Subject: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Vienna Date: 11 Apr 01 - 01:45 PM Please help! I am compiling a book of songs sung in the late '50's-earliest '60's at summer camp and need the lyrics to "Take Her Out of Pity." This is admittedly not a p.C., song, but it was very singable and is a part of camp history, Thank you! |
Subject: Lyr Add: TAKE HER OUT OF PITY (from Kingston Trio) From: mousethief Date: 11 Apr 01 - 01:49 PM I found this on www.google.com by searching for "take her out of pity" (quotes included). First page up had it.
TAKE HER OUT OF PITY
I had a sister Sally, she was younger than I am.
Chorus:
We had a sister Sally, she was ugly and misshapen. Chorus
She never would be scoldin'. She never would be jealous. Chorus (c) 1960 Atzel Music, Inc., New York, NY (used without permission) Alex
|
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: sheila Date: 11 Apr 01 - 01:59 PM That sounds very like a song I knew in Edinburgh in the 60s - "The Auld Maid In The Garret". |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: mousethief Date: 11 Apr 01 - 02:01 PM Rats. 4 minutes. I'm losing my touch. Alex |
Subject: Lyr Add: OLD MAID IN THE GARRETT (Steeleye Span) From: BEK Date: 11 Apr 01 - 02:15 PM "Old Maid in the Garret" was also recorded by Steeleye Span on "TIME" CD. It's one of my favorites of their songs. THE OLD MAID IN THE GARRETT Definitely to be taken with a large pinch of salt, this is probably the first (and last) time this song has been sung by women! I was told by my aunt. I was told by my mother That going to a wedding is the makings of another. Well, if this be so, then I'll go without a bidding. O kind Providence, won't you send me to a wedding. CHORUS: And it's oh, dear me, how will it be If I die an old maid in a garret? Now there's my sister Jean; she's not handsome or good looking. Scarcely sixteen and a fella she was courting. Now she's twenty-four. she's a son and a daughter. Here am I, forty-four, and I've never had an offer. CHORUS I can cook and I can sew. I can keep a house right tidy, Rise up in the morning and get the breakfast ready. There's nothing in this wide world that makes my heart so cheery As a wee fat man to call me his own deary. CHORUS So come landsman or come townsman; come tinker or come tailor. Come fiddler, come dancer, come ploughman or come sailor. Come rich man, come poor man, come fool or come witty. Come any man at all. Won't you marry out of pity? CHORUS They say that the women are worse than the men. They go down to hell and they're thrown out again. HTML line breaks added. --JoeClone, 2-Jun-02. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: MAG (inactive) Date: 11 Apr 01 - 02:23 PM Actually, Womenfolk did it as "Take me out of Pity" in their heyday. And yes, through the used record grapevine, I've got my collection. (Thanks to Crossroads and Vinyl Resting Place in Portland OR) |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: Giac Date: 11 Apr 01 - 02:49 PM See this previous thread: http://www.mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=12058#92944 Tells how to look for it in the DT. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: Giac Date: 11 Apr 01 - 02:51 PM See this previous thread that tells how to find it in the DT: take her out |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: Gary T Date: 11 Apr 01 - 02:55 PM I recall this as a traditional(?) song titled "Old Maid's Lament." The DT lists it as "Old Maid Song." |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Bruce O. Date: 11 Apr 01 - 04:25 PM In the Scarce Songs 1 file on my website (www.erols.com/olsonw) you will find 17th century versions and later ones (click on 'Old Maid's Complaint'). As you will see, the modern form is no later than 1825. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Sheila Date: 11 Apr 01 - 07:02 PM Like Meg, I learned this song as being sung in the first person: "Come a landsman, a tendsman, a tinker or a tailor, Fiddler or a dancer, a plowboy, a sailor, Gentleman, a poor man, A fool or a witty, Don't you let me die an old maid, But take me out of pity." Now where did I learn this? And the chorus ended on the 5th, which to me was so unusual. Sheila |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Bruce O. Date: 11 Apr 01 - 07:07 PM I don't think you learned it from the author, because Martin Parker died about 1650. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 11 Apr 01 - 07:15 PM I've never heard it except with "take me" rather than "take her". I don't know if that makes it more or less potentially offensive. I've never known anyone get offended by it anyway. And it's normally women who sing it anyway.
