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Lyr Req: A Dollar a Day Is All They Pay for Work..

13 Apr 01 - 08:43 PM (#440138)
Subject: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay for Work on the Blvd
From: Joe Offer

My friend Mrs. Lev has another puzzler for us. She's wondering if there's anything more to this song.
Hush-ta-ra-ra-ray
Hush-ta-ra-ra-rah
Times is gettin' hard
A dollar a day is all they pay
For work on the boulevard.
We do have one song, Last Winter Was a Hard One (Rise Up Mrs. Reilly), that has the phrase "work on the boulevard." No connection I can see, though.
-Joe Offer-


17 Apr 01 - 10:38 PM (#443104)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Joe Offer

still need help....
Help?


18 Apr 01 - 12:55 PM (#443517)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Joe Offer

help!


21 Apr 01 - 04:20 AM (#445964)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Joe Offer

still nobody?


16 Jul 01 - 01:37 AM (#507442)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Joe Offer

Mrs Lev is going to be very disappointed if we can't come up with this one...


16 Jul 01 - 05:54 AM (#507497)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Liam's Brother

"When McGuiness Gets A Job," which is the vaudeville original of "Last Winter Was A Hard One" dates from 1880 when Italian immigrants were challenging the Irish in New York with cutthroat wage competition for manual labor jobs. For a few reasons, "Dollar A Day" would seem to come from the same time and background.

I have not run across "Dollar A Day" in looking through 19th century American songsters but that's one place Mrs. Lev might like to look.

All the best to you and yours,
Dan


14 Nov 07 - 04:26 PM (#2193814)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: GUEST

I remember this song from grade school in Upstate New York in the mid '60s. I think this is all there was to this song. I still remember the tune.


14 Nov 07 - 04:57 PM (#2193837)
Subject: ADD: SH-TA-RA-DAH-DEY
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Printed with musical score in Carl Sandburg, 1927, "The American Songbag," pp. 36-37. Heard by Robert E. Lee of the Chicago Tribune from an Irishman in charge of the railroad station at Wallingford, Iowa.

SH-TA-RA-DAH-DEY
(Irish Lullaby)

[With a sigh]
Sh-ta-ra-dah-dey, sh-ta-dey,
Times is mighty hard.
A dollar a day is all they pay
For work on the boulevard.
Sh-ta-ra-dah-dey, sh-ta-dey,
Times is mighty hard.
A dollar a day is all they pay
For work on the boulevard.
Sh-ta-ra-dah-deh, sh-ta-dey,
Times is mighty hard.
A dollar a day is all they pay
For work on the boulevard.

Score in 6/8 Arr. E. C.

Click to play

(from Sandburg)


14 Nov 07 - 04:59 PM (#2193840)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Song was reproduced in "Songs for Tomorrow."


14 Nov 07 - 05:08 PM (#2193847)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Also titled "Times Is Mighty Hard," www.freehandmusic.com.

Listed with many other songs, camp, scout, etc., in "Index of Songs in Songbooks," Index of Songbooks


14 Nov 07 - 07:57 PM (#2193961)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Janie

We did this as a round in the little folk group I sang with in high school.


14 Nov 07 - 08:07 PM (#2193966)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Joe Offer

Thank you, Q. Mrs. Lev will be so pleased. I'm a little annoyed with myself, because Sandburg's Songbag sits less than three feet from my chair, and I didn't find it. Here's the entry from the Traditional Ballad Index:

Sh-Ta-Ra-Dah-Dey (Snagging the Klacking)

DESCRIPTION: "Sh-ta-ra-dah-dey, sh-ta-dey, Times is mighty hard. A dollar a day is all they pay For work on the boulevard." Alternately, "Hip-fa-lad-di-dee/Graybacks/Are mighty thick/A dollar a day/Is all they pay/For snaggin'/The Klacking Creek."
AUTHOR: unknown
EARLIEST DATE: 1927 (Sandburg)
KEYWORDS: work lullaby hardtimes lumbering nonballad logger worksong
FOUND IN: US(MW)
REFERENCES (2 citations):
Sandburg, pp. 36-37, "Sh-Ta-Ra-Dah-Dey" (1 short text, 1 tune)
Beck 23, "Snaggin' the Klacking" (1 short text)

Roud #6515 and 8861
NOTES: While Beck gives no information about the circumstances under which the song was sung, it sounds enough like a worksong that I've given it that keyword. - PJS
Whereas Sandburg lists his as a lullaby. I can't prove that these two are the same song -- but they're too similar to separate until fuller versions come along. - RBW
File: San036

Go to the Ballad Search form
Go to the Ballad Index Song List

Go to the Ballad Index Instructions
Go to the Ballad Index Bibliography or Discography

The Ballad Index Copyright 2016 by Robert B. Waltz and David G. Engle.


