Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Dennis Littlehales Date: 04 Jul 23 - 06:21 AM Can anyone help me acquire a copy of this rare 'Stoke Folk' LP from 1968? It seems to be almost impossible to acquire now. I don't need the actual physical release, a decent digitisation would serve my purposes nicely as I only want top listen to it/ study it academically as a cultural artefact. I would be willing to pay for the help. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Kevin Lovatt Date: 07 Feb 23 - 07:50 AM Dave Boulton - originally with Muggins Fancy then His Worship & The Pig. Great songwriter. https://david-boulton.co.uk/ |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Mr Red Date: 07 May 17 - 09:14 AM but how wud them be sayin it? |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST Date: 06 May 17 - 04:57 PM Yes, Mr Red, Glynne Arms it was, (spelt like this if you like pedantry) - but known to Gornalites as the 'Sidin' House' after the then close by mineral railway siding. George Dunn was proud of being one of the few people born in Sheffield Street who could read and write and would definitely have spelt it 'Quarry Bank'. I know this for a fact as my grandfather was one of the others ! |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Mr Red Date: 05 May 17 - 02:36 AM Just dug this up, (sticking my neck out!) Wiki talking about Leekfrith Torcs |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST Date: 01 May 17 - 01:01 PM And there are the ancient Leekfrith Talks too. Sorry, that should be Torcs. It's caused a lot of trouble at the Potteries Museum. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: FreddyHeadey Date: 01 May 17 - 11:59 AM [some contemporary poems, incase anyone is interested "... In 2016 Staffordshire County Council's Libraries & Arts Service took the decision to develop the Staffordshire Poetry Collection. Our aim has been to create a picture of the county in words, to capture its diversity and in so doing help to create a cultural identity and awareness for the county as a whole. We have of course a rich heritage of poetry going back centuries, but we wished to create a feeling of life in Staffordshire as it is today. The poems in the collection are therefore contemporary and as varied in form and tone and content as the county itself. ..." https://staffordshirepoetlaureate.wordpress.com/the-staffordshire-poetry-collection/ ] |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: John J Date: 27 Apr 17 - 05:36 PM Anybody know whatever happened to Muggins Fancy - 3 lads from Staffordshire who had tremendous voices and used them to very good effect in the folk clubs in the area in the mid - late 1970s. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: FreddyHeadey Date: 27 Apr 17 - 03:23 PM That was me. Wrong link above, should read : ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Just for the record Recently Sam Edwards has written "Mmmmmm...Oatcakes!" but it isn't on line, I don't know if it is singable http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/schoolboy-s-ode-oatcakes-features-new-poetry-book/story-28049951-detail/story.html |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST Date: 27 Apr 17 - 11:22 AM Some oatcake songs on YouTube, mostly not terribly folky imho, or oatcakes are barely(!) mentioned so I'm not going into a lot of detail Never Underestimate An Oatcake _ Terry James The Oatcake Boat Song _ neo anderson I Want Oatcakes (For My Christmas Dinner) _ Merrym'n(Bob Moston) They don't make oatcakes in Ohio _ Duncan Bourne An Oatcake's Not Negotiable _ Terry James https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLM6cU8b4WUOQRZZF2Qs0hdDtccMC8YKVW ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Merrym'n(Bob Moston) has other Stoke songs on Youtube I Was Born In Stoke-on-Trent Anna Of The Five Towns 47 Bottle Kilns https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLWSjgUVVET2bb0GzSHV9Gmx1F9gekEVLB ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Just for the record Recently Sam Edwards has written "Mmmmmm...Oatcakes!" but it isn't on line, I don't know if it is singable http://www.bbc.co.uk/stoke/content/articles/2006/02/24/ode_to_an_oatcake_feature.shtml One from a famous poet locally, but this isn't very singable Ode to the Oatcake _ Arthur Berry "Let us pay homage to the Oatcake Or Oatcake or woodcake as the old men called them. The oatcake is not a cake at all really Not