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What is a Shanty

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GUEST,Roger the skiffler 10 Aug 01 - 11:25 AM
Dicho (Frank Staplin) 10 Aug 01 - 01:49 PM
Shantymanuk 01 Apr 02 - 03:52 PM
Gareth 01 Apr 02 - 06:27 PM
53 01 Apr 02 - 06:32 PM
Melani 01 Apr 02 - 06:46 PM
Shantymanuk 01 Apr 02 - 07:51 PM
Peter Kasin 01 Apr 02 - 08:47 PM
toadfrog 01 Apr 02 - 09:14 PM
Melani 01 Apr 02 - 10:14 PM
GUEST 01 Apr 02 - 11:49 PM
Peter Kasin 02 Apr 02 - 12:56 AM
Snuffy 02 Apr 02 - 07:41 AM
toadfrog 06 Apr 02 - 12:41 AM
Manitas_at_home 06 Apr 02 - 01:44 AM
Ship'scat 06 Apr 02 - 07:53 AM
toadfrog 07 Apr 02 - 07:55 PM
53 08 Apr 02 - 05:55 PM
GUEST,EBarnacle nrg1952@aol.com 09 Apr 02 - 04:16 PM
GUEST,EBarnacle nrg1952@aol.com 09 Apr 02 - 04:22 PM
Azizi 27 Feb 08 - 01:50 PM
autolycus 27 Feb 08 - 04:58 PM
Greg B 27 Feb 08 - 08:32 PM
Seamus Kennedy 27 Feb 08 - 10:17 PM
TRUBRIT 27 Feb 08 - 10:42 PM
EBarnacle 28 Feb 08 - 06:01 PM
Marc Bernier 29 Feb 08 - 01:09 PM
Charley Noble 29 Feb 08 - 03:45 PM
Charley Noble 23 Nov 09 - 01:10 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 11 Jan 22 - 06:14 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 11 Jan 22 - 06:18 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 11 Jan 22 - 06:58 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 11 Jan 22 - 07:24 PM
Steve Gardham 12 Jan 22 - 04:15 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 12 Jan 22 - 08:56 PM
open mike 13 Jan 22 - 01:16 AM
open mike 13 Jan 22 - 01:22 AM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 13 Jan 22 - 03:18 AM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 13 Jan 22 - 03:45 AM
GUEST,Gealt 13 Jan 22 - 10:06 AM
Dave the Gnome 13 Jan 22 - 11:13 AM
Steve Gardham 13 Jan 22 - 03:57 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 13 Jan 22 - 04:21 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 13 Jan 22 - 04:59 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 22 Jan 22 - 06:51 PM
GUEST 23 Jan 22 - 04:29 AM
Steve Gardham 23 Jan 22 - 09:55 AM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 24 Jan 22 - 02:10 PM
Steve Gardham 24 Jan 22 - 05:53 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 24 Jan 22 - 09:14 PM
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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Roger the skiffler
Date: 10 Aug 01 - 11:25 AM

...and of course, in North Wales and the North of Scotland it is a beer and lemonade!*BG*
RtS (diving overboard before being keel-hauled!)


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Dicho (Frank Staplin)
Date: 10 Aug 01 - 01:49 PM

Forebit is a seamans term for posts on the foredeck of a ship where seamen could gather and sing or BS. Some people call forebits bollards, but bollard applies to the posts on quays as well. WHEN was the term forebitter introduced? I believe it is a modern term introduced by singers of sea songs and is not "historical."


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Shantymanuk
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 03:52 PM

The French colonised the west coast of Africa, along with the empires of Spain and Portugal. England also had its part to play. All four languages have their roots principally in Latin.

To chant is to sing.

Galleys were "stroked" in pre-christian times to the beat of a "drum".

The way to achieve physical effectiveness is to co-ordinate effort. If you "pull together", you survive longer, that is, you get to live a bit longer, thanks to a common purpose, however transitory. If you want to do things, do them together. Not only is it easier physically, it bonds humanity.

It is not really that hard to see where common chants come from. The constant inventiveness of man fighting hard just to survive, to do a necessary job, or to raise his spirits by companionship should not really be a mystery to any of us, if we choose to think about it. The "Nobility of Labour" of the jolly jack tar has no more of the ring of truth about it than that of the eight year old boy sent to clean chimneys, or to wriggle beneath the cotton looms to clear jams while the machines were still running.