Click to play

(from Sandburg)
The song is also in Songs of Work and Protest, by Edith Fowke and Joe Glazer - title is "Times Is Mighty Hard," but it's taken direct from American Songbag.

Instrumental: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Caoz-HDHiiw


14 Nov 07 - 08:20 PM (#2193973)
Subject: ADD: Snaggin' the Klackin'
From: Joe Offer

Snaggin' the Klackin'

Hip-fa-lad-di-de!
Hip-fa-lad-di-de!
Graybacks, they are mighty thick.
A dollar a day
Is all they pay
For snaggin the Klackin' Crick

source: Beck, Lore of the Lumber Camps, #17, p 47.
singer: Fred Scribner
(no tune available)

Klacking Creek is one of several smaller streams flowing through the Ogemaw Hills timberland of Michigan (northwest of Saginaw).

-Joe-


16 Nov 07 - 01:57 PM (#2195455)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: Joe Offer

Anybody know of recordings of this song? Anybody sing it?
The first note of the "sh" is interesting, and I didn't know how to turn it into a MIDI. You know how a quarter note is usually a circle and a stem? Well, this one has an "x" instead of a circle. I think I remember from long-ago music theory class that the symbol means the note is spoken instead of sung, right? In this case, I think the "sh" is supposed to be whispered at "C" for two beats.

-Joe-


16 Jun 09 - 10:28 PM (#2658239)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On
From: GUEST,Mary Ratcliff

I heard this song alot when I was a kid. I didn't know what a boulevard was but the song sounded very soothing. It just went sh ta ra ta dey sh ta dey times is mighty hard, a dollar a day is all they pay for work on the boulevard. Heard it from my grandma. Yes she was Irish. Interesting, isn't it? It still rings in my head after all these years. It was going through my head today, so I looked this up on google. Must be going through some other people's heads too still. I was wondering if there was more to it also, but I guess perhaps there wasn't.


16 Jun 09 - 10:48 PM (#2658251)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On
From: Rowan

It's not likely that the song has currency in Oz, but, during the 1930s depression, the dole was given to "susso" workers, ie, workers receiving sustenance pay. Two major projects involving susso workers were construction of "The Great Ocean Road" west along Victoria's coast west from Airey's Inlet (a great scenic drive and recently in the news when part of the Lochard Gorge pillars collapsed due to wave action; it's an extremely "high energy" coastline) and "The Boulevarde" along the Yarra River at Kew (a suburb of Melbourne); The Boulevarde used to be a favoured parking spot for courting couples when I was a lad. Alas, I had no car.

In Oz slang for the first half of the 20th C, a dollar was the alternative name for "five bob" (ie, five shillings); I'll have to do a bit of researching to find out the amount susso workers got per diem but it might have been five bob.

Cheers, Rowan


14 Nov 09 - 08:20 PM (#2766227)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On
From: GUEST,O'Connor

This is an Irish folk song. I sang it as a child in school.


02 Feb 10 - 10:21 PM (#2828690)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: GUEST,GUEST, Kelly

I sang this song in grade school in the mid '70s. I don't recall any more verses, although it would lend itself to that. The initial "sh" scored with the x-note was indeed spoken--like shushing someone in a library, only shorter, quarter-note duration. I recall from our music book that it was a song sung by Irish workers in America. I have used it as a lullaby to all three of my daughters, who love it.


02 Feb 10 - 10:32 PM (#2828694)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: GUEST,999

If someone with a fast machine could Google

Full text of "The American Songbag"

the song should be there. This machine I'm on is so slow I'm still downloading yesterday's stuff.


25 Mar 11 - 03:15 PM (#3121479)
Subject: RE: req: Dollar a Day Is All They Pay For Work On The Blvd
From: GUEST

Just heard this on the CBC series Canada: A People's History, in the episode on the Depression. A lovely choral version, with viola reprise.


15 Jul 17 - 07:37 PM (#3866318)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: A Dollar a Day Is All They Pay for Work..
From: GUEST,Lisa

When I was a kid, I was told it was a lullaby.


16 Jul 17 - 02:07 AM (#3866345)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: A Dollar a Day Is All They Pay for Work..
From: Joe Offer

Looking around YouTube, I found an Instrumental under the title Sh-Ta-Ra-Da-Dey Irish Lullaby: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Caoz-HDHiiw

I wasn't able to find a sung version, looking particularly for a sung version with the "dollar a day" lyrics. Can anybody find it?

-Joe-


15 Nov 17 - 11:08 AM (#3888732)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: A Dollar a Day Is All They Pay for Work..
From: GUEST,cindy

my music teacher taught us this and said it was a "sweeping song" for those who had to sweep the boulevard to keep it clean. Makes sense