Has anyone ever written a version for a man who likes the idea of getting married, and can't understand why he never finds a taker? |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Bruce O. Date: 11 Apr 01 - 07:33 PM Yes, and I had it typed up yesterday to post on the Mudcat Forum and my word processor save didn't work right and I don't know where it went. I'll take another look for it. |
Subject: Lyr Add: GO UP WEST From: GUEST,Bruce O. Date: 11 Apr 01 - 07:58 PM [Retyped. Songs of maids eager to be wedded or bedded are legion. This type is much rarer.]
GO UP WEST Oh, where is the girl who will go up West with me, Chorus:
I care not for riches, but a beautiful form,
She must not be afraid if a-hunting I should go, Come all you pretty fair maidens and list to what I say,
--- Potter Co., Pennsylvania, c 1881. [no tune] [Cf. Going to the West thread]
|
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: dick greenhaus Date: 11 Apr 01 - 08:04 PM I refer all you seekers of equivalence to The Laird O' Cockpen. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Bruce O. Date: 11 Apr 01 - 08:13 PM Dick, how about asking Murray on Saltspring for a history of "The Laird of Cockpen". I'm confused as to whether there's evidence that the song we have is the original song, or not. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: Lin in Kansas Date: 11 Apr 01 - 11:56 PM Does anyone recall what group did this one in the sixties or seventies? I seem to "hear" it being done by the Limelighters--?? Lin |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: ddw Date: 12 Apr 01 - 12:15 AM Don't think so, Lin. KT did it, but if the Limelighters did it in concert, they never recorded it as far as I know — and I think I still have all of their albums. david |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: Night Owl Date: 12 Apr 01 - 12:43 AM I "hear" the same thing Lin.....do you know who recorded "The Seine" in the sixties/seventies?? I hear the same voices singing this and knew it as "The Old Maid's Lament". |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Bruce O. Date: 12 Apr 01 - 12:51 AM Glenn Yarborough did it. Is that what you mean by Limelighter's? My recording, though is solo, not him singing with the Limelighters. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity (Kingston Trio) From: GUEST,Bob Coltman Date: 23 Nov 05 - 07:35 PM The Bob Shane copyright is laughable. The Trio, like everybody else in the 50s, learned their version of "Come a Landsman, a Pinsman" from Peggy Seeger, who recorded it on her first LP c. 1956. Hers is the definitive contemporary version. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Picnic Player Date: 18 May 08 - 03:12 PM I just finished a play called Picnic by William Inge, in Hollywood. One of our players was a folk singer. During the intermission she sang this song, and two other very sad Appalachian folk songs. Since the play is about a group of "old maid school teachers" in Kansas, (whose lives get turned upside down by the young stud that drifts into town and then leaves again with a young girl), it seemed like a very fitting song for the play. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: GUEST,Mighty Hev Date: 19 Feb 11 - 02:49 PM In the Kingston trio version of 'take her out of pity', they sing 'come a landsman a pins man...' Does anyone know what, if anything, is a pins man? Or is it a misheard lyric...? |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: MGM·Lion Date: 19 Feb 11 - 05:00 PM This is one of the few folksongs referred to by Jane Austen. In Northanger Abbey, a character asks "Did you ever hear the old song 'Going to one wedding brings on another'?" The sentiment is also well documented as a proverb, appearing as such, with 4 references, under "Wedding" in The Oxford Dictionary Of Proverbs. Another woman who used regularly to sing the Old Maid In A Garrett version was Isabel Sutherland, the Scottish resident in a folk club run in the late 1950s by Bruce Dunnett (who employed also an English resident, Shirley Collins; an Irish one, Dominic Behan; an American, Sandy Paton + Stan Kelly as compère & anchor-man). ~Michael~ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: Jack Campin Date: 05 Mar 20 - 04:32 PM Is there any written trace of a version of The Old Maid in the Garret that Austen might plausibly have heard? I've always thought of it as Scottish and can't imagine it sung in any other accent. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: Steve Gardham Date: 05 Mar 20 - 05:01 PM Although Pitts printed it this may have been after 1803. With so many versions in print it's hard to believe that there weren't versions floating about in the mid 18th century. However that line occurs in a late 17th century version printed by Jonah Deacon and if Jane is calling this an old song then that only makes it about a century old. About right I'd say. See Pepys Vol 5, p194 The Maid's call to the Bachelors. |
