To Thread - Forum Home

The Mudcat Café TM
https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=131375
36 messages

Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.

11 Aug 10 - 11:19 AM (#2962885)
Subject: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

You are answering these quizzes nice & quickly so know try this one. Song & Writer if possilbe:-
Same song Two diffrent Writers for no.1 & 2. (the older first)
1. It's far away I am today, From scenes I roamed a boy
2. If you ever go across the sea to Ireland, Then maybe at the crossing of your day,
3. See, o see the breaking day, How the dew drop decks the thorn
4. Oh, the summer time is coming and the trees are blooming
5. Here's a health to the Queen (or King) & lasting peace, to faction an end, to wealth increase
6. All in the dawn the fled was moor'd, The streamers waving to the wind
7. He lay upon his dying bed, his eyes were growing dim
8. There's a low green valley, on the old Kentucky shore
9. We may roam thro' this world like a child at a feast,who but sips of a sweet & then flies to the rest
10. Why weep ye by the tide, lady why weep ye by the tide?


11 Aug 10 - 11:32 AM (#2962899)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Crowhugger

Hmm, I'm a little lost here IDK: Are you saying that for each pair of excerpts--which I gather you've done as one before the comma and one after--there is one SONG with 2 writers? Or two songs with ONE common TITLE but of course 2 writers?


11 Aug 10 - 11:35 AM (#2962903)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Leadfingers

I dont know any one who has a 'Crossing' of their day !


11 Aug 10 - 11:37 AM (#2962904)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: SqueezeMe

1 and 2 are Galway Bay. Bing Crosby? Percy French? Just guessing....
4 is Wild Mountain Thyme, claimed by the McPeake family as their own, but....
5 is Down Among the Dead Men; always thought it was traditional...
7 is American Civil War era; Stephen Foster maybe?

I'm done :-)


11 Aug 10 - 11:40 AM (#2962907)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: greg stephens

GUERST I dont know: A lot of your lines are familiar songs slightly changed. Are you noting these from recordings you can't quite hear?
Like "All in the dawn the fled was moored" instead of" all in the downs the fleet was moored"


11 Aug 10 - 11:46 AM (#2962912)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: John MacKenzie

Last one is 'Jock 'O Hazeldean'


11 Aug 10 - 11:49 AM (#2962915)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,Gene

A real TOUGHIE! but I finally got 4 of them..


1. It's far away I am today, From scenes I roamed a boy

A. Porter Wagoner - Forty Miles From Popular Bluff.


4. Oh, the summer time is coming and the trees are blooming

A. Roger Miller - You Don't Want My Love

In the summertime when all the trees and leaves are green
and the redbirds sing, i'll be blue, 'cause you don't want my love.


7. He lay upon his dying bed, his eyes were growing dim

A. Roy Acuff - Don't Make Me Go To Bed And I'll Be Good



10. Why weep ye by the tide, lady why weep ye by the tide?

A. Hank Thompson - Cryin' In The Deep Blue Sea

Whew!

G


11 Aug 10 - 12:00 PM (#2962924)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: SqueezeMe

Thank you Greg. No 6 makes more sense now. That's John Gay, of Beggar's Opera fame.

I love his quote "Do you think your mother and I should have lived comfortably so long together, if ever we had been married?"

A man before his time, to be sure.... :-)


11 Aug 10 - 12:07 PM (#2962931)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

You all came back quicker than expected . It is 10 songs, just that no 1 & 2 are the same title & no.2 should read at the cosing of your day. Sorry about misleading you.
Well done SqueezeMe 1,2,4 & 5 song titles correct, Yes Wild Mountain Thyme was written by William McPeake in 1957.


11 Aug 10 - 12:09 PM (#2962933)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Leadfingers

Galway Bay was writen by Arthur Colahan , and the line is 'Closing of your day'


11 Aug 10 - 12:12 PM (#2962938)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: SqueezeMe

Always thought that Galway Bay deserved a Kipper family re-write.
Or have they indeed done so?


11 Aug 10 - 12:14 PM (#2962941)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Leadfingers

Check Clancy Brothers at Carnegie Hall Album - The Kippers couldnt have done better


11 Aug 10 - 12:21 PM (#2962949)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: SqueezeMe

Yes, heard that one. But I reckon perhaps it still needs the Kipper treatment...


11 Aug 10 - 12:23 PM (#2962951)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Leadfingers

I should have looked first ! Its in the D T


11 Aug 10 - 01:10 PM (#2962989)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Sorry got called away during my last posting , yes closing of the day- Galway bay by Dr Arthur Colahan 1947 - Do you know who wrote the earlier version (no.1) it was writen in 1850. Guest Gene a lot of work but sorry none right. John Mackenzie right with Jock O'Hazeldean - who by, a very popular writer.
Greg Steven's all these lines are copied from the internet in what is supposed to be the wording used by the writer when first writen.


