Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: catspaw49 Date: 28 Jan 08 - 01:50 PM Mooh.....That's a beautiful memory my friend and thanks for bringing it here. Spaw |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Mrs Scarecrow Date: 28 Jan 08 - 01:52 PM One of my greatest regrets is that I did not get into traditional folk music whilst my father was still alive. He was born in 1907 and his first commision at sea was on a sailing ship although it only lasted a few days before it got into trouble and he moved on to something else. He sang Leave her Johnny Leave her, Spanish Ladies and probably many others that I do not recall or didn't get to hear as my mother was strictly into clasical music and a lot of what my father sang would also have been considered inappropriate for children, I do recall the jug of punch and snippets of other drinking songs being sung to me from an early age which may explain a lot |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Mr Red Date: 28 Jan 08 - 01:55 PM dunno - he died when I was 9 months old. But from what I recall of family folklore - singing never figured. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: scouse Date: 28 Jan 08 - 02:10 PM A very drunken version of "Barefoot Days." the Harmonies outside the pub with his mates still bring back memories.. Vin Garbutt was right when he sung "they don't write them like that anymore." Virtually all the words where true!!! As Aye, Phil. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Fidjit Date: 28 Jan 08 - 02:14 PM When Father Papered The Parlour Any Umberellas Underneath The Arches White Cliffs of Dover Run Rabit Run My job as a kid on a Friday after school was to go get the Acumulator from the cycle shop where it had been re-charged, so's we could listen to the wireless at the week-end. There was "Good Evening. This is Henry Hall speaking and Tonight is my Guest night". Then on Sunday lunch time it was Wakey! Wakey! Billy Cotton Band show with Allan Breeze and he'd sing. I've got a Luvly Bunch of Coconuts Chas |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: AnCailínÉireannach Date: 28 Jan 08 - 02:21 PM My native town Drumlish is a favourite of my dads |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Partridge Date: 28 Jan 08 - 02:56 PM My Dad and I used to sing loads of gilbert and sullivan together. The first folk song I ever sang I sang with him - the keeper. It was at a family wedding and everyone did a turn. When I visited him he used to put on the alexander brothers and we'd sing the northern lights of old aberdeen, and his favourite the road and the miles to dundee - it reminded him of my mum - who he missed so much. We also sang lots of old white heather club stuff and the corries, The tears pour down my face as I write this , but they are such happy, happy memories. Singing is not the same without him. It was what we did together - we sang Pat xx |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: frogprince Date: 28 Jan 08 - 03:04 PM Dad sang pretty decently, but very, very seldom around home; about all I remember is an occasional scrap of "It ain't agonna rain no more". He sang regularly in church, and joined in a quartet on rare occasions. I know of any number of songs he enjoyed listening to, but so far as what he especially liked to sing, "Near the Cross" would probably be at the top of the list. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Little Hawk Date: 28 Jan 08 - 03:16 PM My Dad was incapable of singing. He could not carry a tune to save his life. He could whistle reasonably well, though...and he knew about 4 tunes on the piano: "You Are My Sunshine" and a handful of others like that. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Tootler Date: 28 Jan 08 - 04:16 PM My Dad didn't sing, but he did listen to a lot of Beethoven. My Mother and Grandmother both sang a lot round the house, though my Mother stopped in later years. You only had to say something and they would come up with an appropriate song. I can only remember two for certain now but what they sang was a mixture of traditional and popular songs of the day. The two I remember them singing for sure were Kerry Dances and Katie Bairdie I got a set of words for Katie Bairdie and would love to have words for the Kerry Dances as I still have the tune in my head. The first two lines I remember were Oh, the days of the Kerry Dances Oh, the ring of the piper's tune That's all I remember. Geoff |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Amos Date: 28 Jan 08 - 04:42 PM Subject: Lyr Add: O THE DAYS OF THE