We may wonder about what the purpose was of particular shanties, in terms of the task to be performed, but I feel that I will always have respect for the men who performed those tasks, many of them against their will, just for the money for their families to survive.

Regards,

Alan.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Gareth
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 06:27 PM

That old man computer, he keeps on rolling
He don't say nothing, he needs an input,
It's Gargage input, it's Garbage output
To keep him rolling along !

It's hammer that key board,
It's feed that printer,
It's check that data. It's check that error,
But ole man computer he keeps on rolling along.

Gareth


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: 53
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 06:32 PM

A piece of shit house.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Melani
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 06:46 PM

A small wooden house on a boat.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Shantymanuk
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 07:51 PM

Thanks so much for the input.

I found it so stimulating that I spent many hours fo introspection looking to see if I could explain to myself the hidden depths of your real meanings.(NOT!) "Ditch these losers" is my personal interpretation. However, I find that when people react in a negative way, there is usually a reason.

Why be offensive, when you could be constructive.

GARETH, I suspect that you send that angry response in the same verse to all sorts of people. It is hardly original. It doesn't even relate to what I said in my post, as far as I can see, but if I'm wrong please post or even PM me. Just remember Swansea's part in wrecking ships, and in the slave trade that was bound for Bristol.

MELANI, yes, I have my own dictionary. Quite why you would need to send me (twice), a definition of which I am already aware escapes me. If you can piece together a post that is constructive, I would be very happy to read it.

As for "53", what sort of name is that? I am sure that you prostitute your literacy by your reply. Do you mean a "piece of shit" house or a piece of "shit house"? I would be grateful if you could post a cogent reply.

Your posts are received, I am sure in the spirit in which you sent them.

Regards,

Alan.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Peter Kasin
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 08:47 PM

There was a lot of borrowing and changing of shore songs to adapt to shipboard work. Railroading songs, church songs, what have you - have been changed through the folk process into chanteys once brought aboard ship. Whites and blacks borrowed and adapted songs from each other, and railroad workers who became sailors might have brought shipboard songs of railroading origin back to the railroads, but as Charley Noble, Barry, and others have stated, it is the song's shipboard work use and how the song is adapted for that use which makes it a chantey. If a song's main claim to fame came about through its adaptation to shipboard work, it is a chantey, but if a call and response work song originated on shore for shore work, and was never found on ships, it wouldn't historically be a chantey, as I understand it.

chanteyranger


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: toadfrog
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 09:14 PM

Hi, Shantymanuk, welcome aboard. It has also been my experience that not all of my contributions here have been greeted with all the solemnity I might have wished for. In fact, a lot of them just get ignored. One has to maintain a certain sense of humor about that. And yet, Mudcat can be rewarding.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Melani
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 10:14 PM

Shantymanuk, I was trying to be funny, not offensive. Sorry if you don't think so. If it was posted twice, it was a computer glitch. I suspect that Gareth also had humor in mind; Stan Rogers used to do what I thought was a funny parody of a chaingang song about "Rollin' out the data on the Xerox Line." You obviously did not receive the posts in the spirit with which they were sent.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST
Date: 01 Apr 02 - 11:49 PM

How about the song whose lyrics begin with; Its only a Shanty in old shanty town ,where the roof is so slanting that it touches the ground .There s a queen waiting there in a silvery gown ,in a shanty in old Shanty town. Shanty : A decrepit, run down building. Hooverville was made up of shantys, The General burned them down. Jets


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Peter Kasin
Date: 02 Apr 02 - 12:56 AM

Shantymanuk, I know Melani well. She indeed means no harm. Chalk it up to one of those internet miscommunications, I say.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Snuffy
Date: 02 Apr 02 - 07:41 AM

Ashanti?


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: toadfrog
Date: 06 Apr 02 - 12:41 AM

Chanteyranger: Some of the chanteys also found their way into bluegrass or old-time music. The NLCR did one called "Old Johnny Booker," of which another version can be found on Forum. It seems to combine two chanteys, one of them being Johnny Boker and the other being Dead Horse. The Ramblers' version starts out:

There was an young man and he went to school
And he made his living by drivin' a mule,

And a what, Johnny Booker, won't you do, do, do,
And a what, Johnny Booker won't you do?


A poor old man come ridin' by,
And he says, "Young man, your mule's a gonna die,

And a what, Johnny Booker, won't you do, do, do,
And a what, Johnny Booker won't you do?