like the fairy cake or the Eccles cake Not a cake in that way More of a Potteries Papadum A sort of Tunstall Tortilla A Clay Suzette." http://www.bbc.co.uk/stoke/content/articles/2006/02/24/ode_to_an_oatcake_feature.shtml ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Mr Red Date: 27 Apr 17 - 06:24 AM Crooked House - was the Glyn Arms when I first went. & ............... Kworry Bonk owr kid. Getit right, mon. & ............. PS (just to be über-pedantic) exclave I think is the correct term (of Worcestershire). |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Brave Dudley Boy Date: 26 Apr 17 - 04:38 PM Ian [above] is wrong, Dudley has never been in Staffordshire. As another contributor noted it was an enclave of Worcestershire and remained so until the 'West Midlands' conurb was formed. The County Cricket ground [sadly gone] was a home ground for Worcs. until the 1970's and derby games against the Bears [Warwickshire] were always well attended and hotly contested. The Staffordshire border ran alongside the Crooked House pub just west of Gornal at one end and along the Tipton Road to the east. Quarry Bank, though technically part of Dudley Borough, was in Staffs traditionally and was the home of the great traditional singer George Dunn. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: FreddyHeadey Date: 26 Apr 17 - 12:39 PM rich-joy link above ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6IdeeTvw1dk |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: rich-joy Date: 26 Apr 17 - 09:15 AM Jon Raven performing "The Song of the Staffordshire Men" : "For this is the song of the Staffordshire men, In forge, in kiln, in mine. Our fires shall burn, and our mill-wheels turn And the Knot shall be our sign." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6IdeeTvw1dk and there are more Black Country numbers too .... R-J |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Rob Naylor Date: 24 Apr 17 - 07:58 AM FreddyHeady: In fact, it's on his website still: Booth Backdrop Some of those caricatured were manning the booth at various times. The resemblances were uncanny, considering he was working from passport photo head and shoulders shots and a brief description from me on their personalities. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Rob Naylor Date: 24 Apr 17 - 07:53 AM FreddyHeady....yes, Duncan did some caricatures of some of my staff about 10 years ago, when I was part owner of a business. We blew them up to life-size and printed them as the backdrop to a booth we had at a trade fair. Everyone else's backdrops were whizzy technical displays of kit, field operations or fancy graphics. Guess which booth got the most reaction? His regular cartoon strip in one of the climbing magazines was just brilliant, too. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: FreddyHeadey Date: 24 Apr 17 - 07:42 AM Thanks for Duncan's"potteries song", I'd not heard that one. Duncan gives a brief mention of an oatcake in the lyrics of his "They Don't Make Oatcakes In Ohio" which is here on yt with some other oatcake songs, though theyre not particularly 'folky'. http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLM6cU8b4WUOQRZZF2Qs0hdDtccMC8YKVW Btw he does some brilliant cartoony artwork if you're after album covers/ adverts etc |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Rob Naylor Date: 24 Apr 17 - 04:55 AM Duncan Bourne, a climbing friend who is also a great cartoonist/ illustrator, has a CD of unaccompanied potteries-related songs at: Duncan Bourne Potteries Songs And here he is singing "Fireman", a song about a kilnman in the potteries in the mid 1800s: Duncan Singing "Fireman" About a Kilnman And Duncan on Soundcloud doing "The Potteries Song": The Potteries Song on Soundcloud |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,henryp Date: 24 Apr 17 - 04:41 AM Under the leadership of founding Director, the late Peter Cheeseman, the Vic company earned an international reputation through its pioneering work in creating verbatim, musical documentaries. Productions such as The Jolly Potters (1964), Fight for Shelton Bar! (1974), Miner Dig the Coal (1981) and Nice Girls (1993) reflected the experiences and preoccupations of the communities of North Staffordshire, with its economy based on ceramics, coal and steel. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Mr Red Date: 23 Apr 17 - 07:02 AM the tightrope song was the walk &/or song easy or was it ruddy 'ard? Mr Red (Staffordshire man & canal enthusiast) FWIW the lake is actually a reservoir for the Caldon canal. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,henryp Date: 23 Apr 17 - 06:51 AM Staffordshire's southern border has a complicated history! From Wikipedia; The Counties (Detached Parts) Act 1844 was an Act of Parliament which abolished many of the exclaves of counties in England and Wales. The boundaries of Worcestershire, England have been fluid for over 150 years since the first major changes in 1844. Worcestershire had an unusually large number of exclaves, which were cut off from the main county and completely surrounded by the nearby counties of Warwickshire, Staffordshire, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Shropshire (Detached) and Oxfordshire. The most notable islands were Dudley, Evenlode, Blockley and the area around Shipston-on-Stour. Herefordshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire and Shropshire had their own exclaves within the main part of Worcestershire at Rochford, Broome, Clent, Tardebigge (Tutnall and Cobley) and Halesowen. Tardebigge's history is even more colourful, changing hands from Worcestershire to Staffordshire and Warwickshire, before returning to Worcestershire at differing times over the centuries. A significant boundary change occurred in 1926 when the east of Sedgley was transferred to Worcestershire to allow the construction of the new Priory Estate on land purchased by Dudley County Borough council. A major reorganisation in the Black Country in 1966, under the recommendation of the Local Government Commission for England led to the creation of an area of contiguous county boroughs. The county borough of Dudley, historically a detached part of Worcestershire, expanded and became associated with Staffordshire instead. This reorganisation led to the administrative county of Staffordshire having a thin protrusion passing between the county boroughs (to the east) and Shropshire, to the west, to form a short border with Worcestershire. Wolverhampton, Walsall, West Bromwich, and Smethwick were historic Staffordshire towns until local government reorganisation created the West Midlands county in 1974. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,henryp Date: 23 Apr 17 - 06:23 AM We are delighted to announce a daring tightrope walk will take place twice a day on the 30 April/1/2 May 2016. High wire walker Chris Bull of the Bullzini Family will recreate the walk across Rudyard Lake, first undertaken by Carlos Trower, the 'African Blondin', in the 1860s. Michael Symmons Roberts was commissioned to write A Tightrope Song to celebrate A Day at the Lake. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Mr Red Date: 23 Apr 17 - 02:48 AM Any songs about Rudyard? The lake that is, not the poet named after it. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Desi C Date: 22 Apr 17 - 02:42 PM Phil & June Colclough of North Staff's wrote the very beautiful Song For Ireland |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST Date: 22 Apr 17 - 04:31 AM As this thread has been resurrected here's an additional song – "Diglake Field" by Phil & June Colclough which is, I believe, about the 1895 Diglake Disaster. It's discussed here . |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Mr Red Date: 22 Apr 17 - 03:37 AM no songs about Staffordshire Oatcakes? |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: rich-joy Date: 21 Apr 17 - 07:31 PM The fabulous "Muckram Wakes" are more usually connected with Derbyshire, but I used to sing "Cathy Shaw" written, I think, by Roger Watson, which mentions "...I was brought up in Staffordshire (but there I dwell no more)..." Okay, that may be drawing a long bow, but wasn't the singer, Helen Wainwright, from Staffordshire??!! Anyway, years after I used to sing that song at folk clubs, I discovered I had Staffy heritage, LOL! Cheers! Rich-Joy (Down Under) |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: FreddyHeadey Date: 21 Apr 17 - 11:33 AM [re dead link above] Story, needing a song : "The story of Thomas Meakin starts in the lovely little village of Rushton Spencer just north of Rudyard, it then moved to the town of Stone and finally ends in the churchyard of St Lawrence in Rushton Spencer and centres on the belief that Thomas Meakin was buried alive…. Thomas Meakin (or Meaykin) was born c1760 at Rushton Spencer to Thomas and Mary Meakin. Around 1780 or so, Thomas