11 Aug 10 - 01:21 PM (#2962997)
Subject: RE: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,howbe on

I think that Jock O'Hazeldean might be written by Sir Walter Scott.


11 Aug 10 - 01:29 PM (#2963003)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Joe Offer

Say, I Don't Know, can we use the tag Quiz: for these threads, so they're easy to identify?
Thanks.
-Joe Offer, Forum Moderator-


11 Aug 10 - 01:54 PM (#2963019)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

howbe on, well done. Yes Joe Offer will put Quiz for these threads.


11 Aug 10 - 03:07 PM (#2963071)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,Songbob

No. 8 is "Darling Nelly Gray" by Stephen Foster

I recognize some others, but know nothing about their writers.

Bob


11 Aug 10 - 03:20 PM (#2963075)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Songbob, no.8 is Darling Nelly Grey but information gives the writer as Benjamin R. Hanby 1856.


11 Aug 10 - 03:50 PM (#2963092)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Little Robyn

'Yes Wild Mountain Thyme was written by William McPeake in 1957.'

I thought old Francie McPeake wrote it but checking on the 1962 EFDS Publication FOLK, he's quoted as telling Peter Kennedy -
"I heard an old uncle of mine sing this - years and years ago. (They were really a kind of cattle dealers up in the County of Monaghan - he really belonged Dungannon). He'd got a good many old songs like that and I used to hear that one many times. It was a thing from my boyhood days - I always liked and I started to work it on my pipes." Frank McPeake, Belfast, July 1952.

OK, so who is right? Guest I Don't Know or Peter Kennedy/Frank McPeake.
Just wondering.
Robyn


11 Aug 10 - 05:04 PM (#2963149)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Little Robyn , I got my facts fromm WIKIPEDIA which gives William McPeake as the writer & Francis McPeake as the person who recorded it.


11 Aug 10 - 06:03 PM (#2963206)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Leadfingers

W M T is STILL a ReWrite of Braes of Balquidder ¬


12 Aug 10 - 01:06 AM (#2963390)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: SqueezeMe

Just reviewing this thread, in an earlier post I realise that I omitted to add the title of the John Gay song (no. 6), which is, of course, Black Eyed Susan.


12 Aug 10 - 03:28 AM (#2963423)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Thank you Leadfingers & correct SqueezeMe.


12 Aug 10 - 04:08 AM (#2963432)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,Reinhard

Just because it's on Wikipedia doesn't mean that the facts are correct. Wikipedia's source for their claim of William McPeake being the 1957 author of Wild Mountain Thyme is an obscure Irish song lyrics page that can't even spell the name "William Mc peak" correctly.


12 Aug 10 - 04:34 AM (#2963436)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Seems WMT has caused a stir. I was told when I first heard it years ago in my childhood it was by someone called McPeak(e) & used Wikipedia to confirm this, thinking that they would be right. Sorry if this is not the case & I like to have things corrected as we all make mistakes & I would not like to credit the wrong writer.


12 Aug 10 - 04:47 AM (#2963441)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,CAP

Leaving Wild Mountain Thyme out now it has been answered for no.4 how about
no.3 The Rising of the Lark.
no.5 Down among the dead men by John Dyer
no.9 Daughters of Erin by Thomas Moore.


12 Aug 10 - 08:38 AM (#2963523)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Bernard

McPeake wrote the tune for WMT, but adapted the words from Tannahill's 'Braes o'Balquidder'...


12 Aug 10 - 01:31 PM (#2963722)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Three right answers CAP. The Rising of the Lark was Writen by Elizabeth Grant.
Thank you for your comment Bernard.
Just leaves no.7 If it is any help it was writen by William Ross Wallace about 1856.


12 Aug 10 - 02:10 PM (#2963756)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: McGrath of Harlow

I don't understand what the question is...


12 Aug 10 - 02:12 PM (#2963757)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Give the song title from the lyrics given.


12 Aug 10 - 02:16 PM (#2963759)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: MikeL2

hi

no 7- Sword of Bunker Hill ??

cheers

MikeL2


12 Aug 10 - 02:35 PM (#2963770)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Well done MikeL2. That concludes this quiz. Thank you all for taking part.


12 Aug 10 - 03:23 PM (#2963807)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: Jim Carroll

Francie McPeak claimed that W.M,T. was got from a family member, but it is a verion of Braes of Balquidder.
It was recorded from the family in 1952 by the BBC
They sued Rod Stewart when he recorded it - and lost
Jim Carroll


12 Aug 10 - 03:52 PM (#2963821)
Subject: RE: Quiz: puzzle on these lyrics.
From: GUEST,I Don't Know

Thank you Jim Carroll.