Etc. The other one I had noticed is "Hold the Woodpile Down." That one has already got a thread of its very own, so I'll say no more.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Manitas_at_home
Date: 06 Apr 02 - 01:44 AM

I have seen it suggested that shanties got their name from house-moving songs in the West Indies as mentioned above. A shanty is still a common name for a hut, not just in the WI. The orgin of the word is possibly Irish, sean ti or old cottage.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Ship'scat
Date: 06 Apr 02 - 07:53 AM

Following chanteyranger's focus on use, I'm surprised I haven't heard the one word that sums it all up - TOOL.

Shanties were tools used by seaman. Different tools USED for different jobs. Not all jobs needed these kinds of tools. Technology eliminates the job and the tool falls out of use. Good tools make work easier.

People, including seaman, didn't tend to bring their tools with them when they're out on the town. Songs and and singing were for church and music halls and family parlors - places where tools weren't generally carried. When you think of it as a tool you can understand why an old salt, knew hundreds of shanties might say he didn't know any songs.

You might also frame lyrics and any musicallity as just decorating the tool box - sort or auditory marlin spikesmanship.

Any thoughts?


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: toadfrog
Date: 07 Apr 02 - 07:55 PM

What I like about chanteys as a form of folk music is that trying to sing them right imposes a form of discipline. They should be sung in such a way that the rythm could be used in work, with a regular beat for hauling. With a little imagination on the part of the "chanteyman," they can sound genuine, like something real people used as a work-song.

So what I don't understand is why they are so rarely sung that way. Go to a chantey-sing, and what you mostly hear is chanties sung as if they were camp-songs, or occasionally as if they were ballads.
And 60% of what you will hear is not chanties at all, but singer-songwriter stuff about sailors, often unbearably sentimentalized. E.g. "Mary Ellen Carter" and "Rolling Down to Old Maui," which are enormously popular, but which I refuse to believe actual sailors created, or sang, or ever would have sung. Try to picture a grizzled old hand from off a whaler singing,

"It's a rough, tough life of toil and strife,
We whalemen undergo."

Imagine any ordinary practical person from a working class background, in a song intended for his/her own use and not to impress literary folks, using expressions like "rough, tough," "toil and strife," or "undergo." The song then goes on to put on "authenticity" by adding 20th expressions like "give a damn." I further refuse to believe that before 1900, in any case, people used "give a damn" in the casual way it is thrown into that song.

And yes, I know Stan Hugil liked the song. I also think Hugil was not above pulling a fast one on credulous city audiences.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: 53
Date: 08 Apr 02 - 05:55 PM

Alan, you figure it out.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,EBarnacle nrg1952@aol.com
Date: 09 Apr 02 - 04:16 PM

As has been demonstrated many times and in many places, if a song can be used to provide a working rhythm aboard a vessel (including rowing) it is a chantey. I recently met a retired man who used to live on Bequia (sp?) who used a variant on "Blow the Man Down" for launching whaling boats into the surf. The chorus he gave me was: "Way, hay, gve us some rum" wih the second chorus line "Give us some rum, we'll haul the boat down." This was not aboard ship but it certainly met the requirement of a chantey.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,EBarnacle nrg1952@aol.com
Date: 09 Apr 02 - 04:22 PM

As has been demonstrated many times and in many places, if a song can be used to provide a working rhythm aboard a vessel (including rowing) it is a chantey. I recently met a retired man who used to live on Bequia (sp?) who used a variant on "Blow the Man Down" for launching whaling boats into the surf. The chorus he gave me was: "Way, hay, gve us some rum" wih the second chorus line "Give us some rum, we'll haul the boat down." This was not aboard ship but it certainly met the requirement of a chantey.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Azizi
Date: 27 Feb 08 - 01:50 PM

Here's a hyperlink to the URL about a group of Black Chantey Singers that Sinsull posted on a thread that I started*:

http://www.coresound.com/fa-menhaden.htm

-snip-

In the interest of helping to make sure that the summary statement found on that website is preserved, I'm going to post it here and on the archived Mudcat thread about shanties whose link I just posted.

Menhaden Chanteymen Worksong Singers Beaufort [North Carolina]
updated Jan. 9, 2006

"For more than a century, folklorists and ballad hunters have mined the North Carolina mountains for folksongs and traditional crafts, virtually unaware that such treasures could be found in abundance along the watery byways of the coast. Many of the richest folk traditions in the state are associated with maritime occupations, or "working the water," as people say.