KERRY DANCING (Molloy) From: Alice - PM Date: 30 Jul 99 - 11:11 AM Here are the 4 verses altogether. The third verse changes keys and slows down (piu lento) and also changes tune. The first two verses are bright and lively (vivace), and the fourth verse, same tune as the first two, is sung lento, sadly, in the beginning, then speeds up at "when the boys". I considered singing this in my program at the Victorian Ball last week, but decided to do "The Lass With the Delicate Air" instead. As it turned out, I didn't have time to sing The Lass. O THE DAYS OF THE KERRY DANCING words and music by James Lyman Molloy 1837-1909 1. O the days of the Kerry Dancing, O the ring of the piper's tune! O for one of those hours of gladness Gone, alas! like our youth, too soon. When the boys began to gather, In the glen of a summer night, And the Kerry piper's tuning Made us long with wild delight; O, to think of it, O to dream of it, Fills my heart with tears. O the days of the Kerry Dancing, O the ring of the piper's tune! O for one of those hours of gladness Gone, alas! like our youth, too soon. 2. Was there ever a sweeter colleen, In the dance than Eily Moore! Or a prouder lad than Thady, As he boldly took the floor: "Lads and lasses to your places, Up the middle and down again," Ah, the merry hearted laughter Ringing thro the happy glen. O, to think of it, O to dream of it, Fills my heart with tears. O the days of the Kerry Dancing, O the ring of the piper's tune! O for one of those hours of gladness Gone, alas! like our youth, too soon. (piu lento, tune & key change) 3. Time goes on, and the happy years are dead. And one by one, the merry hearts have fled. Silent now is the wild and lonely glen, Where the bright glad laugh Will echo ne'er again. Only dreaming of days gone by, Fills my heart with tears! (back to same tune as verse 1 and 2) 4. Loving voices of old companions Stealing out of the past once more, And the sound of the dear old music, Soft and sweet as in days of yore: When the boys began to gather In the glen of a summer night, And the Kerry piper's tuning Made us long with wild delight; O, to think of it, O to dream of it, Fills my heart with tears. O the days of the Kerry Dancing, O the ring of the piper's tune! O for one of those hours of gladness Gone, alas! like our youth, too soon. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Post - Top - Forum Home - Printer Friendly - Translate -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: RE: TUNE ADD - NEED LYRICS: The Kerry Dances From: Alice - PM Date: 30 Jul 99 - 11:15 AM By the way, my source is the sheet music published by Warner Brothers, who now own the copyright. They are posted here for educational puposes only. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: The Vulgar Boatman Date: 28 Jan 08 - 05:03 PM I think eclectic is the right word - G&S, hymns, standards of all descriptions including the Kerry Dances, and a whole repertoire from canteen "Sod's Operas" from wartime service, Moving Father's Grave to Build a Sewer (mostly delivered in a flawless tenor voice), and recitations - the Farting Contest was a favourite... the strange thing is, we don't regard this lot as folk music. Or do we? |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Irish sergeant Date: 28 Jan 08 - 05:18 PM Great question! My father played several instruments (Guitar, banjo, piano and fiddle that I remember and Bagpipes!) But what did he sing. Miss Otis. Shutters and boards SCotland the Brave really too many songs to remember but it certainly is fun trying!. Neil |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Bert Date: 28 Jan 08 - 05:29 PM ...we don't regard this lot as folk music. Or do we?... We do here Boatman. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Beer Date: 28 Jan 08 - 05:43 PM Melancholy Baby Down the River of Golden Dreams Smile Awhile Ever in Dreams (not sure here if title is correct.) And lots more. Beer (adrien |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Tootler Date: 28 Jan 08 - 05:43 PM Here's some words for Katie Bairdie. It's a children's song and there are other verses out there. I will be happy to get more. Katie Bairdie Trad Tune "Shirramuir" Katie Bairdie hid a coo', Black and white aboot the moo' Wisna that a dainty coo'? Dance Katie Bairdie. Katie Bairdie hid a cat, She could catch baith moose and rat; Wisna that a dainty cat? Dance Katie Bairdie. Katie Bairdie hid a hen, She could lay baith but an' ben; Wisna that a dainty hen? Dance Katie Bairdie. Katie Bairdie hid a wife, She could use baith fork an' knife; Wisna that a dainty wife? Dance Katie Bairdie. Katie Bairdie hid a bairn, Widna play when it cam' on rain; Wisna that a dainty bairn? Dance Katie Bairdie. (Source. 