Subject: ADD Version: The Old Maid's Song From: Joe Offer Date: 05 Mar 20 - 10:37 PM The Peggy Seeger version is called "The Old Maid's Song." The YouTube video of the Smithsonian Folkways recording is here: Album notes are here: And here are Peggy Seeger's lyrics: THE OLD MAID'S SONG CHORUS Come a landsman, a pinsman, a tinker or a tailor, Fiddler, or a dancer, ploughboy, or a sailor, Gentleman, a poor man, a fool or a witty Don't you let me die an old maid but take me out of pity. Oh, I had a sister Sally, was younger than I am She had so many sweethearts, she had to deny them; As for my own part I never had many If you all knew my heart, I'd be thankful for any. CHORUS Oh, I had a sister Susan, was ugly and misshapen, Before she was sixteen years old she was taken, Before she was eighteen, a son and a daughter Here am I six and forty and nary an offer. CHORUS Oh I never will be scolding, I never will be jealous, My husband shall have money to go to the alehouse, While he's there a-spending, well I'll be at home a-saving, And I'll leave it to the world if I am worth having. CHORUS Notes: THE OLD MAID'S SONG· - The old maid tells of the success of her sisters, gives her own age as "six and forty", and makes unheard-of concessions to the man who will marry her and take her "out of pity". |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Take Her Out of Pity From: John C. Bunnell Date: 05 Mar 20 - 10:41 PM I'll need to check my vinyl when I get home, but I think the Highwaymen did a version of this, which I recall as a bit different from the Kingston Trio version. |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: Joe Offer Date: 05 Mar 20 - 10:42 PM So, what's a "pinsman"? I always thought it was "kinsman," but it's pretty clear that I was. But I have no idea what a "pinsman" is. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: GeoffLawes Date: 06 Mar 20 - 03:36 AM Lizzie Higgins singing Auld Maid in a Garret |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: GeoffLawes Date: 06 Mar 20 - 05:15 AM Old maid in the garret, song / Chris Miles, singing in English lyrics here too |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: Newport Boy Date: 06 Mar 20 - 07:05 AM @MGM-Lion - Another woman who used regularly to sing the Old Maid In A Garrett version was Isabel Sutherland, the Scottish resident in a folk club run in the late 1950s by Bruce Dunnett... I always enjoyed Isobel Sutherland singing this. Her version was slightly different and she had a wonderful voice. I've tried to represent some of her Scots words. AULD MAID IN THE GARRET Isabel Sutherland Now I've often heard it said frae my faither and my mother That to gang to a wedding is the makings of another Gin that be true then I’ll gang withoot a biddin’ Kind providence, ye’ll ask me to a weddin’. And it’s oh dear me what will I do if I die an auld maid in a garret. Oh my young sister Jean she's no’ handsome or good lookin’ Only sixteen and a fella she is courtin’ I am forty four and I havenae got a man I dinna ken if I will or if I can. And its oh dear me what will I do if I die an auld maid in a garret. Oh come tinkler, come tailor, come soldier or come sailor Come ony man at all that’ll tak me to my faither Come rich man, come poor man, come wise man or come witty Come ony man at all that’ll marry me for pity. And its oh dear me what will I do if I die an auld maid in a garret. Oh, for I can knit and I can sew I can mak’ the hoose right tidy Rise up in the mornin’ and mak the breakfast ready One thing in this wide world would make me half as cheery Is a dear auld man to call me his wee deary. And its oh dear me what will I do if I die an auld maid in a garret. Oh, for I'll awa’ hame for there’s nobody heedin’ Naebody heeding to poor auld Annie’s pleading I'm awa’ hame to ma wee garret If I canna get a man then I'll surely get a parrot. And its oh dear me what will I do if I die an auld maid in a garret - Wi’ a parrot! If Robin Hall was there, he would always tease Isabel by singing the tag line as "Wi' a carrot!" |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: GUEST,Jack Campin Date: 06 Mar 20 - 08:54 AM I heard that sung at Auchtermuchty in one of their last festivals- would have been either Chris Miles or Sheena Wellington. She said she'd make up her mind whether it was going to be "carrot" or"parrot" at the last moment. |