In the town of Beaufort, in Carteret County, commercial fishing enterprises have long operated fleets to net huge catches of menhaden, or shad fish, as they're more commonly called by the local fishermen. In processing facilities along the water, the fish are converted to a remarkable variety of uses, from feeds and fertilizers to paints and perfumes.

The ship-board crews employed by the fisheries have been predominantly black over the years, and the work assigned to them has been physically demanding. Menhaden are caught by quickly encircling large schools of fish in two small "purse" boats, which surround the fish with their nets. This purse seine must be pulled tight or "hardened," drawing it in from the bottom in order to capture the fish and lift them to the surface of the water. A special "scoop" net then brings the catch to the hold of the main fishing vessel. Since the mid-1950s, this work has been performed with the aid of hydraulic winches and lifters; prior to this time it was done by hand. As it was not uncommon for a catch to exceed 100,000 fish, hardening the net required great strength and coordination on the part of the crew.

To help ease and pace this extraordinary labor, the men sang "chanteys" or worksongs. Generally a leader would sing out the first line of the song by himself, to be answered with another line sung in harmony by the rest of the crew. The songs or lines were drawn from many sources, including hymns and gospel songs, blues, and barbershop quartet songs, and were often improvised.

Folklorists Michael and Debbie Luster, hired by the North Carolina Arts Council in 1988 to survey the folk culture of Carteret County, were fascinated by what they'd heard of the chantey-singing tradition. They arranged a gathering of about a dozen retired fishermen, hoping that a few might be able to recall verses or even perform some of the old songs. Though they had not sung together in more than thirty years, the singers found their parts with ease. The lines were recollected almost effortlessly when they began to pantomime the action of working the net.

The great success of the venture persuaded the men to accept an invitation to perform in public at an event sponsored by the North Carolina Maritime Museum, in Beaufort. This reunion concert brought misty eyes to the audience and singers alike, and renewed the pride of the community in these beautiful sounds that once rolled across the water.

Since that memorable occasion, the Menhaden Chanteymen, as they like to be called now, have been constantly in the public eye. They have performed for the North Carolina General Assembly and the National Council on the Arts, appeared at Carnegie Hall, and have been featured on national television and radio. And every Friday night they gather at the parish house of St. Stephen's Congregational Church in Beaufort to sing for themselves and to share the fellowship wrought by decades of rugged camaraderie at sea."
-snip-
updated Jan. 9, 2006

{visit that website for additional pages and a photo]

-snip-

*That thread is only tangentially about chanteys, but readers may be interested in since it does contain some comments about chanteys and forebitters, I'll include the links to comments on that thread {beside's SInsull's post} which as of this time refer to those types of songs:

thread.cfm?threadid=108931&messages=154#2272605

and

thread.cfm?threadid=108931&messages=154#2273417


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: autolycus
Date: 27 Feb 08 - 04:58 PM

What is a Shanty? Mixture of beer and lemonade?

Ivor


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Greg B
Date: 27 Feb 08 - 08:32 PM

It was my privilege to have shared a weekend with the Menhaden Chanteymen a decade or so ago.

Words still fail.

The best explanation I can give is their own account that, later
in their fishing careers, yachtsmen would come out to watch them
fish and hear them sing. And as they did, the yachtsmen would
toss cans and bottles of beer into their nets.

They are distinctive among work song singers in that the actual
WORK doesn't take place during actual singing--- they sing in
between the work, unlike deep-water sailors who work in the
choruses (on halyards) or throughout (on capstan or pumps).

Rather, they work IN BETWEEN the singing, but accompany the work
with "chatter."

So they'll sing:

Johnson Girls are mighty fine girls
WALK AROUND HONEY WALK AROUND... (during this time they are pausing)

(now work) ad lib. heave it up buddy, c'mon c'mon, git it up now

Johnson Girls are might find girls
WALK AROUND HONEY WALK AROUND...

ad. lib. come on git em in you got her now

Great big legs and itty bitty feet
WALK AROUND HONEY WALK AROUND...

ad. lib...

Oh--- they were just the finest old gentlemen. Of the unique sort
of Southern African-American survivors of Jim Crow and everything
else where you just want to sit and listen, listen, and listen.

For their part, I guess they were pretty astonished at these
white folk who, instead of calling them "boy" at their venerable
age, just wanted to hear what they had to say and to sing about
their lives and treated them like the national treasures that they
were.

The honors came late, but they came in time.