101 Scottish Songs ed. Norman Buchan) Geoff |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Rapparee Date: 28 Jan 08 - 05:43 PM Thinking on it, he also sang Turkey in the straw Peanut sat on a railroad track Hallejulia I'm a bum Stardust (usually whistled) Red River Valley |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST,lyndie Date: 28 Jan 08 - 06:20 PM When we were driving in the car my parents used to harmonize to: When You Wore a Tulip Tell Me Why and Lyndie (Sweet As The Sugar Cane) |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: astro Date: 28 Jan 08 - 06:32 PM I don't have memories of my dad, but as a dad I've made it my mission to sing everything I could so long as a silly dance could be included. It made me a happy man when I saw my daughter do a silly clog across the floor to pinch my cheek...the traditions do go on... astro in LA |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Jim Dixon Date: 28 Jan 08 - 07:04 PM My father wasn't very musical. I only remember a couple of snatches: "The cuckoo, she's a pretty bird. She sings as she flies. She brings us good tidings and tells us no lies." He sang it to the tune I now know as "My Horses Ain't Hungry." Also: "Horsy, hold your tail up, hold your tail up, hold your tail up. Oh, horsy, hold your tail up. Keep the sun out o' my eyes." He sang that to the tune of "Ach Du Lieber Augustine." In each case, I think he only ever sang one verse. I wasn't very interested in those days. I wish I had asked him if he knew more. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST,Seonaid Date: 28 Jan 08 - 09:43 PM Dad comes from a very musical family, but never sang much. In WWI he was part of his "fleet orchestra," a bunch of guys with ukuleles and one clarinet -- they billed themselves as "Ike Eisely and the 99 Nasty Nose-Pickers, singing 'Oh, You Booger'"! Wonder what that was like? He never has given up the secret. Years later, after seeing "The Ballad of Cat Ballou," he would occasionally break into a growly rendition of the theme song's opening line. My mother, on the other, hand, is mostly tone-deaf, but always sang around the house. She was pretty much famous for drifting from one song into another one with a similar musical phrase; one of the best of these unplanned medleys was probably "Goldfinger... wider than a mile..." |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: iancarterb Date: 28 Jan 08 - 09:55 PM It's fun to read the whole thread and theorize on whose parents are/were what age. Many posts reminded me "Oh, yes, that too." The Captain and the Mermaid, The Pope, Eddystone Light, various Harry Lauder, Coney Island Baby, much Gilbert and Sullivan, Bless 'em All, A Capital Ship. My mother and father grew up on Cohan and Irving Berlin, but they learned a lot of songs from the Brit and Aussie and New Zealander sailors whom they hosted on Long Island on liberties during WWII, and long after Dad had died and she could barely remember who my sister and I were she still sang the chorus to Roll Me Over In the Clover to herself walking down the hallway. I always hope that, as is often said, the songs really ARE the last thing to go. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST,Norval Date: 28 Jan 08 - 10:08 PM Bert, someone had a similar thought about Dad way back in 1921. The Baldwin Piano Company issued a small music folio "The Tunes Dad Whistled". Today we could substitute GrandDad for Dad in the title. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: number 6 Date: 28 Jan 08 - 11:34 PM My father once and a while would bring out his old beat up guitar (probably a Kay) and sing a bunch of Jimmy Rodger songs, yodelling and all. Why Jimmie Rodgers I haven't a clue. He would also get out on occassion his ukulele and sing a completely different tone of songs. The only one of those I recall was 'I Don't Want to Play in Your Yard', the rest were probably old collegiate type songs from the days of his youth. He died when I was quite young so I never really did get to know him. Never did know what happened to that old guitar or ukulele. biLL |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Bryn Pugh Date: 29 Jan 08 - 04:33 AM I was fortunate that both my parents sang, me owl' feller usually when he was aled up, althought I was too young to realise it. He died in 1951, before my 6th birthday, but 57 years on I can still see him and hear him sing Ho-ro, my Nut-Brown Maiden Me Nancy Tickled me Fancy, and Me Father's the King of the Gypsies. Don't get me started on the Old Girl - from her I learned She Moved thro' the Fair, Kelly from Killane, Oro ! Se do bheatha bhaile, Shall my soul pass thro' Old Ireland, The Little Toy Doggie is covered with rust, Little old Turf Cabin on the Hill, Amhrann na bhFianna, Moonlight in Mayo (vomit !) . . . etc. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST Date: 29 Jan 08 - 05:41 AM What a wonderful thread! I love all of these answers. My Dad loved all those sentimental old Irish songs especially "Rose of Tralee" because my mother's name is Mary, and "Come Back, Paddy Reilly, to Ballyjamesduff" because his mother was born in Ballyjamesduff. He was a sort of one man folk process since he rarely remembered the words of songs and would make up others as he went along. But they would always rhyme and very often were stronger and better than the original. God, how I miss him. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Schantieman Date: 29 Jan 08 - 06:04 AM My dad was a great singer - he was in a jazz band while he was in the army (1934 - 46) and learned lots of songs, some of which he passed on to me. These included, It's a Long way to Tipperary Pack up your Troubles Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty I've Got Sixpence ...all of which were marching songs he learned as a soldier. Then there were the jazz songs, four of which he actually recorded on 78s in the 50s while he was courting my mother. These were You Gotta Have Heart The Nearness of You When I Fall in Love Out of Town ...and I sing the first three of these now. In fact I'm recording a couple of them on my current CD! He died a few years ago. I don't miss him - he was a grumpy old bastard but a good singer! Bit like me really. Steve |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: paula t Date: 29 Jan 08 - 08:45 AM My Dad used to sing "Scarlet Ribbons" to me. I loved it. He was hugely touched to hear Kathryn playing it on the piano the last time he came to visit.It's sentimental, but that's how Dads songs should be eh? |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: topical tom Date: 29 Jan 08 - 09:15 AM Dad almost never sang but the only song I remember was "The Wearin' O' The Green".Ironically enough, my father's ancestors were, for the most part, members of the Orange Lodge!I am not proud of that fact. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Charmain Date: 29 Jan 08 - 10:42 AM Lots and lots of songs: Lavenders Blue and Train Whistle Blowing when he's singing a small child to sleep... Rattlin' Bog and Home, Boys, Home on long car journeys in the days when there was no other music to be had... Dirty Old Town when he's been reminiscing about his childhood... Wild Rover when he's had one to many... Grey Funnel Line when he really should be off to bed now... But he is most famed for his roaring renditions of O'Reilly's Daughter, Rawtenstall Annual Fair and Brother Sylveste - classics all!! |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Ythanside Date: 29 Jan 08 - 11:46 AM My old man sang almost constantly, and his repertoire varied according to how much money he had in his pocket at the time. When flush he would be all 'Girls Were Made to Love and Kiss', 'Sweet Sixteen', 'Kathleen', 'Just a Little Love, a Little Kiss' and virtually anything optimistic from Richard Tauber or Frans Lehar's Viennese operettas. Broke, and therefore rather melancholic, he would go through the card from Pagliacci to any other wrist-slitting, blood-and-gore opera that took his jaundiced fancy. One song that I only ever heard him sing at New Year, and have never heard sung by anyone outside of my immediate family, was a rather short WWI number called 'The Bombing Raid'. The words, as I recall them, are as follows. THE BOMBING RAID Listen and I'll tell you, How the Jocks spent their New Year, They were standing in the trenches, With the mud right up to here, And soaking through, and through and through. Aha, said Fritz, the time is right, For the Jocks are fu' the noo, So the plan was made for the bombing raid. They were up against the men o' marmalade, But if Fritz had only known, That that trench held Dundee's own, He would never, never made that bombing raid. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: ClaireBear Date: 29 Jan 08 - 12:11 PM Where to start? It's been 22 years since he died, but I'll never forget. Any time of the day or night, Dad would pick up the mandolin or mandola and start in. I sang harmony, my two sisters came in on piano and melody respectively, and my brother on guitar. We had, erm, a wide range of material. Here are a few of our family favorites, to give you a vague idea of just how eclectic we were: Twickenham Ferry Lazybones Santa Lucia Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair The Dying Hobo La Golondrina Poor Little Joe La Marseillaise Slap 'er Down Again, Paw Lili Marlene Green Grows the Ivy Ymnos eis tin Eleftherian (the Greek national anthem) Flow Gently Sweet Afton Long Black Veil Cancion Mixteca Do Ye Ken John Peel? The Whiffenpoof Song Mean to Me (How Come You're So...) Ach! du liebe Augustin Father, Dear Father (Come Home with Me Now) Lady Be Good Malagueña Saleroza Fratelli d'Italia (the Italian national anthem) Adios Muchachos Let the Rest of the World Go By Thanks for helping me relive my misspent youth... Claire |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Franz S. Date: 29 Jan 08 - 12:38 PM Only thing my dad ever sang to me was Joe Hill, according to him. I don't even remember that. Now he makes me sing it. Luckily, almost everyone in my mother's family sang. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: PeadarOfPortsmouth Date: 29 Jan 08 - 12:46 PM I remember that as a kid, my dad would sing "The Frozen Logger" with severe gusto, and would shake the windows by joining in with any Clancy Brothers chorus that was playing. Heck, I practically have to restrain him now when someone launches into "Holy Ground". ("Fine girl you are!") Reading through some of the responses above, I'm even more attuned to how lucky I am. Both he and my mum are still around (thank God) and enjoy the fact I'm singing the music they played to us when we were kids. Peter |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: lady penelope Date: 29 Jan 08 - 05:19 PM Getting my father to sing the whole of a song was the problem. We get lots of bits of songs. A lot of music hall stuff, some jazz, some really odd songs, show tunes, whatever came into his head. Plus Mad Mcgonagal poems and the like. The only songs I remember him singing all the way through on a regular basis were the Bluebell song.... Bluebells are bluebells Bluebells are blue Bluebells are bluebells 'Cos Bluebells are blue..... Second verse! Bluebells are bluebells.... (you get the idea, I inflictged this song onto my mates at Towersey one year in revenge for someting, I forget what though....) and a song I think is called The Indian Lullabye. Down where the river Kiporee (?) Empties its waters to the sea Down where the bear in his lair doesn't care If it rains or snows or shines An indian squaw sang To a baby on a straw mat And she sang as she hummed as she crooned him this lullabye Oh please don't cry Go to sleep my little papoose Go to sleep and slumber deep Close your eyes, your big brown eyes And soon you'll grow For soon you will be hunting buffalo You'll be a big chief some day For soon you will be hunting buffalo You'll be a big chief some day He's a trumpet player really.... |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Betsy Date: 29 Jan 08 - 05:55 PM I have a slight variation but similarity to Sooz , for some reason or other, after a pint or two ,my Dad used to sing "I'll take you home again Kathleen" but my mother would go crazy with him - My mum was called Annie. I suppose it made things a lot easier when he resorted to playing the paper and comb. !!! |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Irish sergeant Date: 29 Jan 08 - 08:21 PM This thread got me thinking about some of the songs that Dad sang. I mentioned some above but I remember my Uncle LArry who like Dad has gone to the jam sessionin the sky and he sang a song "Oh you'll neveer get to heaven in a PBY because the Godamn thing won't fly that high" That and "MAry-ann McCarthy" A lot of Army Air Corps songs Regards Neil |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST,Jay Date: 30 Jan 08 - 03:43 AM My Dad had a great baritone voice but sang nothing but Gilbert and Sullivan. He used to play all the comedy parts in the local operatic society. I remember bringing home an LP (long time ago now) of Ella Fitzgerald and in the interests of good taste I can't possibly tell you what he said! There was never any folk music in our house so I don't know where I got the bug. Perhaps from my mother singing pseudo folk songs with the W.I. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Liz the Squeak Date: 30 Jan 08 - 04:54 AM Lady P - I think it was your answer to 'the worlds shortest folk songs' like 'Now listen as I sing of the Good ship Araldite, stuck fast in Plymouth Sound', or 'D'ye ken John Peel? No.' But it might have been on the bus back from a gianting gig, to take our minds off the noise of your drunken sot of a brother hoiking up into a carrier bag hung over his ears. LTS |
