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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan (1966 mining disaster) From: GUEST,Gethin Date: 03 Nov 09 - 04:34 PM Ican recall this song and it was sung by Bryn Yemm, I have searched for this song for years but had no luck. I hope this solves a problem for you. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Ms Mouse Date: 26 Jun 09 - 12:11 AM I've joined the site now too. :) |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Angela Suprano Date: 26 Jun 09 - 12:06 AM Just to add a little more info' to my last post, this group/individual sounded very sort of 70's style alike many did then, and of the Beatles type style. All I can remember of the lyrics is that toys were sent to the children, and millions of toys were of no use, plus it was very critical of the council and organisers of Aberfan. Very moving song. I think I taped it onto an old Phillips 4 inch reeled machine off a vinal record, and Aberfan was on the B side? Angela. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Angela Suprano Date: 25 Jun 09 - 11:48 PM I had a song about Aberfan on tape, and wish I could find it. So I would appreciate you mailing me with the lyrics, or posting here, if you're still receiving these messages? Don't know if I have to join this forum? But you can email me at An9ila(AT)gmail.com if you would? If you make the title of the mail 'Aberfan' I'll know it's not spam. Thanking you in advance, Angela. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Greenm Date: 17 Mar 09 - 09:43 AM I am constantly attempting to recover songs I have actually performed in the past, one of which was back inthe mid sixties shortly after the Aberfan disaster. A member of a group I was involved with (the free folk) Phil (can't remember his second name) who was a teacher asked his class to think about the disaster and how they feel about that fact that it was a school just like theirs. One pupil wrote a poem which Phil put to music and as I remember it was one of the most moving songs I have ever encountered. A slim chance I know, but does anyone out there remember hearing this song or even more unlikely have the words & music. This all took place in Eccles, Manchester where with the Free Folk (Stewart, Ewan & Phil) we started a Folk Club in the Cross Keys (and later moved on to the Duke of York). |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST Date: 08 Feb 09 - 07:29 PM Gosh,that's the song I'm looking for and I don't know the artist...it was so touching. Annette abcems@comcast.net |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Stuart Reed Date: 28 Jan 09 - 09:31 PM Grey October was also recorded by the Brighton Taverners on their first EP. I could email an mp3 if anyone is interested. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,philip thomas survivor of aberfan Date: 12 Jan 09 - 04:26 PM i found this site very touching. i never new so many songs had been written about aberfan. the only song i was ever told about was the beegees song. its hard to believe how many people thought of us .thank you i was one of the lucky ones who survived. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Dougieb Date: 16 Sep 08 - 04:10 PM Thank you for your interest in songs of Aberfan, my song written just after the terrible disaster can also be obtained from mp3.com/dougieb |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Suibhne O'Piobaireachd Date: 06 Aug 08 - 04:43 AM The Strawbs - or as they were then - The Strawberry Hill Boys - used to sing one about Aberfan, which I remember as very powerful. I think written by Dave Cousins. Wish I could remember more about it. The song is Not All the Flowers Grow, in which our intrepid songwriter seems to imply the school was buried by a coal seam... |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Susanne (skw) Date: 05 Aug 08 - 07:12 PM Sorry, I managed to overlook you've become a member. I'll send you a PM. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Dougieb Date: 05 Aug 08 - 04:24 PM Hi susanne, Thank you for your kind interest in my song on Aberfan, if you would forward me an address I will post the cd to you asap. many thanks. Dougie. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Susanne (skw) Date: 04 Aug 08 - 05:42 PM Dougie, I'd be interested. A tape would be fine. Could you please eMail me: skw at freenet dot de? Thank you. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Dougieb Date: 04 Aug 08 - 03:48 PM My song about the Aberfan disaster can also be abtained from Mudcat records, or Dick Greenhaus at Camsco records. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: mark gregory Date: 03 Aug 08 - 04:42 AM Grey October is on another mudcat thread see http://www.mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=57432#903040 |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Dougieb Date: 02 Aug 08 - 09:07 AM I wrote a song about the Aberfan disaster just after it happened, and sung it at many folk clubs around the west of England, it was recorded on a tape but is now on a CD, I do not sing very much now due to my age, but if anyone would like a copy free please reply to this message and I will return with an E mail address. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,OldNicKilby Date: 16 Jul 08 - 05:34 AM The finest song about Aberfan that I have heard is by Greg Hastings who lives in Perth West Australia.I will admit to crying when he sang it at Fairbridge Festival, for me it was something very special as two weeks after Aberfan I was teaching in a school that was hit by a whirlwind and we were digging children out until the Fire Brigade arrived ,the best part of 30 mins. You could always try Greg for the words |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Miskin Man Date: 15 Jul 08 - 05:46 AM That'll be the one I mentiond back in Oct 06 (see a few messages back) Hope you find it. Andy |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,spb=cooperator Date: 14 Jul 08 - 06:48 PM I have on vynle - somewhere a superb song by Mabsant |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Timo_Tuokkola Date: 14 Jul 08 - 05:18 PM Just thought I'd add the lyrics to a Great Song I heard by Kyle Aughe form his CD "Not against my own". Aberfan T'was the twenty-first of October, on a foggy Friday morn And the children sang things beautiful and bright Their fathers dug the coal beneath the mountainside above And grew teh tip that shattered all their lives For years the townsfolk worried of the spring beneath Merthr Vale Could it someday bring the slag upon the town? And on that fateful morning in the mining south of Wales Five hundred thousand tons came raining down CHORUS: On Aberfan, a hundred sixteen children, Aberfan So cruel a fate to will them There'll be no consolation for the coal board's washed their hands Of the blood of those young children in the town Of Aberfan They heard a distant rumble and it soon became a roar So quickly that they had no time to flee The parents and the miners dug frantically in vain Through tears that made it difficult to see The crown and her tribunal and the coal board had their say Empty words that fell on deafened ears New rules and regulations are not the prime concern When you're burying a child of seven years CHORUS: In Aberfan, a hundred sixteen children, Aberfan So cruel a fate to will them There'll be no consolation for the coal board's washed their hands Of the blood of those young children in the town Of Aberfan Since that day my father's never mined an ounce of coal For he lost a son and daughter in the slide He sees my brother James and sister Margaret in my eyes The torment and the grief will not subside Most days the memory lingers sometimes it starts to fade Till you see the hollow faces in a crowd And it brings back the resignation t'will never go away A generation lost beneath a shroud CHORUS: In Aberfan, a hundred sixteen children, Aberfan So cruel a fate to will them There'll be no consolation for the coal board's washed their hands Of the blood of those young children in the town Of Aberfan |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,tim readman Date: 27 Oct 06 - 11:28 PM Does anybody know the chords for Close The Coalhouse Door? If so please let me know. If you could send them to me that would be fantastic. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Miskin Man Date: 16 Oct 06 - 06:55 PM When I first moved to Wales in the early eighties I went, of course, to the Llantrisant Folk Club. On one of the first nights there Siwsi George sang a song about Aberfan. It was in Welsh, but Siws told the story of the song. I still tingle when I remember the effect of Siwsi's wonderful voice. What an introduction to the sung Welsh. Siwsi was the generation that lost so many, and even as an Englishman it was a powerful memory from my childhood. Sadly Siws is with us no more, but I cherish her friendship and for showing me such beauty in her Language. I have racked my brain for more details of the song but I am not in Wales at the moment to check my recordings. Any ideas, are you there Dr Price, Splottman? Andy |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: bradfordian Date: 16 Oct 06 - 06:23 PM PS See this thread for NON MUSIC comments |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: bradfordian Date: 16 Oct 06 - 06:13 PM So there were 7 or 8 songs relating to Aberfan event & no doubt several poems including the one in the other thread. There seems to be 3 recordings that one can obtain now, but suprisingly not Grey October, unless anyone knows differently. Palaces of Gold (Leon Rosselson) RosselSonGs compilation Here Released 1990 Aberfan Coal Tip Tragedy (Thom Parrott)Best Of Broadside 1962-1968 Here Aberfan (Robin Jones) Here Aberfan (Bernie Fairlamb) (refer to 'catter Leadfingers) Grey October (The Critics et al) I seem to be having difficulty finding a current recording of this one apart from "The Angrey Muse" Aberfan (Dave Collins) The words are in the "Songs about Aberfan" thread, but don't know about any recordings Aberfan (Dave Ackles) Don't know if anyone has come across this one. 40th Anniversary; maybe a missed opportunity here! Bradfordian |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: eddie1 Date: 15 Oct 06 - 07:46 AM Re the song "Grey October, it seems to be accepted that it was written by the Critics Group though I'm sure I saw it in a magazine as written by Peggy Seeger and Jack Warshaw. (Don't remember where – it was 40 years ago.) GREY OCTOBER - comp Charles Parker & Critics Group 1966 -- Ewan MacCOLL with Peggy SEEGER (gtr) "The Angry Muse": ARGO ZFB-65 1968 http://www.folktrax.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/menus/search%20for%20titles_grei_gyz.htm Title: Grey October Composer(s)/Lyricist(s): Critics Group Source(s): Sing Out! Magazine, Aug/Sept. 1968 www.SJLibrary.org Whoever wrote it, a great song. I still find it difficult to sing. I guess the only other single event to have affected me so deeply was the Dunblane shooting. I do remember some unbelievable things like collected money being used to help clear the slag that the Coal Board was responsible for! Eddie |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Leadfingers Date: 15 Oct 06 - 06:36 AM Fortieth Anniversary next weekend !! I will no doubt be singing Bernie Fairlamb's song !! |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,ibo Date: 14 Oct 06 - 08:18 PM I lost my faith the day the slag heap swamped that school.I fear we may be on our own down here. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: richd Date: 14 Oct 06 - 02:41 PM Can I just shamelessly plug a book called 'Aberfan- Our Hiraeth an anthology in poetry prose and pictures' produced by the Aberfan and Merthyr Vale Writers and History Group, and published in Aberfan by the Aberfan and Merthyr Vale Commmunity Co-operative. ('Hiraeth' means love and longing for home in Welsh.)Its full of stuff, not only about the Disaster but the story of the village before and after. Lots of poems and songs about the village, most written people who live there. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Zany Mouse Date: 14 Oct 06 - 02:09 PM This brings back memories! The day it happened a few friends and I sat in a pub in Yorkshire (very under-aged at 14) and talked about the tragedy. We all lived in the heart of the West Riding coal fields and really felt for the poor sods in the village. My mum, although a Yorkshire woman, spent her childhood in Methyr, which is almost next door, so this felt particularly close to home. We decided we would do something about it and hitched down to Wales but were sent away again as 'mere kids'. Sad, as we were full of energy and the diggers were getting tired. We did manage to help a little bit by serving tea but it wasn't enough. We just left feeling useless and, for some reason, guilty. Rhiannon |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,helen Pentecost Date: 14 Oct 06 - 01:53 PM I remember a song that used to go something like Aberfan, Aberfan will we ever understand Aberfan, aberfan we gave a helping hand We'll never let The world forget the star(scar?) of aberfan It goes on to sing about Where grown men cried without wipping their eyes. Anyone heard it? Can't for the life of me remeber what it was called or who sang it. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,J C Date: 09 Feb 06 - 04:35 AM PS The original idea for Grey October came from BBC producer Charles Parker |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: 12string growler Date: 08 Feb 06 - 03:51 PM You can find an absolutely wrenching version of "Close The Coalhouse Door" on "The Wilson Family Album" I recently bought a "NEW" copy on vinyl. It's on Harbourtown Records, Number HAR 020 released in 1991. The Wilsons are a Family group from the North East of England and they do almost all their stuf A Capella. Real Meaty harmonies and mega powerful voices. I caught them at the Gainsborough Folk Festival in October 2005. "Sooz" may have contact details for them. Chris |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,J