I don't imagine too many of them are left, much less left singing.

Pfizer has always contributed (thanks Doug) to the Mystic Festival.

Unfortunately, they hadn't invented Viagra yet when the Menhaden
gents were with us.

Imagine it:

"Won't you help me to raise 'em boys...oh honey" right under the
Pfizer "blue pill" logo!

Now THAT would have taken sea music to a new level of commercial
value!


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Seamus Kennedy
Date: 27 Feb 08 - 10:17 PM

I once heard monks singing Gregorian Chanties...

Seamus


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: TRUBRIT
Date: 27 Feb 08 - 10:42 PM

Seamus -- now that is witty....


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: EBarnacle
Date: 28 Feb 08 - 06:01 PM

Pete Seeger learned "Bye, bye, my Roseanna" from them many years ago.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Marc Bernier
Date: 29 Feb 08 - 01:09 PM

That's funny Greg.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Charley Noble
Date: 29 Feb 08 - 03:45 PM

Those of us who attend the Mystic Sea Music Festival on a regular basis also got to hear rowing shanties led by the Barouallie Whalers, from the West Indies. Some of their songs were featured in DEEP THE WATER, SHALLOW THE SHORE by Roger Abrahams.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Charley Noble
Date: 23 Nov 09 - 01:10 PM

refresh


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 11 Jan 22 - 06:14 PM

About thirty mentions of “work song” however chanties are very different from practical work song.

'Chanty/Shanty' is a sub genre label. Like any other media label it is utterly meaningless without context. The ship fiddler's song book has Brisk and Sprightly Lad in it. It's a pop tune on shore or a forebitter when day is done. The instrumental, performed on watch, is maritime work song but not shanty which 'require' lyrics but not the task.

Steve in the dirty folk thread: Regarding chanties, they are today 100% heritage related entertainment and are totally away from the original context, so that means they can be performed in any way the performers feel fit.

Maritime work song: the rhythmic sounds that sailors make when going about tasks in unison. It has the command structure and social organization of the task(s). The more complex the task, the more complex the structure. If there is no task, there is no work song, maritime or not.

Chanty is based on a true story… but not the truth. The chanty genre label has always been more closely associated with academia, nostalgia and pop media than the professional maritime.

And from Homer to Wagner to Hugill to TikTok, practical maritime work song has always been lurking backstage.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 11 Jan 22 - 06:18 PM

Who:
Chanty – Mid-19th century Anglo-American blue water sailors, typically clippers, windjammers, 'lime juicers' &c.
Maritime Work Song – Mariners.

What
Shanty – Excludes more tasks and functions than it includes.
MWS – Yes.

When
Chanty – Second half of 19th century, approx. 50 years.
MWS – Prehistory to present day. +2.400 yrs.

Where
Shanty – Wherever Anglo-American merchantmen sailed.
MWS – Wherever there was a maritime.

Why
Chanty – Timing and choreography.
MWS – Timing and choreography +training, enhortation, exhortation, command & control, navigation, piloting, &c &c &c.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 11 Jan 22 - 06:58 PM

RE: Harmony & exertion &c.

In maritime work song, only the chorus labours (burthen) and it's not always killer work. The verse belongs to middle managment but it's typically a solo in the Western form. Pacific-Asian styles have two or more song leaders so harmony can be a thing.

When mariners of diverse cultures come together in common song a kind of harmony comes naturally:

So two pilgrims who were priests and monks, and who had good voices, went along the rowing-benches as far as the mast, to the place where sea Mass is wont to be read, and there in union they began to sing with a loud voice the hymn of Ambrose and Augustine, (Te Deum laudamus) which was taken up by all the other clergy present as it is sung in church, each man singing it according to the notation of his own choir at home. I have never heard so sweet and joyous a song, for there were many voices, and their various dissonance made as it were sweet music and harmony; for all alike sang the same words, but the notes were different and yet sweetly harmonized together, and it was a joyous thing to hear so many priests singing the same song together out of the gladness of their hearts. There were many Latin priests, Sclavonians, Italians, Lombards, Gauls, Franks, Germans, Englishmen, Irishmen, Hungarians, Scots, Dacians, Bohemians, and Spaniards, and many there were who spoke the same tongue, but came from different dioceses, and belonged to different religious orders. All these sang the glorious Te Deum, in which even the laity, pilgrims, and the crew of the galley alike joined in, shouting aloud for joy at our good fortune. [Fabri, Howe Hissa &c.]