junior move to the town of Stone where he found work in service as a groom, his master being an apothecary (pharmacist). Thomas it seems caught the eye of his master's daughter. It is not known whether the attraction was reciprocated. We do know however that in Thomas was taken seriously ill and sadly died and was buried in the churchyard of St Michael's in Stone on the 16th July 1781 It would have been regarded as simply the sad death of a young man, but then we have the tale of a pony which had been in Thomas's charge, making his way to Thomas's grave and attempting to drag away the earth with his hooves. This is supposedly to have happened more than once. This naturally caused a lot of talk and suspicions amongst Thomas's friends and no doubt the people of Stone, which must have continued for some time as almost to the year of his death his grave was exhumed and on opening the coffin Thomas's body was found to be face down. It was then believed that Thomas had taken – or been given a very powerful narcotic which did not kill him but gave the appearance of death. His family and friends then had his body taken back to Rushton Spencer for re-interment in the churchyard of St Lawrence, but perhaps because of the circumstances he was laid to rest with his feet to the west as is his gravestone, in the believe that his ghost would be laid to rest. The Parish Register at Stone records state that "Thomas Meakin of Stone was buried July 16th 1781 and was removed thence and buried at Rushton Spencer July 17th, 1782." His west facing gravestone reads:- Memento Mori Thomas son of Thomas And Mary MEAYKIN Interred July 16_ 1781 Aged 21 years 'As a man falleth before Wicked men, so fell I' 'Bia Thanatos' 'Memento Mori' - Be mindful of death. 'Bia Thanatos' - Death by Violence No charges were bought against anyone in connection of Thomas Meakin's death." http://www.visitinghistoryinstaffordshire.com/thomasmeakin-buriedalive.asp |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: FreddyHeadey Date: 02 May 15 - 07:41 PM I don't know any songs but I did spot a story that needs a song. story is of a young man buried alive—Thomas Meaykin, ... |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Kev Lovatt Date: 02 May 15 - 05:11 PM Nobody has mentioned a song that is definitely about Newcastle-under-Lyme and it's called 'Newcastle Wakes'. I nice little song that we have been singing for many years as an amateur folk group called Fustian based at Higherland Methodist Church, Newcastle. The song is included in quite a few publications but the latest one I've seen is in a book called 'West Midlands Ballads' by Michael Raven - ISBN 978 0 90611485 8. We first heard this sung by the High Level Ranters because they originally mistakenly thought it was about the 'Geordie' Newcastle. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,David M Date: 09 Nov 14 - 05:29 AM Lads from the potteries used to sing a version of this, that started "My name is Willy Hancock", on their regular visits ti The Royal Oak at Wetton (the landlord was my father in law Harry Cooke)There were verses that they used to ommit because they were "Too rude to sing here in mixed company". |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,David M Date: 09 Nov 14 - 05:28 AM Lads from the potteries used to sing a version of this, that started "My name is Willy Hancock", on their regular visits ti The Royal Oak at Wetton (the landlord was my father in law Harry Cooke)There were verses that they used to ommit because they were "Too rude to sing here in mixed company". |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST Date: 13 Jan 14 - 09:17 AM Here's "On the Club". It was written by Brian Berrington who used to sing at the Stoke Folk Club in the 1960s. I've transcribed the words from Brian's singing on the "Stoke Folk" record. Oh my name is Albert Twemlow and I come from Boslem Tine Me fayther is a mould runner, me brother's dine a mine Me sister works at Doulton's and me mother's in a pub But I meself don't work at all, I'm always on the club. CH: Tunstall, Boslem, Hanley, Stoke Fenton, Longton through the smoke. One day before I left the school me teacher said "Hey you, You'll have to get a thinking lad what you are gonna do. You conna stay at school no more, you wunna gerra sub." "That's owrate duck," I says to her, "I'm going go on the club." I thought I'd get a job of work with the good old PMT* Conducting** on a 'decker bus as