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GUEST,Rigby Want info: re "The Wild Whistle" & Ted Tarling (2) Ted Tarling 29 Nov 25


I just picked up a fascinating paperback/pamphlet in our local Oxfam shop, called The Wild Whistle: Ballad Airs for Whistle and Other Melodic Instruments. It was published in 1983 by The Sonus Press and is credited to Ted Tarling. Despite the title, it contains numerous melodies and words for songs, as well as instrumental tunes.

The Internet tells me that Ted Tarling was a jazz musician from Hull, who was a friend of Philip Larkin. He founded the Sonus Press himself, but I can find no information about this book. Frustratingly, there is also nothing at all in the book itself to explain the origins of any of the songs.

This is a shame because some of the songs are very interesting. Many are versions of well-known traditional songs, some of which are localised to the Hull area. But I was very surprised to find versions of 'The Two Sisters', 'The Famous Flower of Serving Men' and 'The Cruel Mother' among them, all under different titles. As far as I'm aware the first two of these have rarely been collected in England, so if these are from Yorkshire tradition I'd have thought that was fairly remarkable.

There are also several songs that I've not come across before anywhere: 'Mrs Kathleen Stevens', 'I'll Be No Submissive Wife' and 'Oxfam Peg'. Were these from local tradition? Did Ted Tarling write them himself?

Does anyone here remember Ted Tarling, or know anything about these songs?


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