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 11 Jan 22 - 07:24 PM

More why: For all you rocket scientists out there, the 'work' objective of the burthen is the maximization of the first time derivative of acceleration, second time derivative of velocity, or third time derivative of position. ;)

Obviously, singing out the depth whilst heaving the lead is a totally different class of celeusma. No burthen at all.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 12 Jan 22 - 04:15 PM

Very interesting approach, Phil. I don't see anything to argue with. But what relevance other maritime worksongs have to people interested in this particular subgenre is very likely minimal on this forum. Sorry about that! I don't think Celeusma will catch on on TikTok but you never know:-)


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 12 Jan 22 - 08:56 PM

Yup. No apology needed. Fantasy & fiction sell better than nonfiction. Homer's Odyssey was always more popular than Polybius' Histories, still is. That's how you get chanties or Jamaican folk music in the firstest place:

Keleusma - Day Oh! (end of night shift.)
Antikeleusma - Dah daylight come an me wan go home.

Standard antiphon. It's an aire, jodie or half-step cadence. The proceleusmatic subgenre is chorus helciariorum. The loaders' head cotta serves the function of the helcium or “yoke.” And naval science is boring af. Physics is worse. Greco-Roman lit is a root canal without the shots.

Any point on the Bennett-Travellers-Belafonte evolution to pop song is far and away more accessible, interesting and entertaining than the working class maritime original. Minstrel coonjine songs same-same.

Regarding chanties, they are today 100% heritage related entertainment...

If a chanty were collected or composed ...totally away from the original context... can it be maritime work song? Methinks our only real disagreement is in what century the first “today” was, 20th, 19th, -4th?


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: open mike
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 01:16 AM

A friend just asked me if I could fill in some information about "Blow the Man Down" and while searching for an answer for him, I went to the San Francisco Maritime Museum and Hyde STreet Pier to see if I could find info about the Maritime Festival that is (or was?) held there. I came upon our Mudcat friend and Park Ranger Peter Kasin and found recordings of him with several sea chanties --- he has been known to lead singing on board the historical ships docked at that Pier, but apparently covid has put a damper on that, so this is now avaialble. ChanteyRanger.... https://www.nps.gov/safr/learn/photosmultimedia/shelter-in-chantey-series.htm                                                          There were three principal types of shanties: short-haul, or short-drag, shanties, which were simple songs sung when only a few pulls were needed; halyard shanties, for jobs such as hoisting sail, in which a pull-and-relax rhythm was required (e.g., “Blow the Man Down”); and windlass, or capstan, shanties, which synchronized footsteps in jobs such as hoisting anchor (e.g., “Shenandoah,” “Rio Grande,” “A-Roving”).
Most of the shanties before the 19th century are of British origin; most of those from the 19th are American. Shanty singing declined in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when steam-powered ships replaced sailing vessels.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: open mike
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 01:22 AM

When searching for Chantey Ranger, i found this info about recordings avaiable from Peter Kasin.... in case you would be interested... Since this thread, Richard and I have recorded three more; two available in hard copy and digital downloads, the last one available as a digital download only. Richard's website is https://walkashore.com, where you can find liner notes, track lists, and digital downloads. I'm the keeper of the CDs, and if you'd like to purchase hard copies, please send me a private message and I'll give you my mailing address. All major cash accepted, lol! Hard copies Arte $20 each, or $17 if ordering all three, and in all cases I'll pay the postage and handling.
-Chanteyranger


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 03:18 AM

Ranger:
If you simply enjoy singing shanties, have fun. Don't let me, or anyone else, rain on your parade. But seriously, French Caribbean calypso was taken from Portuguese gritaria before the colonials were Americans. As a public servant/teacher, just how old do you think your language is versus the Western world's maritime?

Most of the shanties before the 19th century are of British origin...
The genre label first appears in the late 19th as a pop culture term. It was never used in naval science... not ever.

...most of those from the 19th are American.
And only Anglo-Americans used the genre label. The rest of the planet has their own stuff as is only natural.

Shanty singing declined in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when steam-powered ships replaced sailing vessels.
Except for song books and summer camps and folk albums and uni classes and video games and TikTok and your CD &c. &c. It's the nonfiction what died out. The fiction and fantasy and fun are doing just fine at present.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 03:45 AM

Closer to home than calypso, iomramh, iorram, iurram, joram, juram &c. are British maritime glossary but they are neither English nor shanties.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Gealt
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 10:06 AM

A Shanty was a fishcake in 1960s Wimpy Bar.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 11:13 AM

It is half beer and half lemonade.