went to Bentilee. A fat old woman says to me "Where can I put me stub?" And when the judge had tried me case, I was back on the club. I thought as I'd try me hand at the window cleaning trade With me barrow and me chammy cloth I thought as I was made While cleaning Wedgwood's windows I give a special rub Then I stepped back to admire me work and I was on the club I met a woman in a bar, I axed her what her did Her said her stripped for jiggerers and earned just on six quid I dosed her up with gin and port and when we left that pub I axed her if her'd strip for me and now her's in the club. So come all you likely pott'ry lads as have just heard me tale I hope you'll tak me good advice, you'll find it wunner fail Just tell the doc you've strained your back, ax for some Johnson's rub Mak sure he signs upon the lines and you'll be on the club. *PMT = Potteries Motor Traction, the original Potteries bus company. **Those were the days, when buses had conductors! Cheers Jeff Parton |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST Date: 09 Jan 14 - 01:09 PM Hi The song you are after is "On the Club" by the late Brian Berrington. I've got it recorded somewhere. I'll see if I can find it and get back to you. Jeff |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Mel Date: 08 Jan 14 - 07:56 PM Does anyone know the title and lyrics to the "tunstall boslem Hanley stoke....." Song please, thank you |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Anne Lamb Date: 28 Aug 13 - 09:30 AM Hi there I was in a folk group back in the late 60s and there was an old chap who was a regular at the Falcon Folk club, Stafford, who sang a song about Stafford Jail and a murder that had been committed by one of the inmates. It was very dramatic and possibly was originally a Victorian music hall song, he also used to sing a song about the Staffordshire Oatcake and the choice of fillings that could be got during the interval at Stoke theatre.....by the time he had got through the chorus a couple of times, you were just in the mood for an oaty or two! I have a record somewhere in the house called 'On the Cut' with songs about the canals and narrowboats running on the Shroppie, when I was a poor student, I used to get paid to clean some of the boats in at Norbury Junction, there were a lot of singers and musicians on the cut in those days. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,SteveT Date: 18 Jun 13 - 04:47 AM " "M" is for Mard Arse they whinge and they whine " |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,banjo billy Date: 16 Jun 13 - 01:53 AM thanks Steve i have got the lyrics to potteries alphabet now i just can't remember what the letter M stands for. do you? |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: John J Date: 29 Mar 13 - 04:38 AM There are some Staffordshire songs in 'Songs of The Midlands', edited by Roy Palmer, ISBN 0 7158 0177 8 JJ |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Martin Thompson Date: 28 Mar 13 - 12:26 PM A few references to Frank Ryan and his song Silverdale. Frank has been living in Staffordshire for many years and still writes excellent songs. He runs a singaround on the first Thursday each month at the Lamb & Flag, Little Haywwod nr Stafford. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,SteveT Date: 08 Dec 12 - 04:32 AM It's been recorded on the CD "Look Back in 'anley" by His Worship and the Pig (Jeff Parton & Dave Boulton - always my first port of call for Potteries songs*). I can transcribe the words for you if no-one else comes up with a ready-written link. I'll keep an eye on this thread – put a reminder on it if you haven't been able to get a copy of the words. *Albums can be ordered from: His Worship and the Pig, 251 Werrington Road, Bucknall, S-o-T, Staffs: ST2 9AS, UK £6.00 inc. p&p: Cheques (payable to "J. Parton & D. Boulton") |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Bill Pickin Date: 07 Dec 12 - 02:30 PM Does any one know of a song called the potters alphabet? it was sung to the tune of Fairport conventions sailors alphabet off the album Babbecome Lee. the lyrics were A is fer ayup when greeting yer mates B is fer bostin when things are just great C is for chonnock a small turnip so sweet and D is for Doulton's who make potts down our street. i can't remember what M or N was and i can't remember the whole chorus. which was Potteries Potteries ........................................ they talk a bit funny they act a bit strange , but they'll give their last shilling and not ask for change.. If any one knows the missing lyrics please let me know, banjobilly@live.co.uk Thanks and keep up the good work. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: Paul Burke Date: 10 Feb 12 - 06:20 PM "anglo saxon translations from Urdu " Have these been discovered in Stoke? On second thoughts, that would be odd, since Anglo-Saxon died out (in written terms) at Peterborough about 1154, while Urdu (Horde = Army language) doesn't predate the Mongol hordes- somewhere between 1200 and 1400. Stoke is rock bottom, but that's because the people there don't think. If they did, they'd know that the enemy don't have brown faces. They have overseas bank accounts. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs Mike Halifax From: GUEST,David Wrench Date: 10 Feb 12 - 06:26 AM Time to dust off the slops, clear the bats, fill the arcs....the only way is up when you hit rock bottom in a city....no new spend replacing bins, set paving, jollees to Cannes, anglo saxon translations from Urdu in Houston....its community recival by direct funding in embryo cultural industries which means ceramic design studios start ups in creative residential areas along the spine of stoke and remembering our historic cultural pride &skills. You can't beat a good song in a revolution. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs Mike Halifax From: GUEST,david wrench. Date: 19 Sep 11 - 02:34 PM Folk club. was that the Kings Arms in Hill Street with Muggins Fancy and were you originally from Bridgenorth with Taoist glaze interests? |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Jeff Parton Date: 18 May 09 - 03:24 PM Someone mentioned Frank Ryan (who wrote "Silverdale") on this thread some time ago. Does anyone have his email? I was given it but lost it. I'd like to check if his Silverdale is the Potteries one. |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Jeff Parton Date: 16 May 09 - 01:52 PM Hi Ken Whitmore (if you're still around) I remember Wizards All well - and I still sing Chalk & Cheese. (That's another one for any collectors of Staffordshire songs! Sorry it's taken me so long to reply. I've only just seen your post, but with luck it won't take quite so long to come up with a tune for your Athaenium song! Cheers Jeff |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Chris Murray Date: 29 Sep 08 - 01:44 PM When I was a young girl we used to see 'Folk Operas' at the Vic in Newcastle-under-lyme. I remember one about mining and another about the Primitive Methodist Church. My grandad was both a miner in that area and a Methodist. |
Subject: Lyr Add: NINETY TWENTY SIX AT THE ATHENAEUM From: GUEST,Ken Whitmore Date: 29 Sep 08 - 11:46 AM Dear Jeff - You might remember I wrote some lyrics for you in the production of Wizards All at the Vic back in the 70s. Here's one you might like to arrange for your new show. It's got a very posh title but dunner be put off: NINETY TWENTY SIX AT THE ATHENAEUM He marched down to London in the mining strike And stopped at a pub or something like The Toffs tottered merrily in and out And me dad went in and ordered stout "I'm sorry, sir, you're not a member here I'm sorry, sir, you're not a member here I'm sorry, sir, you're not a member here So bugger off out, you're not a member here" Then t'King stepped up and bellowed in his ear The King stepped up and bellowed in his ear The King stepped up and bellowed in his ear He took off his crown and bellowed in his ear He said "I'll buy a drink for this brave lad I will I'll buy a drink for this Potteries lad I'll buy a drink for this brave lad I will and you can put it on me tab, by Gad!" My father told the King , "Just go and take a piss Me Dad he told the King to take a running piss "I'd die before I'd join a bloody club like this I'd rather die before I'd join a club like this You can keep your fucking beer but I'll tell thee this I'd rather die before I'd join a club like this." |
Subject: RE: North Staffordshire songs From: GUEST,Tracy R Date: 19 Aug 08 - 12:38 PM There's a couple of GREAT Staffordshire Compilations by a Guy named Ed Lane/Laine/Layne..................in fact I m just trying frantically now to find some more of his work but he appears quite ellusive! Songs such as Balls of Clay - About the Pots / Gertie Getane / Red White & Stokie!!! Honestly he's Brill!!! Cheers |
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