of the game.
    • Dubious, its the jack of all none class you get after you fall to Earth. Also it seems your hero has that it as their class because the first person you meet mistakes you for a bard.
  • In King's Quest IV, Rosella encounters a wandering minstrel who is terrible at making music. She helps him by giving him a book of Shakespeare, which leads him to decide he wants to be an actor instead.
  • Leliana from Dragon Age, at least in her life before the Chantry. Of course, "bards" are more often than not professional spies, but their job still involves considerable amounts of musical entertainment. In Orlais it's apparently an exciting spice to a party to know that the performing bard might be spying on you, or planning to assassinate you. Appropriately for a bard, Leliana is the most Genre Savvy person in your party.
  • Hurdy of FFTA2 is one of these, and can use his music to cast buffs/debuffs. He's arguably one of the more useful support characters in the whole game.
  • Toyed with in Fire Emblem Jugdral. Levin pretends to be one of these in the first part of Seisen when in reality he's a King Incognito, whereas Homeros from Thracia 776 is more of the real deal. Both of them are also Wind Magic users.
  • In Romancing SaGa and its Updated Rerelease Romancing Saga: Minstrel Song, The Minstrel hangs out in the local pub and serves as Mr. Exposition, and can be recruited if you talk to him enough times. However, he leaves whenever you visit the next bar, and depending on the player's actions, may become completely unrecruitable late in the game, depending on whether or not you complete the Trials of Elore and discover his identity.
  • Okami introduces Issun as "Wandering Minstrel Issun".
  • The Sims Medieval: The Bard Hero Sim, whose duty is to gather inspiration from around the kingdom in order to write plays, perform poetry, and play the lute to entertain the populace.
  • Wandering minstrels wander the streets in Assassin's Creed 2, and they're always pestering people (Ezio, in particular) for money.

I am a tactless minstrel
I sing off-key for coins
If you see me in the street
please kick me in the loins.

Web Comics

Web Original

  • The Music-Human from Water Human, who pops up at the end of episode three to play the outro. In episode four, he inexplicably has a new look: a costume decorated with musical notation.

Western Animation