Subject: Origin: OLD MAID'S SONG (Peggy Seeger) From: Jim Dixon Date: 07 Mar 20 - 08:54 AM THE OLD MAID'S SONG, as sung by Peggy Seeger, and posted by Joe Offer above, can be found in Lonesome Tunes: Folk Songs from the Kentucky Mountains collected and edited by Loraine Wyman (New York: H. W. Gray Co., 1916). The words match so closely, I don't think it's worthwhile to post another copy. But it has the notation: "Pulaski County, Kentucky" and it contains a musical arrangement for piano, which may be of interest to someone more musically literate than I am. |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: leeneia Date: 07 Mar 20 - 06:08 PM If a lyricist made a black person or a Native American grovel like this, you'd all be furious. This song is nasty. |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: Joe Offer Date: 08 Mar 20 - 03:31 AM I suppose you're right, leeneia. I wonder what Peggy Seeger would say now about the lyrics she sang Way Back When - I guarantee she wouldn't sing them now, since she seems to prefer same-sex relationships (and rightly so, quite likely). Still, it tells the awful truth about a time when women were nothing unless they married the proper man. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Old Maid's Song From: John C. Bunnell Date: 09 Mar 20 - 07:38 AM Memory is correct: The Old Maid's Song is in fact on "Hootenanny with the Highwaymen", from early in that group's career, and it's (mostly) the Seeger version... ...except that it turns out that there are a whole lot of performances floating around on YouTube, and the cross-pollination is, well, odd. First of all, the lead on the Hootenanny version is actually a guest performer, introduced as Mayo Muir (but see notes below). Second, the recording is notable in that it mostly adopts the lyrics of the Seeger version while applying them to the Kingston Trio arrangement of the tune (again, see notes below). "Mostly" is important: the Hootenanny version is unique in that Muir and the Highwaymen all clearly sing "tinsman" rather than "pinsman" throughout. Now I am curious as to the origin of that choice. Musically speaking (though I see leeneia's point about the lyrics), I especially like this version; the Highwaymen's madrigal-like backup vocals are extremely deft, considering that according to their intro, Muir was a surprise last-minute addition to the lineup for this live concert recording. NOTES 1. Further Googling establishes that she's much better known in the folk world as Ann Mayo Muir, and as 1/3 of a highly distinguished trio consisting of herself, Gordon Bok, and Ed Trickett. 2. The Seeger performances (Pete's here and Peggy's here) are a good deal livelier and less sorrowful than the slower, more mournful pace of the Kingston Trio arrangement. (Note that Pete gives the singer's age as six-and-twenty, whereas Peggy sings "six-and-forty"!) 3. If the upbeat banjo-picking on the Pete Seeger track startles you, consider the even livelier Clive Palmer banjo version from 1967; Palmer's iteration also adopts the novelty of singing both the verse line and the choruses in first person (that is, "I'm a landsman...." (!!)). 4. By contrast, the Glenn Yarbrough version is positively gloomy; like the Highwaymen, he merges what I'm calling the Seeger lyrics with the Kingston arrangement, but with two tweaks to the words: here, the singer is "seven and forty" (thereby the eldest on record) and substitutes "lover" for "offer" in the second verse (!). 5. For completeness, here's a link to the present-day Web site for the original Highwaymen (vs. the newer country-star group, which is a different animal entirely). |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: Rapparee Date: 09 Mar 20 - 09:39 AM I believe the Clancys did all of these. |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: GUEST,Vic at home Date: 09 Mar 20 - 12:53 PM Mr Offer, A Pinsman. I seem to remember that pedlars who sold "papers of pins" were sometimes called pinsmen. Vic. |
Subject: RE: Lyr ADD: Take Her Out of Pity/Old Maid's Song From: Joe Offer Date: 09 Mar 20 - 09:17 PM Ah....that makes sense. Thanks, Vic. -Joe- |
Share Thread: |
Subject: | Help |
From: | |
Preview Automatic Linebreaks Make a link ("blue clicky") |