C Date: 08 Feb 06 - 02:58 PM Grey October was first conceived during a songwriting session The Critics Group, a workshop run by MacColl I think orginally one of the key figures in the making of the song was Frankie Armstrong. Everybody threw in ideas, including Ewan and Peggy, and the end result was the magnificent Grey October. It can be heard on the Argo record, The Angry Muse (I think!) |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: danensis Date: 07 Feb 06 - 04:17 PM Thorn Parrot writes "Pete Seeger sang the chorus of this song in London during the British news blackout (they were afraid news of the event might bring down the government)". I seem to recall getting in from school at dinner time and finding my mother in tears listening to the radio. Where was this "news blackout"? |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Girl Friday Date: 06 Feb 06 - 05:06 PM Fisheye has actually written one. Ask him. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Girl Friday Date: 07 Jan 06 - 05:50 PM Can't remember his mudcatter name, but Richard Phipps (Folkmob Eltham) was the official photographer for the disaster, and has written a cracking song about it. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Tig Date: 03 Jan 06 - 05:15 PM I'll not forget the day. I was doing my paper round that night looking at the pictures on the front pages - and thinking there were pit heaps (small ones, but big to me) in the woods behind our house. It scared me. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Chris in Wheaton Date: 03 Jan 06 - 02:13 PM The Welsh/Nashville singer, David Llewellyn - http://www.davidllewellyn.com/CALENDAR.html -has a song about Aberfan that he did on Frank Hennessy's show last year - and he wil be performing in Wales next month. David is from Mountain Ash - near to Aberfan. Worth listening to if you are nearby. Chris in Wheaton |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Barrie Roberts Date: 03 Jan 06 - 10:31 AM I think you'll find that 'Grey October' was not written by McColl/Seeger but by their 'workshop' group known as The Critics. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: BB Date: 02 Jan 06 - 03:30 PM The Strawbs - or as they were then - The Strawberry Hill Boys - used to sing one about Aberfan, which I remember as very powerful. I think written by Dave Cousins. Wish I could remember more about it. Barbara |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: LANCASHIRE LAD Date: 02 Jan 06 - 01:12 PM Good to see this thread refreshed. The previously mentioned Grey October was also sung by The Critics Group and there is a fine version on an LP by a Warrington (UK) based group called The Minor Birds. The song Aberfan was also recorded by Gwen and Gordon (Davis) on their rare album called Songs of Rogues and Roses. Hope that helps someone LL |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: bfdk Date: 02 Jan 06 - 06:39 AM As far as I can see the full lyrics for Thom Parrott's song about Aberfan are not in the database. The below version is the one sung by Danish group Paddy Doyles on "Aberfan" (SONET SLP 1719): The Aberfan Coal Tip Tragedy (Thom Parrott) The mining men of Wales are hardy, strong and bold And they tunnel in the earth and make it yield its coal But in the town of Aberfan, it's dearer now than gold For one generation for profit has been sold Chorus: How many died in Aberfan When the slag heap came tumbling down How many children will never grow old And how many lives purchased how many tons of coal The little school of Pantglas lay where the mountain loomed And some two hundred children took their classes in its rooms The day fall recess to begin, they went to meet their doom Not knowing the green hollow would soon become their tomb Chorus It was just 9:00 A.M. when they opened up the door And in came the students, two hundred, maybe more But nobody knew then what the mountain had in store The lucky ones were tardy, the others are no more Chorus "I played with my big dog and I played with my cat," Signed "Paul, October 21," there's nothing after that For the coal tip came down, and everyone was trapped And now there's only coal slag where little Paul once sat Chorus In eighteen hundred and seventy-four, the first pit shaft went down And they started piling mining waste on the slopes above the town And everybody knew that the practice was unsound But for ninety-two years no better place was found Chorus The National Coal Board said they'd known from the first That the coal tips they'd permitted were a worry and a curse But I've heard that speech so many times, and it always sounds rehearsed If the coal tip was a murderer, the Coal Board's crime was worse Chorus