Subject: Lyr Add: THE OLD SOW From: GUEST,Edthefolkie Date: 30 Jan 08 - 06:58 AM About the only thing I remember my Dad (b. 1910) singing was There was an old man and he had an old sow (snort) sow (whistle) sow (raspberry) Hi diddley dow, There was an old man and he had an old sow, (repeat sound effects) Oh, Susanna's a funniful man (repeat sound effects) Susanna's a funniful man. This old sow had three little pigs (etc). They tried to get over the garden wall (etc). They couldn't get over the garden wall (etc). When I was little he used to reduce me to hysteria with this. I always thought he'd made it up...but it turns out it's a pukka (music hall?) song which is even on the Interweb. However my Dad seems to have learned a slightly corrupted Bourne, Lincs version. He knew about Plough Monday too! I do wish he'd met Bob Copper - he'd have got on with him like a house on fire. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Bryn Pugh Date: 30 Jan 08 - 07:36 AM Thank you, ClaireBear, for the reminder of 'Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair', which was another one me owl' feller used to sing. Probably an age thing - it was the best part of 60 years ago :-) The Old Girl's favourite song was 'The Flower of Sweet Strabane'. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST,Guest, (Percy) Date: 30 Jan 08 - 05:53 PM I called on my sweetheart Elizabeth Brown She was having a bath and she wouldn't come down I said slip something on and come down for a while She slipped on the soap and came wearing a smile |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: kytrad (Jean Ritchie) Date: 30 Jan 08 - 07:22 PM Joe Bowers- My name is Joseph Bowers; I have a brother Ike I come from old Missouri- all the way from Pike.....a long 18th Century ballad. He knew and sang many more, too many to name here. The song he used to rock me to sleep with, was, The Uncloudy Day, a fairly modern hymn, but he knew and joined in all the Old Regular Paptist songs that were "lined out" at The Little Zion Church. He always said he wasn't much of a singer, so he hardly ever sang solo, but would always join in if he knew the going song. He loved to play his dulcimer and would often play every verse of a long ballad (e.g. Barbry Ellen), never singing but thinking the words until the story (inside his head) was finished. Most singing, by one person, or family group in that time and place was unaccompanied. It seemed to take us a long time to put the two together. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: TIA Date: 30 Jan 08 - 10:24 PM He sang nearly everything in "Songs of Man" - the one by Norman Luboff and Win Stracke (and painted or embroidered copies of the Paul Freeman illustrations onto various pieces of apparel). Gave me a copy when I left home in the 70's. I sang 'em all to our wee ones, and now he just gave copies to all three of the girls. Where the heck did he find 'em? |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Snuffy Date: 31 Jan 08 - 08:57 AM Lots of Bing Crosby and Irish stuff mostly - Mountains of Mourne, Galway Bay, Dear Old Donegal, Hey Patsy Fagan, Isle of Inisfree, Phil the Fluter's Ball, etc, etc. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: Bert Date: 31 Jan 08 - 09:35 AM Patsy Fagan & Phil the Fluter's Ball. WOW I haven't heard those since my Dad sang them. |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: bubblyrat Date: 31 Jan 08 - 10:25 AM "Green Grow the Rushes o ", but substituting " Brown Hatters " for "Brown Walkers " ---I still do today--can't help it !! also "The Lord's My Shepherd " ( we were both choristers, and sang in Chichester cathedral sometimes ) and ,after too much Friary Meux ( or other brews) , " There once was a monk of great renown, who shagged all the women in London town ". |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST,andy valentine Date: 31 Jan 08 - 01:49 PM Mary of Argyle and The Old Rustic Bridge |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST Date: 31 Jan 08 - 02:03 PM That's Proud Walkers, surely? |
Subject: RE: What did your Dad used to sing? From: GUEST,Joseph de Culver City Date: 31 Jan 08 - 02:06 PM My granddad used to sing: 'Hallelujah, I'm a Bum' 'East Side, West Side' 'Casey Jones' 'Mary' My dad used to sing: 'Sixteen Tons' 'Shenandoah' 'Just a Gigolo' |
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