:D


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 03:57 PM

'Most of the shanties before the 19th century are of British origin...'

Perhaps someone would like to name one!

Phil, of course you are correct. There is a lot of fiction and fabrication attached to what is now perceived as chanty/chantey/shanty.
However we can't escape from the fact that there was a recognisable type of worksong, sung mainly in English, aboard Anglo-American vessels from the 1830s onwards that appears to have at least its main origin in the Gulf ports and Carribean. There were definite embryonic rowing songs that can be related to these noted down from c1810 onwards, but the main impetus can be traced from cotton screwing aboard ships in dock to chequerboard crews and then universally. These can be easily linked up. What relationship any of these have to other traditions of worksongs at sea is a very grey area if any link at all.

Seeing as we have these different spellings, here's a suggestion, we use 'shanty' to describe all of the fabrication that went on post 1880 and 'chanty' to describe all of the noted down material prior to that.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 04:21 PM

Shanty: 93 posts about 1:5 jokes or drift. The rest is consumer preference and speculation. The Advent thread (891 posts) is about the same ratio, making for +200 yuks, but at least some 19th century citations & references. One can skim both combined in less than one hour.

Naval Science: Slogging thru Ships and Seamanship in the Ancient World (Casson, 1971) at the mo. It's 2/3 footnotes every page and takes me an hour to fully digest a paragraph. If I could actually read Greek and/or Latin I could speed things up a tad.

Shanties are a gentrified, fictional genre of pop entertainment. They've always been there even when they are not called shanties. Wagner's Dutchman came out right in the middle of it all.

Maritime work song is the true, mostly lost, naval science & history the new and old fictions are based on.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 13 Jan 22 - 04:59 PM

Steve: Sorry, missed your post before my last. Yup & yup. Every maritime had work song. The English and Americans ruled the waves in the 19th century so they are a natural to lead the real capstan song &c parade. Pax Britannia and all that.

Leave Portuguese, Basque, Spanish, French & Dutch culture out of the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico histories at ones own peril methinks. But that's origins better left for the Advent debate no?

What puts the Hugill & Mudcat 'folk' chanty stuff in a different category from maritime work song is the former's traditional disconnect from the maritime work environment. The most 'authentic' modern reenactments aren't even field recordings or diverse group song.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 22 Jan 22 - 06:51 PM

Too much drift for the R.N. thread...

Steve: Has the word 'chanty' however you spell it ever been used anywhere in a historical context to describe anything other than work SONG aboard merchant ships?

I haven't worked my way up to the era of popular usage as yet but... from what I've seen so far "work song" runs a very distant second to popular song & young adult fiction. Very little of that is in chronological context with the practices. The usage is mostly nostalgic retrospective, reenactment & recreation. The etymology is more like "bulgine" than say "baroque" or "fiddle."

"Historical context" as I would use the phrase, in a naval history or science context I have not found yet. Have you?


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST
Date: 23 Jan 22 - 04:29 AM

' shanty ' rough cabin or shed.

Dave H


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 23 Jan 22 - 09:55 AM

So the proper answer to the OP's question would seem to be: An English spelling, post 1880, of 'chanty';-)


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 24 Jan 22 - 02:10 PM

From the Maritime worksong thread:
Steve: I'm not interested in what modern day practitioners and commercial interests use it for. Its usage aboard merchant ships under certain conditions c1830 to c1920s is well documented and that's all I'm primarily interested in.

If you and your interest have an outlet, usage = marketplace = genre.

Systems Audit 101: Say as we do. Do as we say. If your marketplace is a standing watch or work detail - it's a worksong. If not, it's in a different genre, ie: forebitter or popular song. Adulteration comes with the territory.


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 24 Jan 22 - 05:53 PM

It WAS a worksong, on rivers and on shore first, and then on merchant vessels. It is now pure entertainment. So yes, 2 different genres, but largely using the same material, the tunes, themes and titles at least. More recent ideas among those who have studied it is that many of the texts were written by the anthologists, but not many people are bothered about this, and why should they be?


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Subject: RE: What is a Shanty
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 24 Jan 22 - 09:14 PM

[X] is a dirty word and so-and-so was an anthologist and Jimmy cracked corn... if I know their who, what & where... I don't even need care!


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