The children were pretty, the children were fine The children went to school in the shadow of the mine But with the coal tip up above, they were running out of time And they were buried alive by the Ministry of Mines. Chorus I still haven't figured out how to do this "Lyr add" business, so if a friendly clone would intervene, please? Best wishes, Bente |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Guest Date: 02 Jan 06 - 02:48 AM My grandmother is from the Rhondda, she used to have a record that she picked up in the 70s. On this record was a song about Aberfan. It was recoreded by a man whom I believe was from Wales. I have never heard this song mentioned in all my searches for songs about Aberfan. The only thing I can remember about the song, is that he repeated the word Aberfan throughout the song and one of the last lines is: "...here's to the babes who died that day, Aberfan..." does this ring a bell for anyone? I would love to find out who recorded this song. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST Date: 31 May 04 - 08:41 AM I remember the Bernie Fairlamb song being sung in Plymouth folk clubs in the late '60s by a Geordie, name of Ben Campbell, who had at that time just returned from a tour of duty in Singapore. I have also been told that the song was published in the manner of a broadside and distributed amongst service personnel in Singapore to raise money for those affected by the tragedy. Any one know Bernie Fairlamb? Any one have a copy of this modern "broadside"? |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Alan Date: 12 May 04 - 09:55 PM I guess I must be the same age as Anne Croucher and Lindswidder. Reading this thread and looking at I.C.Rapoport's photographs has brought back memories of 1966 - the images on the news, prayers and collection of money at school. Like Anne, I couldn't sing a song about Aberfan or about 9/11, but I recognise that there is a need for such songs - to tell the story to future generations who may not know of these events. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: LindsayInWales Date: 12 May 04 - 09:55 PM this will take you to a short film about Aberfan http://www.worldwidewales.tv/index2.php?mid=167 sorry I can't make a proper "link" |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: LindsayInWales Date: 12 May 04 - 09:13 PM I was also 15 at the time of the Aberfan disaster and living in Hertfordshire. I made myself a promise at the time that I would, one day, visit the village. I finally made it about ten years ago, with my husband and children, soon after we moved from Oxford to South Wales. We walked around the memorial garden where the school once stood, and visited the cemetery which overlooks the village. We went into a pub in the afternoon and I talked to an elderly man, a retired miner, who remembers helping with the digging. It seemed to me that there was still, after all those years, a great sadness in the air. I would also like to recommend a book, "Aberfan (Struggling Out Of The Darkness)" ISBN 1 898986 05 3 by Gaynor Madgwick, one of the surviving children. I received a copy from her parents, who lost a son and a daughter in the disaster. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: Durham-Mike Date: 12 May 04 - 05:43 PM I have picked up on Leadfingers item regarding the Bernie Fairlamb song of Aberfan - I see you have included chords, but can you indicate the tune (manuscript or a midi file or the like)? Mike |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Mike Green Date: 12 May 04 - 04:48 PM Some time after the Aberfan disaster (67/68) I was resident in two folk clubs in the Manchester area (Eccles: Duke of York & The Cross Keys). There was a teacher whose name I now forget who had collected a song written by the children in his class. The song became very popular through singing at the likes of the MSG in Manchester and I think was performed on "folk from the Two Brewers" a BBC programme from the Salford Pub. I have long since lost the lyrics and cannot recall even the tune, but I have tried on many occasions to recover the song from people I knew at the time. If there was anyone around the folk scene in Manchester at the time and can recall the song I would be most grgateful to hear from you. |
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Subject: RE: Songs about Aberfan From: GUEST,Li'l Aussie Bleeder. Date: 17 Mar 04 - 08:15 PM Greg Hastings 'The Wandering Man' here in Australia, known as the Welsh didgeridoo player, has written a song called 'Davy's Dream' which has bought a tear to many an eye over the years. Anyone interested in this song could E-mail sweetpea-Linda@iinet.net.au or go to http://www.greghastings.com |